That walkon program produced some All-Americans and plenty of starters. The Key was that with the large numbers and them holding 4 or 5 Scholorships for the walkons to compete for each year. They ended up getting some realy hard working and talented kids.
Which gives you better odds of developing an all american? 80 walkons or 20 Walkons?
Remember
I. M. Hipp?
He was the main inspiration for my Cousin Walking on and starting as a RS Freshman, then playing in the CFL with Turner Gill.
I still miss playing and would've loved the chance to wash the coaches car just so I could be a tackling dummy.
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http://www.mydjconnection.com/articles/200...rts/sports2.txt
I.M. Hipp says walk-on cuts will take away dreams
By ERIC OLSON\Associated Press Writer
Jan 30, 2004 - 11:17:08 CST
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) -- I.M. Hipp, perhaps the best-known walk-on in Nebraska football history, doesn't like new coach Bill Callahan's idea to reduce the size of the Cornhuskers' roster.
"If this happens through his changes, there will be many players who never again get the opportunity to fulfill a dream like I did," Hipp told The Associated Press.
Callahan said last week that he plans a purge to get the 170-man roster down a "manageable" number. The coach said he wants the team to include only players with a realistic chance of seeing game action.
Walk-ons -- players who pay their own way to school -- would be sacrificed.
Hipp, now a 49-year-old mechanical engineer in Virginia Beach, Va., is one of Nebraska's many walk-on success stories.
He showed up in Lincoln unannounced from Chapin, S.C., in 1976 and went on to become an All-Big Eight running back the next year.
As a high school senior, he had received letters from a number of big football schools but he was not seriously recruited.
The only correspondence he had with Nebraska was with the admissions office, he said, and he's the one who initiated contact.
"I always was a Nebraska fan," he said. "Most people in the neighborhood, when the annual game was played on Thanksgiving Day against Oklahoma, rooted for Oklahoma. I always pulled for Nebraska. I believed in the tradition. I loved to win," Hipp said.
In the fall of 1976, Hipp traveled 1,800 miles to Lincoln. He said he was among 100 walk-ons who showed up for fall practice.
"When I went into the auditorium, all the blue-chippers and lettermen were there, and everybody walked up and asked, 'How can we help you?' " Hipp recalled. "I told him that I came to play football."
The unknown player from South Carolina -- who came to Nebraska named Isaiah Moses Hipp -- achieved instant celebrity as I.M. Hipp in 1977. In his first start, he rushed for a then-record 254 yards against Indiana, the first of five straight 100-yard performances.
He was awarded a scholarship before his junior season. He still ranks sixth on the NU career rushing chart with 2,814 yards.
"I was a guy who, as Coach Osborne says, fell out of the blue," Hipp said.
Hipp said he wouldn't have had the opportunity if it hadn't been for the walk-on program fostered by Bob Devaney and Tom Osborne.
"Walk-ons have been part of the the essence of tradition and winning at Nebraska as far back as I can remember," Hipp said. "It proves that even though sometimes you're looked over and not given the blue-chip label, you can still play for whoever. If you have an aspiration or a dream, you can make it."
"I was a walk-on, and I'm still a walk-on, and I carry it with me in my heart."