The Nebraska women’s basketball team will shoot for its first winning record in Big 12 Conference play since 1999-2000, while trying to upset its third top-25 foe at home this season when the Huskers collide with No. 17 Kansas State on Wednesday at 7:05 p.m.
Nebraska’s game against the Wildcats will be carried live on radio by the Pinnacle Sports Network on 1400 AM-KLIN in Lincoln and 1110 AM-KFAB in Omaha, along with free Internet audio on Huskers.com. A live video stream of the game is also available to subscribers of HuskersNside - the premium website of Nebraska Athletics.
A win for the Huskers over Kansas State would give Nebraska its ninth Big 12 Conference win of the season and give NU its first winning record in the Big 12 since finishing 10-6 in 1999-2000. It would also mark the first time since the 1998-99 season that Nebraska has posted three wins over Associated Press Top 25 opponents in a season, while representing the first time the Huskers have ever beaten three top-25 Big 12 foes in the same year.
The No. 17 Wildcats will be the Huskers’ 10th AP Top 25 opponent this season, according to this week’s rankings. Nebraska is 2-7 against teams ranked in this week’s AP Poll. Kansas State defeated the Huskers 74-59 in the first meeting between the clubs this season in Manhattan on Jan. 15.
Nebraska (16-9 overall, 8-5 Big 12) matched its league victory total from its previous two seasons combined with a strong 73-59 win at Texas A&M on Feb. 16 in College Station. NU finished with a 7-9 league mark last year after struggling to a 1-15 Big 12 mark in Coach Connie Yori’s first season at Nebraska in 2002-03.
Before the win over Texas A&M, the Huskers produced one of the biggest wins in school history with their 88-59 win over No. 14 Iowa State in Lincoln on Feb. 12. Nebraska’s 29-point victory margin was its largest ever over a ranked opponent, while the game was played in front of the third-largest crowd in school history with 12,429 fans on hand for the landmark win. The Iowa State game marked the first of two "Pack the Devaney" promotions for Nebraska and was a resounding success. The Huskers will try to match that success against Kansas State, as $1 general admission tickets are available, along with $1 hot dogs and Pepsi products at the concession areas.
Kansas State (18-6, 9-4) is tied for fourth in the Big 12 standings with No. 21 Iowa State, and the Wildcats are still gunning for a top four seed at the Big 12 Tournament. KSU has lost three of its last five games, with its only victories coming at home over Oklahoma State and Colorado.
Scouting the No. 17 Kansas State Wildcats
Kansas State comes to Lincoln in the hunt for one of the top four seeds at the Big 12 Conference Tournament in March. The No. 17 Wildcats entered the week in a tie for fourth place with No. 21 Iowa State in the Big 12 standings, just one game ahead of Nebraska, which sits all alone in sixth place.
A win for the Wildcats could help them secure a first-round bye in Kansas City, if they can close the season with a home win against intrastate rival Kansas on Saturday and a road win at Missouri on March 2.
A loss for Kansas State would move Nebraska into a fifth-place tie with the Wildcats and could potentially keep the Huskers in the hunt for a top-four seed at the Big 12 Tournament pending Iowa State’s results in its final three games at Missouri (Feb. 23), and at home against Texas A&M (Feb. 26) and Kansas (March 1).
Nebraska closes the season at home against Missouri (Feb. 26) and on the road at Colorado (March 2).
Kansas State has been one of the Big 12’s best teams the past four seasons, thanks in large part to the play of its current senior starters - Kendra Wecker, Laurie Koehn and Megan Mahoney.
Wecker is a leading contender for Big 12 Player-of-the-Year honors. The 5-11 forward leads the Big 12 in both scoring and rebounding with 21 points and 9.9 rebounds per game. She also ranks third in the league in free throw percentage (84.8 percnet), fifth in three-point field goal percentage (44.4 percent) and 11th in the league in steals (1.81 spg).
Koehn, a 5-10 guard, leads the Big 12 with 70 three-pointers this season, while hitting 39.1 percent of her long-range attempts. She is shooting 91.7 percent (22-24) at the free throw line. Koehn ranks second among the Wildcats in scoring with 11.9 points per game.
Mahoney has been one of the most underrated players in the Big 12 during her four seasons at Kansas State. Mahoney ranks third on the team in scoring with 9.6 points per game, while ranking second on the team with 6.4 boards per contest. She also leads the Wildcats with 3.5 assists per game, while adding 1.4 steals per game.
Sophomore Claire Coggins has earned a starting role in her second season and has averaged 9.5 points and 2.8 rebounds per game, while ranking third on the club in both assists and steals.
Freshman Shana Wheeler rounds out Kansas State’s probable starting five. She is averaging 4.6 points and 3.9 rebounds per game, while leading KSU with 32 blocks on the year.
Senior Brie Madden and junior Jessica McFarland add to Kansas State’s inside game off the bench, while Twiggy McIntyre and Chelsea Domenico have seen the most backcourt action for the Wildcat reserves.
As a team, Kansas State ranks among the top five teams in 17 of the 19 Big 12 statistical categories, including scoring margin (+15.1 ppg, second), rebounding margin (+7.1 rpg, third) and turnover margin (+3.46, second). Nebraska ranks among the top five in just three of those same 19 categories, while ranking seventh in the Big 12 in scoring margin (+5.9 ppg), eighth in rebounding margin (+0.3 rpg) and sixth in turnover margin (+1.68).
Nebraska vs. Kansas State Series History
Kansas State leads the all-time series with the Huskers 37-26, including a 74-59 win at Manhattan on Jan. 15. The Wildcats have actually won the last two meetings between the two schools, with an 89-69 win in Manhattan on Feb. 14, 2004.
The Huskers claimed the last meeting between the two teams in Lincoln, as Nebraska posted one of the biggest wins in school history with an 81-63 win over a No. 9 Kansas State squad on Jan. 24, 2004. At the time, the win over the Wildcats represented the highest-ranked opponent the Huskers had ever defeated. Nebraska improved on that feat earlier this season with its 103-99 triple overtime win over then-No. 2 Baylor on Jan. 12. Three days later, the Huskers lost to the then-No. 23 Wildcats at Bramlage Coliseum.
After playing a Big 12 record 55 minutes in the win over Baylor, the Huskers got off to a slow start in Manhattan this season. NU trailed 17-2 to start the game and fell behind by as many as 23 points in the first half. The Wildcats took a 37-18 lead into halftime, before Nebraska tried to rally in the second half.
Kiera Hardy opened the second half by hitting four straight three-pointers, and the Huskers eventually cut KSU’s lead to single digits at 60-51 with 4:23 left in the game. Kendra Wecker answered with the next two points for the Wildcats and Nebraska was unable to get the lead down to single digits again. Wecker finished with 25 points, while Hardy scored 23 of her game-high 29 in the second half in the first meeting between the Big 12’s top two scorers.
Husker Quick Tips
The Huskers will be shooting for their ninth Big 12 victory of the season against Kansas State. NU has not had a winning record in the league since 1999-2000, the last time the Huskers advanced to the NCAA Tournament. Nine league victories would surpass Nebraska’s Big 12 win totals from the 2002-03 and 2003-04 seasons combined. 4The Huskers are 6-1 against unranked Big 12 foes, after suffering their first loss to an unranked league foe at Kansas on Feb. 20. Nebraska, which enters the week in sixth place in the Big 12 standings, will play its final two conference games against unranked foes after battling fifth-place and No. 17 Kansas State on Wednesday.
Seven of Nebraska’s nine losses have come against opponents who are currently ranked in the Associated Press Top 25. The only unranked teams NU has lost to are Creighton, which managed a 58-57 win in Omaha on Dec. 18, and at Kansas on Sunday. Creighton is 16-7 on the year and has received votes in both major polls throughout the season.
Nebraska, which is 4-2 in February, closed January with a winning record (4-3) in Big 12 play for the first time since 1999-2000, when the Huskers opened the year with a 5-2 conference mark. The Huskers, who made their last NCAA Tournament appearance in 1999-2000, were 4-2 in November, 4-2 in December and 4-3 in January.
Nebraska’s 88-59 win over No. 14 Iowa State was its largest in school history over a ranked opponent. The Huskers have played nine top-25 opponents this season, posting wins over No. 2 Baylor (103-99 3OT) and No. 14 Iowa State. Seven of Nebraska’s nine losses this season have come against teams currently ranked in the AP top 25, while six of the setbacks to ranked foes have come on the road.
