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Theriot Named Wooden Award Candidate

Rachel Theriot
Rachel Theriot

Nebraska junior Rachel Theriot was named one of 30 early season candidates for the 2015 John R. Wooden Award presented to the nation’s top women’s college basketball player.

The 30-player list is chosen by a preseason poll of national women’s college basketball media members.

Theriot was ranked as the No. 13 player in the nation by ESPN heading into this season and was a preseason first-team All-Big Ten selection. The 6-0 point guard from Middleburg Heights, Ohio, has the Huskers off to a 4-0 start and ranked No. 15 nationally by the Associated Press heading into this Friday’s game at UCLA.

Theriot is averaging 17.0 points, 3.8 rebounds, 4.5 assists and 1.5 steals as a junior for the Huskers. Last season, she proved herself as one of the nation’s top young players, earning honorable-mention All-America accolades from the AP after claiming a first-team All-Big Ten award.

In 2013-14, Theriot averaged 14.1 points and 7.1 assists per game while leading the Big Ten with a 2.7-to-1 assist-to-turnover ratio. Her 234 assists were a school record.

She guided the Huskers to their first-ever conference tournament title as the Big Ten Tournament MVP, averaging 18.7 points and a tournament-record 10.0 assists per game.

Defending NCAA Champion Connecticut boasts three players on the preseason Top 30 list: Moriah Jefferson, Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis, and Breanna Stewart, who finished third in the voting as a sophomore a year ago after averaging 19.4 ppg and 8.1 rebounds. Three more teams put a pair of players on the list, 14th-ranked California (Brittany Boyd, Rashanda Gray); No. 1 South Carolina (Aleighsa Welch, Tiffany Mitchell); and No. 4 Tennessee, (Bashaara Graves, Isabelle Harrison).

Other players of note nationally on the Top 30 list include Duke’s Elizabeth Williams, a three-time ACC Defensive Player of the Year pick; Stanford point guard Amber Orrange, who led the Cardinal to a win over UConn last week; and a trio of players who won the three-on-three world championship last summer: Louisville senior Sara Hammond, Notre Dame junior Jewell Loyd; and Mitchell.

Players not chosen to the preseason list are eligible for both the midseason list and the National Ballot. The National Ballot consists of 20 top players who have proven to their universities that they are making progress toward graduation and maintaining at least a 2.0 cumulative GPA. The Wooden Award All American team, consisting of the nation’s top fie players, will be announced the week of the Final Four.

The power conferences lead the way this preseason. The ACC led all leagues with six selections, followed by the Big Ten, Pac-12 and SEC with five apiece. The American Athletic Conference followed with four selections, the Big 12 three, and two more conferences had one pick, the MAC and Big East. Nearly half of the players chosen, 14 out of 30, are seniors.

The 39th annual Wooden Award ceremony will honor the Men’s and Women’s Wooden Award winners, and will include the presentation of the Wooden Award All-America Teams and the Legends of Coaching Award, which in 2015 will go to San Diego State Head Men’s Basketball Coach Steve Fisher. The event will take place the weekend of April 10-12, 2015.

John R. Wooden Award Women’s Preseason Top 30

 Name School Conference
Jillian Alleyne Oregon Pac-12 6-3 F
Rachel Banham Minnesota Big Ten 5-9 G
Brittany Boyd California Pac-12 5-9 G
Crystal Bradford Central Michigan MAC 6-0 G
Lexie Brown Maryland Big Ten 5-9 G
Nina Davis Baylor Big 12 5-11 F
Kaela Davis Georgia Tech ACC 6-2 G
Nneka Enemkpali Texas Big 12 6-1 F
Bashaara Graves Tennessee SEC 6-2 F
Reshanda Gray California Pac-12 6-3 F
Allisha Gray North Carolina ACC 6-0 G
Dearica Hamby Wake Forest ACC 6-3 F
Sara Hammond Louisville ACC 6-2 F
Isabelle Harrison Tennessee SEC 6-3 C
Bria Holmes West Virginia Big 12 6-1 G
Brittany Hrynko DePaul Big East 5-8 G
Moriah Jefferson UConn The American 5-7 G
Samantha Logic Iowa Big Ten 5-9 G
Jewell Loyd Notre Dame ACC 5-10 G
Tiffany Mitchell South Carolina SEC 5-9 G
Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis UConn The American 5-11 F
Amber Orrange Stanford Pac-12 5-7 G
Kelsey Plum Washington Pac-12 5-8 G
Aerial Powers Michigan State Big Ten 6-0 F
Breanna Stewart* UConn The American 6-4 F
Rachel Theriot Nebraska Big Ten 6-0 G
Courtney Walker Texas A&M SEC 5-8 G
Aleighsa Welch South Carolina SEC 6-0 F
Elizabeth Williams Duke ACC 6-3 C/F
Courtney Williams USF The American 5-8 G

