Colorado Nebraska and
Colorado first met on November 17, 1898, a 23–10 Nebraska win in
Boulder, and began playing regularly when CU joined the MVIAA in 1948. A
bison head named Mr. Chip was presented to the victor throughout the 1950s; the exchange ended when Colorado's Heart and Dagger Society misplaced the trophy. The rivalry gained traction in 1982 when
Bill McCartney declared Nebraska to be CU's primary rival to much ridicule, as the Buffaloes were among the country's worst programs at the time. McCartney rebuilt Colorado, defeating NU in 1986, 1989 and 1990 to become the first program since
World War II to wrest control of the Big Eight from Nebraska and Oklahoma in consecutive seasons. Colorado replaced
Oklahoma as Nebraska's traditional
Thanksgiving weekend opponent when the
Big 12 was established in 1996 (the Cornhuskers and Buffaloes were placed in the North Division with four other Big Eight members; the Sooners, Oklahoma State and the Texas schools were placed in the South Division, meaning Nebraska and Oklahoma would not meet every season). Nebraska regained control of the series in the 1990s with nine straight wins, many of them nationally significant. Due to the ease of travel between Lincoln and
Iowa City, Nebraska and Iowa played regularly as out-of-conference opponents until shortly after
World War II. NU won five of just six games in the series from 1947 through 2010, though a 10–7 upset of No. 7 Nebraska in 1981 was instrumental in
Hayden Fry's Iowa rebuild. Following Big Ten expansion in 2024, the Hawkeyes are the Cornhuskers' only permanent conference opponent; Nebraska is one of three for Iowa, along with Minnesota and Wisconsin. Since joining the Big Ten, Nebraska has gone 4–11 against Iowa, losing 10 of the last 11 as of the 2025 season. Nebraska leads the series 30–23–3. Iowa holds the Heroes Trophy after its 2025 win in Lincoln. The teams will play next in 2026. The series ended in 2010, when Nebraska joined the
Big Ten. The Cornhuskers won the last game in Ames, 31–30 in overtime. Nebraska leads the series 85–18–2. No future games are scheduled. Nebraska leads the series 91–23–3. No future games are scheduled. Aggies head coach
Guy Lowman claimed a
gentlemen's agreement throughout the conference disallowed black athletes, but Nebraska denied this and the game was played as scheduled. Nebraska dominated the rivalry for most of its duration, but the series intensified when KSU hired
Bill Snyder. The teams met in
Tokyo in the 1992
Mirage Bowl, a 38–24 Cornhuskers victory in Snyder's fourth season. Kansas State never defeated Tom Osborne, but ended its twenty-nine-year losing streak to Nebraska after his retirement; No. 2 KSU's 40–30 victory in 1998 was among the biggest wins in school history. KSU defeated NU four more times until the Cornhuskers left the Big 12 in 2010. With only 135 miles separating the schools, they were the nearest cross-border rivals in the Big Eight and Big 12. Nebraska leads the series 78–15–2. No future games are scheduled. Nebraska trailed most of the game until scoring with less than a minute remaining to make the score 31–30. Instead of attempting an extra point to tie the game and win the national championship, Tom Osborne elected to go for two and the outright win;
Turner Gill's conversion pass fell incomplete and Miami won its first title. Miami established a dynasty and convincingly defeated Nebraska in the
1989 and
1992 Orange Bowl. The teams met again in the
1995 Orange Bowl, the third
Bowl Coalition-designated national championship game.
Tommie Frazier led two fourth-quarter touchdown drives to give Osborne his first consensus national title as a head coach after decades of frustration. Seven years later, Nebraska was controversially selected to face Miami in the
2002 BCS national championship game; the favored Hurricanes won 37–14. The series is tied 6–6. No future games are scheduled. The teams have played regularly since Nebraska joined the Big Ten in 2011. In 2014, the $5 Bits of Broken Chair Trophy was created out of a
Twitter exchange between the official account for Minnesota mascot
Goldy Gopher and the satirical "Faux Pelini." After publicized on-field exchanges in 2014 and 2015, the trophy disappeared without acknowledgement. It was reestablished by fans as an annual fundraiser for the
University of Minnesota Masonic Children's Hospital and the
Team Jack Foundation, without official association with either university. Minnesota leads the series 38–25–2 and holds the $5 Bits of Broken Chair Trophy after its 2025 win in
Minneapolis. The teams will play next in 2027. Nebraska gradually took control of the series as it became a national power, but several Missouri upsets in the early years of Tom Osborne's tenure took the Cornhuskers out of national title contention. After a shocking 1978 Missouri win in Lincoln—which came one week after the Huskers upended No. 1
Oklahoma—Nebraska won 24 consecutive games over the Tigers, highlighted by the "
Flea Kicker" in 1997. Nebraska opened Memorial Stadium in 1923 with a 24–0 win over Oklahoma and dominated the series until 1942, losing just three of the first twenty-two meetings. In Bob Devaney's second season, NU ended a thirty-two-year conference title drought by beating OU in the last week of the regular season. The first of eighteen top-ten matchups between Nebraska and Oklahoma was nearly canceled due to the
assassination of John F. Kennedy the day prior. Wilkinson was a personal friend of Kennedy's and received permission from his brother
Robert to play the game. On November 25, 1971, the teams met in "
The Game of the Century." Highlighted by a
Johnny Rodgers punt return, top-ranked Nebraska beat No. 2 Oklahoma 35–31 in
Norman. Sportswriter
Dan Jenkins suggested postgame "it was the greatest collegiate football battle ever," a sentiment that has been maintained since. NU's victory over No. 1 OU late in the 1978 regular season was quickly avenged in the
1979 Orange Bowl. The rivals continued their Big Eight dominance in the 1980s until Switzer abruptly resigned from Oklahoma in 1989 in the wake of sweeping NCAA sanctions. Nebraska won seven consecutive matchups following Switzer's departure. The rivals were placed in different divisions when the Big Eight and
Southwest merged in 1996, meaning they would not play annually for the first time since 1927. NU or OU won at least a share of seventy-one out of eighty-nine MVIAA and Big Eight championships.
Bob Stoops was hired at Oklahoma in 1999 and quickly revived the program – his Sooners beat top-ranked Nebraska in 2000 on the way to the national championship. The following year, the teams played the first regular-season No. 1 versus No. 2 game in
BCS history. NU won 20–10 and a long touchdown pass to quarterback
Eric Crouch ("
Black 41 Flash Reverse") became the iconic moment of his
Heisman Trophy-winning season. Wisconsin leads the series 13–5. Nebraska holds the Freedom Trophy after its 2024 win in Lincoln. The teams will play next in 2027. ==Honors and awards==