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Huskers Hold Off Hawaii for 4-3 Win

husker baseballHouston, Texas – The Nebraska baseball team (7-5, 0-0 Big Ten) took a 4-0 lead in to the top of the ninth inning and nearly gave it away after the Hawaii Rainbow Warriors (6-9, 0-0 Big West) plated three runs and had the go-ahead run on base, but junior reliever Colton Howell came in with two outs and got a strikeout to earn his first career save in a 4-3 Husker win. Howell saved the win for senior Kyle Kubat, who tossed 6.1 innings of scoreless work to improve to 2-0 on the year.

After failing to score twice earlier in the game in base-loaded situations, the Warriors scored their first runs of the game with two outs in the ninth on a three-RBI double by JJ Kitaoka. Howell came in and intentionally walked No. 3 hitter Eric Ramirez to setup a righty-righty match up and move paid off, as Howell struck out Jordan Richartz swinging to end the game.

The Huskers outhit the Warriors, 9-8, on the day, with eight different Huskers recording a hit, including a single and a double from freshman Luis Alvarado.

The Warriors loaded the bases twice on the afternoon against Kubat, but each time the senior worked his way out of the jam without giving up a run. Hawaii had the bases loaded with two outs in the first following an error, but Kubat responded with his first of six infield pop outs on the day to end the rally.

After the first inning, Kubat went on to retire 10 straight batters, before Alex Sawelson broke the streak with a leadoff single in the fifth. Following a fly out, the Warriors loaded the bases with a single and walk with just one out for their No. 2 and 3 hitters. Kubat dug in and notched back-to-back strikeouts to again escape a Hawaii scoring threat.

Nebraska failed to capitalize on leadoff base runners in both the third and fourth innings, but got a pair of runs in the fifth thanks to a pair of costly Hawaii errors. With runners first and second with two outs, Hawaii starter Tyler Brasheras sailed a pickoff attempt into center field to put runners on second and third. Scott Schreiber then hit a routine ground ball to Kitaoka at second base, who bobbled the ball, allowing two unearned runs to score.

The Huskers added two very important insurance runs in the eighth on a RBI single by Tanner Lubach and a fielder’s choice off the bat of Austin Darby, who beat out a double-play attempt that would have ended the inning.

The Huskers wrap up their trip to Houston tomorrow at 11 a.m. against the LSU Tigers, the first ever meeting between the two teams. Greg Sharpe and Lane Grindle will have the call on the Husker Sports Network, while the game will also be broadcast on ROOT Sports Southwest and Cox Sports.

Kokesh, Green Advance to Big Ten Semifinals

Robert Kokesh
Robert Kokesh

Columbus, Ohio – All-Americans Robert Kokesh (174) and James Green (157) each advanced to the Big Ten Semifinals after Session I of the tournament on Saturday at St. John Arena.

Kokesh, the top-ranked wrestler in the country at 174 pounds, recorded the quickest pin in the 101-year history of the Big Ten Championships with his 15-second fall of Michigan’s Taylor Massa in the quarterfinals. Kokesh received a bye in the first round. He will face fourth-seeded Logan Storley of Minnesota in Saturday night’s semifinals.

Green opened his day with a pin against Michigan State’s Travis Curley in 4:27 before notching an 8-2 decision over No. 6 seed Josh Demas of Ohio State in the quarterfinals. Green, a three-time All-American, improves to 28-3 this season and extends his winning streak to 10 matches. He will battle No. 2 seed Dylan Ness of Minnesota in Session II.

James Green
James Green

Green and Kokesh, who each captured Big Ten titles last season, led the Huskers, who are in seventh place after the first session with 30 points. Iowa leads the team race with 65 points, while Minnesota (55) and Ohio State (48) round out the top three.

