Page 4 College Station, Texas Tuesday, October 13, 1964 THE BATTALION' Trojans Find The SWC: Statistically Speaking SWC Individual Stats Through Oct. 10 Player & School Donny Anderson, T.T. Jim Fauver, TCU Jack Brasuell, Ark. Ernie Koy, Texas Harold Philipp, Texas James Zanios, T.T. Jim Lindsey, Ark. Johnny Agent, T.T, Fred Marshall BEST: LONG : RUSHING Att. 73 58 85 61 40 47 38 40 37 Gain 387 299 271 244 220 218 222 189 180 rsnaii, rt.rK. 01 iou 164—Anderson, T.T. vs. TCU. 90—Anderson, T.T. vs. TCU. Player & School Dan Mcllhany, A&M Terry Southall, Baylor Kent Nix, TCU Tom Wilson, T.T. Fred Marshall, Ark. Walter McReynolds, ;e Marshall, Baylor any Thomas, SMU Marvin Kristy-''- r "— BES PASSING Att. Comp. Walter McReynolds, Rice Mike Marshall, Baylc nas styi BEST: 19 of 38 for 23 LONG : 68—Tom Wilso lars Danny The Kristynik, Texas r 236 79 69 59 43 33 32 30 24 37 irds— 34 33 27 21 18 17 14 13 13 Lost 17 18 7 1 0 0 20 7 19 Int. 5 5 6 3 4 3 1 3 5 Net 370 281 264 243 220 218 202 182 161 Net 452 463 335 227 233 182 280 124 162 yards—Nix (TCU) vs. T.Tech. to D. Anderson, T.Tech (Miss TOTAL OFFENSE Avg. 5.1 4.8 3.1 4.0 5.5 4.6 5.3 4.6 4.4 Pet. 43.0 47.8 45.8 48.8 54.5 53.1 46.7 54.2 36.1 (Miss. St.). SWC Team Stats Texas Baylor Arkans: T.Tech TCU Rice A&M SMU YARDAGE BESTS: Rush: Pass : Total; PER GAME OFFENSIVE AVERAGES Passing Tot. Off. 83.8 294.5 247.7 289.3 95.8 288.0 60.5 263.3 122.3 217.7 62.0 202.0 120.0 192.8 82.7 178.3 Rushing 210.8 41.7 192.3 202.8 95.5 140.0 72.8 95.7 T.Tech 343 yards vs. Baylor 327 yards vs. T.Tech 385 yards vs TCU. Washington. TCU. Team Texas Arkansas SMU T.Tech A&M R- PER GAME DEFENSIVE AVERAGES Opp. Pass Upp. Ki 113.3 89.8 133.3 105.8 177.5 Rice 176.0 TCU 190.8 Baylor 213.7 BESTS (Least Yards Allowed l Rush: Arkansas 11 vs. Pass : Texas 29 vs. T.Tech. Total : Arkansas 94 vs. TCU. rI) : TCU. pp. P 62.8 124.5 86.0 152.8 94.0 105.3 101.3 99.0 P- 7 176.0 214.3 219.3 258.5 271.5 281.3 292.0 312.7 Player & School Terry Southall, Baylor Fred Marshall, Ark. Donny Anderson, T.T. Dan Mcllhany, A&M Jim Fauver, TCU Ernie Koy, Texas Plays 79 70 73 112 61 65 Net Rush — 34 161 370 — 83 281 243 CONFERENCE STANDINGS Ernie Koy, lexas 65 243 BEST: 232 yards—Southall (Baylor) Pass Yards Per Play Team W L T Pts. Opps. 12 463 429 5.4 Arkansas 2 0 0 46 233 394 5.6 Texas T.Tech 1 0 0 23 0 0 370 6.1 2 1 0 41 45 452 369 3.3 A&M 0 1 0 12 16 20 301 4.9 Baylor 0 1 0 6 17 40 vs. Oregon 283 St. 4.4 TCU SMU and Rice—No 0 2 Conference games 0 to date. 16 54 1939 Champions Return This Week Cricket Team Wins, 66-32 The A&M Cricket team opened the season with a 66-32 victory over the Houston 11 in a five- hour match here Sunday. A. P. Kudchadker and M. V. Kudchadker paced the Aggie at tack. A. P., team captain, scored 20 runs as offensive standout, while M. V. took 6 wickets on defense. The team’s next game will be at the Dallas County Cricket Club in Dallas Oct. 25. f ^ IWKDNER you’ll Always Win The Showdown When You Get Your Duds Don* At CAMPUS CI.FAIVFRS The 1939 Texas Aggies were un defeated, untied, named National Champions and went on to beat Tulane, 14-13, in the Sugar Bowl. This weekend members of that great squad, their wives, children and in some cases, grandchildren, will hold their Silver Anniversary reunion on the A&M campus. They will attend the A&M-TCU game as a group. Headquarters for the reunion will be the Sands Motel in College Station. The group will be luncheon guests of Coach Hank Foldberg and the A&M Athletic Department prior to the game. A buffet ban quet is scheduled Saturday night at Briarcrest Country Club in Bryan with Morris Frank, colum nist and humorist of the Houston Chronicle, as master of ceremonies. J. Howard Shelton, president of the Texas National Bank in Tem ple and center on the 1939 team, is the general chairman, with Marion Pugh, College Station builder and lumber yard owner, co-quarterback of the champions, serving as local chairman. Over a 10-game schedule this team allowed their foes an average of 76.3 net yards total offense, fig uring down to 1.71 yards a play. It was a team that apparently could score at will but was con tent with a three-touchdown mar gin. In their six SWC games, only a 6-2 sqeaker over SMU missed that margin. They were masters of ball con trol. In the Sugar Bowl game, nursing a one-point lead, they held the football for the final 9:30, winding up on the Tulane one-yard line. Rather than risk another kick return