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The Kansas State–Nebraska football rivalry was an American college football rivalry between the Kansas State Wildcats and Nebraska Cornhuskers.. The schools first met as non-conference opponents in 1911, and then played a conference game annually from 1922 to 2010, first in the Big Eight and later in the Big 12.
The final game of the 105-game stretch was a 20–3 Nebraska victory on November 13, 2010. [2] No future games are scheduled. During the 2010–2014 NCAA conference realignment , Kansas and Nebraska were among six Big 12 schools that sought entry to the Big Ten Conference , though Nebraska was the only member to join.
All-time, Nebraska leads the series 78–15–2. Kansas State lost 29 consecutive games to Nebraska, lasting from 1969 to November 14, 1998, when No. 1 Kansas State beat No. 11 Nebraska 40–30. The record between the two schools after that game was more even with Kansas State going an improved 4–8 in the last 12 years Nebraska was in the Big 12.
Charles Robinson. The rivalry between the two schools can be traced indirectly back to their creation in the 1860s. The towns of Manhattan, Kansas (now home to KSU) and Lawrence, Kansas (now home to KU) both competed to be the site of the state University – required in the Kansas Constitution – after Kansas achieved statehood in 1861.
The game went to OT, where Adrian Martinez was picked off on a short third-and-3 pass; MSU won the game with a short field goal. Aug. 27, 2022: Northwestern 31, Nebraska 28 Nebraska Football
Following that, the Cyclones brought the score even with a touchdown before the break. Try as they might to recover the lead, Nebraska was unable to get a score, while allowing Iowa State what would be the game-winning field goal. Nebraska still dominated the series, 42–11–1. [5] [6]
LAWRENCE — Kansas football has a rivalry game Saturday, on the road against No. 16 Kansas State. The Jayhawks (2-5, 1-3 in Big 12 Conference) are coming off of a win at home against Houston. The ...
This game was closer than the score suggests. Despite trailing 38–5 at the beginning of the 4th quarter, Kansas State scored on the next play, recovered an onside kick and promptly scored again, and then recovered a Nebraska fumble and were marching again, trailing 25–38 with 8:57 to play.