The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 04, 1960, Image 4

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    Aggies Whip Dons in Overtime
SAN FRANCISCO (AV-A&M,
the nation’s 10-ranked college bas
ketball team, was forced to beat
the San Francisco Dons in over
time here Monday night, 69-65.
The regulation game ended 61-61.
The hard-pressed victory gave
the Aggies a 13-1 record, and a
three-game win sti’eak. The Dons
were down by 10 points with 3:46
left.
The Texans led the Dons until
the final two minutes, and San
Francisco trailed, 32-25 at the half.
Hal Urban sent . San Francisco
into the l§ad for the first time on
a jump shot from the circle, 60-59.
Then the Dons went two points
ahead on Charley Range’s free
throws. It was a one-and-one situ
ation. Range made his first shot,
and missed the second, with 21
seconds left.
But the Aggies’ Elliott Craig
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tied the game in the last six sec
onds, goaling from 17 feet, and the
intersectional game went into a
five-minute overtime period.
Urban immediately goaled from
the circle again and the Dons were
up two points, 63-61. A&M’s Don
Stanley connected from the corner
and there was another deadlock.
But with 1:48 left Craig’s jump
shot put A&M back in command,
65-63. Don Stanley’s four free
throws clinched it for the Aggies,
who received another productive
night from Carroll Broussard.
Broussard led all scoring with
26 points. He hit 50 per cent of
his shots, connecting on 10 of 20
from the field.
The Dons had the better of the
shooting percentages, hitting 40.3
from the floor against the Aggies’
38.1. A&H dominated rebounds,
48-39. The six-foot seven Wayne
Lawrence of A&M topped all re
bounders with 11.
A&M (69) FG FT TP
Chapman 5 2 12
Lawrence 14 6
Annett Oil
P. Stanley 113
Broussard 10 6 26
D. Stanley 2 4 8
Cox 022
Craig 3 0 6
Keller 0 0 0
Smith 0 0 0
24 21 69
SAN FRANCISCO (65) PF FT TP
Ralls 2 3 7
Gallagher 0 0 0
Range 5 4 14
Urban 408
Bruener 5 1 11
Gaillard .7 2 16
Nolan 0 0 0
Norton 4 19
THE BATTALION
Page 4 College Station, Texas Thursday, February 4, 1960
Santa Clara Hands
Ags Second Loss
With 66-55 Victory
T. .
Carroll Broussard
. . . held to 14 points
Tech Completes
Coaching Staff
LUBBOCK, Tex. OP)—The Texas
Tech football coaching staff has
been completed.
Jim Parmer, who helped coach
the freshmen the past three sea
sons and aided in installing Tech’s
multiple offense, was named an
assistant varsity coach Tuesday.
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“Serving Texas Aggies”
SAN JOSE, Calif. (TP)—The
Santa Clara Broncs pulled one of
the basketball season’s biggest up
sets Tuesday night with a relative
ly easy 66-55 victory over A&M,
Southwest Conference leader.
The Broncs, led by Frank So-
brero and Jim Russi, were sharp
from both the field and the free
throw line. They built a 29-24
half-time and were never headed.
Santa Clara, second in the West
Coast Athletic Conference, now
has a 14-6 season record. The
Broncos are 3-1 in the conference.
It was the second defeat of the
A&M (55) FG FT TP
Chapman 2 0 4
Lawrence 4 3 11
Annett 3 ‘ 1 7
P. Stanley 3 17
Broussard 4 6 14
D. Stanley 4 3 11
Craig ^ 0 0 0
Cox ^ 13 5
Smith 0 0 0
Keller 0 2 2
Totals 18 19 65
SANTA CLARA (66) FG FT TP
Sheaff 4 0 8
McGee 4 0 8
Russi 5 7 17
Cristina 113
Sobrero 7 12 26
Gardiner 0 2 2
Lillevand 0 0 0
Bachich 0 0 0
Keister 10 2
Buoncrstini 0 0 0
McGrath 0 0 0
Ramm 0 0 0
Totals 22 22 66
TCU Plans Offense
Around Passing
FORT WORTH hP)—Texas
Christian’s Horned Frogs plan to
throw the ball more next season
and their first workout in spring
training Tuesday indicated it.
Seventy-four candidates report
ed and Coach Abe Martin had his
three quarterbacks, Don George,
Guy Gibbs and sophomore Ben Nix
moving immediately into the pass
ing game. Gibbs is the 1959 soph
omore who was ineligible.
Bill Phillips, 200-pound sopho
more from Snyder, moved into the
left guard spot replacing Roy Lee
Rambo, two-year letterman who
was found scholastically ineligible
last week.
Larry Dawson, the No. 2 quar
terback last fall, was moved to
halfback.
Jockey Willie Shoemaker made
it three straight United Nations
Handicaps when he scored with
Round Table. It was the Shoe’s
ninth $100,000 vistory of 1959 and
Round Table’s third such score.
season of the Aggies, ranked 10th
in the nation, and gave them a 13-2
mark.
The closest the Aggies came to
catching up in the second half was
at 34-31 with 13:45 remaining.
Santa Clara then pulled away
to a nine-point lead and the Ag
gies never again were close. The
Broncs once led by 17 at 64-47. At
that point Bronc substitutes took
over and the Aggies scored eight
points.
A&M hit 28.1 per cent on 18 of
64 shots. Santa Clara had 45 per
cent, making 22 of 49.
The Aggies led in rebounds, 39-
37.
Ags Host Tech'
In Important
Game Saturday
The Aggies’ loss to Santa Clara
Tuesday night gives new hope to
the Texas Tech Red Raiders, who
looked like they would battle for
the cellar at the start of the sea
son, but now loom as contenders
for the championship.
The Raiders, led by sensational
sophomore Del Ray Mounts, who
scored 35 points, hurt Arkansas’
chances with an 82-79 upset Tues
day night. It was Tech’s second
conference triumph in a row. The
victory shot the Raiders into a tie
for third place with Arkansas and
Texas and put them only a game
out of first.
A&M leads with a 4-1 record
only because the Aggies have
played more conference games
than second place Southern Meth
odist (3-1). The Methodists play
Texas Christian at Fort Worth
Wednesday night. A victory for
SMU would put them into a tie
with A&M for the top.
Texas meets North Texas State
of the Missouri Valley Conference
at Denton in a nonconference test.
Arkansas missed a chance of
pulling into a tie for the lead with
the Aggies when the Razorbacks
lost at Lubbock Tuesday night.
They led twice by nine points in
the first half and were ahead,
38-33, at intermission. But Tech
went ahead mfdway of the last
half and held it to the end.
The loss by A&M gives the con
ference an intersectional season
mark of 22 victories against 24
defeats.
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