The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 16, 1965, Image 4

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Page 4
College Station, Texas
Tuesday, March 16, 1965
THE BATTALION
Aggies Carve Up Bevo, 12-4
Cadets Hosting Baylor Today For SWC Lead
By LANI PRESSWOOD
Sports Editor
Orange domination of this
year’s A&M-UT athletic series
ended in Austin’s Clark Field
Saturday.
The Aggie baseballers blasted
Steer pitching for 17 hits in rac
ing to a 12-4 victory in the SWC
opener for both clubs.
Hurler Steve Hillhouse contin
ued to cast his spell over Texas
hitters. The junior lefty notched
his third victory over the Steers
in his varsity career against no
defeats.
Hillhouse went the route Sat
urday, giving up seven hits,
striking out eight and walking
five. He had a three-hit shutout
going into the ninth inning.
Tom Chandler’s crew faces
Baylor for the conference lead
Tuesday afternoon at 3 p.m. in
Bryan’s Travis Park. Righthand
er Billy Crain will be on the
mound for the Aggies against
the Bears, who shut out Rice in
their opener, 8-0.
Leading the Cadet batting bar
rage Saturday were Billy Crain
and Mike McClure. Crain rapped
four hits, McClure three, and they
each drove in three runs.
fourth Cadet run. In the next
frame the Aggies began to break
the game wide open.
Neil Thompson led off with a
walk and then Koonce cracked a
single to left field. With two men
out, Cobb came to the plate. The
second sacker crashed a two-run
triple which landed on top of the
“goat cliff.” McClure then rap
ped, a single to score Cobb.
In the seventh inning Texas
pitching came apart at the
seams.
Two walks, a wild pitch and a
hit batsman were combined with
only two Aggie singles to pro
duce four more runs.
A&M ended their scoring in
the eighth inning. Koonce drew
a walk and Crain drove a triple
to the cliff to drive him in.
Texas parlayed four safeties
into four runs in the bottom of
the ninth. Don Johnson’s triple
brought in the first two tallies.
Ed Denman drove in the last two
with a double to left-center.
Texas used four pitchers in a
vain effort to quell the red-hot
Aggie bats. Starter Robert Col-
ler absorbed the loss. He lasted
five innings, giving up four runs
and ten hits.
A capacity crowd of 3,200
showed up for the start of the
game but few were still around
after the sixth inning. Texas
had entered the game undefeat
ed.
Crain and McClure weren’t the
only Aggies who padded their
batting averages Saturday.
Thompson, Koonce, Cobb, and
Carlton all had two hits while
Beckner and Dennis Williams
each chalked up one.
The Aggie line-up for the Bay
lor clash will consist of Beck
ner (.083) behind the plate; Mal-
itz (.125) at first; Cobb (.300)
on second; Williams (.333) at
short; McClure (.412) at third;
and Koonce (.316), Thompson
(.286) and Carlton (.438) in the
outfield.
The Aggies are batting .295 as
a team and the pitching staff
owns a composite ERA of 2.9.
The 4-1 Aggies, defending
SWC champions, will play three
home games this week. In addi
tion to the Baylor tilt, the Ca
dets will host Texas Lutheran at
3 p.m. Thursday and Rice at 2
p.m. Saturday.
Matson Wins, Aggies 3rd
In Soggy Border Olympics
Singles by Alan Koonce, Crain,
and Lance Cobb produced the
first Aggie run in the third in
ning. Catcher Ed Beckner fol
lowed in the next frame by clout
ing a 375-foot solo home run.
Singles by Fred Carlton and
Crain and a pair of Texas errors
in the fifth inning produced the
Airline
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A&M’s track team gathered a
total of 44% points to take third
place in the university division
of the 33rd Annual Border Olym
pics in Laredo over the weekend.
Rice won the division with 53%
points and Abilene Christian was
second with 49%. Behind the
Aggies came Houston, Baylor,
SMU, Texas, North Texas, TCU
and Texas Tech.
