The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, January 22, 1993, Page 8, Image 8

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    NU track season
to open Saturday
Coach predicts
success ahead
By Tony West
Staff Reporter
Nebraska will kick off its track and
field season Saturday with goals set
no lower than usual—BigEight titles
and high national finishes.
Coach Gary Pepin said his men’s
and women’s indoor teams, which
will host the Nebraska Open at the
Bob Devancy Sports Center track on
Saturday, were both good enough to
capture conference championships.
Last season, the Huskcr teams
swept the indoor conference titles,
and the Nebraska women also won the
Big Eight outdoor championship.
Pepin said this year’s teams should
repeat those performances.
“We will win both conference
meets (men and women),” Pepin said.
“I want to sec both teams as lop 10
finishers in the national indoor meet.”
The Nebraska Open, which will
begin at 11 a.m., will be more for
individuals than teams. Team scoring
will not be kept in the meet, which
will have more than 600 athletes par
ticipating.
Among the teams competing arc
Barton County Community College,
Nebraska Wesleyan, Hastings, Doanc,
Wayne State, Northern Iowa and
Wichita State.
-44
We are not keeping
team totals. But even
if we were, the team
competition isn’t that
good.
—Pepin
Nil track coach
-»t -
“Wc arc not keeping team totals,”
Pepin said. “But even if wc were, the
team competition isn’t that good.
“This meet wc will focus on the
individuals,” Pepin said. “There will
be some great athletes competing.”
Pepin said the meet would serve as
a tool for him to evaluate the talent on
his team, especially the freshman. He
also said the meet might be thcchancc
to sec where Nebraska needed to fill
its holes.
“We have a lot of new people this
season,” Pepin said. “I feel the men’s
recruiting class was real good, while
wc didn’t get all wc wanted from the
women.”
In addition, Pepin said the low-key
meet would give his younger athletes
a chance to get adjusted to the college
level.
“This is going to be a non-pressure
meet for us,” Pepin said. “This meet
gives us an opportunity to find out
where wc arc with people and their
progress according to other athletes.”
Kiley Timperley/DN
Nebraska freshman Lis Brenden guards a defender in a game earlier this year. Brenden
earned her first start last weekend and will start tonight’s game against No. 7 Colorado.
Husker swim teams ready
to take on Iowa, Iowa State
From Staff Reports
After the Husker swim teams’
sweeps over Missouri last Saturday,
both the men and women arc anxious
to face two competitive teams in Iowa
this weekend.
The men’s team will face Iowa in
Iowa City at 7 p.m. today, and both
Husker teams will have a dual with
Iowa State in Ames on Saturday.
Nebraska coach Cal Beniz said
Iowa, a team which is ranked among
the lop 15 in the nation, would present
a challenge to his swimmers.
“Iowa will always pul your back to
the wall and compete real hard,” Benu
said. “Il’i. a good hard rivalry, with
both schools bringing out the best of
each other.”
Bent/ said for Nebraska, he looked
for strong performances from Husker
newcomers Lazcllc MarkgralT and
Bjorn Mollcr, who both made impres
sive dcbuls last week against Mis
souri.
“We expect to see very good limes,"
Bentz said. “However, Iowa Slate has
limited space, so we will have to swim
well.”
Home
Continued from Page 7
“K-State, I just feel, they’re really
doing a good job,” he said. “You win
two overtime games — one on the
road, one at home — it builds their
confidence, and I think that they’re
really playing with a confident level.”
Nebraska forward Bruce Chubick,
who led the Huskers in scoring with
15 points on Wednesday, said he was
impressed with the Wildcats’ effort
against Kansas.
“Against KU, they carpe out and
just gave lOOpcrccntcffort,’’Chubick
said. “1 thought for a half they played
great; in that first half they looked
tough — they looked as good as most
of the teams I’ve seen.”
Chubick said that after Nebraska’s
dismal performance against Sacra
men to Slate, the W i Ideals would prob
ably be confident coming into the
Dcvancy Center.
“Idon’lthink they’II feel they have
to do anything special to beat us,” he
said. “We haven’t shown anybody
anything yet, and I’m sure they feel
they have a real good chance of com
ing in here and beating us — if I was
them, I probably would, loo; hope
fully we can prove them wrong.”
If Kansas State is to leave Saturday
with a win, the Wildcats will probably
have to do it the way they have been
all season — with balanced scoring.
