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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 10, 1965)
Page 4 College Station, Texas Wednesday, March 10, 1965 THE BATTALION Wynne Hurls Lobos Past A&M In 2-1 Pitcher’s Duel Tuesday By LANI PRESSWOOD Sports Editor The Sul Ross Lobos pushed across runs in the first and last innings Tuesday afternoon to hand the Aggies a 2-1 set back, their first of the year. Lanky John Wynne pitched five- hit ball for the Lobos in going the route. The Cadets threatened sev eral time but on each occasion Wynne managed to work himself out of trouble. Sul Ross registered the winning tally against reliever Billy John son, who replaced starter Steve Hillhouse in the seventh frame. Hillhouse allowed the visitors only four hits and one run during his stint on the mound. The Lobos started the scoring in the first frame. Centerfielder Gary Rockey lined a double to left-centerfield and was driven in tight pitcher’s duel. Both hurlers kept the scoreboard unblemished over this period. Wynne relied on a smoking fast ball while Hillhouse’s most effec tive pitch was a sharpbreaking curve. Ag centerfielded Neil Thompson knotted the score in the seventh by lacing one of Wynn’e offerings over the Travis Park’s rightfield wall. Johnson came in to relieve in the eighth but he left his control in the bullpen. For the two innings the Blinn JC transfer worked, he gave up two hits and four walks. Leftfielder Ken Richardson led off the ninth for the Lobos with a single. Compton bunted him around and third sacker Bill Cart- hel drove him in with a line shot to left-center. Johnson walked the next two batters but pitched himself out of the jam. Tom Chandler’s Maroons threa- thened to pull the game out in the ^ bottom half of the final frame. Pinch hitter Jay Yarter rapped a two-out single. Then Thompson’s grounder to second was hobbled, putting two Ags on base. How ever, the next batter, Dennis Wil liams, flied to right field to end the ball game. This was the Aggie story all - * afternoon. The A&M stickmen jHs couldn’t deliver with ducks on the pond. Ten Cadet runners were left stranded. The verdict left the Aggies with a 2-1 record. Their next contest ^ comes Thursday afternoon when the Ags collide with Houston at 3 p.m. in Travis Park. Ag Soccer Team Nears State Titli In 1st Match, 4-§ 9 LANCE COBB LINES ONE TO LEFT . first inning 1 drive was pulled in by Lobo outfielder. The Aggie soccer team move; step closer to the state champi; ship Sunday by, defeating Cent; ental of Dallas 4-0 in Dallas. Team captain Jasson Gryzago dis scored two of the four the last one in the last second the game. He said the first k was the hardest contest the te* had played all season. It was minutes into the second half fore he opened the game up Ki his first score. Jose Amaya and Joao Leite adi their tallies to bring the Aggies a victory in the quarter-fj match. They will move to semi-finals this Sunday aftent in Houston when they take on Si gerbund. Sangerbund is expected to { the Aggies a workout, since 11 were the only team to tie A( in an undefeated season. The winner of the Houston ga will go to the finals in San ] tonio March 27. They will play winner of the T.U.-Internatio ( ] I by another double off the bat of catcher Mike Compton. For the next six innings Wynne and Hillhouse settled down into a Final Freshman Basketball Statistics Larry Greenhaw ’64 College Master Representative Fidelity Union Life 846-8228 SERVING BRYAN and COLLEGE STATION SMI HOUSTON ZEPHYR Lv. N. Zulch . . 10:08 a.m. At. Dallas . . . 12:47 p.m. Lv. N. Zulch . . 7:35 p.m. At. Houston . . 