Nebraskan ‘ Pf Tuesday, April 23,1991 >'li'C' McKee Daily Nefcia3kan Nebraska’s Alysen Madsen keeps a watchful eye on her putt at Mahoney Golf Course. Madsen is tied for 10th with 165 after two rounds in the three-round event. Two NU golfers stay dry by finishing in top three By Chuck Green Senior Reporter As the first trio to finish 36 holes in Monday’s round of the Husker Clas sic women’s golf invitational entered Mahoney Golf Course’s clubhouse, heavy rains pelted the grounds—and the other golfers. “You were lucky to finish in time,” Comhusker coach Robin Scherer said to the three women. Comhuskcrs Joanne Brooks and Steph Flood were two of the lucky three who escaped the rain. But their luck extended beyond staying dry. Brooks entered the club house in first place by one stroke, while Flood, a freshman, was tied for third with Kansas Slate’s Denise Pottle with a 156 for 36 holes. Flood had shot an 83 in the morn ing’s 18 holes, which put her in a four-way tic for 12th. But she would cut off 10 strokes in the afternoon’s game, shooting a 73. Kari May,a sophomore from New Mexico, was in second—and was the other player in the first group inside. Scherer said she was pleased with t he performance of Brooks and Flood, but not surprised. “Stephanie was nervous in the first round of the tournament,” she said. “But this afternoon, when the wind died down, she was fine.” During the morning’s round, 30 milc-per-hour gusts of wind whipped through the course. Scherer said that hurt Flood’s early play because she hits the ball high. The wind didn’t seem to bother Brooks, though, as she improved from her morning score of 79 to post a 73 in the second 18 holes. Husker Cari Clesson finished the first day of competition tied for sev enth place with a score of 162. Kim Lefflcr, Alysen Madsen and Melissa Odell were lied for 10th with 165; Melissa Busskohl, 17th with 166; Stephanie Hupp, tied for 20th with 172; Becky Young, tied for 23rd with 179; and Anne Rist, 25th with 206. New Mexico leads the tournament by one stroke over Nebraska’s first squad, with 634. Kansas State and Wyoming arc third and fourth, while Nebraska’s second squad is fifth. The tournament will resume today with a final 18-holc round beginning at 8 a.m. NU baseball adds game The Nebraska baseball team has added a game against Washburn Uni versity today at4 p.m. at Buck Beltzer Field. Nebraska coach John Sanders said the game was scheduled in attempt to lill out the 60-gamc schedule. Ne braska will now only be one game short of the 60-game limit. “It’s also to get playing time and give some people an opportunity to play,” he said. The Ichabods, an NAIA school, are 23-19 this season, with an 11-5 loss to Nebraska in the Cornhuskers’ season opener. Sanders said he wasn’t si*c who would start on the mound for Ne braska, but said more than one pitcher would sec action. In another schedule change, the Huskcrs will travel to Cedar Falls, Iowa, to play Northern Iowa at 1 p.rn. Wednesday. The doublcheadcr origi nally had been scheduled to be played in Lincoln. -Nick Hytrek An offensive trio Huskers anticipate passing season By Chris Hopfensperger Senior Reporter The Nebraska football team is going to hammer some people — on of fense. Receivers coach Ron Brown said the Comhuskers have a trio of players at wingback with the size to compare to 1989, when Richard Bell and a young Nate Turner punished defen sive players with their blocking skills. This year, Turner leads a trio of wingbacks with the same potential, Brown said. “Two years ago, we really ham mered people at that position,” he said. “And I think we’re where we can do that again. “It’s a good threesome there.” Turner, a 6-foot-2, 225-pound senior, is second on the depth chart at the position. He is sandwiched be tween No. 1 Mark Dowse and No. 3 Vincent Hawkins. “Nate is a great athlete,” Brown said. “His major problem has been injuries.” Tumer, who sat out three games in his sophomore season, missed the first three games of last season after break ing his collarbone in prescason drills. He returned to the team to regain the starting wingback position for six games and ended the season as the fourth-leading receiver on the team with nine catches for 91 yards. Brown said Turner and Hawkins match up physically, but Turner and Dowse have an experience advan tage. “Nate has explosive power and he’s a big man,” Brown said. “He can block, yet he has good quickness.” The Huskers’ increased passing in the offensive gameplan favors all of the receivers. “We’re spreading the ball out more,” Turner said. “Being a receiver, you want to catch a pass.” Brown said the Huskcrs are not completely changing the offense. “It’s not going to be a thing where we are one-dimensional,” he said. “We still have a lot of great running backs and running quarterbacks. “The