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Andi Jackson Out, Taylor Landfair to Start Again for Nebraska Volleyball

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Andi Jackson Out, Taylor Landfair to Start Again for Nebraska Volleyball


A return home to the Bob Devaney Sports Center will begin the same way as the weekday trip to Champagne, Ill. did on Thursday night for Nebraska volleyball – without Andi Jackson.

The budding sophomore missed the Oct. 3 victory over Illinois due to an undisclosed injury. Nearly 50 minutes prior to tip-off of the Huskers home matchup against Iowa, Jackson has been reported by multiple outlets as unavailble again for the Big Red.

The news was first presented on the Huskers Radio Network pregame show with John Baylor and Lauren Cook West, as the injury has been announced as “day-to-day” but without context of the injury itself. The Colorado native was an AVCA All-Region team member her freshman season, while also garnering second-team All-Big Ten and All-Big Ten freshman team recognition in 2023.

Jackson has been one of the lethal threats to Nebraska’s potent start, aiding the No. 2 Huskers with 117 kills and a .475 hitting percentage, good for sixth in the country and second in the Big Ten Conference. Her inside presence has aided the Huskers to sitting 11th in the country in total hitting percentage.

In Jackson’s absence, San Diego transfer Leyla Blackwell will receive her second start of the season. Blackwell had six kills in her appearnce on Thursday night.

Nebraska volleyball's Taylor Landfair jousts at the net against Wichita State.

Nebraska volleyball’s Taylor Landfair jousts at the net against Wichita State. / Nebraska Athletics

Additionally, Taylor Landfair will start at the outside hitter spot likely opposite Harper Murray for a second straight contest. The Minnesota transfer had eight kills in three sets against Illinois, and has 49 total kilss on the season with a .336 hitting percentage. Landfair had a breakout performance to open Big Ten play nearly ten days ago against UCLA, coming off the bench with a season-high 13 kills.

Nebraska battles the 8-7 Hawkeyes at the Bob Devaney Sports Center at 2 PM CDT with television coverage on Nebraska Public Media. The Huskers hope to get Jackson returned prior to a tough home tilt with No. 10 Purdue on Friday night in Lincoln.

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Nebraska

Nebraska Volleyball Routes Iowa

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Nebraska Volleyball Routes Iowa


Photo Courtesy of Scott Bruhn-Nebraska Athletics

By Nebraska Athletics

LINCOLN, Neb. – The No. 2 Nebraska volleyball team swept the Iowa Hawkeyes 25-17, 25-11, 25-13 on Sunday afternoon at the Bob Devaney Sports Center in front of a crowd of 8,667. 

In their 11th straight win, the Huskers (14-1, 4-0 Big Ten) hit .404 and held Iowa (8-8, 2-2 Big Ten) to .155.

Nebraska had seven aces and just one service error. The last time the Huskers had at least seven aces with one or fewer service errors was Nov. 12, 2017 against Rutgers (nine aces, one error). Lexi Rodriguez had three of NU’s aces to go with a match-high 12 digs. 

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Merritt Beason led NU offensively with 10 kills on .400 hitting and added five digs. Leyla Blackwell had a season-high nine kills on .692 hitting, and Rebekah Allick had nine kills and hit .583 with three blocks. Harper Murray added seven kills on .353 hitting with two aces. Lindsay Krause chipped in five kills on six swings (.833) all in the third set. 

Bergen Reilly contributed 35 assists, and Kennedi Orr and Laney Choboy each had five digs. 

The Huskers did not surrender an ace to the Hawkeyes. NU’s last eight opponents have combined for just seven aces. 

Michelle Urquhart led Iowa with 11 kills on a .269 hitting percentage.

Set 1: Blackwell notched three kills and a solo block to propel the Huskers to an 8-4 lead. Iowa brought the score to 10-10 before Rodriguez went to the service line and sparked a 4-0 run for NU that included kills by Beason and Murray and an ace by Rodriguez. A Reilly kill and Murray ace put the Big Red up 18-12 and forced a Hawkeye timeout. Beason scored her fifth kill to give Nebraska set point, and Allick put down an overpass to close out the 25-17 set victory. NU hit .333 and sided out at a 77.8% mark. 

