Northern Illinois Huskies football

Northern Illinois Huskies
2024 Northern Illinois Huskies football team
First season1899; 125 years ago
Athletic directorSean Frazier
Head coachThomas Hammock
6th season, 28–37 (.431)
StadiumHuskie Stadium
(capacity: 28,211)
FieldBrigham Field
Year built1965
Field surfaceAstroTurf[1]
LocationDeKalb, Illinois
NCAA divisionDivision I FBS
ConferenceMid-American
DivisionWest
Past conferencesIndependent (1899–1919)
IIAC (1920–24)
Independent (1925–1927)
IIAC (1928–1965)
Independent (1966–1972)
Mid-American (1973–1985)
Independent (1986–1992)
Big West (1993–1995)
Independent (1996)
All-time record614–530–51[2] (.535)
Bowl record5–10 (.333)
Claimed national titles1 (1963)
Conference titles12
(1938, 1944, 1951, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1983, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2018, 2021)
Division titles12
(2001, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2018, 2021)
RivalriesBall State, Bronze Stalk Trophy
Miami (OH), Mallory Cup }NCAA Rushing Leaders
Consensus All-Americans2
ColorsCardinal and black[3]
   
Fight song"Huskie Fight Song"[4]
MascotVictor E. Huskie[5]
Marching bandThe Pride of the Midwest[6]
WebsiteNIUHuskies.com

The Northern Illinois Huskies football team are a college football program representing Northern Illinois University (NIU) in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) of college football. NIU football plays its home games at Huskie Stadium on the campus of the Northern Illinois University in DeKalb, Illinois.

The Huskies compete in the Mid-American Conference (MAC) as a member of the West Division, where they have won six championships in 1983, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2018, and 2021. They have played in twelve post-season bowl games since 2004, most notably the 2013 Orange Bowl.

History

[edit]

Early history

[edit]

NIU's football program was established in the late 19th century, playing its first ever game against DeKalb High School in 1899 and was led by coach John L. Keith to the team's first ever victory. NIU started out in the independent scene from 1899 through 1919 before joining the Illinois Intercollegiate Athletic Conference. The team became independent again in 1925. NIU returned to the Illinois Intercollegiate Athletic Conference in 1928 and finished the season winless for the first time. In 1929 however, Chick Evans took over as the head football coach and immediately twisted the downhill fate of his team as he led his squad to a 6–1–1 record. Evans led the Huskies to continuous winning seasons since his take over, and his efforts paid off in 1938 as NIU captured the Illinois Intercollegiate Athletic Conference Championship, the team's first title. He followed it up with three more championships (1941, '44, and '46) and even led the Huskies' to a back-to-back bowl game appearance in 1946 and 1947.

In 1950, the Illinois Intercollegiate Athletic Conference, which had dwindled down to only five members (NIU, SIU, EIU, WIU, and ISU) accepted its first members from out of state and changed its name to the Interstate Intercollegiate Athletic Conference. With the exception of the spotless season (9–0–0) in 1951 that earned the team a 5th conference title, NIU failed to make a decent showing during the first few years in the newly named conference. Howard Fletcher though had other plans as he picked up the pieces of the miserable 0–8–1 season from Robert Kahler in 1956. The Huskies' had a slow progress that picked up in the late 1950s. The team's third bowl game appearance in 1962, although a loss, was only the beginning of good things to come as in the following season, the Huskies completed their sixth undefeated season which earned them the Interstate Intercollegiate Athletic Conference Championship, an AP College Division National championship selection, and a ticket to the prestigious Mineral Water Bowl which the team eventually won over Missouri State. The team made it a three-peat championship, adding up the 1964 and 1965 conference titles. NIU became independent from 1966 through '72 before joining the Mid-American Athletic Conference in 1973. The team claimed the MAC title in 1983 then went on to their first Bowl Game in the Division I-A, the California Bowl, which the Huskies won over Cal State-Fullerton. The team left the MAC after the 1985 season and first became independent from 1986 to 1992, then joined the Big West Conference from 1993 through '95, becoming independent again in '96, then finally was admitted back into the Mid-American Conference in 1997.

