Eric the Red
Team HuskerBoard
Huskers blast Duke
BY TODD HENRICHS / Lincoln Journal Star
Jennifer Saleaumua said goodbye to the Coliseum with a wave to the fans, a celebratory victory lap, and appropriately, another terrific all-around match.
It was a special night for the senior from National City, Calif., who has accomplished much in her Nebraska career. Everything except play in an NCAA final four.
On Saturday, she moved one step closer to that goal, contributing a team-high 10 digs, adding six kills and four blocks in a 30-19, 30-19, 30-20 second-round win against Duke in the NCAA Tournament.
“I had to make it a good one before I left,” said Saleaumua, who capped a perfect 16-0 season at the Coliseum in her 127th career match as a Husker. “There’s no place as loud as here, no place where you feel so much support. I had to give them another show.”
Christina Houghtelling (center) puts down a kill against Duke's Jourdan Norman (12) and Ali Hausfeld (1). (AP)
Just as she did on Senior Night last month, Saleaumua provided some memorable moments for her adoring fans.
In game one, she capped the longest rally of the night with a kill, and in game two, it was Saleaumua’s brilliant coverage that allowed the Huskers to turn what could have been a block for the Blue Devils into a block of their own.
In game three, Saleaumua rose up for a solo block against Duke’s Jourdan Norman. The crowd roared, only to outdo itself in saluting Saleaumua when she came out of the game on match point.
Head coach Cook planned Saleaumua’s exit as a salute to the senior, and the victory lap as a salute to the fans.
“The fans are so connected with this team,” Cook said. “It was a lot of fun at the Coliseum tonight.”
Next week, the fun moves down Interstate 80 to Qwest Center Omaha, what Cook now calls, “Coliseum East.”
Top-ranked Nebraska (30-1) will meet 14th-ranked UCLA in Friday’s late semifinal. The early match pits fourth-ranked Florida against No. 9 Louisville.
The winners will meet Saturday for the right to play in the final four in San Antonio Dec. 15-17.
Earlier this season, Nebraska won the Volleyball Showcase at Qwest, defeating Hawaii and defending national champion Stanford on back-to-back nights. The tournament MVP was Christina Houghtelling, the junior who continued her breakout season Saturday with a standout effort against Duke (24-8).
Houghtelling hit .476 with 12 kills and added eight digs in what she said was a momentum-building victory.
“Just to be making great plays, having fun, making eye contact is all important,” Houghtelling said. “We’ve very confident right now.”
For the second night in a row, Nebraska served tough, generating seven aces and making a Duke attack, which was unstoppable Friday against American, appear disoriented.
Middle attackers Norman and Carrie DeMange combined for seven kills, but 15 errors, against Nebraska, which had 15 blocks. Ten came from senior Melissa Elmer, who secured the single-season school record for blocks after setting the career record on Friday.
Tealle Hankus had a double-double of 10 kills and 11 digs to lead Duke, which suffered its first loss since Nov. 4.
“We knew that they were a very strong, physical team,” Duke coach Jolene Nagel said of the Huskers. “But even more of an issue is the way we passed. We didn’t even worry about the block because we weren’t passing well enough to do anything about it offensively.”
Early on, Nebraska’s middle blockers were a big part of the offense. Elmer and Tracy Stalls combined for four kills as the Huskers went up 15-8 in game one. In one stretch, Nebraska held Duke without a point on serve in eight straight rotations.
Game two was tight until the Huskers went on a 12-2 run to go up 19-10. Nebraska reeled off five straight points, and then seven straight, in game three.
As the sell-out crowd of 4,076 rose to acknowledge match point, Cook called for Dani Mancuso to replace Saleaumua at the service line. Saleaumua walked off, slapping hands with her coach and hugging Elmer, Nebraska’s only other senior.
After Nebraska ended the match on a rare Dani Busboom kill, Cook called for the victory lap, a tradition stemming from the baseball program’s trips to the College World Series.
Now it’s the Husker volleyball team headed to Omaha with a national championship at stake. And as she did Saturday, Saleaumua will have to play great for NU to win it all, Cook said.
“When she wants to play, then you really notice her,” Cook said. “She can impact a match.”
Reach Todd Henrichs at 473-7439 or thenrichs@journalstar.com.
