Nebraska
Sherman: Echoes of a bygone era stir postseason hope for Nebraska baseball
LINCOLN, Neb. — Seven years of postseason magic began a quarter-century ago for Nebraska baseball. It matters more today than at any time since the run came to an end.
I’ll explain.
But first, a story from one of the peak moments of that era: On June 2, 2001, Nebraska hosted Rice in Game 2 of the only super regional ever played at Buck Beltzer Field.
It was, in fact, the final game at the rickety venue, which was quickly razed to make room for football practice space as Dave Van Horn’s baseball program upgraded into its new Haymarket digs. But as the early innings unfolded with a first trip to the College World Series in reach for Nebraska, another day at “The Buck” appeared inevitable.
Rice sent Kenny Baugh to the mound. The hard-throwing right-hander was drafted with the 11th pick of the MLB Draft by the Detroit Tigers three days after his final collegiate appearance that Saturday.
Baugh never played in the big leagues amid the need for shoulder surgery. Part of the reason for his trouble, undeniably, remains buried in Lincoln.
He threw 171 pitches in 8 ⅓ innings against Nebraska. Let that sink in.
None of the first 11 plate appearances for the Huskers ended with a ball in play. Jeff Leise led off the top of the first for Nebraska. It was the visiting team after dispatching the Owls, 7-0, one day prior in the series opener.
Leise struck out. The outstanding player at the Lincoln Regional from the previous week, he walked back toward the third-base dugout. Teammates looked to him for a report on Baugh.
“Good luck,” Leise said he told them, recounting the memory this week. “I didn’t really have much to add other than that. He was mid-90s with his fastball, but it looked harder than that, and he had a power curve.”
Baugh fought his control. Still, several of those 2001 Huskers, in rewatching the game a few years ago, traded texts in wonderment during the replay of the late innings over how Nebraska managed to beat the Owls. The Huskers scored three runs against Baugh in the ninth to take a 6-5 lead and won it in the 10th.
Junior shortstop Will Bolt caught the final out to ignite a dogpile.
The Huskers slayed a dragon. Rice beat Nebraska 16-2 four months earlier in the first game of that season. After another dogpile last Sunday in Omaha when Nebraska won the Big Ten tournament with Bolt at the helm, the Huskers’ resilience and competitive fire echoed a bygone era.
“A lot of memories come flooding back,” Bolt said.
GO DEEPER
Nebraska baseball enters regular-season finale with postseason hopes still on the line
Now, the question is, can they travel a similar path in June?
Van Horn, Bolt’s old coach who has run the show at Arkansas since 2003, masterfully designed his Nebraska program to play with a collective chip on its shoulder.
“People didn’t think much of us when they saw us,” said Leise, a first-team All-American outfielder in 2002 who now provides baseball commentary for the Big Ten Network.
From 1999 to 2005, Nebraska won four Big 12 tournaments. Three times out of the four, the Huskers lost their first games in Oklahoma City, then stormed back to raise a trophy.
These Huskers did the same last week. Instead of Chad Wiles, R.D. Spiehs and Scott Fries who ate innings unexpectedly, it was Will Walsh, Drew Christo and Jackson Brockett. In place of Dan Johnson and Jed Morris who smashed home runs, it was Josh Caron and Gabe Swansen.
“There are certain attributes, certain traits that all (championship teams) have,” Bolt said Sunday. “Toughness is at the top of the list. Talent, you’ve gotta have it. You’ve gotta have the dudes. You’ve gotta have the players.
“The separator is the toughness piece of it, just the unwillingness to waver from a process of showing up and having a job to do.”
In Bolt’s time as a player, Nebraska capitalized on the momentum gained from its second and third Big 12 tourney championships to win regionals. Trips to the CWS followed league tourney titles in 2001 and 2005. Texas beat the Huskers in 2002 to win the Big 12 tournament in Arlington, Texas, before both squads advanced to the CWS.
I had a front-row seat for the rise of Nebraska baseball, reporting on those teams daily during the postseason for the Omaha World-Herald. What struck me was not the heroics on the diamond that put the Huskers over the top in do-or-die games.
It was their composure and togetherness. They were more of a force off the field than on it. I’ve seen more teams like them in decades of watching the CWS up close. Many hoisted trophies in Omaha.
“You can tell this team is close,” Leise said. “They go to bat for each other. When things get tough, they fight through adversity. We played that way. We practiced that way. There was a level of excellence that everybody strived for.”
Ohio State flattened Nebraska 15-2 in the opening game for both teams at this year’s Big Ten tournament. Just as the Huskers responded after several difficult defeats in April and May, they won last week behind ace pitcher Brett Sears. He beat Purdue, and then Nebraska went to work in ending the stays of Ohio State, Indiana and Penn State.
“That confidence and that experience,” Bolt said, “that postseason feel, the butterflies, all of that they’re taking with them this week.”
Championship numbers. 📊🏆 pic.twitter.com/nIS5CWp0cM
— Nebraska Baseball (@HuskerBaseball) May 29, 2024
The Huskers head to the Stillwater Regional as the No. 2 seed of four teams, set to face Florida on Friday at 2 p.m.
