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Nebraska’s first winning season in years made possible because of a player who weathered the storms
Nebraska's first winning season in years was secured by a player who stayed through all of the troubled times.
NEW YORK — Rahmir Johnson stayed. That is his legacy at Nebraska.
He stayed through a pandemic, when he was 19 and 1,300 miles from home and when life in Lincoln, Neb., looked nothing like what he was promised as a recruit out of Harlem.
He stayed through injuries and the disappointment of losing every year. Johnson stayed through a coaching change. He stayed when old teammates left and when new teammates came and left.
And this fall, he stayed through the unthinkable. When his mother, Angela, back in New York, grew “really, really sick,” Matt Rhule said, and the coach asked Johnson to go home and be with his family. Angela entered hospice care. But Rahmir said no. He refused to leave his teammates.
“This is what it means to be a Cornhusker,” Johnson said Saturday after his game-clinching, fourth-down run sealed an MVP performance in Nebraska’s 20-15 Pinstripe Bowl victory against Boston College. “I love this program. I’m dedicated to this place.”
During the Huskers’ bye week in November after the UCLA game, Johnson went home. His mother died. He confided in teammate Emmett Johnson, but Rhule kept it a secret, at Rahmir’s request.
“I told Coach Rhule, I don’t want it to be a big distraction,” Johnson said.
He didn’t want others to feel sorry for him and lose their focus.
No one outside of a small circle knew about his loss until Saturday. The Huskers had to pull Johnson out of the stands at Yankee Stadium after this victory to collect his MVP trophy. Athletes from his youth organization, the Harlem Jets, watched Rahmir’s final game in person. Family members gathered in the seats behind the end zone into which Johnson ran from 4 yards out on the first play of the second quarter for the first rushing touchdown of his sixth year at Nebraska.
Rhule choked up during the postgame news conference in revealing the story of Johnson’s final ride at Nebraska."