Nebraska’s season-high crowd of 12,429 for the Iowa State game on Feb. 12 was the third-largest crowd in school history, and the largest crowd at the Devaney Center for a women’s basketball game since Nebraska defeated Kansas State in front of 13,226 fans on Feb. 26, 2000.
The Huskers claimed four Big 12 Conference weekly honors during January. Kiera Hardy won the Big 12 Player-of-the-Week award on Jan. 17, while Jelena Spiric added a pair of Big 12 Rookie-of-the-Week honors (Jan. 10, Jan. 17). Danielle Page gave the Huskers their fourth award on Jan. 31, when she captured NU’s third Big 12 Rookie-of-the-Week award of the month. Page added another Big 12 Rookie-of-the-Week honor on Feb. 14.
Husker Hot Shots
Sophomore guard Kiera Hardy is making a strong case for All-Big 12 honors by ranking No. 2 in the conference in scoring at 19.4 points per game, trailing only Kansas State All-American Kendra Wecker’s 21.0 points per contest. Hardy leads the league in conference games only, averaging 21.3 points per game, including a career-high 37 points in Nebraska’s win over No. 2 Baylor. She added 29 points in the loss at No. 23 Kansas State, to average 33 points and 5.5 rebounds per game on her way to Big 12 Player-of-the-Week honors on Jan. 17. Hardy has scored 27 or more points on seven occasions this season, including her 27-point performance in the Huskers’ 88-59 win over No. 14 Iowa State on Feb. 12.
Kiera Hardy has scored 20 or more points 11 times this season, and has two 30-plus scoring games, including a 31-point outburst against Hampton on Nov. 27. She has produced double figures in 21 consecutive games and 22 times in 25 games this season. Hardy has smashed NU’s sophomore single-season three-point record with 62 threes this season, surpassing Kate Galligan’s 50 three-pointers in 1993-94. Hardy sits in the No. 2 spot on the Huskers’ overall single-season three-point list, trailing only Amy Stephen’s 85 three-pointers in 1988-89. Hardy has hit five or more three-pointers on four occasions this season.
Danielle Page is making a strong push for Big 12 Freshman honors during a breakout conference season. Page, a two-time Big 12 Conference Rookie of the Week (Jan. 31, Feb. 14), earned her first award after posting her first career double-double with then-career highs of 12 points, 11 rebounds and three blocked shots in Nebraska’s 59-48 win over Kansas on Jan. 29. Page had an even better week the following week, averaging 13.5 points, 5.5 rebounds, 2.0 blocks, 2.0 assists and 1.5 steals per game in wins over Oklahoma and Oklahoma State. She established a career scoring high for the fifth straight game with 15 points and four blocks in NU’s win over OU on Feb. 6. Page claimed her second rookie award last week with a team-high 13 points at No. 17 Texas, before scoring eight points, grabbing five rebounds and blocking a career-high five shots in the win over No. 14 Iowa State. She added an 11-point effort at Texas A&M on Feb. 16, for her sixth double-figure scoring output in the last eight games. Page had not scored in double figures through NU’s first 17 games this season.
Senior Jina Johansen set a school and Big 12 record by playing all 55 minutes in the Huskers’ triple overtime win over No. 2 Baylor on Jan. 12. Johansen scored eight of her 10 points after halftime against the Bears and finished with eight assists. The 5-7 guard from Dannebrog, Neb., has played the full 40 minutes 15 other times in her career, including NU’s wins over Kansas on Jan. 29, at Missouri on Jan. 8 and at Texas A&M on Feb. 16. In league games, Johansen is averaging 37.3 minutes per game. She is averaging 7.3 points, 3.2 rebounds and 6.0 assists in Big 12 play. She dished out a career-high 11 assists in the Huskers’ win at Texas A&M on Feb. 16. Johansen set a career high with 16 points and tied her previous career best with nine assists in an 88-59 win over No. 14 Iowa State.
With 149 total assists this season, Jina Johansen has already surpassed her season total from her junior year in 2003-04, when she dished out 144 assists in 30 games. Johansen needs just five more assists to produce the top single-season total of her career. Her 153 assists in 2002-03 represented the second-best total by a sophomore in school history. Johansen needs just 21 more assists to set the Huskers’ senior single-season assist record, which is held by Meggan Yedsena with 169 in 1993-94.
Junior forward Jelena Spiric is making a strong case for Big 12 Newcomer-of-the-Year honors as one of Nebraska’s top players in Big 12 action. Spiric is NU’s second-leading scorer and third-leading rebounder in conference play, averaging 9.2 points and 4.6 rebounds per game. Spiric earned Big 12 Rookie-of-the-Week honors in back-to-back weeks (Jan. 10, Jan. 17) to open league play. She has added 1.6 assists and 1.7 steals per contest in league action. Spiric notched career highs with 19 points and nine rebounds in the win over No. 2 Baylor, scoring all 19 of her points after halftime. In NU’s win at Texas A&M on Feb. 16, Spiric had 10 points, six rebounds, five assists and two steals.
Sophomore forward Chelsea Aubry enjoyed the best game of her career in the Huskers’ 73-59 win at Texas A&M on Feb. 16. Aubry scored a career-high 20 points on a perfect shooting night, as she went 7-of-7, including 1-for-1 from three-point range. She also hit all five of her free throw attempts. Aubry enters Wednesday’s game with Kansas State as NU’s leading rebounder (5.3 rpg) and second-leading scorer (9.4 ppg).
Huskers Fall at Kansas, 67-53
Kiera Hardy scored 15 points, but the Huskers struggled in a 67-53 loss at Kansas on Sunday afternoon at Allen Fieldhouse in Lawrence, Kan. With its first loss to an unranked Big 12 Conference opponent this season, Nebraska slipped to 8-5 in Big 12 play and 16-9 overall.
Kansas played one of its best games of the season to pull back to .500 on the year at 12-12, while improving to 5-8 in league play. Erica Hallman led four Jayhawks in double figures with a career-high 22 points, including five three-pointers. Kaylee Brown added 14 points, while Crystal Kemp contributed a double-double with 11 points and 11 rebounds. Aquanita Burras pitched in 10 points in the victory.
Kansas shot 46.7 percent from the field, including 30.4 percent (7-23) from three-point range. KU also dominated Nebraska on the glass, outrebounding the Huskers 38-28. KU converted those rebounds into 17 second chance points. The Jayhawks also scored 18 points off 18 NU turnovers.
Nebraska shot just 40.4 percent from the field, after shooting 56 percent in its two previous games combined. NU hit just 3-of-12 three-pointers, with Hardy knocking down all three of the Huskers’ shots.
Hardy was the only Husker in double figures, as Jelena Spiric contributed nine points and four assists in a losing effort. Elena Diaz pitched in eight points, four rebounds and a career-high four steals, while Chelsea Aubry scored all seven of her points in the first half. Aubry also led NU with six rebounds.
Hardy connected on a long three-pointer at the first-half buzzer, but Nebraska still trailed 30-24 at intermission, as the Huskers fell to 2-9 on the year when trailing at the half.
She opened the second half by hitting a two-pointer in the first 10 seconds to cut the KU lead down to four points, but NU would get no closer.
The Jayhawks answered with a 13-2 surge over the next seven minutes to take a commanding 43-28 lead with just under 13 minutes to play. The KU lead grew as large as 23 points in the second half, before Nebraska rallied to cut the final margin to 14 points.
Hardy Scoring at NU’s Strongest Rate in Six Seasons
Kiera Hardy heads into the Kansas game averaging 19.4 points per game, which leads the Huskers and trails only Kansas State senior All-American Kendra Wecker (21.0 ppg) on the Big 12 Conference scoring chart. In Big 12 games only, Hardy has been even better, averaging 21.3 points per game to lead the league.
A 5-6 sophomore from Kansas City, Mo., Hardy has produced NU’s best scoring average since the 1998-99 season when first-team All-Big 12 guard Nicole Kubik averaged 19.8 points per game.
Hardy’s scoring average ranks as the third-best output by a sophomore in school history. All-American Karen Jennings produced the top scoring average by a sophomore with 20.5 points per game in 1990-91, while Maurtice Ivy averaged 19.7 points per game in 1985-86. Amy Stephens ranks fourth with 18.8 points per game in 1986-87.
