Husker Game Day
Nebraska Game Notes: Click here
Iowa State Game Notes: Click here
Game Date: Wednesday, March 4, 2009<?xml:namespace prefix="o" ns="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office"?>
Release Date: Tuesday, March 3, 2009
Tipoff Time: 6:37 p.m. CT
Venue: Bob Devaney Sports Center (13,595)
TV: Fox Sports Midwest; ESPN FullCourt, Play-by-play: Greg Sharpe. Color: Eric Piatkowski.
Satellite TV: DirecTV (Channel 652); Dish (Channel 447)
Radio: Husker Sports Radio Network stations, Play-by-play: Kent Pavelka. Color: Matt Davison.
Internet Radio/Stats: Free on Huskers.com
Satellite Radio: TBA
Parking at the Devaney Center: Map (PDF)
Getting Around: Devaney Center Fan Guide (PDF)
Weather around Lincoln: Lincoln Weather
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Huskers Look to Send Seniors Out on Winning Note Against Iowa State
The Nebraska Cornhuskers will try to snap a three-game losing streak when they play host to Iowa State at the Devaney Center on Wednesday.The Huskers and Cyclones will tip off at 6:37 p.m. in a contest that can be seen on Fox Sports Midwest with Greg Sharpe (play by play) and Eric Piatkowski (color) calling the action. The game will be seen within the state of Nebraska on Fox Sports Midwest on Time Warner Channel 37 in Lincoln; Cox Channel 47 and Qwest Channel 33 in Omaha; DirecTV Channel 652; and Dish Network channel 447. It can also be seen around the country on ESPN Fullcourt.
All of Nebraska’s games can also be heard on the IMG Husker Sports Radio Network, consisting of 31 stations around the state and on the Internet at Huskers.com. Veteran play-by-play man Kent Pavelka calls the action and former Husker Matt Davison provides color commentary.
The Cornhuskers hope to rebound after dropping a pair of tight games last week as the two losses came by a combined six points. They were part of 11 Nebraska games this season that have been decided by six or fewer points (5-6 record).
Nebraska will try to send its senior class out on a high note as this will be the last regular-season home game in the careers of seniors Ade Dagunduro, Steve Harley, Nick Krenk and Paul Velander. NU has won on Senior Night at the Devaney Center in 10 of the last 12 years with the only losses coming in 1997 (lost to No. 1 Kansas) and 2006 (lost to Kansas State). The Huskers have played Iowa State twice on Senior Night, an eight-point win in 2003 and a three-point victory in 2004.
Nebraska entered the week ranked No. 17 nationally in scoring defense at 59.3 ppg. Nebraska has been even better at home, holding Big 12 teams to 57.0 points per game in the Devaney Center this season. Only two league teams - Kansas (68) and Oklahoma State (76 in OT) ? have topped the 60-point plateau this year in Lincoln.
The Huskers hope to keep their offense rolling after hitting 49 percent from the floor and scoring 72 points on the road at Kansas State on Saturday. At home, the Huskers are 4-3 in league play while scoring 60.6 points per game. NU has not scored more than 58 points in any of its last three home Big 12 games, although it owns a 2-1 record in that span.
Junior guard Ryan Anderson is coming off one of his best offensive games of the year after scoring 19 points on 7-of-9 shooting at KSU. He hit 2-of-4 from long range, and has connected on 43.5 percent (10-of-23) from 3-point range the past seven games.
Scouting the Cyclones
Nebraska will be looking to even the season series this week after falling at Iowa State in its first road game of the Big 12 slate nearly seven weeks ago. The win is one of just three Cyclone victories in league play as ISU enters the midweek matchup at the Devaney Center with a 14-15 overall record and a 3-11 Big 12 mark heading into the final week of the regular season.
Just like the Huskers, Iowa State has lost four of its last five matchups with the only victory in that stretch a 71-62 win at home over the Huskers’ final regular-season opponent, Baylor. In its last outing, the Cyclones fell at Texas A&M over the weekend by an 87-69 margin.
Iowa State hit 49.2 percent (29-of-59) from th field and had just 10 turnovers against the Aggies, but A&M knocked down 52.5 percent (31-of-59) from the field, including 12-of-27 from 3-point range. Texas A&M also hit 13-of-16 at the free throw line while ISU went to the charity stripe just six times, connecting on four free throw attempts.
Sophomore forward Craig Brackins led the way with 20 points and five rebounds while hitting 9-of-20 attempts from the field. Brackins is a solid candidate for first-team all-conference honors this season as he has averaged 19.9 points and 9.1 rebounds per game while hitting 47.2 percent from the field. He also leads the team with 29 blocked shots.
In Big 12 Conference play, Brackins has been even more dominant, averaging 21.6 points and 9.8 rebounds per contest while hitting 75.6 percent (65-of-86) from the free throw line. Brackins ranks second in scoring, fourth in rebounding and is fifth in field-goal percentage (45.2 percent) in league action this season.
Along with Brackins, the Cyclones have gotten solid production from point guard Diante Garrett, who has gained 9.7 points and 3.3 rebounds while adding 5.1 assists per game. Lucca Staiger, who attended the same school in Germany as NU freshman Christopher Niemann (although they did not play together), has gained 8.0 points per contest and along with Bryan Petersen, the duo has for 109 combined
3-pointers this season. Petersen adds 2.7 assists per game.
As a team, the Cyclones are averaging just 64.6 points per game but have been solid on the defensive end, allowing only 64.3 points per contest. Iowa State is among the Big 12 leaders in scoring defense and free throw percentage, hitting 71 percent at the line.
Iowa State is coached by Greg McDermott (Northern Iowa, 1988), who is in his third season with the Cyclones. McDermott has posted a 43-49 record in Ames and owns a 264-176 career record over the past 15 seasons as a head coach.
Possible Iowa State Starting Lineup
Name Pos. Ht. Wt. Pt. Rb.
Diante Garrett G 6-4 185 9.7 *5.1
Bryan Petersen G 6-1 180 6.2 3.9
Lucca Staiger G 6-5 225 8.0 2.3
Craig Brackins F 6-10 230 19.9 9.1
Justin Hamilton C 6-11 255 4.5 3.1
*assists per game
Nebraska-Iowa State Team Comparison
NU Stat ISU
64.3___ Points Per Game______ 64.6
59.3 Points Allowed Per Game___ 64.3
44.1_ Field Goal Percentage____ 42.9
42.2 Field Goal Percentage Defense 40.9
36.9 3pt Field Goal Percentage___ 34.3
33.1 3pt Field Goal Percentage Defense 32.6
68.7 Free Throw Percentage____ 71.0
28.5_ Rebounds Per Game_____ 33.9
-5.6___ Rebound Margin______ -1.7
13.2___ Assists Per Game______ 14.3
11.8_ Turnovers Per Game_____ 12.1
8.5____ Steals Per Game_______ 4.1
1.8____ Blocks Per Game_______ 3.5
17.5___ Fouls Per Game______ 15.8
The Series vs. Iowa State
The Cornhuskers and Cyclones are meeting for the 230th time in series history this week. The Huskers lead the series by a 129-100 advantage after the Cyclones won the first meeting of the season in Ames.
