Lincoln -- The No. 2 Nebraska volleyball team continues Big 12 Conference play with two televised matches this week. The Huskers will conclude a three-match homestand Wednesday, Oct. 10 against Kansas. The 7 p.m. match will be televised live by NETV, Sunday, Oct. 14, Nebraska travels to No. 17 Texas A&M for a 2 p.m. match that will be aired live by Fox Sports Net.
NU owns a 66-0 record against the Jayhawks and has swept KU 34 times. NU is 13-6 all-time against the Aggies and has won the last three contests. However, 10 of the 16 contests have gone four or more games, including four of the last six. Texas A&M was one of just nine teams last season to push Nebraska past three games.
Nebraska carries an 11-match winning streak into the week, winning all 33 games it has played. The Huskers swept then-No. 25 Kansas State, Missouri and Oklahoma last week. Senior right side hitter Nancy Metcalf led the offense with 4.22 kills per game on a .333 hitting percentage. Junior middle blocker Amber Holmquist led the Huskers defensively last week, averaging 2.25 blocks per game. Holmquist also added 3.12 kills per game while swinging at a .488 clip. Holmquist currently ranks first in the Big 12 Conference in league games with a .500 hitting percentage and a 2.59 blocks-per-game average.
Five players are averaging more than 2.35 kills per game, and the Huskers are hitting .307 on the season under junior setter Greichaly Cepero, the 2000 AVCA Player of the Year. The Huskers have held their last eight opponents to .121 or less at the net, and Nebraska has limited its last 11 opponents to a .130 hitting percentage or less. NU is out-blocking teams 188.0-61.0 (4.27 bpg-1.39 bpg) in 2001.
Streaking Huskers
Some Nebraska streaks to watch:
- The Huskers have won
37 consecutive home matches, including 35 straight matches at the NU Coliseum.
The streak is the third-longest in the nation. Northern Iowa ranks first with
41 straight wins, and Ball State is second with 38.
- NU Head Coach John Cook
is 26-0 in the Big 12 Conference.
- Nebraska has won 11 consecutive
matches and 33 straight games.
- Nebraska has won 36 straight
Big 12 matches.
- Junior defensive specialist
Lindsay Wischmeier has played in a team-best 81 consecutive matches.
- Senior Nancy Metcalf
has posted double-figure kill totals in her last 16 matches.
- Nebraska has out-blocked its opponent in 67 straight matches. The Huskers were last out-blocked by Texas A&M Oct. 2, 1999.
A Look at Kansas (11-5 Overall, 2-5 Big 12)
Kansas is 11-5 overall and 2-5 in the Big 12 Conference. The Jayhawks opened
the 2001 season with a school-record 10 straight wins. KU dropped four of its
first five in league play, but upset Colorado in four games Sept. 29.
The Jayhawks list two Nebraska
natives on their roster, and both are among the teams statistical leaders.
Senior setter Molly LaMere (Papillion, Neb.), averages 12.32 assists per game
and 1.25 kills per game on a .406 hitting percentage. Junior middle blocker
Kylie Thomas (Sutherland, Neb.) averages 2.43 kills per game.
Sophomore outside hitter Sarah Rome leads KUs offensive attack with 3.64
kills per game.
- The Coach: The Jayhawks
are led by Ray Bechard, who is 58-50 in his fourth season at Kansas.
- The Series: Nebraska
leads, 66-0.
- The Last Time: The Huskers defeated KU, 3-0, Oct. 28 in Lincoln. NU produced a season-high 10 service aces, led by Kim Behrends career-high five.
A Look at No. 17 Texas
A&M (11-2 Overall, 4-1 Big 12)
Texas A&M is 11-2 overall and 4-1 in the Big 12. The Aggies lost in four
games to Stanford Sept. 5, and suffered a five-game upset loss to Colorado in
College Station Oct. 7. Texas A&M is led by All-Big 12 setter Jenna Moscovic,
who averages 12.87 assists per game, 2.80 digs per game and 1.96 kills per game
on a .376 hitting percentage. Moscovic is one of only two players not from Nebraska
to earn Big 12 Player-of-the-Week honors this season. She won the award Sept.
24 after producing a .413 hitting percentage and 11.30 assists, 1.30 blocks,
2.20 kills and 3.00 digs per game against Houston and Missouri.
Senior outside hitters Erin Lechler and Michelle Cole have also been impressive for the Aggies. Lechler leads the Aggies with 3.63 kills per game and adds 3.43 digs per game. Michelle Cole leads A&M with 3.85 digs per game and averages 3.20 kills per game.
