Huskers beat winless Jackson State
His Huskers won again Saturday night to move to 8-2, but Doc Sadler is far from happy. The Nebraska basketball coach knows his team is three weeks away from a rude awakening, so forgive him if he isn’t able to celebrate a 16-point victory over winless Jackson State. “I don’t know if we took a step forward tonight in any area, except that we got the win,” Sadler said. “There’s not another positive thing.”
For Sadler, the Huskers’ 57-41 win Saturday night at the Devaney Sports Center was just one more chance for NU to prepare for Jan. 9, a day he certainly isn’t looking forward to. Nebraska takes on Texas A&M in College Station, Tex., that day to kick off its Big 12 Conference schedule, and the fourth-year coach knows the seven newcomers he played Saturday night are far from ready for that challenge. “We’re playing too many guys who have no idea what’s fixing to hit them,” he said. “It’s been too easy for them. If these guys are going be playing minutes, they better get ready.”
Attendance: 9,358
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Showing posts with label University of Nebraska Cornhuskers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label University of Nebraska Cornhuskers. Show all posts
Sunday, December 20, 2009
Sunday, April 12, 2009
DSU Hornets' title dream spoiled by Nebraska
CANTON, Mich. -- Delaware State's bid for its first NCAA title in any sport ended when the bowling team lost 4-2 to top-seeded Nebraska in the national semifinals Saturday. The No. 7-seeded Hornets were ahead 2-1 before the Cornhuskers won the last three games. "I am so proud of our team, and how hard the ladies worked all season long," said coach Kim Terrell-Kearney. "Certainly we are disappointed in coming up short of the championship, but we met our match [Saturday]. The loss [Saturday] takes nothing away from the great season we had."
No. 7 seed DSU falls in tourney semifinals
The Hornets were two wins away from the championship match after taking two of the first three games in the best-of-seven series. Nebraska won the first game 201-193 before Delaware State evened the match with a 215-149 win in game two. Freshman Brooke Peterson had strikes on each of her two throws. The Hornets took the lead in the match with a 204-156 victory in game three. Sophomore Angela Reynolds led the way with two strikes. Nebraska opened game four with four strikes en route to a 244-173 victory.
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The Hornets were two wins away from the championship match after taking two of the first three games in the best-of-seven series. Nebraska won the first game 201-193 before Delaware State evened the match with a 215-149 win in game two. Freshman Brooke Peterson had strikes on each of her two throws. The Hornets took the lead in the match with a 204-156 victory in game three. Sophomore Angela Reynolds led the way with two strikes. Nebraska opened game four with four strikes en route to a 244-173 victory.
CONTINUE READING, CLICK BLOG TITLE.
READ RELATED ARTICLES:
HORNET BOWLERS ELIMINATED IN NCAA TOURNAMENT SEMIS
National honors for DSU bowlers
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Huskers win bowling crown
Women's college bowling finds niche
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Tuesday, January 6, 2009
Huskers Roll Past Florida A&M
Courtesy: NU Media Relations
Lincoln, NE – The Nebraska basketball team scored inside and out on Monday evening, as the Huskers topped 80 points for the second straight game in an 81-56 victory over Florida A&M at the Bob Devaney Sports Center. With the win, Nebraska closed the non-conference portion of its schedule with a 10-3 record. The Huskers now turn their attention to the Big 12 Conference, as NU hosts Missouri to open league play this Saturday at the Devaney Center. In a change from the original schedule, the Huskers and Tigers will tip off at 1 p.m. and the game will be televised by ESPN2.
The Huskers’ offense was firing on all cylinders in the non-conference finale, as NU hit 10 3-pointers, while shooting 47.6 percent from outside the arc and 56.6 percent overall. Down low, Nebraska outscored Florida A&M 34-8 in the paint. Sek Henry tied his season high with 19 points to lead three Huskers in double figures. Paul Velander was two shy of his season high with 12 points, while Steve Harley added 15 to score in double figures for the 11th straight game.
Ten players scored in the victory as the Husker offense continued its strong play. Nebraska has scored at least 77 points in each of its last three games after reaching that mark just once through its first 10 contests. The last time Nebraska scored at least 75 points in three straight games was in Head Coach Doc Sadler’s first season in 2006-07. The Huskers also owned a decisive edge on the glass for the second straight game. After winning the rebounding battle for the first time in five games the last time out against Maryland Eastern Shore, Nebraska enjoyed its best rebounding performance of the season against Florida A&M. The Huskers pulled down 37 boards while posting a season-best plus-14 advantage on the glass.