Nebraska leads the series despite dropping five of the past seven matchups. NU is 1-4 against the Cyclones since the start of the 2006-07 campaign.
The Huskers own a 10-15 record against Iowa State since the start of the Big 12 era in the 1996-97 season.
Nebraska and Iowa State have split the season series eight times in the first 12 years of the Big 12 Conference.
The Huskers own a 77-32 record over the Cyclones in Lincoln, including a 20-13 record in the Devaney Center.
Seventeen of the past 33 meetings have been decided by six or fewer points.
In Lincoln, nine of the 12 games during the Big 12 era have been decided by eight or fewer points.
In the first matchup of the season, the Huskers trailed by just a basket with 2:12 to play, 55-53, but saw the Cyclones use a 10-0 run to close out the victory. Nebraska shot just 34.5 percent from the floor and was outrebounded by a 42-28 margin. Ade Dagunduro led the way with 13 points, five rebounds and two steals while Cookie Miller had 11 points, four assists and three steals. Steve Harley had 10 points but hit just 4-of-14 from the field while adding five boards and three assists.
During last year’s contest in Lincoln, the Huskers got a balanced performance from its offense while earning an eight-point victory, 64-56. Aleks Maric led the way with 14 points and 13 rebounds while Ryan Anderson and Sek Henry each added 11 points and five boards. Nebraska had 11 steals and forced 20 Iowa State turnovers. Jiri Hubalek posted 18 points while Craig Brackins had 14 points for the Cyclones, who hit just 36 percent after the intermission.
Quick Hits
Here is a quick look at the Huskers through games of Feb. 28:
Quick team notes
The 2009 Huskers recorded a .500 or better mark at the midway point of conference play for just the fourth time in the Big 12 era (1998, 4-4; 1999, 5-3; 2006, 5-3; 2009, 4-4).
Since the start of the 2008 league season, the Huskers have held 12 Big 12 opponents to under 60 points in a game, including four of their last eight games (Colorado, 53 points; Texas, 55; Colorado, 41; Texas A&M, 57).
Overall, the Huskers have held Big 12 opponents to 70 or fewer points in 19 of their last 23 games against league teams, including last year’s league tournament.
With the Big 12 Conference’s top defense, Nebraska is giving up just 59.3 points per game. Since 1951, the Huskers have had a better scoring defense through a whole season only once (1982, 55.3 ppg).
The Huskers ranked 17th nationally in scoring defense on Monday, March 2.
Nebraska’s win over Colorado marked the third time this season Nebraska held an opponent to under 50 points (San Jose State, 46; IPFW, 48). Nebraska and Colorado set the Big 12 record low for combined points in NU’s 46-41 victory in Lincoln.
Nebraska tied the NCAA record with zero turnovers in a half in each of its last two home games. The Huskers first turned the trick in the opening period against Colorado at home and then did it again in the first half against Texas A&M. Eight times this season Nebraska has committed three or fewer turnovers in a half.
Nebraska has forced three conference opponents (Kansas State, 25; Kansas, 21; at Texas Tech, 20) into 20 or more turnovers in a game this season.
Nebraska is second in the league and entered the week seventh nationally in turnover margin (+5.4). The Huskers rank second in the league in fewest turnovers at 11.9 per game.
The Huskers were also in the top 75 nationally at the start of this week in turnovers per game (19th), steals per game (38th), assist-to-turnover ratio (57th) and 3-point field-goal percentage (69th).
In 27 games, only three teams (No. 6/5 Oklahoma, Oklahoma State in overtime and Kansas State) have topped the 70-point plateau against the Huskers this year. Two of those games ? at Oklahoma and Kansas State ? were on the road.
NU tied the school record (originally set at Iowa State in 2002) with only three turnovers against Maryland Eastern Shore. NU also had just six turnovers against Saint Louis and Colorado, seven at No. 6/5 Oklahoma and eight vs. Kansas and Texas A&M.
With victories at Texas Tech and Colorado, Nebraska won consecutive road games in conference play for the first time since 2006-07, when the Huskers won at Missouri and came from 13 points down to win at Texas Tech. Overall it was just the fifth time since the formation of the league that the Huskers won consecutive road league contests.
Nebraska posted its second double-figure comeback victory of the season by erasing a 12-point, second-half deficit vs. then-No. 16/17 Texas to win 58-55. It marked the ninth straight season NU has defeated a ranked team. NU currently owns a 5-12 record against ranked squads under Doc Sadler.
Nebraska has 179 3-pointers this season. The 2009 Huskers move onto the season top-10 list at Kansas State on Saturday, and now rank ninth in school history. In each of coach Doc Sadler’s two seasons, the Huskers have posted at least 190 3-pointers and ranked in the top six in Nebraska history.
Individual quick notes
Senior guard Ade Dagunduro has posted at least 20 points in a game three times in Big 12 Conference games. He had not scored 20 points in any of his first 46 career games at Nebraska.
Earlier this season Dagunduro hit 26-of-32 (81.3 percent) over a four-game span (ending with Maryland Eastern Shore).
Dagunduro tied the school single-game record by hitting all nine field-goal attempts against UMBC, the second-best single-game mark in the league during the Big 12 era.
Dagunduro had three straight made field goals to end the IPFW contest, connected on nine consecutive against UMBC and then knocked in his first three shots against South Carolina State to set the school record for consecutive made field goals at 15. Dagunduro surpassed Mikki Moore for the mark, as Moore had 13 straight made shots over three games in the 1997 NIT.
Senior guard Steve Harley has struggled on offense in league play but has picked up his game in other areas. He is averaging 3.3 rebounds per game and has a team-high 24 steals in 14 games. He ranks fourth in Big 12-only games with 1.7 steals per contest.
Senior guard Paul Velander has 58 treys and needs four 3-pointers to break into the Nebraska single-season top 10. He is already tied for eighth on the NU class list. Only five Huskers have had more than 60 3-pointers during their senior season, and only one has had more than 67 (Cary Cochran with school record 89 in 2002).
Junior guard Ryan Anderson recorded his 100th career steal earlier this year against Kansas at home. He is nearing the Nebraska career top 10 as he needs 21 steals to reach the list.
Sophomore guard Cookie Miller leads the team with 98 assists. He is going to become the first Husker to lead NU in assists as a freshman and sophomore since Tyronn Lue in 1995-96 and 1996-97.
With two more assists, Miller will join Tyronn Lue as the only Huskers in program history to post at least 100 assists in each of their freshman and sophomore seasons.
