i Volleyball team to face improving foes By John Adkisson Staff Reporter The Nebraska volleyball team’s first-round opponent in today’s Stan ford Invitational is all too familiar. The No. 1 Comhuskers, one of four teams in the two-day tournament in Palo Alto, Calif., will face No. 12 Brigham Young for the second time in two weeks. Nebraska beat the Cougars in a Sept. 28 match at the NU Coliseum. But that match went four games, and -44 - Most of the time in practice this week was I been spent in prepara tion for this tourna ment. Cook NU assistant volleyball coach -- A* - . ¥ ¥ assistant coach John Cook said that Brigham Young will be even hun grier this time. “They played us extremely tight the first time, and it was a struggle,” Cook said. “I’m sure they’ll want revenge.” Brigham Young, 14-4, has won five straight matches since losing to Nebraska. Cook said the Cougars have been improving with every match. “We know that they’re better now I than when we saw them the first time,” Cook said. “But we arc too.” Cook said for Nebraska to control ' the match, the Huskers must stop outside hitter Tea Nieminen, who jump-served eight consecutive points when the two team’s last met. “We need to take care of her serve better or we’ll be in trouble,” Cook said. “We’ve made some defensive adjustments to prepare for her.” The bracket-format tournament pits No. 7 Stanford against St. Mary’s in the other first-round match. If both Nebraska and Stanford win their opening matches, the two would meet in the finals on Friday night. The Cardinal is 11-2 on the sea son, with losses to No. 2 UCLA and No. 3 Pacific. By comparison, Ne braska beat UCLA in five games, but lost to Pacific in four. Stanford is led by sophomore out side hitter Bev Oden and junior out side hitter Kristin Klein, who has compiled 1,116 kills in three years. Cook said both are “top-notch play ers.” “They have one of the best attacks in the country,” Cook said. “Those two girls make them a very physical team.” Look added that playing Stanford on the road will make beating the Cardinal especially difficult. “It will make it almost twice as tough for us, catching them in their home gym,” Cook said. “They get tremendous support from their fans.” Nebraska raised its conference record to 2-0 Tuesday with a straight game victory over Iowa State. To day’s match will be the third in six days for Nebraska, but Cook said fatigue will not be a problem. “We’re ready to go, and we won’t be tired,” Cook said. “Most of the time in practice this week was been spent in preparation for this tourna ment.” Cook said the team is still adjust ing to a lineup change that moved outside hitter Cris Hall to part-time middle blocker. The coach added that the emphasis this weekend will be on improvement. “We’re going to go out there, give it 110 percent, and hope we make some improvement,” Cook said. “But this tournament is not going to make or break our season.” if Ini ' I glZKflO .™ I Butch IrelnndDally Nebraskan Nebraska’s Cris Hall goes up for a block in the match against Texas A&M. The Huskers, ranked No. 1, play in the Stanford Invitational today and Friday. Their first-round match, against No. 12 Brigham Young, is their second of the season against the Cougars. Poll addicts crave wicked drug in quest for NU national title A reader recently sent a letter to the Omaha World-Herald complain ing that sportswriters arc poor poll sters for college football. The Associ ated Press top 25, the reader said, is messed up by regional biases and is Paul Domeier dependant on an information-sharing network of ignorant sportswriters. Oops. You got us. We’re notquali tied lo vole intelligently on the enure sport. The poll is stupid. And the reader forgot about per sonal respect or dislike for certain coaches and loyalty to an alma mater, which also can taint a writer’s vote. Go ahead then, ignore the AP poll. I dare you. Do what the coaches say they do, which is concentrate on the conference title. Control-your-own dcstiny stuff. Focus on this Saturday, not the season. Don’t root for Michigan Stale to upset top-ranked Michigan this week end. Enjoy a Wolverine win, even though a Wolverine loss would help Nebraska. Got you there. You can’t wean yourself from Nebraska’s quest for the national championship so quickly. Winning the Big Eight is old stuff for Comhusker fans. We have to have the nation acknowledge our greatness. We’re No. 1! Don’t try to lake refuge in the United Press International coaches’ poll, which is just as bad. Ai some school s, the coac hes don ’ t even bother with the voting. A sports information director will do the hon ors. The coaches that do vote usually arc no better informed than the sports writers and broadcasters. “Heresy! Coaches know more than writers!” Of course the coach knows more about his team, his conference and his opponents. Get away from the sched ule and the region, though, and coaches won’t have a clue. They’ve got enough to worry about as it is. How many football games do you think Tom Osborne had time to watch Saturday? So the polls