 

Amber Rolfzen, Hall Net Big Ten Weekly Awards

 

Amber Rolfzen
Amber Rolfzen

The dominant defensive performance from Amber Rolfzen and Cecilia Hall on Saturday against Michigan has earned them both weekly honors from the Big Ten. Rolfzen was named Big Ten Player of the Week, and Cecilia Hall earned Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week, the conference office announced on Monday.

Rolfzen picks up her first career player of the week honor. She twice earned Big Ten Freshman of the Week last season. The sophomore from Papillion, Neb., had eight kills and 12 blocks against Michigan on Saturday. Her 12 blocks were a career high and the second-highest total by a Big Ten player this season, behind only Hall’s performance in the same match. Rolfzen had 10 kills and two blocks while hitting .562 in the sweep at Indiana on Wednesday. Rolfzen averaged 3.00 kills per set and 2.33 blocks per set for the week and hit .395.

Hall earns her second career defensive weekly award. The junior from Linkoping, Sweden, had a career day against Michigan, totaling a career-high 13 blocks. Her performance tied the school record for most block assists in a three-set match, and it was the highest block total by a Big Ten player in any match this season. Hall also had four kills on six attacks in the match for a .667 hitting percentage. Against Indiana last Wednesday, Hall had five kills and three more blocks. On the week she averaged 1.50 kills per set and 2.67 blocks per set while hitting .375.

The Huskers have now won five individual awards during their eight-match win streak. NU has won Big Ten Player and Defensive Player of the Week in two of the past three weeks.

2014 Nebraska’s Big Ten Weekly Honors
Nov. 3 – Mary Pollmiller (Co-Setter of the Week)
Nov. 10 – Kelsey Fien (Player of the Week)
Meghan Haggerty (Defensive Player of the Week)
Nov. 24 – Amber Rolfzen (Player of the Week)
Cecilia Hall (Defensive Player of the Week)

Huskers’ Pelini Says He’s Doing All He Can to Win

Bo-Pelini-Nebraska-HuskersLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — For the second year in a row, Nebraska coach Bo Pelini is going into the final week of the regular season facing questions about his job security.

Nebraska followed a lopsided loss at Wisconsin two weeks ago with a home loss to Minnesota on Saturday. The Cornhuskers end the regular season at Iowa on Friday.

Pelini said Monday he’s “turning over every stone” to win championships and that he won’t be satisfied until he does. Pelini said he makes changes in the way the program operates every season in his attempt to “get over the proverbial hump.”

Asked if he would fire one or more of his assistants if it meant saving his job, Pelini said he would not.

Kentucky Remains No. 1, Nebraska Drops Out of Top 25

basketballThe top 25 teams in The Associated Press’ college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Nov. 23, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote and last week’s ranking:

Record Pts Prv
1. Kentucky (62) 5-0 1,622 1
2. Arizona 3-0 1,493 2
2. Wisconsin (3) 4-0 1,493 3
4. Duke 5-0 1,473 4
5. North Carolina 3-0 1,315 6
6. Louisville 3-0 1,220 7
7. Texas 4-0 1,185 10
8. Virginia 4-0 1,166 9
9. Wichita St. 3-0 1,120 11
10. Gonzaga 4-0 1,076 13
11. Kansas 1-1 982 5
12. Villanova 3-0 913 12
13. Iowa St. 2-0 831 14
14. VCU 3-0 761 15
15. San Diego St. 3-0 735 16
16. Ohio St. 3-0 557 20
17. Miami 5-0 524
18. Florida 2-1 467 8
19. Michigan 3-0 402 24
20. Michigan St. 2-1 400 19
21. West Virginia 5-0 345
22. UCLA 4-0 177
23. Creighton 4-0 148
24. UConn 3-1 145 17
25. Arkansas 3-0 129

