To start, Tom Osborne was born on February 23, 1937 in Nebraska. He went to high school at Hastings, and many considered Osborne to be a star player in sports. He was a great football and basketball player. He also won the state discus throw in track (Tom Osborne). The Omaha World Herald named Tom Osborne the Nebraska High School ‘Athlete of The Year’. That title is one that is hard to get and is an honor (Tom Osborne Biography).
After his high school days at Hastings High, Osborne decided to go to Hastings College. His father and grandfather both went to Hastings College. Osborne decided to follow their footsteps. He was the quarterback on the football team and with that he played basketball for Hastings during his college career and graduated
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They drafted Osborne as a wide receiver. Tom Osborne played two seasons with the Washington Redskins (Tom Osborne Biography). “He joined Bob Devaney's staff at Nebraska in 1962 and for 11 years was graduate assistant, receiver's coach, then offensive coordinator. In that time, he obtained a master's and a doctorate in educational psychology.” (Tom Osborne).
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Osborne was a successful coach, and this is how he became so successful. Tom Osborne led Nebraska back to the Big 12 playoff in 1997 and beat Texas A&M and gained his first title in the new conference. Soon after that, he coached his team to winning another national championship, his third in four years. The only other major college program to do so was Notre Dame (History of Nebraska Football).
After beating No. 2 or No. 3 (depending on poll) Washington 27-14, it for surely made the Cornhuskers national championship contenders. A 45-38 win at Missouri in overtime kept their national championship hopes alive. After beating No. 3 Tennessee in the Orange Bowl 42-17, it moved them to the top of the USA Today/ESPN coaches’ poll (History of Nebraska
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It honors Tom Osborne, who in 25 terrific seasons as Nebraska’s head coach, built a program based on more than winning. Osborne was named Nebraska's head coach after the 1972 season and had remarkable success and built many traditions. After the 1997 National Championship game, the reigning national champion Osborne retired, making him the first coach in college football history to do so. He left with an outstanding active winning percentage (.836, 255-49-3), an incredible mark that still sits sixth all-time amongst Division I coaches (Tom Osborne Head