Joe Novak era (1996–2007)

[edit]

Joe Novak took over the Huskies program in December 1995, and coached his first NIU game in September 1996. The first three years of Novak's tenure proved to be tumultuous, as his Huskies squads won a total of three games between 1996 and 1998. Despite this, Novak kept his job and turned the program around. On October 17, 1998, the Huskies broke their epic losing streak, by defeating Central Michigan University 17–6. The student body tore down the goal posts, and carried them down Lincoln Highway, planting the goal posts in a campus lagoon.[7] University president John LaTourette personally paid to have new goal posts installed. In 1999, NIU won 5 games, and in 2000 Novak started a string of seven consecutive winning seasons, going 6–5 in both 2000 and 2001. After a 1–3 start to the 2002 season, fans[who?] began to see the fruits of Novak's labor as the team ripped off 7 consecutive wins, and only a 33–30 loss in their final game against rival Toledo prevented a MAC Championship Game appearance.

Optimism was high to start the 2003 season,[citation needed] with 12 returning starters including prospect and future NFL players Michael Turner, Doug Free, Brad Cieslak, P. J. Fleck, Dan Sheldon, Keith Perry, Vinson Reynolds, Akil Grant, Randee Drew, and Travis Moore. On opening weekend, the Huskies beat No. 15 Maryland, 20–13, in overtime. Then, the Huskies traveled to Tuscaloosa and beat No. 21 Alabama, 16–13. After beating Iowa State the following week, the Huskies were rolling and won their first 7 games. Following their week 5 win against Ohio, the first BCS standings were released, and by week 7 the Huskies had climbed to No. 10 overall. Novak and the Huskies could not keep that momentum going, as they lost in week 8 at No. 22 Bowling Green, which also featured the first ever ESPN GameDay appearance for a MAC football game. The Huskies lost one more game in 2003, to Toledo, finishing the year 10–2, unranked, and uninvited to a bowl game.

Novak's 2004 and 2006 teams both went to bowl games. The 2004 team went to the Silicon Valley Classic in San Jose, California and was the first Huskies team to go bowling in 21 years. The Huskies fell behind early, 14–0, to a Troy team that featured DeMarcus Ware, but were able to rally behind future NFL running back Garrett Wolfe and the accurate passing of Josh Haldi to win, 34–21. In 2006, Wolfe and company returned to a bowl, the Poinsettia Bowl, against TCU and lost 37–7.

Novak's final year was a tough one, winning only 2 games and finishing at the bottom of the MAC West. Overall Novak won 63 games as the Huskies' head coach. He currently[when?] is retired and resides in North Carolina.

The Huskies finished the 2007 season having produced a 1,000-yard rusher in the previous nine consecutive seasons, starting in 1999, including rushers Thomas Hammock, Michael Turner, Garrett Wolfe and Justin Anderson.

Jerry Kill era (2008–2010)

[edit]

Jerry Kill was hired to replace the retiring Joe Novak after the 2007 season. Kill was previously the head coach at Southern Illinois University, an FCS football program, making NIU his first FBS head coaching job. Kill led the Huskies to three straight bowl appearances in his three years as head coach, all three with quarterback Chandler Harnish. In 2010, Kill led the Huskies to the MAC Championship, but NIU fell to Miami (Ohio). On December 5, 2010, the day after NIU's loss in the MAC Championship, Kill tendered his immediate resignation and accepted the position of head coach of the Minnesota Golden Gophers. Coach Kill's resignation would leave harsh feelings in the Huskie locker room, as the players learned of his resignation through email. This left the Huskies without a coach, less than two weeks before they were to appear in the 2010 Humanitarian Bowl.

Despite Kill's departure, the Huskies won their bowl game, defeating Fresno State in the 2010 Humanitarian Bowl.