Others receiving votes: Oklahoma 109, Stanford 80, Providence 63, Utah 38, Minnesota 21, N. Iowa 17, Rhode Island 16, Syracuse 15, Oklahoma St. 14, Georgetown 10, Memphis 10, Baylor 7, Indiana 6, California 5, Illinois 5, Nebraska 5, Cincinnati 4, NC State 4, Wyoming 4, Dayton 3, Maryland 3, UTEP 3, BYU 2, Northeastern 1, Xavier 1.

Nebraska Man to be Honored for Saving Bank Employees

Heroes Game Iowa Nebraska Huskers FootballOMAHA, NEB., Monday, November 24, 2014 — A bank president from Pilger, Nebraska and a Winterset, Iowa teenager will be recognized for their remarkable acts of courage on Friday, November 28, 2014. 18-year-old Austin Benson and Gene Willers will represent their home states as “citizen heroes” when the University of Iowa Hawkeyes host the University of Nebraska Cornhuskers in the Hy-Vee Heroes Game.

“The actions of both Gene and Austin represent what the American Red Cross is all about; providing compassionate care to those in need,” said Jill Orton, Regional Executive. “We are thrilled to partner with the Universities of Iowa and Nebraska, and of course, Hy-Vee, to celebrate these two exceptional individuals and their achievements.”

Gene Willers, Pilger, Neb. On the afternoon of June 16, 2014, Midwest Bank President, Gene Willers put the lives of his bank family first. Around 4:00 p.m., a large tornado touched down southwest of the Village of Pilger. After storm spotters called the bank to alert them of the danger, Gene ushered eight people, including several employees, into the bank vault and locked them inside minutes before the deadly tornado ripped through Pilger. Unfortunately, the vault could only be locked from the outside, so Gene sought shelter in a cellar below ground. The EF4 Tornado destroyed the century old Midwest Bank building. Thankfully, Gene emerged safely from below ground and the vault withstood the powerful winds, making Gene Willers a Hero.

Austin Benson, Winterset, Ia.  On the fourth of July, Austin Benson remained calm and was very brave when he rushed to help his friend, Rachel Riley, after she was thrown from her horse. The saddle horn punctured her leg causing traumatic injuries. As Rachel’s mom called for help, Austin used his shirt to apply pressure to the wound. He held Rachel’s hand and talked to his friend; trying to keep her calm while they waited for the ambulance. Rachel’s family wouldn’t know until later, but the injury to Rachel’s leg was a severed artery. The pediatric LifeFlight nurse said Austin’s actions and ability to stay calm saved Rachel’s life.

At halftime, Athletic Directors Gary Barta of the University of Iowa and Shawn Eichorst of the University of Nebraska will make a special presentation to the Hy-Vee Heroes Game honorees, whose names will be inscribed on the Heroes Game trophy. Benson, Willers and members of their families will be guests of the Hawkeyes and the Huskers at the game and will participate in a variety of special pregame activities. Randy Edeker, chairman, CEO and president of Hy-Vee, the presenting sponsor of the Heroes Game, will present a check to the Red Cross just before kickoff to show support for the Heroes recognized and the important work of the American Red Cross in Nebraska and Iowa.

Fans of both schools were invited to nominate residents of Iowa and Nebraska who have performed extraordinary acts of heroism and service in their communities. Staff and volunteers from the Red Cross selected the winners.

The Red Cross invites the public to be heroes in their communities and sign up to volunteer and be a part of the lifesaving work it does. The Red Cross is looking for diverse volunteers of all ages and skill levels. People can go to redcross.org to learn more about volunteer opportunities and how to submit a volunteer application.

