SportsWeekend Gymnast Hardabura out for the year Injury to defending national champion hammers NU «it was my shoulder that made the tfyjonn Gaskins Staff writer In a season full of disappoint ments and bad luck, Nebraska Gymnastics Coach Francis Allen has managed to add yet another achieve ment to his legendary resume. “I’m probably the only coach in NCAA history to have five national champions on his team and go almost an entire season witnout mem on me floor at all,” Allen said. “Now, that’s quite a distinction. How many other coaches can tell you that?” It’s a distinction Allen obviously could live without. The five national champions he speaks of are three time national champion Marshall Nelson and two-time champion Jason Hardabura, both of whom are out with injuries for the rest of the season. Such is the situation the 10th ramcea uomnusKers p-J) will nave to deal with as they travel to take on No. 3 Penn State (6-1) Saturday at 4 p.m. The latest blow to the already blown-out program came this week when Hardabura, who has battled back and shoulder problems all sea son and competed in only two of NU’s five meets, decided he will go through season-ending shoulder surgery on Monday. decision. Jason Hardabura NU gymnast “It wasn’t me that made the deci sion, my coaches that made the deci sion or the doctor that made the deci sion,” Hardabura said, “it was my shoulder that made the decision. “I knew it was coming. It hasn’t been feeling any better lately. It’s bet ter to start dealing with it now than worrying about it after the season.” The defending NCAA all-around Please see HARDABURA on 14 Wrestlers invade Lincoln ■ The Big 12 wrestling tournament houses four of nation’s top ten teams. By David Diehl Staff writer Tim Neumann has been around the block a few times in the Big 12 conference. Sunday he’ll go around once more. For the 15th year, Neumann will take his No. 11 Comhuskers into the conference tournament, but he said there’s something different about this one. “I don’t ever remember a tourna ment being deeper,” Neumann said. Ttie quality of wrestling in the Big 12 this year has put it on die same dominant level as the Big 10. And the talent in the Big 12 will be on display Sunday at the Bob Devaney Sports Center. “With all those teams ranked so high,” Nebraska’s 197-pounder Brad Vering said, “it’s definitely one of the tougher Big 12 tourneys I’ve seen.” The conference boasts some impressive figures: ■ Depending on which poll you look at, the tournament has three or four teams in the top 10. Iowa State is ranked third, Oklahoma fourth, and Oklahoma State is sixth. Nebraska is ranked 11th by Amateur Wrestling News, but 10th by Intermat. ■ Thirty-seven of the 50 wrestlers are nationally ranked. Of those, 26 are ranked in die top 10. ■ Of the 26 ranked in the top 10, six are ranked No. 1 in the nation, including Vering. ■ Cael Sanderson, Iowa State’s top-ranked 184-pounder. Sanderson, who has not lost a collegiate match, is pound-for-pound the best wrestler Please see WRESTLERS on 14 Josh Wolfe/DN ATI CONNER, at 174 pounds lor Nebraska, will be grappling on Sunday in the Big 12 Championship at the Bob Devaney Sports Center. Conner was the California state junior college champion in 1998 for Moorpark Community College, in the 165-pound weight class. Swim team navigates itself to second place From Staff Reports Nebraska is where it wanted to be ahead of the pack in a battle for second place at the Big 12 Swimming and Diving Championships. First place appears out of die ques tion for the Comhuskers after day one in College Station, Texas. No. 1 Texas is seemingly in a league ofits own, with 318 points compared to NIK; 185. Iowa State isn’t far off the Husker’s trail with 174 points. Texas A&M hoped to challenge Nebraska for second in the standings, but the Aggies stand fourth after six events with 152 points. The Longhorns took five of the six first-day everts. UT started die day by winning the 200-yard freestyle relay event with a time of 1:18.41, ahead of Nebraska’s 1:18.95 mark. Texas added insult to injury when it took home the 400-yard medley relay to end the evening. The team’s time of 3:11.32 was far ahead of die Huskers’ 3:14.81. Sandwiched between those relays were individual Longhorn victories in the 50- and 500-yard freestyle events, and die 200-yard individual medley race. Nebraska did come up big in the one-meter diving event, with Erik Cook claiming die championship with a score of564.80, over 30 points ahead of run ner-up John Eisler ofTexas. NU senior Bert Locklin added more points in the diving event with a fourth place finish, and freshman Michael Joublanc ended in eighth place. However, in the pool all of the Husker’s top guns were defeated in their individual events. NU’s Michael Windisch placed third in the 500-yard freestyle with a time of 4:22.01, behind a duo of Longhorns led by the winner’s, Scott Goldblatt, thne of4:20.42. Val Kalamikovs finished third in the 200-yard individual medley finishing in 1:47.96. In the 50-yard freestyle spring, Texas’senior Bryan Jones won with a time of 19.69. Adam Pine came in fifth, place, touching the wall at 20.24. NU women dig deep for victory By John Gaskins Staffwriter With 14 minutes left to go at Missouri on Thursday night, the Nebraska women’s basketball team was in the process of writing its own obituary for the 1999-2000 season. On die road, down47-37, having just been trampled by an 18-9 Tiger run to open the half, guards Nicole Kubik and Melody Peterson took die Comhuskers off life support and turned the obituary into a life-saving Hollywood screenplay. Peterson and Kubik combined for four steals and 13 points in a crit ical four-minute, 15-2 run that essentially saved the Comhuskers’ NCAA Tournament hopes. Mizzou’s guards couldn’t handle die Huskers’ defensive pressure for die rest of the game, as NU stormed its way out of the regular season with a huge 80-66 victory. “This was a huge win for us,” NU Coach Paul Sanderford said on his postgame radio show. “The big thing was that they didn’t lose their poise. I thought our kids played with so much enerev at crunch time.” Nebraska jockeyed itself into the NCAA race by finishing the season with four consecutive wins and a 16 11 overall record. By finishing 10-6 in Big 12 conference play, the Huskers earned fifth place in the final league standings and the No. 5 seed in the league tournament next week in Kansas City. They play Bay lor in die first round Tuesday in a 2:30 p.m. game at Municipal Auditorium. NU jumped ahead of 9-7 Texas after trailing the Longhorns in the standings the entire league season. That may be key, depending how many teams the NCAA selection committee picks from the conference. MU extended a 29-28 halftime lead to the 10-point lead six minutes into the second half before NU’s defensive pressure and spread set offense - which Sanderford said he had used only once before this season - triggered die season-saving surge. Kubik grabbed seven ofNU’s 16 steals as the Huskers forced 23 Tiger turnovers. The all-time NU steals leader also fueled the offense with a game-high 26 points. Fellow guards Brooke Schwartz and Peterson pitched in 16 and 12 points, respec tively. - “Three weeks ago, everyone in the copy rooms said we woe dead, and where was the fight?” Sanderford said, “but these kids just really believed in-what they were doing. To see that rewarded by mak ing the strong finish... I love March. I told the kids in the locker room to keep the March Madness going.”