Nebraskan Thursday, October 19,1989 n-nr-noT-wr w '"wwii hi iiiMPMi.^nnijiff ifciii p rn mrTronrTT mi iii i'i—mr—itmmniTinrwTiinfimT^mmiTiTrrMiirinTTinrir ~ — r—~ " NU volleyball team to play No. 1 Hawaii Hawaii coach says team will come to games ‘cold’ By Darran rowier Senior Reporter It was 88 degrees Monday in Honolulu. After weather similar to that Sun day in Lincoln, the temperature dropped 40 degrees. Hawaii volleyball coach Dave Shoji knows his team will come to Nebraska cold. But he’s not referring to the weather. ‘‘We know a little bit about Ne braska, but basically we’re coming ir. cold,” Shoji said. “I recruited a few of their players like (freshman) Val erie Vcrmculcn. ‘‘We know a little bit about some of their individuals, but not all of them,” he said. Hawaii, 16-0 and ranked No. 1, plays 14-0 and 4th-rankcd Nebraska ____.l:_i_ 111 u ^uii kjm maiuiL3 UII3 wtLK* end in the Baden Challenge. The two teams meet Friday at 7:30 p.m. and Saturday at 8 p.m. at the NU Coli seum. Admission is free to University of Ncbraska-Lincoln students who show their IDs. Vcrmeulen, a 6-foot setter from Wantagh, N.Y., turned down recruit ing trips to Hawaii and Colorado State after visiting Lincoln. “After I came here I knew that this is where I wanted to go,” Vcrmeulen said. “I didn’t want to waste his (Shoji’s) time going there. I didn’t think there would be anything better than this.” She said she liked the atmosphere and spirit that was expressed at a Husker volleyball match she at tended on her recruiting trip to Lin coln. “Everyone was down to earth,’’ Vermeulen said. “The team was nice ana maac me ieel welcome.” She said Husker coach Terry Pet tit’s reputation as a setting coach also was an attraction. “He’s known for his setting,” she said. “(You) can’t get a better setting coach. I just saw it as my best oppor tunity.” Pettit said Nebraska and Hawaii are matched evenly. “Physically it’s a team that’s very similar to ours,” he said. “Both teams have talent in all their posi tions. That makes it very interest mg. It also is interesting that both teams have played 53 games this year in compiling similar stats. Nebraska comes into the match with a .317 hitting percentage and averages nearly 18 kills a game, while its opponents arc averaging 12 kills a game and hitting .141. Hawaii is hitting .321 and averag ing nearly 18 kills a game, while limiting its opponents to .168 hitting ana ciose 10 13 Kills a game. Hawaii amassed its perfect record by posting wins over second-ranked and prescason No. 1 UCLA, third ranked Pacific, fifth-ranked Long Beach State and lOlh-rankcd and defending national champion Texas. “There’s two ways to look at the competition,’’ Shoji said. “Obvi ously it prepares us to compete at a lop level. But, on the down side we’ve had to be up for matches just about every week. “It takes an emotional loll on our players. I just hope we have some thing left for Nebraska. It’s almost impossible to get up*emotionally three or four weeks in a row.’’ He said he is pleased with the way the team has progressed and met each challenge. “Being undefeated I guess is a sign we’re having a good season and I’m happy with the way things have gone,’’ he said. “But I didn’t expect to be undefeated at this point.’’ Hawaii was 33-3 last year, but lost to Texas in the NCAA finals. The Rainbow Wahines won the Big West Conference with an 18-0 record, the first time a team has gone undefeated William Lauer/Dally Nebraskan Nebraska's Cris Hali shows her serving form. m that conference. Shoji said this year’s team is comparable to last year’s. But this one could be better, he said. “I think we have some strengths this year that we didn’t have last year,’’ he said. “We lost three good players but I think we made up some ground. I think the potential of this team is better.” Hawaii is led by two-time All America selection Teec Williams Sanders, who has 253 kills and is hitting .313 in 45 games. Williams Sanders, a senior outside hitter, also leads the team in service aces with 12. Junior middle blocker Karrie Trieschman is the team’s leading blocker with 44 assisted and 11 unas sistcd. Trieschman averages three kills a game, hitting .331. .Sophomore middle blocker Malin Fransson also averages three kills a game, hitting .374. She leads the team in digs with 144 and has 11 service aces. Sophomore outside hitter Jami Long has 119 kills and is hitting .294. Sophomore setter Chcri Boyer has 643 assists in 46 games played. Shoji said his team is experienced anj balanced. “We have three or four girls aver aging three to four kills a game,” he said. “We play a lot of people here, even when the matches arc close. We have a lot of depth. “Our bench has really responded and played well,” he said. • • Comhuskers ready tor Hawaii star By Darran Fowler Senior Reporter Behind every good team, there is at least one great player. For the Hawaii women’s volley ball team, that player is senior outside hitter Teee Williams-Sanders. Williams-Sanders will try to showcase her talents when No. 1 ranked Hawaii battles No. 4-ranked Nebraska this weekend at the NU Coliseum. The two teams play Friday at 7:30 p.m. and Saturday night at 8. “She’s a good person and she’s a great player, Nebraska sophomore outside hitter Cris Hall said of Wil liams-Sandcrs. “She’s going to be tough to stop. But like everyone else, she’s human. I’m anxious to see what happens.” Hall and Williams-Sandcrs were teammates last summer while com peting on the U.S. World University Games team which was coached by Nebraska coach Terry Pettit. “Playing with her will help me play against her,’ ’ Hall said. ‘ ‘ I know where she hits the ball.” Williams-Sanders stands 5-foot 11, but “she plays big,” Pettit said. “She’s a really nice player,” he said. “She’s explosive, but so are (Huskers) Janet Kruse and Virginia Stahr.” Williams-Sandcrs