lack voter credibility. But that won’t drive you away. Nor will you ignore them when they spit on logic. AUDum ami leuucsscc uwj iwu weeks ago. Both dropped in the polls. Colorado fell two spots in this week’s AP poll for a virtual loss to Missouri. If it wasn’t for possibly the worst ease of officiating ever, Colo rado would have lost and dropped even more. Somehow awful officiat ing makes Colorado a better team. You’re addicted, though. I feel like a drug pusher, spouting cruel truths and sneering as 1 sell a desperate junkie another top-25 fix. This year the Daily Nebraskan began running the AP lop 25, plus a DN top 10 that 1 help vote on. I know this drug is bad. Because of these stupid polls, the Scoring Explo sion squad of 1983 is tainted by being No. 2. The 1970 and 1971 Huskers arc regarded as better teams. Bob Devancy is a god, Tom Osborne is a fail are. Give me a break. Because of these stupid polls, Nebraska cannot afford to schedule non-confcrencc games worth watch ing. You want the polls, so I shouldn’t care. The reader is always right. But I do care, since I’m a reader, a fan and an addict, too. I’ve ached for the Huskers every January since I went to my first game in 1977. This is the year to throw off the yoke of the poll. Nebraska is No. 1 in Nebraska. That should be enough. Oh, but complaining now, in Oc tober 1990, is painful! Nebraska, my school, has as good a chance as any to win the national championship this season. Nebraska’s strong position legiti mizes my stand, though. Colorado column complaints about the polls would be sour grapes. I cover a sev enth-ranked, undefeated team, so I don’t have any reason to whine, ex cept for a sincere dislike for the polls. i m run going iu DN football lop 10 from nowon. This will take some ego swallowing when 1 want to look at the poll on Sunday and say, “How can you pinheads put Houston in the top 10? They beat pjon Kv However] I forfeit the right to complain. I’ll turn in may pinhead poll voter card and just be a pinhead. I solemnly promise now that from now on, I will deny the importance of the polls, let voters .do as they wish and ignore Nebraska’s final status in this inexact “national championship” mess, unless the Huskers end up No. 1. Hey, take it easy on me. I’m still a Nebraskan. Domeier is a senior news-editorial mi^jor and Daily Nebraskan sports reporter and columnist. ! Comhusker volleyball player anxious to play No. 12 BYU By John Adkisson Staff Reporter Nebraska outside hitter Janet Kruse said the Comhuskcr volley ball team will have to play “at our level at all times” if they hope to win this weekend’s Stanford Invi tational. Nebraska will play Brigham Young today in the first round of the two-day tournament in Palo Alto, Calif. A Huskcr win today would set up a possible Friday night match with No. 7 Stanford. Kruse said that Nebraska can win the tournament, but must play consistently. “We work a lot in practice on keeping our play at a certain level,” Kruse said. “Our goal is to main tain it." Today’s Ncbraska-Brigham Young match will mark the second lime this season the two teams have faced each other. Although Ne braska won the initial meeting at the NU Coliseum, Kruse said, the Huskcrs can’t let up. “They will be gunning for us, I’m sure,” Kruse said. “Naturally, they’ll want to get us back for the first loss.” Against Brigham Young, Kruse had her highest hitting percentage of the year with a .450 average. The junior from Fori Calhoun also recorded 10 kills and two service aces. Looking ahead to a possible showdown with Stanford, Kruse said the Huskers arc anxious to face the Cardinal. Kruse said playing Stanford would also hold a personal enjoy ment for her. “I’ve played with some of their players at summer camps and other places,” Kruse said. “So it’s going to nice to sec some of them again.” The tournament is Nebraska’s fifth of the year, and the Huskers already have won three. Kruse said playing top-notch teams in tourna ments will help Nebraska, espe cially in its goal of reaching the NCAA Tournament and Final Four. “In the long run, we’ll defi nitely benefit from it,” Kruse said. “When you play two tough teams in two days, that simulates the Final Four.” The Huskers opened the season with a tournament win in Hawaii, where they beat No. 2 UCLA, No. 6 Hawaii and No. 11 Ohio Stale. Kruse said playing far from home doesn’t seem to aflcct the Huskers. “Actually, it’s kind of fun,” Kruse said. “Wc usually don’t get to play tournaments like this in die middle of the season.” NU coach counts on top runners By Benji Greenberg Staff Reporter ThcComhuskcrs’ lop runners will need to be among the leaders of the pack Saturday for the Nebraska women’s cross counry team to com pete with two lop teams. No. 13 Nebraska competes in the 5,(XX)-mctcr Wisconsin Classic Sat urday in Madison, Wis. In addition to the Huskcrs, the meet includes two nationally ranked teams from Wis consin and the University of Califor nia-Bcrkclcy. The University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh and Eastern SeeDIRKSEN on 14