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Set 2: Behind an ace from Rodriguez and kills from Murray and Blackwell, the Huskers took a 6-2 lead. Five straight errors from Iowa stretched the advantage to 11-3. Two kills from Landfair and one from Allick powered a 4-0 run to put the Big Red up 16-6. Kills by Murray and Beason and Rodriguez’ third ace of the match extended Nebraska’s lead to 22-9. NU finished out the set, 25-11, with two kills by Blackwell and one by Reilly. Through two sets, Nebraska’s middles combined for 16 kills and no errors for a combined hitting percentage of .800. 

Set 3: A Beason kill and solo block, Krause kill and Reilly ace were part of a 5-0 run to put NU up 13-5. Krause notched two kills and Murray registered an ace and a kill to help give the Huskers a 22-12 lead late in the third. A Krause/Allick block and an Allick solo block closed out the set, 25-13, and the match, 3-0.

Up Next: The Huskers will take on No. 10 Purdue on Friday, Oct. 11 at the Bob Devaney Sports Center. The match is slated to start at 7:30 p.m. and will be televised on the Big Ten Network. Audio coverage will be provided by the Huskers Radio Network.



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Rutgers defense promised improvement and lives up to it at Nebraska

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Rutgers defense promised improvement and lives up to it at Nebraska


LINCOLN, Neb. — With the clock ticking down under three minutes and Nebraska trying to seal the win Saturday, Rutgers senior Kyonte Hamilton broke through the line of scrimmage, wrapped up quarterback Dylan Raiola and swung the freshman to the ground for a 13-yard loss.

Hamilton’s sack on third-and-6 at Nebraska’s 20-yard line got the ball back to the offense with an opportunity to tie the game, something it did time and time again in what ended up a 14-7 loss at Memorial Stadium.

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Tad Stryker: Goal Line Gumption by Nebraska’s Defense vs. Rutgers

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Tad Stryker: Goal Line Gumption by Nebraska’s Defense vs. Rutgers


In Nebraska, where no one-score win is ugly, getting a stop when you absolutely need to get one is a reason to celebrate.

The Cornhusker defense did that in the final two minutes to nail down a 14-7 win over Rutgers in a classic brutal November-style Big Ten slugfest that occurred on possibly the hottest day in the history of Memorial Stadium, where it was 97 degrees at kickoff on the first Saturday of October with a blast furnace wind blowing through the old ballpark.

Upperclassmen like Ty Robinson, Nash Hutmacher, Marques Buford and DeShon Singleton made the big plays for Nebraska when they needed them, and so did youngsters like James Williams, who had five tackles, including two sacks for the Big Red.

The 5-1 Huskers proved they still aren’t capable of stringing four solid quarters of adequate offensive football together, but the Blackshirts held the conference’s best running back in check, still haven’t given up a rushing touchdown this season and staged a heroic goal line stand in the third quarter that swung the game in Nebraska’s favor.

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Dylan Raiola sacked

Oct 5, 2024; Lincoln, Nebraska, USA; Nebraska Cornhuskers quarterback Dylan Raiola (15) is sacked by Rutgers Scarlet Knights defensive lineman Aaron Lewis (71) during the fourth quarter at Memorial Stadium. / Dylan Widger-Imagn Images

Leading 14-0 at halftime despite allowing 65 rushing yards to Kyle Monangai gave the Huskers a world of good when their Dylan Raiola and the offense swooned in the second half. But handing Rutgers its first Big Ten loss wasn’t easy.

The Blackshirts found themselves in a precarious position when the latest in a depressing series of special-teams gaffes — the Scarlet Knights’ second blocked punt of the game — gave Rutgers the ball at the Husker 2-yard line with 7:50 remaining in the third quarter. But the Huskers gang-tackled Monangai for a three-yard loss, which seemed to set the tone for the rest of the series. Although a holding penalty in the end zone on Singleton gave the Knights new life at the 2-yard line, the Blackshirts stopped Monangai twice more and Singleton tackled Kenny Fletcher for a one-yard loss on a quick pass before Buford slammed the door by knocking down a fourth-down pass near the goal line.

Red zone tenacity and third-down stoutness (Rutgers converted only two of 14) were vital in this tussle that very likely had more than one Husker fan thinking that his team had just won an Iowa-style victory as he wearily trudged toward his vehicle at dusk.

It was probably even uglier than an Iowa win (but possibly not as ugly as an Alabama loss to Vanderbilt) when you consider that Rutgers wideout Ben Black, who caught an 11-yard scoring pass with 3:40 remaining in the game, really should have had two touchdowns. He dropped a surefire six points earlier in the fourth quarter when Buford fell down in coverage on Black’s deep pass route. But Big Ten games sometimes turn on things like that, or on possibly coach Matt Rhule’s best decision of the day, taking the wind in the fourth quarter instead of the third.

