6 THE BATTALION SNOOKS”GARDNER SPORT EDITOR ‘MACK” MCREYIMOLDS ASSISTANT SPORTS “JINX” JINKS ASSOCIATE SPORT EDITOR HOUSTON TEAM NO MATCH FOR FAST AGGIE QUINTET Dwyer and Company Perform In Midseasan Style After Listless First Half. The Houston Triangles lead by two former A. and M. captains, For bes and Longscope, were defeated on the local court on Saturday night by the score of 22 to 14. The game was one of the roughest seen here in years, at times resembling a foot ball game more than a basketball game. The Aggies started the scoring in the first minute of play on a free throw, immediately followed by a field goal. The Houston boys came back and tied the count, then forg ing ahead, but the lead was short lived, for the Aggies were soon in the lead never to be headed again. The score at the half stood 13 toll). All during this half the passing of the home team was not the best and for the great work of the guards the score might have been different. Aggies Come Back. The Aggies came back in the sec ond half and literally swept the Tri angles off their feet. Carrying the ball down the court at will and miss ing but few shots at the basket, they soon rolled up a big score. The vis itors seemed unable to stand the fast pace set by the home team. Captain Dwyer’s men covered the floor in midseason form and showed no signs of fatigue at the finish. For the Aggies Keen probably showed up best for the time he was in the contest. He looped several baskets and was all over the court. Dwyer played one of the most bril liant games of his career, time and again carrying the ball to the oppo nents goal single handed. Williams again led the team in scoring, with five field goals. Ehlert as well as Gill and Megarrity came in for their share of the honors. For the visitors Longscope was the individual star, often carrying the ball down the court with a smoothness that was very noticeable. “Todda” Forbes due to lack of train ing was not up to his old time form. The Linup: Triangles; Longscope and Johnson forwards; Davis and St. John guards; Forbes, center. Substi tutes: Cannon, Jackson. Aggies. Wil liams and Ehlert forwards; Dwyer and Gill guards; Darby Center. Sub stitutes: Megarrity and Jones. Moore (Sewanee) Umpire. TTQdc! [MOdflDDd^ Two wonder teams have the Ag gies met and twice they have come off the field undefeated. Give us more wonder teams SULLY. Fisher, the Harvard mentor says the Centre loss was due to an injury sustained by Roberts in the first BASKET TOSSERS LEAVE THURSDAY Meet Mustangs and Bears on Firsi Road Trip of Season. The undefeated Aggie Quintet will leave on Thursday for their first road trip of the present season. On this trip they will play four games two with S. M. U. and two with Bay lor. This will mark the opening of the conference season, for all three teams and will give some line, on the way the race will go this year. Very little is known here of the Mustang Five, since they have play ed only two games this season, los ing both to Coach Gardner’s team from Southwestern by rather large scores. However the Pirates have a a wonderful team this year and too much cannot be based on these games. Jimmy Kitts, the star atl- lete of the Mustangs, was absent on a hunting trip when these games were played and his presence in the lineup will make a different team. Bears Have Fast Team. When the Bears are met on the Cotton Palace court on Monday night, the Aggies will meet their first real contender for conference honors. Coach Bridges has built a wonderful team around Lyons and Bradshaw. Lyons was selected as Ail Southwestern center last year, by practically every sport writer in the state. Bradshaw continues his spec tacular playing and seems to be the star of the team as he was of the football team. The Bruins lost tv/o games to the Triangles early in the season but the team at that time had had little training. During the holi days they took a trip through the southern states meeting some of the best teams in that section. Very few games were won by the Texas team but no boubt they improved wonder fully and are expecting to win from the Aggies. The Aggies have undergone some strenuous training since their last games. Both Coach Bible and Mc- Quillen have been on the floor the past week and the team has made wonderful strides. The passing is getting better and the forwards are getting their eye on the basket. When the team returns next Wed nesday we still expect them to be undefeated and on their way to their third Southwestern Championship. quarter. We only had three regular backs on the sidelines due to injur ies. However we offer no alibi. Seven varsity men ineligible on Monday—Seven Varsity men eligible on Tuesday. Funny. We not only produce athletes of All-American calibre but our latest contribution is an All-American Yell Leader. Among the numerous wedding re ceptions tendered Bo McMillin that by the Aggies at the Dallas Stadium was in our mind the warmest of al- lex and the one that he will longest remember. Only five Aggie basketball cap tains on the court Saturday night. Quite a family affair. BIG JUMP IN BASEBALL STOCK Eugene Cochreham, Heady Mound Artist to Coach