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WNCC OPENS BASEBALL SEASON THURS

WNCC baseball           Western Nebraska Community College baseball coach Mike Jones is anxious to get the season going to see just how well this year’s team will be.

Jones’ enthusiasm is definitely upbeat as the Cougars open the season on Thursday and Friday when they host McCook Community College in doubleheaders beginning at 2 p.m. at Cleveland Field. The contests were moved up from the weekend to beat the forecasted bad weather.

“We look ahead of where we looked in the past,” Jones said. “I believe we will be a solid team. We have guys that can play multiple positions so we are going to bounce guys around. It will be different because we have depth with so many guys that play different positions, so we are not locked into one or two guys at a position. It will be a lot of utility players put together. We should stay together as a team and I am looking forward to the season.”

Not only is Jones excited to get the season underway, the players are especially anxious to get going.

“I think the excitement will continue to build throughout the week for the players,” Jones said. “You will find guys get more and more excited as the opening day gets closer and closer. That is always a special day for everybody. But, it is just another baseball game. It is one of 56 so we can’t put too much emphasis on it, but it is more of an opportunity to play.”

The Cougars number one goal is to reverse the record from a year ago. Last season, the Cougars finished 14-33 and failed to make the regional playoffs. Jones said what he is stressing to the team is to learn from each game and remember that this is a long season.

“I think it will be important for our guys to understand that we will be challenged a lot early in the season. It will be really tough early and we will face some really tough teams,” he said. “We are going to face some good pitching. It is important for our guys to understand that it is a work in progress and that it is a marathon, not a sprint. We have to get better each game and learning from each game and not get discouraged.”

The Cougars have a good nucleus of returners to help lead the team. The returners include Grant Rimington of Gering, Zach Ostergard of North Platte, Ernesto Punales of Hialeah, Fla., Challis Wright of Aurora, Colo., Keeton Krause of Loveland, Colo., Pablo Garcia of Orlando, Fla., Nick Vanthillo of Brasschaat, Belgium, and Richard Hernandez of Holly, Colo. Other sophomores on the team include Ozzie Gonzalez of Miami, Fla., and Alex Michaud of Olathe, Kan.

Jones said there are a few guys that are standing out among the rest.

“Ozzie Gonzalez is hitting the ball well and Cameron Snyder [of Aurora, Colo.] had a wonderful fall,” he said. “Alex Michaud has shown a lot of power potential and Gabriel DeLa Rosa has showed a lot of offensive potential. I think we have a good core of guys to build around.“

Jones said the pitching rotation will be centered around three sophomores, two of which saw spot action a year ago. Vanthilio will open the season as the No. 1 pitcher. Last season, Vanthilio was the starting rightfielder.

Rimington right know is the team’s number pitcher and and start the second game on Thursday. Wright will start the second game on Friday, while freshman John Timmins of Bellevue will get the start in the first game on Friday.

“Nick moves from right field to our No. 1 pitching spot and he is a strong arm guy that throws with a lot of velocity. He is still learning how to pitch but he is going to learn as he plays,” Jones said. “We are going to give him the baseball and let him go after hitters. He is going to make mistakes, but that is OK. That is how it works as a junior college baseball team.

“Grant Rimington is going to get the ball also. He has shown the ability to execute pitches within the strike zone and do a lot of cool stuff for us while mixing in a lot of off-speed pitches.

Overall, the pitching will be young as the rotation gets innings under their belt.

“I think the pitching is still a bit of a question mark,” Jones said. “We have a lot of young arms that will have to eat up some innings. The guys with experience are really going to have to carry the load. We will just see how the pitching carries out.”

Offensively, though, Jones said this team will be capable of scoring plenty of runs.

“Right now, offensively, we look good,” he said. “For the most part we are aggressive. We have a group of guys that go together where we have our on base guys, our singles guys, our guys that can drive in runs, guys that can hit for power, and that is all mixed with some speed. So, I think we will be able to create scoring opportunities. I am not saying we will score a bunch, but we will create a lot of opportunities.”

After this week’s four-game non-conference games with McCook, the Cougars hit the road to play four games against Odessa College before facing Barton Community College on the road. WNCC will not be back at home until March 9 and 10 when they host Lamar Community College and Otero Junior College in conference games.

 

HUSKER FOOTBALL SIGNS 26

Huskers signing day       Nebraska coach Bo Pelini has announced a 26-player recruiting class that analysts consider more talented the one he signed in 2012 and perhaps the best of the six he’s assembled for the Cornhuskers. 12 players on offense, 13 on defense and a long snapper.

