Volleyball also travels to ND ■The Huskers will not only face a strong Notre Dame team but also Michigan and UCLA. BY BRIAN CHRISTOPHERSON Although Nebraska’s football meeting with Notre Dame is hog ging the spotlight, the NU volley ball team faces an important early season trip to South Bend themselves this weekend. After taking four matches of four played last weekend in Lincoln, the No. 4 Cornhuskers will set foot on foreign soil for the first time this season in the four team Notre Dame tournament. "This is an opportunity for Nebraska volleyball to take another step forward,” Nebraska Coach John Cook said. “We’re playing three quality teams. Obviously, it'd be great to go 3-0, but we also know that we are going to have to play great three days in a row in order to do that” Cook wasn’t overstating. The Huskers open with No. 23 Notre Dame on Friday, move up the charts to 16th-ranked Michigan State on Saturday and end with the current No. 3 team and pre season No. 1 UCLA. UCLA and Nebraska both had a common opponent in Colorado State, with Nebraska beating the Rams in four games and the Bruins falling to CSU in five-game match. Despite that tidbit of infor mation, Cooks sees several areas his team needs to iron out before this weekend. “We let someone get 30 kills against us. We can’t let that hap pen against anyone,” he said, speaking of the 30 Colorado State's Courtney Cox had last Saturday. “We need to continue to improve the rhythm of our attack with Greichaly and the hitters, and defensively the play of our middle back has to be much bet ter.” NU’s first opponent, Notre Dame, should be ready to try to expose any Husker weaknesses. They are coming into the match ‘This is an opportunity for Nebraska volleyball to take another step forward John Cook _ NU volleyball coach with a 3-0 mark, including an upset win over Brigham Young. UND is led by senior setter Denise Boylan, who earned Big East Player of the Week honors this week after a 50-assist, 10-dig game against BYU. She is also last year’s Big East Player of the Year. Notre Dame schedulers also may have been a little tricky with the pen, scheduling the match for 4 p.m. on Friday, before many Nebraska fans will arrive. « “They could break atten dance records up there with all the Nebraska fans that are com ing up there, but I am sure they are scheduling the way they are so that we don’t gain an advan tage with our fans,” Cook said. Tennis team opens season ■Coach Scott Jacobson thinks last year's record success can be broken by a slew of new recruits. BY THOMPSON HERMAN Nebraska women’s tennis coach Scott Jacobson believes he has his program headed in the right direction. He must, for despite losing the most decorated player in school history to graduation, Jacobson is expecting his team to continue its climb up the nation al ladder and into the nation’s group of elite teams. To do that, the Huskers, who open their fall season today at the Wichita State Invitational, will have to improve on the best season is school history. Last year, three time All-Big 12 selection Sandra Noetzel led the Huskers to a 19-6 record and the No. 58 spot in the national rankings, both school bests. Noetzel is gone, but Jacobson says his team has the firepower to make even more noise this season. “We have four freshman who constitute the best recruiting class we’ve ever had,” Jacobson said. “Leslie and Rebecca Harvey were ranked fourth and sixth in Southern California. Elissa Kinard is a big hitter. And Rose Ketmayura is a sleeper. “All four are gifted. We think they can all compete at a high level for us this season.” If Jacobson sounds opti mistic about the infusion of young talent, he is equally excit ed about the returning cast. “Katarina Balan, Ndali Ijomah and Amy Frisch are moti vated, disciplined and improved,” he said. Ijomah has the distinction of being the team’s only senior, but Jacobson dismissed the notion that his team would suffer from any lack of leadership. “Regardless of class, every individual is expected to lead by example,” he said. So, just how much better does Jacobson think his Huskers can be? “Our goal is to finish in the top 4 of the Big 12 and the top 50 nationally,” he said. Nebraska finished sixth in the Big 12 last season. Such achievements will not come easily, however. Jacobson rated the Big 12 behind only the Pac-10 in quality, saying that eight or nine conference teams are consistently among the top 75 teams in the country. There are 309 Division I women’s tennis teams. The Wichita State Invitational is the first step of many the Huskers must take to become a first-tier conference team. The invite will give Jacobson his