Tad Stryker: Painful Lessons for the Huskers as Utah Administers a Bowl Beatdown

Nebraska is not in the same class as Utah right now, and really, there’s no reason except money that the two teams were on the same field in Las Vegas. The fact …

Nebraska is not in the same class as Utah right now, and really, there’s no reason except money that the two teams were on the same field in Las Vegas.

The fact that Nebraska’s fan base would predictably show up en masse and spend freely in Sin City is the only reason 7-5 Nebraska lined up against 10-2 and 15th-ranked Utah. Given that, a 44-22 beatdown was disappointing but not surprising.

Although embarrassing for Husker Nation, it will likely benefit the program in the long run, at least if you believe, as I do, the old adage, “Short-term pain, long-term gain.”

Ultimately, Utah may have done the Nebraska football program a huge favor. By ripping the remaining veneer of fool’s gold from the Huskers’ 2025 season, it exposed their lack of athleticism on the offensive and defensive lines and at linebacker, and gives new assistants Geep Wade, Rob Aurich and whoever ends up as defensive line coach a stark view of what’s needed.

TJ Lateef

Nebraska quarterback TJ Lateef throws out of the end zone during the second half. | Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

It’s not what anyone wants to hear, but the unvarnished truth-telling that took place in Allegiant Stadium, the bald-faced evidence that this ebbing Nebraska team which finished with three whippings would have had to fight like crazy to survive a second-round FCS playoff game, should be ample motivation for Matt Rhule and his staff to prepare the extreme makeover it needs to finish above .500 when the schedule turns nastier in 2026. The Huskers’ 7-6 record speaks for itself. Nebraska did not significantly improve from last season and missed a huge opportunity with a relatively weak conference schedule.

The makeover, through both the transfer portal and development of the current roster, has a decent framework, including wideout Nyziah Hunter (who missed the bowl with an injury) and tight end Luke Lindenmeyer, left tackle Elijah Pritchett, center Justin Evans, linebacker Vincent Shavers and corner Andrew Marshall. There is some good raw material on the defensive front, including edge Williams Nwaneri and tackle Kade Pietrzak, but it’s in dire need of additional size and refining. Relatively untested redshirt freshmen and sophomores like safety Caleb Benning, tight end Carter Nelson and offensive linemen Grant Brix, Jason Maciejczak and Preston Taumua will have to show up and show out if the Huskers are to be taken seriously next fall.

Speaking of sending the wrong message, Rhule wearing his camo cap backward under his headset all game long wasn’t quite as bad a look as the “Surrender Pinks” that someone decided to dress his team in before sending them out in public in Minneapolis back in October, but the beatdown was similar in both games, a clear signal that significant changes are needed. If 15 practices with Matt the d-line coach sparked something in the young, outsized Husker front that will help next fall, that’s great, but against Utah, it didn’t manifest itself. Hopefully that goofy-looking dude has a serious conversation with the head coach and makes sure he understands just how much of a problem the d-line has getting off blocks, filling run lanes and rushing the quarterback.

Although they briefly appeared in the AP top 25 just before the debacle at Minneapolis, the Huskers showed that night they didn’t belong, and in the Las Vegas Bowl against Utah, the Huskers demonstrated how far they have to go to become relevant on the national stage.

One hopeful sign was the running game, which even without Emmett Johnson looked great on the first two series, then disappeared and re-emerged in the fourth quarter. At the two-minute mark of the first quarter, Nebraska led 14-7 and had 93 rushing yards, with Mekhi Nelson bolting for a 38-yard touchdown run that temporarily had the Huskers riding high. Then, without warning, the running game receded and the Husker offense disappeared, unable to get a single first down for more than two quarters.

Ryan Davis vs. Andrew Marshall

Utah wide receiver Ryan Davis carries the ball during the second half as Nebraska’s Andrew Marshall tries to bring him down. | Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

That allowed the potent and physical Utah offense, which relies on misdirection and a strong running game of its own, to go to work on the outmanned Nebraska defense. The Blackshirts had good moments on almost every drive, but could never find a way to close out the Utes in key third-and-long situations and eventually buckled under the pressure, allowing 37 consecutive points as Utah went from a 14-7 deficit to a commanding 44-14 lead. In the second and third quarters, the Utes did pretty much anything they wanted to the Husker defense.

