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GAMESTORY: Navigators chart course past Bulldogs

Lincoln, NE – The Bulldogs are headed into the Christmas break after taking a few tough losses against the Lincoln North Star Navigators.

The Lady Dawgs started things off right where they left after the game against Lexington. The hot shooting continued in the first quarter for the Lady Dawgs as they jumped to a 13-9 lead.

Gracie Haneborg hit two 3pt shots, Callie added 5 pts with Kamryn Hughes hitting a pair of free throws.

In the second it was a lot of back and forth action, the offense picked up for the Dawgs while they played good defense, holding the Navigators to just 7 points in the second quarter while scoring 10 themselves. Gracie lead the way with 7pts in the quarter to end the half with 13. The Dawgs had the lead going into the break 23-16.

Coming out of halftime the Navigators picked up their intensity all across the board, lead by Husker Volleyball commit Bekka Allick who scored 6pts in the 3rd as well as pulling down 5 reb in the quarter. She was all over the Lady Dawgs on defense, frustrating the North Platte girls to the point they could not get a good look at the basket. Gracie Haneborg lead the 3rd quarter scoring for North Platte with 6pts.

At the end of three-quarters of play, the teams were knotted up at 34.

The fourth quarter started off with a lot of back and forth play from the two teams as they continued to trade baskets at the start. The Lady Dawgs were in foul trouble for much of the period, Gracie Haneborg, Abby Orr and Peyton Negley all would play much of the quarter with four fouls. Negley would eventually foul out.

The Navigator offense was a little too much to handle for the Dawgs, they were outscored 20-15 in the quarter to lose 54-49. Gracie Haneborg leads the way again with 22 pts 2 reb. Also scoring in double digits were Callie Haneborg (11pts, 2reb) and Abbie Hedgecock (10pts, 3reb). The girls are 4-4 on the season and will play next in the GNAC tournament in Columbus Dec 27-29th.

The boys went into the game with high expectations coming off a good victory against a district opponent they felt they had momentum on their side.

In the first, it was apparent that both teams wanted to get out and run as much as they could. Lincoln North Star opened the game with a full court press on the Dawgs and teams traded the lead 5 times in the quarter before it ended 21-16 in favor of the Navigators. Steven Garcia, Kiya Kramer both had 5 points in the quarter, Caleb Horne was right behind them with 4.

The Dawgs would come out cold in the second quarter. While North Platte was able to get good looks at the basket nothing seemed to be falling. The Dawgs would only put up 5 points in the second to Lincoln North Star’s 15. At the half it was 36-21 North Star.

The whole of the second half was much the same as the end of the first. North Platte would struggle shooting from the field while the duo of Donovan Williams and Josiah Allick for the Navigators kept pouring in the points.

North Platte would fall 82-52, now 2-6 on the season headed into the GNAC tournament.

Placement and brackets for the GNAC are expected to come out the early afternoon of the 21st.

Missy Franklin retires from swimming

Below is the letter penned by Missy Franklin on her retirement from swimming:

In My Own Words: The Next Chapter
It is with tears in my eyes but a full heart that I begin typing this letter.

It’s hard to know where to begin, but I feel confident and fulfilled in how it will end, and that’s all I could ever ask for.

Swimming was my first true love. Being in the water gave me a sense of freedom, playfulness and joy. It was where I could be completely and utterly myself, not bound by any restrictions or limitations. It was where I found my first best friends, my first mentors and my first taste of competition. It is the little things I remember from the early days, like playing sharks and minnows on Friday morning after practice with my summer club team, the Heritage Green Gators, followed by Krispy Kreme doughnuts. It was doing relays with pumpkins on Halloween and turkey bowling at the practice before Thanksgiving. It was working so hard, every day, and loving every minute of it. It was learning time management, leadership and sportsmanship. It was achieving goals and relishing every moment.

People always ask me when I knew I was good, and I always tell them I truly don’t know because all I was concerned with was having fun. I was just being a little girl, spending time with my teammates and closest friends at practice, all while still getting in a good laugh as we gasped for breath at the wall in between intervals. However, if I had to pick a moment, it would have been as a 13-year-old at 2008 Olympic Trials. I will never forget looking around on the pool deck and seeing every swimmer I had ever looked up to just five feet away from me. I will also never forget realizing that I had made it to the same meet they did, swimming in the same pool and fighting for the same dreams. I knew I wanted to be back at Trials in four years, and I wanted to be the one that the 13-year-olds looked up to on the pool deck.

The first 18 years of my career were as picture perfect as it can get. The equation couldn’t have made more sense: you work hard, you have a positive attitude, you show up every day and give your best, and you get faster. That’s how it worked for me. I worked harder, I trained harder and I swam faster, year after year after year. Following the 2012 Olympics, I decided to remain an amateur and swim in college, and it is one of the best decisions I have ever made. Swimming at the University of California, Berkeley was one of the greatest honors and privileges I’ve had as an athlete and a person. The teams I was able to be a part of in 2014 and 2015 taught me more than I can begin to say. People would sometimes laugh when I said I wanted to swim in college because I knew I would meet my future bridesmaids on my team and that they would become my family for life. Well, I did meet them. One maid of honor and three bridesmaids, to be exact.

In 2015, I decided to go home and train in Colorado with Todd Schmitz and the Colorado Stars, and work with my weight trainer Loren Landow. I’ve been very open about what I went through as I prepared for the Olympics in 2016 and talked openly about the struggles I endured, which included shoulder pain whenever I tried to train or compete, depression, anxiety and insomnia. It was also the year when I began to fully accept the fact that something was wrong with my body and it wasn’t working the way it was supposed to work.

At the Mesa Pro Series event in April 2016, I had to be pulled from the meet due to intense shoulder pain from an injury suffered in warm-up. I had never experienced that kind of pain before and I began to completely unravel. The Olympic Games were just four months away and many expected it to be the greatest moment of my athletic career. After the success I saw at my first Olympics in London, the expectations for my second Olympic appearance only felt greater.

I trained through it all — both the physical and emotional pain — and did everything I possibly could have to keep my head held high. Looking back, surviving through those eight days in Rio was the greatest accomplishment of my career. I was able to stay true to who I was as much in failure and disappointment as I had been in winning and being the best in the world.

