— MEN’S BASKETBALL — NU drops another on road ■ Nebraska maintains dubious record in over time loss to Texas A&M. By Matthew Hansen Staff writer Nebraska and Texas A&M came into Saturday’s regular season finale trying to end dubious streaks before the Big 12 Conference Tournament. The Aggies (8-19 overall, 4-12 Big 12) were successful, stopping their five game losing streak with an 83-76 over time win against the Huskers. NU (11-18, 4-12) meanwhile, fin ished the regular season without a road victory in nine tries. After the regulation 40 minutes of play, neither team’s losing streak had ended, as the score was knotted at 70. In overtime, A&M made 11 of 12 free throws to put away the Huskers, who converted only one of eight field goals in the extra period. Until midway through the second half, it looked as ifNebraska would con tinue another streak of road futility, this one featuring double-digit defeats. The Husker’s first eight road losses were all by at least 12 points, and, with 16 minutes remaining in the contest, Texas A&M had stretched a 7-point halftime margin to a 54-40 lead. Aggie freshman Bernard King had a hand in the team’s quick start - he scored a game-high 30 points, many in the first half. In the process of lighting up the Huskers, King set a Big 12 record. The guard became the confer ence’s all-time leading freshman scorer, breaking the record previously held by Iowa State’s Marcus Fizer. Spurred by the play of Larry Florence, the Huskers stormed back. The senior guard, who finished with a team-high 20 points and added six rebounds, six assists and four steals, led the Huskers on an 11-1 run. By the eight-minute mark, Nebraska led 63-32. NU still held a one point lead with only three minutes remaining before the Aggies held them scoreless for the remainder of regula tion. Louis Truscott scored 14 points and grabbed 8 rebounds for NU, while Kimani Ffriend chipped in 11 points and also had eight rebounds in the loss. Steffon Bradford added 12 points for NU. Yering loses, wrestlers place fourth WRESTLERS from page 16 age to score and lost 3-1 when the Husker was taken down. Both 149-pounder Joe Henson and 133-pounder Todd Beckerman upset higher-seeded wrestlers in the semifi nals, but neither could keep the momentum in their championship matches. Henson lost 4-2 to OSU’s Reggie Wright, and Beckerman was pinned by Iowa State s Cody Sanderson, the tournament’s most out standing wrestler. Neumann said his wrestlers lost only one match they weren’t supposed to, and his team notched a couple upsets. “Do I wish we had 85 points?’’ Neumann asked the reporter. “Hell yes, I do. Being fourth in this conference pisses me off.” Snyder, ranked No. 3 in the country with a top seed, won his 19th consecu tive match and was named champ when Oklahoma’s David Kjelgaard forfeited the championship bout. Snyder, along with Beckerman, Vering, Henson and Gomez, earned automatic bids to nationals for finish ing in the top three. Charles McTorry earned a wild card at 184 pounds. Why is TIAA-CREF the #1 choice nationwide?' The TIAA-CREF ♦ Advantage. Year in and year out, employees at education and research institutions have turned to TIAA-CREF. And for good reasons: • Easy diversification among a range of expertly managed funds • Solid performance and exceptional personal service • Strong commitment to low expenses • Plus, a full range of flexible retirement income options With an excellent record of accomplishment for more than 80 years,TIAA-CREF has helped professors and staff at over 9,000 campuses across the country invest for— and enjoy—successful retirements. i Choosing your retirement plan provider is simple. Go with the leader: TIAA-CREF. Proven Performance Low Expenses Highly Rated Quality Service Trusted Name * According to DALBAR, Inc, a financial services research firm. In its most recent study, 1997Defined Contribution Excellence Ratings,TIAA-CREF was voted number one in partici pant satisfaction. TIAA-CREF Individual and Institutional Services, Inc. distributes CREF certificates and interests in the T1AA Real Estate Account. Teachers Personal Investors Services, Inc. distributes the variable component of the personal annuities, mutual funds and tuition savings agreements.71AA and TIAA-CREF Life Insurance Co. issue insurance and annuities. TIAA-CREF Trust'Company, FSB provides trust services. Investment products are not FDtC insured may lose value and are not bank guaranteed For more complete information on our securities products, including charges and expenses, call 1 800 842-2776, ext. 5509, for the prospectuses. Read them carefully before you invest or send money. © 2000 TIAA-CREF 