Meanwhile, well into the fourth quarter, Nebraska had fewer than 80 yards rushing, having gone three-and-out on five consecutive drives. Then the rushing game re-emerged after the Huskers benched Turner Corcoran, moved right guard Tyler Knaak to Corcoran’s spot and inserted sophomore Sam Sledge at right guard. Nebraska doubled its rushing total from that point to the end of the game with two productive drives.

The most disconcerting thing about this contest was the way Utah played the hammer and Nebraska took the role of the nail for most of the second and third quarters. NU players dropped like flies, leaving the game in droves with injuries. It was obvious who the more physical team was. It was even more obvious which coaching staff could respond effectively to changing game conditions and which couldn’t.

Corcoran, who started 40 games at Nebraska, had to play out of position his entire career because Greg Austin and Donovan Raiola couldn’t recruit, retain and develop effective offensive tackles, with the exception of Pritchett, who is gaining momentum on the left side of the line. The Huskers need to get him some help during the upcoming transfer portal window.

One of the main side effects of its weakness in the trenches showed up again versus Utah. As was the case so often down the season’s homestretch, Nebraska was unable to effectively use the speed of Jacory Barney. With only one exception — on the 8-yard push-pass touchdown that gave NU its brief 14-7 lead —neither Dana Holgorsen nor Mike Ekeler could find a way to get the ball to Barney in open space.

Matt Rhule during second half of Las Vegas Bowl

Nebraska head coach Matt Rhule has no shortage of roster issues to address. | Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

On the defensive line, the Huskers even more urgently need someone north of 310 pounds to step in as a run stuffer, and a linebacker who can capably fill the sure-tackling role that Georgia Southern transfer Marques Watson-Trent was supposed to handle this season. Watson-Trent, who came into the season covered with Group of 5 laurels, couldn’t make much of an impact in the Big Ten; he finished his senior season with 39 tackles (24 fewer than redshirt freshman safety Rex Guthrie), and just 2.5 of Watson-Trent’s stops were for losses.

At quarterback, freshman TJ Lateef had some good moments but was erratic as a passer, completing just over 50 percent of his throws, with an interception. He occasionally showed some quickness, running 13 times for a sack-adjusted 39 yards rushing. He certainly didn’t grab a stranglehold on the race for QB1, which, if the Huskers take another signal-caller or two during the portal window, could become quite interesting.

A thrashing at the hands of the third-place Big 12 team strips away any thought of complacency going into the offseason and, for Rhule and his team, should supply plenty of motivation to find answers.


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Source: Utah News

Nebraska fans upset with blowout loss to Utah in Las Vegas Bowl

Nebraska football was dominated by the Utah Utes, losing 44-22 on Wednesday night in the SRS Distribution Las Vegas Bowl. Nebraska led the game 14-7 in the first quarter, but after that, it was all …

Nebraska football was dominated by the Utah Utes, losing 44-22 on Wednesday night in the SRS Distribution Las Vegas Bowl. Nebraska led the game 14-7 in the first quarter, but after that, it was all Utah. At one point, the Ues scored 31 unanswered points on their way to victory.

The Huskers were outgained 535-343 in total yards, and the offense did not sustain much after the first quarter. Quarterback TJ Lateef went 15-of-28 on the afternoon, throwing for 182 yards, a touchdown, and an interception.

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Mehki Nelson was able to solidify the running game for the Huskers, carrying the football 12 times for 88 yards and a touchdown. Isaiah Mozee had four catches for 48 yards, but it was not enough on a day when the Huskers’ offense was stagnant.

Social media was disappointed following the loss, as the program can now officially turn the page to the 2026 season.

Husker fans wanted the nightmare to end

The future is not going to get any easier

The fans are already planning for basketball season

Old friends are performing better

Coaching is called into question

The Huskers need impact players

Step back

Not great numbers

Yes… yes he was

Terrible

Not going anywhere

Perspective

Contact/Follow us @CornhuskersWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Nebraska news, notes and opinions.

