Nebraska
Nebraska first responder injured in car crash regains independence at Madonna
LINCOLN, Neb. (KOLN) – A Nebraska first responder who was injured throughout the Highway 739 fireplace is dwelling, after spending weeks recovering at Madonna Rehabilitation Hospitals.
On April 7, Phelps County Emergency Supervisor Justin Norris was in a truck that was hit head-on by a semi-truck whereas responding to a hearth eight miles north of Arapahoe, Nebraska. He had a number of damaged bones, head trauma and a spinal wire harm.
His passenger, Elmwood Volunteer Fireplace Chief Darren Krull, died within the crash.
Norris spent two weeks within the hospital earlier than going to Madonna Rehabilitation Hospitals.
“From the start, he demonstrated his grit and willpower to return dwelling as quickly as attainable,” a Madonna spokesperson stated.
Norris is again dwelling in Holdrege and plans to return to work later this summer time in a part-time function to ease himself again into the routine.
“Madonna obtained me the place I’m at the moment, which has been far previous what we have been anticipating, and now it turns into a ready sport,” Norris stated. “Quickly, I discover out what remaining surgical procedures I’ll have and once I can begin to put weight on my legs once more. I wouldn’t be stunned if I’ll be beginning to both use a walker or crutches within the close to future.”
Copyright 2022 KOLN. All rights reserved.
Nebraska
Sunday Standings: Nebraska Women’s Basketball Sits at 7th in Big Ten Conference
In their only game of the week, the Nebraska women’s basketball team upended Iowa in overtime. That win helped the Big Red stay in the top half
Nebraska only had one game this week which they defeated the Iowa Hawkeyes. They defeated Iowa in overtime as they won by three points.
Elsewhere, Ohio State was upset by Penn State and Maryland won a close top-25 matchup against Minnesota early in the week.
Here are all of the scores from this week.
Tuesday, January 14
Wednesday, January 15
Thursday, January 16
Saturday, January 18
Sunday, January 19
One week after moving up to seventh in the league, the Huskers find themselves in that exact same position.
Below are the full rankings.
- #4 USC 7-0 (17-1)
- #1 UCLA 6-0 (17-0)
- #9 Ohio State 6-1 (17-1)
- #8 Maryland 6-1 (16-1)
- #24 Minnesota 5-2 (17-2)
- #22 Michigan State 5-2 (15-3)
- Nebraska 5-2 (14-4)
- Oregon 5-3 (14-5)
- Michigan 4-3 (13-5)
- Washington 4-3 (13-6)
- Indiana 4-3 (12-6)
- Illinois 3-4 (13-5)
- Iowa 2-6 (12-7)
- Wisconsin 1-6 (10-8)
- Penn State 1-7 (10-9)
- Northwestern 0-6 (7-10)
- Purdue 0-7 (7-11)
- Rutgers 0-8 (8-11)
MORE: Nebraska Men’s Basketball Falls to 13th in Big Ten Conference
MORE: Nick Handley Show: Nebrasketball’s Struggles & Will Notre Dame Pull the Upset?
MORE: How to Watch Nebraska Women’s Basketball vs. Wisconsin: Preview, Breakdown, TV Channel
MORE: Husker Doc Talk: Keyuo Craver, Book Author and Football All-American
MORE: After Nebrasketball: Huskers Fall Short in College Park
Stay up to date on all things Huskers by bookmarking Nebraska Cornhuskers On SI, subscribing to HuskerMax on YouTube, and visiting HuskerMax.com daily.
Nebraska
Takeaways from Maryland men’s basketball’s 69-66 win over Nebraska
Maryland men’s basketball narrowly escaped Nebraska, 69-66, Sunday at Xfinity Center.
The Terps led by nine points with less than four minutes remaining, but a 9-0 Nebraska run tied the score with a minute remaining.
Here are three takeaways from the game.
Queen’s up-and-down season continued
Less than a week ago, Derik Queen posted a season-high 27 points in a win over Minnesota, but followed it up with a nine-point, five-turnover performance against Northwestern Thursday. Instead of bouncing back, Queen’s stock continued to fall as he failed to make a single shot en route to a season-low three points.
His defensive play against Northwestern was heavily criticized, as he was consistently out of position and often did not keep up with his defensive assignment as they moved off-ball.
