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Northern Star

Northern Illinois University’s student media since 1899

 

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The Student News Site of Northern Illinois University

Northern Star

The Student News Site of Northern Illinois University

Northern Star

NIU rallies for win

By Nathan Lindquist | April 6, 2004

Comebacks were the order of the day as the NIU men’s tennis bounced back from Sunday’s loss at Western Michigan and returned to its winning form with a 6-1 victory over visiting UIC. Despite playing without No. 1 singles player Willy Gali, the Huskies...

Senior shows dedication with Huskies

By Nathan Lindquist | April 5, 2004

Unlike many college tennis players, NIU’s Ryan Schnack was not raised with a racket in hand. Schnack’s first sport was soccer, which he picked up when he was 5 years old. But Schnack’s grandparents soon shifted his focus to tennis. "They hated soccer;...

Winning streak ends at eight

By Nathan Lindquist | April 4, 2004

With high-speed winds circulating the Anderson Hall courts, the NIU men’s tennis team opened MAC play with a win against visiting Buffalo on Saturday only to fall the following day on the road against Western Michigan. Wind gusts from the northwest...

Men’s tennis to host conference foe Buffalo

By Nathan Lindquist | April 2, 2004

The NIU men’s tennis team will attempt to keep its seven-game winning streak going as it enters MAC play against Buffalo and Western Michigan this weekend. NIU’s match versus Buffalo at 1 p.m. Saturday will be at the Anderson Courts if weather permits....

NIU continues run over WIU

By Ian Waddick | March 29, 2004

The NIU men’s tennis team picked up its 20th consecutive victory over Western Illinois with a 7-0 shutout Saturday. The Huskies (11-3 overall) did not lose a single set in the non-conference meet. "Today was a good match for us; we stayed focused and...

Actual home courts coming soon for tennis teams

By Frank Rusnak | March 26, 2004

Rather than driving the 30-plus miles for a "home match," the NIU tennis team will be in the center of campus on new courts. But not just yet. This weekend, the women’s tennis team will play its first home games of the season at the Clock Tower Resort...

Men’s tennis tops Illinois State, Valparaiso

By Sean Connor | March 22, 2004

Taking 13 of 17 matches this weekend, the NIU men’s tennis team improved its record to 10-3 with wins over Illinois State (4-7) and Valparaiso (2-10). On Friday against ISU, the Huskies squeaked by with a 4-3 win when Erick Martinez won the last match...

Tennis team falls at UIC

By Ian Waddick | March 19, 2004

The NIU women’s tennis team fell below .500 with a 5-2 loss at Illinois-Chicago on Thursday. The Huskies’ lone victories came at No. 2 and No. 3 singles. NIU senior Branka Savic defeated Ayca Gumuscu 5-7, 7-6 (4), 1-0 (2) at No. 2, while junior Ivonne...

NIU baseball goes 6-4 over Spring Break

By Ian Waddick | March 15, 2004

The NIU baseball team finished Spring Break with a 4-1 win over Fairfield. The game was the Huskies’ 10th in 11 days during the break. The Huskies went 6-4 during those 11 days to improve their record to 9-7 overall. Senior left-handed pitcher Zach...

From Spain to DeKalb

By Sean Ostruszka | February 25, 2004

For NIU tennis player Willy Gali, the adjustments from the clay courts of Barcelona, Spain, to the hard courts in America were rough. “In Spain, the clay courts make the game much slower,” said Gali, the team’s No. 1 singles player. “Here the...

NIU has its own streak to end

By Ian Waddick | October 6, 2003

Ninety-five years. Sunday, the Cubs won their first post-season series in 95 years. Let me say it again: 95 YEARS. I know, it’s crazy. Anyway, think about just how long 95 years really is. The last time the Cubs won a post-season series, Theodore Roosevelt...

Good, bad and tragic

By Frank Rusnak | August 24, 2003

In what is usually a time for tranquility throughout the world of college sports, the summer of ‘03 marked a hectic time with some good, some bad and some we’d all like to forget.