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This article originally appeared on Cornhuskers Wire: Social media reacts to Nebraska football’s loss to Utah in Las Vegas

Source: Utah News

Devon Dampier dominates in Las Vegas as No. 15 Utah blasts Nebraska, 44-22, in Scalley era debut

The junior quarterback produced one of the most electric bowl performances of the season, piling up 458 total yards and five touchdowns to power the No. 15 Utes to a 44-22 victory over Nebraska in the …

LAS VEGAS — Utah’s postseason stage became Devon Dampier’s personal showcase Wednesday night.

The junior quarterback produced one of the most electric bowl performances of the season, piling up 458 total yards and five touchdowns to power the No. 15 Utes to a 44-22 victory over Nebraska in the SRS Distribution Las Vegas Bowl at Allegiant Stadium.

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It marked Utah’s first bowl win since 2017 — and the first game of the Morgan Scalley era, though it arrived earlier than expected. Scalley was slated to take over as Utes head coach after the bowl, but Michigan’s hiring of longtime Utah coach Kyle Whittingham last Friday accelerated the transition.

“There have been so many distractions for these players,” Scalley said following the win. “The game is all about them, and they’re the ones who didn’t deserve the distractions. They worked their tails off.”

Despite the turbulence, Utah looked anything but distracted after the opening quarter.

Nebraska surged early, using a 38-yard touchdown run from freshman quarterback Mekhi Nelson and an 8-yard scoring pass from fellow freshman TJ Lateef to Jacory Barney Jr. to grab a 14-7 lead after the first 15 minutes.

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Lateef, making his Las Vegas Bowl debut in what many viewed as an audition for Nebraska’s future, finished 15-of-27 passing for 182 yards, one touchdown and one rushing score. Nelson, meanwhile, rushed 12 times for 88 yards — but was bottled up after the first quarter, gaining just 16 yards the rest of the way.

That shift coincided with Utah’s defensive adjustments. The Utes unleashed a relentless zone-pressure scheme that flustered Nebraska’s offense and flipped the game in the second quarter.

Utah outscored the Huskers 17-0 in the period and outgained them 198-17. By halftime, momentum had hardened into control.

Dampier ensured the scoreboard followed suit.

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He completed 19-of-31 passes for 310 yards and two touchdowns while adding 148 rushing yards and three scores on the ground. The 458 yards were the most by any Utah player in a bowl game. His 148 rushing yards were the most by a quarterback in this bowl’s history, and he became the first QB since the game moved to Allegiant Stadium to top 100 yards rushing in the Las Vegas Bowl.

“I get the last couple hours to hang out with these guys,” Dampier said when asked about his future. “That’s where my mind is going to be at for sure.”

His comments did little to quiet speculation over what comes next. Dampier declined to directly address whether he will return to Salt Lake City, enter the transfer portal, or potentially follow Whittingham to Michigan.

Regardless, his MVP performance etched his name into Utah’s postseason lore — and into Nebraska’s offseason uncertainty.

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The loss pushed Nebraska’s streak against AP-ranked opponents to 30 straight defeats, the second-longest active skid behind Rutgers’ 43-game drought. The defeat also extended Rhule’s personal streak to 20 consecutive losses against ranked teams, including 0-11 while coaching Baylor.

Nebraska coach Matt Rhule acknowledged Utah’s pressure scheme changed the game.

“They started zone-pressuring us,” Rhule said. “You have to win those plays, and we didn’t win quite enough of them.”

Utah finished with 535 total yards to Nebraska’s 343 and rushed for 225 yards, pushing its season total to a staggering 3,462 — a new school record. The Utes also reached 41 rushing touchdowns on the year, another program best.

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The announced crowd of 38,879 was the largest to attend the Las Vegas Bowl since the event relocated to Allegiant Stadium in 2019, surpassing the previous stadium-era record of 32,515 set during Wisconsin’s 20-13 win over Arizona State in 2021. It ranks as the ninth-highest attended game in the bowl’s 33-year history, including its previous home at Sam Boyd Stadium.

