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Saturday, February 23, 2008

Huskers Finish 11th at Rice Intercollegiate

Houston - The Nebraska men's golf team wrapped up its first tournament of the spring season on Tuesday, finishing 11th at the 12-team Rice Intercollegiate with a score of 936.

The Huskers bounced back from a rough opening round to improve their team score in the second and third rounds. Nebraska was led by freshman Andrew Wyatt, who finished the tournament with a career-best score of 223 to finish tied for 18th overall. Wyatt's previous best finish was a tie for 43rd at the Kansas Invitational.

Wyatt, from Lake Forest, Ill., recorded a career-best, even-par 72 in the second and third rounds, topping his best score of the fall season by three strokes. Wyatt's play was a bright spot for the Huskers, as he was a consistent and steady golfer in the fall, but had yet to break through with a low score.

Another freshman, Mike Coatman, continued to cement himself as one of the Huskers' top golfers. The Lincoln native finished in a tie for 45th place after firing a 233. Junior Chris Bruening used a 239 to finish third in the Huskers' lineup and 55th overall.

Mark Pillen, a Houston native and Nebraska's top golfer in the fall season, followed an uncharacteristic 85 in the opening round with two rounds of 79 to finish 57th overall with a score of 243. Junior Trent Price rounded out the Huskers' lineup with a 252.

Baylor took home the team title, shooting 878. UC Davis finished second with a score of 880. Pacific was third with an 884.

Amrith de Soysa of Louisiana Tech captured the individual title. de Soysa shot a one-over-par 217.

Rice Intercollegiate
Westwood Golf Club
Par 72, 7,184 yards

Final Team Standings
1. Baylor - 878
2. UC Davis - 880
3. Pacific - 884
4. Memphis - 887
5. Coll. of Charleston - 893
6. Southern Utah - 894
7. Louisiana Tech - 896
8. Rice - 898
9. Coll. of William and Mary - 901
10. Winthrop - 905
11. Nebraska - 936
12. Texas Southern - 948

Final Individual Leaderboard
1. Amrith de Soysa, Louisiana Tech - 217 (74-71-72)
2. Kelly Manders, Winthrop - 218 (77-73-68)
2. Matt McArthur, Southern Utah - 218 (78-71-69)

Nebraska Final Individual Results
T-18 Andrew Wyatt - 223 (79-72-72)
T-45 Mike Coatman - 233 (78-77-78)
55 Chris Bruening - 239 (78-83-78)
57 Mark Pillen - 243 (85-79-79)
59 Trent Price- 252 (83-83-86)

Monday, February 18, 2008

Sorenstam wins season-opening SBS Open for her 70th LPGA Tour title

KAHUKU, Hawaii (AP) -- Annika Sorenstam waited 17 months to collect a T-shirt from her sister and a bottle of wine from a friend with No. 70 proudly displayed on them.

"It's probably dusty," she said. "I'm ready to collect it now."

Sorenstam won the season-opening SBS Open for her 70th LPGA Tour title and first since September 2006, birdieing two of the last three holes Saturday for a 3-under 69 and two-stroke victory.

"It's great to win tournaments and there's some tournaments that mean a little bit more and they come in a special time, and I would say this is one of them," she said.

The 37-year-old Swedish star, coming off an injury-shortened season where she failed to win last year for the first time since her rookie season in 1994, finished with a 10-under 206 total. It also was her second straight win in Hawaii.

"We've talked so much about '07, it's time to talk about '08," she said. "My clubs did the talking this particular week."

Rookie Russy Gulyanamitta (68), Laura Diaz (70) and Jane Park (70) tied for second. Angela Park (69), the 2007 rookie of the year who was assessed a two-stroke penalty, and Japanese rookie Momoko Ueda (71) tied for fifth, three strokes back.

Sorenstam dropped to a knee and shook her fist as she calmly sank a 24-foot downhill putt on the par-4 17th that ended any suspense.