Tim Lambert (125), Anthony Abidin (141), Justin Arthur (149), Austin Wilson (165) and TJ Dudley (184) each won first-round matches, but fell in the quarterfinals. Abidin earned a pin, while Wilson and Dudley each won by major decision. All five wrestlers will wrestle in the consolation bracket during Session II tonight.

Eric Montoya (133), Aaron Studebaker (197) and Collin Jensen (HWT) each fell in the first round, but remain in contention in the consolation brackets.

Session II of the Big Ten Championships starts at 5 p.m. (CT) tonight. The matches will be streamed on BTN Plus.

Big Ten Championships
March 7-8, 2015
St. John Arena
Columbus, Ohio

125 pounds
First Round: #4 Tim Lambert (NEB) by dec. over Sean McCabe (RUT), 7-2
Quarterfinals: #5 Jordan Conaway (PSU) by dec. over #4 Tim Lambert (NEB), 7-4

133 pounds
First Round: #8 Rossi Bruno (MICH) by dec. over #9 Eric Montoya (NEB), 5-3
Consolation First Round: #9 Eric Montoya (NEB) Bye

141 pounds
First Round: #3 Anthony Abidin (NEB) by pin over #14 Sean Brown (IND), 2:01
Quarterfinals: #6 Josh Dziewa (IOWA) by dec. over #3 Anthony Abidin (NEB), 3-1

149 pounds
First Round: #7 Justin Arthur (NEB) by dec. over Ben Dorsay (MD), 5-4
Quarterfinals: #2 Jason Tsirtsis (NW) by dec. over #7 Justin Arthur (NEB), 6-0

157 pounds
First Round: #3 James Green (NEB) by pin over #14 Travis Curley (MSU), 4:27
Quarterfinals: #3 James Green (NEB) by dec. over #6 Josh Demas (OSU), 8-2

165 pounds
First Round: #9 Austin Wilson (NEB) by major dec. over #8 Nick Wanzek (MINN), 11-2
Quarterfinals: #1 Bo Jordan (OSU) by dec. over #9 Austin Wilson (NEB), 4-1

174 pounds
First Round: #1 Robert Kokesh (NEB) Bye
Quarterfinals: #1 Robert Kokesh (NEB) by pin over #9 Taylor Massa (MICH), 0:15

184 pounds
First Round: #6 TJ Dudley (NEB) by major dec. over #11 Anthony Pafumi (RUT), 11-3
Quarterfinals: #3 Ricky Robertson (WIS) by tiebreaker-1 over #6 TJ Dudley (NEB), 10-9

197 pounds
First Round: #12 Hayden Hrymack (RUT) by dec. over #5 Aaron Studebaker (NEB), 6-3
Consolation First Round: #5 Aaron Studebaker (NEB) by dec. over #13 Rob Fitzgerald (MD), 6-2

Heavyweight
First Round: #6 Michael Kroells (MINN) by dec. over #11 Collin Jensen (NEB), 8-4
Consolation First Round: #11 Collin Jensen (NEB) by dec. over #14 Tyler Kral (PUR), 6-0

Huskers Kick Off 2015 Spring Practice

nebraska_helmetLincoln, Neb.- Saturday marked the start of a new chapter for the Nebraska football team, as the Huskers began its 2015 spring practice season under the guidance of new head coach Mike Riley. NU practiced outside at the Ed and Joyanne Gass practice fields, split into two groups each practicing for about an hour and 45 minutes.

According to Riley, the Huskers had a good first day of spring practice, and the two-group format seemed to work really well. Riley mentioned that all the players got a lot of one-on-one work with the coaches, especially including the depth-depleted linebacker corps.

“I liked it (practice format), I think that it will be good to look at the film, but my thought is as it was happening out there was everyone got a chance to practice,” Riley said. “It is a pretty long sustained work for the coaches, as they stay through the day but I think for the players, their time is pretty concise, they basically went through special teams, an individual period, pass skeleton period and then a team period.”

Riley added that what the team did during practice was about perfect for a first day.