Hardy, who has scored in double figures in 21 straight games, has averaged 20.7 points per game over Nebraska’s last 21 contests (435 points). She owns a pair of 30-point scoring efforts on the season, and seven games with 27 or more points. She erupted for a career-high 37 points in NU’s 103-99 triple overtime victory over No. 2 Baylor. She added a 31-point effort in a win over Hampton on Nov. 27. She just missed a third 30-point performance with a 29-point outing in the loss at Creighton on Dec. 18, and produced another near-30 effort with 29 points in the loss at No. 23 Kansas State on Jan. 15. She opened the season with 28 points in a win over Western Illinois, before adding another 28-point effort in a win at Oklahoma State Feb. 1. She had a 27-point, four-assist outing in the Huskers’ win over No. 14 Iowa State on Feb. 12, before scoring 18 points in the win at Texas A&M on Feb. 16.
Hardy has scored 20 or more points 11 times this season, including 10 of NU’s last 20 games with six coming in conference action. In the Big 12 Conference, Hardy ranks as the highest-scoring sophomore in the league. Tiffany Jackson from Texas ranks second among conference sophomores with 17.6 points per game, while Texas Tech’s Alesha Robertson has managed 13.3 points per contest.
Hardy Climbs Career Three-Point Chart at Record Rate
Kiera Hardy has hit 92 three-pointers in just 52 career games and has already shot into sixth place on Nebraska’s career three-point list. Hardy has hit 1.77 three-pointers per game in her brief career, and is well ahead of school-record pace.
WNBA All-Star Anna DeForge owns NU’s school record with 155 three-pointers in 117 career games (1.3 pg). Hardy is the only player on Nebraska’s top-10 three-point list who has played fewer than 103 career games. Kate Galligan, who ranks No. 2 on NU’s career list with 145 three-pointers, knocked down her shots in just 103 games (1.4 pg) for the highest frequency among the former players on the NU top-10 list.
Hardy ranks second in the Big 12 Conference with 3.0 made three-pointers per game through 13 league contests. Hardy hit a career-high six three-pointers in the win over No. 2 Baylor on Jan. 12, and matched her career-best with six three-pointers in the win over Oklahoma State on Feb. 1. She added five more three-pointers in an 88-59 win over No. 14 Iowa State on Feb. 12, and at No. 23 Kansas State on Jan. 15. She knocked down four three-pointers at Texas A&M on Feb. 16, before hitting a trio of treys at Kansas on Sunday.
Hardy’s 62 three-pointers this season through 25 games smashed Kate Galligan’s sophomore single-season record of 50 three-pointers in 1993-94. Hardy has also climbed into the No. 2 spot on NU’s all-time single-season list, trailing only Amy Stephens’ NU’s single-season record of 85 three-pointers in 1988-89.
Johansen Surging Down Stretch in Senior Season
Nebraska’s lone returning starter from a year ago, senior Jina Johansen has helped the Huskers elevate their play this season.
Johansen unleashed the best game of her career with a career-high 16 points while tying career bests with nine assists and four three-pointers in the 88-59 win over No. 14 Iowa State on Feb. 12. Johansen added six rebounds and did not commit a turnover in 36 minutes of work. She added a second straight career night with 11 assists along with five points and three rebounds in the win at Texas A&M on Feb. 16.
The only Nebraska native on NU’s roster, Johansen came off the floor in the win over Iowa State at the Devaney Center to a standing ovation from the 12,429 fans in attendance with 3:49 to play. The crowd, which was the third-largest in school history, represented 35 times the population of Johansen’s hometown of Dannebrog. Johansen is also the only Husker on the roster who endured NU’s 1-15 Big 12 season in 2002-03.
One of the smartest players in the Big 12 Conference, the CoSIDA Academic All-America nominee’s decision-making has been outstanding in league play. She is averaging 7.3 points, 3.3 rebounds and 6.0 assists per game, She has also hit 52.2 percent of her three-pointers (12-23), which would lead the Big 12 in league games, but she is one three-pointer shy of the mandatory 1.0 made per game. She has also hit 21-of-24 (87.5 percent) of her free throw attempts, while averaging 37.3 minutes per game.
On the season, the 5-7 guard leads the Huskers with 6.1 assists per game, while adding 6.5 points and 3.1 boards per contest. One of the top passers in Nebraska history, Johansen ranks third on the school career chart with 525 assists. She needs 41 more assists to catch Nicole Kubik (1997-2000) in the No. 2 spot on the NU chart. She will need to average 10.3 assists per game over the next four contests to catch Kubik.
Johansen produced one of the best efforts in her career at Missouri. She scored all of her 14 points in the second half, while dishing out eight assists. In NU’s 26-6 run over the final 8:26 against the Tigers, Johansen hit all three of her attempts from the field, including a three-pointer and the game-tying layup with 2:17 to play.
She added 10 points and eight more assists in Nebraska’s 103-99 triple-overtime win over No. 2 Baylor. In that game, Johansen never came off the floor while playing a Big 12 record 55 minutes.
Johansen posted the first victory of her career over Colorado by scoring 13 points, dishing out seven assists and grabbing five rebounds. She also notched two steals against the Buffs. Johansen scored four of the Huskers’ final eight points to help NU escape from Stillwater with a 73-71 win over Oklahoma State on Feb. 1. She finished with eight points, four rebounds and three assists in 39 minutes against the Cowgirls. Johansen added eight points, six rebounds and four assists to notch her first career win over Oklahoma on Feb. 6.
She scored 10 points, tied for the team-high with seven rebounds and led the Huskers with six assists in the win over Louisiana-Lafayette on Dec. 20. She added nine points and seven assists in just 26 minutes against Memphis.
Johansen scored just six points, but dished out nine assists in the loss at Kansas State on Jan. 15. She distributed eight assists in NU’s win over Tennessee-Martin, after scoring 10 points in the win over Southeastern Louisiana. She connected on 5-of-7 shots from the field, while dishing out six assists and pulling down four rebounds in a season-low 24 minutes against the Lady Lions.
In the win over Washington State, Johansen scored nine points on a trio of three-pointers to go along with seven assists. She also helped shut down Cougar star Adriane Ferguson in the second half. Ferguson scored 19 points and hit five three-pointers in the first half, before the Huskers switched Johansen to guard Ferguson. Johansen limited Ferguson to just five points in the second half, before Johansen butted heads with WSU guard Jessica Perry and had to leave the game for the final four minutes with a severely swollen left eye.
Page Making Bid for Big 12 Freshman Honors
Freshman Danielle Page is making a major run at Big 12 Freshman-of-the-Year honors during conference play. In league action, the 6-2 forward from Monument, Colo., has come on strong, ranking as Nebraska’s third-leading scorer and rebounder with 8.8 points and 4.6 rebounds per game. She has added a team-best 1.6 blocks per game to go along with 1.2 steals per contest through 13 league games. For the season, she has increased her averages to 6.5 points and 4.4 rebounds per game, while leading the Huskers with 1.2 blocks per contest.
On the season, Page ranks eighth among all Big 12 freshmen with 1.16 blocks per game. She also ranks sixth among Big 12 freshmen in steals (0.96 spg), and seventh in both scoring (6.5 ppg) and rebounding (4.4 rpg).
Page claimed her first Big 12 Conference Rookie-of-the-Week award on Jan. 31, after posting the first double-double of her career with 12 points, 11 rebounds and three blocked shots in the Huskers’ 59-48 win over Kansas on Jan. 29.
Page followed up her award-winning effort against the Jayhawks by producing the best week of her young career in wins over Oklahoma State and Oklahoma. In Nebraska’s win over Oklahoma on Feb. 6, Page established her career scoring high for the fifth consecutive game by erupting for 15 points against the Sooners. She added four blocked shots to go along with six rebounds and two steals off the bench.
She added her second Big 12 Rookie-of-the-Week award on Feb. 14, after leading the Huskers with 13 points in the loss at No. 17 Texas on Feb. 9, before scoring eight points, grabbing five rebounds and blocking a career-high five shots in NU’s 88-59 rout of No. 14 Iowa State on Feb. 12. Page added a pair of steals, as her seven combined stops led directly to 12 points in transition for the Huskers.
Page came through big down the stretch in a 73-59 win at Texas A&M on Feb. 16. Page teamed with Chelsea Aubry to score Nebraska’s final 17 points in the closing six minutes to win going away after leading just 56-53. Page finished with 11 points, five rebounds and NU’s only block in the game. She has produced double-figure scoring totals in six of the Huskers’ last eight games.