Defensively, Florida A&M became the ninth Husker opponent held to fewer than 60 points this season. The Rattlers managed only 56 points, despite hitting 12 3-pointers. Dale Hughes led the FAMU (2-10) with 20 points, as he connected on 6-of-8 3-point attempts. It was Nebraska who bombed away from long range early, as NU hit seven first-half 3-pointers while building a 39-23 halftime lead. Henry led the Huskers in the first half with 10 points, including two 3-pointers, while Velander nailed three treys to contribute nine points off the bench.
Nebraska sprinted to a 6-0 lead in the first 2:18 of the game, behind a Henry reverse layup and a three from the right wing and a free throw by Harley. Florida A&M cut the Huskers’ lead to one with five straight points, before Nebraska built a 14-5 lead by rattling off eight in a row and holding the Rattlers without a point for 4:25. Strong perimeter shooting drove the Huskers in an 11-3 run that gave them a 27-13 lead with 6:55 remaining in the half. After a Toney McCray basket from the right block, a three by Cookie Miller and two more threes from Henry gave Nebraska breathing room late in the half. The Huskers pushed the lead to 19, their largest of the half, at 38-19 with 1:31 remaining behind back-to-back baskets in the paint by Ade Dagunduro and a three by Velander.
Florida A&M cut the lead to 16 at the half, but despite hitting 9-of-13 second-half 3-point attempts, the Rattlers were never able to overcome the halftime deficit. They trailed by at least 16 points for the entire second half. Nebraska held Florida A&M scoreless for the first three minutes of the half while stretching the lead to 20. A quick 6-0 Husker run two minutes later pushed the lead to 49-26. The teams played even on the scoreboard for the next several minutes before another string of six straight points stretched the Nebraska lead to 63-38 with 9:24 remaining.
Even after drilling a trey on three consecutive possessions, the Rattlers still found themselves down 69-53 with five minutes remaining. Nebraska pushed the lead right back to 20 with consecutive baskets. Henry was able to match his season high by scoring five straight in the closing minutes to give NU a 78-56 advantage. A McCray layup with 23 seconds remaining pushed the Huskers past the 80-point plateau and proved to be the final basket in the 24-point win.
Photo Album
Final Stats
Lincoln, NE – The Nebraska basketball team scored inside and out on Monday evening, as the Huskers topped 80 points for the second straight game in an 81-56 victory over Florida A&M at the Bob Devaney Sports Center. With the win, Nebraska closed the non-conference portion of its schedule with a 10-3 record. The Huskers now turn their attention to the Big 12 Conference, as NU hosts Missouri to open league play this Saturday at the Devaney Center. In a change from the original schedule, the Huskers and Tigers will tip off at 1 p.m. and the game will be televised by ESPN2.
The Huskers’ offense was firing on all cylinders in the non-conference finale, as NU hit 10 3-pointers, while shooting 47.6 percent from outside the arc and 56.6 percent overall. Down low, Nebraska outscored Florida A&M 34-8 in the paint. Sek Henry tied his season high with 19 points to lead three Huskers in double figures. Paul Velander was two shy of his season high with 12 points, while Steve Harley added 15 to score in double figures for the 11th straight game.
Ten players scored in the victory as the Husker offense continued its strong play. Nebraska has scored at least 77 points in each of its last three games after reaching that mark just once through its first 10 contests. The last time Nebraska scored at least 75 points in three straight games was in Head Coach Doc Sadler’s first season in 2006-07. The Huskers also owned a decisive edge on the glass for the second straight game. After winning the rebounding battle for the first time in five games the last time out against Maryland Eastern Shore, Nebraska enjoyed its best rebounding performance of the season against Florida A&M. The Huskers pulled down 37 boards while posting a season-best plus-14 advantage on the glass.
Defensively, Florida A&M became the ninth Husker opponent held to fewer than 60 points this season. The Rattlers managed only 56 points, despite hitting 12 3-pointers. Dale Hughes led the FAMU (2-10) with 20 points, as he connected on 6-of-8 3-point attempts. It was Nebraska who bombed away from long range early, as NU hit seven first-half 3-pointers while building a 39-23 halftime lead. Henry led the Huskers in the first half with 10 points, including two 3-pointers, while Velander nailed three treys to contribute nine points off the bench.
Nebraska sprinted to a 6-0 lead in the first 2:18 of the game, behind a Henry reverse layup and a three from the right wing and a free throw by Harley. Florida A&M cut the Huskers’ lead to one with five straight points, before Nebraska built a 14-5 lead by rattling off eight in a row and holding the Rattlers without a point for 4:25. Strong perimeter shooting drove the Huskers in an 11-3 run that gave them a 27-13 lead with 6:55 remaining in the half. After a Toney McCray basket from the right block, a three by Cookie Miller and two more threes from Henry gave Nebraska breathing room late in the half. The Huskers pushed the lead to 19, their largest of the half, at 38-19 with 1:31 remaining behind back-to-back baskets in the paint by Ade Dagunduro and a three by Velander.
