LINCOLN, NEB.
The beasts were enormous, frighteningly magnificent. Mammoths and rhinos once roamed the plains of western Nebraska, and the lineage of these monsters, complete with fearsome life-size replicas, is on display here in a small museum at the corner of 14th and Vine.
Oh, and also a block away. At Memorial Stadium.
Sure, the history housed there is a little more recent, but it's no less revered by the state's 1.8 million inhabitants. The exhibits are labeled "Rimington" and "Rozier" and "Suh," and bespeak a bygone era -- and one Nebraskans believe may be dawning again.
"We love our history at Nebraska, no question," said Tom Osborne, the courtly athletic director who doubles as an icon of Cornhuskers history himself. "That's what made this a little bit difficult."
He means leaving the Big 12, not joining the Big Ten, which the Cornhuskers do this season. Nebraska has played Kansas in each of the past 105 seasons, the longest continuous streak in college football history -- and that's not even the rivalry that Huskers fans regret leaving behind.
"When the Big 12 was formed and we lost that annual game with Oklahoma, it did put things in a little different complexion. It wasn't why we left, but it was a factor that was sort of in the background," Osborne said of the annual Oklahoma-Nebraska showdown, which was played for 70 consecutive seasons until 1998. "Had we still had that annual game, we might have made a little different choice."
Instead, the choice was to move all that tradition, that 311-game sellout streak that dates to 1962, the "Blackshirts" defense and the five national championships and three Heisman Trophies, and become the 12th member of the Big Ten.