Dave Doeren era (2011–2012)

[edit]

On December 13, 2010, Dave Doeren was named the new head coach. The Huskies went 11–3 in his first season and they won their first MAC Championship since 1983 in a 23–20 comeback win against Ohio, while also defeating the Arkansas State Red Wolves in a come-from-behind game in the 2012 GoDaddy.com Bowl.

Inclusive of the 2012 season, NIU had won 10 conference and three division titles, appeared in 13 Division I-A and College Division bowl games (winning five), had accumulated 535 wins, and has an all-time winning percentage of .533.[8]

2012 ended up being another memorable season in DeKalb, with the emergence of quarterback Jordan Lynch. Lynch was replacing Huskie QB Chandler Harnish, the decorated NIU starting QB for the previous three years. There was hope that Lynch would be a good quarterback, but no one could have predicted what Lynch ended up doing in the 2012 campaign. Lynch ended the season passing for 2962 yards, 24 touchdowns with five interceptions. He also ran for 1751 yards and 19 rushing touchdowns. The 1751 rushing yards were the most ever by a quarterback in the FBS at the time, surpassing a record set in 2011 by Denard Robinson of the University of Michigan. Lynch's marquee game was on November 14 against Toledo, where Lynch threw for 407 yards and three touchdowns, while rushing for another 162 yards. Lynch lead the Huskies to an 11–1 record, a No. 21 ranking in the BCS poll and their third consecutive MAC West Divisional Championship. In the MAC Championship Game, NIU defeated No. 17 Kent State Golden Flashes 44–37 score in double overtime. Lynch scored the game-winning touchdown in overtime. The win eventually propelled the team to No. 15 in the BCS Standings, granting them their first-ever appearance in a BCS bowl game, the 2013 Orange Bowl against Florida State.[9]

The day after the MAC Championship game, Doeren was hired as the new head coach for North Carolina State University.[10] Rod Carey took over and coached the Huskies in the Orange Bowl, but NIU eventually lost 31–10 to the Seminoles.[11] The Orange Bowl was the first of Carey's six bowl losses: Orange Bowl (2013), Poinsettia Bowl (2013 & 2015), the Boca Raton Bowl (2014 & 2018), and the Quick Lane Bowl (2017).[12][13]

Rod Carey era (2013–2018)

[edit]

Following a bitter end to the 2012 campaign, NIU looked to build their momentum in 2013. In front of two sellout crowds, the Huskies increased their NCAA record home win streak to 26 games. Following the conclusion of the regular season, NIU was poised to bust the BCS yet again. They sat 12–0 after cruising through their schedule, #14 in the BCS Standings, and were sitting above an AQ conference champion. Jordan Lynch became the first Huskie ever to be invited to the Heisman trophy ceremony in New York, finishing 3rd. Following their regular season, heartbreak happened for the Huskies. They lost both their conference championship, as well as their bowl game (Poinsettia Bowl) to finish the season 12–2, leaving Jordan Lynch with a career record of 24–4.[14]

Following the season, 3 Huskies had All-American honors. Jordan Lynch was a first team all purpose AP All American, Jimmie Ward was a first team Sports Illustrated (second team AP), and Tommylee Lewis was an honorable mention (AP).[15]

In 2014, the Huskies had another strong season despite the departure of Heisman finalist Jordan Lynch and NFL draft picks Jimmie Ward and Ken Bishop.[16] NIU beat Big Ten program Northwestern in September and defeated Bowling Green 51-17 in the MAC Championship Game to win their 3rd MAC title in four seasons. They lost the Boca Raton Bowl to Conference USA Champion Marshall 52-23. The Huskies finished 11-3, their 5th consecutive season where they won at least 11 games and received votes in the AP Top 25 poll during the season.[17]

