Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Don Callahan, Laman Leken Rosie. Okay, Seana, what's cooking down
in camp today?
Speaker 2 (00:05):
Well, we'll here from Dana Holgerson today. Some offensive players
as well, so you know, kind of get here from
Dana for the first time. His son, Logan has joined
the coaching staff as the assistant general manager. According to
his social media profile, Logan was a Houston quarterback for Dana,
worked in the nil collective down in Houston. So he's
(00:28):
got some family now working underneath him or working at
least with him in Lincoln as well, which I told
him that's probably a good side. He likes it here,
you know, bringing his son up here now is working
in as far as under Pat Stewart, the general manager.
Speaker 1 (00:41):
Yeah, nothing is a better gig right now than to
be the assistant general manager of Nebraska Football. I mean
you get good money, good benefits, but you don't have
any of the pressure. I mean, who wouldn't want to
be the assistant general manager?
Speaker 3 (00:54):
Seano.
Speaker 2 (00:55):
You got to be in the kitchen, but you don't
have to run it.
Speaker 1 (00:58):
Right, I don't have to cook anything, but you're good
to be in the Okay. I was impressed by some
of the remarks made by Luke Lindenmeyer The tight End
from Papilion La Vista. He was talking about the demands
that Holgersson has for precision and for perfection, and that's
very Osborne ask you recall back in the day when
we were machines, because Tom wouldn't let these guys leave
(01:19):
practice until they got it right every time. And his
attitude was, if they do it right every time, they
know no other way. Sounds to me like Holgrison is
cut from the same cloth.
Speaker 2 (01:29):
Yeah, he's a grinder. He's in there early. You know.
I talked to him this summer at the College World
Series for a while, and I mean he walks. He
walks to work every day. He doesn't have a car
in Lincoln, he walks everywhere where. Does he live down downtown?
A lot of these guys live downtown. John Butler, he
was they all walk to work, and he walks to
(01:51):
work in the winter. I mean, you know, but he's
up there early, stays late, and you know, I think
his big thing is, you know, simplifying things and perfecting things.
And I think when he got here he realized they
were trying to do too many things at once with
this offense too many different concepts and plays, and you know,
I think it's going to be a much more concise
(02:13):
slim down what they're going to be doing, and it
will be executed. That means at a higher level with
what they do. And Dylan and him now have this
full off season to really grow. But he's always That's
sort of what you hear. Dana is always up there working,
preparing and just coaching ball.
Speaker 1 (02:34):
Yeah, the bigger question is how do you miss Luke Lindenmeyer.
How does he become a walk on? I mean, what
are these guys looking for in the recruiting process And
he's not the only one, as like Spencer Long, Andy Janovitch.
How do you miss the missed I'm not saying yeah,
this is not on his way, this is from Frost staff,
but it's happened for the last twenty years. We have
(02:55):
missed on so many Nebraska kids and lucky that they
walked on Sean.
Speaker 2 (03:00):
Well, yeah, I mean he was a little you know,
underdeveloped at that point in high school and I just
think you didn't know for sure what direction he would go.
And obviously he's gone the correct direction of what you
want to see. And but yeah, he's got in Tangibles leadership.
You guys like him on the team. He's a referee
even over at the you know, the OSA and Supreme
(03:23):
and basketball. You see him ref and basketball games on
the weekend. He's just a good kid all the way around.
When you know, we were coaching my daughter and he's
reffing games in the same building, something.
Speaker 1 (03:35):
Has been Has he ever teared anybody up?
Speaker 2 (03:38):
Yeah, I've Luckily I've not seen that happen. I'm sure
he has, though those youth games, as you know, can
get pretty nuts.
Speaker 3 (03:45):
Something's been bothering me for the last twenty four hour.
What's that? Well, you we were talking yesterday and Sean
about how, you know, Ammitt Johnson running backs. We have
somebody that can do fifteen plus carries it and I'm thinking,
wait a minute, yeah, wait a minute. They got the
greatest New Age everything down there at then you in
(04:05):
terms of training and recovery and nutrition and all of that,
Rozer was typically doing thirty carries an AstroTurf. What is
the problem, Well, it's.
Speaker 2 (04:14):
Closer to what the NFL is now, and you know
you don't see that in the NFL either. I just
think the players are trained up at a high, high level.
They're bigger, they're stronger, they're faster, and you know, the
hits are harder. And I just think the physicality is different,
just with how developed and advanced players have gotten. And
(04:36):
it's so different in the NFL. You don't see a
lot of NFL running backs carry it twenty times. And
there's more science and metrics now behind you know, the
hits and the body and what they can learn and do.
And I mean these guys were trackers on their bodies
where they know how fast they run, how hard they're hit,
I mean everything, how many steps and things they're doing
(04:58):
in practice at a high level. I mean, it is bizarre.
It is fascinating. I mean what kind of data they
have access to the study with these players now, ye, I.
Speaker 1 (05:07):
Think I think that's one. Yeah, I think that's one
theory and there's a lot of merit to it. I
think the other theory is you got to make people happy,
you got to spread the ball around. And you know,
Irving fry that's true. Irving Fryar couldn't go anywhere, so
he had to accept the fact that Rozier was going
to get the ball and he wasn't.
Speaker 3 (05:26):
But now you've got to spread around LEP. Thanks Sean.
He's back tomorrow and every morning with a Husker buzz
here on news radio eleven ten KFB