The Huskers are a consensus third in the Big Ten behind Ohio State and Michigan. Scout.com has the Huskers’ class ranked 11th in the nation after listing Nebraska 50th a year ago. Rivals.com ranked Nebraska 17th and ESPN.com and 247sports.com each have the Huskers 23rd.

ESPN recruiting analyst Jeremy Crabtree says the Huskers are adding depth at linebacker and running back and have their quarterback of the future in Johnny Stanton of Rancho Santa Margarita, Calif.

While announcing the addition of 26 new players, Pelini also announced the departure of 2 current Huskers, says that running back Braylon Heard and defensive tackle Chase Rome…both sophs…have left the program and plan to transfer after finishing the spring semester at Nebraska.

Rome quit the team for a week in Sept, with Pelini saying at the time that Rome’s “personal goals and personal perception of where he should be on this football team doesn’t match the team goals.”  Rome started 3 of 11 games and made 19 tackles.

Heard appeared in 12 games last fall, rushing 52 times for 348 yards and 3 touchdowns.

SHORTHANDED CSC WRESTLERS AT DICKINSON STATE ON WED

Michael Hill
Michael Hill

The Chadron State College wrestling team is in action tonight in North Dakota, meeting Dickinson State in a dual. The Blue Hawks edged the Eagles in Chadron 21-18 two months ago, but injuries and illness are sending a much different CSC team to Dickinson.

Interim Head Coach Brett Hunter says 141-lb Leandro Arias and 174-pound Brett Klopp are likely done for the season, and he’s taking 7 backups north for tonight’s match to give the Eagles a man in every weight class.

The Eagles have a second match this week, hosting  Western State in an RMAC dual Saturday night. The Mountaineers are led by Elliot Copeland, ranked 2nd at 174…and Kyle Piat, 8th at 184.

CSC will have just one more dual after Western State…on the road against Colorado School of Mines in Golden next Wednesday…before hosting the NCAA D-II Super Region 4 Championship on Fri and Sat the 22nd and 23rd.

 

CSC TRACK TEAMS HIGH IN REGIONAL RANKINGS

The Chadron State College CSC track - hurdlesmen’s and women’s track teams are both in the top 6 in the South Central Region in the latest U.S. Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches Association rankings.

The CSC men moved up two spots to 2nd while the CSC women are ranked sixth. Adams State is the top-ranked men’s team while Adams State and Western State are the only other RMAC teams ranked ahead of the CSC women.

The Eagles are in action this week  at the Concordia Invitational Friday in Seward, Neb.

HOOPER NAMED BIG 10 PLAYER-OF-THE-WEEK

Lincoln – (Huskers.com) Nebraska women’s basketball players Jordan Hooper and Rachel Theriot swept the Big Ten Conference’s weekly individual awards announced on Tuesday.

Hooper, a 6-2 junior forward from Alliance, Neb., captured her second Big Ten Player-of-the-Week honor of the season after averaging 27.5 points and 7.0 rebounds in Nebraska’s wins over Ohio State and Minnesota last week.

Hooper increased her team-leading season averages to 19.0 points and 8.6 rebounds per contest. She is averaging 24.3 points per game during the Huskers’ current four-game Big Ten winning streak.

Hooper, who owns 1,497 points and 700 rebounds in her three-year Nebraska career, won her first Big Ten Player-of-the-Week award this season on Dec. 24. She was a three-time conference player of the week as a sophomore, and the 2012 first-team All-Big Ten selection owns five career awards in less than two full seasons.

Theriot, a 6-0 point guard from Middleburg Heights, Ohio, added the third Big Ten Freshman-of-the-Week honor of her career. Theriot produced the best week of her young career by averaging 10.0 points, 6.0 rebounds, 5.5 assists and 1.5 steals in wins over Ohio State and Minnesota.

Theriot hit 75 percent (9-12) of her shots from the field on the week, including a perfect 5-for-5 performance to finish with 11 points against Minnesota. She also tied her career high with seven rebounds against the Gophers and dished out five assists without committing a turnover.

Theriot, who won Big Ten Freshman-of-the-Week honors on Dec. 31 and Jan. 22, has increased her season averages to 5.4 points, 3.0 rebounds and 3.2 assists per game. She has started 16 straight games for the Huskers, despite battling a foot injury throughout the year. During Nebraska’s current four-game winning streak, Theriot is averaging 8.8 points, 5.3 rebounds and 5.3 assists, while producing a 3-to-1 assist-to-turnover ratio.

