Sports _ NU aims at ASU streak By Chuck Green Senior Editor Nebraska football coach Tom Osborne will try to accomplish some thing Saturday that he never has be fore — to leave Sun Devil Stadium with a win. When No. 2-ranked Nebraska faces No. 12-ranked Arizona State Satur day in Tcmpc, Ariz., the Comhuskers will be trying to improve on a 0-2 record at the stadium. In 1975, Nebraska lost to Arizona State 17-14 in the Fiesta Bowl, then lost to Michigan 27-23 in the 1986 Sunkist-Fiesta Bowl. Osborne said at his weekly media luncheon Tuesday that the Huskers will again have their work cut out for them. “We re very impressed with their football team,” Osborne said of the Sun Devils. “They've got a lot of experience there and the players they have back are very good.” Osborne said one of the main con ccms he has about playing in Tempe is the heat. The temperature often reaches 1(H) degrees or more on the field. During practices last week, the Huskers finished drills by running sprints inside Schulte Field House, where the temperature had been raised to 95 degrees. “We’ve tried to take what steps we can in regard to the he t,” he said. “How much good the indoor work we’ve done with the heat turned up, I just don’t know. We’ll have to wait and see how much that's benefited us.” Osborne said the Huskers ran more than normal last week in preparation for the expected conditions in Tempe. He said Nebraska players don’t nor mally run that much before a game “because we don’t want to have the players leg-weary on the game day.” But, he said, the open date allowed for the extra conditioning. Osborne said the week off also profiled Nebraska in terms of inju ries. “I think if wc had had to play last Saturday (wingback Dana) Brinson would have been very doubtful and I think (defensive tackle) Lee Jones would have been incapacitated,” he said. “I think this Saturday, those players will be alright,” He said he thought quarterbacks Clcte Blakeman and Gcrri Gdowski, who suffered in juries during practice last week, also would be recovered by Saturday. Osborne said he wasn’t concerned about former Nebraska receivers’ coach Gene Huey, who is now an assistant at Arizona State, giving too much information about Nebraska’s passing game to the Sun Devil coaches. “He’s a good coach and a good person and is very ethical in every thing he would do,” Osborne said, “but obviously he works for Arizona ouiic mm, i wuuiu nt wouldn’t withhold information. It would he the same if we had hired somebody from Arizona State. I’m sure we would have asked him a few questions this week.” Osborne also addressed the topic of Nebraska’s pre-season schedule. Ari zona State coach John Cooper said earlier that if he had his way, he’d schedule four “easy” non-conference opponents. He also said that schedul ing a team like Nebraska was sense less, because each team would “beat each other up.” “There’s two ways to look at that,” Osborne said. “If you’re looking at a national championshipand going toa bowl game, if you can schedule four patsies then you’re better off. But it may not make you a whole lot better. “On the other hand, if you really want to be a great football team and you want to do well in your confer ence. then maybe playing some tough people early is good,” he said. “I guess from the standpoint of lon gevity in coaching and national rank ings, John is right. But if you’re inter ested in being a gtxxl football team, the other way is better.” Huskers bake in sauna preparing for Sun Devils By Mike Kluck Staff Reporter In anticipation of a hotaftcmoon in Tcmpc, Ariz., Nebraska has been preparing for its game against Arizona State on Saturday by practicing in what seems like a sauna. Nebraska football coach Tom Osborne said the Cornhuskcrs have spent parts of the last two weeks prac ticing with the heat turned up in Schulte Field hh the HPIHJH practices should • neip tne Huskers endure the 100 de gree temperatures that will be await ing them in Tcmpe. Osborne Osborne said he dec ided to practice in the heat after talking with Nebraska strength and conditioning coach Boyd Eplcy. He said although Eplcy em phasized that working in the field house was mainly psychological, the Huskers “wouldn’t do it if (they) didn’t think it might do some good.” “If we would have had 85 or 90 degree weather, I wouldn’t have been Ux)concerned,”Osborne said. “When we’re dealing with 70 degrees here then I think we need to do something. So we’ll see if it helps.” Eplcy said he got the idea of a heat chamber from Bill Cramer, Director of Conditioning Research for the U.S. Army. He said Cramer informed him that it would lake 10 days for the Nebraska players to adjust to the heat, meaning the Huskers couldn’t have used the chamber if they wouldn’t have had two weeks to prepare for the Sun Devils. Epley said he first thought about having ihc Nebraska players wear extra clothing, but decided against it because it would have to be done in a gradual process. He said extra cloth ing also presents the danger of heat exhaustion. “What we’re trying to do is gener ate climatic heal rather than individ ual,’’ he said. “We want the climate to be hotter.” Eplcy said the Huskers will have an advantage against Arizona State be cause they arc well conditioned. He said Nebraska’s summer conditioning program will help the Huskers adjust to Arizona’s dry heal. “We really don’t have a major concern, Eplcy said. “It is probably one of these deals where we made a little bigger issue out of it then what we really needed