Page was also one of the catalysts during NU’s decisive 23-6 run over the final 12 minutes in a 70-51 win over Oklahoma on Feb. 6. She scored nine points, grabbed three rebounds, blocked three shots and recorded two steals down the stretch for the Huskers. Her effort against OU followed a 12-point, five-rebound performance in the Huskers’ win at Oklahoma State on Feb. 1. She tied her previous career-high scoring effort against OSU, while setting a career high with four assists against the Cowgirls.
In the last six games, Page has connected on 28-of-33 free throws (84.8 percent). Through her first 19 games this season, she hit just 14-of-26 shots from the free throw line (53.8 percent), but has improved her season average to 71.2 percent at the line, including 72.9 percent in Big 12 games.
Page scored in double figures in five consecutive games before her eight-point effort against Iowa State on Feb. 12, beginning with a then-career-high 10-point effort at No. 19 Iowa State on Jan. 22.
Over the past eight games, Page is averaging 10.8 points and 5.4 rebounds per game. She has added 2.0 blocked shots per game to push her team-leading total to 29 blocks on the season.
Page has scored a total of 95 points her past nine contests, dating back to a then-career-best nine-point effort against No. 10 Texas Tech on Jan. 19. She totaled just 67 points through her first 16 games this season.
Before Page’s emergence in the past nine games, her previous career high came with eight points in Nebraska’s win over Memphis on Dec. 30, when she added seven rebounds and two blocked shots. Page came up big down the stretch for the Huskers in their win at Missouri on Jan. 8. She finished with seven points, four rebounds, two blocked shots and two steals. During Nebraska’s 26-6 surge in the final 8:26, Page scored three points, grabbed all four of her rebounds and blocked both of her shots on the night. In Nebraska’s win over No. 2 Baylor on Jan. 12, Page played a career-high 39 minutes off the bench and scored six points, grabbed four rebounds and snagged two steals. She added six points, two rebounds, one block and a steal at Kansas State on Jan. 15.
Freshman Page Dominant on the Blocks
True freshman Danielle Page has shown the potential to be one of the dominant shot blockers in school history. Page not only leads the Huskers with 29 blocked shots this season, she has climbed to No. 4 on Nebraska’s freshman single-season block chart, ahead of former Huskers Charlie Rogers (24) and Maurtice Ivy (27). With five more blocks, Page will move to No. 3 on the freshman block list, marking the highest block total by a Husker freshman in 25 years.
While her overall block numbers are impressive, her impact in Nebraska’s last eight games has been shocking. The 6-2 forward from Monument, Colo., has set or tied her career high in blocks in four of NU’s last eight games and has produced 16 of her 29 blocks on the year. In Big 12 Conference action, Page is averaging 1.6 blocks per game, which ranks sixth in the league.
Spiric Pushing for Big 12 Newcomer Honors
Junior college transfer Jelena Spiric has started 16 of NU’s 25 games this season, including each of the Huskers’ last 11 Big 12 contests.
The 6-0 forward from Belgrade, Serbia & Montenegro, played one of the best games of her NU career in the win over Oklahoma on Feb. 6. Spiric scored 12 points, grabbed seven rebounds, dished out three assists and snagged two steals in the 70-51 win over the Sooners. She added a sensational 10-point, six-rebound, five-assist effort in NU’s 73-59 win at Texas A&M on Feb. 16. She is coming off a solid nine-point, four-assist effort at Kansas to push her season averages to 7.2 points, 3.6 rebounds, 1.7 assists and 1.4 steals per game.
Spiric made her first Big 12 start in Nebraska’s 103-99 triple overtime victory over No. 2 Baylor on Jan. 12, and erupted for career highs with 19 points and nine rebounds to help the Huskers to an upset over the Bears. She added her second Big 12 start in the loss at No. 23 Kansas State on Jan. 15, scoring 10 points and pulling down five boards. She added seven points and four rebounds in NU’s loss to No. 10 Texas Tech on Jan. 19.
The Big 12 Rookie of the Week on Jan. 10 and Jan. 17, Spiric averaged 13 points and six rebounds in wins over Colorado and Missouri to open Big 12 play. She averaged 14.5 points and 7.0 rebounds per game against Baylor and Kansas State. In the win over Baylor, Spiric hit 15-of-16 free throws, including eight straight free throws to open the third overtime period to lead the Huskers to victory.
Spiric’s 15 made free throws rank as the second-highest total in NU history, while her 16 attempts rank fourth on the Husker career chart. Her 44 minutes played against the Bears also demolished her previous career high of 26 minutes played one week earlier against Colorado.
Spiric scored 18 points and grabbed six rebounds, while also dishing out four assists and grabbing two steals in Nebraska’s 81-74 win at Missouri on Jan. 8. During NU’s decisive 26-6 run in the final 8:26, Spiric hit 5-of-6 free throws, while adding one rebound, one assist and one steal to help the Huskers.
In Big 12 play, Spiric is Nebraska’s second-leading scorer and third-leading rebounder with 9.2 points and 4.6 rebounds per game. In the win over Colorado on Jan. 5, Spiric scored eight points and grabbed six rebounds, while snagging two steals. She added seven points, three boards and two steals in NU’s win over Kansas on Jan. 29, and added seven points and three boards in NU’s win over OSU on Feb. 1.
In the Huskers’ win over Memphis on Dec. 30, Spiric scored 10 points, while dishing out a career-best six assists and pulling down five rebounds. In NU’s win over Louisiana-Lafayette on Dec. 20, Spiric had the first double-figure scoring effort of her career with 10 points, while adding four rebounds and three assists.
Through Nebraska’s first seven games this season, when she started five contests, Spiric averaged just 3.0 points, 1.7 rebounds, 1.5 assists and 1.0 steal per game.
A 2004 NJCAA All-American at Colby (Kan.) Community College, Spiric has seen the most time on the court of any of the junior college transfers despite being slowed by a knee injury. Spiric suffered a torn ACL in the final game of her sophomore season and underwent offseason surgery. Her rehabilitation is going well, but she is still far from 100 percent.
Aubry Providing Solid Inside Presence at Both Ends
Sophomore Chelsea Aubry has been one of Nebraska’s most solid players at both ends of the court in her second season with the Huskers. The 6-2 forward from Kitchener, Ontario is tied for the team rebounding lead and ranks second on the club in scoring with 9.4 points and 5.3 rebounds per game.
Aubry produced one of the best performances of her career after scoring a career-high 20 points, while adding four rebounds in a 73-59 win at Texas A&M on Feb. 16. Aubry was perfect from the field against the Aggies, hitting 7-of-7 field goal attempts, including her only three-pointer. She was also perfect at the free throw line, knocking down all five of her attempts. She was huge in the clutch, as she and freshman Danielle Page joined forces to score all 17 of Nebraska’s points in the final six minutes to turn a three-point lead into a 14-point victory.
After starting each of Nebraska’s 12 non-conference games, Aubry suffered a foot injury in practice on Jan. 1, and did not play in NU’s first three Big 12 games this season. She came off the bench in the Huskers’ next three league games, before making her first start in Big 12 action in Nebraska’s 59-48 victory over Kansas in Lincoln on Jan. 29.
Aubry scored nine points, grabbed six rebounds and set a career high with three steals in the Huskers’ 88-59 win over No. 14 Iowa State on Feb. 12. Over the past seven games since returning to the starting lineup, Aubry is averaging 10 points and 6.1 rebounds per game, while adding eight total steals.
In Nebraska’s win over Oklahoma on Feb. 6, Aubry scored seven points and pulled down a career-high 11 rebounds in NU’s 70-51 victory. In the Huskers’ loss at Texas on Feb. 9, Aubry was Nebraska’s lone weapon in the first half, producing eight points and grabbing seven rebounds, before finishing with 10 points and eight boards on the night.
After playing just nine minutes at Kansas State on Jan. 15, Aubry led the Huskers with eight rebounds, while adding five points in 19 minutes against No. 10 Texas Tech on Jan. 19. She came off the bench again at Iowa State, producing eight points, six rebounds and a career-high three assists in 26 minutes. She scored nine points, grabbed three rebounds, dished out an assist and snagged a steal in her return to the starting lineup against Kansas.
One of Nebraska’s best interior defenders, Aubry leads the Huskers in the number of charges drawn this season. She averaged 10.1 points and 5.0 rebounds per game with starts in each of NU’s first 12 games before the injury.
Aubry put her versatility on display in Nebraska’s win over Southeastern Louisiana on Dec. 1, by just missing her first career double-double with 11 points and nine rebounds against the Lady Lions.