Here’s a taste of what you missed if you haven’t been keeping pace with the Huskies over the past couple months.

O lineman dies in collapse

Front page news throughout the the nation was the Chicago Porch Collapse, which killed 13 people. What you may or may not have known was that one of those victims was a student at NIU.

Shea Fitzgerald, a redshirt sophomore football player, was apparently sandwiched between the fallen porch floors that caved in to the basement at his brother’s apartment on Chicago’s North Side.

A 6-foot-8, 283-pound projected starter on the offensive line, Fitzgerald was there with two teammates, Pat Raleigh and Brad Cieslak.

"I didn’t see it happen," said Cieslak. "Me and Pat had just walked inside [from the porch], and we took about 10 steps inside and it sounded like a 300-foot tree had fallen. We saw the floor was collapsed down to the basement - it was gone in almost the blink of an eye."

NIU preseason No. 1

With 24 first-place votes, the Huskie football team topped the MAC News Media Associations list ahead of even the East’s Marshall and Miami-Ohio.

With 13 starters coming back from an 8-4 season and share of the MAC West crown, high hopes await this year’s squad.

Huskies to pro ranks

NIU football’s Tim Vincent was signed by the Chicago Bears and baseball’s Joe Mazzuca was picked up by the Florida Marlins.

On May 7, Vincent, a life-long Bears fan, signed a standard free-agent contract. The 6-foot-6, 290-pound offensive tackle is still listed on the Bears roster as cuts are being made every week.

A shortstop, Mazzuca was selected with the 353rd pick on the June 3 Major League Baseball Draft.

Mazzuca took his signing bonus into Jamestown, N.Y., where he’s with the single A Jamestown Jammers until Sept. 3.

Hammock to Wisconsin

Former NIU All-MAC running back Thomas Hammock will stay with football despite his playing career cut short because of a heart condition.

Hammock, a two-time 1,000 yard rusher, will be a graduate assistant for head coach Barry Alvarez and the University of Wisconsin this season.

Hammock was after his third consecutive year of being both an Academic All-American and All-MAC before feeling chest pains after NIU’s first game against Wake Forest in 2002. Hammock rushed for 176 yards in that one game.

Mr. Basketball to NIU

South Dakota’s top player, Paige Paulsen, signed with the NIU basketball team.

The 6-foot-7 power forward originally signed with Lamar. Then head coach Mike Dean left and Paulsen asked to be let out of his binding letter of intent.

That is where coach Rob Judson and the Huskies stepped in and offered a scholarship to Paulsen, who averaged 25.5 points, 11 rebounds and five assists his senior year, to which he was awarded with the Mr. Basketball award for South Dakota. As a junior, Paulsen led his team to a state title.

Tennis coach to Marquette

After coaching the NIU men’s tennis team for the past four years, Steven Rodecap took an offer to coach at Marquette.

A graduate of the MAC’s Ball State in 1996, Rodecap helped the Huskies to a 16-10 record and a runner-up finish at the MAC Tournament last year.

A replacement has not yet been named.

Bates hopes for CBA career

The NIU basketball team’s point guard from last year, Jay Bates, worked out for the Rockford Lightning CBA team over the summer.

Bates, who has used up all of his NCAA eligibility, is still a student at NIU working on his degree.

He has yet to hear from the Lightning, who will play four home games at NIU ‘s Convocation Center this year, about his prospects of making the team.

Baseball and softball end

NIU baseball coach Ed Mathey led the Huskies to a school-record 34 wins (34-24) in his first year with the team. The Huskies qualified for the MAC Tournament for the first time since 2000, where they upset top-seeded Kent State in the first round.

The NIU softball team finished with a 23-20-1 record. The Huskies lost to a lower seeded Bowling Green team in the opening round of the MAC Tournament, then fell again to Miami-Ohio.