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This is how rivalries begin and flourish. Not with corporate sponsorship or kitschy names or forced trophies. A great game in extraordinary circumstances, and in the way of Nebraska-Oklahoma, it was full of mutual respect, rather than hatred.
Its debatable. I'd say most of the public, including myself, relish in the violent hatred driven rivalries. Most teams in the conference are your "friendly, respected rivals" except for that one, that when they come to town, its not a game. It's a battle in a never ending war. I don't know that you guys get that as Husker fans because your main rivals were who? OU. You have Kansas in between and even then you guys are in the northern bit of NE so you wouldn't see them much. Ohio State and Michigan hate each other because they compete for the same kids, their fans live and work with each other everyday. Same with WI-MN, MSU-UM, or any of the other really great rivalries in college.
You won't get that with PSU. I think it will come out of Iowa but at any rate it has to come out of history, the best ones are within states or between two bordering state schools. Look at Clemson and Carolina, those schools practically went to war in 1900 or so and the governor had to call in the guard. I love it :cheers
I agree that inventing rivalries is stupid though.
I understand that there are other great rivalries that have a foundation built on hatred. What you don't understand is that kind of rivalry doesn't fit Nebraska football, it just doesn't fit the way the fans approach the program or the game.
I'll admit that we have never really had a border war like Nebraska-Iowa could be, but I don't think many Nebraska fans value that very much. We value championships, long-term success, great games with championship implications, and we value mutual respect and sportsmanship above hatred.
Anyways, I understand that there are other rivalries built on hatred, like long, never-ending family feuds. Nebraska is different though. I think most Nebraska fans (at least the fans old enough to remember the Nebraska-Oklahoma rivalry) much prefer a rivalry built on respect, built on great games played year in and year out with championship implications, and where you feel that rival is the most worthy adversary you face each year, and you're grateful to go against them because of it.