After I made it through the Olympics, I knew we had to finally address the pain that I had been using every ounce of energy to ignore. In January and February of 2017, I had surgery on my left and right shoulders. It should have been a quick recovery, but when I was back in the pool in April, I knew based on my pain level that I needed more time to heal. I took the summer off and ended up reconnecting with the man I will be marrying next year. I can’t even begin to explain how God’s timing works, but all I know is that it is beautiful, perfect and magical.

Missy Franklin
Mark J. Rebilas/USA TODAY Sports
Chronic injuries to her shoulders was a large part of Missy Franklin’s decision to retire from competitive swimming.

I got back to training in the fall with Dave Durden and the men’s team at Berkeley. I still had physical therapy 2-3 times a week, and frequently had to adjust practices to compensate for the shoulder pain I was experiencing. I was beginning to get truly frustrated. Weren’t the surgeries supposed to help? Wasn’t this all supposed to go away? Wasn’t I meant to fall in the love with the sport again?

I made the decision in December that I needed to put myself in a new and different environment. As hard as it would be to leave the people I loved so much in Northern California, I also knew I needed to try something different. I packed my bags and within two weeks was living in Athens, Ga., and training with Jack Bauerle at the University of Georgia. Jack and the team took me in with the most welcoming arms, and I began an entirely different kind of training than I was used to. I was so ready to begin my comeback, to prove everyone wrong, to show everyone what a fighter I was and to come back better than I had ever been. I truly believed I could do it, and I had the best people around be believing I could do it, too.

Unfortunately, it was also the same time that my shoulder pain became the worst I had ever experienced. I was still in physical therapy multiple times a week and my coaches were doing everything to help me just get through each practice. Every moment I wasn’t training was spent recovering with ice and rest, as I tried to heal and prepare myself for the next practice – but nothing was working. I went through three different rounds of cortisone shots, one of which was before Nationals this past summer, and also had an ultrasound bicep tendon injection at the end of September. Technically speaking, my medical diagnosis is severe chronic tendonitis of both the rotator cuff and the bicep tendon. After the failure of my last round of shots, I had only one other option: another surgery, and even that was a long shot.

When I heard the word “surgery,” I immediately broke down because I already knew my answer: no. I’ve been in too much pain, for too long, to go through another surgery with a longer recovery time and no guarantee it would even help. I prayed, and I prayed, and I prayed. I talked to the most trusted people in my life. When my now fiancé looked at me and said the following, my answer finally became clear. “I will support you fully, no matter what you choose. But what matters to me the most, more than anything, is that you can hold our children in your arms one day without being in excruciating pain.”

I began to realize that my greatest dream in life, more so than Olympic gold, has always been becoming a mom. Swimming had been such a huge part of my life for as long as I could remember, but it was not my entire life. I still have dreams, goals, aspirations and intentions I plan on living out every day of my life. I will never be able to express in words how grateful I am for swimming — for the places it has taken me, the lessons it has taught me and, most importantly, the people it has brought into my life.

To every teammate, every coach, every mentor, every meet official … you have made me the person I am today, and it is a person I am incredibly proud to be.

For all the companies and brands I have worked with, especially Speedo, Coca-Cola, Minute Maid, Streamline Brands and the USA Swimming Foundation, you have become family and stayed by my side through every up and every down. Thank you for your unwavering support.

To my parents, my family and my dearest friends, who will forever be the most important people in my life, thank you for raising me, teaching me and inspiring me to be a strong woman who is brave and courageous enough to make this decision, and to support it with all your hearts.

This letter would become a novel (if it isn’t one already) if I listed all the thank yous that are in my heart, but please know they are there and in abundance.

This is by no means the end. Rather, I choose to look at this as a new beginning. Swimming has been, and always will be, a big part of my life and I absolutely plan to stay involved in what I believe is the best sport in the world, just in a different way. I hope to continue to inspire others to be their best, both in and out of the pool, and I’m truly excited about this next chapter and how my relationship with the sport will continue to change and grow.

It took me a long time to say the words, “I am retiring.” A long, long time. But now I’m ready.

I’m ready to not be in pain every day. I’m ready to become a wife and, one day, a mother. I’m ready to continue growing each and every day to be the best person and role model I can be. I’m ready for the rest of my life.

Thank you,
Missy

GAMESTORY: Bulldogs go 2-0 in Lexington, Girls 10th in state

Lexington – For the North Platte Bulldogs having Lexington as a district opponent is unusual. This year is the first time North Platte basketball has competed in class B basketball. Last night the Bulldogs showed Lexington that it won’t be easy in class B basketball this season.

The night started off with Lexington JV getting two wins over NP JV squads, but the varsity games would be far different.

The Lady Bulldogs would come out on fire against the Minutemaids, putting up 15 points in the first quarter to Lexington’s eight. It would be one of the best first quarters of the season for the Lady Bulldogs even though their leading scorer Gracie Haneborg would get into foul trouble and have to sit much of the quarter with two fouls.

The second quarter of the girls game is when the Bulldogs went for blood. They came out and played absolutely stellar defense, not allowing the Lexington girls to score until less than three minutes left in the quarter. The Bulldogs would outscore the Minutemaids 11-3 to take a 26-11 lead into the half.

The third quarter started with the Lexington girls playing more intense defense but both teams struggled with shots falling early in the third until the Haneborg girls (Callie and Gracie) finally came to life offensively. The Bulldogs would take a 37-16 lead into the final quarter.

In the fourth more great defense from the Bulldogs, they kept Lexington to only five points in both the third and fourth quarters. Until three mins left in the game, Gracie Haneborg was outscoring the entire Lexington team, she would end the night with 17 pts, 5 reb and the only player on either team to score in double digits. The Lady Bulldogs would move to 4-3 on the season. They get ready to travel to Lincoln North Star on Thursday, Dec 20th.

News also came out later that night that the Omaha World-Herald would put the Lady Bulldogs in the top 10 for the first time this year. The Bulldogs are ranked 10th in Class B girls basketball in the state.

The boys would be next up on the night, coming into the game 1-5 on the season, their lone win coming almost a week ago against McCook.