The victory capped an 11-win season for Utah, just the fourth time in program history the Utes have reached that mark, and the first time since 2019. Utah also owns two Pac-12 championship victories in this same building — but Wednesday belonged entirely to Dampier.

Utah heads into the offseason with a new coach, renewed clarity, and a quarterback decision that now becomes the sport’s latest cliffhanger.

Nebraska leaves Las Vegas searching for answers. Utah leaves having delivered a statement.

Source: Utah News

What Utah’s Morgan Scalley said after his first win as a head coach

As the ice from the Gatorade buckets melted into the confetti-covered field at Allegiant Stadium, Utah head coach Morgan Scalley was still trying to process eve …

As the ice from the Gatorade buckets melted into the confetti-covered field at Allegiant Stadium, Utah head coach Morgan Scalley was still trying to process everything that had transpired over the past week.

His predecessor and mentor, Kyle Whittingham, made an expedited move to Michigan after 21 seasons at the helm of the Utes, officially handing over head coaching duties to Scalley with about five days before Utah was slated to put on the pads one last time in the 2025 season. And it didn’t take long for rumors about some of Utah’s assistants joining Whittingham in Ann Arbor to swirl, creating a load of distractions during what was supposed to be a time to reflect on Whittingham’s career ahead of his last game as the Utes head coach.

That didn’t end up being the case. Whittingham was in Orlando for New Year’s Eve instead, getting to know his future players and coaches as Michigan battled Texas in the Citrus Bowl. His former team, meanwhile, was embarking on a journey into a new era all the way across the country.

None of that outside noise seemed to get to the Utes, though. Based on how they handled the Cornhuskers in a 44-22 drubbing on Wednesday, they were more than ready for the next chapter of the program to be written.

Utah Utes interim coach Morgan Scalley

Dec 31, 2025; Las Vegas, NV, USA; Utah Utes interim coach Morgan Scalley is doused by offensive lineman Tanoa Togiai (73) in the fourth quarter of victory over the Nebraska Cornhuskers in the SRS Distribution Las Vegas Bowl at Allegiant Stadium. | Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

“There have been so many distractions for these players,” Scalley said during his postgame press conference. “And the game is all about them, and so they’re the ones that don’t deserve all the distractions, right? And they worked their tails off that.”

Here’s more from Scalley’s postgame press conference.

On what the past week since taking over as head coach has been like

“It would have been a lot harder had we not had a great culture already established with players really understanding their role in leading. So, there’s a lot to being a head football coach, particularly at a time when the portal is about to open and you’ve got things going on left and right. But like I said, these guys kept it all together and be very easy for people to start turning and ‘What about me? What about mine?’ and to lose focus. And so can’t say enough about our players.”

On getting emotional after the game

“I am who I am. And I wear my emotions on my sleeve. I grew up a Utah man. My dad played at the University of Utah. I had family go to the University of Utah. And I grew up running around in those tunnels at Rice Stadium — when it wasn’t Rice-Eccles Stadium. And I’ve seen it transition. I’ve been there through all of it, and my dream has always been to take it to the highest level. The one thing that I’m so grateful for is that my logo has never changed, nor will it.”

On whether it’s settled in that he’s the head coach

“I don’t think it’s settled in at all yet. There were probably a lot of mistakes; being on the offensive side when I’m supposed to be on the defensive side.

“We were trying to get Wayshawn [Parker] 1,000 yards [on the season] there at the end, which is why we kept him on the field. It was no disrespect whatsoever towards Nebraska, and I told Matt [Rhule] that. What a class guy; I completely respect Nebraska. But yeah it’s been so crazy, I don’t know that I’ve been really able to process it or think about it.”

On his priorities heading into the offseason

“Well, my number one goal is making sure that our guys make it home for curfew tonight — that’s number one.”

“Beyond that, we’ll work after that. But, this is a big time profession, and if people don’t think that we’ve already been planning, already been looking for the next step; then they don’t know us. We will be prepared for whatever is to come, and we are excited for those that want to be Utes. And bottom line is: we hope all these guys in that locker room continue to be here.”