The Red Cross depends on the generosity of the American people to fulfill its mission.  Those who would like to help people affected by disasters like tornadoes, floods and home fires­ can make a donation to American Red Cross Disaster Relief by visiting www.redcross.org, calling 1-800-RED CROSS or texting the word REDCROSS to 90999 to make a $10 donation. These donations enable the Red Cross to prepare for, respond to and help people recover from disasters big and small.

Contact Information:
Nebraska Hero Contact                       Iowa Hero Contact                     Hy-Vee, Inc.

Liz Dorland                                         Kara Kelly                                  Tara Deering-Hansen
Communications Manager                   Communications Officer             Director, Communications

Nebraska/Kansas Region                     Iowa Region
American Red Cross                           American Red Cross                  
Office (515) 559-5770

Cell: (402) 689-3683                                    Cell: (515) 664-6326                         Cell: (515) 778-7865

This Week in Nebraska Athletics

Tuesday, Nov. 25               Men’s Basketball           Omaha (ESPN3)                                                      Pinnacle Bank Arena                 7 p.m.

Wednesday, Nov. 26         Volleyball                        at Illinois (BTN Plus)                                               Champaign, Ill.                           7 p.m.

Friday, Nov. 28                   Football                           at Iowa (ABC)                                                           Iowa City, Iowa                            11 a.m.

Friday, Nov. 28                   Women’s Basketball      at UCLA (Pac-12 Networks)                                    Los Angeles, Calif.                     3 p.m.

Friday, Nov. 28                   Men’s Basketball           Tennessee-Martin (ESPN3)                                   Pinnacle Bank Arena                 7 p.m.

Saturday, Nov. 29               Volleyball                        at Penn State (BTN)                                                 State College, Pa.                       7:30 p.m.

Sunday, Nov. 30                 Women’s Basketball     Northern Colorado (BTN Plus)                             Pinnacle Bank Arena                 2 p.m.

Monday, Dec. 1                  Men’s Basketball            at Florida State (ACC/B1G Challenge/ESPN2)     Tallahassee, Fla.                        6 p.m.

FSU, ‘Bama, Oregon, Miss St Unchanged in AP Poll, Nebraska Drops Out

fox-footballFlorida State is No. 1 in The Associated Press college football poll, followed by Alabama, Oregon and Mississippi State. The top four teams were unchanged for the first time since late September.

The gap between the Seminoles and the Crimson Tide narrowed after another close call by Florida State, which beat Boston College 20-17 on a field goal in the waning seconds.

Florida State received 37 first-place votes and 1,458 points, down six first-place votes and 18 points from last week. Alabama has 21 first-place votes 1,445 points. No. 3 Oregon received two first-place votes, one more than last week.

Mississippi State is fourth, followed by Baylor and TCU. Baylor and TCU swapped places. Ohio State remained No. 7.

No. 22 Minnesota, No. 23 Clemson, No. 24 Louisville and No. 25 Boise State moved into the rankings. Nebraska, Utah, Southern California and Duke dropped out.

The Gophers are ranked for the first time since 2008.

The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press college football poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Nov. 22, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking:

Record Pts Pv
1. Florida St. (37) 11-0 1,458 1
2. Alabama (21) 10-1 1,445 2
3. Oregon (2) 10-1 1,393 3
4. Mississippi St. 10-1 1,301 4
5. Baylor 9-1 1,234 6
6. TCU 9-1 1,233 5
7. Ohio St. 10-1 1,163 7
8. Georgia 9-2 1,002 9
9. UCLA 9-2 998 11
10. Michigan St. 9-2 971 10
11. Kansas St. 8-2 898 12
12. Arizona 9-2 807 15
13. Arizona St. 9-2 790 13
14. Wisconsin 9-2 764 14
15. Auburn 8-3 597 16
16. Georgia Tech 9-2 581 17
17. Missouri 9-2 525 19
18. Mississippi 8-3 398 8
19. Marshall 11-0 384 18
20. Oklahoma 8-3 363 23
21. Colorado St. 10-1 346 22
22. Minnesota 8-3 232 NR
23. Clemson 8-3 198 NR
24. Louisville 8-3 191 NR
25. Boise St. 9-2 96 NR

Others receiving votes: Arkansas 40, LSU 39, Nebraska 14, Utah 14, Duke 9, Southern Cal 8, Memphis 3, Texas A&M 2, West Virginia 2, UCF 1.

