Sports 5 Monday, March 25,1996 ! Page 7 Mitch Sherman Huskers turn disaster into respectability A month ago, nobody expected the Nebraska basketball team to be practicing on March 24. But from noon until 1 p.m. Sun day afternoon, the Cornhuskers ran up and down the Dcvancy Center floor, refining fundamentals and preparing for the National Invita tion Tournament Final Four. Outside the arena sat a bus with the words, “Go Big Red,” plastered on the upper left comer of the wind shield. Shortly after 2 p.m., the play ers and coaches were shipped to Omaha, where they flew directly to New York and Madison Square Garden. Oh, how things have changed. Nebraska is one of only eight teams in the nation still breathing. Thcsc^isjbp: sam^players who,, drew heaps of criticism only weeks ago, the same players who had no sense of unity during their disas trous Big Eight season, the same players who boycotted practice and rebelled against their coach. Nebraska was lucky to earn an invitation to the NIT. Once in, the Huskers were supposed to die in the first round at the hands of upstart Colorado State. After that, it was Washington State’s NBA-bound power forward Mark Hendrickson who was ex pected to bury Nebraska. That didn’t happen, but Jerry Tarkanian loomed in the way of a trip to the Big Apple. The Huskers didn’t have a chance to snap Fresno State’s 15-game home-court winning streak. The game wasn’t even close. The Huskers won by 12 points, and suddenly they’re headed to New York on a three-game winning streak. They’ve won four of their last five and have averaged 85 points per game in the NIT. “We’re not living in the past,” a smiling, enthusiastic Nee said Sun day. “We are happy where we are,” Where the Huskers are is some where on the road back to respect ability. They are the only team left to represent the dying Big Eight Con ference. Nee’s job, which was in jeopardy last month, appears to be secure for at least another year. Nebraska’s seniors arc playing like seniors. Somewhere—maybe it was the end of the regular season, maybe it was the heartbreaking loss to Iowa Slate in the Big Eight Tour nament — these players remem bered how to have fun. And with that, they remembered how to win. “What was then and what is now arc two different things,” Nee said. “This is our old team, the one you saw in early December and Janu ary. It’s absolutely the old basket ball team.” The NIT is not all that impor tant. Winning it would be nice, but what is important is that the Husk ers have found the cure to the sick ness that was eating away at their basketball program. Sbermaa Is a Jaalor aews-edltorlal major aad tbe Dally Nebraskaa sports editor. NU takes growl out of Bulldogs 12-point win over Fresno St. propels Huskers to third NIT Final Four By Brian R. Fisher_ DN Correspondent FRESNO, Calif. — When Coach Danny Nee saw his team fall 13 points behind Fresno State in the first half Friday, he wasn’t worried. Instead, Nee relied on his team’s experience to beat the Bulldogs 83-71 and advance to the Final Four of the National Invitation Tournament. The Cornhuskcrs, 19-14, will play Tulane, 21-9, at 6 p.m. Tuesday at Madison Square Garden. Tulane has beaten Illinois State, Minnesota and Auburn in the NIT. “Tulane is probably as athletic of a team as we’ve played since I’ve been at Nebraska,” Nee said. “They come out of a conference that I think is a Underdogs earn Final Four spots DENVER (AP)—Underdogs Syra cuse and Mississippi State on Sunday joined top seeds Kentucky and Massa chusetts to fill the last spots for next weekend’s Final Four in East Rutherford, N.J. Syracuse upset No. 2 seed Kansas u6Q-57 jq jym thfi, Wctd, fagiqnaj, AP4,, earn a Final Four berth for the first time since 1987. “No one picked us to even get to a regional final,” Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim said. “The kids didn’t worry about that. Theyjust came out to play.” Kansas managed to hold Syracuse star John Wallace in check, but in a game in which the Jayhawks desper ately needed the outside shot, they could hit only four of 25 3-point at tempts. The final errant attempt by point guard Jacque Vaughn was symbolic of Kansas’ inability to hit the long shot. The Jayhawks had plenty of time, but Vaughn was forced to take a shot at the last second. “I had a pretty good look, but it just didn’t go,” Vaughn said. “Our thoughts were to get that shot off a little faster and maybe get a rebound i fwe missed.” Syracuse will face Mississippi State, a 73-63 winner over Cincinnati on Sunday, in a national semifinal Satur day at the Meadowlands. Second-seed Cincinnati was the lat est high-profile team to fall to Missis sippi State, which suddenly has grabbed the nation’s attention. Mississippi State beat thcn-No. 1 Kentucky in the Southeastern Confer ence Tournament championship game 14 days ago and knocked out top seeded Connecticut on Friday night in the Southeast Regional semifinals. “Dreams are coming true for us,” said Dontac’ Jones, who