Florida A&M cut the lead to 16 at the half, but despite hitting 9-of-13 second-half 3-point attempts, the Rattlers were never able to overcome the halftime deficit. They trailed by at least 16 points for the entire second half. Nebraska held Florida A&M scoreless for the first three minutes of the half while stretching the lead to 20. A quick 6-0 Husker run two minutes later pushed the lead to 49-26. The teams played even on the scoreboard for the next several minutes before another string of six straight points stretched the Nebraska lead to 63-38 with 9:24 remaining.
Even after drilling a trey on three consecutive possessions, the Rattlers still found themselves down 69-53 with five minutes remaining. Nebraska pushed the lead right back to 20 with consecutive baskets. Henry was able to match his season high by scoring five straight in the closing minutes to give NU a 78-56 advantage. A McCray layup with 23 seconds remaining pushed the Huskers past the 80-point plateau and proved to be the final basket in the 24-point win.
Photo Album
Final Stats
Monday, January 5, 2009
Florida A&M faces final non-conference game - Nebraska
Tonight’s game against Florida A&M (2-9) could put Nebraska in first place in the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference.
LINCOLN, NE — No offense to Florida A&M, Nebraska’s final nonconference basketball foe of the season tonight, but the Huskers are well into preparation for Big 12 play. Before a practice last week, coach Doc Sadler delivered a 10-minute “do-better” lecture with a list of five keys to surviving inside the conference. The first item — hard work — draws no complaints from Sadler. “I told the guys our hard work has always been there,” he said. “But the past few games, I’ve seen that we need to get the other four things going to have a chance.”
It’s a common-sense list: Sense of urgency, enthusiasm, free throws and transition defense. “We can’t control some things, like our size,” Sadler said. “But we can control all those others. And sometimes in the past few games, I haven’t seen those things taken care of like they need to.”
FAMU head coach Eugene Harris (center) and assistant coaches Reggie Sharp (r) and John "Johnny" Jones (l) are poised for a major beat down and a paycheck with the Huskers.
Tonight’s game against Florida A&M (2-9) could put Nebraska in first place in the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. The Huskers beat fellow MEAC teams South Carolina State and Maryland-Eastern Shore in the past week. Nebraska (9-3) played perhaps its tidiest game of the season Saturday in routing Maryland-Eastern Shore 88-56. The Huskers shot a season-high 61.1 percent from the field and committed only three turnovers, tying the school record. Florida A&M has played two Big 12 foes, losing to Kansas State 96-57 and to Texas A&M 67-57. The Rattlers also have lost four games to Southeastern Conference teams.
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Next: FAMU vs. Howard (1-12), January 10, 7 p.m. Tallahassee
LINCOLN, NE — No offense to Florida A&M, Nebraska’s final nonconference basketball foe of the season tonight, but the Huskers are well into preparation for Big 12 play. Before a practice last week, coach Doc Sadler delivered a 10-minute “do-better” lecture with a list of five keys to surviving inside the conference. The first item — hard work — draws no complaints from Sadler. “I told the guys our hard work has always been there,” he said. “But the past few games, I’ve seen that we need to get the other four things going to have a chance.”
It’s a common-sense list: Sense of urgency, enthusiasm, free throws and transition defense. “We can’t control some things, like our size,” Sadler said. “But we can control all those others. And sometimes in the past few games, I haven’t seen those things taken care of like they need to.”
FAMU head coach Eugene Harris (center) and assistant coaches Reggie Sharp (r) and John "Johnny" Jones (l) are poised for a major beat down and a paycheck with the Huskers.
Tonight’s game against Florida A&M (2-9) could put Nebraska in first place in the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. The Huskers beat fellow MEAC teams South Carolina State and Maryland-Eastern Shore in the past week. Nebraska (9-3) played perhaps its tidiest game of the season Saturday in routing Maryland-Eastern Shore 88-56. The Huskers shot a season-high 61.1 percent from the field and committed only three turnovers, tying the school record. Florida A&M has played two Big 12 foes, losing to Kansas State 96-57 and to Texas A&M 67-57. The Rattlers also have lost four games to Southeastern Conference teams.
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Next: FAMU vs. Howard (1-12), January 10, 7 p.m. Tallahassee
Sunday, January 4, 2009
Nebraska Huskers down Maryland Eastern Shore Hawks
Courtesy: NU Media Relations
Lincoln, NE --- Senior guard Ade Dagunduro continued his torrid shooting to help Nebraska post season highs in points and field-goal percentage as the Huskers ran past Maryland Eastern Shore, 88-56, on Saturday at the Bob Devaney Sports Center. The 88 points were the most in a regulation game under Coach Doc Sadler, and equaled the high set against Oregon in overtime last year. The 61.1 percent shooting, which included an impressive 64.3 percent after the break, was a season high, bettering NU's previous high which came four games ago as the Huskers hit 60.9 percent against Alabama State.