In their 3rd game of 2015, the Huskies narrowly lost to defending National Champion and #1 ranked Ohio State 20-13 as 34.5 point underdogs, in a game that the Huskies didn't trail until halfway through the 3rd quarter.[18] NIU rattled off six consecutive wins to start MAC play, including a road win against #20 ranked Toledo, and won the MAC West division title for the 6th consecutive season. NIU ended the season with losses to Bowling Green in the MAC title game (34-14) and Boise State in the Poinsettia Bowl (55-7) where NIU was outgained 654 to 33 yards.[19][20] Cornerback Shuwan Lurry was selected as a 1st team All-American by several outlets, after finishing the season with an FBS leading nine interceptions.[21]

The following season the Huskies went 5-7, attaining only their 2nd losing season since 2000.[22] In the offseason, Wide Receiver Kenny Golladay was drafted by the Detroit Lions in the 3rd round of the NFL draft after back-to-back 1000 yard receiving seasons for NIU.[23]

On September 16, 2017 the Huskies defeated Nebraska 21-17, giving them a 6-4 record in their last 10 games against Big Ten opponents, 4-1 in their last 5.[24] NIU finished 2017 with an 8-6 record after losing to Duke 36-14 in the Quick Lane Bowl.[25] Defensive lineman Sutton Smith set a Huskie record for sacks (14), and led the nation in tackles for loss (29.5) and quarterback pressures (87).[26] He was named a consensus All-American at the end of the season.

In 2018, NIU clinched its first MAC West division title since 2015. The Huskies defeated Buffalo 30-29 in the MAC Championship game after trailing by 19 points in the 3rd quarter. This was NIU's 4th MAC title since 2011.[27] NIU was defeated by UAB 37-13 in the Boca Raton Bowl, giving NIU their 6th consecutive bowl game loss and 5th bowl game under Rod Carey where they were defeated by at least 21 points.[28] Sutton Smith had another strong season, once again leading the nation in tackles for loss (27) and finishing third in sacks (15). He was named a 1st team All-American for the 2nd straight year by several outlets.[29][30]

On January 11, 2019, it was announced that Rod Carey had accepted the head coaching position at Temple University after six seasons as NIU's head football coach.[31]

In their search for a new football coach, NIU's potential candidates included Baltimore Ravens RB coach Thomas Hammock (former NIU RB), former Maryland OC Matt Canada (former NIU OC), SMU DC Kevin Kane (former NIU DC), and Wisconsin OC Joe Rudolph.[32]

Thomas Hammock era (2019–present)

[edit]

On January 18, 2019, NIU announced the hiring of Thomas Hammock as the new head football coach. Hammock was a running back for the Huskies from 1999-2002 and was most recently the running backs coach for the NFL's Baltimore Ravens from 2014-2018. At his first press conference as NIU's head coach, Hammock stated that coaching at NIU "had always been [his] dream."[33]

In Hammock's first year at the helm, the Huskies finished 5-7 including a 4-4 record in MAC play.[22]

In a pandemic shortened 2020 season, NIU finished 0-6 with one of the youngest teams in the nation. This marked their first winless season since 1999.[22][34]

Northern Illinois at Michigan Stadium in 2021

Expectations were low for the 2021 season following a disappointing 2020. Michigan State QB Rocky Lombardi announced that he would be transferring to NIU in December 2020, and he was named the starting QB to enter the season.[35] NIU opened the year as an 18 point underdog to Georgia Tech, but defeated the Yellow Jackets 22-21.[36] This marked their 12th victory over a Power 5 program since 2000 and 8th since 2009. The Huskies claimed their 5th MAC title since 2011 with a 41-23 victory over Kent State.[37] After their win in the MAC championship, NIU was selected to play in the Cure Bowl against Coastal Carolina, a game they lost 47-41.