first chance to identify which players will play No. 1 singles, No. 2 singles, and so on. The Huskers have held only two formal prac tices. “We want to stay injury-free and just get the season under way,” Jacobson said. If it’s the kind of season Jacobson has in mind, his eager ness is understood. Simms, Applewhite battle for Texas QB spot BY SAMUEL MCKEWON Imagine the shock waves coursing through Texas Coach Mack Brown’s brain when he was asked about quarterbacks Major Applewhite and Chris Simms at the Big 12 Media Days. Brown was caught so offguard that he had prepared a 15-minute fable of sorts involving trout, the North Carolina Smokey Mountains, his second wife and two fishing rods that were sup posed to symbolize Applewhite and Simms. Something about holding onto one rod while he reeled the other one in. "When you catch two big fish at the same time,” Brown said, “you just have to manage.” OK, so he’d thought the issue over a little. Never mind that UT lost its last three games last year. Never mind that it must replace its two defensive ends. Never mind that the offensive line was as unpre dictable as a steer in heat The Longhorns are ranked in the preseason top 10 for both polls. Two Associated Press voters thought enough of Texas to select it preseason No. 1. Based on what, exactly? Now there’s a question. But the only one truly being pressed in Austin for the time being is this: Who will be the QB? Until fall camp began, Brown preached the company line of “let’s wait and see,” all the while figuring that Applewhite, who suf fered a severe knee injury in the bowl loss to Arkansas last season, wouldn’t be ready. This made Simms the obvious choice, which might just have sealed the debate for good. Brown figured wrong. Citing Applewhite as “one of the tough est youngsters I’ve ever been around,” Brown now has the services of a player who shared Big 12 Offensive -1 riayer ui uie Mack Bro«vn Year honors t h Nebraska’s Eric Crouch last season. The gutsy jun ior arrived in fall camp and matched Simms pass for pass. Brown has yet to name a starter, and said on Monday’s Big 12 Teleconference that the deci sion might be delayed until game time. Even then, there’ll be ample playing time for both quarter backs, fairly similar on the outside using opposite arms to throw the ball (Simms is a lefty, while Applewhite is rig^bt-handed). In other words, this isn’t a pick-your-poison kind of deal. More like a pick-your-pleasure. "We have the best problem in college football,” Brown drawled. "Most of the time you’d like one excellent quarterback. We've got two.” To questions regarding a con troversy, Brown preaches the other company line of Applewhite and Simms being close friends. Both players said the same, though not exactly in such glow ing terms, in a long piece that highlighted the Dallas Morning News’ football preseason issue. In the article, both offered cautious optimism on the battle. “I’ll just try to work hard and do what I can every day in prac tice,” Simms said, "and hopefully things will turn out OK.” Said Applewhite: “If the deci sion was based on anything other than production, I would feel shaky. But Coach Brown has been consistent about playing time being based on you producing for the team. Because of that, I have all the confidence in the world." Quarterback is one of the few proven quantities on a team expected to be the heavy favorite in the Big 12 South. Outside of the interior defensive line, where Shaun Rogers and Casey Hampton make the best duo in the nation, UT must fill its two deep roster with several freshmen and sophomores who were part of Brown’s highly-touted recruiting classes. One of those players was tight end Bo Scaife, who was expected to contend for first-team all con ference honors before going down with a serious knee injury a few weeks ago. Otherwise, Brown said, fall camp was relatively injury-free. But still, replacements for the defensive ends, receivers and secondary loom large, Brown said, and the answers remain unknown. "We do not know a lot about our team right now,” Brown said at his weekly press conference. "The team is spending the week before we start the season by watching everybody else play. It is an exciting and anxious time for everyone. There are only a few teams that have not played, and we are in that group.” UT benefits by losing Nebraska and Kansas State from Big XII Preview % * t m m Texas Longhorns Preseason Rank: 1st in Big 12 South 1999:9-5 (6-2 Big 12, 1st in South) Offensive Starters Returning: 7 Defensive Starters Returning: 9 Prognosis: The Long horns have two excell ent quarterbacks, a proven runner and a defensive line that