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1944 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team

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{{{year}}} [[{{{team}}} football]]
1944 Big Six Conference football standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   T W   L   T
Oklahoma $ 4 0 1 6 3 1
Iowa State 3 1 1 6 1 1
Missouri 2 1 2 3 5 2
Nebraska 2 3 0 2 6 0
Kansas 1 4 0 3 6 1
Kansas State 1 4 0 2 5 2
  • $ – Conference champion

The 1944 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team was the representative of the University of Nebraska and member of the Big 6 Conference in the 1944 college football season. The team was coached by Adolph J. Lewandowski and played their home games at Memorial Stadium in Lincoln, Nebraska.

Before the season

World War II was dragging on, with the United States now in its third year since being drawn into the conflict. College sports programs across the nation were shorthanded with so many young men enlisting into the armed forces, while all of the "service teams" that had entered the college football landscape, fielded by the branches of the armed forces, had the advantage of adding former players to their rosters. This gave the service teams the ability to concentrate the best former players into their programs, and at the end of 1944, service teams made up half of all of the ranked teams. It was in this environment of upheaval and disparity that a struggling Nebraska football team that had never previously suffered consecutive losing seasons was now returning from three losing campaigns in a row. Head coach Lewandowski was back for his second year, while also serving as Nebraska's athletic director, to see if he could reverse the fortunes of the Cornhusker football squad.

Schedule

Date Opponent Rank# Site Result Attendance
September 30* at Minnesota Memorial StadiumMinneapolis, Minnesota L 0–39
21,876
October 14* at #19 Indiana Memorial StadiumBloomington, Indiana L 0–54  
October 21 at Kansas Memorial StadiumLawrence, Kansas L 0–20  
October 28† Missouri Memorial StadiumLincoln, Nebraska W 24–20
8,000
November 4* at Iowa Iowa StadiumIowa City, Iowa L 6–27  
November 11 Iowa State Memorial Stadium • Lincoln, Nebraska L 6–19
7,263
November 25 Kansas State Memorial Stadium • Lincoln, Nebraska W 35–0  
December 2 vs. Oklahoma Oklahoma City, Oklahoma L 12–31  
*Non-Conference Game Homecoming #Rankings from AP

[1]

Roster

Berkey, Duane C
Berquist, William G
Betz, Bill #13 HB
Bryant, Jack #34 HB
Buckley, Winton #67 HB
Burroughs, Bob QB
Colerick, Lyle #19 E
Collopy, Frank FB
Dedrick, Jack QB
Denker, Bill PLAYER
Dermann, Kenneth G
Doyle, Keith C
Ebers, Merle C
Fish, Wayne #33 PLAYER
Fowler, Dave QB
Gissler, Bert #10 E
Gradoville, Edward #26 HB
Grundman, Allen G
Hazard, Frank G
Hollins, Kenneth FB
Hoover, John E
Johnson, John T
Kasdan, Bernie G
Kenyon, Francis FB
Kessler, Joe #12 QB
Knight, Charles #15 HB
Koch, Dick HB
Koenig, Robert E
Kops, Lyle T
Kovanda, Keith T

 

Lamberty, Dick HB
Legino, Ed PLAYER
Lorenz, Fred T
Lowry, Bob T
Major, Ralph #17 E
Martz, Stanley G
Mauser, Murl HB
McDowell, Ben E
Megill, Larry PLAYER
Mountford, Roger #39 FB
Nelson, Douglas HB
Ostenberg, Clyde C
Pegler, Don G
Perdew, Bill HB
Peterson, Charles T
Pollat, Bruce T
Price, Bernard G
Robb, Owen PLAYER
Schleiger, Robert E
Scoville, Bob E
Selzer, John #29 HB
Smallfoot, Bob PLAYER
Stein, Ken PLAYER
Stevenson, John G
Stoetzel, Pete G
Strahan, Jim #27 HB
Strickland, Ed T
Tyson, Ben C
Wolf, Dean PLAYER
Yanney, Jim PLAYER

