Big Ten Network Welcomes Nebraska To Conference With Three Days of Programming

Big Ten Network, also known as BTN®, will be laying out the Welcome Mat for Nebraska when it officially joins the Big Ten on Friday, July 1. BTN® will offer three days of programming during the 4th of July weekend starting on Friday. Let’s take a look at what the channel will offer to get Big Ten fans familiar with the Cornhuskers and the school’s sports history.

BTN Welcomes Huskers with Three Days of Nebraska Programming

Tommie Frazier, Ahman Green to chat live on BTN.com on Friday afternoon

CHICAGO – BTN will roll out the red carpet this weekend as the University of Nebraska officially joins the Big Ten Conference on Friday. The network will dedicate three days of programming to the Cornhuskers.

The weekend kicks off at noon ET on Friday with Big Ten Welcomes Nebraska, an hour-long special from BTN studios in Chicago. The program will introduce Big Ten fans to the history and tradition of Nebraska athletics, as Cornhusker icons Trev Alberts, Tommie Frazier, Johnny Rodgers and others will share their thoughts on what football means to the state of Nebraska and Husker fans nationwide.

Exclusive 1-on-1 interviews with Nebraska athletic director Tom Osborne, football coach Bo Pelini, men’s basketball coach Doc Sadler, baseball coach Darin Erstad, volleyball coach John Cook and softball coach Rhonda Revelle will look ahead to the Huskers’ future in the Big Ten.

The show will be hosted by Dave Revsine, Rick Pizzo and Mike Hall with analysis from Gerry DiNardo, Howard Griffith and The Sporting News’ Mike DeCourcy.

At 1pm ET on Friday afternoon, the network will air the 1998 Orange Bowl vs. Tennessee. Former Husker running back Ahman Green played in the victory, and he will chat live on www.BTN.com for two hours during the show. Then, at 4:30pm ET, as the network airs the 1995 Orange Bowl vs. Miami, Frazier will chat live on www.BTN.com to relive his memories of that game. Fans are invited to participate in the chat and can send their questions for Green and Frazier in advance by using the Twitter hashtag #NebraskaDays.

The Friday schedule also includes 90-minute retrospectives on three memorable football campaigns, including the Huskers’ 1997 season (3pm ET), 1994 season (6:30pm ET) and the 1995 season (9pm ET).

Other programming highlights of the weekend include Nebraska volleyball’s 2006 NCAA Championship match against Stanford (Saturday, 11am ET), the football team’s 2010 victory against Missouri (Sunday, 12:30pm ET) and a review of the Huskers’ 2005 baseball season that featured four future big leaguers Alex Gordon, Joba Chamberlain, Brian Duensing and Zach Kroenke, and culminated in a trip to the College World Series in Omaha (Sunday, 2:30pm ET).

A full programming schedule can be found at www.bigtennetwork.com/schedule.

Programming highlights:

Friday, July 1
Noon ET          Big Ten Welcomes Nebraska
1pm ET            1998 Orange Bowl – Nebraska vs. Tennessee
BTN.com: Ahman Green live chat
3pm ET            It’s Crystal Clear – Nebraska 1997 National Championship
4:30pm ET       1995 Orange Bowl – Nebraska vs. Miami
BTN.com: Tommie Frazier live chat
6:30pm ET       Finished Business – Nebraska 1994 National Championship
9pm ET            Decade of Dominance – 1995 Nebraska Football

Saturday, July 2
11am ET          2006 NCAA Women’s Volleyball Championship – Nebraska vs. Stanford
1pm ET            It’s Crystal Clear – Nebraska 1997 National Championship
2:30pm ET       1998 Orange Bowl – Nebraska vs. Tennessee
5:30pm ET       Finished Business – Nebraska 1994 National Championship
7pm ET            1995 Orange Bowl – Nebraska vs. Miami
10pm ET          Reflection of Perfection: Nebraska 1995 National Championships

Sunday, July 3
12:30pm ET     2010 Football – Missouri at Nebraska
2:30pm ET       Day by Day: Team of Destiny – 2005 Nebraska Baseball
5pm ET            1995 Orange Bowl – Nebraska vs. Miami
7pm ET            1998 Orange Bowl – Nebraska vs. Tennessee

That will do it.

About Ken Fang

Ken has been covering the sports media in earnest at his own site, Fang's Bites since May 2007 and at Awful Announcing since March 2013. He provides a unique perspective having been an award-winning radio news reporter in Providence and having worked in local television. Fang celebrates the three Boston Red Sox World Championships in the 21st Century, but continues to be a long-suffering Cleveland Browns fan.

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