On the culture he wants to curate as head coach

“This program will always be better than one person. It will continue to be Utah football, and not about Morgan Scalley. It’s all about the players, all about the team. I’m grateful to be in a position where I can help lead but at the same time, you’re only as good as your players and you’ll never outperform the leadership that’s provided by them.”

“Again, I’m blessed to be in this position to have people trust and believe in me, but it’s all about players.”

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Source: Utah News

New Utah law restricts people with extreme DUI convictions from buying alcohol

A new Utah law aims to prevent repeat drunk driving offenses by limiting access to alcohol for those with serious DUI convictions. Under the law, judges will have discretion to place someone in an …

A new Utah law aims to prevent repeat drunk driving offenses by limiting access to alcohol for those with serious DUI convictions. Under the law, judges will have discretion to place someone in an interdicted category. That means the person’s driver’s license will be marked with “no alcohol sales,” alerting sellers that alcohol cannot be sold to them.

Source: Utah News

Red-hot Utah State improves to 11-1 with road victory over Fresno State

Utah State took the lead for good with 14:49 to go in the first half. The score was 35-26 at halftime, with Collins racking up 10 points. Utah State turned a six-point second-half lead into a 13-point …

FRESNO, Calif. (AP) — Michael Collins Jr.’s 18 points helped Utah State defeat Fresno State 72-63 on Tuesday.

Collins went 9 of 16 from the field (0 for 4 from 3-point range) for the Aggies (11-1, 2-0 Mountain West Conference). Mason Falslev scored 16 points and added eight rebounds and four steals. Kolby King shot 4 of 6 from the field, including 2 for 4 from 3-point range, and went 3 for 6 from the line to finish with 13 points.

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Jake Heidbreder led the way for the Bulldogs (6-7, 0-2) with 21 points and three steals. Fresno State also got 15 points, 12 rebounds and two blocks from Wilson Jacques. Bastien Rieber had 12 points.

Utah State took the lead for good with 14:49 to go in the first half. The score was 35-26 at halftime, with Collins racking up 10 points. Utah State turned a six-point second-half lead into a 13-point advantage with a 7-0 run to make it a 46-33 lead with 15:53 left in the half. Falslev scored nine second-half points in the win.

Source: Utah News

What channel is Utah vs Nebraska today? Time, TV schedule for Las Vegas Bowl

Utah and Nebraska will face off in the Las Vegas Bowl. How to watch, including time, TV schedule, streaming information and game odds: …

Dec. 31, 2025, 6:05 a.m. ET

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Source: Utah News

Who is Morgan Scalley? What to know of Utah coach replacing Kyle Whittingham

Who is Morgan Scalley? Here’s what to know of Utah’s new head coach replacing Kyle Whittingham, beginning with the Las Vegas Bowl: …

Dec. 31, 2025, 6:08 a.m. ET

Source: Utah News

Amidst program changes, Utah’s focus is on getting Morgan Scalley win No. 1 in Las Vegas Bowl vs. Nebraska

The tone of the game has changed from Kyle Whittingham’s final game at Utah to Morgan Scalley’s first, but motivation remains the same for the Utes.

With so much going on around the Utah football program, it would have been easy for the Las Vegas Bowl to fade into the background.

Last Friday, former Utah coach Kyle Whittingham took the head coaching position at Michigan, throwing a wrench into the transition between Whittingham and new head coach Morgan Scalley.

Whittingham is reportedly targeting a number of Utah assistant coaches to join his staff, including offensive coordinator Jason Beck and offensive line coach Jim Harding. While Scalley is putting together his staff at Utah, he’s also preparing for the transfer portal to open on Jan. 2, just two days after the Las Vegas Bowl.

It could be easy for game preparation to take a back seat to the future of the program, but Scalley and the Utes are full steam ahead for New Year’s Eve’s Las Vegas Bowl vs. Nebraska.

After acknowledging the other work he is doing this week, Scalley made it clear that sending Utah’s seniors out with a win is the priority.

“My job is to sell Utah and to prepare for the future of this program, and that’s what we’re doing. But the priority, priority No. 1, is sending these guys out the right way,” Scalley said.