Cady, Theriot lead No. 16 Nebraska past Utah 66-43

Nebraska-Huskers-BasketballLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Emily Cady had 25 points with nine rebounds, Rachel Theriot added 20 points with six assists, and No. 16 Nebraska rolled past Utah 66-43 on Sunday.

The Cornhuskers (4-0) shot 42.2 percent from the field, committed just seven turnovers and had a 28-14 advantage in the paint. Theriot also had six rebounds and four of Nebraska’s 11 steals.

Utah (1-2) was limited to 27.5-percent shooting and gave up 24 points off turnovers. Malia Nawahine led the Utes with 14 points while Tanaeya Boclair and Paige Crozon each had nine.

The Cornhuskers pulled away early, opening the game on a 17-3 run sparked by two jumpers and a three-point play from Cady. A seven-point burst from Cady along with Natalie Romeo’s 3-pointer made it 31-8 at the 5:03 mark in the first half.

Nebraska led 38-17 at half and coasted through the final 20 minutes.

Cornhuskers Looking to Enhance Their Bowl Position

nebraska_helmetLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — For the second straight year, Nebraska will go into its last regular-season game playing for nothing more than a best possible bowl bid.

The Cornhuskers (8-3, 4-3) were eliminated from the Big Ten West race with Saturday’s 28-24 loss to Minnesota. They’ll enter Friday’s game in Iowa City trying to avoid losing a third straight game for the first time since 2008.

“Time to go to work and put our head down,” offensive lineman Jake Cotton said. “We’re going to play a good Iowa team in a hostile environment, and it’s probably going to be real cold in Iowa City. I know we’re excited for the challenge. A lot of times people think losses carry over and that losses linger, but not here.”

Nebraska squandered a 14-point halftime lead at home against Minnesota a week after it was blown out 59-24 at Wisconsin. The manner in which the Huskers have lost their last two games has a segment of the fan base grousing about the direction of the program under coach Bo Pelini.

The Huskers are 9-6 in Big Ten games the last two years, with none of those wins against teams that finished the season above .500 in conference play.

Iowa (7-4, 4-3), which beat the Huskers in Lincoln last year, played Wisconsin tough in a 26-24 loss Saturday.

Nebraska’s problems in run defense continued against Minnesota. The Gophers rushed for 281 yards and four touchdowns, with quarterback Mitch Leidner going for 111 yards and two scores. The week before Wisconsin’s Melvin Gordon set a since-broken FBS record with 408 yards rushing, and the Badgers totaled 581 on the ground.

The two games were the first time back-to-back opponents have rushed for 250 or more yards in Pelini’s seven years at Nebraska.

Pelini was especially frustrated by the way Nebraska attempted to defend the zone-read option against Minnesota. Leidner broke off a number of big runs after faking the handoff to his running back and taking off.

“There’s no excuse there,” Pelini said. “We have to make some changes because we didn’t play very well. There are a couple positions that played horrendous.”

The offense didn’t escape criticism, especially coordinator Tim Beck. Fullback Andy Janovich said Beck told the players at halftime, when the Huskers led 21-7, that there would be more reliance on the run game. It seemed like a good plan, given they were averaging better than 5 yards a carry through the first two quarters.

Beck called 15 straight running plays that averaged 6.7 yards over one stretch of the second half. Then Armstrong completed a 15-yard pass, and Ameer Abdullah ran for 9 yards to set up a second-and-1 at the Minnesota 41 with the Huskers leading 24-21.

With Minnesota’s safeties within 4 yards of the line of scrimmage, Beck gave into temptation and dialed up a shot downfield. But Theiren Cockran broke through to sack Armstrong, and the Huskers ended up punting. Minnesota then started the drive that ended with the go-ahead touchdown.

