Page 10 ■ Daily Nebraskan ■ Tuesday, September 14,1999_ ■ Li First Class |3*j I . Buuaras Umer | level this fall as well. s “It shows in her play and compo sure,” said Tanaka, a sophomore mid fielder. “You can tell she is more com- 1 fortable at forward, and that has helped t her become an offensive weapon for i us.” 1 Walker said moving Williams to ( striker was an easy decision. i “We thought with the experience of ur returning defenders that it didn’t lake a whole lot of sense to keep her at lefender,” Walker said. “We thought rith her athleticism and speed that we ieeded to get her on the field.” Williams hasn’t started, but she has ilayed about as many minutes as the tarters. When she enters the game, the ener y level of the rest of the Huskers on the ield increases, Walker said. “She gives us a big lift when she omes onto the field,” he said. “You now, high energy and that breakaway hreat.” But the most impressive thing about Villiams this fall, Walker said, is that lone of her three goals have come on mre speed. Williams’ individual workouts and ledication to making herself a more imdamental player are paying off, he aid. After scoring three goals in one veekend, Williams might expect the ame out of herself each weekend. Not the case. “I just want to play well and do what can to help this team win a national itle,” Williams said. “If (defenders) are vorried about me, it is easier for rindsay, Kelly (Rheem) and Becky Preston) to get open and score. It does 1’t matter if I score again.” WAC coaches support conference By Samuel McKewon Senior staff writer It wouldn’t be entirely untrue to say the departing members of the Western Athletic Conference left the cupboard bare when they formed the Mountain West Conference. Many believe they did. But that won’t come out of the mouths of WAC coaches and officials. > After all, they’ll say, Texas Christian, one of the eight teams still in the WAC, had a winning record of 7-5 and beat big-name Southern California in the Sun Bowl. So what if the other seven remaining teams had a combined record of26-54? Or that despite being in huge television markets, cooking shows could generate more interest than Texas-El Paso vs. San Jose State? It doesn’t matter to Tulsa Coach Dave Rader. “You’re talking to a guy that was without a conference for a long time,” Rader said. “So I love this conference. There’s some good football to be played here.” Rader pointed to the WAC’s new marketing tool for proof. Of the eight teams - Fresno State, Hawaii, Rice San Jose State, Southern Methodist, TCU, Tulsa and UTEP - six are in California and Texas. And what states, Rader said, play better high school football than those? “Everybody recruits out of those states - everybody,” Rader said. However, Fresno State Coach Pat Hill doesn’t expect the best players to just come to the WAC. Hill, whose Bulldogs have the best quarterback receiver tandem in the conference in Billy Volek and Charlie Smith, believes the new WAC needs to gain respect through non-conference games against big-name opponents. Last season, cur rent WAC teams combined to go 7-21 outside of league play. “You have to keep playing the big name teams - even if you get your ass kicked - until you beat them,” said Hill, who takes his team to UCLA this year. “It’s either going to be a parade or a funeral procession. That’s the only way to do it” Hill said he expects Fresno State to be one of the teams to beat in the WAC. TCU should be strong again with 15 returning starters, as should SMU, which had the nation’s 14th best defense last year. Rice, San Jose State, Tulsa and UTEP will have to reload defensively to compete. Then there’s Hawaii. They were an abysmal 0-12 last sea son. June Jones quit as the San Diego Chargers’ head coach to take over the Rainbow Warriors. Part of the problem with playing UH is the trip itself, cited by former WAC members-as one reason they left the conference. It’s often a four-day deal, which pays few dividends if the opponent only scores 149 points (12.4 average) in a season, one point less than what UCLA scored in three games last year. Another issue with the WAC is money. The teams still remaining are painfully weak at the gate. Despite residing in metropolitan areas of more than 1 million people, Rice (in Houston), SMU (in Dallas) and SJSU (in San Jose) drew 22,115,18,218 and 12,532 in average home attendance last season.