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Basketball Hoiberg's message paying off, update on Büyüktuncel ahead of Penn State

Full recap from Fred Hoiberg's press conference via Zoom:

>> Latest on the statuses of Berke Büyüktuncel, Brice Williams and Connor Essegian
>> Nebraska must have a better start against Penn State than it did at Northwestern
>> Confidence-builder for Braxton Meah?
>> Hoiberg's always-stay-ready message was heard in the locker room, and it's one Hoiberg truly believes in
>> Connor Essegian's winning plays outside of his 3-point shot — "Defensively, I thought it was his best game"
>> A quick look at the schedule down the stretch

Baseball Big Ten Scores and Standings (2/27)

February 27
Washington State 12, Iowa 7

Standings
Purdue (8-0)
USC (7-1)
Michigan State (6-1)
Penn State (5-1)
UCLA (7-2)
Oregon (6-2)
Illinois (5-2)
Northwestern (5-2)
Michigan (4-3)
Rutgers (4-4)
Nebraska (3-4)
Iowa (3-4)
Maryland (3-4)
Indiana (3-5)
Washington (3-6)
Minnesota (2-4)
Ohio State (1-5)

Games for Friday, February 28
Maryland vs. Princeton (at Winston-Salem, NC)
Indiana vs. Mount St. Mary's (at DeLand, FL)
Indiana vs. Stetson (at DeLand, FL)
Penn State at Richmond
Iowa vs. Washington State (at Cleburne, TX)
Ohio State vs. Auburn (at Arlington, TX)
Purdue vs. Akron (at Holly Springs, NC)
Northwestern at #17 Duke
Rutgers at Coastal Carolina
Illinois vs. Texas Tech (at Las Vegas)
Michigan State vs. Harvard (at Greenville, SC)
Nebraska vs. Sam Houston State (at Frisco, TX) (6:00 PM - D1Baseball.com)
Columbia at #11 Oregon
#14 Vanderbilt at UCLA
Minnesota at Arizona State
Michigan at Long Beach State
Washington vs. #15 Texas (at Las Vegas)
USC vs. Connecticut (at Irvine, CA)

Basketball Big Ten Men's Scores and Standings (2/22)

February 22
#3 Duke 110, Illinois 67
Oregon 77, #11 Wisconsin 73 (OT)
Penn State 69, Minnesota 60
Iowa 85, Washington 79

Standings
1. Michigan State (22-5, 13-3)
2. Michigan (20-6, 12-3)
3. Maryland (21-6, 11-5)
3. Purdue (19-8, 11-5)
3. Wisconsin (21-6, 11-5)
6. UCLA (19-8, 10-6)
7. Illinois (17-11, 9-8)
7. Oregon (20-8, 9-8)
9. Nebraska (17-10, 7-9)
9. Ohio State (15-12, 7-9)
11. Indiana (15-11, 6-9)
11. USC (14-12, 6-9)
13. Iowa (15-12, 6-10)
13. Minnesota (14-13, 6-10)
13. Rutgers (13-14, 6-10)
16. Northwestern (14-13, 5-11)
17. Penn State (15-13, 5-12)
18. Washington (13-14, 4-12)

Games for Sunday, February 23
#13 Purdue at Indiana (12:30 PM - CBS)
Ohio State at UCLA (2:45 PM - CBS)
USC at Rutgers (5:00 PM - FS1)

Next Nebraska Game - Monday, February 24
#12 Michigan at Nebraska (7:00 PM - FS1)

Baseball Big Ten Scores and Standings (2/19)

February 19
USC 7, Cal State-Bakersfield 0

Standings
USC (5-0)
Michigan (4-0)
Michigan State (4-0)
Purdue (4-0)
UCLA (4-0)
Oregon (3-1)
Illinois (2-1)
Maryland (2-1)
Northwestern (2-1)
Penn State (2-1)
Rutgers (2-1)
Nebraska (2-2)
Washington (2-2)
Iowa (1-2)
Minnesota (1-2)
Ohio State (0-3)
Indiana (0-4)

Games for Friday, February 21
Illinois at Texas State
Indiana vs. Northwestern (at Cary, NC)
Iowa vs. Notre Dame (at DeLand, FL)
Maryland at Western Carolina
Michigan vs. #22 TCU (at Arlington, TX)
Michigan State vs. Washington State (at Corpus Christi, TX)
Minnesota vs. Oklahoma (at Round Rock, TX)
#23 Nebraska at Louisiana-Lafayette (6:00 PM - ESPN+)
Ohio State vs. #12 North Carolina State (at Jacksonville, FL)
Rhode Island at #11 Oregon
Penn State at Longwood
Purdue vs. Niagara (at Holly Springs, NC)
Rutgers at Grand Canyon
UCLA at Texas A&M-Corpus Christi
USC at RIce
Washington at Stanford

Today in History - March 3

March 3

1845 - Florida became the 27th state.

