pc:? 14 fi'cdnw:y,E?ril 23, 1073 CH3 Ofc!'pvn So 'XT; - J Smit MKfcf A find ccl :hi n Is often a r! SCC for tharJuzg these who answering critics, tye!2 te-sther ths loose ends, etc. However, 1 prefer to go oat with a strong etorial statement. From my game observations and rapport with the players oyer the past four years, I think UNL if it chooses to seek a competitive athletic program, has no choice tut, to replace baseball cosch Tony Sharpe. This is no persons! vendetta against cosch Shaipe. He has been cooperative and accommodating when 1 talked with him. I respect his knowled-e of the pa and under stand that his ilea cf playing winning baseball nay differ from mine. Cut I thir.k that over his 30 years as head coach, he has lost his skill to conmauricate with Jus fleers and the discipline necessary to build a winner. Let's lock at the facts. In his term as baseball mentor, entering this season, Sharps has ccsnp&d a 349-351 235-249 in conference action. This yeaf s teen, currently at 17-20-1, must sweep its last two doubkheadcrs to top the .500 mark in the regular season. Considering the caliber of competition, this record is nothing to write home about. . Unimpressive record The Huskers' marks daring the 1970s have been less than impressive. Sharpe's teams finished 16-10 in 1970, 10-20 in 1971, 12-17 in 1972, 15-I4-I in 1973, 13-27 in 1974 and 13-20 in 1975. That comes to a cool .422 I n The UNL soccer team overcame several adverse factors to finish fourth in the Big 8 Conference meet Saturday and Sunday in Boulder, Colo. It was the team's highest finish ever in the meet. Saturday, the Buskers lost to the eventual champion, the University of Kansas, 6-0. They then tied Kansas State University 1-1, with Oscar Carcomo scoring the Husker goal. In the third game Saturday, the Huskers faced the Uni versity of Oklahoma needing to win by at least four goals to advance to the third-place game. The contest was tied 1-1, but Tony Roach tallied four goals in the last six minutes for a 5-1 Husker win. Sunday the Huskers dropped the third-place game to the University of Colorado 4-1, with Dave Egr scoring the lone UNL goal. Club co-President Jim FuHerton said he and fellow President Mike Bush handled coaching duties since coach Franz Blaha quit two weeks ago. He also said the Huskers had just the 11 starters and one substitute and that the team had to pay its own expenses for the trip. The women's state college track and field champion ships, originally scheduled for Tuesday, have been post poned until 2 pjn. Sunday at Ed Weir Stadium. The UNL women's softbaH team travels to Omaha today for a doubleheader against the University of Ne braska at Omaha. The team is now 8-11 after splitting a home doubleheader with Concordia Teachers College Monday, losing the opener 5-4 and winning the nightcap 13-4. The Huskers finished fourth of five teams in the Big 8 Conference tournament Friday through Sunday at Kansas State University (KSU) at Manhattan. " They won their opener in the double elimination meet Friday, beating the University of Kansas (KU) 4-3 ."Satur day's games were rained out, and Sunday's games were played in KSlFs football stadium on the Astroturf. Sunday, the Huskers lost to Iowa State University 1-0 in a game that had only one hit. Husker Jan Barrels hurled a one-hitter, but was beaten by Cyclone Carol Eich, who tossed a no-hitter. ISU's winning run came on a single in the fourth inning. In another Sunday game, KU elimin ated UNL with a 2-1 win. Bo Green and Roy Schumacher won the year-endin: foosbaH tournament at the Nebraska Union Recreation Area Monday night. They defeated Tom Tismer and Elmer Kirdey in the finals, 5-2 and 5-1. Monthly tourna ments will resume in the falL The Husker baseball team swept a home doubleheader against Dana College Monday, winning 4-0 and 9-6. . Senior pitcher Dave Bushier had a no-hitter in the opener until the seventh inning. He ended up with a two hit shutout in raising his record to 34. Sophomore Lany WIsma was the hitsg star wih a two-run triple. In the second pme, pnicr Echby Thomas led the aray wii three singes, a double and two runs batted in. Senior pitcher Boyd Baienherst epped his record to 5-2 after relieve freshman Jeff Ccst:"o n the third inning. The team, now 17-20-1 , meets Missouri Western State CcZcce a a hems douhlcheader at 2 pjn. The Focsers teem won the Al-Unhersty bowling rc3 effs 1st Thursday and Friday at the Nebrsia Union lines. The Cist and second place teams from the et Union ksgses psrtidpated. Focsers team members were Gary Ahnquist, Brad FaHer, BUI Grurh and Steve Thompson. They had averages cf IcO, 159, 157 and 157, rerpectivcly. winning percentage, hardly an adequate nwrk for a major college coach. Over 8 long season, a player needs a desire