“There was a lot of introductory stuff that I thought they handled well,” he said. “I think we are getting a way better look at the players and they are getting a chance to get more coaching. We are going to try it again on Monday.”

When it comes to what can be accomplished during the first day, Riley said that he just wanted to see a lot of enthusiasm from the players, something he said he saw.

“I like the enthusiasm for the work as much as anything, some of it looked like football from time to time,” Riley said. “We will keep working on that part, but we had good enthusiasm for work, you also get a chance to confirm some of the abilities and maybe find something new out (on the players).”

As for players that stood out to Riley, coach said he liked what he saw from the wide receiver corps.

“I watched guys all day long, De’Mornay (Pierson-El) was a pretty good player, I liked the way he ran. I thought Westerkamp would have a good feel for things, and he did,” he said. “I thought Tommy played well and the others played well too.”

Nebraska returns to the practice field on Monday for its second workout of the spring.

Huskers Fight Hard in Loss to Hawkeyes

Nebraska-Huskers-BasketballHoffman Estates, Ill. – Nebraska battled hard from start to finish but No. 14 Iowa hit more shots and made more plays in the second half to hand the Huskers a 74-65 loss in the Big Ten Tournament quarterfinals on Friday at Sears Centre Arena.

With the loss, the Huskers end the regular season with a 21-10 overall record that included a 10-8 Big Ten mark. Iowa, which defeated Nebraska for the first time in four tries in the Big Ten Tournament, improved to 24-6 overall after posting a 14-4 record to finish second in the conference regular-season standings.

NU’s four seniors finished with an 8-3 overall record in four trips to the Big Ten Tournament, including the 2014 Big Ten Championship Game win over Iowa.

Nebraska will find out its NCAA Tournament seed and destination during the Selection Show on Monday, March 16 at 6 p.m. on ESPN.

Nebraska, which has suffered five of its losses to top 10 RPI teams with two to Big Ten champion Maryland and three to runner-up Iowa, got 16 points, five assists and three steals from senior guard Tear’a Laudermill to lead four Huskers in double figures.

Senior Emily Cady added 15 points, eight rebounds and three blocks, while senior guard Brandi Jeffery added a strong effort with 14 points, five rebounds, two assists and two steals.

The Big Red also received 14 points from freshman guard Natalie Romeo, who hit 4-of-11 threes a night after knocking down a school-record 7-of-11 threes in a win over Illinois. In two career conference tournament games, Romeo went 11-for-22 from long range, and her 11 threes tied for the third-highest career total in Husker conference tournament history, trailing only 20 by All-American Jordan Hooper and 13 by All-American Lindsey Moore.

Despite solid scoring efforts from those four Huskers, the rest of the Big Red combined for just six points, including two points, 10 rebounds, two assists, a block and a steal from senior Hailie Sample. Sophomore Allie Havers added four points in limited time off the bench.

As a team, Nebraska hit just 32.4 percent (23-71) of its shots from the floor just 24 hours after hitting a season-high 61.7 percent of its shots in an 86-71 win over Illinois. NU did hit 7-of-21 threes and 12-of-18 free throws, but got outrebounded, 48-39 by the Hawkeyes. Nebraska did dominate the turnover battle, 20-12.

Iowa hit 44.8 percent (26-58) of its shots for the game, including 6-of-18 threes, and 16-of-20 free throws. Sophomore Ally Disterhoft led four Hawkeyes in double figures with 16 points and nine rebounds, while senior center Bethany Doolittle pitched in 15 points, nine boards and four of Iowa’s 10 blocks. Senior point guard Samantha Logic also scored 15 points to go along with five boards and six assists.

But the biggest contribution for Iowa came from reserve Kali Peschel, who hit 3-of-5 threes to finish with 13 points off the bench for the second straight meeting with the Huskers. Peschel averages four points per game on the season.