Redshirt freshman Brandon Richardson has posted at least nine points in two of the Huskers’ last five games (12 vs. Missouri, 9 vs. Texas A&M). He had at least nine points just twice in his first 18 games this year.
Close Calls
Despite struggling on offense much of the season, Nebraska has been in nearly every game at the very end, leading to a large number of close calls this season.
Overall, the Huskers have had 11 games this season decided by six or fewer points with Nebraska holding a 5-6 record. The Huskers had 14 games decided by six or fewer points in coach Doc Sadler’s first two seasons combined.
Seven of the games in 2008-09 have been decided by one possession, with the Huskers holding a 3-4 record in games decided by three points or less. Nebraska had just four games decided by one possession in coach Doc Sadler’s first two years at Nebraska.
Nebraska is 2-2 in conference games decided by three points or less following its last-second loss to Texas A&M.
The last time Nebraska had more than 11 games decided by six or fewer points in a season was 2000-01. Nebraska went 7-9 in those games that year.
Better and Better
While the Huskers have found tough times on offense in conference play, one constant throughout the season has been the play of senior guard Ade Dagunduro.
The Inglewood, Calif., native has put his name into consideration for all-conference honors by averaging better than 14 points per game in league action while helping the Huskers fight for an upper division finish and a second straight postseason berth.
Dagunduro has averaged 14.4 points per game in league action to rank among the top 13 scorers in the conference. He has 202 points through 14 games, more than double his total in 16 contests last year (93 points, 5.8 ppg).
He also ranks in Big 12-only stats in rebounding (t-15th), field-goal percentage (4th) and steals (t-15th).
Dagunduro has scored at least 17 points in five games against Big 12 foes this year, including a career-high 24 points in a six-point setback against Kansas. Last year, his Big 12 single-game high was 14 points at Kansas State.
Dagunduro has scored in double figures in 11-of-14 Big 12 games this year, after posting just four double-figure scoring games against conference teams last year.
He leads the team in Big 12 play with 4.9 rebounds per game. Dagunduro is also the team leader in league action for field goals (72), field-goal attempts (136), field-goal percentage (52.9), free throws (52), free throw attempts (74) and blocked shots (7).
Sadler Ties Mark
Husker coach Doc Sadler has quickly gained the attention of the rest of the coaches in the Big 12 Conference as, in just three seasons, he has made Nebraska one of the toughest squads to prepare for in the league.
A skillful tactician and master motivator, Sadler’s excellence on the sideline has taken hold as he has shot up the NU record book.
Sadler tied Moe Iba’s school record for most wins in the first three seasons on the NU sideline with his 53rd victory, a 46-41 victory over Colorado at home on Feb. 18.
Sadler previously tied the school record with 37 wins in his first two seasons, equaling the mark originally set by Paul Schlisser who coached two years at Nebraska in the early 1920s.
Last year, Sadler joined Danny Nee as the only Nebraska coaches to reach the postseason at least once in their first two seasons on the Husker sideline.
Sadler and Nee are the only two Nebraska coaches since World War II to post at least one 20-win season in their first two years.
Coaching Wins at Nebraska (first three seasons only)
No. Coach, First Three Years Wins Record
1. Doc Sadler, 2007-present 53 53-38
Moe Iba, 1981-83 53 53-34
3. Danny Nee, 1987-89 51 51-46
4. “Jumbo” Stiehm, 1912-14 46 46-6
5. Barry Collier, 2001-03 38 38-50
6. Harry Good, 1947-49 37 37-37
Joe Cipriano, 1964-66 37 37-38
8. R.G. Clapp, 1904-06 32 32-12
9. Charles T. Black, 1927-29 30 30-22
10. E.J. Stewart, 1917-19 29 29-23
11. Jerry Bush, 1955-57 27 27-40
12. A.J. Lewandowski, 1941-43 20 20-23
13. William H. Browne, 1933-35 16 16-36
14. Frank Lehmer, 1897-99 7 7-3
Back to the 50s
Nebraska has been one of the top defensive teams in the nation each of the past two seasons under coach Doc Sadler.
The Huskers led the Big 12 Conference in scoring defense in 2007-08, allowing just 60.7 points per game to rank 18th nationally. It was the Huskers’ best scoring defense since 1982 (55.3 ppg).
Nebraska entered this week ranked 17th nationally in scoring defense and is currently holding teams to 59.3 points per game despite allowing a season-high 77 points at Kansas State last weekend. In league play, the Huskers are also first in scoring defense, allowing 62.5 points per game in Big 12-only games.
Nebraska is one of only two league teams (also Kansas, 63.5 ppg) allowing less than 68.0 points per game in Big 12 play.
Through 14 Big 12 games, the Huskers have held five teams to 55 or fewer points, including Missouri (51), Kansas State (51), at Colorado (53), Texas (55) and vs. Colorado (41). Nebraska previously had held four league teams to 55 or fewer points in coach Doc Sadler’s first two seasons combined. The Huskers also held Texas A&M to 57 points to give it six games allowing less than 60 points in league action.
Before this year against Colorado (53 points) and Texas (55), the last time Nebraska held consecutive Big 12 opponents to 55 or fewer points was 1999 when NU held Iowa State and Colorado to 52 points apiece in back-to-back road games.
Dating to last season, Nebraska has held seven of its last nine Big 12 Conference foes at the Devaney Center to 57 or fewer points. Three times in that frame the Huskers have held teams under 50 points.
Nebraska’s 59.3 ppg scoring defense gives the 2009 Huskers a chance to become only the second NU squad since 1951 to allow less than 60 points per contest for a whole season. In that span, only the 1982 NU squad has finished a season allowing less than 60 points per contest, as it gave up 55.3 points per game to rank 10th nationally.
NU has held teams to 55 or fewer points 30 times under coach Doc Sadler in the past three years, including 11 times against league opponents.
And One In the 40s
Nebraska’s defensive effort reached even deeper in its last home game when it faced Colorado at home on Feb. 18. The Huskers needed the strong defensive effort as Nebraska’s offense struggled to score against the Buffs, but still managed to record a 46-41 victory.
The 87 combined points were a Big 12 record low. The previous low was 89 points between two teams on two occasions, both in 2006 and with both games involving Texas A&M.
The Huskers held CU to 41 points, marking the fifth time in the past six meetings NU held the Buffs to 55 or fewer points, and second straight game in Lincoln it held CU to 49 or fewer points.
Colorado’s 41 points were the fewest Nebraska has allowed a league opponent since giving up just 41 points in a two-point loss to Kansas State in the 1984 Big Eight Tournament.
Nebraska’s 46 points were the fewest by the Huskers in a victory since 1966, when NU defeated Oklahoma 45-41 in Stillwater, Okla., in a game that went into overtime.
Handling with Care
Nebraska coach Doc Sadler has preached that the Huskers need to be efficient within their offense and not give away easy points. That philosophy includes taking care of the ball, something the Huskers have succeeded in doing well this season.