Aggie Diamond Siars. When the powers that be signed Eugene Cochreham of Luling, Tex as to coach the A. and M. basball team for the coming season they ap parently put the final and important cognito a baseball machine that should, and we trust will, bring home the meat for diamond lovers around College Staion. Mr. Cochreham has been in pro fessional baseball for the past ten or twelve years. Most of that time has been spent in the Texas and National Leagues, although he spent a short time in American Associa tion. He was a member of the Bos ton Braves when they blazed through the National League to a champion ship and then defeated the then fa mous Philadelphia Athletics for games in a row for the world’s champion ship. While with Boston he was as sociated with such brainy stars and coaches as eorge Stallings, Fred Mit chell, John Evers, “Rabbit” Maran- ville, and Leslie Mann. Since coming back to the Texas League this same Texan has pitched a classy brand of ball and has at the same time won recognition as an all-round baseball strategist. Li 1920 he managed and pitched for the Lockhart Independents and his superior knowledge of the game as well as his ability as a hurler con tributed a large part in bringing the state championship to that town. It is said that the opposing pitcher is never at ease when he is on the third i base coaching line. He is at present the property of the Houston Club, but their loss is our gain. We say this in view of the fact that he has signed a con tract to handle our baseball reins from the first of February until the first day of June. For the past two seasons we have had the services of Paul Sentell during the early part of the year but his connection with the professional game caused us to lose him right in the middle of the collegiate race. This year it will be different. Mr. Cochreham begins work here on February 1st when he will call out the battery candidates. Others will be called out later. The only letter men lost from the 1921 roster is Henderson, who did the bulk o.: the mound duty. Therefore, will all due respect to other hurlers on the club, it would seem that we need a man who is able to handle pitchers and if there is one within the borders of this big state we feel that A. and M. has his services. He is also the kind of man who will fit in natural ly in an Aggie machine. His connec tions with the diamond now are lar gely the result of his love of the gam e and that is certainly the kind of ball played on Kyle Field. The Battalion as a mouthpiece for the entire A. and M. student body wel comes him and promises him every support in the attempt to do big things for Aggieland baseball. ^ AGGIE SCHEDULE FOR’22 ANNOUNCED BY SULLIVAN Six Games on Kyle Field; Two New Teams on Card. The 1922 football schedule as giv en out by Business Manager Sullivan is practically the same as this year. This means one battle after another throughout the entire season. The card includes ten games, six to be played at College Station and four on foreign fields. The season opens here on Septem ber 23, when the varsity takes on the husky Freshmen team, which from all advance notices should be a wonder. One week later Arnold Kirkpatrick will bring his yellow Jackets here from Brownwood to battle the Aggies. This team held the Aggies to a 14 to 7 score this year and will probably make things interesting next year. Following the Yellow Jackets, the Arizona Wildcats come for a game on October 10th. This team was un defeated the past season by the Ag gies, later meeting Centre College in a postseason game at San Diego. Centre won 38 to 0. Just four days after the game with Arizona the Southwestern Pirates invaded the lo cal camp. This team has not played the Aggies since 1919, when they were defeated 7 to 0, due to a long run by Higginbotham. On October 20th, Louisiana State University comes to College Station, and the Aggies intend to get revenge for the defeat handed them in the swampy state this year. This game will probably be the best played on Kyle Field during the entire seasor. After L. S. U. the Aggies take on Henry Kendall, now the University of Tulsa. The first big conference game comes on November 4th, when the team goes to Waco for their annual clash with the Baylor Bears. Baylor will undoubtably have the best team in her history in 1922 and this game will probably b e the best played in the southwest during the next sea son. Armistice Day will find the Aggies at Dallas playing Southern Metho dist University. This team has never beaten A. and M. but things have changed at the Methodist school late ly and they should be heard from in the next few years. After returning from Dallas the Rice Owls will be met on November 20th and ten day later the gridiron classic of the southwest will take place on Clarke Field at Austin. The above schedule includes games with five conferences, four being in Southwestern Conference, one in the Rocky Mountain Confer ence, one in the Southern Confer ence, one in the Oklahoma State Conference and three in the Texas Intercollegiate Athletic Association. Really a representative schedule for the leading team of the great south west.