said she learned some defensive strategies from Pettit during the national team ’ s training camp in Colorado Springs. “I thought he was a real good coach,” she said. “He was really nice.” Pettit said Hawaii exploits the tal ents of its star player. Williams-Sanders, a two-time NCAA All-America selection, comes into the match averaging nearly six kills a game. In 45 games, she has tallied 253 kills and compiled a .313 hitting percentage. “She probably has a more signifi cant role on their team offensively than our players do on our offense,” Pettit said. “She probably gets more attacks than any one player on their team.” Wilhams-Sanders, who was mar ried during the summer, attended St. Joseph’s High School in Lakewood, Calif. She said she has never been to Nebraska, but she is looking forward to the match. Against Nebraska, Williams Sanderr could become Hawaii’s ca reer leader in kills. She is No. 2 on the all-time list with 1,501, and needs 53 to establish the record. She also is second in career blocks See TEEE on 16 • -i Player says NU must stop big plays By Jeff Apel Senior Editor Illinois quarterback Jeff Kinney had some definite advice for Ne braska about its upcoming game against Colorado. “Try and stop the big play,” he said. Kinney, the son of the former Nebraska quarterback by the same name, watched earlier this season as Colorado used big plays to defeat Illinois 38-7 at Champaign, 111. The Buffaloes’ arsenal of big plays in cluded long passes to split end Jeff Campbell and a flea flicker. Kinney said he was impressed by Colorado, which Nebraska will face Nov. 4 in Boulder, Colo. He said the Buffaloes possess a physical front line on defense, and have an abun dance of team speed. Kinney said he knows the Ne braska-Colorado game is going to be tough. He said he knows how tough the Buffaloes are because they left him battered and bruised after he faced them earlier this season. ‘‘It’s going to be a tough, physical came,” he said. “Colorado is tough, and so is Nebraska. Both teams are Ph Kinriey said the Colorado game has been the highlight ot his season. He entered the game in the second half in place of an injured Jeff George, and proceeded to complete 3 of 5 passes for 21 yards. Tne following week, after the Fighting Illini posted a 41-2 win against Utah State, Kinney was lost for the season when he was diagnosed as having a blood clot in his right shoulder. Kinney said he was disappointed by the injury. The redshirt freshman from Wheaton, 111., was the Fighting mini’s second-team quarterback be fore being hurt. “I was just starting to get into the onense, Mnncy said, uwasiougn to get the No. 2 job, and it’s tough to watch. But I just have to take it stride by stride.” Kinney said he was not recruited by Nebraska. He said he chose Illi nois over Iowa, Iowa Slate and Wyo ming because he would fit into the Fighting mini’s pass-oriented of fense. Kinney said his father’s accom plishments did not influence his deci sion. Kinney said he never had any seri ous intentions of going to Nebraska. ‘‘I knew I wouldn’t fit in to their offense,” he said. Volleyball team’s rigorous schedule works out nicely Nebraska volleyball coach Terry Pettit refuses to take credit for bring ing in the top-ranked team in the country to play the Comhuskers this weekend. Sure, he invited Hawaii to the Baden Challenge. But that was three years ago, and he had no way of knowing the Rain bow Wahines would come to Lincoln No. 1. That’s an example of how things are falling into place for Nebraska this year. _I Pettit’s 1989 schedule has worked out wonderfully for the No. 4 Husk ers. Three opponents have been ranked in the top 20 - No. 8 Stanford, No. 11 Minnesota and No. 13 Colo rado. Another three ~ Kentucky, Pitts burgh, and Iowa — received votes in the collegiate polls this week. Later this season, Nebraska will play No. 7 Illinois and No. 10 Texas. Pettit would like more. “If we could play 30 teams in the top 20 we would,’’ he said. The schedule hasn’t been as tough as it looks. Pettit either scheduled the tough matches at home or gave his players extra time to prepare. Iowa visited the NU Coliseum. Kentucky, Pittsburgh and thcn-No. 2 Stanford came to Lincoln for the FirsTier Invitational. The Huskers next played at Colo rado, but had a free week to prepare for the Lady Buffs’ unusual inside out offense. VT_ KT^l_I___—_ nuw, iiV/Uia.^a iiao an wuvk to prepare for two-time All-America selection Teee Williams-Sanders and the other Rainbow Wahines. While the schedule is demanding, the Huskers wouldn’t have done as well if the hard matches would have been closer together. Pettit said he would like to have a week off before all the tough matches. That usually is impossible when trying to meet the requirements of the Big Eight schedule. Next year the team will spend more time on the road, returning the fa' or to teams who played in Lincoln this season. But that’s next season. This year, things are working out well. In fact, things arc working out better than anyone could have ex pected. Not that Nebraska’s schedule is unusually tough. Hawaii played, and beat, No. 3 Pacific twice last weekend. It’s just that when a team takes on as tough a schedule as the Huskers do every year, the team is supposed to lose a few. But Nebraska is 14-0. Pettit said he doesn’t look at it that way. ‘‘I don’t say, ‘Well, we can afford to lose 8 matches,’ or whatever,” he said. But unlike the football team, the volleyball team doesn’t have to go undefeated to win the national cham pionship; the Huskers just have to put together five wins in the NCAA tour nament. Pettit said the Baden Challenge should help the team in Regionals. In postseason play, teams have to play top teams back-to-back. Nebraska won’t have a tougher assignment than playing Hawaii two days in a row. This series can give both teams See SCHEDULE on 16