While his defensive effort marginally improved against the Cornhuskers, he was a nonfactor on offense. He did not command the ball on post-ups and lacked aggression when faced with a mismatch, resulting in his 0 for 4 shooting performance. And although he is a talented passer and recorded two assists Sunday, his turnover rate is far too high. He is occasionally careless with the ball and tries difficult moves that he has not perfected yet. He is averaging four turnovers per game over the last four games, including three Sunday.
Head coach Kevin Willard responded, benching Queen for eight of the final 10 minutes Sunday in favor of Jordan Geronimo, who played just two minutes against Northwestern.
Ja’Kobi Gillespie, Rodney Rice, Selton Miguel and Julian Reese picked up the slack, but Queen cannot put up duds if Maryland wants to consistently beat high-level opponents and win on the road.
Turnovers stalled the Terps’ offense
Maryland has protected the ball well throughout the season, committing 10.6 turnovers per game entering Sunday, fourth-fewest in the Big Ten. But the last three games have been a different story; the Terps committed 16 turnovers against then-No. 22 UCLA, 16 at Northwestern and 12 against Nebraska.
While Maryland started the game shooting 2-of-8 from the field, it took care of the ball — committing just two turnovers, both by Derik Queen — in the first 10 minutes, resulting in a five-point lead. But then the Terps got sloppy. They committed six turnovers in the following 10 minutes, which led to a near-five-minute scoring drought and allowed Nebraska to take a five-point advantage of its own. During the drought, Maryland was called for a 5-second violation fresh out of a timeout, highlighting coaching and execution lapses.
Luckily for Maryland, the Cornhuskers were not too sharp either. They committed nine turnovers in the first half — 13 total — multiple of which were just poor decisions rather than impressive defensive plays. Juwan Gary, Nebraska’s second-leading scorer, twice threw uncontested passes straight to Gillespie.
While Maryland cleaned up these issues in the second half and has overcome them at home, it’s been part of their road struggles and something it will need to address.
Maryland stumped Nebraska’s stars
The Terps struggled to contain Northwestern’s leading scorers Nick Martinelli and Brooks Barnhizer Thursday. Martinelli scored 22 points on 64.3% shooting, including the game-winner, while Brooks dropped 20 points and five assists.
But on Sunday, Nebraska’s top three leading scorers were all held below their season averages. Brice Williams, who averaged the fifth-most points per game in the conference with 18.9 entering the game, was subjected to more of a play-making role against the Terps, who assigned Rice to him for much of the game. Williams finished with 14 points on 6-of-14 shooting from the field and three assists.
Gary, coming off a 20-point game against Rutgers, posted one of his worst games of the season Sunday, recording just six points on 3-of-9 shooting from the field and two turnovers. He averaged 12.1 points per game prior to the contest.
Connor Essegian, Nebraska’s leading scorer off the bench, also totaled just six points, more than five points below his season average.
But the Cornhuskers saw production from a different source off the bench. Forward Andrew Morgan, who entered the game averaging 7.9 points per game, scored 12 of Nebraska’s first 24 points and finished with a team-high 17 points on 7-of-12 shooting from the field.
While Morgan kept the Cornhuskers in the game, struggles from their top players ultimately led to their demise.
Nebraska
Nebraska Hoops Game Day: at Maryland
Riding a three-game losing skid and seeing its 20-game home winning streak snapped, Nebraska desperately needs to get its season back on track today at Maryland.
