Record Probability Distribution
This is based on the SP+ power rankings.
If you want the truth about Nebraska football in 2026, it’s this:
They are a 6–6 team.
The Expected Wins: Dead Center at 6.0
When you sum the win probabilities across all 12 games:
- Expected Wins: 6.0
That puts Nebraska squarely in the middle tier:
- Not bad
- Not elite
- Not broken
Just… stuck.
Full Win Distribution
Here’s what the entire season looks like probabilistically:
| Record | Probability |
|---|---|
| 4–8 or worse | ~8% |
| 5–7 | 18% |
| 6–6 | 26% (most likely) |
| 7–5 | 22% |
| 8–4 | 15% |
| 9–3+ | ~10% |
The Reality: A 5–7 to 7–5 Program
The most important number in this entire analysis:
👉 66% of outcomes fall between 5–7 and 7–5
That’s your season.
Not 10 wins.
Not collapse.
Middle-tier Big Ten football.

The Ceiling (If Things Break Right)
Let’s be clear:
- 8+ wins: ~24%
- 9+ wins: ~9%
- 10+ wins: ~2%
This is your “everything clicks” scenario:
- QB development hits
- Close games flip
- Defense overperforms
Possible — but not probable.
The Floor (If It Goes Sideways)
- Under 5 wins: ~8%
This isn’t a disaster-prone team.
It would take:
- injuries
- QB regression
- turnover luck
to truly collapse.
The Most Likely Outcome
6–6 (26%)
That’s the mode.
But here’s where it gets interesting…
Why 6–6 Isn’t One Thing
A 6–6 season can mean two completely different realities:
❌ Empty 6–6
- Lose to ranked teams
- No identity
- Random inconsistency
➡️ Feels like stagnation
✅ Ascending 6–6
- Competitive losses
- Signature win
- System showing progress
➡️ Feels like momentum
The Real Question Isn’t the Record
Because the data already told us:
👉 Nebraska will likely land in the middle
So the real evaluation becomes:
- Did they beat a ranked team?
- Did they beat Iowa?
- Do they look like a program with direction?
Final Take
Nebraska isn’t irrelevant.
But they’re not dangerous either.
They are sitting in the most uncomfortable place in college football:
The middle.
And until they prove otherwise…
Every season will feel like rehearsal.