Page 4 The Daily Nebraskan Friday, February 12, 1965 Good Free Throw Shooting, Team Play Point To More Cornhusker Victories 57. an rx n. By Bob Samuefson Scott And Millsap Out Thinclads Host Buffs Nebraska's star - studded track tear meets a very fine Colorado club here Saturday minus two of its stars, Pete Scott, and Tom Millsap. Scott became scholasticly inelegible just after his fine mile run in Nebraska's easy victory over Drake and Kan sas State last Saturday. Sprinter Millsap wrenched his knee in an intramural basketball game and is out indefinitly. This means Hus ker coach Frank Sevigne will have to look elsewhere for outstanding performances in order to garner points against Colorado. The Buffaloes had an easy time disposing of Wyoming 72-32 last week. Colorado also sports hurdler I deluxe Jim Miller who will ! undoubtedly put a chink in ithe armour of the heretofore j unbeaten Husker hurdle corps, i This battle will certainly make the hurdle events a top j attraction. i Other high spots will include j several possibly record break ing performances. Husker soph Charlie Greene is a good bet to greak the meet record of 6.2 seconds in the 60 yard dash., and Colorado weight man Barry King will probably surpass the meet mark of 54-7',2 in the shot put. Other records in jeopardy are the low hurdle mark of 6.7 seconds, and the mile re lav time of 3.21.4. DAILY NEBRASKAN Room 51 Student Union SUBSCRIPTION $3.00 NAME ADDRESS cur Keep in touch Graduating Seniors In tomorrow's game with Colorado, Nebraska will start four sophomores and one junior if Brice Pearson is able to recover sufficiently from his ankle injury. Starting four sophomores is highly unusual to say the least, but in the Big Eight it is virtually unheard of. Be sides Pearson. Fred Hare, Nate Branch and Willie Camp bell are the other sophomores. Grant Simmons is t h e lone upper-classman. It would seem that Coach Joe Cipriano is pushing a youth movement at the expense of basketball victories now, in hopes that he will receive dividends in the future after the boys have gained seasoning. But this, I feel, is not the ease. Cipriano is merely using his best ball players. Whenever a team is forced to rely heavily upon so many of the younger players, the juniors and seniors who have been around for a couple of years naturally resent the fact that they are not getting to play as much as the younger and more inexperienced players. This makes the possibilities for dissention on a team ever present and it also causes sleepless nights for coaches. A case of upper-class apathy is pointed up by the re cent loss of Bob Antalov due to the "breaking of training rules." In recent games the emergence of Pearson was fairly parallel to the decline of Antalov. and against Colorado at Boulder, Antalov fouled out while playing cry little. It appeared recently, that Big Bob, who played so brilliantly at the first of the season, had lost his desire to play ball. The fine upset of Kansas State may be just the shot in the arm and the boost in confidece that the young team needs which leads us to the subject of Saturday's Colorado game. In Boulder the Buffaloes shot thirty-seven freethrows; the Huskers shot sixteen. Although Nebraska outscored Colorado from the field, they were beaten ten points. This time it is Nebraska who will have the advantage of the home court and the home crowd cheering the Huskers on to victory. The referees should be prone to more favorable calls. Women's Basketball Tourney Scheduled At East Campus The annual Ag College Wo men's Basketball Tournament will be held today and Sun day, February 21. The games will begin at 7:00 p.m. in the East campus gym. Teams from Fedde. Burr East, and Love Memor- ial Hall will participate. This event is sponsored by the Ag Y.MCA. Admission will be 25c per person. j Many Sports Offered To University Males ! The Athletic Department offers every man attending the University an opportun ity to try out for varsity or freshman squads. University varsity teams compete with other schools in baseball, basketball, football, golf, gymnastics, swimming, tennis, riflery. track and wrestling. By Bob Gibson Assistant Sports Editor "Our free throw shooting made the difference." Thus the main ingredient of the Ne braska win over Kansas State was summed up by Husker basketball coach Joe Cipria no. The game was very much the same as many of t h e team's previous encounters, but this time however, Ne braska did not wilt even un der the extreme pressure of the yelling and cheering that the Kansas State fans pro duced. This game was truly a team effort, despite the fact that the team's strength was at a low ebb for the season. Fred Hare's emergence as a playmaker was a great help to the team as was Jerry Spears' outstanding work on defense. Willie Campbell was the mainstay of rebounding. Nate Branch and Grant Simmons took up the slack left by Hare's usual high scor ing, with me rest of the team's scoring well balanced. Jim Sullivan, a transfer from the managing squad, worked out with the team the week before, but was the only Husker not to see action. Whether or not the men feel more like a close-knit group because of the small size of the squad can only be specu lated upon. According to the medical reports on the wound ed in the Husker camp, Brice Pearson and Gary Niebauer are labeled as question marks and Earl Johnson definitely will not play. , In an ordinary week this might impose more of a prob lem for Cipriano's crew, but in light of the K-State per formance by the Huskers, a second upset appears on the horizon. An upset won't be easy, however, as the Buffaloes are among the top three teams in the Big Eight in field goal per centage, free throw percent age,, and rebound percentage. Title-contender Colorado has probably the most improved center in the Big Eight in Chuck Gardner who is the conference's leading rebound er. Gardner is aided by the Frink brothers, who are fine team players and consistent scorers. Colorado appears as a most formidable opponent for the upstart Cornhuskers. If the Big Red enthusiasm holds out, an improvement on the season record of 7-11 is inevitable. 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