"That was huge," said Sorenstam, who has won 47 times when holding the lead going into the final round. "That's one of those putts I'm going to remember for a long time."

She then waved both arms in the air and hugged her caddie after putting for par on the 18th hole.

"It's been a while," caddie Terry McNamara said as they hugged.

Sorenstam was limited to 13 events last year because of neck and back injuries and had six top-10s finishes, but couldn't add to her trophy collection.

In the first event of 2008, the world's former No. 1 looked like her old self -- relaxed, focused and dominant.

"This means so much to me," she said. "Last year was not a year I wanted to remember inside the ropes. I was determined to come back."

Sorenstam smiled as she walked the fairway on the par-4 16th after hitting a wedge to 4 feet, which she dropped for the outright lead that she wouldn't lose.

Sorenstam said she was a little hesitant and trying to protect her lead until she reached the turn when she told McNamara, "Let's play some golf."

She first went up by two strokes on the par-4 10th by sinking a 14-foot birdie putt, but quickly lost a stroke when her long birdie putt whizzed 8 feet passed the cup on the next hole. She three-putted for her only bogey of the day.

Ueda and Jane Park each birdied to tie Sorenstam for the lead at 8 under. Jane Park made a long putt on No. 15. Seconds later, Ueda rolled in a 12-foot birdie putt on No. 14, drawing a roar from the sizable Japanese gallery.

However, no one could keep pace with Sorenstam.

Sorenstam was playing at Turtle Bay for the first time and beginning her season a month earlier than usual. It was her first appearance in Hawaii since winning the 2002 LPGA Takefuji Classic at Waikoloa.

Gulyanamitta, who earned just $4,411 in her previous 17 events, jumped around the 18th green after sinking a long birdie putt. She made $75,867 Saturday.

Like Sorenstam, Diaz also was hungry for a win. She hasn't hoisted a trophy since 2002. Diaz shared the lead with Sorenstam until a double bogey on No. 7 dropped her into a crowd.

Angela Park (69) was assessed a two-stroke penalty for slow play on the par-4 10th that gave her a triple bogey and cost her a shot at the lead and about $60,000. Park then birdied three of the next four holes to get back within a stroke of the lead before Sorenstam's late birdies.

Park said she wasn't holding up play. "I really don't think it's fair especially because I was in contention. I don't think it's fair at all."

Rules officials said Park's second, third and fourth shots on the hole all exceeded the time limit. Park disagreed and was visibly upset, in tears after her round.

"I was so mad out there," she said. "I was flying through the course on the back nine. I was so frustrated."

Without the penalty, Park would have finished 9 under, alone in second place for $100,458. Instead she earned $40,872.

Conditions were unusually calm on Oahu's North Shore. Even the normally roaring Pacific Ocean was peaceful. It was also balmy, forcing the players to find shade anywhere they could.

Ueda used an umbrella. Sorenstam hid under the ironwood trees.

Sorenstam and Erica Blasberg (74) were co-leaders heading into the final round at 7 under. Blasberg was playing in the final group for the first time in her career.

Her troubles started when she pulled her drive near the water hazard and had to pitch out on No. 7 for bogey. Blasberg tied for eighth with Cristie Kerr (73), In-Kyung Kim (71) and Yani Tseng (69) at 5-under 211.

Defending champion Paula Creamer closed with a 69 to finish at 4 under. She hit 18 greens in regulation but putted 34 times.

"I was grinding it out there," she said. "I saw the leaderboard and I think I got a little anxious."

Quinney makes an ace, but Mickelson keeps the Northern Trust Open lead

PACIFIC PALISADES, Calif. (AP) -- Phil Mickelson lost his cushion, but not the lead Saturday at the Northern Trust Open.

Mickelson watched Jeff Quinney make a hole-in-one on the fabled sixth hole at Riviera that erased a four-shot margin, but saved par on the 18th hole for a 1-under 70 to stay in the lead and move one step closer to adding this trophy to his West Coast collection.