During the 2024-2025 season, Hammock's sixth year, NIU beat the University of Notre Dame during the Fighting Irish's home opener in South Bend, 16-14, with two interceptions and two blocked kicks. Notre Dame was ranked #5 at the time, making it the biggest upset in the history of Huskie football, the school's only top-10 win to date (all-time 1-14 against top 10), and the first ever top-5 win by the Mid-American Conference.[38][39]

Conference affiliations

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Northern Illinois has been a member of the following conferences.[40]: 182 [better source needed]

Championships

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National championships

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Year Division Coach Selectors Record Conf. Record
1963 NCAA College Division Howard Fletcher Associated Press 10–0 4–0

Conference championships

[edit]

Conference championships won by Northern Illinois as of 2021.

Year Conference Coach Record Conf. Record
1938 Illinois Intercollegiate Athletic Conference Chick Evans 6–1–1 4–0
1944 7–0 3–0
1951 Interstate Intercollegiate Athletic Conference 9–0 6–0
1963 Howard Fletcher 10–0 4–0
1964 7–2 3–1
1965 9–1 4–0
1983 Mid-American Conference Bill Mallory 10–2 8–1
2011 Dave Doeren 11–3 7–1
2012 12–1 8–0
2014 Rod Carey 11–3 7–1
2018 8–6 6–2
2021 Thomas Hammock 9–5 6–2

† Co-champions

Division championships

[edit]
Year Division Coach Opponent CG result
2001 MAC West Joe Novak N/A lost tiebreaker to Toledo
2002 N/A lost tiebreaker to Toledo
2004 N/A lost tiebreaker to Toledo
2005 Akron L 30–31
2010 Jerry Kill Miami L 21–26
2011 Dave Doeren Ohio W 23–20
2012 Kent State W 44–372OT
2013 Rod Carey Bowling Green L 27–47
2014 Bowling Green W 51–17
2015 Bowling Green L 14–34
2018 Buffalo W 30–29
2021 Thomas Hammock Kent State W 41–23

† Co-champions

Bowl games

[edit]

Northern Illinois has played in 15 bowl games, having a record of 5–10.

Season Bowl Opponent Result
1983 California Bowl Cal State-Fullerton W 20–13
2004 Silicon Valley Classic Troy W 34–21
2006 Poinsettia Bowl TCU L 7–37
2008 Independence Bowl Louisiana Tech L 10–17
2009 International Bowl South Florida L 3–27
2010 Humanitarian Bowl Fresno State W 40–17
2011 GoDaddy.com Bowl Arkansas State W 38–20
2012 Orange Bowl Florida State L 10–31
2013 Poinsettia Bowl Utah State L 14–21
2014 Boca Raton Bowl Marshall L 23–52
2015 Poinsettia Bowl Boise State L 7–55
2017 Quick Lane Bowl Duke L 14–36
2018 Boca Raton Bowl UAB L 13–37
2021 Cure Bowl Coastal Carolina L 41–47
2023 Camellia Bowl Arkansas State W 21–19
Other bowl games

In years prior to having classifications for college football, Northern Illinois participated in five bowl games that are now considered as "College Division". They played in five bowl games, having a record of 1–4.

Season Bowl Opponent Result
1946 Turkey Bowl Evansville L 7–19
1947 Hoosier Bowl Evansville L 0–20
1962 Mineral Water Bowl Adams State L 20–23
1963 Mineral Water Bowl Missouri State W 21–14
1965 Mineral Water Bowl North Dakota L 20–37

Head coaches

[edit]

Career records of NIU head coaches.[40]: 183 [42]