One of the things Coach Kaminski has talked about all season long is how resilient this boys team has been and that the record is not a good judge of their play. In Tuesday night’s game, the team would prove Coach right.

First quarter action for the Boys would be a lot of back and forth with teams going bucket for bucket with each other and getting up and down the court fast. Shots were really not falling for either team despite both teams getting good looks. Caleb Horne would lead the way for the Bulldogs with 6 pts in the first as the Bulldogs trailed 13-11.

The second quarter was much the same story as the first quarter, the officials were lenient on their whistles letting both teams play with a little more pace than the Dawgs have seen this year. Lexington looked like it was starting to pull away as they outscored North Platte 11-7 in the quarter to take a 24-18 lead into halftime. Starting PG Dylan Richman (JR) for the Minutemen had a great quarter scoring seven of Lex’s eleven points.

At Halftime Coach Kaminski told the boys he was proud of how they were playing and adjusted a few things defensively and it showed.

The third quarter was an entirely different game, the two starting guards Kiya Kramer and Steven Garcia came out and took over the Bulldog offense. Kramer found his 3pt shot as he put in 10 points in the quarter, Garcia was right behind him with 6 points. The Bulldogs allowed 16 points in the quarter but dropped 24 of their own to take the two-point lead (42-40) headed into the final frame.

As the game headed into the fourth quarter the prevailing thought was these two teams would go down to the wire. For much of the fourth, that was true, neither team would really take control of the game. The officials started to call the game closer in the second half which helped to open up the scoring for both squads.

They threw haymaker after haymaker at each other. Steven Garcia hit a huge 3pt shot from the wing with about 5 mins left. Lexington would follow that with a drive and foul from Nick Saiz for a traditional 3 point play.

Jack Mohr would hit maybe the shot of the season as he buried a LONG 3pt shot with about 1:15 left in the game to put North Platte up for good.

The Bulldogs would go on to win 67-61 and improve to 2-5 on the season before taking on Lincoln North Star on Thursday the 20th.

Steven Garcia came alive in the game scoring 19 pts (14 in the second half) to lead scoring for the Dawgs. Caleb Horne continued his impressive play early in the season as he had 13 pts, 4 reb. Kiya Kramer also in double-digit scoring for North Platte with 16pts, 7 reb.

Nick Saiz for Lexington had a fantastic game statistically scoring 28 pts and pulling down 7 reb.

Nebraska and Akron come to terms, will play 2025

The Nebraska Athletic Department and the University of Akron have finalized a two-part agreement, addressing the 2018 canceled football game between the schools and scheduling a future contest in Lincoln.

Nebraska will play host to Akron at Memorial Stadium on Sept. 6, 2025. Akron will receive a guarantee of $1.45 million for the 2025 game in Lincoln.
Nebraska will pay Akron $650,000 for the originally scheduled game on Sept. 1, 2018, that was canceled due to severe weather in Lincoln. The contract signed in 2014 provided a guarantee of $1.17 million for Akron to play the game in Lincoln, and Nebraska has agreed to pay more than half of that guarantee despite the game being canceled.

“We are pleased to finalize an agreement with Akron that is beneficial for both institutions,” Nebraska Athletic Director Bill Moos said. “We have had good dialogue with Akron during this process and are appreciative of the cooperation and patience from everyone involved. We look forward to Akron making a return trip to Memorial Stadium in 2025.”

The 2025 game against the Zips will be the home opener at Memorial Stadium for Nebraska. The Huskers open the season at Illinois on Aug. 30, before Akron will visit Lincoln. Nebraska also has a non-conference game scheduled at Cincinnati on Sept. 13, 2025, with one remaining non-conference opening.

NPHS JV Wrestling results

McCook JV Open Results for North Platte from 12/13

JV 113
Joel Niles’s place is 3rd and has scored 0.0 team points.

Round 1 – Jullian Stiver (McCook) won by fall over Joel Niles (North Platte) (Fall 2:43)
Round 2 – Brayden Schmalz (Holdredge) won by fall over Joel Niles (North Platte) (Fall 0:38)

JV 120
Skyler Geier-Dodson’s place is 1st and has scored 19.5 team points.

Round 1 – Skyler Geier-Dodson (North Platte) won by fall over Angel Molina (Lexington) (Fall 3:22)
Round 2 – Skyler Geier-Dodson (North Platte) won by fall over Gabriel Counts (Colby) (Fall 3:05)
Round 3 – Skyler Geier-Dodson (North Platte) won by tech fall over Evan Nordhausen (Wauneta Palisade) (TF 19-2)

JV 120B
Merissa Panek’s place is 4th and has scored 4.0 team points.

Round 1 – Juan Ruiz (Chase County) won by fall over Merissa Panek (North Platte) (Fall 0:30)
Round 2 – Jake Franz (Colby) won by fall over Merissa Panek (North Platte) (Fall 0:31)
Round 3 – Koy Smith (Wray) won by forfeit over Merissa Panek (North Platte) (FF)

JV 132A
Jakob Richards’s place is 4th and has scored 4.0 team points.

Round 1 – Dillon Schmidt (Wray) won by fall over Jakob Richards (North Platte) (Fall 0:41)
Round 2 – Brayan Hernandez (Lexington) won by fall over Jakob Richards (North Platte) (Fall 1:12)
Round 3 – Kainin O`Malley (Colby) won by fall over Jakob Richards (North Platte) (Fall 0:26)

JV 138
Alex Rodriquez’s place is 2nd and has scored 14.0 team points.

Round 1 – Alex Rodriquez (North Platte) won by fall over Brice Vitosh (Chase County) (Fall 1:31)
Round 2 – Alex Rodriquez (North Platte) won by fall over Shane Adkisson (Paxton) (Fall 1:07)
Round 3 – Thomas Dennis (Colby) won by fall over Alex Rodriquez (North Platte) (Fall 3:36)

JV 145
Breckyn Brown’s place is 4th and has scored 6.0 team points.