In the Huskers’ home win over Washington State on Nov. 22, Aubry tied her then-career high with 16 points for the third time this season and powered a strong second-half effort against the Cougars. With the Huskers leading by one point at halftime, Aubry charged out of the locker room to score NU’s first seven points of the second half. She also pulled down all seven of her rebounds after halftime to help erase WSU’s 14-rebound edge in the first half.
Aubry opened the season with a then-career-high 16 points to go along with six rebounds in a 74-71 win over Western Illinois in the first round of the Preseason WNIT on Nov. 12. She added 16 points and four boards in the loss at No. 10 Notre Dame on Nov. 14.
Aubry was one of Nebraska’s top players off the bench during her true freshman campaign, averaging 5.5 points and 3.5 rebounds per contest. She played in all 30 games last season and averaged 18.4 minutes of action per contest off the bench.
Nebraska’s first-ever Canadian women’s basketball player, Aubry gained international experience this summer by playing with the Canadian Senior National Team. One of the top junior players in Canada, Aubry spent 2003 with the Canadian Under-20 National Team and represented her home country at the World University Games.
Gerhart On Mend After Having Appendix Removed
One of three leaders of Nebraska’s solid sophomore class, Jessica Gerhart did not travel to Oklahoma State on Feb. 1, and did not play against Oklahoma on Feb. 6, after undergoing routine surgery to have her appendix removed on Feb. 1 in Lincoln.
The procedure went well and Gerhart returned to the court for the first time at Texas on Feb. 9, and saw action off the bench against Iowa State, at Texas A&M and at Kansas. The 6-2 forward from Fenton, Iowa did not start NU’s win over Kansas on Jan. 29, playing just five minutes after experiencing flu-like symptons for much of the week leading up to the game.
Despite missing two full games and playing a total of 30 minutes in her last five appearances, Gerhart still ranks third on the team in scoring and rebounding with 9.0 points and 5.1 boards per game. She was averaging 12.9 points and 7.1 rebounds per game through the Huskers’ first 15 contests.
A CoSIDA Academic All-America nominee who has spent her time working in the classroom, in the community and on the court, Gerhart has far surpassed her production from all of last season. Through 25 contests, Gerhart has scored 208 points, 117 more than the 91 points she scored last season. She has also hit 14 three-pointers this season, after going without a made three-pointer last season.
Gerhart leads the Huskers with 118 rebounds, a total that has more than doubled the 52 boards she grabbed in all 30 games last season. She also ranks second on the squad with 11 blocked shots on the season.
Gerhart produced her first career double-double with 17 points and 11 rebounds in the win over Missouri on Jan. 8. Gerhart hit for a career-high 20 points in the Huskers’ 89-46 victory over Northern Colorado at the Devaney Center on Nov. 19, and followed that effort the next time out with a team-high 19 points in a win over Washington State on Nov. 22. She also led the Huskers with 16 points in NU’s win over Louisiana-Lafayette on Dec. 20, and 13 points in the Huskers’ rout of Memphis on Dec. 30. She added 16 more points in NU’s win over Colorado Jan. 5.
Gerhart hit the first three three-pointers of her career and finished with 13 points in the second-round Preseason WNIT loss at No. 10 Notre Dame. Her performance against the Fighting Irish followed a then-career high 17-point, nine-rebound effort in the first-round WNIT win over Western Illinois on Nov. 12. Against the Westerwinds, Gerhart also hit a pair of free throws with seven seconds left to seal NU’s three-point victory. She added 13 points at No. 10 Ohio State.
Hardy’s 37 in Baylor Win Places Her Among NU Elite
Kiera Hardy’s career-high 37-point performance in Nebraska’s win over No. 2 Baylor on Jan. 12, in Lincoln placed her among an elite list of Huskers.
Not only did Hardy’s total tie for the seventh-highest single-game effort in school history, it also provided her with her second 30-point effort of the season. Her first 30-point performance came against Hampton in the Paradise Jam in St. Thomas, Virgin Islands, on Nov. 27.
The two 30-point outbursts during her breakout sophomore season place her among a select group of Huskers who accomplished multiple 30-point games as sophomores. The last NU sophomore to produce a pair of 30-point games was two-time All-American Karen Jennings, who did it in 1990-91.
Debra Powell, who was an All-Big Eight performer on the court and an All-American sprinter on the track, was the first Husker sophomore to score 30 in a game on multiple occasions. Powell produced three 30-point games in 1982-83.
Maurtice Ivy, who was the Big Eight Player of the Year in 1988 after leading the Huskers to their only conference title in school history, matched Powell’s feat with a trio of 30-point performances as a sophomore in 1985-86.
A year later, Amy Stephens added two 30-point efforts during her sophomore season in 1986-87.
Hardy’s 37 points is the highest single-game total among the elite group of NU sophomore scorers and ranks as the second-highest scoring performance in school history by a sophomore, trailing only a 41-point eruption by Crystal Coleman against Oklahoma State on Feb. 19, 1983. The performance was Coleman’s only 30-point or more scoring game of her career, which ended at Nebraska after her sophomore season.
Hardy is just the seventh player in Nebraska history to record two or more 30-point efforts in the same season, and one of just eight Huskers to score 30 twice in her career. The last player to score 30 points twice in the same season was Kubik, who had a trio of 30-point performances in 1998-99. Only 16 different Huskers in history have scored 30 or more points in a single game - a total of 54 times. Jennings owns the NU record with 12 30-point scoring efforts in her career, including eight in 1991-92.
Hardy Attacking Nebraska Sophomore Scoring Record
Although she has played just 25 games in her sophomore season and just 52 games with 24 starts in her college career, Kiera Hardy became Nebraska’s active career scoring leader with her 29-point outburst at Creighton (37th career game) on Dec. 18. The 5-6 guard from Kansas City, Mo., has pushed her career total to 731 points, including 484 points in 25 games this season and 247 points in 27 games as a true freshman last season.
Hardy needs just 10 more points this season to crack NU’s top five list among sophomores in total points. Debra Powell ranks fifth among all-time NU sophomores with 494 points in 1982-83. Karen Jennings, who was a two-time All-American and earned the Wade Trophy as a senior, owns the sophomore scoring record at Nebraska with 574 points. Hardy would need to average 22.5 points per game over the next four games to match Jennings’ total. Over the past 21 games, Hardy is averaging 20.7 points per game.
NU senior guard Jina Johansen was the Huskers’ active leader in career points with 413 points in 97 career games, including 72 starts, entering the Creighton game. Johansen now ranks second among active Huskers with 529 points in 113 career games.
With 92 three-pointers in her career, Hardy is also Nebraska’s active three-point leader, ahead of Johansen’s 59 career three-pointers.
Johansen Sets Tone for Husker Turnaround
Jina Johansen, a preseason honorable-mention All-Big 12 selection by the media, has been a leader both on and off the court in her four seasons at Nebraska. Johansen is the only Husker to start all 25 games this year and leads the Huskers with 36.1 minutes per game after playing a school and Big 12 record 55 minutes in NU’s 103-99 triple overtime win over No. 2 Baylor on Jan. 12. That marathon performance by Johansen came after playing the full 40 minutes for the 13th time in her career in the win at Missouri on Jan. 8. She added her 14th 40-minute effort in the Huskers’ win over Kansas on Jan. 29, and a 15th 40-minute performance in the win at Texas A&M on Feb. 16.
Johansen owns 88 career starts, including 56 straight starts heading into Wednesday’s game against Kansas State. She started all 30 games as a junior and 27 of 28 contests as a sophomore in 2002-03, stepping out of the starting lineup only on Senior Night. She has led the Huskers in minutes played in each of the past two seasons and became one of Nebraska’s most dangerous offensive weapons from long range as a junior.
After knocking down just 9-of-36 three-pointers in her first two seasons combined, Johansen tied Kiera Hardy for the team lead with 30 three-pointers in 2003-04, while tying Amy Stephens (1987-88) for the second-best single-season three-point percentage in school history by connecting on 41.1 percent (30-73) of her attempts.
Johansen has been nearly as good from long range this season, hitting 40.8 percent (20-49) of her three-pointers on the year, including 52.2 percent (12-23) in Big 12 action. Her career 37.3 percent (59-158) success rate from long range ranks as the fourth-best three-point shooting percentage in school history.
