the sports THE BATTALION Page 11 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1978 ndal lv e$tigati Wash*, rter, N| to Rico fions © New()j Housti 'ula, Mm- 'o and Sa ? and o as a bill J yearn isclosures than 'f payol dulentpa SA! er doneh I frandnk lit cards *y on IS at $83 re hopes ;er, who in a trill 23-year' I at Bet' MO, l WOULDN'T SAT ” KICKCD ” tMEM COULD YOU Differ MC tO SHE EAGLE. LOCKEA. AOO* ? don't say THE LJONO " TO HtH ' / TCU suffers loss off football field United Press Internationa] FORT WORTH — One would have expected joy in the Texas Christian University dressing room after the Horned Frogs upset Ore gon 14-10 Saturday night in Eugene, Ore. Instead there were tears. TCU Coach F.A. Dry broke the news to his team that one of its young players, James Timothy Roche, was knifed to death Friday night in Irving, Texas, while return ing from an outing with fraternity brothers. Roche, who was a walk-on wide receiver from Austin, was not part of the traveling team. “One of our players was killed last night (Friday) and I just told our team about it,” Dry told reporters in the quiet TCU dressing room after the game. “Some of them have taken it pretty hard. Some were pretty close to the boy. “I didn’t want to tell the team be fore the game. I knew they’d take it pretty hard.” Steve Bayuk, the senior TCU quarterback, saiid, “We had some thing terrible happen tonight. But this win is so important to the prog ram at TCU. So imnortant.” “He (Roche) was real close to Coach Dry,” said a TCU spokesman Sunday morning. “The coach was upset about it. He said he (Roche) was one of the most likeable youngsters on the squad and a real hard worker. “Coach Dry said that the boy’s parents had told him (Dry) that he was the happiest he had ever been — getting to be a part of the team and contributine.” lot time in Boston Aggies cool Eagles By DAVID BOGGAN Battalion Sports Editor |A Boston sportscaster this bkend described the New Eng- d area as “a hotbed of college r court, >hio and itionsof myth* let court ■tores as s Hummm? Obviously, this feeling is shared many New Englanders, as ton-area television stations jnd more importance in Satur- Yale-Brown contest than the jnost-nationally televised Michi- Ji-Notre Dame game. ■ButifNew England is a hotbed of Hegefootball, the Southwest (.011- ■ence must be an inferno. Witness |xas A&M's 37-2 smoking of Bos- College. [The reasons for such a lopsided ? Fairly simple. The Aggies did little wrong. The Eagles did iry little right. And. frankly, the ninth-ranked Aggies were a much [superior football team. ■ However, Texas A&M did get off a slow start, taking the whole first to the chilly jBuyter to warm up to the MWMwMmtk- bfeezes• •’] ■‘1n tbe first quarter. Bosto Boston Col- Segi'was moving the football, said ^! e "And when they turned it a . earr -®rer, they turned it over on our armg,jjine, so we j uu j no breathing bom. But our defense hung in mfcAihere real good and stopped several If their drives." ;OK®iThe Aggie defense and the Eagle ■ense seemed to work almost in S resifc’lnison to stop Boston College’s L'ienth''pee first quarter drives. A quar- ■rback sack by Jacob Green, hold- •leii.' llg against the Eagles and another tow by James Zachery and a fum- m aniSplnl pitchout recovered by Carl veighrulich all added to the quelling of the Eagles’ early scoring threats. “They started off with tremend ous field position in the first quar ter,’ Grulich said. "That makes it tough. Just the fact that we kept them out of the end zone was an accomplishment of our goal. We put tremendous pressure on them with plug stunts and bare stunts and a tremendous pass rush and we were able to stop them.” In fact, it was up to the Aggie spe cial teams to give Boston College its only score of the contest. Punting from his own endzone, David Appleby was pressured by the Eagle rush. Somehow, as the ball left Appleby’s foot, it popped up over his head and out of the end zone, giving BC a safety. Officially scored as a blocked punt by Eagle defen sive end Jack Kent, Bellard saw the play somewhat differently. “That ball came off the tail end of our fullback,” the Aggie coach said. "And that is ridiculous. That’s poor coaching—on my part.” Throughout the rest of game, Eagle scoring threats were as rare as a pickup''truck*on the streets of Bos ton "They fired up because were we re Texas A&M—we re ranked ninth in the nation,” Green said of EC’s first period performance. “But we finally adjusted to their offense. And the Aggie offense finally ad justed to EC’s defense. Amassing 364 yards total offense, the Aggies were led by a 138-yard performance by Curtis Dickey. Un customary of his style, the junior running back rarely ran outside the hashmarks against the Eagles, gain ing most of his yards with bursts through the middle of the BC de fense. “We just used a counter action or trap play with Curtis running up the middle, Bellard explained. "We determined in the first quarter that we could run that play with success, and success determines how often you run a play.” “I just faked the football to the fullback,” quarterback Mike Mosley said, “and the defensive tackles were moving up the field so fast that Curtis could just use his speed to break by them.” The Aggies may have been in the hotbed of college football this weekend but it took little effort to cool the lukewarm Eagles. The heat of the season is yet to come. SCORING SUMMARY Texas A&M: Boston College: 0 28 9 0—37 2 0 0 0—2 BC —Safety, punt blocked out of end zone A&M—Dickey 13 run (rush failed) A&M—Dickey 29 run (Franklin kick) A&M—Dickey 1 run (Franklin kick) A&M—Safety, ball snapped out of endzone on punt A&M—Brothers 1 run (kick failed) A&M—Mosley 55 run (rush failed) A&M—Franklin FG 29 'MSG Bryan-College Station K0A / The Camping Place to follow the Aggies 2700 East By Pass in College Station Your hosts are Ron and Fay Berg- quist. 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