Quinney made a 35-foot birdie putt on the final hole for a 67 that set up what appears to be a two-man race in the final round.

Mickelson, whose 15 victories on the West Coast Swing have come in every city but Los Angeles, was at 11-under 202. He missed the green to the right on the final hole, chipped 7 feet by and saved par.

"I thought it was a good, solid round," Mickelson said. "It should be an interesting and tough day tomorrow."

Quinney delivered the best shot, and maybe the worst.

Along with his hole-in-one that he could hear, but not see, Quinney bladed a wedge over the green on the par-5 11th that led to a two-shot swing in Mickelson's favor, then spent the rest of the gorgeous afternoon trying to catch up.

Quinney was at 203, four shots ahead of everyone else.

John Rollins fell back with consecutive bogeys and had to settle for a 69 that left him at 6-under 207. Scott Verplank, who opened his round with a four-putt from 30 feet on the fringe, shot 71 and was another shot back with Stuart Appleby (69) and Vaughn Taylor (71).

"Other than Tiger, he's probably the next best front-runner," Verplank said of Mickelson, who is 21-7 with a 54-hole lead. "He's awful good. So I'm going to have to play exceptionally well, and probably then would need a little bit of help."

Mickelson also had a one-shot lead last year going into the final round, losing in a playoff to Charles Howell. There were five players within three shots of the lead a year ago, but only Quinney, a former U.S. Amateur champion who has not won on the PGA TOUR, appears to be in his way this time.

"He's going to bring a lot to the table," Quinney said. "I have to bring my best to the table."

Quinney did not sound the least bit concerned about a four-shot deficit to Mickelson, saying after his second round that Riviera is not the type of course where one has to shoot 64 to make up ground.

Then, he looked as though he might do just that.

Quinney birdied the first hole with a long chip across the green on the par 5, then gained another shot when Lefty three-putted for bogey on No. 4. Quinney then holed a 20-foot birdie putt to reduce the lead to one-shot going into the sixth hole, famous for having a bunker in the middle of the green.

He thought that's where his 7-iron was headed. But it landed just to the side, rolled down the slope and into the cup.

Back on the tee, Quinney had already turned away and was looking over his shoulder when he heard the crowd erupt, the sure sign that he had made ace. He ran toward his caddie, unsure whether to hug or high-five, and it turned out to be a clumsy celebration.

"We need to get that organized," he said.

That gave him the lead, but only for as long as Mickelson hit 8-iron to 5 feet and made birdie, putting both at 10 under.

They matched birdies at No. 10 -- Quinney with a wedge to 2 feet, Mickelson by driving to the front of the green -- and neither showed signs of backing down. But everything changed with one swing.

Mickelson was on the par-5 11th green in two, Quinney just short of the bunker. Quinney caught two much ball, however, and it sailed over the green. He chipped back to 15 feet and did well to escape with bogey.

Even so, it was a two-shot swing after Mickelson made birdie, and Lefty kept his margin.

Mickelson had the 54-hole lead at Riviera last year, only this time the odds are even more in his favor. Five players were separated by three shots last year, while this appears to be a two-man race.

"Daylight is up front, first and second," Appleby said. "If I can shoot a good round tomorrow, 4 or 5 under, that would be a good score. Now, what's that mean for the tournament? Does that threaten the top? Probably not. It's not really an open tournament."

Divots: Pat Perez isn't any more optimistic about the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship than he was last week, when he thought he was playing Tiger Woods in the first round and didn't want to embarrass himself. He was told Saturday morning he would be playing Phil Mickelson. "Yeah, that's much better, because he's playing like (dirt) right now," Perez said with typical sarcasm. J.B. Holmes will play Woods and had a different outlook. "I'm in," he said. "That's all that matters." ... Marc Turnesa was on his way home Saturday morning until John Merrick missed a 4-foot par putt, meaning 78 players made the cut at 3 over. Turnesa then shot 67 and moved up to a tie for 29th at 1-under 212.