Sears will be on the mound, ready to slay a dragon.
LSU beat the Gators last year in the decisive third game of the CWS championship series. This year, Florida still hits home runs like a national title contender. But it’s 28-27 and snuck into the 64-team field.
“We’ll play anybody in the country and it’s not going to change our approach,” Christo said. “We’re going to show up and be the same team every day.”
That these Huskers last week showed a resemblance to the best teams in school history — with a coach who connects one era to the other — offers hope of a memorable June on the horizon.
(Photo of Caleb Clark: Courtesy of Nebraska Athletics)
Nebraska
Carey’s Two Home Runs Help Nebraska Baseball Stomp Michigan State, Sweep Weekend Series
The first Big Ten Conference series of the year for NU ends in a sweep.
Nebraska baseball pounded Michigan State in Sunday’s series finale at Haymarket Park, 12-2, in seven innings. The Huskers improved to 10-5, while the Spartans fell to 3-11.
With Sunday’s victory, NU moves to 3-0 in the league.
- The Game
- The Stats
- What’s Next
- Nebraska Baseball’s 2026 Schedule
The Game
Down 2-0 in the series, Michigan State needed a spark early to try to salvage at least one win in Lincoln. In the top of the first inning, first baseman Randy Seymour took a 3-1 pitch from Gavin Blachowicz to right center and over the fence.
But, for the Spartans, that spark was quickly extinguished.
Nebraska loaded the bases with no outs on a walk, a single, and a single. Case Sanderson then doubled to score them all. He would cross home plate two batters later when Preston Freeman smacked a 1-0 pitch down the left field line for a two-run homer.
Already up 5-1, Dylan Carey lifted a two-run home run in the second inning. The Huskers would tack on one run in the third, one in the fourth, two in the fifth, and one more in the sixth. At the end of the game, Nebraska scored in every inning in which it went to the plate.
Blachowicz sat down 11 batters from the second through fifth innings. A leadoff double in the sixth inning helped Michigan State add one more run to its tally.
In the top of the seventh inning, with a 10-run rule waiting to be enacted, the Spartans got a one-out single before being put down via a fly out and a fielder’s choice to end the game.
The Stats
Blachowicz pitched the entire 7.0 innings Sunday afternoon. He allowed two earned runs on three hits, walking one and striking out 11.
The Huskers, who rattled off 11 hits, were aided by five Spartan errors. That helped bring home extra runs, with four of the 12 runs scored being unearned.
Carey led the way at the plate for the Big Red. The shortstop went 3-for-4 with four RBI, two home runs, and three runs scored.
Nebraska left seven runners on base, while Michigan State stranded just two.
What’s Next
Nebraska’s nine-game homestand continues with a midweek contest against North Dakota State.
The Bison are 1-14 on the year and coming off a sweep at Vanderbilt. The lone victory was 5-1 over Monmouth at the Stetson Tournament on Feb. 21.
First pitch from Haymarket Park on Wednesday is slated for 6 p.m. CDT. The game will be streamed on B1G+.
Have a question or comment for Kaleb? Send an email to kalebhenry.huskermax@gmail.com.
Nebraska Baseball’s 2026 Schedule
- Feb. 13 Nebraska 12, UConn 2 [7 inn.] (MLB Desert Invitational)
- Feb. 14 Nebraska 7, Northeastern 4 (MLB Desert Invitational)
- Feb. 15 Nebraska 9, Grand Canyon 1 (MLB Desert Invitational)
- Feb. 16 Stanford 11, Nebraska 6 (MLB Desert Invitational)
- Feb. 20 Louisville 4, Nebraska 2 (Amegy Bank College Baseball Series)
- Feb. 21 Kansas State 3, Nebraska 3 FloCollege (Amegy Bank College Baseball Series)
- Feb. 22 Nebraska 10, Florida State 1 (Amegy Bank College Baseball Series)
- Feb. 27 Nebraska 9, Auburn 8 [10 inn.]
- Feb. 28 Auburn 15, Nebraska 4 [7 inn.]
- Mar. 1 Auburn 12, Nebraska 3
- Mar. 3 Nebraska 8, Omaha 5
- Mar. 4 Nebraska 5, South Dakota State 4
- Mar. 6 Nebraska 5, Michigan State 4 [10 inn.]
- Mar. 7 Nebraska 3, Michigan State 1
- Mar. 8 Nebraska 12, Michigan State 2 [7 inn.]
- Mar. 11 vs. North Dakota State 6 p.m.
- Mar. 13 vs. Maine 6 p.m.
- Mar. 14 vs. Maine 2 p.m.
- Mar. 15 vs. Maine 12 p.m.
- Mar. 17 at Wichita State 6 p.m.
- Mar. 18 at Wichita State 2 p.m.
- Mar. 20 at Michigan 3 p.m.
- Mar. 21 at Michigan 1 p.m.
- Mar. 22 at Michigan 12 p.m.
- Mar. 24 at Kansas State 6 p.m.
- Mar. 27 vs. Indiana 6 p.m.