In an explosive first six minutes, Nebraska hit nine of its first 11 shots from the floor to take a 20-17 lead. But the Hawkeyes answered to outscore the Huskers 17-6 over the next 11 minutes to take their biggest lead of the half at 34-26.

The Big Red responded to cut the margin to just one possession at 36-33 at the half, despite hitting just two of their last 18 field goal attempts of the half.

The Huskers, who entered the game ranked No. 4 nationally by committing just 12.7 personal fouls per game, were also strapped with foul trouble up and down their starting lineup with two fouls apiece on Cady, Laudermill, Jeffery and Romeo.

Despite the problems, Laudermill and Jeffery each scored nine points to lead the Huskers in the half, while Cady added eight points, four rebounds and four blocks. The Huskers also outscored Iowa at the line, 6-3.

Nebraska finished at just 38.7 percent (12-31) from the floor, including 3-of-9 from three-point range, while going 6-of-8 at the free throw line. The Huskers won the first-half turnover battle, 10-6, but lost the first-half battle of the boards, 22-15.

Iowa hit 48.4 percent (15-31) of its shots, including 3-of-11 threes, while going 3-of-4 at the free throw line. Doolittle led Iowa with 11 points and four rebounds despite playing just nine minutes because of foul trouble. Disterhoft added 10 points and five boards, while Logic pitched in seven points and five assists. Peschel pitched in six points on a pair of three-pointers off the bench.

Iowa came out attacking in the second half building its lead to 44-36 before Laudermill trimmed the margin briefly back to six with 16:39 left. The Hawkeyes’ grip on the game strengthend with an 11-0 run capped by five straight points from Peschel, including a three-pointer to make it 53-38 with 13:56 left.

But Nebraska refused to quit. Laudermill came up with three quick defensive stops in a row, including a pair of steals and converted them to four points to cut the Iowa margin to 53-42 with12:44 left.

A three-point play by Cady with 9:59 left cut the margin to seven at 55-48 while forcing the fourth foul on Doolittle. Iowa maintained the seven-point edge at 57-50, before Peschel sparked a 7-0 Hawkeye run to rebuild the Iowa margin to 64-50 with 4:16 left.

However, the Huskers refused to go away despite all four of their senior starters being assessed four fouls. Romeo scored eight straight points for Nebraska, including a pair of threes to shave the Iowa lead to 66-58 with 2:13 left. A three by Jeffery cut the margin back to seven at 68-61, before a pair of free throws by Cady with one minute left got the margin to six points.

A final shot by Cady got the Big Red to five at 70-65 for the first time since the start of the half, but the Hawkeyes made 10-of-12 free throws in the final 2:24 to seal the win.

Huskers Host No. 10 Maryland on Senior Night

Nebraska-Huskers-BasketballNebraska returns to Pinnacle Bank Arena for the final time this season, as the Huskers host No. 10/9 (AP/Coaches) Maryland on Senior Night this Sunday.

The tilt between the Huskers and Terrapins is a sellout, although a very limited number of returned tickets could go on sale at 5 p.m. on Sunday at the Pinnacle Bank Arena box office.

Tipoff is set for 6:36 p.m. and the contest will be televised nationally on BTN with Kevin Kugler and Stephen Bardo on the call. Sunday’s game is also available online and on mobile devices on the BTN2Go app.

The game will be broadcast across the state of Nebraska on the 37-station IMG Husker Sports Radio Network, including KLIN 1400 AM in Lincoln, 1110 KFAB in Omaha and KRVN 880 AM in Lexington with Kent Pavelka calling the action and Matt Davison adding color commentary. The game can be heard for free on Huskers.com and is available on the Huskers’ app on iOS or android devices, as well as on TuneIn Radio and on SiriusXM Satellite Radio.

The Huskers will honor seniors Moses Abraham, Kye Kurkowski, Trevor Menke, David Rivers and Leslee Smith in pregame ceremonies and fans are urged to be in their seats by 6:15 p.m.