1/00. - - - . — SOFTBALL — Softball team loses all games in Gold division ■ Huskers9 overall record drops two places after Georgia tourney. From Staff Reports The No. 23-ranked Nebraska soft ball team has shown it will not shy away from the nation’s best competi tion. After winning its pool with a 2-1 record in the prestigious NFCA Leadoff Classic in Columbus, Ga., the Cornhuskers concluded play in the Gold division with a record of 0-2. All three Husker losses came at the hands of ranked opponents. The tournament field was made up of 15 teams who were ranked in the top-25. On Friday, NU opened play with a loss to No. 15 Louisiana-Lafayette. Nebraska jumped to a 6-0 lead before the Cajuns stormed back to upend the Huskers, 7-6. NU’s second game against No. 24 Hofstra was postponed due to a down pour in the top of the third inning with no score. Saturday morning, the Huskers knocked off 39th-ranked Cal State Northridge 3-0. When play resumed against UH, Nebraska started the top of the third with a triple from senior Jennifer Lizama. Walk-on freshman Kim Ogee grounded out to second to score Lizama, which gave NU the 1 -0 victo ry By winning their pool, the Huskers were put into the tourna ment’s gold bracket. Nebraska lost its first-round game 10-2 against top-ranked Washington before closing out tournament play with a 7-0 defeat of No. 4 Arizona State. The Huskers’ overall record dropped to 7-9 after their 2-3 showing in Columbus. Josh Wolfe/DN ISU’s Cael Sanderson grapples with OSU’s Daniel Cormeir for the Big 12 Championship in the 184-pound class Sunday at the Devaney Center. ISUs wrestling brothers form powerful trio on mat TRIO from page 16 If Cody Sanderson was going to move from Utah and go to school in Ames, the next brother in line, Cole Sanderson, thought he better sign on Iowa State’s dotted line a year later. The two brothers signed for Douglas. There was one to go. The last one was the best one, and he almost got away to the enemy. “I thought about going to Oklahoma State,” Cael Sanderson said. “But it scared me to not go where my brothers were. My dad said not to worry and go where I needed to, but I couldn’t go away from family.” Said Steve Sanderson: “Caei’s a maverick, and can be his own person, but it did make me happy when he went where his brothers went. “I think he stayed up two or three nights, but the family was the deciding factor, and he said he would have a hard time cheering against them and sitting on the other bench.” bteve banaerson is no tool wnen it comes to wrestling. The boys’ father coached them in high school and wres tled at Brigham Young in college. Their father has “thousands” of tapes of the boys wrestling, dating back to when they were eight years old. “It’s funny because you watch their styles at the young age, and it really doesn’t change,” Steve Sanderson said. “Cody’s more of a technician, and he knows what he’s going to do. “Cole is a fighter, and he always gives 150 percent, and I’m as proud of him as the other boys,” Steve Sanderson said. “And Cael has always just wrestled with a smile on his face, and I think their styles just kind of developed from each other.” Surprisingly though, it’s not his sons’ wrestling success that has this father so jubilant, but the family’s unity. “I know after Cole lost in the sec ond round at NCAAs last year that it really affected the other kids,” Steve Sanderson said. “I don’t know how other people are, but it meant a lot to me when I was with the other kids to see a tear in their eyes.” Cody Sanderson wiped the tears from his eyes and ended up a national runner-up at 133 pounds, and Cael Sanderson dominated, even pinning Nebraska standout Brad Vering in 1:58. All the brothers have qualified for next week’s nationals in St. Louis, with Cole joining his two brothers at the NCAAs with a third-place finish Saturday. The Sanderson boys are going to make ISU a tough team to trip at nationals next week. “It helps out to wrestle on such a good team, because everyone here has the same goals to win, both individual ly and as a team,” senior captain Cody Sanderson said. However, it you dig in young Cael Sanderson’s past, the youngest brother had a 127-3 record in high school. “I don’t like to say the names of the people I lost to,” Cael Sanderson said, half-jokingly. Leave it to Dad to blow his cover. “The last match he lost in high school was his junior year to Joe Heskett (current Cyclone teammate and 165-pound All-American), but the ref later admitted that he had made a wrong call,” Steve said. “But he’d kill me if he knew who I said he lost to.” That secret should have stayed inside the family. All the other ones have.