We're back to 1993 for the History this week, as Gerry Francis' men briefly look good for a Premier League title challenge of ...
Former Nebraska football players and NFL hopefuls Ty Robinson and Thomas Fidone saw the field Saturday in a Senior Bowl game ...
Ohio State defensive lineman Jack Sawyer returned a fumble 83 yards in a crucial play against Texas in the College Football Playoff semifinal in Arlington, Texas. The Buckeyes won 28-14 thanks in ...
Jack Hoffman, who captured the nation’s heart ... Hoffman’s parents took their son to his first Nebraska football game on his fifth birthday in 2010 and “he has been a Cornhusker football ...
A few months later, Lead Prep Academy announced it had hired Robinson as its running backs coach. The post-graduate school with a junior-college football program based in Brighton (MI), must've ...
Noie:Thoughts about Notre Dame football while counting down the hours until Monday's kickoff One more game, one more box and the kid from the one flashing stoplight town of Royal Center, Indiana ...
Jack Hoffman, known for his memorable touchdown at the Nebraska spring game, has passed away at 19 from cancer. Initially diagnosed in 2012, Hoffman raised awareness for pediatric brain cancer and ...
The website said Jack had been enjoying his freshman year, along with Nebraska football and volleyball games. “Jack Hoffman embodied what it means to be a Husker every day through his courage ...
Jack Hoffman, the cancer patient who captured the hearts of Nebraska football fans and inspired the nation as a 7-year-old when he ran for a touchdown during the Cornhuskers' 2013 spring game ...
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Jack Sawyer’s journey with Ohio State football has been well-documented, but it’s rarely been shared via his own words. That changed Thursday when Sawyer shared his story in ...
Jack Hoffman, a fan of the University of Nebraska Cornhuskers football team who warmed the hearts of millions after he ran for a touchdown in the team's 2013 spring game, has died at the age of 19 ...
Jack. You changed the world. Not only did 61,722 people watch you run for that touchdown in what forever will be the most meaningful moment in Nebraska football history. Millions of people saw it.