Along with her increased success from long range, Johansen continued to provide a steady play-making presence for the Huskers by ranking fifth in the Big 12 with 4.8 assists per game. Her 144 assists on the year ranked as the fourth-best total by a junior in school history. She has already surpassed that total this season with 149 assists and is averaging 6.0 assists per game. She needs just 21 more assists to break Nebraska’s senior single-season record of 169 assists held by NU’s all-time assist leader Meggan Yedsena (1993-94).
While Johansen helped set the tone for the turnaround of the Nebraska program with her work ethic on the court, she has also established herself as a top performer in the classroom. Johansen is a two-time first-team academic All-Big 12 selection. She carries a 3.696 grade-point average as a nutrition/dietetics major.
Johansen Tough to Turn Over
One of the top point guards in the Big 12 Conference, senior Jina Johansen has proven herself as one of the most consistent ball-handlers in the league. Not only is she tied for second in the Big 12 with 149 total assists, she also ranks third in the conference with a 2.61 assist-to-turnover ratio.
Johansen has committed just 57 turnovers against her 149 assists. She set her career high with 11 assists in NU’s 73-59 win at Texas A&M on Feb. 16, after tying her previous career best with nine assists in Nebraska’s 88-59 win over No. 14 Iowa State on Feb. 12. Johansen did not commit a turnover and also set a career high with 16 points, while tying her career high with four three-pointers against the Cyclones.
She added a nine-assist effort at No. 23 Kansas State, along with an eight-assist performance at Missouri when she played the full 40 minutes without turning the ball over. She added eight more assists while playing a school and Big 12 record 55 minutes in Nebraska’s 103-99 triple overtime victory over No. 2 Baylor on Jan. 12.
As impressive as Johansen’s overall assist-to-turnover ratio is, she has been even better at the Devaney Center this year. Johansen has helped the Huskers to a 12-1 home record by dishing out 84 assists and committing just 23 turnovers in NU’s 13 home contests. Those numbers translate to a 3.65 assist-to-turnover ratio.
Diaz Earns Role as Starter in Big 12 Action
Elena Diaz has provided a major contribution in her first year at Nebraska after transferring from Dodge City (Kan.) Community College. Diaz has made 16 starts, including each of Nebraska’s last 11 Big 12 Conference games.
Over Nebraska’s last five games, Diaz is averaging 7.6 points, 6.0 rebounds, 2.0 assists and 1.2 steals per game. She had a six-point effort at Texas A&M that included a career-high nine rebounds, before providing a bright spot for the Huskers in Sunday’s loss at Kansas with eight points, four rebounds and a career-high four steals.
In NU’s 88-59 win over No. 14 Iowa State on Feb. 14, Diaz produced one of the best all-around efforts of her career when she scored eight points, grabbed seven rebounds and dished out a career-high six assists. She has increased her season averages to 5.4 points and 4.2 rebounds per game, after averaging just 4.0 points and 3.4 boards per game through NU’s first 14 games this season.
In Nebraska’s 103-99 triple overtime win over No. 2 Baylor on Jan. 12, Diaz tied a career high with 11 points, while pulling down seven rebounds. She earned her second straight start at Kansas State and contributed six points and eight rebounds.
Diaz added a solid outing with eight points, two rebounds, two assists and one steal against No. 10 Texas Tech, and eight points and three rebounds in NU’s win over Kansas on Jan. 29. She also started against Colorado. Diaz added a solid seven-point, seven-rebound effort in the win over Oklahoma on Feb. 6, before pitching in nine points and three boards in the loss at Texas on Feb. 9.
On the season, Diaz leads the team with her 54.9 field goal percentage, including a team-best 59.3 percent in Big 12 Conference action. Overall, Diaz’s shooting percentage would rank third in the Big 12, while her conference shooting percentage would easily lead the league, but she has not met the Big 12 minimum requirement of 3.0 made field goals per game. On the season, Diaz is averaging just 2.24 made field goals per game, but she is averaging 2.69 made field goals per game in Big 12 action.
Since taking over as a starter in the last 11 games, Diaz is shooting a sizzling 63.6 percent (35-55) from the field. In her last eight games, Diaz is shooting 67.6 percent (25-37) from the floor.
Diaz set her career high with 11 points in the win over Northern Colorado, which included 3-of-5 shooting from the field and 5-of-6 shooting from the free throw line. The junior from Medellin, Colombia, by way of Dodge City (Kan.) Community College added three rebounds and an assist in just 15 minutes of work against the Bears.
Diaz opened the season with a seven-point, five-rebound effort in the first-round Preseason WNIT victory over Western Illinois on Nov. 12, before making the first start of her career in the loss at No. 10 Notre Dame in the second round of the tournament. She added the second start of her career in the win over Southeastern Louisiana and her third start in the win over Tennessee-Martin, before getting the nod at No. 10 Ohio State.
Husker Individuals among Big 12 Leaders
Senior point guard Jina Johansen and sophomore Kiera Hardy are ranked among the Big 12 Conference leaders in several categories. Hardy ranks second in the league in scoring at 19.4 points per game, trailing only Kansas State senior Kendra Wecker (21.0 ppg). Hardy also ranks second in the conference with 2.48 made three-pointers per game, while her 62 three-pointers rank second in the Big 12. Hardy also ranks sixth in the league in free throw percentage (82.2 percent) and 14th in the conference in three-point field goal percentage (37.1 percent).
Jelena Spiric (80.3 percent) and Chelsea Aubry (78.0 percent) are right behind Hardy in individual free throw percentage in seventh and eighth place, respectively in the league.
Jina Johansen is tied for second in the Big 12 with 149 total assists, while her 6.0 assists per game rank third in the Big 12. She also ranks third in the Big 12 with her 2.61 assist-to-turnover ratio (149 assists-to-57 turnovers).
Husker freshman Danielle Page has vaulted up the Big 12 blocked shot chart in the past four weeks. Page, who has 16 blocks in the past eight games, ranks 10th in the league with 1.16 blocks per game. Her 29 total blocks rank as the fourth-best total by a freshman in school history.
Junior guard LaToya Howell has continued her climb up the league steals chart to rank 10th with 1.87 steals per game.
Howell Keys Husker Defensive Pressure
LaToya Howell has earned six starts this season, but has come off the bench in each of the last 11 games to provide an offensive and defensive spark for the Huskers.
Howell has helped the NU defense turn up the heat on the opposition by averaging 2.3 steals per game (34 total steals) over the last 15 games, including four games with four steals each during that stretch (Creighton, Colorado, Kansas State, Kansas).
The 5-5 guard started NU’s first two Big 12 Conference games, but has come off the bench in each of the Huskers’ last 11 contests. In the Huskers’ 103-99 triple overtime win over No. 2 Baylor, Howell sparked the Huskers with nine points off the bench. In NU’s 88-59 win over No. 14 Iowa State on Feb. 12, Howell scored eight points, including six in the first half, while producing three rebounds and two steals. She added eight points, four rebounds and two assists in 18 minutes off the bench against No. 10 Texas Tech on Jan. 19.
In NU’s win over Kansas on Jan. 29, Howell knocked down her only three-point attempt and hit a free throw to score the first four points of Nebraska’s decisive 10-0 run midway through the second half. Howell’s spark helped turn a 39-37 NU lead with 11 minutes left into a 49-37 edge with 7:50 to play against KU. She knocked down all six of her free throw attempts and snagged a pair of steals to help the Huskers to a 73-71 win over Oklahoma State on Feb 1.
Howell enters the Kansas State game averaging 3.9 points, 3.0 rebounds, 2.3 assists and a team-leading 1.9 steals per game.
After spending the entire 2003-04 season as a redshirt and missing Nebraska’s first two regular-season games in the Women’s National Invitation Tournament, Howell finally played her first regular-season game as a Husker in the win over Northern Colorado and made her first start in the win over Washington State.
Despite being limited somewhat while recovering from a severely sprained ankle suffered late in the first half of NU’s exhibition opener against Nebraska-Kearney, Howell scored a season-high 10 points, grabbed two rebounds and distributed three assists against Northern Colorado. She added seven points, a season-high six rebounds, three assists and two steals in the win over Washington State. She dished out a season-best six assists in the win over Southeastern Louisiana.
The junior from Chicago, Ill., was one of the Huskers’ top players in practice during her redshirt season after transferring from Air Force before the 2003 fall semester.
