Honors & Awards
» Academic All-Big Ten (2022, 2023)
» Four-Time Nebraska Scholar-Athlete Honor Roll
» Brook Berringer Citizenship Team (2022)
» Tom Osborne Citizenship Team (2022, 2024)
2024 (Junior)
Heinrich Haarberg has played in nine games this season, being efficient as Nebraska's No. 2 quarterback while also figuring into the offense as a runner and receiver. Haarberg has completed 10-of-17 passes for 101 yards, rushed 19 times for 84 yards and caught one pass for eight yards.
Haarberg played extensively in the second half against UTEP, completing 5-of-5 passes for 35 yards and rushing two times for eight yards. He led an 80-yard touchdown drive in the fourth quarter against Northern Iowa, finishing the game 3-of-3 passing for 34 yards with three carries for seven yards and an eight-yard reception. At Purdue, Haarberg had two carries for 18 yards from his quarterback position on Nebraska's final drive. Haarberg was Nebraska's leading rusher at Indiana with 32 yards on five carries. He completed 2-of-7 passes for 32 yardsa nd rushed four times for eight yards while replacing the injured Dylan Raiola in the fourth quarter against UCLA. Haarberg had two carries for 15 yards at USC.
2023 (Sophomore)
Haarberg played in 10 games with eight starts and led the Huskers to a 5-3 record. Haarberg led Nebraska in passing yards (967), rushing yards (477), rushing touchdowns (5) and passing touchdowns (7).
Haarberg saw action in an H-back role at Minnesota, catching a 10-yard pass in the second quarter. At Colorado, he played quarterback for Nebraska’s final three drives after Jeff Sims was injured. Haarberg threw for 13 yards and rushed twice for 17 yards and he led Nebraska on a 57-yard touchdown drive.
Haarberg made his first start at quarterback against Northern Illinois and accounted for 256 yards of total offense and three touchdowns. He rushed for 98 yards and one touchdown and completed 14-of-24 passes for 158 yards and two scores. Haarberg topped that effort with 264 yards of total offense against Louisiana Tech, when he became the first Husker quarterback to win his first two career starts since Tommy Armstrong Jr. in 2013. Haarberg passed for 107 yards and one touchdown against the Bulldogs and ran 19 times for 157 yards, including a career-long 72-yard touchdown run. Haarberg’s 157 rushing yards tied for the highest total by a Husker quarterback since 2012.
Against No. 2 Michigan, Haarberg threw for a career-high 199 yards. Haarberg threw for 154 yards and rushed for 82 yards at Illinois, accounting for 236 total yards in the Husker victory. He accounted for 157 yards of total offense and two touchdowns against Northwestern, throwing a 44-yard touchdown pass and rushing for 72 yards and one score. Haarberg completed a career-long 73-yard touchdown pass against Purdue while tying his career high with two touchdown passes.
Haarberg threw for 129 yards and rushed for 37 yards at Michigan State, including a 43-yard carry and a five-yard touchdown run. Haarberg started against Maryland but was injured on the first drive of the second quarter and did not return. The injury kept him out of the Wisconsin and Iowa games.
2022 (Redshirt Freshman)
Haarberg did not play in a game in 2022.
2021 (Redshirt)
Haarberg did not play in a game during the 2021 season.
Before Nebraska (Kearney Catholic HS)
A three-year starter for Kearney Catholic High School, Haarberg was the first in-state scholarship quarterback to sign with Nebraska since 2001. He was a 2020 Sports Illustrated All-America candidate. Haarberg enrolled at Nebraska in January.
As a senior, Haarberg completed 55 percent of his passes for 1,857 yards and 19 touchdowns, according to the Kearney Hub. He added 556 rushing yards, scoring 10 touchdowns on the ground and averaging 6.0 yards per carry. For his efforts, Haarberg was named the Hub Territory 11-Man Player of the Year in addition to being an Omaha World-Herald second-team All-Nebraska honoree and a Lincoln Journal Star second-team Super-State selection. Haarberg was an honorable-mention all-state selection by both the World-Herald and Journal Star as a junior, when he threw for 1,869 yards and 23 touchdowns and ran for 426 yards and four scores. Haarberg first became Kearney Catholic’s starting quarterback during his sophomore season. He also starred at the Nebraska Class C state track and field championships as a sophomore, finishing second in the 200-meter dash and the 400-meter relay and third in the 100-meter dash and high jump.
Haarberg was ranked among the nation’s top 20 dual-threat quarterbacks by 247Sports. He had more than a dozen scholarship offers and chose Nebraska over Boston College.
Personal
Heinrich was born on March 15, 2003, and he is the son of Rod and Liz Haarberg. Heinrich earned his degree in finance in May of 2024, and is a two-time Academic All-Big Ten selection.
Heinrich's father, Rod, was a walk-on fullback at Nebraska in the early 1990s.