by Tulane’s great Bob by Kellogg, Aggie captain Cotton Price elected to run out the clock rather than score. John Kimbrough, tackle Rev. Joe Boyd and guard Marshall Robnett won All-American honors and the majority of the starting unit won all-SWC honors. Homer Hill Norton, coach of that great machine, will induct Kim brough into the first A&M Hall of Fame Friday night. Buckeyes Gain In Latest Poll By The Associated Press The top ten teams with first place votes in parentheses, won- lost records and points on 9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis i a 10- i. Texas (30) 4-0 387 2. Ohio State (7) 3-0 344 3. Alabama (2) 4-0 307 4. Notre Dame (1) 3-0 281 5. Michigan 3-0 233 6. Nebraska 4-0 142 7. Syracuse 3-1 89 8. Arkansas 4-0 86 9. Louisiana State 3-0 59 10. Florida State 4-0 56 zjCord by Tulane at Loupot's cjCord by Charles Meyers at the Open Mon. & Thurs. til 8:30 r sitl) SHo| Achilles Heel By LANI PRESSWOOD Sports Editor The Southern California Trojans allowed the Aggie wood en horse a seven-point peek Saturday night, slammed the gates shut and handed the cadets their fourth straight loss, 31-7. Halfback Mike Garrett led the Troy offensive by slash ing for 121 yards rushing and two touchdowns. The 178- pounder was mercifully removed from the game early in the fourth quarter by Coach John McKay. The Aggies stunned the crowd of 42,295 by scoring on the game’s sixth play. Cadet secondary ace Mike Pitman picked off an SC pass before the Memorial Coliseum audience got settled in their seats, and streaked 33 yards to the Trojan seven. Four downs later, tailback Jim Stabler crashed over from the one to score his second TD of the season. Glen Lind sey’s conversion made it 7-0, Ag gies. The next three quarters were all Southern Cal. First, Trojan quarterback Craig Fertig engineered a 68-yard scor ing drive which bore fruit with 14:26 left in the second quarter. Garrett then sparked a drive which played out at the Aggie five when the Cadet defense stiffened. Dick Brownell booted a field goal from that spot and sent Troy home at halftime with a 10-7 lead. The second half added insult to injury as the Angelenos completely dominated play. With 4:11 gone in the third stanza, Garrett rambled through a gaping hole in the Ag line to put six more points on the score- board. Late in the fourth quarter, Ag punter Phil Scoggin laid a kick out of bounds on the Trojan 12. It was only a matter of time. Ron Sherman broke for 24 yards and the officials tacked on 15 more for piling on. Fertig took to the air and drilled end Dave Morton for 34 yards. Garrett then plunged for the touchdown. The final SC tally came after the interception of a Dan Mcllhany pass at the mid-field stripe. The ensuing effort carried to the Ag 34. The Ags were charged with pass interference in the end zone on the next play and the ball was placed on the one. Two plays later fullback Ron Heller crashed into the end zone for thet game’s last tally. A fumble recovery by tackle Harvey Ermis gave A&M its only possession of the football in Trojan territory the entire second half. Young Catcher Vetoes Keane, Wins Ball Game By JOE REICHLER Associated Press Sports Writer NEW YORK UP) — Talk about accidental home runs. Tim Mc- Carver’s three-run homer that gave the St. Louis Cardinals a 10-in ning 5-2 triumph over the New York Yankees in the fifth World Series game Monday was the big gest dent of all. In the first place, McCarver was supposed to bunt. That was Manager Johnny Keane’s original plan. But he vetoed it when he thought Yankee catcher Elston Howard was on to it. Even when ordered to hit away, McCarver was not swinging for the seats. All he wanted to do was get the ball past the infield to bring home the runner from third. “It was the biggest hit I ever made in my life,” chortled Mc Carver as the fun-loving catcher re-lived the greatest thrill of his young life. ’’But all I wanted to do was get enough good wood on it to score Bill White from third.” “It was a squeeze situation and we had one in mind,” explained Keane. “I thought about it but dismissed it from my mind when I saw Howard watching me in tently. “He had been watching me all game and I figured he had guessed what I was up to. So we let McCarver hit.” McCarver, a .288 hitter during the season, has been swinging a hot bat in the Series. He had two singles, besides his game win ning homer. 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