to. “We will be well prepared physi cally fbr the game,” he said. Nebraska reserve quarterback Cletc Blakcman said he was not fond of practicing in the chamber. “It’s something you really don’t enjoy but then again you have to real ize why you’re doing it— to get ready for the weather down there,” Blakcman said. “If it helps out a little bit, that’s why we’re doing it. “(But) I don’t think this little bit is going to help us. We’re a pretty well conditioned team and I think that really takes care of it for us,” Blakcman said. Starting quarterback Steve Taylor disagreed. “I think it’s going to hclpoula great deal,” Taylor said. “I think we’re in good physical condition in order to play under any conditions. We’re going to be OK.” —f _-_ Butch Ireland/Daily Nebraskan Nebraska’s Frank and Harald Graham. Runners are double trouble By Rich Cooper Staff Reporter When Nebraska cross country coach Jay Dirksen recruited Frank and Harald Graham, he received a two-for-onc deal. Dirksen said the twin brothers from Nebraska City have been a benefit for the Comhuskers be cause they both have a good a chance of being included in the top seven runners on this year’s team. “Frank and Harald arc going to push to be on the team all year,” Dirksen said. “These two guys work very hard and as the season progresses they’re going to gel better.” Dirksen said the Graham broth ers worked so hard when they first came to Nebraska two years ago that they would sneak in extra mileage. “...I give everybody on the team a maximum amount of mileage to run,” Dirksen said, “and 1 don’t want them to go over that mileage. “But Frank and Harald used to sneak in extra mileage. It hurt them because their bodies couldn't handle it.” Both Grahams agreed that they trained loo hard when they first became Huskers. “The first year here at Nebraska we tried to run with the big boys,” Harald said. “We would be running mile repeats and be right with the front runners. “But as the season progressed, it got harder and harder to do be cause our bodies couldn’t take it. What’s so funny is, coach knew we were sneaking because one of us was sick every other week.” Dirksen said he thinks the Gra hams' hard work has begun to pay off. He said the brothers, who grew up in Darmstadt, West Germany, and then moved to Nebraska City in 1981, have perfect bodies for running with their long, muscular legs and little body fat. The Grahams said they first started running when they were freshmen at Nebraska City High School. “We actually started out as pole vaulters but our coach used to send us out on runs before practice as a pre-conditioning thing,” Frank said. “And we would come back before everybody, even the dis tance runners, and the rest is his tory.” During the Grahams’ senior year of high school, they finished first and second in the Nebraska State Cross Country Champion ships. The Grahams were so domi nant during their high school ca reers that Dirksen said he began watching them as juniors. “1 first saw the Graham brothers at the Waverly Invitational their junior year and I thought to myself, ‘Boy, these guys are going to be good,”’ Dirksen said. Despite first impressions, Dirksen said, he didn’t know if he was going to be able to offer the Graham brothers scholarships because they didn’t impress Ne braska track coach Gary Pepin at first. “In their senior year of High School, I told coach Pepin to go watch these guys. Well, it turned out to be their worst meet of the season,” Dirksen said. “Coach Pepin said he didn’t think they were that good.” The Grahams said they remem ber seeing Pepin at the meet. “The meet was some kind of in vitational, and before the race we went over to our coach to get last minute instructions and we found out Pepin was there," Frank said. “Well, that race didn’t go over too well because we were so nervous that we went out to fast and just died at the end of the race." Harald said he and Frank could have accepted scholarship offers from a Division III school, but turned them down because they were set on going to Nebraska. “The main reason we came here was because of coach Dirkscn,” Frank said. “Even in high school he would help us out when he came to see us.” Dirkscn said he thinks Frank and Harald arc the closest brothers he’s ever met. He said the fact that they help each other out gives them an advantage over other runners. The two brothers are so close that Frank was once disqualified from a high school race because he waited for Harald to catch him at the finish line. "We wanted to finish together because it was our home town invitational and Harald was behind me,” Frank said. “So when I got to the finish line, I stopped and waited for Harald to catch up. Well, be cause of that, I got disqualified for not trying and Harald won the race. Boy was our coach mad.” Harald said the big difference between high school and college running is the intensity of the races. He said high school competition was so relaxed that he and Frank used to have conversations during the race. Dirksen said the best thing about the Grahams is their team spirit “You never know what those guys arc going to do next. They ’re both crazy, but in a good way,” Dirkscn said. “These guys love life so much and it seems like they’re always doing something fun.” During the summer, the Gra hams run a fishing and hunting guide service in Nebraska City. They also publish a hunting and fishing newsletter. “Running isn’t the only thing we love to do, we love to fish, hunt -and listen to music,” Frank said.