The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 21, 1975, Image 5

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    THE BATTALION
WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1975
Page 5
T & L TEXACO
1800 Welch - Corner Southwest Parkway
College Station - Just N. of A&M Consol H.S.
Phone - 693-4132
New Management
New Hours 7:30 - 7:30 Mon.-Sat.
Free Chassis Lubrication with Oil Change
Texaco Lawn Food Special - 5,000 sq. ft. only $4.75
l
Hoping to come out of hitting slump
Ags face OU in playoffs
By DAVID WALKER
Staff Sports Writer
Coach Tom Chandler is hoping
that his Texas Aggies left that non
hitting bug in Edinburg last week as
they leave tomorrow for Norman
Oklahoma to begin the 1975 NCAA
baseball playoffs.
After weeks of waiting the Aggies
found out Monday where they were
going and who they were going to
play.
The Ags will meet the University
of Oklahoma at 2 p. in. Friday in the
first game of the District 5 double .
elimination tournament.
The Aggies finished second in the
Southwest Conference and have a
31-13-1 season record. Oklahoma is
the Big Eight champion and posted
a 46-7 season mark. The other two
teams in the tournament are Iowa,
the second place team in the Big
Ten, and Tulsa, the winner of the
Missouri Valley Conference.
The full schedule of the tourna
ment has Iowa meeting Tulsa at 10
a.m. with the Aggies and the Soon-
ers going at 2 p.m. The losers of the
first two games will play at 5 p.m.
Friday. The winners of the first two
games will play at 1 p.m. Saturday.
The winner of the third game Friday
and the loser of the first game
Saturday will play at 4 p.m. Satur
day. If another game is necessary, it
will be played at 1 p.m. Sunday.
The starting pitcher for the Soon-
ers will be Bob Shirley, a lefty with
an 11-1 record and a 1.60 ERA. The
Aggies will counter with James Gib
son, a lefty with a 9-3 record and a
2.26 ERA.
The winner of the tournament
will advance to the College World
Series in Omaha Nebraska, June
9-13 along with seven other regional
winners.
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For the Aggies to win at Ok
lahoma they are going to have to
solve the hitting problems that they
had last weekend in Edinburg when
they played Pan American.
The Aggies lost all five games to
the Broncs and in the process got
only 17 hits and two runs. The
scores were 6-1, 4-1, 2-0, 4-0, and
1-0. They went the last 24 innings
without a run.
Not all was bad in the Pan Am
series as the Aggies got some fine
pitching. James Gibson gave the
Broncs only six singles in Friday’s
4-1 game. Three of Pan Am s four
runs were unearned. David Lockett
came back on Saturday to pitch a
three hitter only to have a one bitter
thrown against him. Two of the
three hits came in the first inning
when the Broncs got their two runs.
The big surprise came from Aggie
sophomore pitcher Alan Wilson.
Wilson, who had not pitched an
official inning all year, started
Sunday s nine inning game and
went all the way giving the Broncs
only three hits.
The Aggie team hatting average
dropped below the .300 mark for
the first time all year. Going into the
series the Aggies were hitting .314
before dropping to .293.
While not making excuses the
Aggies were hampered by the fact
that they had not played in almost
three weeks and had not had much
hitting practice in a week because of
finals.
The Aggies hope to regain their
hitting touch this week as they will
he making their first trip to the
playoffs since 1964 when they
earned an automatic berth in the
College World Series. This year the
field has been expanded to 32 teams
with conference runner-up teams
eligible for the first time.
The top hitters for A&M are third
baseman Kirk Campbell .362,
center fielder Mike Frazier .342,
catcher Tommy Hawthorne .331,
first baseman Jim Bratsen .329, left
fielder Al Thurmond .326 and right
fielder Bill Raymer .309.
The pitching staff is led by Gibson
and Clint Thomas with 8-4 records
and David Lockett with a 6-2 slate.
Tracksters
participate
nationally
Texas A&M s two entrants in the
national AIAW track and field meet
placed 15th and 33rd in the discus
last weekend at Corvallis, Oregon,
hut failed to score any points.
Lucy Neiman threw 124 feet, 6V2
inches for 15th place and Sandra
Lyman threw 94 feet, 6V2 inches for
33rd place.
UCLA won the meet with 89
points. Prairie View A&M was sec
ond with 71 while Texas Women s
University finished third with 29
and Baylor, the only other Texas
entry, finished 13th with 14 points.
East squad
signs three
for June tilt
LUBBOCK — Notre Dame and
Maryland are the latest schools to
announce that they will have
players on Coach Steve Sloan s East
squad in the 15th annual Coaches
All-America Game scheduled June
21 in Texas Tech’s Jones Stadium.
Notre Dame is sending Gerry
DiNardo, a 6-1, 248-pound offen
sive guard and Drew Mahalic, a 6-3,
220-pound linebacker. Maryland
will he represented by Stan Rogers,
a 6-4, 255-pound offensive tackle.
NEW
BARBER
SALON OPENS
Mr. Troy Causey,' Roffler
stylist, has opened a new hair
styling salon for men and
women. Mr. Causey, with fif
teen years of experience in the
hair styling business, will do
layer cuts and offer a complete
line of hair cutting and styling
at reasonable prices.
Mr. Causey will also be
featuring a complete line of the
popular Roffler hair products
for men. The new shop is lo
cated in room 104 in the
Ramada Inn and is open Mon
day through Friday, 8:00 to
6:00. Appointments are never
required, but will be accepted.
Call 846-8811 (extension
104).