The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 22, 1963, Image 4

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    Page 4
College Station, Texas
Tuesday, October 22, 1963
THE BATTALION
14-14 TIE
Aggies Match Frogs
By JIM BUTLER
Battalion Sports Editor
About ten minutes past two on
a cloudy Saturday afternoon in
Ft. Worth, TCU fans were chort
ling with glee and ready to settle
down for a long afternoon of scor
ing by the mighty Horned Frogs.
Aggie fans hitched up their
pants, battened down the hatches
and put their minds on the post
game parties, also expecting a
long afternoon.
BUT ALL surprises are not
hatched in Dallas and its sister
city to the west was about to be
shook by a mild tremor in the
good old Southwest Conference
tradition.
TCU let the Aggies run four
plays to open the ball game and
then moved 40 yards in eight plays
for a quick 7-0 lead. Frog root
ers sighed in contentment and the
only question in their minds was
how many points TCU would rack
up — a question that grew and
festered as the Aggies tied the
score and took the lead.
A&M WIGGLED back in the
game early in the second period
on a one yard burst by fullback
Jerry Rogers for the touchdown.
The scoring drive originated on
the TCU 49-yard line and featured
a tremendous 31-yard sideline
dance by halfback George Har
gett. Hargett was pulled down on
the TCU 2 after being hit by the
majority of the TCU team. The
senior halfback’s tightrope act
was the longest run from scrim
mage for the Aggies this year.
TCU got nowhere on two more
series of downs before A&M’s
shock troops struck with a blitz
that would have turned Hitler
Maroon with envy.
THE FROG’s Garry Thomas
dropped back to punt with the
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Halftime festivities consisted of
the presentation of Nanette Ga
briel, Aggie Sweetheart for 1963-
64. Miss Gabriel was appropri
ately greeted by Cadet Colonel
of the Corps Paul Dresser and so
ended the Aggie kissing until
after the final gun.
TCU STORMED back onto the
field, determined not to be the
victim of another upset. With the
exception of 10 plays, the entire
second half was played in A&M
territory.
But the Aggie defense scram
bled, hustled and contained the
Frogs almost to perfection. The
lone breach came in the fourth
quarter when TCU drove 85 yards
in 16 plays to knot the score.
A&M STOPPED three other
Frog threats. Mike Pitman re
covered a Tommy Crutcher fumble
caused by Ray Kubala; Jim Keller
intercepted a TCU pass on the
Aggie six; and TCU’s ace field
goal kicker Jim McAteer missed
a 33-yard three-pointer.
The 14-14 tie put A&M’s record
for the season at three losses, one
win and one tie. TCU is now
3-1-1.
A&M PLAYERS relaxed in Ft.
Worth Saturday night and start
ed preparing Monday for Baylor
whom they host next Saturday in
Kyle Field. The Baptists will be
leading the Southwest Conference
(tied with Texas) when they in
vade College Station. The Bears
barely beat Texas Tech, 21-17,
Saturday night.
Texas remained undefeated with
a 17-13 victory over Arkansas and
Rice edged SMU, 13-7.
Pardon me if I sound as if the
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the world.
It does.
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How can you get started? For many, the best way
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you can still apply for Air Force Officer Training
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For more information about Air Force OTS, see
your local Air Force representative.
ball on the TCU 44. The pass from
center was high and the attempted
punt bounced off the arm of A&M
tackle Bill Ward. Ward and four
other Aggies who had broken
through the TCU line raced for
the loose ball. Ward picked it up
on the 17 and rumbled into the
end zone to give the Maroon-and-
White a 13-7 lead. Bob Lee, who
had kicked the first A&M conver
sion, made it two and the Farmers
led 14-7 at halftime.
END OF THE ROAD
A&M’s Budgie Ford (22) is stopped by TCU’s Jim Fauver (21).
Hank— 6 We Wanted To Win 9
But Pleased With Outcome
The Aggie dressing room, after
TCU had been hard put to emerge
from the game with a 14-14 tie,
wasn’t exactly a scene of raucous
jubliation with champagne flow
ing 1 from the shower spigots. Sub
dued relief and content was more
the theme as the Cadets pulled
off sweaty jerseys and unlaced
shoulder pads. Smiles were the
order of the day for the second
straight weekend.
There was no doubt about the
feeling, as Head Coach Hank Fold-
berg put it, “We wanted to win!”
BUT FOLDBERG was pleased
with the scoreboard tied and moral
victory for the Farmers who went
into the game as two touchdown
underdogs. “Our boys played a
good game, put out a lot of ef
fort,” Foldberg said. “TCU is a
fine team.”
Was TCU stronger in the second
half?
“I don’t think so. We were hurt
by bad field position. And Fau-
ver’s (Jim) running kept us in
a hole. We just didn’t contain
them well in the second half.”
MEANWHILE, sophomore tac
kle Bill Ward was sitting on a
bench, sipping a soda pop. Ward
had made a lineman’s dream come
true by scoring A&M’s second TD
after blocking a TCU punt and
fielding the ball for a 20-yard
jaunt into the end zone.
The f)ig sophomore from Austin
happily related the circumstances.
“The ball hit my arm and bounced
away. I saw Brotherton (John)
looking for it and I saw it in front
of me. The ball bounced toward
me and I picked it up. All I
thought about was getting across
the goal.”
THE SIX-POINTER was the
first touchdown for Ward. “I
came close in high school on a 75-
yard run, but it was called back.
I’m just glad one of us was able
to do it,” Ward added.
Ward was one of several heroes
for the Cadets. Mighty Mite
George Hargett set up the first
Aggie score with a 31-yard pinball
machine run down the sidelines in
the second quarter. Hargett was
hit by the majority of the Horned
Frog team before being brought
down just short of the goal line.
“I WAS afraid I was going out
of bounds,” Hargett said. “I think
TCU thought I had gone out and
relaxed a little bit. I could see
the goal but I couldn’t quite reach
it.”
Field General Jim Keller con
tinued his consistent play and
picked off a Horned Frog pass in
the fourth quarter.
“I wasn’t thinking about going
all the way with it especially,”
Keller said. “I was just trying to
get it back as far as I could.”
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AGGIE CAPTAIN Ray Kubala
did an outstanding job defensive
ly making several big plays to
thwart TCU drives. Kubala led
the Cadets in unassisted tackles
with seven. Junior tackle Ray
Gene Hinze, another defensive
stalwart who spent most of his
time in the TCU backfield, was
right behind Kubala with six
tackles.
Foldberg credited fullback Jerry
Rogers with the best job of line-
backing against the Horned Frogs
that the Aggies have had this sea
son. Rogers was credited with
five unassisted tackles.
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