Howell was one of the best players in the Mountain West Conference as a sophomore, earning a pair of Mountain West Conference Player-of-the-Week awards in 2002-03. She started 17 games and averaged 17.4 points, 4.7 rebounds, 7.0 assists and 3.2 steals per game. Her top performance as a sophomore came with a 38-point outburst against Minnesota on Nov. 30, 2002, which tied the school single-game scoring record. She also set the school single-game steals record with eight steals against the Runnin’ Rebels on Feb. 23, 2002.
Despite playing a shortened sophomore season, Howell still set the Air Force single-season assist mark with 119 assists in 2002-03. She also established the school’s single-season steals record with 90 steals in 2001-02. As a freshman, Howell averaged 10.0 points, 2.6 rebounds, 3.9 assists and 3.2 steals per game.
Samardziska Shows Solid Production
Bojana Samardziska made a splash with a career-high 19 points in Nebraska’s 69-60 win over Tennessee-Martin on Dec. 7, and the junior college transfer has shown she is capable of producing solid numbers at times during the season.
Samardziska, a 6-4 center from Belgrade, Serbia & Montenegro, arrived against Tennessee-Martin by knocking down 9-of-12 shots from the field. She also hit her only free throw attempt of the game, while pulling down five rebounds, blocking two shots and snagging one steal in the win over the Skyhawks. She did all that in just 13 minutes of court time, in an amazingly productive performance.
Samardziska had scored just 21 points in Nebraska’s first seven games before her outburst against Tennessee-Martin. She entered the UT-Martin game averaging 3.3 points per game.
She added another hugely productive outing in the win over Memphis on Dec. 30, when she scored 11 points, grabbed six rebounds and added a blocked shot in just 11 minutes of action off the bench.
In Nebraska’s win over Colorado to open Big 12 Conference play on Jan. 5, Samardziska helped the Huskers with 10 points, three rebounds, two blocks and a steal in a career-high 20 minutes. She made her first start of the year in place of an injured Chelsea Aubry in the win at Missouri on Jan. 8.
Samardziska is averaging 3.5 points per game, despite playing just 7.4 minutes per contest. She has added 2.0 rebounds per game, while ranking third on the team with nine blocks. For the season, Samardziska is shooting 50.9 percent (27-53). She has also contributed eight steals and four assists.
In her two-year career at Colby (Kan.) Community College, Samardziska scored 1,038 points and grabbed 601 rebounds. She captured first-team NJCAA Region VI All-Tournament honors by averaging 26 points, 8.5 rebounds and 5.5 blocked shots per game in 2004. She averaged 17.6 points, 9.4 rebounds and 3.1 blocks per game on her way to second-team All-Jayhawk West Conference honors last season.
White, Drmanac Add Depth to Nebraska Roster
Freshman Sarah White’s production has been a pleasant surprise for the Huskers. NU coaches had considered redshirting White this season as she made the transition from high school post player to college wing player, but injuries to Nebraska backcourt players Heather Kephart, LaToya Howell and Jelena Spiric forced White into action earlier than expected.
The 6-0 native of Topeka, Kan., stepped up to the challenge. After going scoreless in eight minutes in the season-opening win over Western Illinois, White struck for six points, including her first career three-pointer, in the loss at No. 10 Notre Dame. She produced a career-high seven-point performance in the win over Southeastern Louisiana on Dec. 1.
White, who has played in 15 games this season, including meaningful minutes in each of the Huskers’ last four games, has been solid off the bench throughout the season. Against Memphis, she scored six points and and grabbed three rebounds in 12 minutes. She added six more points and one rebound in just six minutes of work against Colorado. She tied her career high by playing 12 minutes in the loss at Texas, where she scored two first-half points and added three rebounds. She added two more points and three rebounds in just four minutes in the win over Iowa State on Feb. 12, before scoring two points and grabbing one rebound in the win at Texas A&M on Feb. 16. She matched her career-high again with 12 minutes at Kansas, including significant minutes in the first half against her homestate school. She is averageing 2.6 points and 1.3 rebounds per game.
Junior college transfer Ivana Drmanac has also added depth to Nebraska’s backcourt. The 6-1 forward has played in 16 games and averaged 1.0 points and 0.7 rebounds per game for the Huskers. She has also knocked down four three-pointers for the Huskers, and dished out eight assists in just 6.1 minutes per game.
Huskers Take Care of the Rock
The Huskers have produced two of the top three turnover marks in school history in Coach Connie Yori’s first two seasons at NU and are on their way to their best season of taking care of the basketball under Yori this season.
Nebraska is averaging just 15.1 turnovers of per game (377 total turnovers) and committed a season-low seven turnovers in its win at Missouri on Jan. 8. The Huskers are averaging 15.5 turnovers per contest in conference play.
Last season, the Huskers committed just 488 turnovers (16.3 per game), which ranked as the second-lowest total in school history, trailing only the 369 turnovers in 32 games in 1991-92 (11.5 per game).
The Huskers achieved their third-lowest turnover total with 497 total turnovers (17.8 per game) in Coach Connie Yori’s first season at Nebraska in 2002-03.
Nebraska displayed an uncanny ability to protect the basketball through the first four games this season. The Huskers committed just 45 turnovers, an average of 11.3 per game, through the first four contests, including just nine turnovers in the loss at No. 10 Notre Dame.
NU committed just 10 turnovers in the season-opening win over Western Illinois, despite playing with an injury-depleted backcourt and a roster that included seven newcomers who have seen significant playing time this year. NU added just 11 turnovers in the win over Washington State.
Nebraska Leads Big 12 at the Free Throw Line
Nebraska is shooting a Big 12 Conference-leading 75.1 percent at the free throw line this season, and the Huskers have continued to improve at the line throughout the season.
In Big 12 games, the Huskers have connected on a conference-best 78.3 percent of their free throws. Over the past four games, Nebraska is shooting a 85.5 percent at the free throw line. The Huskers hit 14-of-15 free throws at No. 17 Texas, before burying 12-of-14 free throws in the win over No. 14 Iowa State in Lincoln on Feb. 12. The Huskers knocked down 13-of-15 free throws in the win over Texas A&M in College Station on Feb. 16, including their last eight free throws in the closing minutes to secure the win. NU added 8-of-11 shooting at the line in the loss at Kansas on Sunday.
Nebraska starters Jina Johansen (86.7 percent), Jelena Spiric (80.3 percent) and Kiera Hardy (82.2 percent) are all shooting better than 80 percent from the line, while Chelsea Aubry (78.0 percent), Jessica Gerhart (75 percent), Danielle Page (71.2 percent) and LaToya Howell (72.0 percent) have each hit better than 70 percent of their free throws this season.
Yori Working to Establish Foundation at Nebraska
Now in her third season at Nebraska, Coach Connie Yori has the Husker program moving in the right direction. After the Huskers suffered through four consecutive losing seasons, Yori helped Nebraska turn the corner in 2003-04 by producing one of the nation’s top turnarounds. The Huskers’ 10-game improvement tied for the ninth-best swing in NCAA Division I women’s basketball in 2003-04. More impressively, NU’s 18-12 record came against a powerful schedule that included 19 games against teams that advanced to postseason play.
The Huskers raced to a 10-1 non-conference record that included victories over No. 13 Ohio State and eventual WNIT champion Creighton, before notching one of the biggest wins in school history with an 81-63 victory over No. 9 Kansas State in league play. The Huskers finished with a 7-9 record in the Big 12 to finish in a tie for seventh place. NU was a two-point loss to Missouri or three-point loss to No. 13 Colorado away from earning a spot in the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2000.
The Huskers made their first postseason appearance since 2000 and played host to a postseason tournament game for the first time since 1993. Nebraska notched just the second home postseason victory in school history with a first-round WNIT win over Drake, before hosting just the third postseason game in school history in the second round against Oregon State.
Along with the success on the court, the Huskers also enjoyed a rejuvenation at the turnstiles, as attendance grew nearly 20 percent from the 2002-03 season. Nearly 450 more fans per game were in attendance at the Devaney Center last year, while 10,000 more total fans came to women’s basketball games than a year earlier. The Huskers averaged nearly 3,100 fans per game in 2003-04.
Although the Huskers struggled to an 8-20 overall record and a 1-15 Big 12 mark in 2002-03, NU players accepted the principles of hard work and conditioning and showed major strides throughout the season. Despite carrying a roster of just five or six scholarship players in 2002-03, NU returned five experienced starters for 2003-04. That group of five starters was a model of consistency, starting all 30 games to help fuel Nebraska’s turnaround.
