The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 22, 1975, Image 7

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College Republicans
Water Polo
THE BATTALION
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 22, 1975
Page 7
OfClusivt
dmur
Fos gets 100th win
M
Date: WID. OCT 27
Time: T-JO nn
Place:.
CoQi|e Rcpubiu *n N«non*l Commiiicc .10 Fw»i Slrrr*. SE/Washington. DC.' 2000.1' Pormistiun lo rrprtMlucr is granicd and ci
Report Time
Blues!
You spend hours, or days, or
even weeks putting together a report,
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type it “Letter Perfect” . . . now
what? Do you staple it? Or clip it?
Or put it in the type of binders
that kids use for book reports?
NO!
You walk over to NOSCO NORTHGATE and I
bind your report with the MITEY-BIND in just
seconds. Prices are very reasonable.
iNews Office
Supply Co.
108 College Main f North Gate
By PAUL McGRATH
Battalion Sports Writer
Fresh off another successful road
trip, this time in the northern cli
mates of Michigan, the Aggie Water
Polo team returned home to add
one more victory to their increasing
list.
The tankers of Coach Dennis
Fosdick trounced The Bunch of
Rice by a 15-2 margin, the second
defeat the Ags have put on the
Houstonians this year. It also
marked Fosdick’s 100th polo vic
tory at Texas A&M.
Again it was junior college trans
fer Blake Hinman leading the Aggie
assault with four goals with team
captain Lee Davis and Jim Yates fol
lowing with a pair apiece. Bill Yates,
Mike Reilly, Doug Adamson, David
Donnell, Bill Lewis, Bob Leland
and David Meeh each had single
marks.
The Yates brothers led the
Fosdick-men in assists with three.
Hinman and Mike Vanderhurst had
two helpers each.
“We had an assist on all but one
goal. Many were after two or three
pass plays. This was the best team
work we’ve had this year. Much of it
is because the team has played to
gether enough now to anticipate
each others moves and an ability to
get to the right place at the right
time,” said Fosdick.
“The Bunch was fairly physical,
but they never had the opportunity
to use their strength. We were mov
ing too fast and swimming too hard
to catch. Two months of two-a-day
practices are starting to pay off. The
team is in the best condition ever.
We have been able to go hard for a
full game all year long,” Fosdick
said.
The two Yates and Hinman have
been A&M’s top scoring threats
throughout the year but Fosdick
says they will be receiving increas
ing aid from Leland, Vanderhurst
and Steve Moore as they improve.
The multiplicity of possible scor
ers has greatly aided the Aggie of
fense by taking some of the pressure
off stellar individuals such as the
older Yates. Now the opposition
cannot key on any single player, said
Fosdick.
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Fosdick was also complimentary
of the performance of Brian Hold,
substituting for regular goalie Steve
Engel. Hold blocked eight attempts
while allowing only the two scores.
A&M is now 17-0-1 for the season
in collecting its centennial win for
Fosdick since he took over as coach
in 1971. His overall record is 100-
14-1 and is in his fifth year at A&M.
The Aggies will travel to Arkansas
this weekend to compete in a round
robin tournament. Their first match
will be an interesting one as the var
sity faces the Aggie freshman team,
which is also undefeated this year.
Although one of them will have to
suffer their first loss of the year,
there is still the possibility of the
Aggies finishing first and second in
the tourney.
Boston 7-6;
to go seven
Associated Press
BOSTON — Carlton Fisk wal
loped a leadoff home run in the 12th
inning early Wednesday morning,
lifting the Boston Red Sox to a
dramatic 7-6 victory over Cincinnati
that tied the 1975 World Series at
three victories apiece.
The sensational come-from-
behind triumph sent the Series into
a seventh-game showdown here
Wednesday night at 8:30 p.m.
Fisk’s drive on the second pitch of
the inning by reliever Pat Darcy
ended the marathon ball game with
one swing.
The ball sailed long and far down
the left field line and banged against
the foul pole as left field umpire
Dick Stello signaled home run.
Fenway Park erupted.
Fisk barely made it to home
plate, swarmed upon by his happy
teammates who had come from be
hind in this exciting sixth game.
The Red Sox had come from be
hind in the eighth inning with the
same kind of suddenness, tying the
score on a two-out, three-run homer
by pinch hitter Bernie Carbo. That
swing wiped out a three-run Boston
deficit and the game went into extra
innings, settling down into a battle
of ballpens.
Darcy was the Reds’ eighth
pitcher, setting a record for hurlers
used by one team in a World Series
game. The teams used a total of 12
pitchers between them, also a series
record.
In the top of the 12th, the Reds
had made one last run at Rick Wise,
the fourth Boston hurler. With one
out, Tony Perez and George Foster
singled. But Wise got Dave Con
cepcion on a long fly to right field
and struck out Cesar Geronimo,
ending the inning.
By the time Fish reached home
plate on his game-winning homer,
the rampant Red Sox fans had spil
led onto the field and police and
park attendants had difficulty keep
ing them off the Boston catcher as
he romped toward the dugout.
He was interviewed for television
in front of the dugout with fans
swarming around him. Then, Fisk
took a long, happy run across the
outfield into the left field comer to
the door of the Red Sox clubhouse.
When Wise got the Reds out in
the top of the 12th, the game was
four hours old and just about every
minute was exciting.
RAY B0MNSKIE
BODY SHOP
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Bryan
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