is second to none. They will have no trouble in the Big 12 South. the schedule and picking up lesser foes, which will help to stave off challengers Oklahoma and Texas Tech. A possible breakout star could be defensive end Cory Redding, Brown said. Though a sore shoulder may limit his action in the opener against Louisiana Lafayette. Another goal for the 11:30 a.m. game on Saturday will be finding depth at running back. Brown said that all-conference back Hodges Mitchell received too many carries last season, and, as a result, wore down, along with the team as it lost to Texas A&M, Nebraska and the Razorbacks to a 9-5 campaign. “Right now, we feel that we can play just about two deep at every position,” Brown said. “There are also a lot of guys who we feel are interchangeable.” Especially the quarterbacks. Fighting Irish trying to return to past glory IRISH from page 10 had Caracino’s office not rejected them. Although the article may have presented the perception that the admissions office has upped its loftiness in response to the over popularity of football, Kelly said nothing could be further from the truth. “We're all in this together,” Kelly said. “(Caracino) doesn’t tell us how to run the football team, and we don’t tell him how to run the admissions office. I don’t think he’s been unfair. He's done a good job. His job is on the line, too.” Hie article, and a whole lot of grumbling from the media about last season’s debacle, has put an unflattering spotlight on the pro gram recently. The whipping boy in all of this, inevitably, is Davie, despite the fact he has two years remaining on his original contract and three left on the extension the university awarded him last fall. Michael Wadsworth, the ath letic director who hired then assistant coach Davie after Holtz resigned near the end of the '96 campaign and gave Davie the extension, was forced out by the university last winter. Wadsworth’s replacement, White, has maintained neutrality when asked about Davie’s status in the past but offered support when asked about the program’s future. He also made clear that Davie is under a contract, and the university always honors its con tracts. “I have no doubt we are head ed in the right direction,” White said. “Bob has done a fine job of building this team to what it is today and we expect good things. He’s more than capable of leading this team.” White and Kelly both pointed toward tough injuries and bad breaks as reasons for recent losses. A similar first-time head coach at a perennial power pumped with expectations - the man who will face Davie from the other side of the sidelines Saturday - can relate. v “Any coach that heads into a nationally recognized program is going to feel pressure,” said NU Coach Frank Solich, who received similar but not as severe criticism after a 9-4 debut season. “Coach Davie has done an outstanding job of holding things together at very tough times. The injuries had to be tough on him. I imagine he’ll last.” A brutal schedule and the weight of the world on his shoul ders may prove otherwise but for now Davie has a little breathing room. The Irish’s season-opening win last Saturday over then 25th ranked Texas A&M helped douse some flames for a week, and a good showing against NU in front of a national audience will help, as well. And if anyone is serious about Notre Dame’s falling off the planet and taking Davie with it, John Doyle, the sports editor of the South Bend, Ind., Tribune from 1950-81, recommends looking at the history books. “Football goes in cycles,” Doyle said. “You had Knute Rockne and the national champi onships and they went into a slump. Frank Leahy resurrected it, and another slump followed. Parseghian came along and they went into another slump after that. “ (Davie) knows that when you get four or five years, and you don't develop a great thing, people talk. (Notre Dame) hangs on to people. He’s not in danger of anybody yanking off his shoes during the middle of the game. They just don’t do it that way. “They give the guy a chance.” So history, and, for now, the program, embraces him. But they also entrap him. St. Louis Rams are offensive standard of league THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ST. LOUIS - Kurt Warner likes it when teams blitz the St. Louis Rams because he can feel the big play coming from his fast offense. The Rams were the No. 1 offense in the NFL last year, and they ran up huge numbers in their opening 41-36 victory over the Denver Broncos on Monday night. They accumulated 513 total yards and had three 100 yard receivers for the first time since 1951. A lot of the yardage came in big chunks. Marshall