1849 - Congress established the U.S. Department of the Interior.

1863 - President Abraham Lincoln signed the act creating the National Academy of Sciences.

1879 - Belva Ann Bennett Lockwood became the first female lawyer to be admitted to appear before the United States Supreme Court.

1918 - Germany, Austria and Russia signed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk.

1931 - President Herbert Hoover signed a bill making "The Star-Spangled Banner" the national anthem of the United States.

1943 - In London's East End, 173 people died in a crush of bodies at the Bethnal Green Tube station, which was being used as a wartime air raid shelter.

1945 - Allied troops fully secured the Philippine capital of Manila from Japanese forces during World War II after a monthlong battle that destroyed much of the city.

1969 - Apollo 9 blasted off from Cape Kennedy on a mission to test NASA's lunar module.

1991 - Motorist Rodney King was severely beaten by Los Angeles police officers after a high-speed chase; amateur video that captured the scene aired on local news that evening, sparking public outrage.

2000 - Former dictator Augusto Pinochet returned to Chile after being detained in Britain on torture charges.

2003 - New embassies opened in Kenya and Tanzania to replace those lost in the 1998 terrorist bombings.

2022 - OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma reached a nationwide settlement over its role in the opioid crisis, with the Sackler family members who own the company boosting their cash contribution to as much as $6 billion in a deal intended to staunch a flood of lawsuits.

Birthdays
26 - Isabelle Mathers (model)
27 - Jayson Tatum (basketball player)
28 - Camila Cabello (singer)
38 - Shraddha Kapoor (actress)
43 - Jessica Biel (actress)
51 - David Faustino (actor)
55 - Julie Bowen (actress)
57 - Brian Leetch (hockey player)
59 - Tone Loc (rapper)
63 - Jackie Joyner-Kersee (track & field athlete)
67 - Miranda Richardson (actress)
73 - Randy Gradishar (football player)
78 - Jennifer Warnes (singer)

==================================

Today in Sports History - March 3

1875 - The first recorded hockey game was played in Montreal.

1951 - Bill Mikvy of Temple University scores NCAA basketball record 73 points, including 54 straight, in 93-69 win on the road at Wilkes College.

1968 - Jean Beliveau (Montreal Canadiens) became the second NHL player to score 1,000 regular-season career points.

1984 - Peter Ueberroth is elected commissioner of MLB.

1985 - Bill Shoemaker becomes the first jockey to win $100 million.

1992 - Mike Bossy's #22 became the second number retired by the New York Islanders.

1998 - Larry Doby became the first black player in the American League to be elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame.

2001 - John Ruiz became the first Hispanic heavyweight champion. He beat Evander Holyfield for the WBA heavyweight title.

2006 - In Tokyo, Japan, the opener of the World Baseball Classic took place.

2024 - Caitlin Clark of Iowa becomes the NCAA Division I basketball all-time scoring leader, surpassing Pete Maravich's career total of 3,667 points.

Memorial Stadium upgrades after 2026 from A.D Troy Dannen

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The immediate focus is now on the East and West Stadium and not the south end zone​

On Thursday, Dannen met with a small group of reporters to outline the plan. In short, the project is still happening, but the map to complete it will change.

“The project remains on track,” Dannen said. “However, the timing and the sequencing is going to be different than I think might have been projected earlier. Going forward, we’re going to really focus the architects on East and West Stadium. The rationale for that quite simply is East and West (Stadium) has the potential to monetize itself.
“The landscape of what’s going on right now, the ability to generate money, I’m going to have a pretty big spot on my budget for new money that needs to be generated. I think there was speculation that the south was coming down at the end of the ’24 season. That is not happening.”

However, “The south end zone project is still a part of the scope,” he said.


None of the work, though, to the East and West stadiums will begin until after the 2025 football season. The plan is to have chair-back seating in the East and West stadiums and tie each seat to a licensing fee. The new premium East and West chair-backed seats would have access to several new in-stadium amenities.

