The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 11, 1996, Page 10, Image 10

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Hangin’ out before practice
' . * y.- \
Matt Miller/DN
Dan Hadenfeldt, a backup kicker on the Nebraska football team, entertains a group of *
children Wednesday before practice by bouncing a football off the ground. The Corrinusfcers
are in their third week of spring drills. They will practice again Friday, scrimmage Saturday
and conclude drills April 20 with the annual spring game.
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Strickland
doesn’t
practice
From Staff Reports
Two days after practicing with the
Nebraska football team, Erick
Strickland was a no-show Wednes
day.
Strickland, a former second-team
All-Big Eight basketball player whose
eligibility expired last month, said
Monday that he planned to practice
football for a week. After that, he said,
he would concentrate on continuing to
improve his status for next month’s
NBA draft.
Nebraska football coach Tom
Osborne said he hadn’t seen Strickland
since Monday’s practice.
Osborne said Strickland’s apparent
halfhearted interest in football could
be a result of confusion in the weeks
leading up to the draft.
Strickland,an all-state widereceiver
and linebacker while in high school,
worked out Monday with the
Comhuskcr wide receivers. He said if
he was not happy with the way his
basketball career was progressing, he
would join the football team next fall.
Strickland, who played in the
Florida Marlins organization before
his freshman and sophomore years,
has one year of football eligibility.
If he decides to play football, he
would have to be placed on scholar
ship or walk on to the team. Giving
Strickland a scholarship would be a
big gamble, Osborne said.
Fullback
Schuster
injured
From Staff Reports
In footbal l practice Wednesday, No.
1 fullback Brian Schuster went down
with a pulled hamstring. Coach Tom
Osborne said Schuster would not re
turn this spring.
Schuster’s injury adds to
Nebraska’s problem of keeping qual
ity running backs on the field.
“We started the spring with five
experienced running backs,” Osborne
said. “Now three of the five arc down.”
Osborne said he hoped No. 2 I
back Damon Benning and No. 3 I
back James Sims would return to prac
tice Friday or early next week.
Huskers
to face
UMKC
By Mike Kluck
Senior Reporter
After surviving a strong
physical test last weekend from
Kansas, the Nebraska softball
team will face a mental battle
today when it faces Missouri
Kansas City,
The No. 17Comhuskers,who
are in first place in the Big 12
Conference, will play the Kan
garoos in a doubleheader start
ing at 4 p.m. at the Nebraska
Softball Complex.
Last weekend the Huskers,
25-12 overall and 3-1 in the con
ference, lost their first game to
the Jay hawks but responded with
two wins, 15-11 and 6-4 in nine
innings, to win the weekend se
ries.
The Huskers’ extra-inning
win, in which they came back
from a 4-1 seventh-inning defi
cit, Coach Rhonda Revelle said,
helped the team’s confidence.
Uur team needed a win that
way more than anything else,”
Revelle said. “We scrapped our
way to a tie. It was completely
'unconventional on how we did
all of our scoring.”
After the Huskers tied the
score in the seventh inning, se
nior Karla Knicely- hit her first
home run of the season in the
ninth inning to win the game.
“We’ve been waiting to get
on this road, and 1 think we’re
going to ride it,” Revelle said.
But Revelle said she expected
UMKC to present the Huskers
with a new challenge.
“UMKC is a test for us,”
Revelle said. “It’s a mental test
because physically we should
beat them. But if we let down
mentally, they’re gunning for
us.”
A Kangaroo win today would
make UMKC’s season, she said.
But instead of concentrating on
the Kangaroos, Revelle said she
had made sure the Huskers
stayed focused on doing what
they need to do to win.
“We have to come out sharp,”
she said, “and we need to look at
it as if we have to stay in our
game. Every game we play right
now is going to reinforce the
next game.”
On Saturday, the Huskers
travel to College Station, Texas,
to face 12th-rankcd Texas A&M
in a three-game series.