The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 30, 1995, Page 10, Image 10

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Kansas State has
experienced edge
By Jeff Griesch
Senior Reporter
Kansas State could be the most
experienced baseball team in the con
ference.
The Wildcats returns starters at
every position from last year’s club
except for infielder Jay Kopri va, who
hit .305 and was an honorable men
tion All-Big Eight player.
Kansas State also returns its top
six pitchers.
Unfortunately for Coach Mike
Clark and the Wildcats, this year’s
team is the same team that went 13
43 and finished last in the Big Eight
in 1994.
“Last year was extremely frustrat
ing to me and everyone on the coach
ing staff, but we really couldn’t show
it on the field,” Clark said. “We knew
that the nucleus of our team was
seven freshmen, and we knew we
were going to take some knocks.
“The good news is that this year
our nucleus is a group of seven sopho
mores who want to show that they are
better than people think.”
Clark, who has a career record of
211-232 in eight seasons at Kansas
State, said a winning record was the
Wildcats’ goal this season.
“I think if we finish around or
above .500, that is a realistic goal,”
Clark said. “We are too young to
really challenge for one of the top
spots, but I think we could finish
fourth or fifth, maybe even third if we
got some breaks.”
The Wildcats’ most talented re
turner is sophomore shortstop Todd
Fereday.
Fereday was selected as a third
team freshman All-American after
hitting .306 with 7 homers and 42
RBI.
The Wildcats also return second
team All-Big Eight designated hitter
Matt Miller, who hit .318 with 4
home runs and 26 RBI.
The junior will split his time be
tween football and baseball this
spring. Miller was the second-team
quarterback last season and is ex
pected to challenge for Chad May’s
old job as the Wildcats’ signal caller
next season.
Clark said progress made by the
Wildcats this season would depend
on the success of the pitching staff.
“The whole thing comes down to
pitching and whether our guys can
throw strikes for nine innings and be
confident that they can win,” Clark
said. “If we do that, we are going to
have a good, competitive team this
year.
Top 2 Husker backs
held out of practice
From Staff Reports
The Nebraska football team prac
ticed Wednesday in helmets and shoul
der pads at Memorial Stadium.
Comhusker coach Tom Osborne re
ported no new injuries at the close of
Nebraska’s first outdoor workout of
the spring.
The Huskers’ I-back shortage con
tinued Wednesday. For the second con
secutive practice, No. 1 and No. 2 I
backs, Lawrence Phillips and Damon
Benning did not participate in all drill?
Both Phillips are Benning are re
covering from pulled hamstrings ag
gravated during winter conditioning.
Osborne said he didn’t expect the duo
to return to full speed until next week.
Osborne said he had been pleased
with the Huskers’ condition so far this
spring.
“Overall, we have made reasonably?
good progress,” he said, “but nothing
to write home about.”
Osborne said he expected to scrim
mage on Wednesdays for the rest of the
spring.
Huskers
Continued from Page 9
Erstad hit his ninth homerun of the
season and Wulfing had three hits for
the Huskers.
Dalton, Meyer, Todd Sears and
Motley all had doubles to help
Nebraska’s attack. Motley stretched
his hitting streak to 20 games with
three hits against the Tigers.
Senior righthander Bob Courter
allowed two runs in seven innings to
improve to 3-0.
Despite Nebraska’s hot bats, the
Huskers’ pitching staff came down
with a different type of contagion —
a soaring earned run average.
The Huskers’ pitching staff ERA
was 9.33 during the trip, which in
creased the team ERA from 3.54 to
6.03.
Sanders said he was concerned
with the performance of the pitching
staff, but he was more pleased that
the hitters made up for the lack of
pitching.
“That’s where the team comes in,
that’s picking up your teammates,”
Sanders said. “The hitters said, ‘Hey,
we’ll bang out enough runs until you
guys get it together and throw strikes.’
And in the first 12 games, it was the
other way around.”
Instead of being frustrated with
the pitching, Erstad said he and the
other Nebraska hitters were confi
dent the pitchers would regroup.
“We know our pitchers are a lot
better than they pitched this week,”
Erstad said. “They’ll come back, and
when they do all I can say is look
out.”
Softball
Continued from Page 9
go home and play Oklahoma State
tonight’,” Revelle said. “So I think
they are ready.”
She said the Huskers weren’t ready
last year.
Nebraska was 11 -15 at the start of
the Big Eight and struggled through a
10-game losing streak. Revelle said
her team learned a lot from last year.
“The physical talent has helped
the emotion and that feeds off of each
other,” Revelle said. “There is no
comparison to last year. Last year we
were constructing, not rebuilding like
some teams do for the long haul.”
Another thing that might help
Nebraska is having 30 games of com
bined experience, Revelle said.
“It gave us a chance to work the
bugs out and experiment a little with
the lineup,” Revelle said.
But she said the time for experi
mentation was over.
The Huskers were 5-15 in the Big
Eight last year, and four of those wms
came when Oklahoma forfeited the
final four games of the year.
The Sooners had scheduled too
many games and violated NCAA
rules.
After winning just one game on
the field last year, Revelle said her
team was happy to start with six-time
Big Eight champion Oklahoma State.
“Where our team wants to be at,
we don’t want to start with anyone
else,” Revelle said. “It should be an
all-out bam burner.”
Last year, Nebraska lost its first
nine conference games before beat
ing Iowa State.
The Huskers were 0-4 at home last
season in the Big Eight. All four
losses came to Kansas at the begin
ning of April.
Revelle said a good start to con
ference play would be important.
“It’s everything,” Revelle said.
“It can set the tone for the rest of the
conference schedule.”