[2]

Coaching staff

Name Title First year
in this position
Years at Nebraska Alma Mater
Adolph J. Lewandowski Head Coach 1943 1937–1944 Nebraska
Charles Armstrong 1937 1937–1942, 1944
Arthur Sprague 1943 1943–1944
Jerry Adam 1944 1944

[3][4]

Game notes

Minnesota

Nebraska at Minnesota
1 2Total
Nebraska 0
Minnesota 39

The new season did not start off on a good note, as Nebraska was completely unable to stop the Golden Gophers, who rolled over the Cornhuskers to post 33 unanswered points in the first half. It may have been that Nebraska's halftime adjustments slowed down Minnesota's assault, or perhaps the Gophers simply backed off, but even though Minnesota's scoring slowed in the second half, the Cornhuskers never were able to put up points. For the second year in a row, Minnesota handed Nebraska an opening shutout loss, the 20th Golden Gopher victory over the Cornhuskers and improving in the series to 20–4–2, setting the tone for what looked like might be another year of heartbreak.[5][6]

Indiana

Nebraska at #19 Indiana
1 2Total
Nebraska 0
• #19 Indiana 54

Nebraska's only bright spot in this game was a single 55-yard running play in a contest that was otherwise all Indiana. The Hoosiers kept the Cornhuskers off the scoreboard even as they repeated their record-setting 54 points scored on Nebraska, which was the fourth time in two years that the 54 mark was hung on the Cornhuskers and was a repeat of Nebraska's worst-ever defeat, matching the 54–0 shutout handed down by Minnesota last year. With four wins in a row against Nebraska so far, Indiana finally took the series lead between the teams at 4–3–2.[5][7]

Kansas

Nebraska at Kansas
1 2Total
Nebraska 0
Kansas 20

The 1944 loss to the Kansas Jayhawks was a particularly painful and heartbreaking loss. As the Cornhuskers were held scoreless for the third game in a row to open the season, a dubious mark that had never before fallen upon Nebraska, worse still was the end of Nebraska's 27-game undefeated streak against the Jayhawks that began with a 13–3 Nebraska victory in 1917. It was also the first time that Kansas had defeated the Cornhuskers in Lincoln since an 18–4 victory dating all the way back to 1896, making this one of the darkest days in the history of the program. This was the 10th win for the Jayhawks over Nebraska all time, though they still lagged in the series 10–38–3.[5][8]

Missouri

Missouri at Nebraska
1 2Total
Missouri 20
Nebraska 24

The previous loss to Kansas marked one of the lowest points in program history, but Nebraska overcame any discouragement remaining and unexpectedly sprung to life against a heavily favored Missouri team in front of a small homecoming crowd in Lincoln. Playing somewhat like the Nebraska of old, several big plays went in favor of the Cornhuskers and allowed them to take their first victory of 1944, in what would be the brightest spot of the season. As Nebraska improved in the series to 24–11–3, the Missouri-Nebraska Bell should have been returned to Lincoln after its three-year stint in Columbia. However, amidst the weariness of the war overhanging the nation, the trading of the bell to the winner of this series was overlooked, and the bell passed for a short time into forgotten history.[5][9]

Iowa

Nebraska at Iowa
1 2Total
Nebraska 6
Iowa 27

Nebraska was unable to score in this contest until within the final five minutes, as another loss was added to the 1944 record. Adding insult to injury was that one of the scores tallied against the Cornhuskers was put over by a former Nebraska player now on the Iowa roster. Though they avoided the shutout, the Cornhuskers gave up what would be Iowa's 10th win in the series, allowing them to chip away at Nebraska's 20–10–3 series lead.[5][10]

Iowa State

Iowa State at Nebraska
1 2Total
Iowa State 19
Nebraska 6
  • Date: November 11
  • Location: Memorial Stadium • Lincoln, Nebraska
  • Game attendance: 7,263