Saturday, February 16, 2008

Sand Hills Golf Club Named Top 100 Golf Clubs in U.S. by Golf .com

Sand Hills Golf Club, NE, USA
Green Keeper: Justin White


The great Sand Hills of Nebraska - no hype required.

Steeped in history, The Old Course at St. Andrews has a spirtual hold unlike any other, with golfers leaving there more reinvigorated than ever by the joys of the game of golf. For many, the course in the United States that offers a similar reconnection to all the game's best attributes is - ironically - just over ten years old.

How can this possibly be, one asks? To understand how, one must appreciate the expansive sand hills range in north central Nebraska where the Sand Hills Golf Club is located. As with the Old Course, the land was shaped by the elements and was largely untouched by man for thousands upon thousands of years. The overall result is that a game at Sand Hills Golf Club immerses the golfer in nature like few courses anywhere in the world.

The credit for finding and providing this primal reunion with nature belongs to Dick Youngscap and his partners. Youngscap had previously worked with Pete Dye in the eastern part of the state when he founded the Firethorne Golf Club in 1986. Long aware of the great sand hills range and of the Ogallala aquifer, Youngscap searched this unique area for several years looking for property with land forms that might yield holes of high golfing quality.

As Youngscap notes, 'Not all sand hills are created equally' and the particular parcel of land that was eventually settled upon was brought to Youngscap's attention because of its poor grazing qualities: the sandy soil lacked humus and thus much vegetation, requiring 25 acres to support each cattle. Excellent grazing land consists of soil/vegetation conditions that allow cattle to be supported on just 5 acres per head.

According to the Lodging Information booklet found in each cabin,

In August 1990 an option on 8,000 acres was secured, including the valley in which the golf course is located; the property was purchased in 1991. In September 1990, Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw made their first site visit and shortly thereafter, they were retained as golf course architects. Over the next two years, Bill and Ben made numerous visits. By the spring of 1993, they had discovered over 130 holes, from which 18 were selected and a routing plan finalized. During 1993, most of the work was concentrated on the irrigation system, which comprises about 85% of the total golf course construction cost. Fairways, greens and tees were developed in 1994, using the following procedure: 1) mowing existing vegetation to ground level; 2) tilling all areas to a depth of 6'; 3) doing some minor finish grading on the greens - rough grading expense was less than $7,000 - primarily with a small power rake; and, 4) applying seed fertilizer and water.

The Lodging Information booklet points out that because of the excellent sand particles, the cost per Sand Hills green was $300 as neither drain tile/gravel under the greens nor special greens mix were required. Put in perspective, the average cost of a USGA specification green is approximately $40,000.

When the course opened in June, 1995, the most natural course built in the United States since World War I had opened.

Consistent with the huge scale of the place, the course enjoys massive fifty to ninety yard wide fairways that weave in and out and over and around the sand hills in every possible manner, much more satisfactorily than the fairways at Royal Birkdale for instance that repeatedly play through valleys. The fairways were seeded with a blend of four fine-blade fescues, which makes for a stunning contrast against the bunkers and the native tan and brown grasses blowing in the breeze.

Course critics say that Sand Hills was waiting to be 'discovered.' Certainly, Perry Maxwell's comment re:Prairie Dunes about eliminating one hundred holes applies to Sand Hills. However, these comments are dismissive of the fact that the monumental challenge was to route eighteen consecutive holes that play well together in all wind conditions.

Many architects could find several dozen great holes scattered over the 8,000 acres. However, hole D's tee might require a three hundred yard walk from Hole C's green. Or perhaps the architect finds a fine string of six or seven holes only to become boxed into a less appealing portion of the property. Or, lacking the patience to follow nature's lead, an architect resorts to bulldozing landforms to force a conventional set of holes upon the landscape.