9:30 p.m. FORT WORTH AND DENVER RAILWAY Tad Adama, A®*«» ■X9-X1S1, N. ZULCH Terry Trippet, six-foot, three- inch forward from Odessa, led Texas A&M’s freshmen scoring during the 1964-65 campaign. The solid 200-pounder, who rewrote Dub Malaise’s records at Odessa High, tallied 170 points in 12 games for a 14.1 average. He also was the Fish leader in eight SWC games with 122 points and a 15.2 norm. Kent Andrews, one of the twins from Dry Creek, La., was second in scoring with 147 points. He also hit the most free throws in one game with 10 against the Texas Yearling. The high single game was turn ed in by Jimmie Lenox of League City. The 6-3 nephew of former A&M great, Bennie Lenox, scor ed 27 points against TCU. Le- ACE GLASS COMPANY "AUTO GLASS — OUR SPECIALITY” 2807 Texas Ave. Phone 823-8211 Henry Cortez, Jr. Manager (A&M , 64) 8 Years Experience In Local Area. Insurance Claim Service Free Estimates RUDY CORTEZ Home Phone 822-0672 12 Years Experience In Local Area RUDY & HENRY INVITE ALL THEIR AGGIE BUDDIES TO VISIT AND HAVE COFFEE IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIIIIIM nox and Trippet tied for most field goals in one game. Lenox had 11 against TCU while Trippet hit 11 against Wharton and Texas. Lenox was third in scoring for the year with 138 points. Max Mainord, the 6-5 jumping hitting three-for-three from the foul line in SWC play. Larry Ditto, 6-8 center from Breckenridge, had the most re bounds in one game with 14 again st Rice. He had 90 for the season to finish second to Mainord in that category. The Fish hit their high point against Rice with 90. They also hit the most team field goals and free throws at Rice’s expense with 35 and 33, although they did not come in the same game. The Fish finished their 12 game slate with a 6-6 record. In eight SWC games they won 5, lost 3. In SWC play, they lost twice to Baylor, one in overtime, and once to TCU. They beat Rice twice, Texas twice and TCU once. jack from Greenville, was the most accurate shooter on the FRESHMAN STATISTICS — 1965 Texas A&M Basketball after 12 games (won 6, lost 6) club. He hit 40 of 86 from the SWC (won 5, lost 3) floor for a 46.5 percentage. He also was the club’s top rebound er with 102. Keith Andrews, the other twin from Dry Creek, La., had the only perfect mark among the Fish, BATTALION SPORTS Player G FG-FGA Pet. Miss Pet. Miss Reb. PF-D Pts. Avg. High Terry Trippet 12 68-158 .430 34-43 .791 99 79 44-4 170 14.1 23 (Texas) SWC 8 48-110 .436 26-31 .839 67 47 32-3 122 15.2 23 (Texas) Kent Andrews 12 47-113 .415 53-63 .841 76 39 35-1 147 12.2 18 (San J) SWC 8 29-72 .403 36-44 .818 51 21 25-1 94 11.7 14 (Texas) Jimmie Lenox 12 53-131 .405 34-56 .607 100 70 41-1 138 11.5 27 (TCU) SWC 8 42-94 .447 24-40 .600 68 53 27-1 108 13.4 27 (TCU) Max Mainord 12 40-86 .465 55-72 .764 73 102 47-3 135 11.2 18 (Rice) SWC 8 30-68 .441 41-61 .672 58 71 32-3 101 12.6 18 (Rice) Larry Ditto 12 52-137 .397 12-32 .375 105 90 37-2 116 9.6 21 (Rice) SWC 8 41-102 .401 5-20 .250 76 66 24-1 87 10.8 21 (Rice) Jim Burgess 12 39-99 .394 22-26 .846 51 39 29-1 100 8.3 18 (Rice) SWC 8 25-57 .439 15-18 .833 34 28 19-1 65 9.2 18 (Rice) Buzzy Myatt 12 24-71 .338 14-25 .560 58 52 35-<2 62 5.4 9 (TCU) SWC 8 15-45 .333 8-18 .444 40 39 21-0 38 4.4 9 (TCU) John Rhodes 10 14-33 .321 11-19 .579 27 18 16-0 39 3.9 16 (Lon M) SWC 6 3-12 .250 4-6 .667 11 9 9-0 10 1.7 6 (Rice) Keith Andrews 12 13-33 .394 7-9 .778 22 11 17-0 33 3.0 6 (Rice-SJ) SWC 7 10-26 .385 3-3 1.000 16 9 14-0 23 3.3 6 (Rice) John Cosby 5 12-3 .666 3-4 .750 2 3 1-0 7 1.4 5 (TCU) SWC 3 1-2 .500 3-4 .750 2 3 1-0 5 1.6 5 (TCU) Mike Tredway 7 0-3 .000 1-3 .333 4 5 3-0 1 0.2 1 (Baylor) SWC 3 0-0 .000 1-2 .500 1 1 0-0 1 0.5 1 (Baylor) John Duncan 4 0-1 .000 0-0 .000 1 0 2-0 0 — — SWC 1 0-0 .000 Team Rebounds SWC 0-0 .000 0 0 .. 75 .. 44 1-0 0 SEASON FISH 12 352-868 .405 246-342 .719 612 588 307-14 950 79.1 90 (Rice) FOES 12 342-787 .434 297-415 .703 563 587 290-17 981 81.7 100 (TCU) SWC FISH 8 244-512 .478 166-247 .697 349 356 205-10 654 81.7 90 (Rice) FOES 8 235-521 .461 192-271 .708 365 358 192-13 662 82.7 100 (TCU) of San Antonio semi-final nu also being played Sunday. ’ winner of the Texas cup may tn to St. Louis to represent the st in the National Champions Tournament. 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