- The Coach: The Aggies
are led by Lori Corbelli, who is 300-71 in her ninth season at Texas A&M.
Corbelli picked up her 300th career win and her 200th win at Texas A&M
Friday, Oct. 5, when the Aggies defeated Texas in four games at College Station.
Corbellis husband, John, serves as associate head coach.
- The Series: Nebraska
leads, 13-6.
- The Last Time: The Huskers defeated Texas A&M, 3-1, Nov. 8 in College Station, Texas, to claim at least a share of their fourth Big 12 title. Amber Holmquist produced a career-best 26 kills, hit .550 and recorded a match-high 11 blocks. Greichaly Cepero posted a triple-double with 71 assists, 18 digs and 11 blocks.
Hitting Deficiency
Nebraska has stifled opponents with its defense this season. Opponents are hitting
just .103 against Nebraska in 2001. Only one team, No. 1 Long Beach State, has
hit better than .153 against Nebraska this season. The Huskers have held seven
of their opponents to less than .100 at the net, including No. 5 UCLA, which
hit just .091 against NU. Nebraska leads the Big 12 Conference in opponent attack
percentage, holding league teams to .060.
Dont Go There
The most consistent and intimidating element of the Huskers game in recent
years has been their block. Nebraska has out-blocked its opponents in an incredible
67 consecutive matches, going 64-3 during the streak. The last time NU lost
a blocking battle was Oct. 2, 1999, when it fell to Texas A&M, 3-2.
In Big 12 statistics released Oct. 8, Nebraska led the league with an incredible 5.36 blocks per game. Second-place Texas owns a 3.65 blocks-per-game mark. Junior middle blocker Amber Holmquist ranks first individually (2.59 bpg), followed by Jenny Kropp (second, 1.94 bpg), Nancy Metcalf (fourth, 1.67) and Greichaly Cepero (fifth, 1.56 bpg). The Huskers have out-blocked their Big 12 opponents 96.5-19.0 (5.36-1.06 per game) in 2001. If Nebraska continues its current pace, it will capture its fifth Big 12 blocking title.
The 2000 Huskers were statistically the best blocking squad in Nebraska and Big 12 Conference history. In 2000, NU set a new school record with 4.20 blocks per game and a new Big 12 record with 4.36 blocks per game in conference matches. The Huskers won the NCAA blocking title, and Holmquist claimed the NCAA individual blocking title with 1.98 blocks per game -- which was also a school record. Holmquist, who owns single-match conference records for block assists and total blocks, shattered the Big 12 record with 2.14 blocks per game in league matches. The Big 12s top three blockers were NU players -- Holmquist, Kropp (1.73 bpg) and Cepero (1.68 bpg).
League Leaders
In the Big 12 Conference statistics released Monday, Oct. 8, Nebraska led the
league in hitting percentage (.321), blocks per game (5.36) and opponent hitting
percentage (.060). Junior middle blocker Amber Holmquist ranked first in hitting
percentage (.500) and blocks per game (2.59) in conference matches, and junior
middle blocker Jenny Kropp ranks first in blocks per game in all matches (1.86).
Other Huskers who rank among the leagues leaders include Nancy Metcalf
(fourth in blocks per game and kills per game, fifth in hitting percentage,
10th in service aces) and Greichaly Cepero (fifth in blocks per game, sixth
in assists per game).
No. 1 No Longer
Lincoln -- Nebraska steamrolled to three easy victories during the last week
of September, but their efforts werent enough to retain its No. 1 ranking
in the AVCA/USA Today Coaches Poll released Monday, Oct. 1. The Huskers fell
to No. 2 after an AVCA-record 17 weeks in the top spot. Long Beach State, which
defeated Nebraska, 3-1, Sept. 1, leaped Nebraska for the No. 1 spot after defeating
No. 4 Stanford, 3-1, and UC Riverside, 3-0.
NU, which is one of just three teams to be ranked in the AVCA poll for all 239 weeks, had held the top spot since Sept. 11, 2000.
The Gauchos held just a three-point lead over NU in the Oct. 1 poll, and the Huskers received 33 first-place votes to Long Beach States 32. But the gap widened this week. Long Beach State swept No. 12 Pacific in Stockton last Thursday and now owns a 48-point lead over NU and has 55 first-place votes to Nebraskas 10.
Shes Back ...