Nebraska returns to Big Ten road action on Thursday night when they travel to Northwestern. The matchup between two of the Big Ten’s hottest teams tips off at Welsh-Ryan Arena in Evanston at 7 p.m.

NEBRASKA PREP BASKETBALL SCORES – FEBR. 5

BOYS BASKETBALL
Adams Central 56, Hastings St. Cecilia 50
Ainsworth 66, Stuart 48
Amherst 67, Alma 57
Anselmo-Merna 73, South Loup 64
Arapahoe 73, Cambridge 40
Battle Creek 54, Neligh-Oakdale 36
Boone Central/Newman Grove 61, Doniphan-Trumbull 32
Boys Town 74, St. Albert, Council Bluffs, Iowa 37
Burns, Wyo. 61, Banner County 20
Clearwater/Orchard 55, Ewing 45
Crete 48, Hastings 44
Cross County 65, East Butler 34
Diller-Odell 45, College View Academy 38
Elgin Public/Pope John 45, CWC 42
Elk Point-Jefferson, S.D. 56, Homer 51
Elkhorn Mount Michael 69, Omaha Concordia 55
Exeter/Milligan 60, McCool Junction 50
Falls City 53, Nebraska City 38
Falls City Sacred Heart 63, North Andrew, Mo. 47
Fort Calhoun 66, Tekamah-Herman 46
Franklin 46, Northern Valley, Kan. 35
Fullerton 63, St. Edward 51
Gibbon 70, Cozad 63, OT
Gretna 48, Blair 47
Hampton 56, Dorchester 50
Heartland 47, Deshler 24
Hemingford 59, Morrill 52
Hitchcock County 48, Cheylin, Kan. 44
Howells/Dodge 57, Bancroft-Rosalie 56
Humphrey St. Francis 61, Aquinas 60
Kearney Catholic 76, Centura 45
Kenesaw 71, Red Cloud 28
Lawrence-Nelson 47, Harvard 33
Leyton 57, Bayard 34
Lincoln Christian 76, Johnson County Central 49
Lincoln Southeast 50, Lincoln Pius X 38
Lincoln Southwest 60, Papillion-LaVista South 44
Lindsay Holy Family 69, Elkhorn Valley 41
Loomis 71, Eustis-Farnam 44
Lyons-Decatur Northeast 65, Wisner-Pilger 63
Maywood 41, South Platte 33
Nebraska Christian 48, Nebraska Lutheran 41
Nebraska City Lourdes 55, Omaha Brownell-Talbot 41
O’Neill 80, Plainview 44
Omaha Benson 70, Omaha Bryan 49
Omaha Roncalli 68, Schuyler 45
Overton 68, Wilcox-Hildreth 34
Palmer 43, Arcadia 42
Pawnee City 75, Axtell, Kan. 67
Peetz, Colo. 74, Potter-Dix 52
Perkins County 60, Creek Valley 25
Ralston 44, South Sioux City 41
Randolph 55, Emerson-Hubbard 24
Raymond Central 72, Louisville 51
Sandy Creek 72, Fillmore Central 42
Seward 63, Fairbury 45
Sioux County 47, Crawford 40
Southern 40, Lewiston 39
Southern Valley 94, Southwest 36
St. Mary’s 45, Boyd County 37
St. Paul 57, Ravenna 48
Sutherland 39, Maxwell 25
Syracuse 48, Auburn 38
Wahoo 75, Columbus Scotus 46
Walthill 70, Gayville-Volin, S.D. 42
Wauneta-Palisade 55, Chase County 51
Wausa 53, Hartington 39
West Point-Beemer 55, Madison 45
Winnebago 70, Wakefield 52
Wynot 58, Irene-Wakonda, S.D. 46
Yutan 71, Omaha Nation 66

