The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 21, 1975, Image 7

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THE BATTALION Page 7
WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1975
ROBERT HALSELL
TRAVEL SERVICE
AIRLINE SCHEDULE INFORMATION
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CALL 822-3737
1016 Texas Avemie — Bryan
Texas slight favorite in SWC meet
Ags battle for track title
by MIKE BRUTON
Sports Editor
The Texas A&M track team will
go to Lubbock this weekend with
hopes of robbing favored Texas of
their fourth straight title in the 60th
Southwest Conference track and
field meet.
The Aggies will have four en
trants defending titles and at least
one qualifier in each of the 16 events
that are to be run at the Texas Tech
track stadium. Defending titles will
be Doug Brodhead in the 440-yard
dash, Bill Newton in the javelin.
Brad Blair in the polevault and two-
time SWC champion Scottie Jones
in the 120-yard high hurdles. No
other team -have more than three
entrants who were 1974 champions.
Texas will certainly be the team to
beat but A&M, Baylor and Rice will
leave the Horns no room to half-
step. The age old nemesis of the,
Aggies, the injury bug, has also bit
ten the Longhorns, with the
heaviest damage being inflicted by
the loss of sprinter Marvin Nash
who pulled up lame a few weeks ago
and distance men Paul Craig and
Tim Patton.
Baylor’s thinclads have run very
well through the season and were
barely beaten by Texas in the indoor
championships in January. The
Bears boast an outstanding mile
relay, with strength in the middle
distances, hurdles and the jumping
events.
The Rice Owls are more like the
Aggies but with less injury prob
lems. They have contenders in sev
eral events and have to be consi
dered as a pre-meet selection to
finish among the top.
Although not considered as con
tenders Arkansas, SMU and TCU
will exhibit strength in some areas.
The Hogs will excel in the distances,
TCU in the springs and the Mus
tangs should score scattered points
in several events.
The 1975 SWC meet promises
excitement with nine of 14 champ-
tions of the 1974 meet eligible to
defend their titles. Competition this
season has been so intense that only
three of the ’74 titlists are heavily
favored to repeat. Baylor’s Kevin
Delorey who has sailed over the bar
at 7-1 twice this season in the high
jump should hang on to the title he
won as a freshman. Texas Dana
LeDuc stands unbeaten in eight
meets this spring and should keep
plenty' of distance between himself
and the rest of the field in the shot-
put. And Bill Collins, the speed
4. andSitt
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demon of Fort Worth, should lead
the field in an exceptionally strong
100-yard dash.
There will also be three runners
in this year’s affair who have run
their events faster than any other
performer in the history of SWC
track and field. Texas’ Robert
Primeaux has run the quarter hur
dles in 49.5 and Arkansas Randy
Melancon has glided to a 13:24.9
finish in the three-mile. Collins of
TCU has sped to a legitimate 9.3 in
the century tying him with Rockie
Woods of A&M and John Roderick
of SMU for all-time honors.
There are several other entrants
in the 1975 meet who are among the
top in all-time marks: Delorey of
Baylor in the high jump, LeDuc of
Texas in the shotput, TCU’s Collins
in the 220 (curve), Arkansas’ Niall
O’Shaughnessy in the 880, Texas’
John Craig in the mile, Ricky
Thompson of Baylor in the long
jump, David Shepherd of Texas in
the polevault, A&M’s Scottie Jones
in the high hurdles. The Longhorn
sprint relay (39.8) ranks fifth on the
all-time list.
Some records should fall in the
75 SWC meet with three current
records already bettered and three
more tied. The Hog’s Melancon and
Rice’s Jeff Wells seriously threaten
the 3-mile mark of 13:56.8 set by
Texas’ Patton last year.
O’Shaughnessy of Arkansas has run
a 1:47.5 this season almost a full sec
ond better than the current stan
dard of 1:48.1 set in 1969 by Lon
ghorn David Matina. Shepherd’s
17-4 in the polevault also jeopar
dizes the record in that event. The
Horns have tied A&M’s 1970 sprint
relay of 39.8 once this year but may
not be able to shatter the mark in
this weekend’s competition due to
injury problems. The Horned Frog
wonder Collins’ 9.3 and 20.7 in the
sprints ties existing standards in the
100 and 220.
Other records threatened are the
mile run (4:03.2), the discus
(202-11), the mile relay (3:06.7) and
the high jump (7-1V2). Four runners
have dropped below 4:07.0 in the
mile this year and Baylor’s Delorey
is a half inch away from the record
books in the high jump. Baylor’s
swift foursome and the Longhorn
quartet will press the top mark in
the mile relay running 3:07.0 and
3:07.9 respectively. Jim McGol-
drick of Texas, the second part of the
Longhorn one-two punch in the
shotput and discus, has thrown the
discus 202-3 this season.
Finals in the long jump, javelin
and discus and preliminaries in
running events will begin at 4:30
p.m. Friday. The meet will con
clude Saturday with the remainder
of the field events starting at 4:30
p.m. and finals in the running
events beginning at 6 p.m.
Texas A&M’s Entries (best marks in parentheses):
100-yard dash
Charles Dawson (9.5)
220-yard dash
Doug Brodhead (20.8)
Ray Brooks (21.3)
Charles Butler (21.4)
Gerald D’Ambrosio (21.8)
440-yard dash
Doug Brodhead (46.9)
Horace Grant (48.5)
880-yard run
Jim Brannen (1:52.0)
Adolph Tingan (1:52.2)
Mile run
Manfred Kohrs (4:10.3)
Jacob Yemme (4:15.2)
3-mile run
Bruce Smith (14:08.0)
Charles Cottle (14:19.9)
Manfred Kohrs (14:24.3)
Long Jump
Tom Owen (23-1084)
Javelin
Bill Newton (228-5)
Paul Miller (192-6)
120-yard hurdles
Shifton Baker (13.8)
Scottie Jones (13.9)
Mike Williams (14.5)
440-yard hurdles
Shifton Baker (52.1)
440-yard relay
40.4 (Robert Harris, Doug Brodhead,
Charles Dawson, Ray Brooks)
d’Ambrosio may substitute for Dawson)
Mike Relay >
3:10.1 (Sam Dierschke, Charles Butler, Horace
Grant, Doug Brodhead)
(Terry Novak, Ron McGonigle or Gerald D’Ambrosio
may sub for Dierschke)
High jump
Lynn Byrd (6-10)
Phil McGuire (6-10)
Don Riggs (6-8)
David Frazier (6-6)
Shot put
Frank West (52-0)
Pole Vault
Brad Blair (16-7)
David Peterek (15-6)
Pat Ruehle (15-6)
Discus
Frank West (145)
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