Round 1 – Mason Marquardt (Holdredge) won by fall over Breckyn Brown (North Platte) (Fall 5:09)
Round 2 – Jason Tovar (Lexington) won by fall over Breckyn Brown (North Platte) (Fall 2:56)
Round 3 – Breckyn Brown (North Platte) won by fall over Brayan Sanchez (Chase County) (Fall 5:36)

JV 145B
Trevor Snyder’s place is 2nd and has scored 14.0 team points.

Round 1 – Trevor Snyder (North Platte) won by fall over Jackson Oaks (Lexington) (Fall 3:45)
Round 2 – Carlos Romero (Lexington) won by major decision over Trevor Snyder (North Platte) (Maj 9-1)
Round 3 – Trevor Snyder (North Platte) won by fall over Cody Duffy (Chase County) (Fall 1:38)

JV 152
Jordan Schultz’s place is 1st and has scored 18.0 team points.

Round 1 – Jordan Schultz (North Platte) won by decision over Trae Skiles (Ogallala) (Dec 10-7)
Round 2 – Jordan Schultz (North Platte) won by fall over Emmanuel Herrera (Chase County) (Fall 2:43)
Round 3 – Jordan Schultz (North Platte) won by fall over Jakob Koon (Colby) (Fall 1:19)

JV 170
Jaden Dike’s place is 1st and has scored 18.0 team points.

Round 1 – Jaden Dike (North Platte) won by fall over Derek Fosbinder (Ogallala) (Fall 2:40)
Round 2 – Jaden Dike (North Platte) won by decision over Wyatt Ervin (Cambridge) (Dec 9-2)
Round 3 – Jaden Dike (North Platte) won by fall over Jacob Osmus (Wray) (Fall 2:32)

JV 195
Edmund Hatch’s place is 1st and has scored 16.0 team points.

Round 1 – Edmund Hatch (North Platte) won by decision over William Santoyo (Lexington) (Dec 12-8)
Round 2 – Edmund Hatch (North Platte) won by fall over Ali Hedri (Wray) (Fall 5:26)
Round 3 – Edmund Hatch (North Platte) won by decision over Julien Grindle (Cambridge) (Dec 13-6)

Huskers Volleyball stage comeback to earn spot in national championship

MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. – For the second year in a row, the Nebraska volleyball team won a five-set thriller in the NCAA Semifinals, this time rallying from an 0-2 hole for a dramatic come-from-behind victory over Illinois Thursday Night at the Target Center. With the win, the Huskers advanced to Saturday’s NCAA Final, where Nebraska will take on Stanford in an attempt to win back-to-back national titles.

Nebraska (29-6) lost the first two sets, 25-22 and 25-16, and set three was tied at 23 before Mikaele Foecke delivered consecutive kills to send the match to the fourth set. The Huskers then won set four, 25-20, to send it to a decisive fifth set. The fifth set was tied at 11 before Nebraska scored the final four points, with Foecke closing out the match with her 19th kill on match point.

Foecke and Lexi Sun each had 19 kills to lead Nebraska, and each player produced a double-double with Sun recording 12 digs and Foecke tallying 11 digs. Nicklin Hames also had a double-double with 46 assists and 19 digs, while running a Husker offense that hit .251 for the match. Jazz Sweet had nine kills on only 20 swings and Lauren Stivrins produced eight kills on 16 error-free swings for a match-high .500 attack percentage. Kenzie Maloney led Nebraska with 20 digs, while Megan Miller had 19 digs. Maloney also added a career-high 10 assists to post her first career double-double. The Huskers had nine more kills than Illinois and out-dug the Illini, but Illinois out-blocked Nebraska and served up nine aces.

Jacqueline Quade had a match-high 28 kills for Illinois (32-4), the most by a Husker opposing player this season. Beth Prince added 10 kills for an Illinois offense that hit .237. Morgan O’Brien had a match-high 27 digs, while Quade added 10 digs to produce a double-double.

Set 1: The Huskers had kills on their first three swings to take a 4-1 lead. Foecke had a block with Schwarzenbach and back-to-back kills to keep the Huskers up three, 7-4. But Illinois answered with a 3-0 run to tie the score at 7-7. Illinois tied the set at 9-9 and 10-10, but Hames dumped a kill after each point to not allow Illinois to go in front. Sun blasted a pair of kills and served an ace to give NU a 14-11 lead, but the Illini wouldn’t go away, scoring three in a row to tie the set once again. Sweet and Schwarzenbach blocked an Illinois attack to give the Huskers a 15-14 advantage at the media timeout. Illinois took its first lead at 16-15 after a kill and ace by Quade on consecutive rallies, and Ali Bastianelli and Ashlyn Fleming added kills to take the Illini to an 18-16 lead. Foecke and Sun answered with kills for the Huskers out of a timeout, and the score was tied once again, 18-18. Hames dumped her third kill of the set, and Nebraska regained a 19-18 lead. After an Illinois timeout, Foecke served the Huskers’ second ace of the set to make it 20-18. Illinois scored the next two to tie it 20-20, and the Illini went back in front, 22-21, on Quade’s eighth kill. A pair of Husker hitting errors gave Illinois set point at 24-21. The Huskers fought off one point before the Illini won 25-22 on Quade’s ninth kill. There were nine ties and three lead changes in the opening set.

Set 2: Illinois setter Jordyn Poulter served a 6-0 run to begin the set for the Illini, including three aces, and Nebraska used both of its timeouts during the run. The Illini led 12-4 after kills by Megan Cooney and Quade and a block by Bastianelli. Stivrins, Sun and Foecke strung together four straight kills for the Big Red to trim the deficit to 13-9, but Illinois went right back to Quade for two more kills and a 16-9 lead. Illinois led 19-12 when Sweet had three kills in a row to pull the Huskers within 19-15. The Huskers could get no closer than four, however, as Illinois scored a 6-1 run to win the set, 25-16.

