Sports Opinion Mttch Sherman NU couple perseveres in rough times, Damon Benning stood among 300 people at a crowded party in the spring of 1994. Still, he managed to spot Tanya Franck. “I had seen her around,” Benning said. “But I had never said a word to her. She always looked so different She dressed weird, and she didn’t really talk to anybody. She was kind of a loner.” Benning and Franck talked that Friday night for three hours, sitting on the couch as if they woe the only two in the room. Two days lido:, they went to a Husker baseball game—Benning’s first — and the rest is history. Franck, a junior co-captain on die sixth-ranked NU soccer team, and Benning, a senior co-captain on the ^eyentlbmnked football team, have been together for 1 Yi years. Together, they persevere. In spite of road trips, team meet ings and practice schedules, it has worked well. “It’s really hard to get quality time together,” said Franck, who transferred to Nebraska in 1994 from Arkansas-Little Rock after growing up in Toronto. When they met, Benning, a life long Nebraskan, knew almost noth ing about soccer. Franck knew even less about football. “Every time I go out to a soccer game,” Benning said, “I tell my buddies that I can’t believe I’m ac tually doing this on a regular basis. Growing up, soccer wasn’t any thing I was real fond of.” Football isn’t even played at Earl Haig High School in Toronto. When Franck arrived in Lincoln, she couldn’t point out a quarterback on the field, let alone an I-back. “Now,” she said, “I know all these plays, and I love it.” What Benning and Franck don’t have in common off the field, they make up for on the field. Unfortu nately for both, injuries have been a mqjor part of their NU careers. Benning has been tormented by minor setbacks — hamstrings, ankles, and this week, he’s missed twapractices withasore^groin. A few months after she met Benning, Franck tore the anterior cruciate ligament in her left knee, causing her to miss the 1995 sea son. She’s come back strong as a junior, but without Benning, she said, last season would have been nearly unbearable. “Knowing that you have a per son behind you helps a lot,” Franck said, “someone who can relate to what you are going through. “Damon may look all hard and tough on the outside. But inside, he’s the sweetest person in the whole world.” Sherman is a senior news-edi torial major and the Daily Ne braskan sports editor. 1 W-, . MattMillkr/DN ISABELLE MORNEAU.is one of five Nebraska freshmen to play a mqjny r^jhhiafoll in NTfg