Simply put, routing a course to incorporate as many natural landforms as possible is an art form that is largely lost on many modern architects, many of whom have frankly never had the chance to develop such a skill set as their work is confined to housing development courses on modest property. Without selecting the right architect, there was no guarantee at all that a great course would be built here. Youngscap and his partners felt it imperative that as many of the natural landforms as possible be included in the design and understood that the right architect would need to spend weeks upon weeks on the property trying to find just such a routing.

Patience would be required by both the owners and the architect. In the case of Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw, they walked the property for over 24 months before settling on a routing that yielded the best 18 hole sequence. As Coore modestly states in his November 1999 Feature Interview on this site, 'The Sand Hills site was ideal. The challenge there was to create a course equal to the potential of the land � a daunting task to say the least! To have constructed anything less than an extraordinary golf course on that site would have been a failure.'

Coore & Crenshaw's patience and sensitivity to the land is a hallmark of their design work and sets them apart from all other architects. At one point when they weren't making headway toward a final routing, Ben Crenshaw stepped over the then boundary fence (roughly where 11 green and 16 tee are today) and reported back to Coore to come see this next door parcel of land. Shortly thereafter, Youngscap swapped the land owner some land for that parcel and holes 12 through 15 were allowed to be created.

Certainly some of the great sand blow-out areas guided Coore & Crenshaw in the routing process. Among other things, a walk around Sand Hills is a study in hazards, both in bunker placement and bunker construction. Of the courses with which the author is familiar, only those at Pine Valley, Royal Melbourne and Royal County Down begin to compare. To even term parkland course bunkers as 'hazards' seems to do the word an injustice based on the four photographs below.


This blow-out to the right of what became the 1st green helped Bill Coore find the hole rightaway. Coore
& Crenshaw's talented crew scraped back and exposed more sand to create the bunker of today.


The variety of hazards at Sand Hills is astonishing, ranging from the pits around the 17th green
in the foreground to the massive blow-outs up the 18th fairway in the distance...


...to this view of a trench bunker 170 yards from the 16th green...


..to a shallow bunker full of ruts 300 yards off the middle markers at the 12th that is in play off
the tee in certain wind conditions. Though thirty times (!) shallower than the
crater bunker to the left of the 4th green, it is equally as dangerous.

In the foreword to Robert Hunter's The Links, Bill Coore writes, 'I have never encountered a more perfect description of the artistic construction of bunkers than the following: [quoting from Robert Hunter] They should have the appearance of being made with carelessness and abandon with which a brook tears down the banks which confine it, or the wind tosses about the sand of the dunes�forming depressions or elevations broken into irregular lines. Here the bank overhangs, where there it has crumbled away.' The golfer sees from the photographs above that Coore & Crenshaw have employed this philosophy to great success.

With the routing done, another crucial task was getting the detail work right around the greens. Indeed, as diverse and eye catching as the hazards are, they divert attention and praise away from the heart and soul of the design: the green complexes. The diversity found within the greens is of the highest order and is comparable to those of The Old Course at St. Andrews and the West Course at Royal Melbourne.

Coore & Crenshaw re-introduced the all important (and all but dead) art form of tying the entrances of the greens to the greens themselves. The majority of the greens are open in front to allow for the wind, regardless of its direction. However, it is the subtle pitch and roll of the terrain just prior to the greens that give each hole much of its unique playing characteristics. For instance, a slight knob of less than a foot in height lies eight paces shy of the left part the 8th green. Its randomness can perhaps propel a ball forward but far more likely than not, it has the habit of kicking balls right into a small gathering central greenside bunker.


The stunning beauty late in the day at Sand Hills is what first registers. At some point, though,
the golfer begins to take in and appreciate the variety and joy offered by the green complexes.
Pictured above is the 6th putting surface.

