Monday, October 22, 1904 PagoG Daily Nebraska! lV- PtK ttJ -m 211 Last-minute heroics upset Husker JV DyMile Eeillcy Daily NeLtutkaa Stair Eeporfer Waldorf Junior College made sure Nebraska's junior varsity football team was aware of the adage: "All good things must come to an end." Nebraska's 24-game junior var sity winning streak died Friday when Waldorf, fueled by a last minute broken play touchdown pass by quarterback Bill Rogan, upended the Huskers 23-21. The loss was the first blemish on the JVs record since 1 979 and their first loss in Memorial Sta dium in 15 years. Nebraska held a 2 1 -1 6 lead late in the game when Waldorf defen sive lineman Jerry Harris reco vered a fumble by back-up quar terback Jim Toner at the Husker's 39-yard line. Waldorf drove to t'. le-yard line where they faced a crucial fourth-and-goal situation with 59 seconds remaining in the game. Rogan attempted to run around the left end, but reversed his field and found tight end Tom Wagner in the end zone to put the Histo rias ahead to stay. "He (Rogan) had to reverse it," Waldorf coach David Bolstorff said. "It was a broken play. I looked down there (at three re ceivers standing in the corner of the end zone) and I said, 'Oh please.' " Rogan ripped the Husker sec ondary for 279 yards and three touchdowns. Two of his aerials fkre intercepted, one by; line backer Jim (Grruehwaid, who re turned it 29 yards for a touch down in the third quarter. "Bill is all heart," Bolstorff said. "He's an average quarterback who does what we ask him to do." NU junior varsity coach Dan Yong had nothing but praise for Rogan. Their quarterback made things happen," Young said. "He was very elusive. We had him on that Two starters watched the game from the bench, but Nebraska's volleyball team won anyway. The Huskers wiped out Okla homa 15-7, 15-5, 15-6 to win its seventh conference game against no defeats and raise its season record to 19-1. The eighth-ranked Huskers will face three other rated teams this weekend on the season's first trip to the West Coast. Still, just when" the Husker's ratings rose, the injuries started to pile up. Sharon Kramer was lost until December with an ankle injury at Ames, Iowa. Then, her replacement Michelle Smith was lost for an indefinite time with a soft tissue injury or stress frac ture at the top of her foot. As a result, when the Huskers took the floor against the 16-6 Sooners, Annie Adamczak, the Big Eight's player of the week, was set up at middle blocker. Enid Schonewise was inserted at Adamczak's former outside hit ter position, and Kathi DeBohr was enlisted as the first front court reserve for setter Mary Buysse, Schonewise's old position. "We adjusted to the two of them (Smith and Kramer) being out," Nebraska coach Terry Pettit ssld. "We're lucky to have players C&& vliQ Csii a i.,t.t Gil Nebraslsa spiders fourth down, but he slipped away and hit his receiver." Nebraska drew first blood when I-back Jeff" Wheeler wheeled into the end zone from nine yards out. Waldorf got on the board with a 27-yard field goal by Rogan late in the first quarter. Rogan hit Wagner with a nine-yard scor ing strike early in the second quarter to give the Historias a 10 7 half time lead. . Gruenwald's interception re turn put the Huskers back on top, 14-10 with 11:40 to play in the third quarter. Rogan's second touchdown pass came early in the final period when he pegged fullback Marlon Long for 30 yards. Nebraska responded on the next possession with a 64-yard drive, capped by a one-yard touchdown by I-back Jon Kelley. Gruenwald's extra point gave the Huskers a 21-16 lead and set the stage for Rogan's last-minute her oics. Five of Waldorf s starters were lost to injuries and didn't make the trip to Lincloln. Bolstorff said the replacements got the job done. "I didn't know if we were ready physically to play Nebraska," he said. "But they like to get around and hit hard. When we come here, I tell 'em to strap their helmets on tight." Bolstorff said playing against the Huskers makes a long-lasting impression on his players. "The whole experience is just a phenomenal thing," Bolstorff said. "It's something they'll remember ,all their lives." IL Young said he sensed before" the game that his team was not prepared to play. "Before the game, the kids seemed to be flat," Young said. "They weren't ready to play." Despite the loss, Young remains optimistic. "We'll just have to start up Monday and see what our guys want to do," Young said. "I think they'll come back." short notice like that. The prolem is trying to fill Annie's