to player, not h spite chis coach. UusJcer teams I have seen lacked this mutual respect. On the field, quibbles between player and coach are evident to the discerning fan. And they con cern more than the expected complaints from reserves about not playmg enough. ' I have seen players snickering at Sharpe's advice, jsst as I have teen Sharpe humiliate players. During a game this season, I heard Sharpe yell to a player at the plate, "Hey, swing the bat up there. Yon mfr.t get lucky and hit one." Now that's a red confidence builder. - Husker players both past and present (who wish to re main anonymous), have toll me that Sharpe rarely oilers constructive criticism. Instead, I am told, he is a master at derisive, cordidence-shattering remarks that do ncttr.z but damage a payer's ego and redetermination. ' Qsfitasr v - Ron MUtenberger, a junior catcher from Burlington, Iowa, quit the team earlier this year because of his dis agreement with Sharpe's training policies and methods of handling the team on a road trip, if Itenbcrger gave up his scholarship money in an effort to see the baseball program improve through Sharpe's removal. MEtenberger is not merely a disgruntled reserve who decided to quit. He was the team's leading conference hitter his freshman year. He also has seen how a winning team operates, playing for national high school coach of the year Dick Wagner at Burlington High School. During his career, Miltenberger was one of the more motivated, conscientious players I met. He had a desire to help make the UNL baseball program a winning one. Apparently, he chose to disengage himself from the negative atmosphere between team and coach. I commend him for his efforts to seek new leadership and overall improvement of the baseball program. When swimming coach John Reta recently came under the gua, Athletic Director Bob Devaney said he owed it to Reta to let him coach in the new pool, blaming the old pool for part of his past failures. Well, there are no plans for a new baseball field, - Nebraska will not hire top state and area talent until its baseball program is upgraded, and I believe a major step in the improvement process is the replacement of Tony Sharpe as head baseball coach. n p r hus Em f uursnors cud Sy2: sqcohos yTQCO jm am oh' two-, .X mi i& rely rcf By Jim Hunt Putting it all together at the right time is what Husker middle distance runner Paul McCIain tries to do. And McCMn, a sophomore pre-medicme major from BeQevue, put it all together Saturday when he ran 1:49:8 in his 850-yard leg of the two-mile relay at the Drake Relays. McCIain, along with teammates Matt Reckmeyer, Keith Whitaker and Ron Fisher, raced to a new school record in the relay with a time of 7:2055, clipping more than three and a half seconds off the old mark. The record earned Husker athlete-of-the-week honors for the team. The old mark of 7:245 was set in the 1971 Drake Relays by Jen Hawkins, Greg Cailberg, Roger Chadwick and Larry Cimato. Reckmeyer, a junior from Mt. Morris, 13., led off for the Huskers and ran his SSOyard leg in 1:51.2. He was followed by Whitaker, a junior from Norwell, Masswho recorded a time of 1 50.4. McCMn ran third and the team was anchored by freshman Ron Fisher from Ottawa, Canada, with a time of 1 :49.4. Fisher was boxed in, however, and the Huskers took third place behind Baylor University and the University of Wisconsin. Just two-tenths of a second separated the three schools. Althouth the two-mile relay is not run in the NCAA national championships, Husker track coach Frank Sevigne is optimistic about the runners chances of qualifying in individual events. 1 think that they have a chance of cmalifying for nationals if they get a break from the weather, Sevigne said. "I'm going to try my best to qualify for nationals," McCIain said. "I'm going to try to put my best foot for ward because it (the nationals) is within reach." McCIain's performance in the relay Saturday was his career best in the 880. ' Javelin thrower Scott Sorchik, a junior from Sussex, NX, is the only Husker to qualify for nationals thus far. UNL track fans can see the Huskers in a dual Saturday against the Iowa State University Cyclones (ISU). It will be the Husker's only home dual this year. They will host the Big 8 Conference Championships May 14 and 15. Other athlete of the week nominees were sophomore golfer Doug Smith of Iincoln;junior baseball pitcher Kirk Eymann of Papillion; freshman tennis player Phil Woog of Rolling HHIs, Calif.; sophomore softball pitcher Jan Bartels of Lincoln; junior tennis player Sue Rapp of Lincoln; and sophomore golfer Jane Deeter cf Lincoln. irjii'fTn f r-i'n- -wwWm-a--f.,g0ate-. . r Rca FH.tr, kft, csd Ut ncdsseyer practice their rdqr exchere. They were past cf Hz school recwd-scttlm