Faulk turned a simple swing pass into a 72-yard touchdown. Az-Zahir Hakim did the same on an 80 yard play that was almost all run. “There’s no limits,” said Seattle Seahawks Coach Mike Holmgren, whose team will try to control the Rams on Sunday. “They have a great combination of offensive players.” Coach Mike Martz, the offensive coordinator last year on a team that averaged 33 points and scored the third highest point total in NFL histo ry, doesn’t like taking the credit. "The question is, who can cover Az? Who can cover Torry? Who’s going to tackle Marshall? Who’s going to defeat that offen sive line?" Martz said. “I don’t think it makes a heck of a lot of difference what you’re doing. I think we’ve got real good play ers, and they’re playing real well.” Warner was an instant natu ral in Martz’ system, throwing for 41 touchdown passes in his first season as a starter. “He’s a gunslinger, I guess,” Martz said. “He just likes the fact he can get that ball out quick to his guys and see if you can cover them.” Faulk set an NFL record with 2,429 yards from scrimmage last season. Bruce is coming off his second Pro Bowl season and third 1,000-yard receiving year, scoring 12 touchdowns last sea son. The 5-10,178-pound Hakim, though, might be the most dan gerous of all of the offensive weapons. Last season, he aver aged 18.8 yards on 36 receptions with eight touchdowns as the third wideout, and scored on an 84-yard punt return. NU, Irish set to do battle in South Bend GAME from page 10 in a 40-6 thrashing over the Irish in the 1973 Orange Bowl. But so much more is at stake than history. The top-ranked Huskers come in swaggering - their blood pumped full of a probable national-title run. The offense will look to keep rolling, while the Blackshirts will try to improve their tackling and prove they are better than they showed in Saturday's win over San Jose State. "We didn't play Blackshirt defense like we’re used to play ing,” co-captain and linebackej Carlos Polk said. "We know we’re not going to play like that again. We love playing teams that want to come at us. “It’s going to be a long day for us. It’s going to be a heavy weight fight, and it’s going to go 12 rounds.” The No. 23 Irish will be equally energized, looking to prove that the Golden Dome still pierces the football sky - even after a disastrous 1999, when they lost their last four games and at 5-7 suffered their first losing season in 14 years. And Notre Dame players, whether they admit it or not, “It's going to be a long day for us. It’s going to be a heavyweight fight, and it’s going to go 12 rounds” Carlos Polk NU linebacker will be playing for Coach Bob Davie, who has posted a lacklus ter 22-16 record in his fourth season while his seat gets hotter. • Davie knows what a win would do for his program and himself. From the sidelines, though, he could care less about the history and drama sur rounding the game. “He's the embattled coach, and if he can win this game ... that’s just all talk,” Davie said. “It comes down to all of a sudden they run the belly option, and there's a guard chopping the end on the ground. "That has nothing to do with the embattled coach. It's great conversation, but it comes down to the preparation to go out and play this game.” Toughest weekend yet for Cook, Husker soccer CHALLENGE from page 10 were national champions two seasons ago and began this year in the Top 10 before two early losses. Junior Kelly Rheem said that Florida would be ready to play. “Florida’s a great team,” she said. “I’ve played them twice in spring, they’re very physical. Coming off two early losses means they’ll be hungry for a win.” Sunday’s game will see Purdue and Nebraska squaring off in a battle of the unbeaten. The Boilermakers have opened some eyes this year, earning their first-ever national ranking and knocking off No. 12 Missouri on the road in Columbia. It adds up to the toughest weekend for the Huskers so far. "We’ve only really been test “We need to compete and get home results against two great teams. Purdue is highly aggressive, and Florida has Final Four potential Coach John Walker NU Soccer coach ed once thus far, and with play ing two games in three days we’ll get our tests,” said Walker. Rheem said the early Husker brilliance won't swell any heads. “We know we’ve played well so far, but we also know that we have lots to improve on,” said Rheem. men's basketball student season tickets? Pay only $ if you get them by September Come to the Athletic Ticket Office at 625 Stadium Drive and sign up today or call 472-3111. First-come, first-served. After September 28th. 2000 men's basketball student season tickets will be $42.