That would also mean a stadium reseat would take place, and NU’s ticket grandfathering system, which went into effect in the 1990s, would end. Currently, a large chunk of Nebraska’s season ticket holders are grandfathered into their original donation fee, while new ticket holders might pay thousands more annually for the same seats.

Previous stories on HuskerOnline have outlined Nebraska’s grandfather ticket pricing, and our studies have found that no other stadium in the country has anything like it in terms of tens of thousands of ticket holders locked into sweetheart seat-donation prices from the 1990s.
“If the East and West project is going to generate money, it’s going to generate it from premium seat licenses for the privilege of accessing those seats, and the amenities that will go with those seats that are going to be different, new, and improved,” Dannen said. “There will be a new price tag on every seat. If that is going to happen, it has to.

“If you ever have a reseat, you have to have at least a year’s notice for your fans. In a perfect world, we’d be looking at something post-’25 into ’26 before really anything tangible inside East and West can happen.”

Dannen continues to explore options with South Stadium​

As the focus moves to the East and West stadium for 2026, what can be done to improve and upgrade the south end zone?

The original plan called for a complete demolition, which would have forced around 23,000 ticket holders to miss at least the 2025 and 2026 seasons while it was rebuilt. Dannen wants to continue to explore options. There are no current plans to add chairback seating to the north end zone because the structure of the aisles won’t allow it.
“What I have not gotten into yet is understanding does South have to come down to rebuild South?” Dannen said. “Does it have to come down all at once? Can it come down in phases? Is there another model of that if we have an extended period of time that the whole thing doesn’t come down, but pieces of it do, and we build around it, and we never really harm the capacity?”

Another point that both Dannen and head football coach Matt Rhule brought up is neither was too wild about creating a giant wind tunnel in South Stadium for two seasons with an open end zone that currently sits 98 rows high.

“Coach and I joked, I think we understand why we were in the option for all those years, because of the wind tunnel effect,” Dannen said. “I think you really have to assess the impact on the competitiveness of the team and how we would play by the other impacts that would come if the south end zone sat empty for a season or a period of time.”

However, one thing you can expect to come to the south end zone is a new video board. You’ll also see new and improved stadium WiFi by this season.
“I do plan to go to the board to get a south end video board before the ’25 season,” Dannen said. “The north board’s old. It’s beyond its useful life. It’s still working but given where the seats are and everything else, it feels like the board needs to be in the south. Then, when we eventually build, we can build around it, or we can take it down, relocate it, and put it back in. That’s another big number that we’ve got to figure out whether it can happen or not. I hope when we start ’25, we’ll have a big board down there.”


Raising the money and the overall pricetag​

We don’t have answers to the overall project’s price tag or money raised thus far.

Dannen did not have answers on either topic, mainly because several unknowns remain. A big one is the role of the third-party group Nebraska Philanthropic Trust.

The NU Board of Regents contracted the Omaha group led by Sue Morris for $5.5 million to spearhead fundraising efforts for the project over the top of Nebraska’s in-house foundation and development offices.

“They still have the contract with the board,” Dannen said of Nebraska Philanthropic Trust. “I’m not sure at this point in time whether we will actively fund raise until we have a real project, until we have the drawings, until we know what’s viable, until we know what the costs are, and frankly until we know what the other effects outside of the department, the other effects of the enterprise are going to have on our ability to either carry debt or have other expenses in the budget.
“I’m not sure we’ll be doing a whole lot other than discussing the project versus actually asking because we just don’t have something right now to ask for other than support the concept.”

Thursday, Dannen also made it clear that there have been zero conversations about asking for public dollars for the stadium project.

“I anticipate at some point in time, I will ask everybody for everything,” Dannen said about raising money for the project. “Once we have a project, once we have a financial model that doesn’t compromise our ability to compete in the new world of college athletics. Really, if I’m on the other side and I read all the antitrust settlement stories right now, before you come ask me for money, I need to know what’s going to happen to the department.

“I need to know how the college athletic department is going to run and function before I’m going to financially support it. There are a lot of unanswered questions that I think our development folks would need to be prepared to answer before we get to that point.”

An on-campus hotel and entertainment district is no longer on the radar​

When Alberts first began planning for his initial $450 million stadium project, one of the places he looked at for inspiration was Wrigley Field.

