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A Nebraska fan carries extra heads in the first half of an NCAA college football game against Purdue in Lincoln, Neb., Saturday, Nov. 1, 2014. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik)
A Nebraska fan carries extra heads in the first half of an NCAA college football game against Purdue in Lincoln, Neb., Saturday, Nov. 1, 2014. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik)Nati Harnik/Associated Press

Nebraska Football: Reasonable Expectations for the Huskers' 2015 Season

Patrick RungeMay 7, 2015

Nebraska football fans do have the capacity to be reasonable (evidence sometimes notwithstanding). So as we settle in for the offseason, let’s take some time to look ahead and think about what we can reasonably expect from Nebraska under new head coach Mike Riley.

Nebraska Will Improve on Turnovers, Not Penalties

A smart and particularly handsome analyst has used this table before, but what it reveals about Nebraska under former head coach Bo Pelini is striking. Take a look at where Nebraska ranked under Pelini nationally in terms of penalty yards per game and turnover margin (stats courtesy of CFBStats.com):

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Year

Penalty yds/game, nat’l ranking

Turnover margin, nat’l ranking

2008

99

108

2009

102

33

2010

115

61

2011

73

67

2012

95

108

2013

82

119

2014

56

75

The bold italicized numbers, as a refresher, are the times when Nebraska finished in the top half nationally in those statistical categories. In other words, if the number isn’t in bold italics, it means Nebraska was (put charitably) below average.

Put less charitably—especially when the national rankings were in triple digits—Nebraska was regularly atrocious.

How did those numbers look in the same time period under Riley at Oregon State? In comparison, it’s a mixed bag.

Year

Penalty yds/game, nat’l ranking

Turnover margin, nat’l ranking

2008

83

56

2009

87

31

2010

80

35

2011

118

100

2012

78

29

2013

78

42

2014

123

41

With regards to penalties, you could argue Riley’s Beavers were worse than Pelini’s Cornhuskers. But with regards to turnover margin, Riley’s teams were far better than Pelini’s.

So you can stop expecting Nebraska to commit fewer penalties because Riley is such a soft touch compared to Pelini. But you can expect Nebraska under Pelini to do a much better job in protecting the football.

True Freshmen Will Make an Impact

A combination of talent and lack of depth will likely push a number of true freshmen onto the field in 2015. The clearest path to the field is probably possessed by linebacker Dedrick Young, given Nebraska only has five non-freshman scholarship linebackers on the roster. (You can see a class-by-class breakdown of NU’s roster competition here, courtesy of the Omaha World-Herald.)

Eric Lee and Avery Anderson, two of Nebraska’s highest-rated recruits, according to 247Sports, should be in the mix for playing time even in NU’s crowded and talented secondary. Matt Snyder, a talented offensive weapon at tight end, could be pressed into earlier service if the spring injury to Cethan Carter lingers into the fall. And Jordan Ober looks to come in right away and start for Nebraska at long snapper after losing scholarship snapper Gabriel Miller to injury last year.

Nebraska’s Record Will Be About the Same as 2014

Cue the “Then why did we fire a coach who never won fewer than nine games?” shrieking in three, two, one…

Nebraska’s 2015 schedule isn’t the most difficult, but it has some pitfalls. The season opener against BYU is a big challenge, given that Nebraska will be installing a new offense and a new defense. Riley’s first test of his new-look Cornhuskers squad will be against a program with a national championship in its locker, not an FCS directional school coming to Lincoln for a paycheck.

Nebraska also has to travel to Miami to face a Hurricanes squad with more talent on paper than the Cornhuskers. In conference, Nebraska also has to go to Minneapolis to face a Golden Gophers team with a two-game winning streak over NU. (I know, I had to read that a couple of times to let it truly sink in.) Games against Wisconsin and Michigan State (and, to a lesser extent, Iowa and Northwestern) will challenge Nebraska, but they are at Memorial Stadium.

Last year Nebraska went 9-3 in the regular season. Given the two nonconference challenges and the five in-conference contests, combined with the difficulties of transitioning to a new coach and a new system, besting a 9-3 record could be a challenge. It will take a big step up in quarterback play, or a big step back from a number of Nebraska’s conference foes, to comfortably predict an improvement over NU’s 2014 record.

We’ll have a discussion later about whether that can represent progress for Nebraska. Be patient, it’s a long offseason.

This column first appeared at The Double Extra Point, which you can follow on Twitter, at @DblExtraPoint.

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