Coach Tenure Games Record Pct.
John A. H. Keith 1899–1903 29 17–7–5 .672
Dixie Fleager 1904 5 5–0 1.000
Harry Sauthoff 1905 5 3–1–1 .700
Nelson A. Kellogg 1906–1909 28 8–17–3 .339
William Wirtz 1910–1916 59 33–17–9 .636
No team 1917–1919
Paul Harrison 1920–1922 26 11–14–1 .442
William Muir 1923–1925 23 11–9–3 .543
Roland Cowell 1926–1928 20 6–11–3 .375
Chick Evans 1929–1954 222 132–70–20 .640
Bob Kahler 1955 9 0–8–1 .056
Howard Fletcher 1956–1968 123 74–48–1 .606
Doc Urich 1969–1970 20 6–14 .300
Jerry Ippoliti 1971–1975 55 25–29–1 .464
Pat Culpepper 1976–1979 44 14–29–1 .330
Bill Mallory 1980–1983 44 25–19 .568
Lee Corso 1984 11 4–6–1 .409
Jerry Pettibone 1985–1990 66 33–32–1 .508
Charlie Sadler 1991–1995 55 18–37 .327
Joe Novak 1996–2007 139 63–76 .453
Jerry Kill 2008–2010 39 23–16 .590
Tom Matukewicz 2010 1 1–0 1.000
Dave Doeren 2011–2012 27 23–4 .852
Rod Carey 2012–2018 81 52–29 .642
Thomas Hammock 2019–present 57 26–33 .441

† Interim head coach for 2010 Humanitarian Bowl

‡ Interim head coach for 2013 Orange Bowl

Rivalries

[edit]

Ball State

[edit]

Northern Illinois holds a 25–23–2 series lead over Ball State through the 2022 season.[43]

Individual honors

[edit]

Retired jerseys

[edit]

NIU has not retired any number but has honored the jerseys of four former players retiring them.[40]: 150–151 

No. Name Position Years Ret.
6 Dave Petzke SE 1977–1978
11 George Bork QB 1960–1963 1983
12 Bob Heimerdinger QB 1948–1951 1951
31 Mark Kellar FB 1971–1973 1973

College Football Hall of Fame

[edit]

There have been two former NIU players inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame.[40]: 152 

Name Position Years Inducted Ref.
George Bork QB 1960–1963 1999 [44]
Tom Beck QB/HB 1959–1961 2004 [45]

† Inducted as a coach

Heisman Trophy

[edit]

Finishes for Northern Illinois players:

Year Name Position Finish
1963 George Bork QB UA
1990 Stacey Robinson QB 38th
1993 LeShon Johnson RB 6th
2003 Michael Turner RB 18th
2006 Garrett Wolfe RB 11th
2012 Jordan Lynch QB 7th
2013 Jordan Lynch QB 3rd

Consensus All-Americans

[edit]

NCAA Rushing Leaders (By Year)

[edit]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_NCAA_major_college_football_yearly_rushing_leaders

NIU and the NFL

[edit]

Future non-conference opponents

[edit]

Announced schedules as of August 11, 2024.[46]

2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2031 2032
Western Illinois Holy Cross at Iowa at Nebraska at Ohio State at Iowa Middle Tennessee at San Diego State at Missouri
at Notre Dame at Maryland Illinois State at Colorado at Missouri at Middle Tennessee
at NC State at Mississippi State at Arizona South Florida Missouri
UMass San Diego State New Mexico State