GIRLS BASKETBALL
Ainsworth 53, Stuart 30
Allen 51, Winside 29
Amherst 63, Alma 59
Aquinas 46, Humphrey St. Francis 30
Arapahoe 52, Cambridge 47
Ashland-Greenwood 56, Conestoga 28
Bayard 32, Leyton 19
Bellevue East 60, Omaha Northwest 44
Bishop Neumann 59, Platteview 37
Boone Central/Newman Grove 61, Doniphan-Trumbull 32
Bruning-Davenport/Shickley 51, Osceola 40
Burns, Wyo. 61, Banner County 20
Clearwater/Orchard 51, Ewing 34
Columbus Scotus 41, Columbus Lakeview 35
Cozad 40, Gibbon 21
Crete 53, Hastings 29
Diller-Odell 62, College View Academy 17
East Butler 45, Cross County 36
Elgin Public/Pope John 48, CWC 38
Elkhorn South 58, Omaha Mercy 36
Elwood 61, Elm Creek 56
Emerson-Hubbard 54, Randolph 47
Exeter/Milligan 64, McCool Junction 17
Falls City Sacred Heart 57, North Andrew, Mo. 44
Fillmore Central 61, Sandy Creek 34
Freeman 52, Sterling 44, OT
Fullerton 41, St. Edward 26
Gayville-Volin, S.D. 56, Walthill 37
Gothenburg 48, Ogallala 36
Grand Island Central Catholic 49, Wood River 46
Gretna 70, Blair 30
Guardian Angels 45, Norfolk Catholic 40
Hampton 60, Dorchester 35
Hartington 45, Wausa 23
Hastings St. Cecilia 57, Adams Central 39
Heartland 43, Deshler 34
Hemingford 35, Morrill 24
Homer 57, Elk Point-Jefferson, S.D. 49
Howells/Dodge 61, Bancroft-Rosalie 49
Kearney Catholic 75, Centura 30
Kenesaw 44, Red Cloud 34
Kimball 63, Mitchell 61, OT
Lawrence-Nelson 43, Harvard 24
Lincoln Christian 61, Johnson County Central 28
Lincoln Southwest 59, Papillion-LaVista South 28
Lindsay Holy Family 56, Elkhorn Valley 17
Loomis 49, Eustis-Farnam 47
Lutheran High Northeast 64, David City 45
Lyons-Decatur Northeast 45, Wisner-Pilger 37
Maywood 48, South Platte 43
Meridian 65, High Plains Community 55
Nebraska Christian 52, Nebraska Lutheran 25
Nebraska City 40, Falls City 29
Nebraska City Lourdes 40, Omaha Brownell-Talbot 36, OT
Neligh-Oakdale 44, Battle Creek 33
North Central 37, Colome, S.D. 27
Northern Valley, Kan. 43, Franklin 38
O’Neill 57, Plainview 53
Oakland-Craig 46, Archbishop Bergan 35
Omaha Benson 58, Omaha Bryan 24
Omaha Gross Catholic 56, Council Bluffs, Thomas Jefferson, Iowa 20
Ord 44, Broken Bow 36
Overton 50, Wilcox-Hildreth 46
Palmer 51, Arcadia 28
Parkview Christian 21, Boys Town 19
Pawnee City 48, Axtell, Kan. 32
Pender 58, Ponca 43
Perkins County 58, Creek Valley 42
Raymond Central 57, Louisville 41
Scribner-Snyder 69, Omaha Christian Academy 34
Seward 69, Fairbury 44
Silver Lake 48, Shelton 14
Sioux County 55, Crawford 54
SMC 46, Arthur County 30
Southern 55, Lewiston 30
Southern Valley 82, Southwest 44
St. Mary’s 62, Boyd County 37
St. Paul 47, Ravenna 45
Stanton 39, Logan View 37
Sutherland 75, Maxwell 27
Sutton 65, Tri County 24
Syracuse 56, Auburn 47
Thayer Central 49, Wilber-Clatonia 26
Twin Loup 40, Sumner-Eddyville-Miller 38
Wauneta-Palisade 42, Chase County 28
Wayne 44, Hartington Cedar Catholic 37, OT
West Holt 53, Niobrara/Verdigre 35
West Point-Beemer 36, Madison 34
Winnebago 68, Wakefield 48
Wynot 71, Irene-Wakonda, S.D. 43
Yutan 57, Centennial 46

CSC SB SEASON OPENS THIS WEEK IN LAS VEGAS

CSC pitchingThe Chadron State College softball team opens its season this week, and for the fourth consecutive year they’ll do it at the Desert Stinger Softball Tournament in Las Vegas hosted by Montana State University-Billings.

The Eagles, who were recently picked to finish 11th in the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference, are one of nine teams who have played the Desert Stinger since its inception in 2010.

Chadron State has a 2-13 record at the tourney. The Desert Stinger features 28 teams representing 14 states and one province and six conferences to make it the largest tournament in Division II.

Chadron State will play five games over three days, beginning with Northwest Nazarene and Cal Baptist this Friday, Feb. 8. The Eagles will then play Western Washington and Notre Dame De Namur on Saturday before closing out the tournament against Western Oregon on Sunday.

