Nebraska has a big hidden WR weapon Anthony Colandrea is excited to watch dominate

When new Nebraska quarterback Anthony Colandrea talked to Pete Nakos of On3, most of the focus was on the signal-caller’s expectations. Those expectations are higher than what most fans expect from NU in 2026. They’re the kind of expectations that national analysts tend to ridicule and belittle. They’re too high for a program that hasn’t won more than seven games in a decade. And yet, Colandrea did lay out a couple of the reasons he expects NU to be even better than some believe. Why does he believe it won’t just be treading water?

Anthony Colandrea sees Quinn Clark as a big piece for Nebraska football

Unsurprisingly, the Husker quarterback called out a couple of his new teammates who are also competing to be impact players at wide receiver. Chief among those is UCLA transfer Kwazi Gilmer. Colandrea said he’s been impressed with the former Bruin this spring, but more than that, he’s really liking the other players that will surround him on offense.

Among the receivers who might be overlooked by most people but could be a very nice complementary piece to Gilmer is Quinn Clark. The Nebraska quarterback said Clark will be a “big piece” for what the Huskers want to accomplish.

— Pete Nakos (@PeteNakos) May 13, 2026

He might not have realized just how figurative and literal he was being at the same time. Clark is a big piece, meaning he’s actually big. Standing at 6-foot-5 and weighing in at 210 pounds, the son of former Nebraska running back Ken Clark is one of the biggest-bodied receivers that has been on the roster in the last few years.

A red-shirt sophomore this season, Clark didn’t have a huge 2025, but he showed just enough that coaches have also talked about him as someone who could be a real impact player in 2026. Last year, he played in all 13 games, starting one, as a redshirt freshman. He caught five passes for 132 yards and one touchdown.

Quinn Clark gives Nebraska football a big-bodied receiver with breakout potential

Clark had a seven-yard reception against Cincinnati for the first catch of his career. He had a 37-yard catch and run for a touchdown against Akron, scoring his first career touchdown. Clark had a 14-yard reception against No. 21 Michigan. He caught a career-long 43-yard pass at Minnesota. Clark started the first game of his career in the Las Vegas Bowl, catching a 31-yard pass against No. 15 Utah…

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