The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 03, 1971, Image 6

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Page 6
College Station, Texas
Wednesday, November 3, 1971
THE BATTALION
Hogs’ upset was continuation of Baylor game
By JOHN CURYLO
Battalion Sports Editor
Aggie Coach Gene Stallings
told his weekly news conference
yesterday that the win over the
Arkansas Razorbacks in Little
Rock Saturday night was a con
tinuation of the victory over
Baylor.
“We were mentally ready for
Baylor,” he explained. “The atti
tude carried over this week. I
wasn’t worried about them not
being ready to play, but Arkansas
was ready too.”
Thirty five stars were awarded
to 26 players by the coaching
staff, with Grady Hoermann, Lee
Hitt and David Hoot getting
three each. Mike Lord, Steve
Luebbehusen and Brad Dusek
won two each.
Hoermann was cited for caus
ing two fumbles, tipping a pass
and making 13 tackles. Hitt made
11 tackles, caused a fumble and
recovered a fumble. Hoot made
12 tackles, intercepted a pass and
recovered a fumble.
Lord tipped two passes, Lueb
behusen made 14 tackles and
Dusek caused a fumble and
knocked down a pass. The re
mainder of the defensive unit re
ceived a star each.
Offensively, ten players were
given stars. Mark Green for his
effort on the touchdown run, Joe
Mac King for the winning game
and Steve Burks for recovering
a fumble on a punt were the Ag
gies who received recognition for
performances other than blocking.
Buster Callaway had 23 knock
downs, Skip Kuehn 22, Ralph Sa
cra 13, Doug Neill and Leonard
Forey 11 each, Homer May 10
and Robert Murski six to round
out the offensive star winners.
On the specialty units, Pat Mc
Dermott’s 34 yard field goal won
him a star, as did Mitch Robert
son’s excellent punting. Ted
Smith was given recognition for
his good centering and coverage
on punts, while Charlie Billings
ley and Gary Whitehead had
three tackles each on kickoffs.
Stallings pointed out that one
of the keys to victory was the
fact that Arkansas had four turn
overs, but the only Aggie miscue
in the last two games was an in
terception against Baylor.
“Joe Mac King has given us
leadership and stability at quar-
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terback,” Stallings explained. “If
we hadn’t thrown interceptions
and fumbled snaps from center,
we’d have done better down the
line.”
Joe Ferguson, the Razorback
quarterback, drew praise from
the Aggie mentor. The Arkansas
junior completed 31 of 61 passes
Saturday for 345 yards.
“He threw perfect passes,”
Stallings said. “Our defensive
secondary played well, even
though they completed a lot of
passes. Ferguson’s a super quar
terback. He loves to throw the
ball a lot. Not many teams are
fortunate enough to have a great
one like him.”
The SMU Mustangs are the
Aggies’ next opponent, and the
Dallas school, off to a slow start,
is 2-1 in conference play. They
lost a close game to Texas last
week, 22-18. The quarterback of
SMU is Gary Hammond, a two-
time All-SWC performer, who
played split end as a sophomore
and tailback last year.
“Hammond can really do
things,” Stallings said. “He does
a good job of faking off tackle
and sprinting out to pass or run.
He loves to play the game, and he
certainly is one of the better
players we’ll face. SMU has a
tough defense to rush against
too.”
A&M's tailback, Mark Green,
carried the ball 27 times for 102
yards against Arkansas. In scor
ing two touchdowns, the Odessa
sophomore is tied for the scoring
lead on the Aggie team with 18
points.
“Mark’s finally well from the
foot he injured during early fall
drills,” Stallings said. “This is
the first time he’s played there,
and blocking is something new to
him. All he’s ever done before
was take the ball from center and
sprint out to run. His football’s
all ahead of him.”
Early estimates have the crowd
at 35,000 to 40,000, but Stallings
said he hoped there would be
more people than that. Comment
ing on the Arkansas fans at Sat
urday’s game in Little Rock, he
praised them for their enthusi
asm.
“They were noisy,” he said,
“but not so that the quarterback
couldn’t hear. I like crowd noise
just so long as they don’t inter
fere with the game. It doesn’t
make much sense for them to sit
there and say nothing. The Ar
kansas people did everything they
could to get their team going,”
The reception party of 5,000-
6,000 that met the Aggies at Eas-
terwood Field early Sunday morn
ing was a bright part of the up
set win too.
“It was good for the team,”
Stallings said. “It took me quite
a while to get home from the
airport, but I wasn’t in any hur
ry.
Nebraska and Oklahoma are still at top of poll;
Aggies drop Razorbacks to sixteenth place
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Nebraska and Oklahoma con
tinued to run 1-2 in The Associ
ated Press college football poll
Tuesday, raising tensions for the
possible national championship
battle at Norman, Okla., Nov. 25.
Both teams continue to move
along at an impressive pace, but
the defending national champion
Cornhuskers maintain first place,
although the Sooners have the
gaudier statistics.
At last count, with new figures
scheduled Wednesday, Oklahoma
was leading the nation in total
offense, rushing offense and scor
ing. However, Nebraska, while
ranking among the leaders in of
fense, rushing offense and scor
ing, has the better defensive rec
ord.
The Cornhuskers, averaging
better than 35 points a game,
have shut out two of their rivals,
limited five others to no more
than a touchdown and given up
13 points to only one team—Okla
homa State, beaten 41-13.
The Cornhuskers’ defensive
prowess was maintained last
weekend when they defeated
Colorado, a team which previous
ly had beaten Louisiana State
and Ohio State, 31-7.
This feat enabled Nebraska to
cling to No. 1 in the poll with
34 first place votes and a total
of 1,050 points.
On the graded scale of 20
points for a first place vote, 18
for second and down to one for
the 15th selection, Oklahoma was
a close second with 1,010. The
Sooners collected 17 first place
votes after trouncing Iowa State
43-12.
Other first place votes went
to Michigan, the No. 3 team,
which got two; Auburn and Penn
State.
Alabama is No. 4 in the poll,
followed by Auburn, Penn State,
Georgia, Notre Dame, Ohio State
and Arizona State.
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Enlargements / Reductions
Report Publishing
Collating / Binding
Auburn and Alabama meet in
their annual bash Nov. 27. Mich
igan has a Nov. 20 date with Ohio
State. Penn State closes its reg
ular season against Tennessee
Dec. 4. Georgia must play Au
burn Nov. 13. Notre Dame’s
toughest remaining test is a Nov.
20 date at Louisiana State. Ari
zona State winds up with rival
Arizona Nov. 27.
The Top Twenty teams, with
season records and total points.
Points tabulated on basis of 20-
18-16-14-12-10-9-8 etc.:
7.
Georgia
8-0
517
8.
Notre Dame
6-1
374
9.
Ohio State
-6-1
354
10.
Arizona State
6-1
251
11.
Tennessee
5-2
164
12.
Stanford
6-2
168
13.
Colorado
6-2
130
14.
Toledo
8-0
129
15.
Texas
5-2
126
16.
Arkansas
6-2
115
17.
Southern Cal.
4-4
54
18.
Louisiana State
5-2
49
19.
Houston
5-2
36
20.
Washington
6-2
17
1.
Nebraska
8-0
1050
2.
Oklahoma
7-0
1010
3.
Michigan
8-0
840
4.
Alabama
8-0
782
5.
Auburn
7-0
617
6.
Penn St.
7-0
595
FOR
BEST
RESULTS
TRY
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