Five Wildcat players arc averaging
double figures in scoring, led by guard
Askia Jones’ 12.8 points per game.
Chubick said playing at the
Dcvancy Center should help combat
Kansas State’s numerous weapons.
“There’s no place like home," he
said. (
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‘Little things’ offer big
returns for freshman
By Tony West
Staff Reporter__
The Nebraska women’s basketball
team just can’t keep its freshmen on
the bench.
Earlier this season, freshman Kate
Galligan broke into the starting lineup
after an impressive showing in a game
against Arizona State.
Now it’s Lis Brenden’s turn.
Brenden, a guard, got her first start
of the season last Sunday when Ne
braska played at Kansas State. She
responded by scoring 12 points and
helped lead the Comhuskers to a 74
57 win.
Tonight, Brenden will see her sec
ond start of the season when the Husk
ers play host to No. 7 Colorado in an
S p.m. game at the Bob Dcvancy
Sports Center.
Despite shining in her first start,
Brenden isn’t ready to proclaim her
self as a fixture in the lineup just yet.
“I am not for certain that I am a
permanent starter,’’ Brenden said.
Her offensive production has
picked up as the season has progressed.
Brenden is averaging almost 6 points
and 2 rebounds per game.
But the main reason why Brenden
has seen an expanded role for the
Huskers is her scrappy defense. She
said she prides herself on playing
lefense with all the intensity she can.
Colorado (15-0,3-01 ^
F Amy Matter* 7A 3.9
F Mindy Henry 113 63
C Abhyfflrfs 93 63
G Stephanie Mack S3 13
G Stetey Steetz |16.7 23
Wgbrwk. [11-4,2-2) ^ m
F Nafeesak Brown 113 43
F Karen Jennings 21.7 73
G Meggan Yedsena 83 33
G Kate GaMga* 63 2.1
G Lb Brendan S3 2.1
Scott Maurer/DN
1 just play defense hard and bring
defensive intensity,” Brenden said.
‘If I knock them down, I’m not going
to help them back up.”
“I’m not a very nice person out
there,” she said. “I bang with the
best."
Brenden said she tries to model her
play after her role model, Phoenix
Sun forward Charles Barkley, who is
known for his physical play on the
court.
Brenden said making the transi
lion from high school to college was
easier than she expected.
I expected it to be more difficult
here,” Brenden said. ‘‘In high school
it was a cakewalk and here you have
to actually play the game and be more
patient."
That patience finally paid off with
last weekend’s start. But Brenden said
she still realized her role on the team
and that she’s still only a freshman.
“I keep my mouth shut,” Brenden
said. “But, I beat them up with the
little things I do.”
Championship “only goal” Parcells has
BOSTON (AP) - The word “cham
>ionship” flowed repeatedly from Bill
’arcclls’ lips as he relumed to coach -
ng Thursday, even if he must rebuild
he New England Patriots.
Parcclls, winner of two Super
Jowls in his last five years as head
:oach of the New York Giants, lakes
:hargc of a team that lied for the
siFL’s worst record and has won just
our playoff games in its 33-year his
ory.
“History,” he declared, “means
tothing in football.”
Patriots owner Jim Orth wein cal led
he signing of Parcclls “the beginning
)f a new and exciting chapter in the
history of the New England Patriots ”
Ata meeting late last week, Parcclis
said, Orth wein asked him what it would
take to make the Patriots competitive.
I told him I wasn’t interested in a
competitive team, but rather if he was
interested in bringing a championship
team to New England, then I was his
man, Parcclis said at a news confer
ence. “That’s the only goal a guy like
me can have.
“I emphasize the word champion
ship because that’s what I’m trying to
d?H ad,dcd- ‘When (Orthwein)
said, That s what I want to do, too ’
I got real interested.”
New England was 2-14 in 1992, ils
second season under coach Dick
MacPhcrson. MaePherson was fired
Jan.8andchicfcxccutivcofficcrSam
Jankovich resigned the next day.
Parcclls is the Patriots’ fourth coach
in five years. He resigned as Giants
coach lour months after winning the
1991 Super Bowl and spent the past
two seasons as an NBC football an
nouncer. He said Thursday he missed
coaching.
It s like going to the schoolyard
when you’re a kid,” he said. “You
have to grow up some time, but fortu
nately I haven t had to.”