BY TODD HENRICHS / Lincoln Journal Star
Jennifer Saleaumua said goodbye to the Coliseum with a wave to the fans, a celebratory victory lap, and appropriately, another terrific all-around match.
It was a special night for the senior from National City, Calif., who has accomplished much in her Nebraska career. Everything except play in an NCAA final four.
On Saturday, she moved one step closer to that goal, contributing a team-high 10 digs, adding six kills and four blocks in a 30-19, 30-19, 30-20 second-round win against Duke in the NCAA Tournament.
“I had to make it a good one before I left,” said Saleaumua, who capped a perfect 16-0 season at the Coliseum in her 127th career match as a Husker. “There’s no place as loud as here, no place where you feel so much support. I had to give them another show.”
Christina Houghtelling (center) puts down a kill against Duke's Jourdan Norman (12) and Ali Hausfeld (1). (AP)
Just as she did on Senior Night last month, Saleaumua provided some memorable moments for her adoring fans.
In game one, she capped the longest rally of the night with a kill, and in game two, it was Saleaumua’s brilliant coverage that allowed the Huskers to turn what could have been a block for the Blue Devils into a block of their own.
In game three, Saleaumua rose up for a solo block against Duke’s Jourdan Norman. The crowd roared, only to outdo itself in saluting Saleaumua when she came out of the game on match point.
Head coach Cook planned Saleaumua’s exit as a salute to the senior, and the victory lap as a salute to the fans.
“The fans are so connected with this team,” Cook said. “It was a lot of fun at the Coliseum tonight.”
Next week, the fun moves down Interstate 80 to Qwest Center Omaha, what Cook now calls, “Coliseum East.”
Top-ranked Nebraska (30-1) will meet 14th-ranked UCLA in Friday’s late semifinal. The early match pits fourth-ranked Florida against No. 9 Louisville.
The winners will meet Saturday for the right to play in the final four in San Antonio Dec. 15-17.
Earlier this season, Nebraska won the Volleyball Showcase at Qwest, defeating Hawaii and defending national champion Stanford on back-to-back nights. The tournament MVP was Christina Houghtelling, the junior who continued her breakout season Saturday with a standout effort against Duke (24-8).
Houghtelling hit .476 with 12 kills and added eight digs in what she said was a momentum-building victory.
“Just to be making great plays, having fun, making eye contact is all important,” Houghtelling said. “We’ve very confident right now.”
For the second night in a row, Nebraska served tough, generating seven aces and making a Duke attack, which was unstoppable Friday against American, appear disoriented.
Middle attackers Norman and Carrie DeMange combined for seven kills, but 15 errors, against Nebraska, which had 15 blocks. Ten came from senior Melissa Elmer, who secured the single-season school record for blocks after setting the career record on Friday.
Tealle Hankus had a double-double of 10 kills and 11 digs to lead Duke, which suffered its first loss since Nov. 4.
“We knew that they were a very strong, physical team,” Duke coach Jolene Nagel said of the Huskers. “But even more of an issue is the way we passed. We didn’t even worry about the block because we weren’t passing well enough to do anything about it offensively.”
Early on, Nebraska’s middle blockers were a big part of the offense. Elmer and Tracy Stalls combined for four kills as the Huskers went up 15-8 in game one. In one stretch, Nebraska held Duke without a point on serve in eight straight rotations.
Game two was tight until the Huskers went on a 12-2 run to go up 19-10. Nebraska reeled off five straight points, and then seven straight, in game three.
As the sell-out crowd of 4,076 rose to acknowledge match point, Cook called for Dani Mancuso to replace Saleaumua at the service line. Saleaumua walked off, slapping hands with her coach and hugging Elmer, Nebraska’s only other senior.
After Nebraska ended the match on a rare Dani Busboom kill, Cook called for the victory lap, a tradition stemming from the baseball program’s trips to the College World Series.
Now it’s the Husker volleyball team headed to Omaha with a national championship at stake. And as she did Saturday, Saleaumua will have to play great for NU to win it all, Cook said.
“When she wants to play, then you really notice her,” Cook said. “She can impact a match.”
Reach Todd Henrichs at 473-7439 or thenrichs@journalstar.com.