:v f Onlhe l r: ___ By Gregg Madsen Staff Reporter Heather Brink knows how to make a good first impression. In her first collegiate appearance Saturday at the Iowa State Invita tional, the Ne braska freshman women’s gymnast showed her poten tial by winning the all-around with a score of 39.175. Her score helped the fifth 1 ranked Comhuskers win their season opening meet 193.675-191.675 over the Cyclones. The score was the high est first-meet score in NU history. Brink won the balance beam (9.775) and the floor exercise (9.775). She finished second on the vault (9.875) and third on the uneven bars (9.775) . Brink, a Lincoln native who com peted for five years with the Dynamo Gymnastics Club in Oklahoma City, said she didn’t expect that kind of per formance. “Actually, I was really nervous. I haven’t competed in two years.” The hiatus didn’t affect her perfor mance on Saturday, and Coach Dan Kendig said it shouldn’t affect her at any point in the season. Brink said she shared the same goals as the rest of the team. “Most of the goals we have are real long-term goals,” she said. “Of course, we all want to make it to the national championships, but right now my short term goal is just to do the best I can and to come back and improve on the mistakes I made in the last meet.” Kendig said Brink has a disci plined work ethic and a quiet confi dence that should help Brink meet her goal of improving each week. j “She’s the kind of person who doesn’t really want to hear the kind of expectations you have for ha-,” Kendig said. “She just wants to go out and compete.” A member of the 1993 and 1995 U.S. National Teams, Brink said it was different to compete as part of a team instead of an individual competitor. Brink said competing at the colle giate level was the biggest adjustment from club gymnastics. “That’s been the hardest for me to adjust to,” she said. “I’m not only go ing to score for myself. Some days I’ll have to work a little harder just to help the team and I have to keep a positive attitude, not only for myself, but for the team.” Nu, KSU enter £ame on a roll WOMEN from page 10 in Manhattan, Kan., the same after noon. So both teams enter the game with momentum. “I kind of feel like I’m somewhat the underdog going in,” Husker Coach Angela Beck said. “Although they don’t have a huge roster, they really have some great players on their team that play well together ” The Wildcats are led by junior guard Brit Jacobson, senior guard Missy Decker and senior forward Andria Jones — all three were 1995 96 All-Big Eight selections. Jones leads KSU in both scoring and rebounding averaging 20.3 points and 6.8 rebounds per game. The 6 foot-1 forward also has 32 blocked shots, one shy of the school record. Jacobson needs just three points 22nd Wildcat to reach toe*UKWpoint mark. While Decker, who hit a free throw at the end of regulation against Texas for the win, leads the Wildcats with 22 3-point goals and is shooting 37 percent from behind the arc. With the win over Texas and the leadership of three seniors and three juniors, Kansas Stale is playing as a team, something NU hasn’t quite done yet, Beck said. “Right now, chemistry-wise, we’re still working on it,” Beck said. “Be lieve it or not, even though we’re 11 - 1,1 can’t say we have played our best basketball yet.” However, Kansas State first-year Coach Deb Patterson said her team is at a major disadvantage playing in the Devaney Center. “Anybody who looks forward to coming to Lincoln to play Nebraska wTenher football or baHkett&Il rnust be halfcrazy,” Patterson said. Patterson said she is impressed with the Huskers’ record and knows the Wildcats will have to be ready for NU’s aggressive defense. Against Texas A&M, the Huskers forced 36 Aggie turnovers. Nebraska has been causing 33 turnovers per game. KSU averages just under 19 turnovers a game. Patterson said she is concerned about the Wildcats’ lack of depth com pared to the Huskers’. The Wildcats are consistently using seven players, while NU has played as many as 13 players in 10 games this season. “K-State reminds me a lot of our guys,” Beck said. “They have some of the five better players in the league if you put them on the floor together. They have that land of •combination, but