Some of the teams' longest afternoons were
spent in Lincoln, Nebraska. Not that a weekend in Lincoln is any carnival
today, mind you, but in the Nebraska Cornhuskers, Rockne's Ramblers had a
special bugbear. The Huskers had more success against Rockne than any other
school, winning three and tying one in eight encounters. Part of the success
was simply due to solid football playing; part of it came because of the
home field hurdles flung into Notre Dame's path.
A persistant anti-Catholic specter would rear its head when Notre Dame
played in Lincoln. Incited by newspaper headlines such as "Horrible
Hibernians Invade Today!" , students and townfolk would cluster around the
hotel where the horribles were staying at caterwal through the night.
Banners urging the Cornhuskers to "Beat the Papists" and "Maul the Mackeral
Snappers" saluted the visitors when they walked onto the field.
Invariably, a few of the Nebraska gridders would carry the religious clash
into the game. Notre Damers wore medals and scapulars while in uniform, and
in the pile-up following a play Husker hands would go for them and try to
make the visitors literally choke under pressure. More than one Rambler had
his chain yanked noose-tight around his neck. Insults zinged back and forth,
escalating into questions of ancestry. And from there into physical
rebuttal. After being prodded over the brink, Hunk Anderson growled at one
Nebraskan, "I'm not Catholic, but I'm gonna get your Protestant ass anyway!"
While the ill feelings over religion were an annoying sidelight, they had no
real weight in the final score. Nebraska found the key to shackling Notre
Dame's speed. That was the difference.
The Cornhusker players fit a general profile: they were tall, strong country
boys (as folklore has it, they got their strength by hoisting a newborn calf
overhead, and repeating the exercise daily until the animal was a full-grown
twelve-hundred pound steer); and most of them were slower than an arthritic
mule. On a fast track the Notre Dame backfield could go over, under and
around the Nebraska line. No problem. The Huskers called on a little native
farming talent, and some good old-fashioned gamesmanship. They doctored
their field, slowing down the Irish, giving their big linemen time to lumber
in and swat down runners with a calloused paw.
The 1923 game was played on a field of dirt that had been plowed and rolled
- but not rolled much. It was unsure footing at best. Every time a Notre
Dame back tried to cut upfield his footing gave way like he'd stepped on a
pile of marbles. That's the way the gridiron - and the season - crumbled.
The Irish suffered their only loss of the year, 14-7.
Two years later, the resourceful Nebraska groundskeeper - presumably an
agriculture student who was encouraged to use the field for lab work - let
the grass grow to a height of four inches. "Are we going to play football on
it, or make it into hay?" asked Rockne. Again the Irish speed was
ineffectual. Again the Cornhuskers triumphed, 17-0.