Nebraska (13-16, 5-12 Big Ten) looks to break a seven-game losing streak, while Sunday’s game is only the third home game in the last month for the Huskers. NU has faced a challenging stretch late in the season, as the Maryland game is the seventh straight game against teams who are either expected to be in the NCAA Tournament or on the bubble.

The Huskers had a chance to steal a road win on Wednesday, trailing by six with two minutes left before falling 69-57 at Illinois. The Huskers were done in by strong 3-point shooting from Illinois, which went 7-of-16 from beyond the stripe, while the Illini also went 20-of-23 from the foul line to hold on down the stretch.

The Huskers had three players in double figures, led by Shavon Shields’ 14 points. Seniors David Rivers and Leslee Smith put together strong efforts, as Rivers had 10 points and five rebounds, while Smith nearly had a double-double with season bests in both points (eight) and rebounds (nine).

Maryland (25-5, 13-4 Big Ten) has already locked up the double-bye for the Big Ten Tournament and will be the No. 2 seed in the Big Ten Tournament next week in Chicago. The Terrapins have won six straight since a loss at Iowa, including a 60-50 win over Rutgers on Tuesday.

Huskers Drop Houston College Classic Opener, 2-1

husker baseballHouston, Texas – Chance Sinclair went a season-high 8.0 innings for the Nebraska baseball team (6-5, 0-0 Big Ten) against the undefeated No. 14 Texas A&M Aggies on Friday afternoon at the Houston College Classic, but it wasn’t enough, as the Aggies improved to 14-0 on the year with a 2-1 victory.

Texas A&M No. 9 hitter J.B. Moss drove in both Aggie runs on the day with a bases-loaded RBI single in the second and a solo home run in the eighth. Moss and Nebraska’s Ben Miller were the only players with multiple hits on the day, as the two teams combined for nine hits.

After not making it out of the sixth inning in any of his first three starts of the season, Sinclair notched the second-longest outing of his career, trailing only his complete-game effort against Ohio State on April 5, 2014. Following a RBI single in the second, the senior retired 17 straight Aggies before Moss untied the game in the eighth with his third of the season.

Aggie starter A.J. Minter went 5.0 innings, allowing one unearned run on four hits and no walks, while striking out six. Three TAMU relievers combined to throw 4.0 no-hit innings of relief. The bullpen allowed just one base runner, a hit-by-pitch in the eighth.

The Aggies loaded the bases in the second with one out, but were only able to notch one run. After the third single of the inning drove in a run, the bases remained loaded for the top of the Aggies lineup. Following a visit to the mound from pitching coach Ted Silva, Sinclair got Blake Allemand to bounce into an inning-ending 4-6-3 double play.

Sinclair responded with a 1-2-3 inning in the third, and the Husker offense evened the game, 1-1, in the fourth. Ryan Boldt was hit with Minter’s first pitched and moved to second on a throwing error by first baseman G.R. Hinsley on a pick-off attempt. Minter then struck out Tanner Lubach and got Blake Headley to fly out, but couldn’t retire Miller, who delivered a game-tying RBI single for his second hit of the game.

The Huskers had their leadoff man on in both the fifth and eighth innings, but were unable to cash in on either opportunity.

After being sat down in order in the third, fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh innings, the Aggies retook the lead, 2-1, in the eighth on Moss’s home run. Mark Ecker closed the game with a perfect ninth inning for his second save of the season.

The Huskers and Hawaii will open the second day of the Houston College Classic tomorrow at 12:05 p.m. Greg Sharpe and Lane Grindle will have the call on the Husker Sports Network and the game will also be broadcast on ROOT Sports Southwest.

Romeo leads Nebraska Women past Illinois 86-71 in Big Ten

Nebraska-Huskers-BasketballHOFFMAN ESTATES, Ill. (AP) — Natalie Romeo hit seven 3-pointers and scored 26 points, both career highs, to lead seventh-seeded Nebraska to an 86-71 win over Illinois in the second round of the Big Ten tournament on Thursday.