Despite posting a season-high 20 turnovers at No. 17/19 Missouri on Feb. 14, NU has averaged just 11.8 turnovers per game this season and entered the week ranked 19th nationally in the category.
The Huskers moved back to first place in the Big 12 Conference after the performance vs. Colorado, when NU had zero turnovers in the first half and six for the game. In conference-only games, NU is second in the league standings for turnovers per game at 11.9, joining Texas (11.7 tpg) as the only teams averaging less than 12 turnovers per game in Big 12 play.
Nebraska tied the NCAA, Big 12 and school record with zero (0) turnovers in the first half at home against Colorado and turned the trick again in the opening frame against Texas A&M. NU posted its Big 12-best with six total miscues against the Buffs, all after the half, while finishing with eight TOs against the Aggies.
The Huskers tied the school record by committing just three turnovers against Maryland Eastern Shore. NU equaled the team mark originally set in 2002 at Iowa State. Nebraska had just one turnover in the first half against Maryland Eastern Shore, and two miscues following the break.
Nebraska’s Best Turnover Games of 2008-09
Opponent NU Turnovers
Maryland Eastern Shore *3
Colorado **6
Saint Louis 6
at Oklahoma 7
Kansas 8
Texas A&M **8
- tied school single-game record
** - Zero (0) turnovers in the first half to tie NCAA record.
The Huskers began the week ranked
No. 7 nationally in turnover margin. Nebraska currently has a +5.4 margin to rank second in the Big 12 Conference entering the week.
Nebraska posted just six turnovers against Saint Louis, tying the previous low mark for miscues in Sadler’s first three years. NU also had just six turnovers against Colorado in 2007, and at home vs. the Buffs in 2009.
Nebraska posted 10 turnovers at Kansas, marking the 11th time overall under coach Doc Sadler that NU had 11 or fewer turnovers in a game away from Lincoln. It was the fourth time this season (also at Oregon State, 11 TO; 7 at Oklahoma; 11 at Texas Tech; 10 at Kansas).
The Huskers had zero turnovers in the first half against Colorado and Texas A&M at home, the best record ever in a half. NU also had only three turnovers in the first half against Alabama State, two turnovers in the second half against Saint Louis, three in the first half at No. 6/5 Oklahoma and three in the second frame vs. KU, giving the Huskers eight halves this season (including each half vs. UMES) with three or fewer turnovers.
Finding Road Success
Nebraska has seen its share of road struggles in the past but the Huskers put that behind them on Saturday, Jan. 31, when NU snapped a three-game losing streak with an 82-69 victory over Texas Tech in Lubbock. The win also snapped a four-game regular-season Big 12 road losing streak dating to last year.
Nebraska made it two straight league road wins when it defeated Colorado 55-53 in Boulder. It was the fewest points Nebraska has allowed on the road since giving up 42 points in a 15-point victory at Kansas State in 2006.
The Huskers broke out quickly in both games before making key plays down the stretch to hold on for victory.
Nebraska hit 55.1 percent (27-of-49) from the field against Texas Tech, easily its best performance on the road this season. The Huskers followed up with a 47.4-percent effort at Colorado. NU has hit better than 43 percent from the field only one other time (at Kansas State, 49.0 percent) in its other eight games away from Lincoln this year.
The last time Nebraska won a conference road game when scoring 55 or fewer points was Feb. 4, 1984, at Kansas State when the Huskers won 47-46.
When the Huskers allowed Colorado just 53 points in Boulder, it was only the 12th time in the Big 12 era that Nebraska held its opponent to under 60 points in a road contest. The Huskers improved to 9-3 in those games.
Fewest Points Allowed by Nebraska in
Conference Road Game (Big 12 era only)
No. Opponent, Year Points Allowed Score
1. Kansas State, 2006 42 W, 57-42
2. Colorado, 1999 52 W, 57-52
Iowa State, 1999 52 L, 47-52
4. Colorado, 2009 53 W, 55-53
5. Colorado, 2008 55 L, 51-55
Baylor, 1999 55 W, 68-55
6. Oklahoma State, 2006 57 W, 59-57
7. Texas A&M, 1998 58 W, 75-58
8. Texas A&M, 2008 59 W, 65-59
Texas Tech, 2007 59 W, 61-59
Kansas, 2005 59 L, 57-59
Kansas, 1999 59 W, 64-59
The 55.1 percent shooting at TTU is NU’s best in a league road game since hitting 59.0 percent from the field in a 65-59 win at No. 22 Texas A&M last season, the last road victory in league regular-season play before downing the Red Raiders.
The Huskers’ 82 points at Texas Tech were their most in a Big 12 game since March 5, 2007, when NU scored 85 in a win over Oklahoma State at home. That was a span of 26 games before the Huskers topped the 80-point plateau (home, away or Big 12 Championship).
The last time Nebraska scored at least 80 points on the road was an 87-83 overtime loss at No. 7 Oklahoma State on Feb. 21, 2004, a span of 37 Big 12 regular-season road games before topping the 80-point mark again.
The Huskers’ last road victory when scoring at least 80 points came on Feb. 20, 2002, when Nebraska won 82-72 at Texas A&M.
Nebraska Road Scoring Margin (Big 12 games only)
No. Opponent, Year Margin (Score)
Texas A&M, 1998 +17 (75-58)
Kansas State, 2006 +15 (57-42)
Oklahoma, 1999 +15 (96-81)
Texas Tech, 2009 +13 (82-69)
Baylor, 2005 +11 (74-63)
Iowa State, 2006 +10 (73-63)
Texas A&M, 2002 +10 (82-72)
Stealing the Spotlight
Nebraska has been among the national leaders for steals all season, entering this week ranked No. 38in the country. The Huskers currently average 8.5 steals per game to rank second in the league. Overall seven Huskers have posted at least 19 steals this year, with six averaging at least 1.0 steal per game.
It's much of the same from a pair of familiar faces when it comes to steals. Junior guard Ryan Anderson and sophomore guard Cookie Miller have shown an impressive court awareness since joining the Huskers and have been among the teams' top defenders despite their size.
Anderson became just the 14th player in Nebraska history to record 100 steals in a career when he picked off one pass against Kansas on Jan. 28. At his current pace (12th in the Big 12 entering the week), Anderson could finish this season just outside of the Nebraska top 10.
Miller ranks 10th in the league in steals at 1.5 per contest and has a chance to reach 100 before the end of his sophomore season. He moved into the Nebraska all-time top 15 with one steal in the victory over No. 16/17 Texas.
Miller is trying to join Cookie Belcher and Erick Strickland as the only Huskers ever with at least 100 steals at the end of their sophomore seasons. Belcher had 162 in his first two years while Strickland had 107. Belcher owns the Nebraska freshman record for steals with 87 and holds the NU and Big 12 Conference record with 353 steals in his career.