One of the most dynamic attackers in school history, senior Nancy Metcalf (formerly
Meendering) missed the 2000 national title run but has made an impressive return
to the court this season. Metcalf has been the Huskers go-to player offensively,
averaging 4.36 kills per game on a .352 hitting percentage. Metcalf, a two-time
AVCA All-American, has also been a clutch performer defensively, averaging a
team-best 3.25 digs per game, including a career-best 23 at then-No. 12 Pacific,
Aug. 25. Her blocking numbers have shot up recently as well. Metcalf has averaged
2.11 blocks per game over the Huskers last three matches to increase her
blocks per game numbers to 1.11.
In Big 12 matches, Metcalf ranks fourth in the conference in blocks per game (1.67), fourth in kills per game (4.28), fifth in hitting percentage (.361) and 10th in service aces per game (0.44).
Metcalfs performances have not gone unnoticed. She earned State Farm/NACWAA MVP honors after averaging 4.71 kills per game, a .377 hitting percentage, and 4.00 digs per game against then-No. 5 Hawaii and Pacific. Metcalf has also twice been named the Big 12 Player of the Week, claiming the honor on Sept. 3 and Oct. 1.
Metcalf already owns five school records, including single-season kills per game with 5.09 in 1999. The 1999 Big 12 Player of the Year, Metcalf redshirted in 2000 after training with the U.S. National Team during the off-season.
Sure Shot
Amber Holmquist has been the Huskers most effective attacker this season.
The junior middle blocker has 121 kills in 195 swings, good for a .487 hitting
percentage. She has hit for a .333 percentage or better in 12 of NUs 14
matches, including five performances of .600 or better and nine of .400 or better.
The 2000 AVCA Second-Team All-American tied her season-high hitting percentage
Oct. 1 against Missouri, pounding 10 kills and committing just one error in
12 attempts (.750).
Holmquist leads the Big 12 Conference with a .500 hitting percentage in league matches in 2001, and she is hitting .468 against ranked teams. Holmquist is on track to shatter the Nebraska single-season record for hitting percentage of .440, set by Virginia Stahr in 1989.
Holmquist finished the 2000 season ranked fourth nationally with a .406 hitting percentage. She hit .500 or better in 14 matches last season, and she swung at a .600 or higher clip six times.
Super Setter
Nebraska junior setter Greichaly Cepero continues to baffle opponents with her
all-around game. Cepero is averaging 12.75 assists per game, 2.20 digs per game,
1.18 blocks per game and 1.11 kills per game while leading NU to a .307 team
hitting percentage this season.
Cepero virtually redefined the setter position as a sophomore last year and had one of the most successful seasons by a setter in school history, guiding the Huskers to a No. 1 ranking, a 34-0 record and a .312 hitting percentage (second in the nation) in her first season at the position.
A unique setter because of her blocking ability, Cepero was the only setter in the country to rank among the nations top 20 in blocking (18th, 1.48 per game). Cepero led Nebraska in solo blocks with 28 and was responsible for 34 percent of the Huskers total blocks (161 of 477.5). For the season, the Dorado, Puerto Rico, native, averaged 11.90 assists, 2.14 digs, 1.48 blocks and 1.83 kills per game.
Cepero capped her incredible 2000 season with countless awards, including the Honda Award for volleyball, the AVCA Player of the Year, and the Big 12 Female Athlete of the Year. Cepero also became the seventh NU setter to earn All-America honors and the first to be named player of the year. Husker setters have combined to win 13 All-America awards.
Full House
Nebraska drew 8,976 fans, the largest crowd in NCAA Division I volleyball this
season, for its sweep of Oklahoma Saturday, Oct. 6, at the Bob Devaney Sports
Center.
NU, which has broken the all-time NCAA regular-season attendance record three times at the Devaney Center, shattered the nations previous 2001 attendance mark of 7,723, which was set Sept. 2 when Hawaii hosted UCLA. The Huskers normally play in the 4,200-seat NU Coliseum.
Saturdays crowd bumped the Huskers average attendance to 4,753, which ranks second nationally. Hawaii is first with 6,580. Wisconsin, Florida and Long Beach State round out the top five.
Home Sweet Home
The Huskers have won 37 consecutive matches at home, and 35 straight matches
at the NU Coliseum (NU defeated Colorado, 3-0, last season at the Bob Devaney
Sports Center). Nebraskas last loss in Lincoln was a five-game defeat
to Kansas State Sept. 22, 1999. The Huskers have gone undefeated at home 11
times in program history and have been perfect at home five times in the past
seven years.
The Big 12s Best
Nebraska is looking to capture its fifth Big 12 Conference title in six seasons
in 2001. The Huskers have won four Big 12 championships and 23 Big 12/Big Eight
conference titles in the past 25 years. Nebraska owns an all-time record of
377-32-1 (.919) against Big 12 schools, and NU is 92-9 against Big 12 schools
since the leagues inception in 1996. The Huskers have lost just once at
the NU Coliseum in Big 12 history, a 1999 five-game defeat to Kansas State.