The Cornhuskers were having enough trouble trying to remain competitive, but entered this game with three starters out with injuries, and then lost another in the first quarter of this game. Unsurprisingly, with the odds stacked against them, the day ended with another Nebraska loss as the Cyclones added another win to their 7–31–1 series record.[5][10]

Kansas State

Kansas State at Nebraska
1 2Total
Kansas State 0
Nebraska 35
  • Date: November 25
  • Location: Memorial Stadium • Lincoln, Nebraska
  • Game weather: Rain/Snow

If fortunes for Nebraska were down, then certainly it was telling about the Kansas State program that the Wildcats could allow the Cornhuskers to hang a 35–0 shutout defeat on them. It was the most points scored by Nebraska since a 53–2 defeat of Kansas in 1940, and the win helped the struggling Cornhuskers improve to 23–4–2, to stay well ahead of Kansas State in the series.[5][10]

Oklahoma

Nebraska vs. Oklahoma
1 234Total
Nebraska 0 0012 12
Oklahoma 7 1806 31

Oklahoma launched into a strong 25–0 lead by the half to put the game essentially out of reach, but Nebraska made a respectable effort in the final quarter by outscoring the Sooners 12–6. Oklahoma's victory was their second in a row over Nebraska, which moved them forward slightly in the series to 5–16–3.[5][10]

After the season

Nebraska continued to fall into a tailspin, with each year seeming no better, and sometimes worse, than the last. The Cornhuskers had now strung together four straight losing seasons, a bleak picture for a program not used to having even one occasional isolated losing campaign. Coach Lewandowski repeated his 1943 overall and league records in 1944, bringing his overall Nebraska career total to just 4–12–0 (.250), with a slightly better Big 6 total of 4–6–0 (.400). Nebraska's overall program now stood at 305–122–31 (.700) with a conference record of 111–25–11 (.793).

Coach Lewandowski, in his role as athletic director, decided that change was needed in the program, and swept the entire coaching staff out of the program, including himself. Brought aboard following 1944 was storied football coach George Clark, a player for two colleges and then two military teams prior to starting his coaching career in 1916. Clark had also served in both world wars, and his appointment at Nebraska followed his return home to the United States.

To his credit, Coach Lewandowski's leadership allowed Nebraska football to continue uninterrupted through World War II even as numerous other schools suspended their programs for a time. With limited resources, sparse rosters, through rationing and travel restrictions, his guidance kept the program's continuous history intact.

References

  1. ^ "Football - 1944 Schedule/Results". University of Nebraska-Lincoln Athletics Department. Retrieved 2010-02-28.
  2. ^ "Nebraska Football 1944 Roster". University of Nebraska-Lincoln Athletics Department. Retrieved 2010-02-28.
  3. ^ "Nebraska head coaches". HuskerMax. Archived from the original on 8 March 2010. Retrieved 2010-02-28. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  4. ^ "Assistant coaches". HuskerMax. Retrieved 2010-02-28.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h "The 1940s". HuskerMax. Retrieved 2010-02-28.
  6. ^ "1945 Cornhusker - University of Nebraska Yearbook (Page 169)". University of Nebraska–Lincoln Libraries. Retrieved 2010-02-28.
  7. ^ "1945 Cornhusker - University of Nebraska Yearbook (Page 171)". University of Nebraska–Lincoln Libraries. Retrieved 2010-02-28.
  8. ^ "1945 Cornhusker - University of Nebraska Yearbook (Page 173)". University of Nebraska–Lincoln Libraries. Retrieved 2010-02-28.
  9. ^ "1945 Cornhusker - University of Nebraska Yearbook (Page 172)". University of Nebraska–Lincoln Libraries. Retrieved 2010-02-28.
  10. ^ a b c d "1945 Cornhusker - University of Nebraska Yearbook (Page 170)". University of Nebraska–Lincoln Libraries. Retrieved 2010-02-28.