Set 3: Stivrins had three early kills and Nebraska led 7-5 after an ace by Foecke. With the score tied 9-9, the Huskers scored four straight points after Illinois made its first service error of the match, and Sun added an ace that was followed by an Illinois error and a Sweet kill to make it 13-9. After Illinois pulled within one at 14-13, the Huskers put together another 4-0 run, this one with two kills by Foecke and one each by Sweet and Hames. Foecke and Sun added kills to make it a six-point lead at 20-14, but a Husker service error followed by a receiving error on Illinois’ next serve made it 20-16, and the Huskers took a timeout. Nebraska led 21-16 when Illinois went on a 5-0 run to tie the score at 21-21. Foecke earned an important sideout for the Huskers with her 13th kill, but Nebraska’s 10th service error knotted the score at 22-22. Illinois took a 23-22 lead, but Schwarzenbach and Foecke terminated for set point for the Huskers at 24-23. An Illinois net violation gave the Huskers the 25-23 win to extend the match.

Set 4: The Huskers trailed 5-3 before rallying to take a 7-5 lead on a 5-0 run served by Miller. A kill by Sun made it 9-6 Huskers, but Illinois scored the next three to tie it at 9-9. Illinois gained a 12-11 lead, but the Huskers clawed their way to a 15-14 lead at the media timeout, aided by kills from Sun and Schwarzenbach. An ace serve by Miller following an Illinois serve into the net put NU ahead 17-15. After Illinois tied the set at 17-17, Stivrins and Foecke blocked a Quade attack, and Stivrins and Sun took the Huskers to a 20-18 lead with back-to-back kills. The Illini hit wide after a timeout, but Poulter and Fleming had kills to cut to the Huskers’ lead to 21-20. But once again an Illinois service error was followed by a Nebraska ace – this one from Hames – and NU led 23-20. After Illinois’ second timeout, Sweet gained set point for the Huskers with her seventh kill, and Sun found the corner to force a fifth set after the 25-20 Husker win.

Set 5: The teams went back and forth early on with Illinois committing three service errors but siding out each time the Huskers served the next rally. Foecke blasted a kill for a 6-5 Husker lead, but Beth Prince answered for Illinois. The Illini won a joust at the net to go ahead 7-6, but Stivrins sided out for the Huskers with her eighth kill. Sun put NU up 8-7 at the crossover. Foecke struck a kill out of the back row to make it 9-7, and another kill by Sun had the Huskers up 10-8. A kill by Quade and an ace by Fleming tied the score at 10-10, and the Huskers took a timeout. Capri Davis sided out for the Huskers, but Quade answered. Sweet came right back with her ninth kill, and the Huskers won a challenge call that Foecke’s shot deflected off an Illinois fingertip before going out, making the score 13-11. Maloney served an ace for match point at 14-11, and Foecke closed out match on the next rally with a kill.

Nebraska Post-Match Notes

With the win, Nebraska (29-6) advanced to the NCAA Final for the ninth time in program history (third-most in NCAA history). The Huskers have made back-to-back NCAA Finals for only the second time in school history (2005 & 2006) and are playing for the national title for the third time in the past four seasons.
The Huskers will go for their sixth national title and second in a row on Saturday. Nebraska has never won back-to-back national championships.
NU rallied from an 0-2 deficit for the first time ever in an NCAA Semifinal or Final. The Huskers had been 0-4 in NCAA Semifinals when losing the first two sets and 0-3 in NCAA Finals when losing the first two sets.
The Huskers became the first team to rally from an 0-2 deficit in an NCAA Semifinal or Final since Penn State came back to defeat Texas in the 2009 NCAA Final. The last time a team rallied from an 0-2 hole in an NCAA Semifinal match was in 2008, when Stanford defeated Texas.
Nebraska set a school record with its 11th consecutive NCAA Tournament victory. The 11-match postseason winning streak ranks sixth in NCAA history.
Nebraska improved its all-time NCAA Tournament record to 113-31. The Huskers’ 113 victories and .785 winning percentage in the postseason rank second in NCAA history to Stanford (124-31).
Nebraska improved to 9-6 all-time in NCAA Semifinal matches, including a 6-3 record under John Cook. Cook moved to 72-14 overall in NCAA Tournament play as Nebraska’s head coach and 80-18 in his career, including his seven seasons at Wisconsin.
John Cook has taken a Husker team to the NCAA Final for the sixth time in his 19 seasons at Nebraska, winning four national championships. Cook’s six finals appearances rank fifth among all coaches in NCAA history.
Cook improved to 8-1 against Big Ten teams in the NCAA Tournament at Nebraska.
The Huskers extended their winning streak to 13 matches with the win over third-ranked Illinois. Nebraska is 7-0 against ranked opponents during its win streak, including 3-0 vs. top-10 foes.
Illinois won five of the final six rallies in set one to hand Nebraska its first set loss of the NCAA Tournament, 25-22. The Huskers had won all 12 sets in the postseason and 22 straight sets dating back to Nov. 16.
Nebraska was held to 16 points in the second set, its third-fewest points in a set this season.
NU fell behind 0-2 for just the third time this season. The previous two times both occurred in the first six matches of the year. The Huskers are 2-1 when losing the first two sets of a match, with both wins coming over top-15 opponents (Creighton and Illinois).
Nebraska’s two seniors who have been with the program all four years – Mikaela Foecke and Kenzie Maloney – improved to 21-1 in their NCAA Tournament careers. The duo has won more postseason matches than any other players in Husker history.
Foecke and Maloney each played their 22nd NCAA Tournament match on Thursday, setting a school record for the most postseason matches by any player in program history. The duo have also each played 77 career sets in their NCAA Tournament careers, the most by any player in Nebraska history.
Foecke and Maloney are a combined 52-2 all-time in the months of November and December.
Foecke had 19 kills in the match, giving her 102 career kills in the NCAA Semifinals/Finals. She became just the 10th player in NCAA history to have 100 kills in NCAA Semifinals/Finals matches.
Foecke also had two aces, giving her eight in her career in NCAA Semifinals/Finals matches, which ties for the 10th-most in NCAA history. Her two aces also moved her up to seventh on Nebraska’s all-time list.
Maloney had a team-high 20 digs against Illinois to give her 519 digs this season. She became just the fourth Husker to have 500 digs in a season, and her 519 digs rank fifth in school history.
Maloney also had a career-best 10 assists to post the first double-double of her career.
Nicklin Hames produced her 24th double-double of the season, extending her school record.
Hames also tied her career high with five kills.
Illinois’ Jacqueline Quade had 28 kills, the most by Husker opponent on the season. She had at least 22 kills in all three matches against Nebraska in 2018.
Illinois had nine aces in the match, the most the Huskers allowed in 2018. Nebraska had been aced only five times in its first four NCAA Tournament matches combined.