Omaha native Tom Ricketts owns the Chicago Cubs. Since purchasing the Cubs, Ricketts has acquired nearly all the property around Wrigley Field to create an entertainment district and built a boutique Marriott hotel across the street from the ballpark.

Alberts had grand plans of doing something similar at Nebraska, attempting to find and create new revenue streams.

Dannen said creating Nebraska’s own on-campus entertainment district is currently not on his radar.

“It’s not on my personal radar right now. I’m staying in Haymarket. I feel like we’ve got Wrigleyville two blocks away. It’s an amazing area,” Dannen said. “Now, is there more to come? I will tell you my focus is right now on getting the stadium up to speed and if things come that are around it, there will be private people who want to invest. If they feel like there’s a return, they will seek to invest around the stadium but I’m not contemplating building an entertainment district and a hotel in order to get the stadium done.”

Also, don’t expect to see alcohol sales inside Memorial Stadium for the 2024 football season, although, “There will be a point in time in which I’m sure that we will go to the board and ask for that consideration,” Dannen said. “Certainly not this year. When I was at the meeting where the board approved it for baseball, there was talk about a more comprehensive look at alcohol. We sell alcohol at all of the facilities that we do not own, in which Nebraska plays athletics. Not at the ones that we do own.

“The other comprehensive look will be for those events that are coming in, as we talk about how do we utilize the stadium and monetize the stadium beyond the seven Saturdays or whatever per year, alcohol will have to be sold in order for those events to take place. They won’t come if you don’t. I think there’ll be a broader analysis, not specific to football that needs to take place.”


Basketball Men's Top 25 Polls & NET (2/24)

AP Top 25 (2/24)
1. Auburn (60) (25-2)
2. Duke (24-3)
3. Florida (24-3)
4. Houston (23-4)
5. Tennessee (22-5)
6. Alabama (22-5)
7. St. John's (24-4)
8. Michigan State (22-5)
9. Iowa State (21-6)
10. Texas Tech (21-6)
11. Wisconsin (21-6)
12. Texas A&M (20-7)
13. Clemson (22-5)
14. Missouri (20-7)
15. Michigan (20-6)
16. Maryland (21-6)

17. Kentucky (18-9)
18. Memphis (22-5)
19. Louisville (21-6)
20. Purdue (19-9)
21. Marquette (20-7)
22. Arizona (18-9)
23. St. Mary's (25-4)
24. Mississippi State (19-8)
25. BYU (19-8)

Others Receiving Votes
Creighton, Mississippi, Kansas, New Mexico, Virginia Commonwealth, Oregon, UCLA, Drake, UC-San Diego, High Point, Gonzaga, Illinois, Vanderbilt, Utah State, Yale

============================

Coaches Top 25 (2/24)
1. Auburn (28) (25-2)
2. Duke (2) (24-3)
3. Florida (24-3)
4. Houston (23-4)
5. Tennessee (22-5)
6. Alabama (22-5)
7. St. John's (24-4)
8. Michigan State (22-5)
9. Iowa State (21-6)
10. Texas Tech (21-6)
11. Texas A&M (20-7)
12. Wisconsin (21-6)
13. Michigan (20-6)

14. Clemson (22-5)
15. Maryland (21-6)
16. Missouri (20-7)
17. Louisville (21-6)
18. Memphis (22-5)
19. Purdue (19-9)
20. St. Mary's (25-4)
21. Arizona (18-9)
22. Marquette (20-7)
23. Kentucky (18-9)
24. Mississippi State (19-8)
25. Creighton (19-8)

Others Receiving Votes
BYU, New Mexico, Virginia Commonwealth, Mississippi, UC-San Diego, UCLA, Kansas, Utah State, Gonzaga, Connecticut, Drake, Oregon, UC-Davis

============================

NCAA NET Rankings (2/24)
1. Auburn
2. Duke
3. Houston
4. Florida
5. Tennessee
6. Alabama
7. Texas Tech
8. Iowa State
9. Arizona
10. Gonzaga
11. Maryland
12. Kentucky
13. Wisconsin
14. Michigan State

15. Missouri
16. St. Mary's
17. Texas A&M
18. St. John's
19. Purdue
20. Kansas
21. Michigan
22. Clemson
23. Illinois
24. Louisville
25. UCLA
----------------------------
32. Oregon
34. Ohio State
54. Nebraska
56. Indiana
57. Northwestern
64. Iowa
69. Penn State
71. USC
75. Rutgers
92. Minnesota
95. Washington
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