Even with the changes of the past two weeks, the expectation is that the majority of Utah’s available two-deep will play. The Utes have had just three confirmed opt-outs — offensive tackle Spencer Fano, offensive tackle Caleb Lomu and defensive end Logan Fano — all of whom have declared for the 2026 NFL Draft.

Utah will also have a mostly full coaching staff for the Las Vegas Bowl — Beck is in Sin City — with the only change being that Scalley will handle head coaching and defensive coordinator duties.

Quarterback Devon Dampier wanted to finish the season the right way.

“We’re just excited for the opportunity to be here,” he said. “One last ride for the boys. Our team is built off of love. Very rare in the way college football is going now, it’s rare to see a team that they want to go out there and play this last game for each other. Just the number of seniors that want to continue to play, not sitting out.

“It sparks my heart. It’s like, man, this is real love that we got going on here. So I’m excited to get one more with those guys.”

Utah (10-2) is a 14-point favorite over Nebraska (7-5). The lack of opt-outs gives the Utes an advantage, as the Cornhuskers are missing starting quarterback Dylan Raiola and star running back Emmett Johnson, who rushed for 120.9 yards per game, fourth in the nation. Meanwhile, starting safety DeShon Singleton, one of Nebraska’s top defense players, is out with an injury.

“We entered this game knowing that probably a lot of people don’t give us much of a chance, but that has nothing to do with us, how people see us,” Nebraska coach Matt Rhule said. “… So we’re not going to take the field, walking on the field like underdogs.”

Nebraska offensive coordinator Dana Holgorsen will use a “running back by committee” approach in the Las Vegas Bowl with Johnson’s absence. Isaiah Mozee (19 carries for 83 yards) and freshman Mekhi Nelson (15 carries for 59 yards and a touchdowns) are the two Husker running backs to watch.

The Utes’ run defense has not been up to par to close the season, ranking No. 111 in the nation after giving up an average of 182.8 yards per game. Can they reestablish the classic Utah run D against Nebraska’s backup running backs?

With Raiola injured in early November — he plans to transfer from Nebraska this offseason — the Cornhuskers turned to freshman TJ Lateef. Lateef has thrown for 461 yards and three touchdowns on 57% completion in three games as the starter. He’s also added 48 yards and a score on the ground.

Lateef suffered a hamstring injury in the regular-season finale against Iowa, but Rhule said he’s 100% for the game against Utah.

Defensively, Nebraska has allowed just 141.1 passing yards per game (No. 2 in the country) and 312.3 total yards per game (No. 23).

Where the Huskers’ defense has been vulnerable is on the ground. They’ve given up an average of 171.2 rushing yards per game this season, and in the last two games against Penn State and Iowa, Nebraska allowed 231 and 213 yards, respectively. The Huskers have struggled against mobile quarterbacks this season and will face another one in Dampier.

Can the Utes’ run game, featuring Wayshawn Parker and Dampier, play to the level it has all season with their two star tackles missing? Keith Olsen and Zereoue Williams will fill in for Fano and Lomu in the Las Vegas Bowl.

Utah has rushed for 269.8 yards this season, second in the nation, and has an opportunity to add to that against Nebraska.

The tone of the game has changed from Whittingham’s final game at Utah to Scalley’s first game, but the motivation remains the same for the Utes: to finish off the season with a win.

“I’m really happy for Coach Whitt, honestly, and I’m really happy for him to have this opportunity, but I’m also excited to be coached by Morgan Scalley and I’m going to tell our team ‘Let’s go get Coach Scalley’s first win on Wednesday,’” said senior Jaren Kump.

Source: Utah News

How Utah Gov. Spencer Cox stood out on the top political stories of 2025

But the topic on which Cox has been the most intentional about changing his tone in 2025 is that of religion, and the essential role it plays in Utah’s success, and in sustaining the soul of the …

But the topic on which Cox has been the most intentional about changing his tone in 2025 is that of religion, and the essential role it plays in Utah’s success, and in sustaining the soul of the …

Source: Utah News