NPCC Softball Team sends cheer to Ronald McDonald Houses

Children at Ronald McDonald Houses in six states and a province in Canada will benefit from the generosity of the North Platte Community College Knights Softball Team.

Families with children who are seriously ill or injured can stay at Ronald McDonald Houses for little to no cost while the children are undergoing medical treatments. Because many of those families will be unable to return home for Christmas, the Knights decided to do something special for them.

The team colored pictures and created Christmas cards for Ronald McDonald Houses in Nebraska, Iowa, Utah, California, Colorado and Canada – all the places team members are from.

They also sent a box to a Ronald McDonald House in Seattle, Wash. because their charity was inspired by a little boy who is staying there – Tavish McCosh, a 3-year-old battling leukemia.

The Knights saw McCosh’s story on the Internet. He is currently undergoing chemotherapy treatments, and the one thing that brightens his day is checking the mail – although there usually isn’t any mail for him.

His parents decided to put a request out on Facebook asking for Christmas cards for McCosh, and soon the mail was streaming in.

“That got the team to thinking,” said Janelle Higgins, NPCC head softball coach. “There are probably a lot of other kids just like Tavish whose days could be made a little brighter if someone just sent them mail.”

The Knights created a special card for McCosh thanking him for being an inspiration to others. The boxes they mailed to Seattle will be delivered directly to him so he can hand the gifts out to other children in the Ronald McDonald House.

In addition to the pictures and Christmas cards, the gifts include handmade stocking caps, candy and a team card signed by all of the Knights. There’s enough for every child in the Ronald McDonald House.

“We all have difficult days – with workouts, finals, being away from home,” said Higgins. “I always challenge the team to ask, ‘Is this a hard time, or is it just life?’ Typically, for us, it’s just life, but we all know someone who is struggling with something big. That’s why we want to reach out to those who are suffering. We will probably never know the impact these gift boxes have on the children they are going to, but if they bring one smile, then it’s worth it.”

Two team members, Erika McClung and Sophia Kiss, both of Victoria, British Columbia, will hand-deliver boxes to their local Ronald McDonald House when they return home for the holidays.

GAMESTORY: NPCC Lady Knights fall in last game of semester

Colby, KS – The Lady Knights went into Colby KS looking for revenge to end the first semester and came up short, losing 93-39.

The Trojans jumped on the Knights early with a combination of drives in the paint and long twos and were ahead 20-4. North Platte would end the quarter down 20-7.

The second started off well for North Platte, they found a good mix defensively and got a few stops to start the quarter. Meanwhile, their offense started to come alive as Sophmore Madisyn Francis found her groove to the tune of 8 points in the quarter. The Knights would head into halftime down 41-19.

The third was the best quarter for the Knights behind gritty play from starting Freshman Katie Cox, who had her best quarter and game on the season. Cox dominated the paint gobbling up 5 rebs in the quarter while scoring 7 points (including a wide-open corner three) and was a force on defense as well affecting some of the Trojan shots. It was 65-34 at the end of 3.

The Trojans came out with a lot of fire in the fourth quarter, putting up 28 points in the quarter while keeping the Knights to just 5.

Coach Jeff Thurman after the game said “we just couldn’t get stops and our shots weren’t falling. Games like this will happen but just like I told the girls, we aren’t playing for W’s against Colby in December, we are growing and playing for W’s in late January and February against Southeast and Central, those are the games that matter.”

The loss drops the Knights to 2-11 on the season heading into the Holiday break. The next game for the Knights is Jan 8th at home against York College JV. That game is a reschedule from a postponed game earlier in the season.

Husker volleyball powers to Final Four

MINNEAPOLIS – The Nebraska volleyball team earned a program-record fourth straight trip to the NCAA Semifinals after a 3-0 sweep over the No. 14 Oregon Ducks on Saturday night at Minnesota’s Maturi Pavilion.

The defending national champion Huskers – with eight new players on the roster this season – became the sixth program in NCAA history to reach four consecutive final fours, joining Pacific, Penn State, Stanford, Texas and UCLA.

Nebraska (28-6) won its 12th straight match, stopping a high-flying Oregon squad that had upset No. 2 Minnesota on the Golden Gophers’ home court on Friday in the regional semifinal. The Huskers held the Ducks to a .250 hitting percentage, and offensively Nebraska hit .345 in the 25-22, 25-23, 25-17 win.

Mikaela Foecke, the regional’s most outstanding player, had 16 kills and 13 digs, hitting .400. Lauren Stivrins had 11 kills and hit .526, and Nicklin Hames tallied 41 assists and 15 digs. All three were named to the all-regional team.

Lexi Sun tacked on 10 kills, while Jazz Sweet had five. Kenzie Maloney added 12 digs. Nebraska out-blocked Oregon, 5-2, and had a 53-47 edge in digs.

The win was Nebraska’s 10th consecutive NCAA Tournament win dating back to an NCAA Semifinal loss to Texas in 2016. The 10-match postseason win streak is tied for the longest NCAA Tournament winning streak in program history (NU also won 10 straight matches from 2000-01 and 2015-16).

The Huskers will play No. 3 Illinois, led by former Husker assistant coach Chris Tamas, in an NCAA Semifinal match next Thursday. The 2018 NCAA Championships will be played at the Target Center in Minneapolis. Tickets can be purchased at NCAA.com/tickets. The semifinals will be played on Thursday, Dec. 13 at 6 and 8 p.m. (Central). The final is set for Saturday, Dec. 15 at 8 p.m. Both NCAA Semifinals and the NCAA Final will air on ESPN2.

