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Randy York's N-Sider Blog
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The only walk-on in the 2012 Nebraska Chapter
of the College Football Foundation Hall of Fame was the most surprised
selection and, perhaps, the most proud. “It was really a rush. It was
kind of like hitting a home run,” said Steve Manstedt, a
three-year letterman defensive end who came to Nebraska as a skinny
walk-on from Wahoo, Neb., and played in 1971, ‘72 and ‘73. “I’ll be
honest with you. I haven’t felt that way since I competed. Something
like that really surprises you. It’s kind of like when Coach (Monte) Kiffin
would tell you that you just made a heck of a play. When you get news
about something that means a lot to you, it makes you feel good. I
totally did not expect it. I own my own construction business and in
this heat, the last thing I expected was something like this. I was so
caught off guard I couldn’t help but think back.”
Manstedt thought about all of his buddies who
still live in Wahoo and keep track of such news. He found it “funny”
and even “crazy” that the son of Wahoo’s mayor would call him from Texas
and congratulate him because he’d followed Manstedt’s career from
Nebraska to two injury-plagued years in the NFL with the Redskins and
Saints and two more years in the World Football League with Birmingham.
The Birmingham Americans, led by George Mira, provided
Manstedt with a world championship ring. And yes, Mira is the former
Miami quarterback who almost beat Nebraska single-handedly in that 36-34
shootout in the 1962 Gotham Bowl, the first bowl win in Husker history.
“It’s kind of surprising how people pay attention to all this stuff,” Manstedt said. “They read it (the Hall-of-Fame announcement)
in the paper or online, and word gets out. I’m not on Facebook, but
I’ve learned how many are. They help you realize this is kind of a big
deal. I always thought it was nice for others, but when you learn you’re
one of the names being honored, you can’t help but look back on all
those times you worked out by yourself. When everybody else was having
fun during the summer, you were running around a track or running up
hills and trying to get in the best shape you can. I absolutely had no
idea I would ever play at Nebraska, no thought whatsoever. But somehow I
did, and I’m humbled by it.”
Tom Osborne
remembers watching Manstedt throw the shot in the state track meet.
“Steve wasn’t as big as a lot of those guys who are throwers, but you
could see that he had a lot of strength, a lot of coordination and a lot
of pop throwing the shot,” Osborne said. “We knew he was a pretty good
football player, so we encouraged him to walk on. Of course, he became a
very, very fine player for us. I think he was like a lot of the better
walk-ons who chose to come here. We took them not necessarily on what we
saw on the football field, but what they did athletically in other
areas. We could see their strength and speed in track and their frames
and footwork in basketball. We knew a lot of those guys would develop
later on, and Steve was one who did develop like we expected.”
When I relate Osborne’s observations to
Manstedt, he laughs, recalling how he was only 6-foot-1¼ and weighed
only 178 pounds when he threw the shot nearly 60 feet in high school. “Vernon Thompson
was my high school coach,” Manstedt said. “He was a fantastic coach and
would do anything for anyone. He was one of those guys who would kick
you in the butt when you needed it, and he’s the one who told me if I
worked hard in the shot put, I could catch Nebraska’s eye with my
strength. He had me warm up with the 16-pound college shot, and nobody
was impressed. I was throwing it 49 or 50 feet. When the competition
started and the shot was four pounds lighter in my hands, I was reaching
59 to 60 feet. I was so skinny. I knew I needed something to
show Nebraska the strength I had.”
Thompson’s strategy worked, and Steve Manstedt,
the skinny walk-on from Wahoo, will be inducted into the Nebraska
Football Hall of Fame at a banquet on Friday night, Sept. 21, in
Lincoln. The next day, Manstedt will join fellow Huskers Dale Klein, Bill Weber, Ahman Green, Josh Heskew and DeJuan Groce
on Memorial Stadium’s hallowed turf, where they will be introduced in
front of another sellout crowd at the Idaho State game. Osborne will be
on the field for the Hall-of-Fame presentation. Thompson, Wahoo’s
strategic-minded coach who now lives in Omaha, will be in the stands.
Who knows? Maybe Thompson will find an old 16-pound shot, paint it red
and bring it with him as a recruiting reminder and a special gift for a
walk-on who planned to go straight from high school to his dad’s
construction business … until a better idea paved the road to the Hall
of Fame.
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