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Michigan isn't alone in supporting a strong walk-on program with a number of schools getting production from non-scholarship players.
Nebraska's dates to the Bob Devaney era of the 1960s and was ramped up under Tom Osborne in the 1970s, '80s and '90s. At one time, the team had 75 to 80 walk-ons, most of them small-town Nebraska kids who grew up dreaming of becoming a Cornhusker. In all, more than two dozen former Nebraska walk-ons have played in the NFL.
After Osborne's successor, Frank Solich, was fired in 2003, Bill Callahan de-emphasized the walk-on program. Current coach Bo Pelini has revived it, though his staff generally only takes invited walk-ons.
Michigan also brings in what are known as "preferred walk-ons," but Rodriguez, at the start of each fall term, also invites any student in good standing to show up and try out for the team.
Kovacs showed up for last year's student-body tryout and impressed the coaches enough to get a second look.
Going into this season, "I thought, 'Walk-ons don't play too much at big programs.' I figured my role was going to be on the scout team and to give the starters a good week (of practice)," he said. "Next thing I know I'm a back-up free safety and playing on special teams."
[Associated Press;
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