Matt Rhule stresses the importance of Nebraska winning last year's bowl game to boost 2025 team

With the advent of some landmark changes in college football, like the expanded College Football Playoff, the transfer portal and NIL, bowl games as a whole have felt a little less special. There’s a myriad of reasons, like players deciding to sit-out instead of compete, but Matt Rhule and Nebraska still yearn for the chance to play in one.
Last season, the Cornhuskers made it to the Pinstripe Bowl, where they defeated Boston College inside Yankee Stadium. While it’s not the most glamorous bowl, it ended up being the perfect way to cap the 2024 season, and provide Rhule’s team with some momentum for the 2025 season.
That’s why bowls are important to the Nebraska head coach. He took some time to explain on the latest episode of Always College Football with Greg McElroy.
“I think, going back to Temple and then going back to Baylor, the one thing that I knew, I said it to our guys — I always felt like it was the first game of the next year. Now, with transfer portal and some of those things, it even more so is,” Rhule stated. “Football is a game of competition. We spend a lot of time — we even have a committee determining who goes to the Playoff. It’s the only sport that’s really kind of like that, in terms of our national champions. So, we try to say, ‘Well, this team is better than that team, that team is better than this team,’ but it’s a game of competition. It’s a game of achievement. The two teams go out there — it’s not the better team, it’s the team that plays the best.
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“So, I think being a part of that bowl game, going out and competing — Yankee Stadium was amazing. New York City, for a lot of kids that have never been to New York City, was amazing. I think bowls are awesome. I mean, I watch every single one that I can. I love watching people compete and play the game that I love.”
Call him a traditionalist, but Rhule knows bowl victories can help accelerate the growth of a program. It worked for him at Temple, then again at Baylor. Now, he’s on the right track with Nebraska, as he enters Year 3.
Time will tell if Matt Rhule’s team can take the next step in 2025. If they do, it’ll be tough to say their bowl victory in the Bronx didn’t have an effect. Perhaps more teams need to take notice of what the season-capping win could mean, even if they feel they’re above the bowl they get selected for.