Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Iowa–Nebraska football rivalry

American college football rivalry


American college football rivalry

FieldValue
wideyes
nameIowa–Nebraska football rivalry
imageThe Heroes Game logo.svg
team1Iowa Hawkeyes
team1logoIowa Hawkeyes wordmark.svg
team2Nebraska Cornhuskers
team2logoNebraska Cornhuskers logo.svg
sportFootball
firstmeetingNovember 26, 1891
Iowa, 20–0
mostrecentNovember 28, 2025
Iowa, 40–16
nextmeetingNovember 27, 2026, Iowa City
total56
seriesNebraska leads,
largestvictoryNebraska, 57–0 (1980)
longeststreakNebraska, 8 (1931–1941)
currentstreakIowa, 3 (2023–present)
trophyHeroes Trophy
trophy seriesIowa leads, 11–4

Iowa, 20–0 Iowa, 40–16 | mark-size1 = 7 | mark-coord1 = | label-pos1 = left | label-color1 = black | mark-coord2 = | label-pos2 = left | label-color2 = black

The Iowa–Nebraska football rivalry, also known as the Heroes Game, is an American college football rivalry between the Iowa Hawkeyes and Nebraska Cornhuskers. The game is held annually on Black Friday.

History

Non-conference series

Iowa and Nebraska first met on November 26, 1891, in Omaha, Iowa's first-ever game outside its home state. Nebraska credits Iowa assistant Theron Lyman, who was sent to Lincoln days early to prepare an inexperienced NU team to face the more experienced Hawkeyes, as its head coach for the game, though he likely did not attend Iowa's 22–0 win. The following year, the schools became founding members of the short-lived Western Interstate University Football Association, one of college football's first conferences.

The proximity of the two teams played an important role in the early days of the game, with exclusive trains running between Iowa City and Lincoln to allow fans to travel. The series was paused for decades until being renewed from 1979 to 1982. In 1979, No. 7 Nebraska overcame a two-touchdown second-half deficit to beat unranked Iowa, resulting in a standing ovation from fans of both teams. Two years later, Iowa upset No. 7 Nebraska at Kinnick Stadium in what head coach Hayden Fry called "the biggest win since I've been here."

Conference series

Nebraska has played a rivalry game on the day after Thanksgiving since 1990, first against Oklahoma and later against Colorado. Iowa became NU's traditional Black Friday opponent when the Cornhuskers joined the Big Ten Conference in 2011. Established as the "Heroes Game," it is used to recognize individuals from both states for acts of heroism in their communities.

In 2017, the Big Ten announced that the Iowa–Nebraska game would not take place on Black Friday in 2020 or 2021. After significant pushback from fans and public opposition from NU athletic director Bill Moos, the change was reverted.

Iowa has won ten of the eleven meetings since 2014, the year Nebraska fired Bo Pelini one day after a regular season-finale win over the Hawkeyes. The series is played annually as one of twelve Big Ten protected rivalries; even-year games are played in Iowa City and odd-year games in Lincoln.