Set 1: Back-to-back kills by Stivrins and an Oregon tip wide gave the Huskers their first lead of the set at 6-5, but Oregon regained a 10-8 lead after a 4-1 spurt. The Ducks increased their lead to 13-10 after three straight kills. Foecke posted a sideout kill for the Huskers, and Stivrins and Sweet blocked an Oregon attack to cut the deficit to one. Sun and Stivrins tipped home kills on consecutive rallies to put the Huskers up 16-15. After four sideouts, Hames served an ace to give the Huskers a two-point lead for the first time in the set, 19-17, and Oregon called timeout. The Huskers committed a pair of service errors, and an Oregon kill knotted the score at 20-20. But Oregon committed three unforced hitting errors on the next three rallies to put Nebraska back in front, 23-20. The Huskers earned set point at 24-21 via an Oregon service error, and Foecke tipped home the winner at 25-22. NU hit .400 in the set, while Oregon hit .294.

Set 2: Oregon held the early advantage again, taking a 6-3 lead after six kills from five different players. The Ducks went ahead 10-6 with their eighth kill on their 17th swing, and Nebraska took a timeout. The Huskers trailed 12-7 when Sun, Schwarzenbach and Sweet put down kills to trim the deficit to two. The Ducks continued their efficient attack, however, and regained a four-point lead at 16-12. Nebraska was down 18-14 when Foecke and Sun connected on kills as part of a spurt that cut it to 18-17. Nebraska then won a challenge that Oregon had four hits before a kill that would have made it 19-17 Ducks. Instead, it became 18-18. The score remained tied at 19-19 before Oregon mishandled a serve by Sun, and Nebraska took a 20-19 lead, its first of the set. The Ducks responded with a kill by Lauren Page and one by Taylor Borup for a 21-20 lead. Foecke put the Huskers back on top, 22-21, with a kill and a block with Stivrins. With the score tied 23-23, Foecke terminated for the 10th time for set point for the Big Red. Stivrins found the floor with a tip on the slide to win the set for the Huskers, 25-23.

Set 3: The Huskers scored four in a row to take a 5-2 lead, capped by a block by Schwarzenbach and Sweet. The Ducks charged back to take a 7-6 lead after a 5-1 run. Nebraska answered with a 4-0 run, keyed by a block by Foecke and Stivrins and an ace by Megan Miller. Hames and Sweet notched back-to-back kills to make it 14-10. Foecke added another kill and an Oregon hitting error and a kill by Sweet put the Huskers up by five, 18-13. Nebraska scored seven of the final 10 points down the stretch to clinch their fourth straight final four bid with a 25-17 win.

Match Notes

Nebraska improved to 28-6 overall and won its 12th straight match. The win was Nebraska’s 10th consecutive NCAA Tournament win dating back to an NCAA Semifinal loss to Texas in 2016. The 10-match postseason win streak is tied for the longest NCAA Tournament winning streak in program history (NU also won 10 straight matches from 2000-01 and 2015-16).
Nebraska advanced to the NCAA Semifinals for the fourth straight year, a first in program history. Nebraska became the sixth program in NCAA history to reach at least four straight final fours, joining Stanford (1982-87, 1994-97), Pacific (1983-86), UCLA (1988-92), Penn State (2007-10) and Texas (2012-16). Only Penn State, Texas and Nebraska have accomplished the feat since the field expanded to 64 teams in 1998.
The Huskers will make their 15th NCAA Semifinals appearance all-time, second-most behind only Stanford (who has 21 entering Saturday’s regional final match against Penn State).
Nebraska’s all-time NCAA Tournament record is now 112-31. Its .783 winning percentage in the NCAA Tournament is second only to Stanford (.797 entering Saturday).
Nebraska improved to 15-13 all-time in NCAA Regional Finals.
John Cook is taking Nebraska to the NCAA Semifinals for the ninth time in his 19 seasons as head coach. Cook’s nine NCAA Semifinal appearances are tied for the sixth-most by any coach in NCAA history.
Cook is just the fifth coach in NCAA history to make nine NCAA Semifinal appearances at one school, joining Andy Banachowski (UCLA, retired), Russ Rose (Penn State), Don Shaw (Stanford, retired) and Dave Shoji (Hawaii, retired).
Cook improved to 71-14 in the NCAA Tournament at Nebraska and 79-18 overall in his NCAA Tournament career, including his time at Wisconsin.
Nebraska’s two seniors who have been with the program all four years – Mikaela Foecke and Kenzie Maloney – are 20-1 in their NCAA Tournament careers, and the duo is a combined 51-2 all-time in the months of November and December. Their 20 postseason victories are the most in a four-year span in Nebraska history.
Foecke and Maloney each played in their 21st NCAA Tournament match at Nebraska, tying for the most postseason matches played by any player in program history. The duo have also each played in 72 career NCAA Tournament sets, trailing only Annika Albrecht (75 sets) and Jordan Larson (73 sets) for most career postseason sets played in Nebraska history.
Freshman setter Nicklin Hames had her 23rd double-double of the season with 41 assists and 15 digs. That broke Jordan Larson’s school record for single-season double-doubles in the rally-scoring era.
Foecke had 16 kills, passing Lisa Reitsma (1,633) for third place on Nebraska’s all-time kills list with 1,638.
Foecke has 263 career kills in the NCAA Tournament, which moved her past Nancy Metcalf (Meendering) to No. 2 on Nebraska’s career postseason kills list.
Maloney has 1,369 career digs, which moved into the top five on Nebraska’s all-time digs list.
Nebraska’s sweep of Oregon marked just the second time the Huskers have made it to the NCAA Semifinal without losing a set (also happened in 1990).

NPHS Wrestling results from Belleview East

Chieftain Duals – North Platte
Guaranteed 4th place

Match #1 Round 1
Fremont defeated North Platte 48-35
132 – Cody Carlson (Fremont) over Corey Parsons (North Platte) Fall 2:43
138 – Noah Molzahn (Fremont) over Santana Morin (North Platte) Fall 3:05
145 – Hunter Robertson (Fremont) over Luke Rathjen (North Platte) Fall 1:14
152 – Tommy Wentz (Fremont) over Doc Rodgers (North Platte) Fall 0:42
160 – Cash Arensdorff (North Platte) over Riley Fox (Fremont) TF 22-7
170 – Quinton Vieyra (North Platte) over Austin Settles (Fremont) Fall 0:51
182 – Gavyn Brauer (North Platte) over Kaden Garges (Fremont) Fall 4:24
195 – Isiah Nielsen (Fremont) over Unknown (Unattached) Forf
220 – Trevin Escamilla (Fremont) over Mason Newland (North Platte) Fall 1:21
285 – Kade Richardson (Fremont) over Johnathan Sutherland (North Platte) Fall 0:48
106 – Sebastian Villagomez (Fremont) over Unknown (Unattached) Forf
113 – Jaylan Ruffin (North Platte) over Michael Gehring (Fremont) Fall 0:47
120 – Brock Little (North Platte) over Carlos Ahumada (Fremont) Fall 2:32
126 – Darian Diaz (North Platte) over Jacob Marsh (Fremont) Fall 1:46