Overall the Huskers have three players ranked in the top 12 in the Big 12 Conference listing for steals. Along with Anderson and Miller, Steve Harley leads the Huskers and ranks seventh in the league at 1.6 steals per game (42 total), including ranking fourth in league-only games.
Nebraska Career Steals (since 1978)
No. Player, Years Steals
1. Cookie Belcher, 1997-2001 353
2. Erick Strickland, 1993-96 257
3. Venson Hamilton, 1996-99 186
4. Clifford Scales, 1988-91 177
5. Brian Carr, 1984-87 159
6. Tyronn Lue, 1996-98 154
7. Larry Florence, 1997-2000 137
8. Jaron Boone, 1993-96 131
9. Eric Johnson, 1988-89 128
Jack Moore, 1979-82 128
11. Jamar Johnson, 1992-94 126
12. Carl Hayes, 1990-92 125
13. Greg Downing, 1980-83 118
14. Ryan Anderson, 2007-present 107
15. Cookie Miller, 2008-present 97
-- Sek Henry, 2007-present 79
-- Steve Harley, 2008-present 76
Turning Teams Over
Nebraska has turned up the defensive pressure this season, especially while playing with a heavily guard-oriented lineup, including many sets with five guards on the floor at once.
That strong defensive push was evident in NU’s opener as they forced 25 San Jose State turnovers. Spartans’ point guard Justin Graham was frustrated into 10 turnovers while going
0-of-5 from the floor in 33 minutes of action.
The 25 turnovers NU forced against San Jose State were the second-highest total under Coach Doc Sadler. The most turnovers a Husker squad has forced in Sadler’s tenure is 26 last season against North Carolina Central.
NU also forced a season-high tying 25 turnovers against Kansas State on Jan. 17.
The Huskers have now forced 465 turnovers through 27 games, while allowing teams to record just 296 assists on 548 baskets.
The Huskers have forced at least 20 turnovers in nine games this year. Last year, the Huskers forced 20 turnovers in a game six times all season.
Most Opponent Turnovers in 2008-09
Opponent Turnovers
San Jose State 25
Kansas State 25
Creighton 24
at Oregon State 24
IPFW 24
Arkansas-Pine Bluff 23
South Carolina State 21
Kansas 21
at Texas Tech 20
The 24 turnovers forced at Oregon State are the most by a Husker opponent away from Lincoln since Texas Tech had 26 turnovers against Nebraska in the first round of the 1999 Big 12 Championship.
Nebraska posted 16 steals in the defensive effort against San Jose State, the most by the Huskers under Sadler. The previous best under Sadler was 15 steals vs. North Texas in 2006.
The Huskers have had double-figure steals seven times this season and at least eight steals in 20 games this season.
The most steals in a game by a single Husker this season is five on two occasions, most recently by sophomore guard Cookie Miller who tied his career high with five at Texas Tech. Junior guard Ryan Anderson also had five steals against Kansas State on Jan. 17. Four other players have recorded eight games with four steals each.
The defensive pressure has helped Nebraska to a 492-317 advantage in points off turnovers this season.
Nine Huskers have recorded a steal this year, including six averaging at least 1.0 steal per game.
Nebraska Freshman Steals (since 1979)
No. Player, Year Steals
1. Cookie Belcher, 1997 87
2. Cookie Miller, 2008 57
3. Tyronn Lue, 1996 50
4. Erick Strickland, 1993 47
5. Joe McCray, 2005 32
Clifford Scales, 1988 32
7. Jake Muhleisen, 2002 28
8. Jaron Boone, 1993 26
9. Ryan Anderson, 2007 25
10. Beau Reid, 1988 24
-- Brandon Richardson, 2009 23
Bombs Away
Nebraska has been strong from outside the arc during coach Doc Sadler’s tenure, including this year. The Huskers are among the national leaders, hitting 36.9 percent from long range. Last season, Nebraska hit 34.2 percent from beyond the arc.
Sek Henry has become one of the team’s most improved 3-point shooters this year, as he has hit 36.4 percent (24-of-66) from long range. He came into the year hitting just 26 percent in his first two years, draining 37-of-140 attempts. He already has more 3s this year than either of his first two seasons (17 and 20, respectively).
Paul Velander has been effective this season from beyond the arc as he is hitting 43.6 percent to currently rank fourth in the Big 12 Conference.
Velander is also 10th in the league in
3-pointers made. He currently has 58 treys after nailing 3-of-6 over the past three games. In the seven games before that, he had hit just 7-of-31 from 3-point range.
Nebraska has hit better than 40 percent from the 3-point line as a team six times this season, including at least 50 percent four times this year. The Huskers hit at least 50 percent from long range twice against Big 12 Conference teams at home (vs. Kansas and Texas).
The Huskers have hit 10 or more 3-pointers three times this season, including against Alabama State (14), Florida A&M (10) and Kansas State (10).
Nebraska hit an impressive 14-of-25 (56.0 percent) from beyond the arc against the Alabama State. NU “only” connected on 51.7 percent (30-of-58) from the floor overall.
The 14 3-pointers were the most by the Huskers since hitting 15 against Miami on the road in the 2006-07 season. The school record is 18 3-pointers against No. 1 Kansas in 2002.
Six Huskers hit from outside the arc, including four players with three 3-pointers apiece. Sek Henry led the way with a perfect 3-for-3 night beyond the arc while Ryan Anderson (3-of-4), Steve Harley (3-of-5) and Paul Velander (3-of-6) each had three treys apiece.
Nebraska had another game where all the shots were falling as the Huskers hit 10-of-18 (55.6 percent) against Kansas State on Jan. 17. Velander hit 6-of-10 by himself, while Cookie Miller connected on all three of his attempts. Nebraska hit 50.0 percent overall from the field in the game.
Keeping Opponents in Line
While the 3-point line moved back one foot ? from 19-9 to 20-9 ? for the first time in men’s college basketball this season, Nebraska’s
3-point defense has improved dramatically with the change in the line.
Nebraska’s 3-point defense this year has been solid as opponents have hit just 33.1 percent from beyond the arc. Last season, opponents hit 36.4 percent on the year.
The Huskers currently rank fourth in the Big 12 Conference in that category. NU has held eight teams under 25.0 percent shooting from beyond the arc this season.
Twelve of Nebraska’s 27 opponents have been held to five or fewer 3-pointers in a game, including five with three or fewer.
On the Glass
The Huskers will put a small lineup on the floor just about every night this season, giving coach Doc Sadler reason to be interested in Nebraska’s rebounding, especially on the defensive end. All of NU’s guards will need to be capable rebounders this season to keep the opposing team from getting easy baskets on second chances.
Through 27 games, Nebraska trails on the glass by over five rebounds per game
(-5.6 rpg, 34.1 to 28.5).