The Aggies took firsts in the
440-yard relay, 100-yard dash,
the high jump and shot put to
spearhead their scoring. Abilene
Christian also had four first
places and Rice had three.
Randy Matson was the only
bright spot in a day of rain, wet
grounds and soggy performances.
He broke the meet record of 58-
9% set by A&M’s Danny Roberts
last year with a 63-7 toss. The
night before he had won the
NCAA Indoor Championship Shot
Put with a 63-2% heave. Roger
Orrell of ACC was second in the
event at Laredo with a 56-8%
effort.
In the 100-yard dash White
won it in 9.9 and Gilbert Smith
tied Ken Coleman of Texas Tech
at 10.5 for fifth. A three-way
tie at 10 flat between SMU, Bay
lor and Houston occupied second
through fourth place.
Gilbert Smith tied Jim Bank-
head of SMU at 22 flat to take
second in the 220-yard dash. Gale
Harrison of ACC won it in 21.8
and Wayne Brandt of Baylor was
fourth.
Aggie firsts were rounded out
by Mike Schrider in the high
jump with an effort of 6-4%.
David Segrest of Texas was sec
ond and Lynn Morris of Rice fin
ished third.
The discus event was one of
the meet’s closest. A&M’s David
Glover was third with a heave of
167-9%. First place was cap
tured by Orrell with a 198-3
spin. Jim Lancaster of Baylor
was second.
Billy Schmidt, Gilbert Smith,
Robert Martin and James White
teamed up for a 41.4 time to win
the 440-yard relay. SMU was
second with 41.5 and Rice came
in third with 41.7.
In the broad jump A&M’s Bob
Brown was third with a 22-2
leap. Ron Linscomb of North
Texas copped first place at 23-
2%. Butch Reed of Houston was
second at 22-9%.
Don Kooser of A&M and Craig
Fox of Abilene Christian had
identical times of 55.1 seconds in
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only 25
the 440-yard hurdles to tie for
fourth. Bobby May of Rice won
the event in 53.6 seconds. Jim
my Wilkerson of Rice was sec
ond and Cyler Thompson of
Houston was third.
The remainder of the Aggie
points came in the javelin throw.
Dan Meadows took second with
a throw of 187 feet and Donny
Ayers was fourth at 179-10%.
Ricky Jacobs of Rice was first
with a 198-3 toss.
The Aggies didn’t place in the
440-yard dash, the 880-yard run,
the mile run, the 3-mile run and
the 120-yard high hurdles.
A new record was set in the
pole vault. Warren Brattlof of
Rice vaulted 15-6% to break the
record of 15-4 set by Rice’s Fred
Hansen in 1963. Only three men
competed in the event, the other
two being Mark King of Texas
and Wayne Fitzgerald of North
Texas State.
A&M Soccermen
Suffer Setback
In Semis Match
The Aggie soccer team came
within a couple of kicks of gaining
a berth in the state championship
game as they went down to San-
gerbund 3-2 Sunday afternoon in
Houston.
The Aggie squad built up a 2-0
lead in the first half on tallies by
Carlos Matamoros and Mauricio
Martinez. In the second half, the
Houston team came alive as the
Aggies’ previous week’s injuries
began to take their toll.
Jasson Gryzagoridis, captain of
the A&M team, said “Injuries
started hurting us in the second
half; we sort of ran out of gas.”'
The Aggies played in the same
league with Sangerbund during
the regular season, defeating them
once and tying them once. A&M
was undefeated in its other con
ference games. They went on to
win their quarterfinal match, but
suffered numerous injuries in that
game.
The win by Sangerbund will en
title them to play International of
San Antonio next Sunday for the
Texas Cup state championship
game. The winner of that game
will go to the national tourney in
St. Louis.