Match #2 Round 2
Gretna defeated North Platte 56-24
138 – Luke Figi (Gretna) over Santana Morin (North Platte) Fall 5:21
145 – Cameron Cunningham (Gretna) over Luke Rathjen (North Platte) Maj 14-0
152 – Lou Carnazzo (Gretna) over Doc Rodgers (North Platte) Fall 3:40
160 – Cash Arensdorff (North Platte) over John Weed (Gretna) Fall 3:01
170 – Cole Huss (Gretna) over Gavyn Brauer (North Platte) Fall 3:39
182 – Jack Larchick (Gretna) over Quinton Vieyra (North Platte) Fall 2:29
195 – TJ Huber (Gretna) over Unknown (Unattached) Forf
220 – Omar Holtan (Gretna) over Mason Newland (North Platte) Fall 0:36
285 – Daric Burghardt (Gretna) over Johnathan Sutherland (North Platte) Maj 10-2
106 – Ayden Hall (Gretna) over Unknown (Unattached) Forf
113 – Jaylan Ruffin (North Platte) over Josh Arend (Gretna) Fall 0:46
120 – Brock Little (North Platte) over Unknown (Unattached) Forf
126 – Darian Diaz (North Platte) over Dylan Shelden (Gretna) Fall 1:23
132 – Leyton Tuma (Gretna) over Corey Parsons (North Platte) Fall 0:52

Match #3 Round 3
Bellevue East defeated North Platte 39-36
106 – Gabe Grice (Bellevue East) over Unknown (Unattached) Forf
113 – Garrett Grice (Bellevue East) over Jaylan Ruffin (North Platte) Fall 5:11
120 – Brock Little (North Platte) over Jacob Francois (Bellevue East) Fall 3:47
126 – Darian Diaz (North Platte) over Daniel DeRosier (Bellevue East) Dec 10-4
132 – Caelan Hester (Bellevue East) over Corey Parsons (North Platte) Fall 1:40
138 – Collin Mutzenberger (Bellevue East) over Santana Morin (North Platte) Dec 9-2
145 – Luke Rathjen (North Platte) over Gavin Zurcher (Bellevue East) Dec 7-2
152 – Doc Rodgers (North Platte) over Ashton Evans (Bellevue East) Fall 1:54
160 – Cash Arensdorff (North Platte) over Brett Olson (Bellevue East) Fall 4:20
170 – James Larson (Bellevue East) over Quinton Vieyra (North Platte) Fall 1:26
182 – Gavyn Brauer (North Platte) over Mathew Powley (Bellevue East) Fall 1:02
195 – Dalton Hike (Bellevue East) over Unknown (Unattached) Forf
220 – Mason Newland (North Platte) over Michael Palmquist (Bellevue East) Fall 1:35
285 – Preston Welch (Bellevue East) over Johnathan Sutherland (North Platte) Fall 3:49

Match #4 Round 4
North Platte defeated Omaha Westside 51-27
152 – Benjamin J. Radicia (Omaha Westside) over Doc Rodgers (North Platte) Dec 5-3
160 – Cash Arensdorff (North Platte) over Jacob Vincentini (Omaha Westside) Fall 1:17
170 – Nolan Johnston (Omaha Westside) over Quinton Vieyra (North Platte) Fall 0:57
182 – Gavyn Brauer (North Platte) over Cole D. Haberman (Omaha Westside) Fall 3:13
195 – Matt Onken (Omaha Westside) over Unknown (Unattached) Forf
220 – Mason Newland (North Platte) over Loren I Woita (Omaha Westside) Fall 3:41
285 – Cade D. Haberman (Omaha Westside) over Johnathan Sutherland (North Platte) Fall 0:15
106 – Michael K. Colling (Omaha Westside) over Unknown (Unattached) Forf
113 – Jaylan Ruffin (North Platte) over Unknown (Unattached) Forf
120 – Brock Little (North Platte) over Unknown (Unattached) Forf
126 – Darian Diaz (North Platte) over Cade A. Hargis (Omaha Westside) Fall 2:28
132 – Corey Parsons (North Platte) over Unknown (Unattached) Forf
138 – Santana Morin (North Platte) over Zach Schweigart (Omaha Westside) Fall 1:18
145 – Luke Rathjen (North Platte) over Noah Aken (Omaha Westside) Dec 4-0

Match #5 Round 5
North Platte defeated York 45-35
160 – Cash Arensdorff (North Platte) over Jacob Frink (York) Fall 1:46
170 – Kaden Lyons (York) over Quinton Vieyra (North Platte) TF 19-4
182 – Gavyn Brauer (North Platte) over Chase Cotton (York) Fall 2:26
195 – Kobe Lyons (York) over Unknown (Unattached) Forf
220 – Brayan Rodriguez (York) over Mason Newland (North Platte) Fall 3:48
285 – Terrance Heyes (York) over Johnathan Sutherland (North Platte) Fall 3:35
106 – Nick Conrad (York) over Unknown (Unattached) Forf
113 – Jaylan Ruffin (North Platte) over Thomas Ivey (York) Fall 2:15
120 – Brock Little (North Platte) over Kaleb Eliker (York) Dec 7-3
126 – Darian Diaz (North Platte) over Nate Streeter-Myers (York) Fall 2:21
132 – Corey Parsons (North Platte) over Oren Krumrei (York) Fall 3:02
138 – Santana Morin (North Platte) over Trent Bush (York) Fall 2:45
145 – Luke Rathjen (North Platte) over Damon Rasmussen (York) Fall 1:59
152 – Harrison Gocke (York) over Doc Rodgers (North Platte) Fall 1:02

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