The Huskers also featured some depth in 2003-04, a luxury they lacked in 2002-03. Yori and her staff made up some major ground on the recruiting trail by adding five freshmen to their 2003-04 roster. They continued their recruiting success by adding one Division I transfer, four junior college transfers and a pair of freshmen for the 2004-05 season.
The 2002 Missouri Valley Conference Coach of the Year, Yori led Creighton to a 24-7 overall mark and a 16-2 MVC record in 2001-02 to capture the league’s regular-season and tournament titles. Yori’s success at CU in 2001-02 capped a 170-115 career mark at Creighton. Her teams made two trips to the NCAA Tournament in 1994 and 2002. Before taking over the top job with the Bluejays, Yori led NCAA Division III Loras College to a 25-25 record in two seasons from 1990 to 1992. She also served as an assistant coach at Creighton from 1986 to 1989.
Yori was one of the top players in Creighton history, and she still owns the school record for career scoring average at 20.3 points per game. She ranks as CU’s No. 3 all-time leading scorer with 2,010 points, and she had her No. 25 jersey retired. She was inducted into the Creighton Athletic Hall of Fame in 1992.
A native of Ankeny, Iowa, the 41-year-old Yori is married to Kirk Helms, and the couple had their first child, Lukas, in early July of 2004.
Huskers Facing Another Challenging Schedule
After playing 19 games against teams that advanced to the postseason in 2004, the Huskers are again squaring off against another loaded schedule in 2004-05.
The Huskers, who played six 2004 postseason qualifiers during the non-conference season, opened the regular season in the 2004 Preseason Women’s National Invitation Tournament. The Preseason WNIT began Nov. 12 with the Huskers’ win over Western Illinois (74-71). NU advanced to the second round to take on 2004 NCAA Sweet 16 qualifier Notre Dame. The Huskers fell to the No. 10 Fighting Irish, 73-57 in South Bend. The Irish went on to win the Preseason WNIT title, and the Huskers rebounded with impressive home victories over Northern Colorado (89-46) on Nov. 19, and Washington State (78-61) on Nov. 22.
Nebraska traveled to St. Thomas in the Virgin Islands for the Paradise Jam during the Thanksgiving holiday and returned with a third-place showing after falling to eventual champion North Carolina State (55-45) on Nov. 26. The Wolfpack earned a bid to the 2004 NCAA Tournament. NU faced another postseason team and came away with a 72-54 win over 2004 NCAA Tournament qualifier Hampton on Nov. 27.
After running past Southeastern Louisiana, 82-35 at home on Dec. 1, the Huskers defeated Tennessee-Martin, 69-60, on Dec. 7. Nebraska suffered its second loss to a top 10 team this season when it fell at No. 10 Ohio State, 86-61, on Dec. 11. The Buckeyes advanced to the second round of the 2004 NCAA Tournament.
The Huskers fell to 2004 WNIT Champion Creighton, 58-57, at the Omaha Civic Auditorium on Dec. 18, before rebounding for an impressive 81-70 win over Louisiana-Lafayette, which finished its non-conference season with a 10-3 record, on Dec. 20. Nebraska closed the non-conference season with its best performance of the year in an 82-50 rout of 2004 WNIT qualifier Memphis at the Devaney Center on Dec. 30. The Lady Tigers returned four starters from a team that won 20 games in 2003-04.
Nebraska opened Big 12 play with an impressive 84-62 win over Colorado to give the Huskers their second straight victory over a 2004 postseason qualifier, and made it three wins in a row over 2004 postseason teams with 81-74 come-from-behind win at Missouri on Jan. 8. The Huskers added the biggest win in school history by knocking off No. 2 Baylor, 103-99 in triple overtime at the Devaney Center on Jan. 12.
The Huskers suffered their first conference loss in a 74-59 setback at No. 23 Kansas State on Jan. 15, before dropping their first home game in league action to No. 10 Texas Tech, 68-58, on Jan. 19. NU also fell at No. 19 Iowa State 74-54, to end a streak of four straight games against ranked foes.
Nebraska rebounded with a 59-48 win over Kansas in Lincoln on Jan. 29, before knocking off Oklahoma State in Stillwater on Feb. 1. The Huskers snapped a six-game series losing streak to 2004 NCAA qualifier Oklahoma with a 70-51 win over the Sooners in a FSN national television broadcast on Feb. 6, before falling at No. 17 Texas 83-53, on Feb. 9.
The Huskers rebounded with their most lopsided win over a ranked opponent in school history with an 88-59 win over No. 14 Iowa State on Feb. 12. The Huskers added their third road Big 12 win of the year with a solid 73-59 win at Texas A&M on Feb. 16, before falling on the road to Kansas 67-53 on Feb. 20.
Through 25 games in 2004-05, Nebraska is 4-7 against teams that advanced to the 2004 NCAA Tournament and 2-2 against 2004 Postseason WNIT qualifiers, giving the Huskers a 6-9 overall record against 2004 postseason clubs.
Nebraska’s History of Success at Home
Since the Bob Devaney Sports Center opened in 1976-77, the Huskers are 289-101 (.741) in games played in the arena, including 104-64 (.619) in conference games.
The Huskers have opened 2004-05 with a 12-1 home record, after running to a 13-4 home mark in 2003-04. NU’s home victory total last year more than doubled its home victory total from 2002-03. The Huskers were 5-3 at home in the Big 12 and 8-1 against non-conference competition, including 1-1 in postseason WNIT play. Nebraska is 2-1 all-time in home postseason play, with an 81-58 win over San Diego on March 17, 1993, in the first round of the NCAA Tournament at the Devaney Center. The Huskers added a 73-60 win over Drake in the first round of the WNIT on March 18, 2004, before losing 75-67 in the next round to Oregon State on March 22, 2004.
Attendance is a big part of the Huskers’ success. Nebraska’s average home attendance increased nearly 20 percent in 2003-04 to 3,074 fans per game. The Huskers averaged 449 more fans per game than the 2,625 fans per contest that NU drew in 2002-03.
Nebraska’s average home attendance is on the rise again in 2004-05, as the Huskers have averaged 3,262 fans per game through their first 13 home games. NU drew its third-largest crowd in school history with a season-high 12,429 fans in attendance for an 88-59 win over No. 14 Iowa State on Feb. 12. It was NU’s largest crowd in the past five seasons, dating back to a school-record crowd of 13,226 against Kansas State on Feb. 26, 2000.
Over the past seven seasons, the Huskers have averaged 3,735 fans per game, attracting 380,941 fans to the Devaney Center for 102 home contests. Nebraska ranked 14th nationally in average home attendance in 1999-2000 after ranking 15th nationally with a school-record average of 5,000 fans per game in 1998-99.
Nebraska’s Top 10 Single-Game Attendance Figures
1. 13,226 Kansas State Feb. 26, 2000 W, 65-56
2. 13,135 #15 Iowa State Feb. 7, 1999 W, 68-67
3. 12,429 #14 Iowa State Feb. 12, 2004 W, 88-59
4. 12,181 #22 Iowa State Feb. 28, 1998 W, 78-53
5. 11,465 Colorado Feb. 22, 1998 W, 68-60
6. 10,221 #11 Texas Tech Feb. 21, 1999 L, 62-75
7. 8,637 #13 Texas Tech Feb. 9, 1997 W, 62-57
8. 7,901 #23 Kansas Feb. 13, 2000 W, 75-72
9. 7,012 Iowa State Feb. 23, 1997 L, 55-57
10. 6,488 Texas A&M Jan. 22, 2000 W, 74-71
Fastbreakers Booster Club Corner
The Nebraska Women’s Basketball Booster Club, The Fastbreakers, and the Lil’ Breakers provide dynamic support to the Huskers. Membership benefits include regular news flashes during the season, a free Nebraska Yearbook, game information, monthly pre-game meals with the coaches, traveling Fastbreakers, an invitation to the postseason awards banquet and a Senior Night reception.
For more information on the Fastbreakers and Lil’ Breakers Booster Club, please call the Fastbreaker Hotline at (402) 434-6501.
The Fastbreakers have hosted several Pregame "Backboard Banquets" during the season. The banquets are held for 5 p.m. on the upper concourse of the Devaney Center. This year’s banquets have included guest speakers and several giveaways.
The cost of each meal is $10 per person and the proceeds go to the Husker women’s basketball program. For reservations to attend the final pre-game "Backboard Banquet" please call Rose at (402) 472-6462.
2005 Fastbreakers Pregame Backboard Banquet
Saturday, Feb. 26, Missouri, 5 p.m.