Nebraska (21-9) will play 14th-ranked Iowa, seeded second, in the quarterfinals on Friday.

Hailie Sample and Tear’a Laudermiller had 14 points apiece for the Cornhuskers while Allie Havers added 13 and Emily Cady had 11. Brandi Jeffery had nine rebounds and eight assists to go with her six points.

Ivory Crawford had 19 points and Amarah Coleman 18 for the Illini (15-16), who shot just 34.6 percent.

Romeo, a freshman who has started nine straight games since All-American Rachel Theriot was lost for the season with an ankle injury, was 5 of 7 behind the arc in the first half when the Cornhuskers (21-9) opened a 49-29 lead. She broke her career marks early in the second half with a layup, which she turned into a three-point play. Nebraska shot 61.7 percent and led by 28 with 8:21 to play.

Quarterbacks, Coaches, Coordinators Dominate Spring Stories

Mike Riley
Mike Riley

In college football, spring comes early. Or at least spring practice comes early.

Practice has already started for many teams around the country and will ramp up just about everywhere else throughout March.

Spring story lines tend to revolve around quarterbacks, coaches and coordinators. Most quarterback competitions won’t get settled until August. New coaches and coordinators will install their systems, but how much progress are they actually making? Who knows?

The intrasquad games and scrimmages that wrap up spring practice will give fans a glimpse of what they have to look forward to (or brace for) come September.

So while acknowledging that spring football often provides few definitive answers, a look at some of the most interesting story lines from around the nation.

QUARTERBACK COMPETITIONS

You might have heard that national champion Ohio State has a lot of good quarterbacks. Well, most of them aren’t going to be fully healthy for spring ball. Two-time Big Ten player of the year Braxton Miller is still recovering from shoulder surgery. Last year’s All-Big Ten quarterback, J.T. Barrett, is still on the mend from a broken ankle. So Cardale Jones, who led the Buckeyes to the Big Ten and national championships in three starts, should get a lot of snaps. The bigger question for the Buckeyes will be who sticks around after spring. Miller has graduated and can transfer without restrictions.

Other intriguing quarterbacks battles:

— Notre Dame: Mistake-prone Everett Golson will try to win the starting job back from Malik Zaire. And if Golson doesn’t, will he take the graduate transfer route?

— Florida State: There is no clear replacement for Jameis Winston. Last season’s backup, Sean Maguire, is the only quarterback on the roster with any experience.

— Baylor: Stud freshman Jarrett Stidham will try to jump past next-in-line junior Seth Russell. Coach Art Briles has had a lot of success plugging in the experienced player.

— LSU: Highly touted Brandon Harris will get another shot to take the starting job away from uninspiring incumbent Anthony Jennings. Tigers fans might want to keep an eye on how things play out with Golson and Miller.

— Oklahoma: That Sugar Bowl victory against Alabama seems like a long time ago for Trevor Knight, who followed up his breakout postseason performance with a mediocre 2014. Texas Tech transfer Baker Mayfield will provide competition, along with redshirt freshman Cody Thomas.

NEW COACHES

Michigan’s first spring under Jim Harbaugh started in February. What should expectations be for the Wolverines? Well, when Harbaugh comes to town the team tends to get better quickly and the Wolverines, despite missing the postseason last season, do have some talent. Two things to watch: A) Can Harbaugh tap into whatever it was that made quarterback Shane Morris a highly touted recruit? B) How large will the crowd be at the Big House on April 4 for the spring game? The faithful in Ann Arbor, Michigan, have not been this excited for a season since before the failed Rich Rodriguez experiment.

There hasn’t been quite the same buzz coming out of Gainesville, Florida, where Jim McElwain is putting his stamp on the Gators. The inability to put a productive offense on the field cost Will Muschamp his job at Florida. The spring game will give Gators fans a taste of what McElwain has up his sleeve and which quarterback — sophomore Treon Harris or freshman Will Grier — is the front-runner to run the show.

