Stats & coverage
Sept. 9, 2001
Nebraska sweeps No. 7 UCLA
Lincoln -- Junior
middle blocker Amber Holmquist produced her best performance of the season
to lead the top-ranked Nebraska volleyball team to a 30-28, 30-24, 30-21,
defeat of No. 7 UCLA before 4,092 fans Sunday afternoon at the NU Coliseum.
Holmquist tallied
season-highs with seven blocks and 13 kills on a .647 hitting percentage
in the championship match of the US Bank/Arbys Classic en route
to earning tournament MVP honors. The Houston, Texas native averaged
3.56 kills per game on a .591 hitting percentage while adding 1.44 blocks
per game in Nebraskas three wins. Junior setter Greichaly Cepero,
senior middle blocker Jenny Kropp and senior right side hitter Nancy
Metcalf also earned all-tournament honors for the Huskers, who also
swept No. 15 Pepperdine and No. 20 Notre Dame over the weekend.
Outside hitter Kristee
Porter led UCLA with 13 kills but hit for a minus -.036 percentage against
NU. The Bruins hit just .091 as a team, thanks in part to Nebraskas
seasons-high 16.5 team blocks. Five Huskers tied or bettered their season-best
individual block totals.
With the win, the
Huskers improved to 6-1 and extended their home winning streak to 33
matches.
I was really
impressed with our effort today, Nebraska Coach John Cook said.
The first game was some of the highest level of volleyball Ive
seen in a long time. Both teams were so impressive in that game. UCLA
definitely brought out the best in us, and it was exciting to watch.
The score was tied
14 times in the competitive first game, and UCLA defensive specialist
Chrissie Zartman made it 26-26 with her third service ace of the game.
The squads exchanged points with kills by Angela Eckmier and Anna Schrad,
and the score was tied once again at 28 when the Bruins were called
for a net violation. Holmquist slammed a kill down to put the Huskers
in a game-point situation, and NU took the 30-28 victory after a UCLA
hitting error. The Huskers out-blocked UCLA 7-1 in game one.
After taking the
second game 30-24, the Huskers fell behind early in the third. UCLA
led 9-2 early as Porter came alive with three quick kills. But the Huskers
battled back, tying the score at 12 after back-to-back kills by Holmquist.
Nebraska led 27-21 after a kill by Cepero, and the Huskers closed the
match with a 3-0 run. A kill by Kropp sealed the 30-21 third-game victory.
Nebraska has
an outstanding block," UCLA head coach Andy Banachowski said. "They
served us out of our offense and made us predictable today. We need
to attack smarter, like we did at the start of game three. It would
have been good if we could have maintained that rhythm."
Holmquist said the
Huskers remained confident despite falling behind in game three.
There was
never a doubt in our minds that we would come back, Holmquist
said. The question was, when we were going to have our run? Its
all about momentum, and things were really going our way.
Personally
I was really excited all weekend. I felt really comfortable on the court.
Greicha and I were connecting really well. My parents were here watching,
and it felt good to be home in Nebraska and to be playing in front of
our fans.
Source: University of Nebraska Athletic Dept.
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