Game results

| November 26, 1891 | Omaha | Iowa | 22 | Nebraska | 0 | November 24, 1892 | Omaha | Nebraska | 10 | Iowa | 10 | November 30, 1893 | Omaha | Nebraska | 20 | Iowa | 18 | November 29, 1894 | Omaha | Nebraska | 36 | Iowa | 0 | November 28, 1895 | Omaha | Nebraska | 6 | Iowa | 0 | November 26, 1896 | Omaha | Nebraska | 0 | Iowa | 0 | November 28, 1896 | Omaha | Iowa | 6 | Nebraska | 0 | November 25, 1897 | Council Bluffs | Nebraska | 6 | Iowa | 0 | November 24, 1898 | Council Bluffs | Iowa | 6 | Nebraska | 5 | November 4, 1899 | Omaha | Iowa | 30 | Nebraska | 0 | October 31, 1903 | Iowa City | Nebraska | 17 | Iowa | 6 | November 5, 1904 | Lincoln | Nebraska | 17 | Iowa | 12 | October 31, 1908 | Iowa City | Nebraska | 11 | Iowa | 8 | October 23, 1909 | Lincoln | Nebraska | 6 | Iowa | 6 | November 22, 1913 | Lincoln | Nebraska | 12 | Iowa | 0 | November 21, 1914 | Iowa City | Nebraska | 16 | Iowa | 7 | November 20, 1915 | Lincoln | Nebraska | 52 | Iowa | 7 | November 25, 1916 | Iowa City | Nebraska | 34 | Iowa | 17 | October 13, 1917 | Lincoln | Nebraska | 47 | Iowa | 0 | October 5, 1918 | Lincoln | Iowa | 12 | Nebraska | 0 | October 4, 1919 | Iowa City | Iowa | 18 | Nebraska | 0 | November 22, 1930 | Iowa City | Iowa | 12 | Nebraska | 7 | November 7, 1931 | Lincoln | Nebraska | 7 | Iowa | 0 | November 5, 1932 | Iowa City | Nebraska | 14 | Iowa | 13 | November 25, 1933 | Lincoln | Nebraska | 7 | Iowa | 6 | October 13, 1934 | Lincoln | Nebraska | 14 | Iowa | 13 | November 20, 1937 | Lincoln | Nebraska | 28 | Iowa | 0 | November 19, 1938 | Iowa City | Nebraska | 14 | Iowa | 0 | November 9, 1940 | Lincoln | Nebraska | 14 | Iowa | 6 | November 22, 1941 | Lincoln | Nebraska | 14 | Iowa | 13 | September 26, 1942 | Iowa City | Iowa | 27 | Nebraska | 0 | November 20, 1943 | Lincoln | Iowa | 33 | Nebraska | 13 | November 4, 1944 | Iowa City | Iowa | 27 | Nebraska | 6 | November 24, 1945 | Lincoln | Nebraska | 13 | Iowa | 6 | October 12, 1946 | Iowa City | Iowa | 21 | Nebraska | 7 | September 22, 1979 | Iowa City | #7 Nebraska | 24 | Iowa | 21 | September 20, 1980 | Lincoln | #6 Nebraska | 57 | Iowa | 0 | September 12, 1981 | Iowa City | Iowa | 10 | #7 Nebraska | 7 | September 11, 1982 | Lincoln | #3 Nebraska | 42 | Iowa | 7 | September 4, 1999 | Iowa City | #5 Nebraska | 42 | Iowa | 7 | September 23, 2000 | Lincoln | #1 Nebraska | 42 | Iowa | 13 | November 25, 2011 | Lincoln | #22 Nebraska | 20 | Iowa | 7 | November 23, 2012 | Iowa City | #17 Nebraska | 13 | Iowa | 7 | November 29, 2013 | Lincoln | Iowa | 38 | Nebraska | 17 | November 28, 2014 | Iowa City | Nebraska | 37 | Iowa | 34 | November 27, 2015 | Lincoln | #3 Iowa | 28 | Nebraska | 20 | November 25, 2016 | Iowa City | Iowa | 40 | #16 Nebraska | 10 | November 24, 2017 | Lincoln | Iowa | 56 | Nebraska | 14 | November 23, 2018 | Iowa City | Iowa| 31 | Nebraska | 28 | November 29, 2019 | Lincoln | #17 Iowa | 27 | Nebraska | 24 | November 27, 2020 | Iowa City | #24 Iowa | 26 | Nebraska | 20 | November 26, 2021 | Lincoln | #16 Iowa | 28 | Nebraska | 21 | November 25, 2022 | Iowa City | Nebraska | 24 | Iowa | 17 | November 24, 2023 | Lincoln | #17 Iowa | 13 | Nebraska | 10 | November 29, 2024 | Iowa City | Iowa | 13 | Nebraska | 10 | November 28, 2025 | Lincoln | Iowa | 40 | Nebraska | 16

References

References

  1. (November 24, 2017). "Rivalry results: Iowa-Nebraska football". [[Sioux City Journal]].
  2. (November 22, 2018). "Looking back at the Nebraska-Iowa rivalry". [[The Daily Nebraskan]].
  3. (August 30, 2018). "Nebraska's Black Friday rivalry game with Iowa will return in 2022". [[Omaha World-Herald]].
  4. (January 5, 2025). "Nebraska Football Part II – The 1891 Season".
  5. Mark Fricke. "Nebraska Football In The 1890s". library.la84.org.
  6. (November 12, 1893). "A Battle Royal Thanksgiving Day". [[Omaha Daily Bee]].
  7. (November 20, 2017). "Huskers stand tall over Hawkeyes in all-time series". [[Omaha World-Herald]].
  8. (September 22, 1979). "NU-Iowa Grit Gets Standing Ovation". [[Omaha World-Herald]].
  9. (September 12, 1981). "Hawkeyes Paint the Big Red Blue". [[Omaha World-Herald]].
  10. Steven Elonich. (November 26, 2019). "8 quick facts about Husker football's history on Black Friday". [[Omaha World-Herald]].
  11. (August 1, 2024). "Pioneer to Honor Local Heroes as Title Sponsor in Iowa-Nebraska "Heroes Game"".
  12. Parker Gabriel. (September 12, 2017). "NU-Iowa leaving Black Friday after 2019; rivalry rotation likely". [[Lincoln Journal Star]].
  13. Steven Sipple. (May 6, 2018). "Moos says of NU-Iowa becoming permanent on Black Friday: 'Not quite there but close'". [[Lincoln Journal Star]].
  14. Chad Leistikow. (February 5, 2021). "Revised 2021 Big Ten football schedule returns Iowa-Nebraska to Black Friday".
  15. Connor O'Gara. (November 27, 2020). "The curse of Bo Pelini? Nebraska's 6th consecutive loss to Iowa puts things into perspective".
  16. (October 3, 2023). "Big Ten Conference Announces Future Football Schedule Formats for 2024-28".
  17. "Iowa Hawkeyes vs. Nebraska Cornhuskers football series history".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Iowa–Nebraska football rivalry — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report