In Nebraska, Huskers fans seem to be embracing Mike Riley, who brings an experienced coaching staff and refreshingly friendly personality to Lincoln. Two major stars need to be replaced. Running back Imani Cross gets first crack at the tailback job vacated by Ameer Abdullah’s departure. Defensive end Randy Gregory will be even more difficult to replace. Maybe redshirt freshman Stoltenberg can help fill the void.

Other new coaches to track:

— Wisconsin: Paul Chryst comes home to take over the Badgers.

— Pittsburgh: Fiery former defensive coordinator Pat Narduzzi brings the Michigan State formula to Pitt.

— Oregon State: Gary Andersen bailed from Wisconsin after just two seasons to replace Riley and give the Beavers a new look for the first time in a long time.

— American Athletic Conference West Division: The AAC West could be supercharged with three former offensive coordinators stepping into their first head coaching jobs: Chad Morris (formerly of Clemson) at SMU, Tom Herman (formerly of Ohio State) at Houston and Philip Montgomery (formerly of Baylor) at Tulsa.

FIXING THE D

With offenses flourishing, quality defensive coordinators were hot commodities this offseason.

The two hires that drew the most attention were in the Southeastern Conference. Auburn’s Gus Malzahn brought in Muschamp, who, for all his problems at Florida, always had quality defenses.

Texas A&M coach Kevin Sumlin wanted Muschamp but ended up with a pretty good consolation prize in John Chavis, the former LSU and Tennessee defensive coordinator.

Points are rarely a problem for Sumlin and Malzahn’s teams so fans of the Aggies and Tigers will be happy to see boring spring games dominated by their new-look defenses.

Other new defensive coordinators:

— UCLA: Bruins coach Jim Mora reached across the country to hire Tom Bradley to run his defense. Bradley, the longtime Penn State assistant, spent last season with West Virginia.

— Colorado: Former USF coach Jim Leavitt returns to the college game, given the task of fixing the worst defense in the Pac-12.

— Michigan State: Mark Dantonio stayed in-house to replace Narduzzi, promoting secondary coach Harlon Barnett and linebackers/special-teams coach Mike Tressel to co-defensive coordinators.

Illinois Holds Off Nebraska for Badly Needed Win, 69-57

Nebraska-Huskers-BasketballCHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP) — Rayvonte Rice scored 23 and led Illinois to a badly needed win over Nebraska Wednesday, 69-57.

The Illini (19-11, 9-8 Big Ten) have won two straight as they look for a way into the NCAA tournament.

Nebraska (13-16, 5-12) has lost seven games in a row and nine of its last 10.

Rice had a quiet six-point first half but scored 17 in the second 20 minutes. That included seven straight over a key stretch midway through the half that brought Illinois back from a 40-39 deficit to a 46-42 lead.

He drilled home a long 3-pointer with 1:35 left in the game to give Illinois a 59-50 lead.

Kendrick Nunn and Leron Black added 11 each for Illinois.

Shavon Shields led Nebraska with 14 points. Terran Petteway added 13.

Nebraska QB Told to be Ready for More Passing, Less Running

Tommy Armstrong Jr.
Tommy Armstrong Jr.

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Tommy Armstrong Jr. remains Nebraska’s No. 1 quarterback heading into coach Mike Riley’s first spring practice with the Cornhuskers.

Besides that, the offense is going to look much different as Riley begins installing a pro-style system when practice begins Saturday.

Armstrong said Wednesday he won’t get nearly the number of rushing attempts in the new offense. Armstrong ran 145 times in 2014, mostly on designed runs and zone-read keepers.

Riley said he would divide the team into two groups for spring practices so he can familiarize himself with and better evaluate the players. Coaches will conduct two separate practices each day, with about 60 players on Team Red and 60 on Team White. The spring game is April 11.

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