led the Bull dogs with 23 points and 13 rebounds. great basketball conference.” The Green Wave were 9-5 in Con ference USA, which sent Memphis, Louisville, Marquette and Cincinnati o the NCAA Tournament. St. Joseph’s and Alabama will play in the other semifinal game Tuesday light. The consolation and the cham lionship games will be played Thurs day. “We are happy to be where we are,” Nee said. “We appreciate the opportu nity, and now we are going to New York to try to put another good game together.” The Huskers put a solid game to gether against Fresno State, silencing a sellout crowd of 10,132 at Sclland Arena. Nebraska had trouble early han Matt Miller/DN Nebraska senior Jason Christie competes on the parallel bars Saturday night at the Bob Devaney Sports Center. Christie tied Ohio State’s Blaine Wilson for first place on the horizontal bars, but the Nebraska lost to the Buckeyes despite a season-high team score. The Nebraska women also competed against Southern Utah and set an all-time record with a score of 195.75. See story on page 8. National Invitation Tournament Final Four Madison Square Garden, New York Tuesday, 6 p.m. Thursday, 6 p.m. Tuesday, 8 p.m. Nebraska (19-14) Consolation Game st. Joseph's (18-12) VS. Thursday, 8 p.m. VS. Tulane (21*9) championship Game Alabama (19-11) tiling the quickness of Bulldog guard Dominick Young and beating the Fresno State full-court pressure. Young scored the first nine points of the game for the Bulldogs on three 3-pointers. He finished the game with a game-high 25 points. Darnell McCulloch added 18 points for Fresno State. The Huskcrs committed 11 turn overs in the first 7:20 of the game and trailed 24-11. In the first half, Ne braska committed 17 turnovers, but had only four in the second half. See NIT on 8 place 5th at NCAAs By Antone Oseka Staff Reporter MINNEAPOLIS — It was said before the NCAA Wrestling Champi onships began that no team could beat Iowa. A Jot of learns tried. A lot of teams failed.' Iowa won its second consecutive and 16th overall NCAA Champion ship with 122.5 team points in front of a crowd of 13,979 fans at the Target Center. It was the second-largest total crowd in tournament history with 77,489 fans attending the three-day event. Nebraska held the No. 2 spot for most of the day Friday, but all of Nebraska’s wrestlers lost before the championship round, dropping the Cornhuskcrs in the team race. Iowa coach Dan Gable said he had ups and downs in the tournament. Gable gave away the secret to winning 16 NCAA titles. “Never be satisfied with what you accomplish,” he said. Nebraska finished fifth behind Iowa, Iowa State, Cal-Statc Bakers field and Penn State. The Huskcrs brought home four wrestlers with All American honors, but no national champions. 158-pounder Temoer Terry, 190 pouirder Ryan Tobin and heavyweight Tolly Thompson all placed third. 167 pounder Chad Nelson earned his-first All-American honor with an eighth place finish this year. The other five of Nebraska’s nine qualifiers were out of the tournament Friday. 118-pounder Brad Canoycr couldn’t match his All-American fin See WRESTLING on 8 Nebraska hones to learn from NCAA loss By Mike Kluck Senior Reporter STANFORD, Calif.—Losing 66 62 to Colorado State in the first round of the NCAA Tournament won’t hurt the future of the Nebraska women’s basketball team—as long as the play ers learn from their experience, Coach Angela Beck said. The Comhuskers finished 19-10 after losing to the Rams on March 17 at Maples Pavilion on the campus of Stanford University in the NCAA West Regional. The Huskers must continue to im prove, Beck said, but the first-round JL “This team made tremendous strides from last year, bringing us to an NCAA level. ” ANGELA BECK Nebraska women’s basketball coach loss will help them. “I think it issomethingweean learn from and build on,” Beck said. “This team made tremendous strides from last year, bringing us to an NCAA level. And with our recruitment next year, 1 look for us to learn from this experience and become a little bit bet ter in the future.” One reason for Beck’s optimisn was the performance of Nebraska’: underclassmen against Colorado State especiallyjunior guard LaToya Doage The transfer from Lincoln (111.) Jun ior College, who earned honorabk mention All-Big Eight, scored 1( points for the Huskers — including back-to-back baskets that cut the Ranis’ lead from six to two points with four minutes remaining in the game. She also led Nebraska with three steals, including two against Ram se nior guard Dee Dec Dominguez. Those two steals brought praise from Colo rado State coach Greg Williams. > “They bring Doagc in off the bench and she picks Dec Dee Dominguez a i couple of times,” Williams said. “That ; never happened to Dec Dee Dominguez , in her entire career, let alone in a three , minute stretch. So we had to make a ■ change there.” , \ See END on 8 NU gymnasts fail short Wrestlers rrrrr-—■■ ■ ■ ■■■ ■ ■ • w; ■ '.'.IM1 wmmbwmmw ■■■■■■" Msa—a