Then there was Brian Buschini, who unleashed a critically important, wind-aided 69-yard punt with 2:28 to go that forced Rutgers to start its final drive at its own 11-yard line. And then it was up to the Blackshirts, who remembered that they allowed quarterback Athan Kaliakmanis to lead Minnesota to a game-winning touchdown on the final drive in the 2023 season opener. This time, they shut him down on four consecutive misfires, with Williams making a hit on Kaliakmanis to force an incompletion on the Knights’ last-gasp fourth-down play.

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Kaliakmanis had a rough time of it for most of the day, completing just 15 of 37 passes for 186 yards with one TD and two interceptions (by Buford and Ceyair Wright). Raiola did no better. In easily his worst effort of his young career, the true freshman completed 13 of 27 passes for 134 yards and no touchdowns, with one interception, and got very little help from a Husker running game that disappeared completely in the fourth quarter and netted less than 100 yards for the game.

After his excellent first half, Monangai got just 13 more rushing yards on nine second-half carries and finished with 78.

69-yard Brian Buschini punt

Oct 5, 2024; Lincoln, Nebraska, USA; Nebraska Cornhuskers wide receiver Jaylen Lloyd (19) and defensive back Jeremiah Charles (25) down Brian Buschini’s 69-yard punt late in the fourth quarter. / Dylan Widger-Imagn Images

Buschini, who had two punts blocked and for a moment looked seriously injured after the Scarlet Knights roughed him up on the first one, singlehandedly lifted an otherwise spotty Nebraska special teams performance out of the doldrums. He pinned Rutgers at its own 5-yard line with a well-placed 41-yard punt that rolled out of bounds. The senior even completed a 30-yard pass to Jalen Lloyd on a fake punt, but not even that could jumpstart the Husker offense in the second half.

Nebraska had only four first downs the entire second half as Raiola and his offensive line looked completely baffled by the Rutgers defense.

If you called Buschini the game’s hero, you wouldn’t have gotten much of an argument from Rhule.

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“I’m proud of the guys, proud of the team, and Buschini was an all-star again today,” Rhule said.

Buschini needs some help on special teams. The upcoming bye week would be a good time to figure it out.

At midseason, special teams coordinator Ed Foley is playing “whack-a-mole.” Whether it’s poor snaps on field goals, poor coverage by his punt gunners or getting punts blocked, something new comes up almost each week. Nebraska’s kicking game is a net drag on the team, although Nebraska’s steady plus-one performance in turnover margin has usually been enough to offset it.

Thomas Fidone

Oct 5, 2024; Lincoln, Nebraska, USA; Rutgers Scarlet Knights defensive back Shaquan Loyal (6) breaks up a pass to Nebraska Cornhuskers tight end Thomas Fidone II (24) during the third quarter at Memorial Stadium. / Dylan Widger-Imagn Images

On offense, the most surprising stat of the season’s first half is that tight end Thomas Fidone doesn’t have a single touchdown catch. Fidone caught three passes for just 15 yards and no big plays Saturday. He and Raiola had an awkward exchange on the second of Nebraska’s three consecutive three-and-outs in the fourth quarter. Fidone was open for the first down on a third-and-six play from deep in his own territory, but the usually accurate Raiola delivered the ball at about knee level to the lanky Council Bluffs native, who stooped over but couldn’t get a grip on a ball that probably should be considered catchable. It’s October, and the two really haven’t developed a good rhythm, which is costing the offense a lot of consistency.

With one major stumble against Illinois, it’s been the defense which has carried Nebraska through the first half of the season and to a win over previously unbeaten Rutgers, which although ugly, has the Huskers tied for fifth in the Big Ten, and will no doubt will be a valuable possession as the season winds down.

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MORE: Adam Carriker Gut Reaction: Nebraska’s One-Score Win Over Rutgers

MORE: Gallery: Huskers Hand Rutgers Its First Loss of the Season

MORE: The Turning Point: Nebraska vs. Rutgers

WATCH: Matt Rhule and Players, Rutgers Postgame Press Conference

MORE: I-80 Club: Nebraska Wins a One-Score Game, Moves to 5-1

Stay up to date on all things Huskers by bookmarking Nebraska Cornhuskers On SI, subscribing to HuskerMax on YouTube, and visiting HuskerMax.com daily.



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