- Mar. 28 vs. Indiana 2 p.m.
- Mar. 29 vs. Indiana 12 p.m.
- Mar. 31 at Creighton 6 p.m.
- Apr. 3 vs. Penn State 6 p.m.
- Apr. 4 vs. Penn State 2 p.m.
- Apr. 5 vs. Penn State 12 p.m.
- Apr. 7 vs. Kansas 6 p.m.
- Apr. 10 at Oregon 7 p.m.
- Apr. 11 at Oregon 4 p.m.
- Apr. 12 at Oregon 2 p.m.
- Apr 14 vs. Creighton 6 p.m.
- Apr. 17 vs. USC 6 p.m.
- Apr. 18 vs. USC 2 p.m.
- Apr. 19 vs. USC 12 p.m.
- Apr. 21 at Kansas 6 p.m.
- Apr. 24 at Illinois 6 p.m.
- Apr. 25 at Illinois 3 p.m.
- Apr. 26 at Illinois 1 p.m.
- Apr. 28 vs. Kansas State 6 p.m.
- May 1 at Ohio State 5 p.m.
- May 2 at Ohio State 2 p.m.
- May 3 at Ohio State 12 p.m.
- May 8 vs. Iowa 6 p.m.
- May 9 vs. Iowa 2 p.m.
- May 10 vs. Iowa 1 p.m.
- May 12 at Creighton 6 p.m.
- May 14 at Minnesota 6 p.m.
- May 15 at Minnesota 6 p.m.
- May 16 at Minnesota 1 p.m.
- May 19-24 Big Ten Tournament
Home games are bolded. All times central.
Nebraska
Nebraska Secures a ‘Grand’ Sweep in Front of Sold Out Crowd
GRAND ISLAND, Neb. — Press release courtesy of LOVB Nebraska:
The state of Nebraska once again proved why it’s the Volleyball Capital of the U.S. as a sold-out Heartland Events Center played host to a LOVB Nebraska sweep of LOVB Salt Lake (29-27, 25-16, 25-22) on Saturday night in Grand Island, Nebraska.
Outside hitter Jordan Larson shined once again for Nebraska (5-7), recording her third-straight match with 15+ points. The Hooper, Nebraska, native tallied 14 kills on a season-high .385 hitting efficiency, tacking on 13 digs for her second double-double in three matches.
“I think I’ve always kind of played like this,” said Larson. “You never know when the last could be, and so to me it’s just like how can I continue to leave it all out there. How do I continue to show up and let my body do it? I’m really trying to enjoy this as much as I can.”
The other half of Nebraska’s dominant outside hitting tandem, Anne Buijs, was close behind Larson, securing 13 points on 13 kills. Opposite hitter Kimberly Drewniok rounded out a trio of Nebraska athletes in the double figures for points and kills, also scoring 13 points on 13 kills.
The true highlight of the match were the fans that filled the Heartland Events Center. Central Nebraska showed up and made it known, creating a tough environment for Salt Lake while continuously energizing the home bench.
“We’re thrilled to be in Grand Island. That’s the best crowd we’ve had all season,” said Nebraska head coach Suzie Fritz.
“You could feel the energy. I think they helped us with a couple points. They really do make a difference and it’s really impactful for us to hear that and be a part of it,” said Larson.
“When Jordan got announced in the starting lineup, I told her I got goosebumps because the fans were just so amazing,” said Drewniok.
Salt Lake (8-6) continues having midseason struggles, extending its losing streak to five matches and now falling one game back of first place. Outside hitter Claire Hoffman led all athletes on the floor tonight with a match-high 16 points and 15 kills.
“Unfortunately, really frustrated after the match,” said Salt Lake head coach Tama Miyashiro. “We gotta look forward and no one’s feeling sorry for us. We’re going to try to get back to work and fix a couple things.”
LOVB Nebraska will look to continue its hot streak next Thursday, March 12, against LOVB Madison for a 7 p.m. Central first serve at the Alliant Energy Center in Madison, Wisconsin. The contest will stream on ESPN+.
Nebraska
2026 NSAA Girls State Basketball Championships Scores & Highlights (Saturday)
LINCOLN, Neb. (KOLN) – The NSAA Girls Basketball Championship is underway. The event is March 4 to March 7, with the finals at Pinnacle Bank Arena.
Tickets for the event can be purchased on the Gofan.co website.
State basketball scores and highlights
Below is the schedule for Saturday’s games. Check back throughout the day for updated scores and highlights.
Class A
1PM: North Star vs. Omaha North
Class B
6:15PM: Gretna East vs. Bennington
Class C1
Milford 66, Malcolm 52
11AM: Gothenburg vs. Fort Calhoun (third place game)
Class C2
4:15PM: Pender vs. Elkhorn Valley
1PM: Yutan vs. GACC (third place game)
Class D1
8:15PM: Bloomfield vs Howells-Dodge
3PM: Sutton vs. Elm Creek (third place game)
Class D2
FINAL: DCS 49, Wynot 39
9AM: Archangels vs Red Cloud (third place game)
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