“We want to start the season with confidence,” said Rob Stack, who is entering his sixth season as the Eagles’ head coach. “It’s nice to play different teams in this tournament we haven’t previously played. We hope to be able to figure out what our best lineup will be following this tournament so that when conference games come around, we’ll be ready to go.”

Cal Baptist, which was projected to win the Pacific West Conference this preseason, is the only team the Eagles are facing who had a winning record in 2012. The Lancers went 49-6 a season ago and didn’t lose a game in the Desert Stinger in 2012.

The Eagles’ four remaining opponents all had records below .500 last year. Northwest Nazarene went 8-37, Western Washington was 17-36, Notre Dame De Namur was 25-32 and Western Oregon was 23-26.

Chadron State ended the 2012 campaign with a 17-32 record, including a 14-24 mark in the RMAC. The Eagles return five starters and eight letter winners.

Among the returners is Katie Londo, a hard-hitting third baseman from Colorado Springs. In 49 games last season, Londo paced the Eagles’ lineup with a .354 batting average and belted 12 home runs and drove in 50 runs.

Nikki Ritzen, a senior outfielder from Chadron, also returns. She hit .337 a season ago and stole a team-high eight bases.

Other starters returning for the Eagles are catcher Ashlynn Marino, first baseman Amy Schartz and Danielle L’Argent at second base.

The Eagles also bring back pitcher Aryn Grywusiewicz, who went 6-14 in the circle last season.

Following the tournament in Las Vegas, the Eagles will take two weeks off before playing a four-game series with Colorado State University-Pueblo.

Chadron State’s first home games will be a pair of doubleheaders against the University of Colorado-Colorado Springs March 2-3.

 

CARDINAL WRESTLING TEAM DOWNS BANNER COUNTY WILDCATS

Cardinal wrestlingThe Chadron wrestling team beat Banner County in a dual 78-6.

Here are the full results from February 2nd.

The Chadron wrestlers that saw action were:  Trace Strotheide, Tate Cullers, Cooper Cogdill and Alex Doescher.  Who all won by pin.

All other Cardinals won by forfeit. The Wildcats 6 team points came because Chadron did not have a wrestler at weight 220.

Wt.

106. Daniel Goings (Chadron) won by forfeit over Banner CO. Wrestler.

113. Kane Wellnitz (Chadron) won by forfeit over Banner CO. Wrestler.

120.  Paul Watak (Chadron) won by forfeit over Banner CO. Wrestler.

126. Trace Strotheide (Chadron) won by pin over Garrett Grubbs (Banner County) 0:23.

132. Thomas McClure (Chadron) won by forfeit over Banner CO. Wrestler.

138. Tyler Reitz (Chadron) won by forfeit over Banner CO. Wrestler.

145. Tate Cullers (Chadron) won by pin over Noah Huber (Banner County) 1:48.

152. Trevor Lewin (Chadron) won by forfeit over Banner CO. Wrestler.

160. Colby Riesen (Chadron) won by forfeit over Banner CO. Wrestler.

170.  Chance Bila (Chadron) won by forfeit over Banner CO. Wrestler.

182. Cooper Cogdill (Chadron) won by pin over Gared Krakow (Banner County) 1:42.

195. Alex Doescher (Chadron) won by pin over Thomas Grubbs (Banner County) 2:53.

220. David Gifford (Banner County) won by forfeit over Chadron Wrestler.

285. Devin Mitchell (Chadron) won by forfeit over Banner CO. Wrestler.

BALTIMORE RAVENS WIN SUPER BOWL 47

Baltimore RavensNEW ORLEANS (AP) — The Ravens used a last-gasp defensive stand to hold off the San Francisco 49ers 34-31 and capture their second Super Bowl title in 12 years.

Game MVP Joe Flacco threw for three touchdowns while helping Baltimore build a 21-6 halftime advantage.

Then, not long after Jacoby Jones opened the second half with a 108-yard kickoff return that increased the Ravens’ lead to 28-6, a power outage held up play for 34 minutes.

The Niners regrouped, and Colin Kaepernick directed four second-half scoring drives.

The Niners’ final touchdown cut the deficit to 31-29. They missed a two-point conversion try before Baltimore added a late field goal and then took a safety in the final seconds.

It is San Francisco’s first loss in six Super Bowl appearances.

It was Baltimore linebacker Ray Lewis’ final game after a 17-year pro career.

HOOPER LEADS LADY HUSKERS OVER MINNESOTA

Lincoln – Jordan Hooper scored a game-high 27 points to lead Nebraska’s most complete effort of the year in an 80-56 women’s basketball win over Minnesota at the Bob Devaney Sports Center on Sunday afternoon.

