NamelessHusker
Banned

[SIZE=14pt]Numbers don't lie for NU[/SIZE]
LINCOLN -- Everybody knows the Nebraska volleyball team is pretty good.
The No. 1 Huskers are now 6-0 after disposing of No. 4 Penn State 30-14, 30-27, 30-23 Sunday afternoon.
But those numbers don't tell the whole story. Just take a look at these numbers.
The Huskers hit .367 as a team against a very good Penn State team. Four players -- Jordan Larson, Christina Houghtelling, Sarah Pavan and Melissa Elmer -- had at least nine kills.
The most impressive thing is that all four of those players also hit over .400 for the match. Larson was at .480, Pavan .478 and Houghtelling .476. Elmer was way behind those three at a rather pedestrian .421.
Remember that a volleyball hitting percentage -- kills minus errors divided by total attacks-- is similar to a baseball average. Anything over .300 is pretty good.
Anything over ..400 -- well in major league baseball no one has hit .400 since Ted Williams in 1941.
That balance makes the Huskers so difficult for opponents to handle.
"That's what makes us such a good team is that we have players all the way around the court that are equally good," Pavan said. "Having that causes other teams a lot of difficulty because they don't know who to block, they don't know where to go.
"We're just a talented, deep team. The numbers speak for themselves."
And those numbers don't lie. They say that coach John Cook's system is working to perfection. They say that Cook's decision to go to a 6-2 offense instead of the usual 5-1 was a good one.
"That's our system," Cook said. "That's why we designed that system was to be balanced so we're not relying on anybody. That's a credit one, to that we have people who can put the ball away and two, the setters are mixing it up. It does make it difficult."
Penn State coach Russ Rose knew the Huskers were very good. He watched them two weeks ago when his Nittany Lions played in the AVCA.NACWAA College Volleyball Challenge at the Qwest Center in Omaha. Penn State didn't play Nebraska in that tournament but Rose got a good idea of how good the Huskers were going to be.
Nothing he saw Sunday changed his mind.
"I think they've always been a terrific blocking team," Rose said. "I think this team's defense is correlated to the quality of their block. We didn't pass well enough to mount the type of attack that really could have separated the block and they had very little difficulty with our serve.
"They passed very well and that enabled them to do what they wanted to do offensively, and even on some broken plays they just had the ability to jump and take a pretty big swing."
And a lot of those big swings resulted in big kills.
"Nebraska didn't have much of a problem with us at the net which is something I think will be a trend with a lot of teams," Rose said.
That is, as long as the Huskers remain focused. Cook said that was a problem Friday night against Pepperdine.
"If we have some people checked out, playing as many people as we're playing, the system will really look bad," he said. "Over the three days they really improved and obviously played extremely well tonight. I think they learned a valuable lesson, that there's an intensity and focus to being great every day."