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "New Huskie Stadium Turf Installation Complete". NIU Athletics - Official Website. NIU. Retrieved August 27, 2024.
  2. ^ As of September 7, 2024, per the "2023 NIU Football Record Book & Guide" (PDF). NIU Athletics - Official Website., plus record to date per "Northern Illinois Huskies School History". College Football at Sports-Reference.com.
  3. ^ "NIU Athletic Marks Standards Guide" (PDF). July 12, 2016. Retrieved November 7, 2016.
  4. ^ "The Northern Illinois Official Athletic Site – Traditions". Niuhuskies.com. Retrieved August 3, 2015.
  5. ^ "Dogs and Canine Characters: 31 of 52". Mascots.com. Retrieved August 3, 2015.
  6. ^ "Huskie Band Home – NIU – Huskie Band". Niu.edu. Retrieved August 3, 2015.
  7. ^ "Huskies In Heaven". Archived from the original on March 6, 2016.
  8. ^ "NIU 2013 Huskies Media Guide" (PDF). NIU Athletics - Official Website.
  9. ^ McMurphy, Brett (February 12, 2012). "Sources: Northern Illinois to play in Orange Bowl". Retrieved February 12, 2012.
  10. ^ Mitchell, Fred (January 12, 2012). "Doeren to leave Northern Illinois for N.C. State". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved January 12, 2012.
  11. ^ Seligman, Andrew (August 15, 2012). "Northern Illinois looks to put Orange Bowl in past, build on BCS".
  12. ^ "Orange Bowl - Northern Illinois vs Florida State Box Score, January 1, 2013 - College Football at Sports-Reference.com". College Football at Sports-Reference.com.
  13. ^ "Mcubed.net : NCAA Football : Bowl Games : Northern Illinois bowl game history".
  14. ^ "2014 Northern Illinois Huskies Schedule and Results - College Football at Sports-Reference.com". College Football at Sports-Reference.com.
  15. ^ "Three Huskies Earn All-America Honors – NIUHUSKIES.COM – The Northern Illinois Official Athletic Site". Niuhuskies.Com. December 17, 2013. Retrieved August 3, 2015.
  16. ^ "2014 NFL Draft Listing". Pro-Football-Reference.com.
  17. ^ "2014 Football Schedule".
  18. ^ "Odds: Ohio State should have no trouble with NIU".
  19. ^ "2015 Northern Illinois Football Schedule".
  20. ^ "Boise State vs. Northern Illinois - Game Summary - December 23, 2015 - ESPN".
  21. ^ "Northern Illinois' Shawun Lurry named first-team All-America". Chicago Tribune.
  22. ^ a b c "Northern Illinois Huskies Football Record by Year".
  23. ^ "Kenny Golladay Drafted by the Detroit Lions".
  24. ^ "Football".
  25. ^ "2017 Northern Illinois Huskies Schedule and Results".
  26. ^ "Northern Illinois' Sutton Smith drafted by the Pittsburgh Steelers". April 27, 2019.
  27. ^ "Huskies shock Bulls, complete 19-point comeback to win 30-29". November 30, 2018.
  28. ^ "2018 Northern Illinois Huskies Schedule and Results".
  29. ^ "Steelers select Northern Illinois OLB Sutton Smith 175th overall". April 27, 2019.
  30. ^ "Northern Illinois DE Sutton Smith racks up three All-American selections". December 10, 2018.
  31. ^ "Rod Carey selected as Temple's head football coach". January 11, 2019.
  32. ^ "More names have emerged in Northern Illinois coaching search, reports say". Chicago Tribune.
  33. ^ "Former NIU star Hammock gets his dream job in coaching Huskies". January 18, 2019.
  34. ^ "Hammock encouraged by growth of young NIU players despite 0-4 record". December 2, 2020.
  35. ^ "Northern Illinois is adding quarterback Rocky Lombardi, a transfer from Michigan State". Chicago Tribune.
  36. ^ Sugiura, Ken. "Georgia Tech stunned by Northern Illinois". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
  37. ^ "2021 Northern Illinois Football Schedule".
  38. ^ Bromberg, Nick (September 7, 2024). "Northern Illinois stuns No. 5 Notre Dame for first-ever win over a top-10 team". Yahoo! Sports.
  39. ^ "Northern Illinois shocks No. 5 Notre Dame on late field goal for MAC's first win vs. top-five team in history". September 7, 2024.
  40. ^ a b c d "2017 NIU Media Guide" (PDF). niuhuskies.com. Northern Illinois Athletics. Retrieved January 28, 2018.
  41. ^ "NIU Football 2020 Record Book" (PDF). Northern Illinois University Athletics. p. 185. Retrieved September 11, 2021.
  42. ^ "Northern Illinois Huskies Coaches".
  43. ^ "Winsipedia - Northern Illinois Huskies vs. Ball State Cardinals football series history".
  44. ^ "George Bork (1999) - Hall of Fame".
  45. ^ "Tom Beck (2004) - Hall of Fame".
  46. ^ "Northern Illinois Huskies Future Football Schedules". FBSchedules.com. Retrieved October 23, 2019.
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