“Probably shouldn’t have done it,” Beck said. “Hindsight is 20-20. If we scored it would have been a great call.”

The Huskers still had a chance to win in the last two minutes, but freshman receiver De’Mornay Pierson-El was stripped of the ball at the Minnesota 2-yard line for his second fumble of the game.

Nebraska hasn’t been a conference champion since the 1999 team won the Big 12 under Frank Solich, two coaches ago.

Husker Block Party Spurs Senior Night Sweep

Nebraska-Volleyball-HuskersLINCOLN – Behind the dynamic defensive duo of Cecilia Hall and Amber Rolfzen, the No. 11 Nebraska volleyball team posted a 25-23, 25-20, 25-21 sweep against Michigan on Senior Night at the Bob Devaney Sports Center on Saturday. 

The Huskers (20-7, 14-4 Big Ten) avenged a sweep at the hands of the Wolverines (12-16, 7-11 Big Ten) in Ann Arbor on Oct. 12 and did so with an impressive defensive display. NU tallied 15 total blocks with Hall posting 13 block assists and Rolfzen adding 12, both career highs. Hall’s 13 blocks assists were the most by a Big Ten player in a match this season and tied the school record for block assists in a three-set match.

Kadie Rolfzen had 13 kills and nine digs, and Kelsey Fien had 11 kills. In addition to her 12 blocks, Amber Rolfzen had eight kills, and Hall finished with four kills on six attacks. Senior setter Mary Pollmiller had 33 assists and three kills in her final regular-season match at the Devaney Center. The Husker captain was honored following the match. 

NU hit .262 and held Michigan to .174. During the Huskers’ eight-match win streak, they have held each opponent under .200 hitting. The last time NU held eight straight opponents under .200 hitting was 2008 when the Huskers did so 13 times in a row. Abby Cole led Michigan with 12 kills, and Caroline Knop had 11, but the two hit .121 and .027, respectively. 

Nebraska fell behind 9-5 in the first set but reeled off a 4-0 run to tie it 9-9, capped by a Kadie Rolfzen kill. Kills by Cole and Knop with a hitting error by the Huskers gave Michigan a 13-10 lead, however, forcing a Husker timeout. Michigan pushed the lead to 21-16, but the Huskers roared back with a block by Amber Rolfzen and Hall, a Kadie Rolfzen kill, a Michigan attack error and Annika Albrecht ace to cut it to 21-20. The teams traded points before Michigan hit long to tie the set 22-22. Amber Rolfzen killed off a block after a Michigan timeout for the Huskers’ first lead of the set, 23-22. Knop tied it, but Michigan hit wide for a 24-23 Husker lead. Kadie Rolfzen capped off the comeback with her seventh kill of the set. She had no errors while hitting .412 in the first set.

The Huskers held the early edge in set two, but an Adeja Lambert ace tied the set at 8-8. The Huskers used a 4-0 run to go back in front, 15-10, with kills by Amber and Kadie Rolfzen and a block by Amber Rolfzen and Hall. The Huskers continued to pull away after the media timeout, going up 17-11 with a kill by Amber Rolfzen and Michigan error to force the Wolverines to take a timeout. Michigan pulled within 20-19 on a Cole kill, but Fien answered to put NU up 21-19. Out of a Michigan timeout, an Albrecht ace off the top of the net put NU up 23-20. Amber Rolfzen killed to give NU set point, 24-20, and then she teamed up with Hall for a stuff for the set win, 25-20.

In the third set, Amber Rolfzen and Hall combined for four blocks in the Huskers’ first six points to spark a 6-2 lead. The duo went on to combine on five blocks in the set, and the Huskers led by as many as seven at 23-16. The Huskers hit .387 in the final frame with Fien contributing five kills and Kadie Rolfzen four. NU had eight of its 15 blocks in the third set. 

The Huskers are on the road next week for two top-10 matches. Nebraska is at Illinois on Wednesday at 7 p.m. and at Penn State on Saturday at 7:30 p.m. (CT) to close out the regular season.

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