Nebraska’s perfect 16-0 start is no fluke—the Cornhuskers have rallied from double-digit deficits in three straight games, proving their No. 10 ranking is forged in clutch time, not cupcakes.
The Stakes: History on the Line in Lincoln
When the Huskers tip off Tuesday night inside Pinnacle Bank Arena, they’ll be chasing two ghosts: the 1965-66 team that opened 7-0 in the Big Eight and the program’s only other top-10 AP ranking. A win over Oregon pushes Nebraska to 6-0 in the Big Ten—matching that 59-year-old conference-start record—and keeps alive an outside shot at a No. 1 seed come March.
Why Nebraska Keeps Escaping
Fred Hoiberg’s roster is college basketball’s version of a cardiologist’s dream—every game is stress-tested. The latest exam came in Bloomington, where Indiana led by 16 with 14:16 left. Lawrence, playing on a tender ankle, poured in 19 of his 27 after the deficit peaked. Mast added 18-8-5, and the Huskers closed on a 31-14 kick that turned Assembly Hall into a library.
- Clutch gene: Nebraska is 7-0 in games decided by six or fewer points.
- Shot-making: They lead the Big Ten in effective FG% (56.8) despite ranking ninth in tempo.
- Experience: Mast, a seventh-year senior, is the emotional rudder; Lawrence, a grad transfer, is the late-game dagger.
Oregon’s Crisis: Injuries, Long Frontcourt, Altman’s Creighton Echo
Dana Altman’s Ducks arrived in the Big Ten with NCAA-tournament hopes, but Jackson Shelstad’s hand injury has cratered the offense. In the three games without their floor general, Oregon is averaging 0.93 PPP—last in the league over that span—and just endured a 21-0 Ohio State blitz that turned a winnable Thursday night into a 10-point home loss.
Size remains the equalizer. Altman can roll out a 7-foot (Nate Bittle)–6-9–6-9 alignment that rivals Purdue’s length. The problem: that length hasn’t translated to stops; Oregon ranks 13th in Big Ten play in defensive rebounding rate and 12th in 2-point defense.
Matchup Chessboard
Nebraska ball screens vs. Oregon length: Mast is a pick-and-pop sniper (38% from three); if Bittle drops, Mast will fire. If Bittle switches, Nebraska’s guards will attack his hips in space.
Oregon’s half-court drought: Without Shelstad, the Ducks’ primary creator is sophomore Gabe Reichner, who sports a 1.3:1 assist-to-turnover ratio. Expect Hoiberg to blitz Reichner early, forcing 6-9 wings Evans and Stewart to handle against Nebraska’s smaller, quicker guards.
Altman’s Lincoln history: The Creighton legend went 10-7 against Nebraska from 1994-2010 and is 3-0 inside Pinnacle Bank Arena. He’ll need every bit of that mojo—Vegas opened Nebraska –8.5, the largest home number against Oregon since 2018.
Fan Forecast: What the Metrics Say
KenPom projects a 78-67 Nebraska win with an 86% probability—respecting the Huskers’ top-15 offense and Oregon’s bottom-30 turnover rate. BartTorvik’s T-Rank is slightly more bullish, giving the Huskers an 88% chance and a 16-point margin, citing Oregon’s 344th-ranked luck metric as evidence the Ducks are one bad bounce from 1-5 becoming 0-6.
Bottom Line
Nebraska isn’t just winning; it’s weaponizing close games into confidence. Oregon isn’t just losing; it’s unraveling without its point guard and identity. Tuesday night either extends the Huskers’ march toward a protected seed or plants the first real doubt in a locker room that still hasn’t tasted defeat. Either way, the Big Ten’s last unbeaten team is about to learn exactly how heavy 16-0 feels under the brightest lights Lincoln has seen in decades.
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