Sunday, December 1, 1940 DAILY NEBRASKAN By Chris Petersen. A great Nebraska football team con cluded their season yesterday, a season of thrills topped with victory, a season that will probably place them among the five top teams in the nation. Thirteen seniors played their last fame yesterday, leaving behind them a trail of gridiron glory, a trail not marked by one outstanding man but rather one which marks them as a group, as a real team. And they leave behind them another team, potentially as great as their own; for their play during the last three years has been integrated with that of juniors and sophomores. And those who are open to greatness learn what makes that great ness. It is the team, the coach, and school support that deserve credit not for credit's sake but credit built upon the season. It was on Oct. 5 that two of the "mid west's always good" teams met in Min neapolis to do battle. Minnesota's Gophers, now the No. 1 team in the nation edged out a 13-7 win over the Huskers that aft ernoon. But it was not a disappointed team that returned to Lincoln for they knew that they had played the toughest team in the nation- knew that in one sense of the word they had won a moral victory for "Butch" Luther had scampered 65 yards in the third quarter to score only to have it discounted by a heart-breaking penaltyTPerhaps that score would have meant a tie or maybe even victory for the Huskers. And then out of Indiana came the Hoosi era, not an ordinary team, to go down before the Husker machine 13-7 as Hopp and Rohrig flipped passes for the Huskers' first win of the season. It was after this game, that Sports Editor Jim Evinger of the DAILY in his column said, "We don't know where we're going, but we're going." It was in that game that Nebraska fans began to realize that it was going to be Ed Schwartzkopf who would be in on the bottom of most of the tackles during tho season and that Prochaska, wh6 caught one of the touchdown passes, was not just another end. At Kansas, the KU Jayhawks gave way Huskers. The ball started rolling in Ne braska's favor early in the game when Forrest Behm and Ray Prochaska blocked a punt on the Kansas 8-yard marker. Vike Francis plunged it over from there. Wayne Blue got the second tally only to repeat for six points a few minutes later. Harry Hopp "powered" over the goal to be followed by Petsch who fell on a fum bled Kansas ball behind the goal line for an additional score. Blue cracked over for the sixth touchdown while Bradley fol lowed him a few minutes later with sev enth scoring honors. Henry Rohn added seven points to his individual scoring rec ord a few minutes later when he carried the ball over and kicked the extra point. And calling signals like the coaches think them were Petsch and Theos Thomp son. And at the Homecoming game, old grads came back to see their team "cook with gas." The Missouri Tiger and its cub, the great Paul Christman, were put in the broiling pot to be cooked to the tune of 20-7 as 37,000 fans squeezed into the stadium. There's an old axiom that too many cooks spoil the broth but the numerous chefs that trotted out on the field that day for the Huskers brewed a dandy pot of victory broth. The Huskers, as a unit, com bined running power and scoring punch via the air lanes to sink the Tiger hopes of repeating as conference championship holders. Roy "Cowboy" Petsch scampered 53 yards for the first tally, while Hopp and Rohrig passed to Luther for the second and third set of six points after Francis and Hopp had worked the ball up the field. Then came the Oklahoma game. Okla homa, one of the big guns in the confer ence race, went down before the Huskers 13-0. And it was Nebraska who remained as the only undefeated team in Big Six conference play. It was big Royal Kahler and Warren Alfson who were making the holes for the gains and scores. And it was there that Quarterback Petsch pulled the famous cen ter around play from his bag of tricks. It was Nebraska's last big hurdle in the winning of the conference that was beaten down at Norman, Okla., that afternoon. And it was after that game in the Soon er dressing room that Mitchell Shadid, who played a whale of a game for the Sooners, said, "I heard Nebraska had an All-Amer-ican, but I got mixed up on which one it was." And that's the way the team worked all season, not as separate units but as one unit. It was a tilt of sheer power and team work when Nebraska met the Iowa Hawk eyes on home sod to beat them by a score of 14-6. The Huskers led all during the game but the Hawkeyes were no pushovers. It was after that game that Nebraska fans began to sit up and take notice that they had a great team that wa3 steadily climbing towards the top among the best teams of the nation. And it was not long after this game that someone got the idea that Nebraska should be one of the lead ing contenders for a bowl bid. At Pittsburgh, Nebraska's fighting band of Cornhuskers fought fire with fire in turning back the inspired Panthers, 9-7, in one of the most thrilling games of tha season. A field goal In the third period by Vlke Francis gave the Huskers a precious three point lead. Harry Hopp, in one of the best games of his career had scored six points earlier in the game. Perhaps one of the outstanding plays was that of Clarence Herndon when he slashed through the Pitt secondary to block an attempted field goal in the last few seconds of the game. Iowa Cyclones blew into Cornhusker Land to give the Scarlet and Cream one of the big scares of the season when they led at the half by a score of 12-0. But it was an inspired eleven that came back on that field in the second half with a smooth running machine that changed the score to 21-12. And it was a great line that Francis, Hopp, and Luther scored behind, a fighting line with every one from Center Burruss to Ends Prochaska and Preston. And yesterday, the Kansas Aggies went to the chopping board before the axe of the Husker eleven. And it was in a blaze of glory from good playing and teamwork plus the best form of sportsmanship that this team, our team, shall go down in the annals of Nebraska football history. Bull Head Coffee Shop , $ 1120 N Street j f f ' u , , f f f First National Bank :;; if J V C j , .:& $ Un.Ver.ity Drug l " If 9 iS&'-h I W ..v- I' 1 j jj L-s Lincoln Hotel GEORGE KNIGHT KWIKOUIASkA HtRMA ROHKIC Iowa-Nebraska Light & I !; Power Co. 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