spot, then Enids', then Kathi's." Oklahoma failed to provide much of a challenge to the Husk ers, who also dispatched the Sooners in three games in Nor man, Okla., this year. Nebraska scored the first six points of the match, only to have Oklahoma storm back to tie at 7-7. But Nebraska regrouped in time to win the next eight points and the game. Nebraska also jumped to big leads in the next two games, lead ing 14-2 in the second and 13-3 in the third, before the Sooners were able to mount any attack. In the last set, Nebraska led 7-4 when Adamczak served an ace for the eighth point. Karen Dahlgren had eight kills in 1 0 attempts for Nebraska, while Cathy Noth had 13 and Adamc zak 10. The Husker kill percen tage for the match was 62.3 per cent. Pettit said he considered the match a team victory because cf the adjustments each team mem ber had to make. Pettit said the team switched to a defense to try to get the ball to either Buysse or Noth more. That, as v. ell as the new line-up, worked well for a NU Blackshirts throttle sputtering By Laari IIcppIs Daily Kebrtskan Senior Editor The Blackshirts battled the black jerseys Saturday in Boulder as both defenses kept the Nebraska-Colorado football game alive. Although the Huskers won the game 24-7, they trailed the Buffaloes 7-3 until the fourth quarter. Before then, the Hus ker offense was plagued by fumbles and an inability to capitalize on good field posi tion, but mostly by a razor sharp CU defense. The Buffaloes, wearing black jerseys instead of their usual light blue ones, had marked Jt 1 4 their game against Nebraska as the most important of the season, and attacked the Hus ker offense with a specially designed "tilt" defense. Colorado coach Bill McCartney said the "tilt" was conceived last summer, but the team saved it until Saturday's game. The tilt aimed CU line backers at Nebraska center Mark Traynowicz and guards Harry Grimminger and Greg Orion. "We put two guys in there and mixed up the charges to neutralize Nebraska's ability to dominate the line of scrim mage," McCartney said. "They certainly stopped them enough times to win the game." And the Huskers made enough mistakes to help the Buffs win the game. The Hus kers failed to take advantage of the good field position ClTs bad punts gave them and lost three of five fumbles. Colorado came out of the game with no fumbles. In the first quarter, Nebraska drove deep into Colorado ter ritory three times but failed to score. Two of the drives were stopped by lost fumbles one Bsitoa prepares aforeaaad wiaaer on Mm wzy to Hie sieves tills nad the No. 5 division cpienswp. in tke fcebrassa Comaker Isviistaal i East Caspca Saicrdsy. Bcrioa oersted Kucmfoofcn Zsrwkk, 6, 6-2. WIscoasia woa the teittsftnul v&th 24 prists. reached Ue fiasla o!Mb dhisioa bzt lest to TFIscoastir' Ckzck Smyne. offense finaliy ignites f rf 7 f" Mark DzvltDally Nebrsskan Todd Praia barrels in on Colorado weak safety Kent Davis. by Husker fullback Tom Rath man and one by I-back Doug DuBose. But although the Buff de fense played well, their offense did not respond. "We just had to negotiate some offense and we couldn't, and that was our undoing," McCartney said. The Buffs scored early in the second quarter on their first drive. The Huskers closed the gap slightly with a field goal late in the second quarter, mak ing the score 7-3. But CU remain ed ahead through the third quarter for the first time against Nebraska since 1967. In that game, the Buffs led the Huskers 21-13 in the third quarter and went on to win the game 21-16. Although CU failed to score again Saturday, the game looked like it would be a repeat of 1967. Instead, it took on the look of last year's game, which Colorado led 14-12 at half time. uixs;- 1 V i . .... -x . The Huskers then scored a record 48 third-quarter points on the way to a 69-19 victory.. The Huskers began their 1983 replay early in the fourth quarter, when quarterback Travis Turner scored on a one yard dive to give Nebraska a 10-7 lead. Some of the new-found Hus ker momentum may have been sparked by the injury of CU strong safety Mickey Pruitt, who was knocked out of the game with a severely sprained neck. Although McCartney denied after the game that Pruitt's injury had any psycho logical effect on his players, the CU defense seemed to lose its edge on Nebraska from that point on. Turner, scrambled for three yards to score again with 12:42 left in the game, raising the lead to 17-7. The last touch down came with 4:45 left, when Turner connected on an 11 yard pass to tight end Brian Hiemer.