Nebraska has trailed on the glass in 20 contests this season, including each of its first seven league contests before outrebounding Colorado on the road. Overall, the Huskers have trailed on the boards in 17 of the past 21 games.
NU has trailed on the boards in all but two of its Big 12 contests, and has a -7.8 rebounding margin in league action. Nebraska’s 38 rebounds against No. 17/19 Missouri were its second-highest total of the season and just the second time in league play NU outrebounded (38-36) an opponent.
Nebraska’s +8 rebound advantage at Colorado (30-22) was its biggest against a league squad. The Huskers’ -22 margin at Kansas (46-24) was its worst. Nebraska’s two least productive rebounding games came against KU (-26 and -16).
Nebraska, which is listed as the shortest team in Division I by kenpom.com, held nearly even on the boards against Texas, the Big 12 Conference’s tallest team. UT only posted a +4 (34-30) advantage on the glass over the Huskers.
NU has had at least 10 offensive rebounds in a game eight times, most recently at Kansas State when 11 of the Huskers’ 25 boards were on the offensive glass. NU also had at least 10 offensive boards at No. 6/5 Oklahoma (10) and against Kansas (13), Texas (11) at home and at Missouri (11).
Line Time
Nebraska has had its ups and downs at the free throw line this season, but one of the better efforts came at just the right time in a road game at Texas Tech.
The Huskers hit 76.7 percent (23-of-30) from the line vs. the Red Raiders, including 80.8 percent (21-of-26) in the second period to pull away for an 82-69 victory. The Huskers had entered the game hitting 68.1 percent from the charity stripe.
The 76.7 percent from the foul line is still Nebraska’s third-best effort this season when attempting at least 20 free throws in a game. The only times NU has topped the mark was when it hit 87.1 percent (27-of-31) against Oklahoma State and 81.3 percent (18-of-22) at Kansas State.
Senior guard Ade Dagunduro did most of the hard work against Texas Tech, hitting all 10 of his attempts from the line. He entered the game hitting 69.0 percent from the free throw line on the season.
Dagunduro became just the fifth Husker in the Big 12 era to hit all of his free throws when attempting at least 10 in a game, and the second under coach Doc Sadler. Overall, he’s the 12th Husker since 1982 to accomplish the feat.
Perfect Games at FT Line since 1982 (min. 10 att.)
Player Opponent (date) FT-FTA
Ade Dagunduro at Texas Tech (1/31/09) 10-10
Charles Richardson Jr. at Missouri (2/3/07) 10-10
Nate Johnson.. Tennessee (12/13/03) 10-10
Jake Muhleisen.... Kansas St. (2/9/02) 11-11
Tyronn Lue.. at Kansas (1/3/98). 10-10
Jamar Johnson.. at S. Utah (11/30/91) 10-10
Tony Farmer at Oklahoma (3/8/91) 12-12
Beau Reid.... Wyoming (1/23/89) 10-10
Pete Manning.... at Oklahoma (3/5/88) 11-11
Dave Hoppen.. at Oklahoma (1/29/85) 10-10
Dave Hoppen.. S. Colorado (11/29/84) 11-11
Jack Moore.. Oklahoma St. (2/10/82) 15-15
Dagunduro Puts Up All-Big 12 Stats
After a sluggish start to the season, senior guard Ade Dagunduro has turned up the intensity on both ends of the court during league play and now should be in the mix for All-Big 12 honors.
One of the most athletic players in the league, Dagunduro has recently brought his scoring average up to lead the squad with 12.4 points per game. He has scored in double figures in 16 of the past 20 games, including at least 17 points seven times.
In Big 12 play, he is averaging a team-best 14.4 ppg. He is averaging a team-best 4.9 rebounds per game in Big 12 action (no other Husker is over 3.9 rpg) and he has 24 assists, 16 steals and seven blocks while hitting 52.9 percent (72-of-136) from the field and 70.3 percent (52-of-74) from the charity stripe.
Dagunduro started the season averaging just 4.8 points per game in three contests against San Jose State, TCU and Arkansas-Pine Bluff.
Dagunduro has set a career high by scoring in double figures in his last six consecutive games. Previously, he had scored in double figures five straight games just once, in non-conference play. Last year, he did not score in double figures more than three consecutive contests.
The senior posted a then-career high in the Big 12 opener, gaining a game-high 20 points on 6-of-11 shooting while helping Nebraska to its third league-opening win in 13 years. He also had five rebounds and three steals in 29 minutes.
Dagunduro had the best offensive game of his career against Kansas at home, posting a career-high 24 points on 10-of-16 shooting. He added five rebounds, two assists, two steals and a block in 29 minutes while helping the Huskers remain within one point in the final 30 seconds.
Dagunduro recorded his second straight 20-point performance while helping Nebraska to a road victory over Texas Tech. He hit 5-of-6 from the field and 10-of-10 at the line for 20 points, while adding a season-high tying six rebounds with three assists and three steals.
He also had solid games with 17 points and nine boards against No. 16/19 Texas, 18 points and six boards vs. Colorado at home and 16 points and seven rebounds at Kansas State.
Possibly Dagunduro’s biggest points of the non-conference season came in the final seconds of a comeback victory over Creighton. The Inglewood, Calif., native got free on the right block when his defender hedged to the middle of the lane as Steve Harley drove to the basket. Harley made a nice wrap-around pass to Dagunduro, whose uncontested layup with 2.7 seconds remaining was the game-winner.
Dagunduro’s slow start this season was the exact opposite of last year, which has been a good thing for the Huskers in the long run. Dagunduro started 2007-08 on fire, averaging 11.8 points per game in non-conference play while hitting 54.8 percent from the field. In league action last year, he gained only 5.8 points per game while knocking down just 40.4 percent from the field.
Record Performance
Senior guard Ade Dagunduro had a breakout game against UMBC as he posted 19 points in 27 minutes of action. He topped his previous career best of 17 points last year in an overtime road loss to Western Kentucky.
Dagunduro scored 15 of his 19 points against UMBC in the second half and added three rebounds, three assists, two blocks and two steals for an impressive all-around performance.
But the most impressive aspect of Dagunduro’s line on the stat sheet was the field-goal column. He finished the game hitting 9-of-9 attempts from the field, helping Nebraska hit 48.9 percent from the floor.
Dagunduro tied the school single-game record by hitting all nine of his attempts from the field against UMBC.
Dagunduro became the fifth Husker in history to connect on nine consecutive shots from the floor in a single game. It was the fourth time the feat happened by a Husker against a non-conference opponent.
Consecutive Field Goals in Game (NU Record)
FG Name (Opponent) Date
9 Ade Dagunduro (UMBC) 12/23/08
9 Mikki Moore (at Nevada) 3/19/97
9 Venson Hamilton (Iowa State) 2/3/96
9 Dave Hoppen (Southern Illinois) 11/26/85
9 Chuck Jura (Iowa) 12/5/70
Dagunduro’s mark was originally believed to be a single-game conference record, however, since then it has been established that Colorado center David Harrison had a 10-for-10 effort versus Baylor in 2004. It is believed that Dagunduro’s mark ties for second place in the Big 12 record book.
