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Dec. 12, 2003 UCLA ends Huskers' season LINCOLN – Brittany Murphy had a team-high 16 kills, while No. 8 UCLA held Nebraska to a season-low .108 hitting percentage in a 20-30, 30-27, 30-21, 30-23 victory over the ninth-ranked Huskers Friday evening in front of 4,150 fans at the NU Coliseum. With the win, the Bruins, who improved to 23-8 on the year, advance to face USC Saturday night at 7 p.m. (central). The Bruins have lost both of their previous meetings with the top-ranked Women of Troy, but UCLA is one of only five teams to take a game from USC this season. Earlier Friday night, USC swept 16th-seeded Texas A&M. Murphy was one of four Bruins to finish in double figures in the win, as Brittany Ringel added 11 kills while Heather Cullen and Cira Wright chipped in 10 apiece. With the victory, the Bruins snapped a three-game losing streak to the Huskers dating back to the 1992 season. Melissa Elmer and Jennifer Saleaumua led Nebraska with 14 and 13 kills, respectively, as the Huskers saw their season come to an end with a 28-5 record. Nebraska’s previous season low was a .131 effort against Missouri on Oct. 15. In game one, Nebraska raced to a 15-5 lead as Anna Schrad, Jennifer Saleaumua and Elmer all produced easy kills. UCLA closed it to 15-7 after Krystal McFarland and Heather Cullen blocked Dani Mancuso and Cira Wright pounded a kill. But Elmer and Mancuso responded with kills, starting a stretch in which eight of the nine points were scored by Nebraska. The Huskers led, 23-11, after a kill by Schrad. UCLA cut the Huskers’ advantage to 27-20, but NU eventually took a 30-20, first-game win when Schrad and Elmer blocked Lyman. NU hit .208 in game one, but held UCLA to a -.104 mark, as three Bruins with six or more attempts hit negative. It was all UCLA early in game two, and the Bruins led, 23-16, after a kill by Murphy. However, the Huskers scored 10 of the next 14 points and trailed 27-26 after Ally Rebholz drilled a kill. Wright responded with a kill, and Schrad produced a crosscourt strike. Leading 28-27, UCLA wrapped up a 30-27 win on back-to-back kills from Murphy and Cullen. In game three, Nebraska trailed, 15-12, before Mancuso reeled off four straight to give the Huskers a one-point advantage. UCLA came back with a 5-0 run that included three NU errors. Mancuso cut the Bruins’ lead to 24-21 with a kill, but Nebraska did not score again. UCLA produced the final six points in the 30-21, third-game win, as the Huskers hit a dismal .021. In game four, Nebraska led 15-13, but UCLA ran off six of the next seven points to take a 19-16 lead on a kill by Colby Lyman, forcing John Cook to take a timeout. The Huskers continued to dig themselves a hole, committing service errors to trail 21-16 before Dani Mancuso’s kill changed the tide. The Bruins continued to build the lead, taking a 29-21 advantage before a Saleaumua kill and an Elmer block put NU within 29-23. Murphy then ended the Huskers’ season with her 16th kill of the match for the final point. While Nebraska’s season ended with a 28-5 mark, the Huskers will return five starters in 2004, losing only Schrad, middle blocker Sara Westling and libero Jenae Dowling.
Nebraska-UCLA Post-Match Notes
Post-Match Quotes
Nebraska head coach John Cook
On games two and three
Nebraska sophomore Melissa Elmer
On the second game
Nebraska senior Anna Schrad
Nebraska freshman Dani Busboom
UCLA head coach Andy Banachowski
UCLA junior Brittney Ringels
UCLA Junior Chrissie Zartman
Source: University of Nebraska Athletic Dept.
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