Holes to Note

1st hole, 550 yards; Right at the top with the opening holes at Pine Valley, Machrihanish, National Golf Links of America, Garden City and The Old Course at St. Andrews, the view from the elevated tee of the broad sixty-five yard wide fairway and jagged bunkers contrasted against the tan, rust and brown grasses makes one itch to play. While Coore eventually found over 130 holes amongst the rolling sand hills, the first three that he immediately 'saw' when he initially walked the property where the 1st, 18th and 17th. The rest of the holes/routing eventually radiated away from these three holes. All three holes enjoy natural green sites, with the 1st and 18th in their own little amphitheaters.


The great sweep of the 1st fairway winds the golfer up toward...


...the green nestled between dunes in the left center of the photograph above.

2nd hole, 460 yards; The back marker was added a year after the course opened and stretched the hole from its initial length of 420 yards. As the member tells his guests, there is no prevailing wind at Sand Hills. Thus, one of the challenges that Coore & Crenshaw faced was to create a string of holes that played well in all wind directions. Apart from providing playing width (which they emphatically did), the only way to do so is to provide genuine ground game options for the player. Downwind and the golfer may try to land the ball ten to thirty yards shy of the putting surface and have it bound up. Into the wind and the player may hit a lower runner that chases the finally thirty or forty yards.Case in point is the second green complex which is as appealing as any green complex that the author has ever seen.


The closely mown high bank to the right of the 2nd green allows the upper plateau to play bigger than it
actually is. The sight of golfers at the base of the false front is a common one.


The striking 2nd green and its contours as seen in the early morning.

3rd hole, 215 yards; A recent gathering at Sand Hills of ten golf architecture fans failed to produce a consensus as to the favourite one shotter here. Indeed, the group was almost evenly split between the four holes. The defining attribute of the 3rd is the way the green complex was integrated in with a dune on its left. The mammoth 10,000 square foot green yields an untold number of interesting hole locations.


The 3rd green is angled from front left to back right.


How best way to get close to this hole location? Decisions range from going straight at it to banking
a ball from near the man in the pink shirt and feeding it left to right toward the hole.

4th hole, 485 yards; A fine example of how to bunker - and not bunker - a green. Coore & Crenshaw dug out the huge bunker (more like a 30 foot crater) to the left of the green and used that fill to build up the green complex directly beside it. To the right of the elevated green, the architects provide a tightly mown 40 yard wide area. Thus, a huge range of recovery shots exists, from a bunker shot that must quickly climb thirty feet in the air to a bump and run up a hill. If the flag is located to the right, the golfer may also consider missing the green short to avoid a potentially ticklish bump and run shot to a short-sided hole location. Too many modern architects bunker both sides of a green and in front, thus actually forcing the golfer to take dead aim at the green - where is the strategy in that?? The art of bunkering but one side of a green is one of the reasons that Royal Melbourne's design as long been considered amongst the finest in the world.


The heroic 4th, as seen from the back markers, as it tumbles sixty feet downhill. The elevated tee
means there is no place to hide from the wind on the tee ball.


This view from 160 yards out provides a full view of the tightly mown area right of the built-up green
but only the top 1/3 of the course's deepest bunker is visible to the left of the green.


There is no good reason for missing the 4th green to the left, as this picture suggests.
Just the act of getting in and out of this crater can break the spirit of a good man.

Huskers Hope to Warm Up In Houston

Lincoln - After a harsh winter break, the Nebraska men’s golf team is looking forward to hitting the links again. The Huskers open the spring portion of their season on Feb. 18-19 at the Rice Intercollegiate in Houston, Texas. It will be the first appearance at the Rice Intercollegiate for the Huskers since 2005, when Nebraska finished fifth.

Nebraska opens the spring with four tournaments in southern states – Texas, Florida, South Carolina and Arizona. The spring concludes with the Diet Pepsi/Shocker Classic in Wichita, Kan., The Palisades Collegiate Golf Classic in Charlotte, N.C., and the Big 12 Championship at Trinity, Texas.