Here is what you need to know going into another daunting road test for the Huskers this afternoon in College Park…
Who, What, Where, When
Nebraska Cornhuskers (12-5, 2-4 Big Ten) at Maryland Terrapins (13-5, 3-4 Big Ten)
Sunday, Jan. 19, 2025 – 11:00 a.m. CT
Xfinity Center (17,950)
TV: Big Ten Network
Radio: Huskers Radio Network
Internet/Streaming: Fox Sports App
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Nebraska projected starters
Rollie Worster | G | Sr. | 6-5/210 | Ended up with 10 points, seven rebounds, and five assists to finish with a team-best +/- of 14 in the loss to Rutgers. He also shot 8-10 at the free-throw line. |
Brice Williams | G | Sr. | 6-7/214 | Scored a team-high 21 points in the loss to Rutgers. He’s averaging 18.9 ppg on the season while shooting a career-high 48.5% from the field and 40 percent on 3-pointers. |
Juwan Gary | F | Sr. | 6-6/226 | Finished with 20 points in the loss to Rutgers, two shy of matching his career high. That marked his 11th double-figure scoring effort of the year and second 20-point game. |
Berke Buyuktuncel | F | So. | 6-10/224 | Held scoreless on 0-4 shooting with two assists, two turnovers, and four fouls over his 21 minutes of work against Rutgers. His +/- of 10 still ranked second on the team. |
Braxton Meah | F | Sr. | 7-1/264 | He made all three of his shot attempts to finish with six points, six rebounds, and a blocked shot over 17 minutes of work in the loss to Rutgers. |
Maryland projected starters
Ja’Kobi Gillespie | G | Fr. | 6-6/215 | Belmont transfer who is averaging 13.9 ppg on 47 percent shooting, including 41 percent from 3-point range. He also leads UMD with 4.3 apg) and 1.7 spg. |
Rodney Rice | G | Sr. | 6-4/210 | He’s scoring 12.4 points per game while ranking second on the team with 2.4 assists per game this season. |
Selton Miguel | G | Fr. | 6-10/200 | He’s averaging 11.1 points, 1.8 rebounds, and 1.9 assists per game while starting all 18 contests for Maryland this season. |
Julian Reese | F | Fr. | 6-7/205 | All-Big Ten selection who is averaging 13.2 ppg on 58 percent shooting and leads Maryland in rebounding (8.7 rpg) and blocked shots (1.3 bpg). |
Derik Queen | C | Fr. | 6-10/275 | A true freshman who leads Maryland in scoring with 15.8 ppg on 56 percent shooting while hauling in 8.1 rebounds per game. |
3 keys to victory
Defend the 3
It really doesn’t matter who Nebraska is playing – the Huskers’ 3-point defense has become a critical concern over its three-game losing streak. Iowa (17), Purdue (19), and Rutgers (12) combined to hit a whopping 48 threes. That’s 16.0 made 3-pointers per game. Head coach Fred Hoiberg said after the Rutgers loss that it wasn’t a schematic issue but that his team needed to defend the perimeter with better effort and consistency. To prevent today from becoming a repeat performance, Nebraska better be locked in with its close-outs, rotations, and contests from start to finish. Maryland comes in ranked fifth in the Big Ten, shooting at a 35.9% clip from behind the arc. Again, the opponent won’t matter if NU cannot make life more difficult on teams from deep. The Huskers currently rank 358th out of 364 Division I teams, with 49.8% of their opponent scoring coming off 3-pointers.
Battle on the boards
One area that has made Maryland such a tough matchup this season is how effective the Terrapins have been on the glass this season. UMD ranks fifth in the Big Ten in rebounding (37.3 rpg) out-rebounds its opponents by more than five rebounds per game. Big men Julian Reese (fifth, 8.7 rpg) and Derik Queen (seventh, 8.1) rank among the Big Ten’s top rebounders, with Reese tied for first in the league with 3.2 offensive boards per game. The Huskers just gave up 17 offensive rebounds for 19 second-chance points against Rutgers. If they can’t finish defensive possessions with strong rebounding, it could be another long day on the defensive end.
How much do you want it?
Ace Bailey’s voice better still echo through the heads of every Nebraska player today at Maryland. The Scarlet Knights’ stellar freshman called the Huskers out repeatedly during Thursday night’s game, yelling, “We want it more than them!” Juwan Gary said that added salt to the Huskers’ wounds. It also forced them to look into the mirror after a third consecutive Big Ten defeat. For NU to get its season back on track, it must play like the team that wants it more. In two of their past three losses (Iowa and Rutgers), they’ve left feeling like they were the better team. They just didn’t finish the job. Today’s game will measure what this team is all about. Their effort and intensity at Maryland will say plenty about the chances of getting this train back on the tracks.
Quotable
“That’s all I kept hearing Ace Bailey say tonight. ‘We want it more.’ That hurt as a player. I know no team wants it more than my guys, for sure. But they proved it today.”
Senior forward Juwan Gary on Rutgers’ star Ace Bailey’s comments during Nebraska’s loss on Thursday night.
Prediction
Maryland (-9.5) 81, Nebraska 71
Robin’s season record: 14-2
Vs. the spread: 8-8
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