Playing in front of a season-high crowd of 6,935 on Super Bowl Sunday in Lincoln, the Huskers notched their fourth straight Big Ten win to improve to 16-6 overall and 6-3 in the conference. Minnesota slipped to 14-9 overall and 3-6 in the Big Ten, as Nebraska completed a regular-season sweep of the Gophers.

Hooper, who hit 10-of-17 shots from the field, including 3-of-7 three-pointers, produced her third straight game with 25 or more points for the Huskers. The 6-2 junior forward from Alliance, Neb., moved within just three points of 1,500 in her career.

Sophomore guard Tear’a Laudermill tied her career high with 14 points off the bench, including three three-pointers, which helped put five Huskers in double figures on the day.

Freshman guard Rachel Theriot added a nearly flawless performance with 11 points, a career-high seven rebounds, five assists and two steals. Theriot went a perfect 5-for-5 from the field, including a three-pointer.

Senior point guard Lindsey Moore added 12 points, seven assists and one steal. Moore pulled within 11 points of 1,500 in her career and joined Nebraska’s all-time top 10 in career steals with 190. She also tied a Nebraska record by making the 120th straight start dating to the first game of her NU career.

Sophomore forward Emily Cady added 10 points, seven rebounds, two assists, two blocks and three steals in a tremendous all-around performance.

As a team, Nebraska hit 45.3 percent (29-64) of its shots from the floor, including 7-of-22 three-pointers (31.9 percent). The Huskers also hit 88.2 percent (15-17) of their free throws, while outrebounding Minnesota, 37-36.

Nebraska dominated the turnover battle, 19-9, converting Minnesota’s miscues into 31 points and outscoring the Golden Gophers 31-7 in points off turnovers for the game. The Huskers dished out 18 assists while committing just nine turnovers, while Minnesota had just 12 assists against its 19 turnovers.

“That might be the best we have played all over the floor today,” Nebraska Coach Connie Yori said. “We were good on defense, we won the boards and we attacked them really aggressively in transition. We hit shots and we had five in double figures, with everybody contributing. We played really, really well today and it is exciting to see this time of year.”

Minnesota jumped out to a quick 5-0 lead to open the game eager to avenge an 84-63 loss to the Huskers in Minneapolis just two weeks ago. But NU answered with six straight points from Cady and Hooper to take a 6-5 lead with 16 minutes left in the half.

The Gophers regained a 9-8 lead before Laudermill jumped off the bench and buried back-to-back threes to shoot NU to a 14-9 lead. The Huskers never trailed again, eventually building a 28-point margin with 3:37 left in the contest.

Micaella Riche led Minnesota with 12 points and seven rebounds. The Huskers held the Big Ten’s leading scorer, Rachel Banham, to just 11 points. Banham entered the contest averaging 21.5 points per game, including 34.5 points in her last two games. It was her second-lowest scoring total of the year, trailing only the nine points she scored against Michigan State. NU held Banham to just 15 in Minneapolis on Jan. 20.

Minnesota hit 41.4 percent (24-58) of its shots for the game, but just 2-of-8 three-pointers and just 6-of-8 free throws.

Nebraska took a 38-30 lead to the locker room at halftime thanks to 15 points from Hooper. Moore and Laudermill each contributed six first-half points, while Theriot added five points, five rebounds and three assists.

Hooper, Moore and Theriot combined on an 11-2 surge midway through the first half to turn an 18-16 lead with 7:21 left into a 29-18 edge with 5:21 left in the half. NU built its biggest lead of the half at 36-22 on Brandi Jeffery’s jumper with three minutes left, before Minnesota closed the half on an 8-2 surge.

Banham and Kayla Hirt combined for all eight Gopher points during the surge and both finished the half with six points apiece. Riche led Minnesota with seven first-half points, as she scored seven of Minnesota’s first 12 points of the game.

Nebraska hit 45.2 percent (14-31) of its shots in the half, including 4-of-10 three-pointers and all six of its free throws. NU also won the first-half rebounding battle 18-14, and the turnover battle, 9-6. Minnesota hit 46.2 percent (12-26) but just 1-of-7 from long range. The Gophers were 5-of-6 at the free throw line in the half.

The Huskers return to Big Ten road action on Thursday when Nebraska travels to Evanston, Ill., to battle Northwestern. Tip-off between the Huskers and Wildcats is set for 7 p.m.Jordan Hooper-3

 

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