The Huskers hope to build off a fall season during which the young squad gained valuable experience. Nebraska’s best finish of the fall was a tie for seventh at the Kansas Invitational. With no seniors on the roster, junior Mark Pillen led the Huskers in the fall with a 75.00 stroke average. The Rice Intercollegiate will have extra meaning for Pillen, as he returns to compete in his hometown of Houston for the first time in his career.

Freshman Mike Coatman stepped up big as well for the Huskers in the fall, averaging 75.43 strokes per round. Another freshman, Andrew Wyatt, gained experience from being a regular in the lineup. Juniors Chris Bruening and Trent Price, also regulars in the Huskers’ lineup, are both eager to improve their scores this spring. Freshmen Tyler Parsloe and Brett Sundberg showed some potential in later-fall tournaments and both look to compete for a spot in the Huskers’ lineup this spring.

Though the Huskers face a slight disadvantage to start every spring season, as the winter weather conditions make golfing in Lincoln practically impossible, the Huskers can be confident heading into the Rice Intercollegiate. Thanks in part to a strong mental toughness developed during the winter months, the Huskers have finished in the top six in each of the past three seasons in the first tournament of the spring, and the team hopes to continue that success this year in Houston.

Friday, February 15, 2008

Nebraska Golfers Seek To Learn From Experience

(UWIRE) LINCOLN, Neb. — Coming into the spring of 2008, the Nebraska men’s golf team seeks one word.

Improvement.

One way the team seeks to get better results is where it finishes at tournaments. In five contests during the fall season, the Cornhuskers, led by coach Bill Spangler, finished 14th, 7th, 13th, 15th and 16th in their tourneys, with just one top-10 finish in those five competitions.

"I would say a team goal is to get top 10 in the majority of the tournaments," said NU junior Trent Price.

Others, like Nebraska junior Mark Pillen, say they hope the team is at its peak by the time the Big 12 Conference Championships arrive. The tournament will take place April 25-27 in Trinity, Texas.

"I think probably (our team goal is) just continue to improve so that by the conference tournament, we can have a good showing," Pillen said.

One variable the team has in its favor is experience. Though four of the seven players are freshmen, Pillen said that the team has gained a lot of experience through the fall tournaments.

"I don’t think a whole lot has changed," Pillen said, "because we’re essentially the same team, but more experienced."

Pillen also said that the added experience should help the Huskers garner more top 10 finishes than the team had in the fall season.

One factor that works against the team as it moves into the spring season is the weather.

"Going into the spring season, it’s harder (to prepare) in the aspect of the weather," Pillen said.

Pillen said that what helps the team in the fall season is that golfers are able to play summer tournaments and are ready to jump right into the fall season.

In the winter, Pillen said, things are different because the team practices a lot more indoors to get out of the frigid winter conditions.

"In the fall," Pillen said, "we do a lot more drills outside,"

Price said he thinks the weather isn’t that much of a factor, even in the winter.

Still, one major variable does surface.

Part of this, he says, is that while the team practices indoors, it plays outdoors in warm weather at tournaments. The Huskers will open the spring season with four tournaments in warm climates including Houston and Tampa Bay, Fla.

"I think the weather varies, but in the spring it’s a bit more windy," Price said.

The individual players are also attempting to improve their performances to help the overall team, and they are using different methods to accomplish that goal.

Price, for one, is hoping to lower his score. After all, improvement shows itself in better scores in competitions.

"The only way you can improve the team performance is by shooting lower scores," Price said.

Pillen, on the other hand, is hoping to improve by simply continuing what he’s done to be successful thus far.

Pillen pointed to experience once again as his needed improvement, saying that the more experience he gets by playing in tournaments and various competitions, the better a player he has a chance to become.

"Every tournament in which I get more experience is going to help me," Pillen said.