Stats & coverage
Dec. 1, 2001
Huskers advance with 3-1 win over Kansas State
Manhattan, KS -- The No. 2 Nebraska volleyball team advanced to the
Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament for the 18th time in school history with
a 30-25, 28-30, 30-26, 30-19, win over Kansas State in second-round action
Saturday night at Ahearn Fieldhouse. The Huskers, who are making their
20th consecutive NCAA Tournament appearance, have advanced 18 times to
the Sweet 16. Nebraska, 49-17 all-time in the tournament, will face either
Colorado or Colorado State in the regional semifinals. Sites for the four
NCAA regionals will be determined Sunday night following the conclusion
of all second-round matches.
Nebraska (29-1)
used a balanced offensive attack in their second-round triumph, engineered
by Greichaly Cepero. The junior setter produced eight kills, 51 assists,
14 digs and 10 blocks in leading NU to a .352 hitting percentage. Nancy
Metcalf tallied 14 kills and 16 digs, while Laura Pilakowski posted
14 kills and 12 digs. Middle blockers Jenny Kropp and Amber Holmquist
combined for 25 kills and two errors on 40 attacks with 14 blocks. Anna
Schrad produced a team-high 18 digs and two service aces.
Kansas State ended
its season with a 20-18 overall record. NU out-blocked the Wildcats
18-8 and held them to a .172 hitting percentage. Lisa Mimick led KSU
with 13 kills, and Liz Wegner added 12. Setter Gabby Guerre recorded
nine kills and 40 assists.
"Kansas State
came out with a lot of fight and they played great defense against us,"
NU Coach John Cook said. "They are such a great serving team that
you never really feel comfortable against them. I was very impressed
with them tonight."
Nebraska was on
fire early in game one as they raced to a 7-0 lead with Schrad at the
service line. Schrad picked up two aces, and Pilakowski and Holmquist
each produced two kills in the run. The Huskers led by 12 before KSU
mounted a comeback. The Wildcats cut NU's lead to 15-8 with the help
of two kills from Mimick. Kansas State pulled within four after a kill
by Lauren Goehring, and then cut Nebraska's advantage to three with
another kill by Goehring.
But Schrad stopped
KSU's run with a kill. NU went up 25-21 after a service error by Mimick.
A kill by Cepero, a KSU service error, a kill from Kropp and a block
of Goehring by Pilakowski and Kropp brought the Huskers to game point.
Kansas State twice thwarted Nebraska, first with a kill by Guerre and
then with a block of Kropp. But Metcalf secured a 30-25, first-game
win for the Huskers with a perfectly placed roll shot that landed in
the deep left side of the court.
"We have to
credit that first game in part to our fans," Cook said. 'There
were so many of them here, and that really fired us up."
In game two, Nebraska
led by as many as eight before Kansas State tied it at 25 with back-to-back
kills by Wegner. Holmquist answered with a kill to make it 26-25 NU,
and Metcalf followed to widen the margin to two. KSU tied it at 27 with
another kill by Wegner and an ace serve by Kris Jensen. A Nebraska hitting
error and kills by Wegner - who accounted for four of Kansas State's
final six points -- and Geohring gave the Wildcats the 30-28, second-game
win.
In game three, the
two teams battled point-for-point to a 22-22 tie. With Metcalf at the
service line, the Huskers reeled off five straight as Holmquist and
Cepero combined for two blocks and Cepero notched a solo stop. KSU blocked
an attack by Anna Schrad to cut NU's lead to 27-24, but Cepero answered
with a kill. The squads exchanged service errors to make it 29-24, Nebraska.
The Wildcats held NU off twice with kills from Guerre and Wegner, but
Nebraska took the 30-26, third-game win on the ensuing possession on
a service error by Jayne Christen.
Nebraska controlled
the entire fourth game, using a 6-0 lead that included two kills by
Kropp to take a 17-8 advantage. The Wildcats pulled within six after
an ace serve by Cari Jensen, but never got closer than that. NU used
an 8-0 run to make it 24-12, its largest lead of the game. The Huskers
wrapped up the 30-19, fourth-game win and the match on a kill by Metcalf.
"I was very,
very proud to be the coach of this team tonight," KSU Coach Suzie
Fritz said. "They fought the good fight, and they gave everything
they had. I thought that it was unfortunate that we had to be matched
up against Nebraska in the first round, because this team is a top 16
team without a doubt."
Source: University of Nebraska Athletic Dept.
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