Something about that kid just is very enjoyable. He just seems like a positivity magnet. Plus he is banging a hot pole vaulter. Based on his attitude alone I think the team atmosphere will be really fun to watch next year. How the players interact, is fun and just brings that’s itch to be on a team again.
An all-star village for Chief: Nebraska linebacker transfer Borders raised to shine
Mil Borders makes a living promoting football players. This time he’s happy to let others do the talking.
The father of Nebraska linebacker transfer Chief Borders knows some of the stories about the former Florida defender sound too good to be true. The biology major’s sky-high grade-point average. The outsized personality that can carry a room. The unique blend of athleticism and frame that makes him a Swiss Army knife in any scheme.
So don’t take his word for it. Who should he get on the phone as a Chief witness?
He could dial up former NFL stars like Michael Strahan, Cam Newton or Dwight Freeney. Maybe ESPN analyst Dan Mullen, the former Gaytors coach who was on Borders as a middle school prospect in Chicago. Or Lovie Smith, the well-known pro and college coach who sponsored Borders’ grade school team years ago while with the Chicago Bears.
Deion Sanders? Better not, the elder Borders says — the Huskers play Coach Prime and Colorado in eight short months.
“Chief has relationships with everybody,” Borders says. “There are a lot of people who have known Chief since he was a shorty.”
Michigan State coach Mel Tucker is “like an uncle” to the former 2021 four-star prospect. Ditto Michigan’s Jim Harbaugh. Borders’ peers include Alabama linebacker Will Anderson — one of the top projected picks in this spring’s NFL Draft who, like Borders, played high school football in Georgia — and Michigan quarterback JJ McCarthy, an old Pop Warner rival in Illinois.
Mil Borders operates his own sports-driven recruiting service, Ballers Choice, while also training players and working with national recruiting analysts and selection committees for high school all-star bowls. Thus, Chief — who received his first scholarship from Illinois in seventh grade — grew up in a climate where he could be an apprentice instead of a pioneer. Everyone around him had talent and drive as a former or current elite athlete.
“It’s definitely a humbling situation I’m in just knowing you have those people on speed dial or at your fingertips,” Chief Borders says. “That allows me to take a deep breath and understand that I can do this. It takes a village to make a person be successful, and that goes for everybody. Those people in my life have allowed me to be where I am now with life lessons.”
Borders is so well-connected and charismatic that he is already on ESPN’s radar as a potential future broadcaster. He’s so ambitious that he talks openly about winning the Heisman Trophy as a defender and owns an online shop offering merchandise of his “The Chief” brand.
Between what was and what could be for Borders is Nebraska. He still has three seasons of eligibility to be a Husker and leave a lasting impact as he did in Chicago, rural Georgia and at Florida.
If a relentless personal standard and NU’s extensive support system aren’t enough to push Borders where he wants to go, a contact list packed with recognizable names is always on call to help. It wouldn’t be the first time.
“A lot of people don’t see the blood, sweat and grind,” Chief Borders says. “We don’t say tears because we can cry when it’s all said and done.”
Moving on to better places
Darrell Reid loves his alma mater. So much so that the former NFL defensive lineman reached out to Minnesota Gophers coaches last month encouraging them to go after the guy with the memorable name in the transfer portal.
If they don’t, Reid warned them, Borders would be hurting their feelings the next few years.
Reid, 40, is a longtime Borders family friend who has known Chief most of his life. Reid also won a Super Bowl with Peyton Manning’s Indianapolis Colts in 2007 and played with other pro Hall of Famers like Edgerrin James and Champ Bailey. He has seen daily greatness up close and personal.
The “pro intangibles” of Borders rate with the best of the best, Reid says. Forget about the on-field abilities, where his 6-foot-5, 240-pound frame could adapt to play virtually any defensive position or even some tight end. His mix of work ethic and intelligence make for a body and mind that are always pushing their limits. His infectious positivity is locker-room gold.
Reid wonders what might have happened had Mil Borders not moved his family to Georgia when Chief was entering high school. Recruiting business had Borders often in the football-crazed South anyway, and gang activity in the Windy City wasn’t what the father wanted for his son. His own experience — as a gifted athlete whose dad didn’t let him play team sports growing up there — left him wanting something better for Chief.
“Chief would be in trouble in Chicago because he’s too nice,” Reid says. “Not that he’s not tough, but his heart is too big. His father didn’t have a choice: He had to grow up in that environment. But the lessons he learned over his life, he knew there were other environments. He wanted his son to be everything he knew he should have been.”
The next destination was McEachern High School in Powder Springs, a town of about 17,000 sitting 25 miles northwest of Atlanta. Borders saw his role steadily increase at the large-classification program and the college offers continued to come in. Ohio State, Georgia and more than 20 other top schools wanted in.
After Borders’ junior season, the family moved 40 miles southwest to Carrollton with the intention of finishing school there. For eight months he studied and trained there.
Then, days before the 2020 opener, Borders received shocking news. The Georgia High School Association declared the senior ineligible, ruling he began attending his new school before the family had made a “bona fide move” to the area.
“It was a nightmare,” says Sean Calhoun, then Carrollton’s head coach. “We got screwed, that’s the bottom line. But it turned out well for Chief.”
The family reacted quickly, hiring a lawyer and physically relocating again another 20 miles south to Heard County High School to the tiny town of Franklin, which boasts one stoplight and about 900 people. Borders played in 10 games, averaging more than 15 tackles per outing. That December he finished second for the High School Butkus Award that honors the nation’s best linebacker.
The situation led the GHSA to eventually add what is informally known as the “Chief Borders Rule” to its bylaws, stating that a transfer student who doesn’t become eligible at one school cannot regain that status at another in the same academic year.
Calhoun figures plenty of athletes would have caved under the pressure of negative attention. Not Borders, who turned in his best season with a smile on his face.
“Before you talk football — and he’s very good at that — you see the human and the actual person,” Calhoun says. “It’s hard to have a bad day around Chief.”