Big Notebook 1 With the birth of the Big 12 Con ference in August, Iowa State’s 56 55 victory over Kansas in the Big Eight Tournament championship Sunday was the last-evcr Big Eight basketball game. It was also the Cyclones’ first league tournament title. In the 20-year history of the tournament, only Colorado failed to win a championship. * * * The Big 12 will not change the configuration of the Big Eight’s wrestling championships. Because none of the Texas schools have a wrestling program, Nebraska, Iowa State, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State and Missouri still will be the only schools in the league tournament next season. * * * The last Big Eight Tournament at Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo., set a record for attendance as 70,617 fans watched the three-day event. The mark surpassed last year’s record of 69,059. * * * Kansas and Iowa State domi nated the all-tournament roster. Named to the team were Dedric Willoughby, Kenny Pratt and Kelvin Cato from Iowa State. Kan sas landed Jacque Vaughn, Racf LaFrentz and Ryan Robertson. * * * Four Big Eight men’s teams were selected for the NCAA Tour nament. Kansas (26-4) received a No. 2 seed in the East Region and will face South Carolina State (22 7) in the first round in Tempo, Ariz., Friday. Iowa State (23-8) received a No. 5 seed in the Midwest Region and will face 12th-seedcd Califor nia (17-10) in Dallas on Thursday. In the Southeast Region in Orlando, Fla., Oklahoma (17-12) received a 10th seed and will face seventh seeded Temple (19-12) Friday. Kansas State (17-11) also received a 10th seed and will face New Mexico (174) in the first round of the East Region in Richmond, Va., Friday. AAA Four Big Eight women’s basket ball teams, including Nebraska, received bids to the NCAA Tour nament. The ninth-seeded Comhuskers (19-9) will face Colorado State (25 4) in the first round in Palo Alto, Calif., Saturday. Colorado (25-8) received a No. 3 seed and will play host to 14th-sccdcd Tulane (21-9) Friday in Boulder, Colo. Fourth seeded Kansas (20-9) also will play host to a first-round game in Lawrence, Kan., against Middle Tennessee State (24-5). Oklahoma State (19-9) received a seventh seed and will play lOth-sceded Rhode Island (21-7) Saturday in Athens, Ga. ♦ + * Missouri and Nebraska were in vited to the men’s National Invita tion Tournament. Nebraska (16-14) will face Colorado State (18-11) in Fort Collins, Colo., Thursday. Mis souri (17-14) will play host to Murray State (19-9) on Wednesday in Columbia, Mo. Oklahoma State received an invitation but declined the offer. Big Eight Notebook compiled by «e ■ior reporter Mike Klack. Sky’s the limit e;.| i:; Brown sets the pace for Huskers d 'vv By Gregg Madsen Staff Reporter Performing a scries of flips and handstands on a 4-inch-wide bal ance beam suspended 4 feet above the ground is not easy. But for freshman Cornhuskcr gymnast Courtney Brown, it comes as second nature. “She’s a great beam worker,” Nebraska assistant coach Teresa Ijams said. “She’s really clean form-wise. She doesn’t have any form breaks, and she moves well on the beam. She just has good skills.” But Brown’s Torfn and naturaf talent arc not as valuable as her con fidence, Ijams said, which has helped her claim the leadoff role for Nebraska on the beam. “It’s very, very important,” Ijams said, “because what the first person docs has a great deal to do with how the rest of the team docs. It kind of sets the pace for the other competi tors.” Husker coach Dan Kcndig said the leadoff position is one that few gymnasts covet, but Brown volun teered for the spot earlier this year. “She asked for the role,” Kcndig said. “Courtney’s great on the beam. We had her at a later spot in the lineup for intra-squad practices, but she didn’t like that. “We feel like we’ve got a qual- . ity person there to get us-going. And nobody is harder on herself when she misses than Courtney.” Brown, a native of Fishers, Ind., has fallen only twice on her beam routines this year. She scored a ca rccr-high 9.85 in the Masters Clas sic Feb. 25, good enough for third “ place. “I really like it,” Brown said, “because it gives me a chance to lead the whole team off. I feel like I can have a big impact.” One of five freshmen in the eighth-ranked Huskers’ starting ' lineup, Brown also competes on the vault and in the floor exercise. At the Masters Classic, she also scored a career-high 9.875 on the floor, sparking the Huskers to a v come-from-bchind 193.8-193.2 victory over No. 4 Michigan. “I didn’t think we were going to have as much impact as we have,” Brown said, “but all the upperclass men kept tel ling us that we were go ing to be good. I don’t really think that any of us believed it until we actually started performing, and we were like, 'Wow, we can actually do this.’” Ijams said she was also surprised at the impact that Brown had made this season. ?. “You don’t usually think of a freshman as the type of competitor that would start out an event,” Ijams said. “But she’s done awesome.” Brown said she hoped to add an uneven bars routine to her reper toire and compete as an all arounder. That adjustment, Brown said, will be an easy one. But she said the adjustment to college life had not been as simple. “It’s a lot different,” she said. “I had to change a lot. I had to change my time management and just my whole schedule.” Freshman wrestler inspires NU By Antone Oseka Staff Reporter . / STILLWATER, Okla.—Freshman Dusty Morris entered the Big Eight Wrestling Championships as the fifth seed in a five-man bracket. He had a losing record at 15-16 and __was supposed to be the weak spot in Nebraska’s lineup. He proved everyone wrong. Morris wrestled his way to third place in «■—■ — • : : * me i^z-pouna Morris weight class Sat urday afternoon ;at Gallagher-Iba Arena on the Okla “The kid's got a big heart. He gives you everything he's got all the time. ” TONY DEANDA Nebraska wrestler ' _ homa State campus. He beat third-seeded Rod Jones of Oklahoma 2-1 in overtime when Jones was called for stalling. And most important of all, Morris qualified for the NCAA Championships, which will be March 21-23 in Minneapolis. “Dusty gave us a chance to win the tournament,” Nebraska coach Tim Neumann said. Morris’ team points weren’t enough for Nebraska to win the title. though. The Comhuskcrs finished six points behind Oklahoma State, which won the meet with 70 team points. Morris scored team points with a first-round 3-2 win over Matt Webster of Missouri. That victory pitted Morris against top-seeded Derek Mountsier of Iowa State. Morris lost 6-1, drop ping him into the match against Jones. Morris, who is from Cody, Wyo., not only earned the praise of his coach after the meet, he also served as a model for his teammates, Neumann said. “We got to get these guys to wrestle like Dusty Morris, as far as letting it all hang out,” Neumann said. Tony DeAnda, a senior 134 poundcr, said the secret to Morris was his determination. “The kid’s got a big heart,” DeAnda said. “He gives you everything he’s got all the time.” DeAnda said he remembered when Morris started the season for Ne braska. Then, DeAnda said he could beat him easily, but now Morris, who redshirted last season, has earned a chance to wrestle for the national championship. “It’s a great feeling,” Morris said. See MORRIS on 8