To get to the season-high totals, Nebraska took care of the ball at a record pace. The Cornhuskers tied the school record with just three turnovers, matching the mark originally set in 2002 at Iowa State. NU had just one turnover at the break and notched two miscues in the second half.
The 6,146 in attendance nearly saw another record as Dagunduro came close to matching the same school mark for the second time in four games. The senior from Inglewood, Calif., hit his first eight shots from the floor before missing his last attempt on a layup off an inbounds pass. He finished the day 8-of-9 from the field, just missing the single-game school record he tied against UMBC by going 9-of-9. Over the past four games, Dagunduro has hit 26-of-32 for a scorching 81.3 percent field-goal accuracy.
Behind Dagunduro's 18 points, the Huskers blew past the Hawks, taking a 12-point halftime lead out to as many as 36 points in the final four minutes of the contest. Dagunduro was followed by Steve Harley, who had 12 points, including 10 in the first half, while 10 other Huskers scored in the contest. Nebraska blew out of the gates in the second half, hitting nine of their first 10 shots from the field to open a 60-38 lead on Paul Velander's only 3-pointer of the game with 12:00 remaining in the contest. His basket was part of a 7-0 run that came just before the Huskers' biggest defensive stand of the night.
UMES' Michael Pitt hit a 3-pointer at the 8:29 mark to pull the Hawks to 68-45 before Nebraska reeled off 13 straight points to push out to an 81-45 lead on Toney McCray's breakaway dunk. McCray got free with the ball after collecting his career-high fourth steal of the game, one of 12 Husker thefts in the contest. Sadler cleared his bench just seconds later and the third team did a solid job, holding UMES to just two baskets in the final four minutes.
Box score
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Next: Nebraska vs. Florida A&M, Monday, Jan. 5, 7 p.m., Devaney Center,
Lincoln, NE.
Next: UMES at Oklahoma, Norman, OK, Monday, Jan 5, 7 p.m. ET; TV: Sooner Sports Network.
Lincoln, NE --- Senior guard Ade Dagunduro continued his torrid shooting to help Nebraska post season highs in points and field-goal percentage as the Huskers ran past Maryland Eastern Shore, 88-56, on Saturday at the Bob Devaney Sports Center. The 88 points were the most in a regulation game under Coach Doc Sadler, and equaled the high set against Oregon in overtime last year. The 61.1 percent shooting, which included an impressive 64.3 percent after the break, was a season high, bettering NU's previous high which came four games ago as the Huskers hit 60.9 percent against Alabama State.
To get to the season-high totals, Nebraska took care of the ball at a record pace. The Cornhuskers tied the school record with just three turnovers, matching the mark originally set in 2002 at Iowa State. NU had just one turnover at the break and notched two miscues in the second half.
The 6,146 in attendance nearly saw another record as Dagunduro came close to matching the same school mark for the second time in four games. The senior from Inglewood, Calif., hit his first eight shots from the floor before missing his last attempt on a layup off an inbounds pass. He finished the day 8-of-9 from the field, just missing the single-game school record he tied against UMBC by going 9-of-9. Over the past four games, Dagunduro has hit 26-of-32 for a scorching 81.3 percent field-goal accuracy.
Behind Dagunduro's 18 points, the Huskers blew past the Hawks, taking a 12-point halftime lead out to as many as 36 points in the final four minutes of the contest. Dagunduro was followed by Steve Harley, who had 12 points, including 10 in the first half, while 10 other Huskers scored in the contest. Nebraska blew out of the gates in the second half, hitting nine of their first 10 shots from the field to open a 60-38 lead on Paul Velander's only 3-pointer of the game with 12:00 remaining in the contest. His basket was part of a 7-0 run that came just before the Huskers' biggest defensive stand of the night.
UMES' Michael Pitt hit a 3-pointer at the 8:29 mark to pull the Hawks to 68-45 before Nebraska reeled off 13 straight points to push out to an 81-45 lead on Toney McCray's breakaway dunk. McCray got free with the ball after collecting his career-high fourth steal of the game, one of 12 Husker thefts in the contest. Sadler cleared his bench just seconds later and the third team did a solid job, holding UMES to just two baskets in the final four minutes.
Box score
CONTINUE READING, CLICK BLOG TITLE.
Next: Nebraska vs. Florida A&M, Monday, Jan. 5, 7 p.m., Devaney Center,
Lincoln, NE.
Next: UMES at Oklahoma, Norman, OK, Monday, Jan 5, 7 p.m. ET; TV: Sooner Sports Network.
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