kinds of passes we’re throw ing, however, are high percentage passes.” While catching the ball is nice, Turner said, “it isn’t the only thing the wingbacks are responsible for. “We have a lot of statistics that don’t show up in the paper on Sun day,” he said. “Every time someone scores on a long run, we are a part of it. Somebody threw that downfield block.” Kangers will win, someday... One day when I was really young, my dad picked me up by the diaper. I hadn’t done anything wrong, and I wasn’t in for a spanking. Nor was I crawling to an imminent death in an overly crowded street or into the hands of a scary stranger. My dad picked me up, looked at me for a second while I was dangling in the air, and said, ‘ You will live, breathe, and love the Texas Rang ers.” No doubt the Rangers sucked then, as they have ever since. They were probably at least 20 games under .500, choking away a doubleheader even as he spoke. But my dad (a Texas na tive) can be intimidating, especially to the eyes of a startled infant who would really rather listen to mommy. So I obeyed, making the first blun der of my young life. I’ve paid the price ever since. It took me awhile to realize that I wasn’t like the other little boys grow ing up around me. Every spring, they would put on their Royals, Twins or Cubs caps and tell me how their team was destined for World Scries glory. They knew the players, and even planned to attend a game or two that summer. I wasn’t like the rest. There were no Texas Rangers’ baseball caps to be found in the Nebraska Sandhills. To get any information about my heroes from the Deep South, I would buy scads of baseball cards, discarding Willie Stargells, Mike Schmidts and Reggie Jacksons just to reach the bottom of the heap and find a Bump Wills or an A1 Oliver. The other kids watched their teams on NBC’s Saturday “Game of the Week.” Vin Skully and Joe Garagiola would shout with glee when Reggie Jackson took one out of Yankee Sta dium to beat the Royals. Even the Twins and Cubs merited a few ap pearances, no matter how bad they were. Texas was never on. Instead, my dad bought me a radio and tuned it to 820 AM, the Home of the Rangers. About 9 p.m. every night, Marie Holtz and Eric Nadell, the voices of the Rangers, would come filtering through the hog market reports. By the time I could pull in the game, the contest already was in the seventh inning, the Rangers would inevitably be trailing by a huge mar gin. The announcers would laugh, sometimes at the Ranger players, and sometimes go off into a fantasy “What if we had a really good team?” rou tine. Meanwhile, I suffered because of my Ranger addiction. When I’d wear my big “T” cap to school, kids would ask me if the Rangers were a minor league team, if I could name more than three Ranger players, if they had drawn more than 500 fans the night before. A couple of times, I got to attend games in Arlington Stadium. I went crazy, especially having 30,000 fans around me who knew who the Rang ers were and actually liked them. Texas would only win one out of every three games I saw, but I left ecstatic. When 1 returned, however, I had nobody with which to share my en thusiasm. No matter how I embel lished the story about how my team rallied to win, any Ranger tale was labeled a yawner. The seasons always ended the same way — with me silting in front of the television watching a couple of teams 1 really didn’t care about battle for the pennant. All other fans had their year in the sun: The Royals in 1985, the Twins (for God’s sake, the Twins) in 1987 and the Cubs even won a couple of division titles before losing in the playoffs. Texas has never won the Ameri can League West, much less anything else. The closest was five games behind California in 1986. Arlington Sta dium, incidentally, is the only pre 1980s baseball stadium never to have hosted an All-Star Game. The Rangers arc the team nobody cares about. Ageless Nolan Ryan has brought a little notoriety (Did you sec the Sports Illustrated baseball issue?) but it quickly fizzles when Nolan’s picture is put next to the Rangers’ record. Although Texas m ight have one of its best teams ever this season, they will end up buried beneath new and old powers like Oakland, Chicago, Kan sas City and California. I knew that when this season be gan, the Texas Rangers weren’t going to win anything. But nevertheless, I listened to them last week just like I was 10 again. With the talent they have now, the Rangers arc going to win the damn division before the turn of the cen tury. I and every other closet Texas fan will come out, wave red and blue pennants and laugh all the way to the Series. It will happen someday; 1 can feel it. Right, Dad? Adkisson is a sophomore news-editorial major and a Daily Nebraskan sports stafT re porter. c CD Jtf s I O d 5 ■