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Lincoln misery haunts Missouri Tigers
by Associated Press
Wednesday, October 1, 2008

LINCOLN, Neb. — Whenever Jim Pillen talks to Bruce Dunning, he invariably asks, “Do you still have James Wilder’s cleat marks on your forehead?”

They can laugh now.

Pillen and Dunning were members of the last Nebraska football team to lose to Missouri in Lincoln. That was in 1978, on a day Wilder ran for 181 yards and four touchdowns, running over Dunning for the last score in a 35-31 victory that dashed the second-ranked Huskers’ national championship hopes.

Thirty years later, Missouri is poised to end its 15-game losing streak in Lincoln. The fourth-ranked Tigers (4-0) will bring in their best team in decades Saturday night. The Cornhuskers (3-1) are in a rebuilding mode under first-year coach Bo Pelini.

“We’ve all heard about it,” Tigers quarterback Chase Daniel said. “We hadn’t won at Kansas State in 12 years before last year. We hadn’t won at Colorado in years. This is another streak we would like to break.”

Missouri has beaten Nebraska three straight times in Columbia, including 41-6 last year. In Lincoln, the Tigers haven’t come within a touchdown of the Huskers since a 23-19 game in 1982. Through the 1990s, when Tom Osborne fielded some of his most dominant teams, 30- and 40-point blowouts were common. Even Bill Callahan, fired at the end of last season, beat the Tigers handily in 2004 and '06 at home.

This time, the oddsmakers say Missouri is supposed to win.

Warren Powers, who coached the Tigers in '78, said Gary Pinkel has taken a downtrodden Missouri program and rekindled the excitement of the 1960s and '70s.

“He’s done a good job of winning back the kids in the state, and with Chase he has a super leader,” said the 67-year-old Powers, now working for a car dealership in St. Louis. “They’ve got a real good team, and I think they’ll go a long way.”

There were multiple story lines at play on that cloudy and bitterly cold mid-November afternoon in 1978.

Nebraska, which had opened the season with a 20-3 loss at Alabama, had come into the game No. 2 in the national rankings after beating Oklahoma 17-14 the week before. It was Tom Osborne’s first win over the Sooners, and Nebraska’s first since 1971. A victory over Missouri would send Nebraska to the Orange Bowl to play for the national title against Penn State.

Missouri was led by a first-year coach in Powers. He had played halfback at Nebraska in the early 1960s and had been an assistant under Bob Devaney and Osborne. The Tigers had beaten fifth-ranked Notre Dame in the opener but lost to a pair of top-ranked teams in Alabama and Oklahoma. They came to Lincoln 5-4 and needing a win to make a bowl game.

Osborne, now Nebraska’s athletic director, recalled Wednesday that his team was spent defensively after beating Oklahoma.

“Not to take anything away from Missouri. They had a great team and played well that day,” Osborne said. “We just weren’t as sharp defensively. Both teams went up and down the field that day.”

Missouri went on to the Liberty Bowl and beat LSU 20-15. Nebraska grudgingly played Oklahoma in a rematch in the Orange Bowl and lost 31-24.

“Winning at Notre Dame was good, but winning at Nebraska your first year as coach was great, too,” Powers said. “Not many people do that.”

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