Dagunduro extended his streak of consecutive made field-goal attempts to 15 over three straight games, setting a new Nebraska record. He had three made shots to end the game against IPFW, added nine against UMBC and then hit his first three against South Carolina State to surpass Mikki Moore, who held the previous NU record by hitting 13 straight shots in three games in 1997.
Consecutive FG in Multiple Games (NU Record)
FG Name Season, games
15 Ade Dagunduro 2008-09, three
13 Mikki Moore 1996-97, three
Dagunduro’s streak of 15 straight made shots fell two shy of the old Big 12 record. His streak is second in the league this season behind Baylor’s Quincy Acy, who set the new Big 12 record by making his first 20 attempts from the field to start his career.
Miller Ready to Lend a Hand
Cookie Miller was the only true freshman to play for the Huskers last year when he posted near-record numbers for assists (109) and steals (58). This year, he is trying to take it a step higher as one of the top returning point guards in the Big 12 Conference.
Miller was sixth in the league in assists (3.6 apg) last year and the only freshman in the top 10 for assist-to-turnover ratio (1.7). He was fourth in the Big 12 for steals (1.93), and led the league in Big 12-only contests (2.0 spg).
This season, Miller leads NU with 98 assists (3.8 apg) and is second the team with 39 steals (1.5 apg). He is one of seven Huskers with at least 19 steals.
Miller has 51 turnovers to go with his 98 assists, helping him rank in the top eight in the Big 12 Conference in assist-to-turnover ratio (1.9-to-1).
After posting a season-high five miscues with one assist against Kansas State on Jan. 17, Miller rebounded to have his best game distributing the ball at Oklahoma. He had seven assists with just two turnovers against the No. 6/5 Sooners on the road. Miller also had seven assists on the road against Kansas State.
Miller has had at least four assists in 15 contests this season, including five straight games to end non-conference play. He has had six assists six times, including posting six assists with just one turnover against Kansas in Allen Fieldhouse.
Miller was efficient in leading the Huskers to a win in the Big 12 opener against Missouri. He had three assists against two turnovers in 36 minutes, but helped NU continually break the Tigers’ press. His defense also helped NU force MU into 16 turnovers with only 10 assists after the Tigers came into the game ranked third nationally in assist-to-turnover ratio. Miller also drew three charges, all in the first half, against MU.
Miller also sparked a struggling Husker squad in the second half against IPFW. He came off the bench and posted six assists, including four in the second half, with four steals to lead the Huskers to a come-from-behind victory.
Henry Doubles Up
After a strong offseason, junior guard Sek Henry started out on a tear while helping the Huskers win six straight games to open a season for just the second time in the Big 12 era.
Henry has been more consistent on offense this season than at any point in his career. He is averaging 8.1 ppg to rank third on the team.
Henry has posted double figure points 12 times in 27 games this season, after scoring in double figures just nine times in the first 64 games of his career. Henry posted double figures five times last year and four times as a freshman.
Henry posted 19 points against each Saint Louis and Florida A&M, one off his career high and the most points he has scored at home in the Devaney Center. He nearly matched the mark with 18 points vs. South Carolina State.
Henry added 13 points against Missouri to help Nebraska to a win in the Big 12 opener. It was the second-highest point total of his career against a Big 12 squad, trailing the 14 points he scored last season at Missouri.
Overall, he has scored at least 10 points five times in league play this season after posting double figures just four times in his first two Big 12 campaigns combined (35 games including league tourney).
Henry has hit 75-of-165 shots (45.5 percent) from the field, including 24-of-66 (36.4 percent) from 3-point range this season. His career averages entering this season were 36.7 percent shooting and 26.4 percent from beyond the arc.
Henry has twice this season tied his career high with four steals in a game. He is currently fifth on the team with 27 steals through 27 contests.
On the glass, Henry tied his career best with seven boards at Kansas this season. He added seven points and two assists against the Jayhawks.
Henry raised his free throw average significantly of late, hitting 37 of his last 51 (72.5 percent) attempts over the past 16 games. Henry hit an impressive 7-of-8 from the line against UMBC after entering the game hitting 45.0 percent in his first nine games, and followed with a 7-of-9 effort against SCSU.
Energy Guy
Following the season-opening contest against San Jose State, Coach Doc Sadler praised several players for their energy and hustle, especially the ones off the bench.
Leading the way that day was redshirt freshman Brandon Richardson, who posted six points, three rebounds, an assist and four steals in 16 minutes in his career debut.
Richardson’s numbers did not tell the whole story as he made several dives to the floor and other hustle plays to ignite NU in the second half after SJSU cut the lead from 18 points to five. His steal off an inbounds and three-point play turned the game around, helping NU score 10 points in less than a minute to pull away for good.
Following another strong performance in Nebraska’s game against IPFW, Sadler said:
“Brandon Richardson makes plays that don’t show up on the box score. When we went to the 1-3-1 for the first time (that night), he made two huge hustle plays. He does things that might give you three or four more possessions that you wouldn’t otherwise get in a game.”
After sitting out the first four games of Big 12 Conference action with an injury, Richardson came back to hit 2-of-3, including both 3-point attempts, to score eight points in 15 minutes against Oklahoma State.
Richardson scored 11 points in a road victory at Texas Tech. He came off the bench to hit 4-of-5 shots, including 3-of-4 from long range, in 19 minutes.
In another strong road performance, Richardson scored a career-best 12 points on 3-of-5 shooting to lead Nebraska at No. 17/19 Missouri. He added four rebounds, two assists and a steal in 20 minutes.
He has posted at least three steals in a game three times this year, and is sixth on the team with 23 steals, just one from reaching the Nebraska freshman top 10.
Energy Guy . . . Too
Along with Richardson, senior Paul Velander has also been praised by Sadler for his energy coming off the bench, including following the Saint Louis game. In his postgame press conference that night, Sadler said:
“We’ve got to get the rest of the team to make effort plays like Paul Velander. There’s not a player in the country who makes more effort plays than that guy.”
Velander has come off the bench to hit 58
3-pointers in 27 games, including 12 games with at least three treys apiece. He is fourth on the team in scoring at 7.6 points per game.
Paul Velander has hit at least three 3-pointers in 12 games this season. Dating to last year, he has hit at least three treys in 17 of his last 36 games. Before that, he had hit at least three 3-pointers in a game just six times in his first 51 career games.
Velander struggled in the seven games starting with the Jan. 24 game against Oklahoma State. Before that, he led the nation by hitting 50.0 percent (48-of-96) to open the year. He hit just 8-of-33 attempts (24.2 percent) from long range before getting back on track by hitting a 3-of-6 in the past three games.