they don’t have anything after that** tt's sw»»£J*,*, ttauiviywl Send us your wedding horror *1 nightmare? I stones to be published in the DN wedding guide on Jan. 24. Give us the nitty-gritty via e-mail letters@unlinfo.unl.edu, or bring your stories to the Daily Nebraskan, 34 Nebraska Union. Mark them "Attention: Honeymoon's over." - Huskers need to protect home court against KSU juisin from page m_ on Saturday. “You’ve got to expect that every I night.” Tonight’s opponent, Kansas State, presents NU with a reasonable chance to win its third straight game, but if the Huskers are caught with their guard down, Moore said, they will lose. “We can’t afford to lose any of the rest of our home games,” Moore said. “We have to please our fans and have pride in our home court.” The 7-5 Wildcats, 0-2 in the Big 12, enter tonight’s 6:05 game at the Bob Devaney Sports Centra still recovering from a 103-64 waxing at the hands of No. 23 Texas on Saturday. Losers of four of its last five games, KSU has played terribly away from Bramlagc Coli seum this season. Before losing in Austin by 39 points, Kansas State dropped road games to Xavier (95-54) and to Michigan State (75-43). “K-State is a good basketball team that is just about ready to break out,” Huskcr Coach Danny Nee said. ’They will crane in here and be very confident. We will catch their best shot.” Junior forward Mark Young leads KSU, averaging 14.4 points and 6.5 rebounds per game. The Wildcats start only one senior, 6 foot-11 center Gerald Eakra, and rank last in ; the Big 12 in scoring (67 points per game) on 39.1 percent field-goal shooting. But KSU isnot without its bright spots. The Wildcats own a 6*2 home mark rad took No. 1 Kansas to the final minute,losing62-59 on Jan. 4. .Nebraska (9-5 and 1 -1) has also played well this season at home, winning six of seven games at die Devaney Crater. Senior forward Bernard Gamer returns to the court tonight after missing fbur games be cause of uncompleted academic course work. Nee sent Gamra back to Lincoln for an undis closed disciplinary reason following NU’s 84 73 loss to Cincinnati, Dec. 31 in Puerto Rico. “We feel like we are family” Moore said. “With Bernard gone, it felt like something was M We can’t afford to lose any of the rest of our home games” Mikki Moore NU center missing. Since he’s coming back with a new attitude, I feel like there will be unity.” Mporc, whose role increased in Gamer’s absence, felfthe Aggies’ heat on Saturday, of ten fading two or three defenders at once. The 6-11 senior scored only eight points and took eight shots in 35 minutes. Nee expects Moore to draw more of the same attention throughout the conference season. “As far as a mental approach,” Nee said, “Mikki Moore is A-pi us. But the physicalness is going to afTect him.” Moore said he urges his teammates to “bang cm him” in practice to help prepare him for the physical post play he’ll see in the next two months. “I tell them to smack me or push me,” he said. “Sometimes the coaches get out the foot ball pads. Even though I’m skinny, I try to be a little aggressive under there.” , Moore lit up Colorado for a career-high 27 points in NU’s 79-73 league-opening loss in Bocdtfer. When A&M shut him down, the Husk ers looked to point guard Tyronn Lue, who made 10 of 17 field goals on the way to 29 points. Despite KSU’s struggles, Nee said the Wild cats pose an important test for NU, which plays host to Missouri on Saturday night before hit ting the road for six of its next eight games. “The first place problems start is when you lose home games,” Nee said. “We try to win them all. Realistically, is that going to happen? I don’t know. But that’s what we try to do.” ft - ’..: ._ ,. ■■ *%•;-■ ■ 11 w:»u.F **£■**£ ’“Tju* * • "•' l^r'-.- \» « yj: » ^^■"4. '.: ’m - ^;1 IIM j l-S-'-i At University Bookstore, we’ve got more used textbooks than ever before! Thousands of used texts are available for many of your spring semester classes. And that means you save 25% off the cost of new textbooks. Come on down to savings at University Bookstore. ' • • ' Nebraska Union East Union •. ■ “Sir.*; ■. ■ University of Nebraske-Uncotn Phone:472-7300 Hours: 8-5:30 M-TH, 8-5 F Owned and operalecl by tie UrweisiiyoiNebrasks-lncoir _I