The Past And The Future
New Aggie grid recruit Wendell Housley is shown with
all time A&M football great John David Crow. Housley
signed with A&M Friday. The Richardson halfback is 6-2,
205 and he runs the 100 in 9.8. Aggie assistant coach
Elmer Smith says of Housley, “he could be another Crow.”
Crow is the only Aggie gridder to ever win the Heisman
Trophy.
Netiers Split Pair,
Golfers Take 3rd
The Aggie netters of Omar
Smith won a smashing victory
over Louisiana State Saturday aft
er making a determined but futile
effort against Pan American Fri
day.
Meanwhile the Aggie golf team
was seeking its fortune in the
Border Olympics Golf Tournament.
The Ags managed to finish third.
The netters blanked the Tigers
6- 0 behind the leadership of their
new number-one man, Albert Al
drich. He played the second posi
tion against Pan American and de
feated Sherwood Stewart 6-3, 4-6,^
7- 5. He teamed up with Luis Ro
jas to beat Detly Nitsche and
Stewart 6-3 and 2-1 when Nitsche
went out with leg cramps at that
point.
In Saturday’s action the Aggies
were in complete control. Aldrich
took straight sets from Dave Roe-
mer, the Tigers’ number one man,
6-2 and 6-1. The Aggie domina
tion continued as Rojas blasted
David Longmire 6-3 and 6-0 and
Ray Salazar pounded Joseph Hub
bard 6-2 and 7-5.
Doug Sassman completed the
singles rout by downing Fred Sem-
ineau 7-5 and 6-0.
Fish Try Baylor
In SWC Opener
A&M’s freshmen baseballers
open SWC play Tuesday at Waco
against the Baylor Cuibs and right
hander Ken Perrin of Sherman will
be on the hill for the Fish.
The Fish were slated to play
Texas here last Saturday but wet
grounds caused that one to be post
poned. It was reset as part of a
doubleheader against the Texas
freshmen in Austin M&y 7.
Coach John Crain is expected to
start the following for the Fish
against Baylor:
Joe Staples behind the plate,
Gary Moon on first, Richard
Rimato on second, James Heart-
well on short, Lou Camilli on
third, Bob Delery in leftfield, Mike
Wood in centerfield and Rick
Schwartz in rightfield.
In doubles competition the same
one-sided story was told on till
courts. Aldrich and Rojas easily
moved by Roemer and Longmin
in two 6-0 decisions. Sassman anJ
Dean Dyer completed the shutout
by beating Hubbard and Seminea:
6-2 and 6-3.
In the Aggies’ 4-3 loss to Pan
American, Dyer had the Cadets'
other victory with 6-3 and 7-5 de
cisions over Fred Berli.
Pan American gained their
points on wins by Nitsche over Ro
jas 15-13, 4-6, 8-6; Lornie Kuhle
over Sassman 6-1, 0-6, 9-7; George
Kon over Salazar 7-5 and 6-2, and
in the doubles competition Kon
and Kuhle defeated Sassman and
Dyer 6-2 and 6-4.
In the golf tournament, the Cou
gars won by 44 strokes over sec
ond-place Texas Christian. Hous
ton had a total of 1,138, 14-under-
par, while TCU had 1,182.
The Aggies were only 7 strokes
out of second and 51 off the win
ning pace at 1,189.
Chess Tourney
Sends 4 Victors
To State Finals
The MSC Chess Committee spon
sored the San Jacinto Open chess
tournament for the second year in
a row and attracted thirty-five of
the strongest players in the state
to the A&M campus over the
weekend.
This tournament qualifies four
Gulf coast area players to the
state championship playoff next
November. Efric Bone, a former
state champion from Baytown, won
the tournament and first qualify
ing position by winning his first
four games and drawing in the
last round.
His 4% game score was matched
by George H. Smith, editor of the
Sunday Houston Chronicle chess
column, who placed second on tie
breaking points. They both col
lected trophies and divided $130 in
cash prizes.
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