Velander is currently fourth in the Big 12 Conference in 3-point percentage, hitting 43.6 percent from behind the arc.
Entering the Iowa State game, Velander needs four 3-pointers to move onto the Nebraska single-season top-10 chart. Velander also currently would rank sixth in NU single-season history for 3-point percentage.
Velander posted as career-high tying 20 points behind a career-best six 3-pointers against Kansas State on Jan. 17.
Velander leads the team with 24 charges taken in 27 games, including three against each San Jose State and Saint Louis. If the statistic were kept nationally, it’s possible that Velander would lead the nation in charges taken.
Velander’s effort finally rubbed off on his teams against IPFW. NU had six charges taken, each by a different individual, including one by Velander. As a team, NU has taken 50 charges in 27 games this year.
Balham Making Most of Minutes
Junior forward Chris Balham has been limited by chronic knee problems throughout his career and while he has not been able to practice or get on the court in games as much as he and coach Doc Sadler would like, Balham has made the most of his court time lately.
Over his last 15 games played (he missed the CU contest at home), Balham has averaged 12.9 minutes per game, with a total of 194 minutes of action. He saw 46 minutes of action combined in his first seven games of the year, with a high of 10 minutes at TCU. He also missed four games this year because of chronic knee issues.
He played 18, 14, 17, 14, 10 and 12 minutes, respectively, between the Maryland Eastern Shore and Oklahoma games, the first time in his career he gained at least 10 minutes in more than three straight games. Overall, he has played at least 10 minutes in 13 of the last 16 games he has played.
Balham played a Big 12-high 17 minutes against Texas, the tallest team in the conference. He fared extremely well, posting six points on 2-of-3 shooting while adding three boards, including two on the offensive end, as Nebraska was outrebounded by just four boards, 34-30.
He came back to log another 17 minutes at No. 17/19 Missouri, posting a team-best-tying seven rebounds (three offensive) with two points.
Balham tied his career high with eight boards vs. Florida A&M. He added six boards on the road at Texas Tech for his most in conference play this year. Of his 49 rebounds in his past 15 games played, 24 are offensive boards.
Balham scored a season-high seven points in consecutive games near the end of the non-conference slate this season. The only time Balham has scored more than seven points (his totals against SCSU and UMES) in a game was a career-high 10 points on 5-of-7 shooting in a road win over No. 22 Texas A&M last season.
Hitting from Long Range
At 6-4, guard Ryan Anderson may be a little undersized to play in the front court, but he is one of the biggest players on the court when he steps outside the 3-point line. Anderson has made a living with the long ball, hitting 123 treys in his career to rank ninth in NU history.
Despite being one of the best 3-point shooters in the league the past two years, Anderson has struggled this season. He has hit 25-of-78 attempts (32.1 percent) after coming into the season hitting better than 39 percent in his career.
Anderson’s best long-range game this year came with four 3-pointers at No. 6/5 Oklahoma, marking the 15th time in his career he has had at least three treys in a single game. He also had three treys earlier this season against Alabama State.
He went 3-of-3 from the field against Florida A&M but did not attempt a 3-pointer. It was the first time in 30 games that he did not attempt a 3-pointer in a game. He also did not attempt a trey at Texas Tech, just the sixth game in his career he did not shoot from long range.
Anderson is the only Husker ever to post at least 48 treys in each of his first two years at Nebraska.
Anderson ranks second on the NU freshman list with 48 3-pointers in 2006-07 and last year posted 50 treys to rank third on the Huskers' sophomore chart.
Only Nebraska's all-time 3-point leader, Cary Cochran, made more shots from outside the arc by the end of his sophomore season, as Cochran had 101 through two years.
Comeback Kids
Under coach Doc Sadler, the Nebraska Cornhuskers have become a team that is hardly ever out of a contest as it has shown the determination and will to come back repeatedly in difficult situations.
Nebraska’s most recent account of a major comeback was against No. 16/17 Texas at home on Feb. 7. The Huskers trailed by 12 points early in the second half and by 10 points with just under 11 minutes remaining. NU continued to chip away at the lead and went ahead with less than two minutes remaining before Ade Dagunduro’s 3-pointer in the final minute sealed the 58-55 victory.
It was the second time this season Nebraska posted a significant come-from-behind win.Against Creighton, the Huskers were keyed by a strong second-half performance from Steve Harley and Cookie Miller. Harley finished with a game-high 18 points with three steals and had the key assist on Dagunduro’s game-winning basket with 2.7 seconds remaining. Miller posted six assists and two steals and got the Huskers’ offense into high gear after trailing by 13 points at halftime.
By coming back from 12 points down against Texas, the Huskers made their ninth double-digit comeback against league teams in the Big 12 Conference era. It was the second time under Sadler, as NU came back from 13 points down on the road against Texas Tech in 2007.
The 13-point deficit the Huskers overcame against Creighton matched the largest comeback under Coach Doc Sadler. It tied for the second-largest comeback by Nebraska during the Big 12 era, matching the 13-point deficit NU overcame at Texas Tech.
The largest deficit Nebraska has rebounded from to win since the formation of the Big 12 Conference was 20 points against Kansas State in the first year of the league (1996-97). KSU also had the biggest halftime lead that NU has overcome in the Big 12 era as the Wildcats led by 18 points at the break.
Largest Nebraska Deficits Overcome to Win
(Big 12 era only, since 1996-97)
Deficit
Year Opponent Overcome
1996-97 Kansas State 20 points
2008-09 Creighton 13 points
2006-07 at Texas Tech 13 points
2008-09 No. 16/17 Texas 12 points
2002-03 vs. UC Santa Barbara 12 points
1998-99 Texas A&M 12 points
2005-06 Baylor 11 points
2004-05 No. 4 Oklahoma State 11 points
2001-02 Colorado 11 points
2000-01 Missouri 11 points
1999-2000 Eastern Illinois 10 points
1997-98 Baylor 10 points
2003-04 Creighton (NIT game) 9 points
Nebraska nearly added another fantastic finish to the list as it rallied from a 16-point halftime deficit, and 20-point overall deficit in the first half, to have the final shot at the win against UMBC.
The near comeback against UMBC came just three days after the Huskers rallied from a five-point halftime deficit at home to pull away for a 75-48 victory over IPFW.
In an continuing theme, NU fell behind by 13 points at Iowa State before battling back to tie the game at 45-45 with under seven minutes to play. With 2:13 remaining, NU trailed by just two points, 55-53, but saw the Cyclones go on a 10-0 run to end the game.
Unfortunately, the Huskers saw the other end of a comeback against Texas A&M as Nebraska led by 18 points twice in the second half before the Aggies rallied. The Huskers led the whole second half until Josh Carter’s
3-pointer with less than a second remaining gave A&M the come-from-behind victory.