Last Time Out: Huskers
Sweep Oklahoma
The No. 2 Nebraska volleyball team defeated Oklahoma, 30-21, 30-24, 30-16, at
the Bob Devaney Sports Center Saturday afternoon before 8,976 fans, the largest
crowd in NCAA Division I volleyball this season.
Nebraska, which has broken the all-time NCAA regular-season attendance record
three times at the Devaney Center, shattered the nations previous 2001
attendance mark of 7,723, which was set Sept. 2 when Hawaii hosted UCLA. The
Huskers normally play in the 4,200-seat NU Coliseum.
Anna Schrad and Nancy Metcalf combined for 20 kills and 14 digs to help the Huskers improve to 13-1 overall and 6-0 in the Big 12 Conference. Schrad swung for a season-best .556 hitting percentage, tallying 10 kills with zero errors on 18 attacks.
Overall, the Huskers hit .396 under junior setter Greichaly Cepero, who posted five kills, seven digs, three blocks and 38 assists. Six Huskers hit .333 or better, including Schrad, Amber Holmquist (seven kills, .500 pct.), Laura Pilakowski (nine kills, .553 pct.), Jenny Kropp (seven kills, .445 pct.), Pam Krejci (one kill, 1.000 pct.) and Sara Westling (three kills, .333 pct.).
Logan Pierce posted a match-high 11 kills for Oklahoma, which fell to 2-13 overall and 1-4 in the Big 12.
All-America U
Nebraska is the only team in Division I with four All-Americans in its starting
lineup. Junior setter Greichaly Cepero and junior outside hitter Laura Pilakowski
earned first-team All-America honors in 2000, while junior middle blocker Amber
Holmquist was recognized on the second team. Joining the three 2000 All-Americans
is Nancy Metcalf, a first-team All-America selection in 1998 and 1999. Metcalf
redshirted in 2000 after training with the U.S. National Team during the offseason.
The Nebraska volleyball program has now earned 38 AVCA All-America certificates,
the second-highest total of any Division I institution. A total of 21 Huskers
have earned All-America status, ranking Nebraska second all-time in total All-America
athletes.
Nebraska Coach John Cook
John Cook (207-74) is in his second year as the Nebraska head coach after guiding
the Huskers to one of the most successful seasons in NCAA history in 2000. Cook,
who was named the AVCA Coach of the Year, guided the Huskers to a 34-0 record
as they became just the second team in NCAA history to cap an undefeated season
with a national title.
Nebraska was ranked No. 1 in the AVCA/USA Today Top 25 poll for a record 14 straight weeks and broke single-season school records for wins and winning percentage. Sophomore setter Greichaly Cepero earned AVCA National Player-of-the-Year honors. Three Huskers won AVCA All-America certificates, and five Nebraska players were named to the All-Big 12 teams. Laura Pilakowski earned Verizon/CoSIDA Academic All-America honors, and a conference-best seven Huskers earned Academic All-Big 12 recognition.
Cook, 44, has continued his success in 2001, as the Huskers have gone 13-1, defeating eight ranked teams. Cook has improved his Nebraska record to 47-1, and he is 26-0 in Big 12 matches.
Cook took over the Nebraska head coaching job after serving as associate head coach during the 1999 season. Before returning to Nebraska in 1999, he led Wisconsin to six straight postseason appearances in seven seasons as the Badgers head coach.
Cooks accomplishments at Wisconsin earned him praise as one of the games top young coaches. He built the Badger program into a top-10 program during his seven-year career in Madison, which included back-to-back trips to the NCAA regional finals in 1997 and 1998. Cook compiled a 162-73 record at the helm of the Badgers, including an 89-51 Big Ten record. He was named the Big Ten Co-Coach and AVCA District 2 Coach of the Year in 1997 after leading the Badgers to a share of the Big Ten title with a 19-1 mark and school-record 30-3 overall record. Cook coached four All-Americans, nine AVCA All-District award winners, 11 All-Big Ten honorees and two Big Ten freshmen of the year at UW. He also coached 21 academic All-Big Ten selections during his seven seasons.
A graduate of the University of San Diego, Cook earned his bachelors degree in history in 1979. He completed his masters degree in teaching and coaching effectiveness from San Diego State in 1991. Cook and his wife Wendy, a former two-time All-America setter at San Diego State, are the parents of two children, Lauren, 10, and Taylor, 7.