The Oklahoman

Nebraska finds new ways to lose

- Eric Olson

LINCOLN, Neb. – The way Nebraska frittered away what would have been a breakthrou­gh victory for Scott Frost just might inspire a new term to replace an old one in college football parlance. Let’s call it “Nebraska-ing.”

A decade ago, the word was “Clemsoning,” defined as a team failing in spectacula­r fashion at the most inopportun­e time. Fortunatel­y for Clemson, “Clemsoning” was mostly forgotten once the Tigers started playing for and winning national championsh­ips.

The Cornhusker­s appear to be a ways from shaking their knack for “Nebraskain­g,” especially after a 23-20 overtime loss at No. 20 Michigan State that ranks as the most crushing in Frost’s four seasons.

Nebraska gave up no first downs and 14 total yards in the third and fourth quarters Saturday night, so there was reason to believe the Huskers would not blow a late 20-13 lead.

But just as they did in their opener at Illinois and again at Oklahoma, they began “Nebraska-ing” when Michigan State forced a punt with under four minutes left.

Daniel Cerni was instructed to send his punt to the right, but instead booted it left. As most of the Huskers’ coverage headed right, as it was supposed to, the return man on the left side, Jayden Reed, fielded the punt and raced 62 yards to the end zone nearly untouched.

On Nebraska’s first play in overtime, Adrian Martinez didn’t see two open receivers near the end zone for what could have been an easy touchdown pass. Two plays later, when Martinez tried to hit Samori Toure on a slant pattern, the Spartans’ Chester Kimbrough stepped in for an intercepti­on that set up the winning field goal.

And like that, Nebraska’s first road win against a ranked opponent since 2011 turned into another loss. How’s that for Nebraska-ing?

The Huskers (2-3, 0-2 Big Ten) have lost 15 of 20 games decided by eight points or less under Frost, and that includes all three losses this season.

“This hasn’t been easy for this team, hasn’t been easy for me,” said Frost, who is 14-23 in four seasons. “From where we started to where we are right now, we’re a way better team. We’ve got to get the pilot light lit and and get over the hump in a couple of these games and get on a roll, and that just hasn’t happened.

“It hasn’t happened because right when we need things to happen, people let us down. And I’ve got to do a better job.”

Nebraska has shown a stunning inability to get out of its own way under Frost, never more than it did against Michigan State.

The offensive line had four false starts in the first half and has 15 penalties in five games.

“I can’t go out there and stay set for them,” Frost said.

“These guys have got to do it. But they’ve got to get sick of this stuff. I’m sick of it. They’re sick of it. We’ve got to be able to count on guys when we need them to do their job.”

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