THE BATTALION TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1979 Page 9 4gs lose to UT in Drum, 89-66 nent of ?.I at 4 p.in j By DAVID BOGGAN The pair combined for 31 points gies hit only 33 percent. Vernon .1 at 4 p „ By DAVID BOGGAN Battalion Sports Editor t 6 30 AUSTIN — There is not room lough in the Southwest Confer- ce for two first place teams. ■ "'ll Both Texas A&M and the Univer- (n ttT, for L 0 f Texas, which had identical Hecords at the top of the confer- n will nie, tee before Monday night, knew Plans wil at is true. So the two teams, the Tig gunslingers from the Brazos ley and the old NIT gang, met in “'icouragedl mamentsil Super Drum Monday night to le this thing once and for all (for >lamil;ii The Aggies never made it to high Showd»rion. The superior marksmanship Peering Texas seniors Tyrone Branyon ng conceti 4 Jim Krivacs saw to that as the mghorns beat the Aggies to the B 89-66. B’m disappointed,” said Aggie ach Shelby Metcalf after the nent Par jjne. “I don’t think there’s that d floor oi jich of a difference between these out todaifi clubs. But there was tonight. ’ ■hey’ve got such great shooters, nnmittee fficouldn’t handle Krivacs and must aHJMvon. Branyon is very decep- e. He s a fine basketball player. ’’ it 7:30 par B ine Surgeri The pair combined for 31 points in the first half. Texas A&M ended the first half with 31 points. Branyon finished the game with 29 points while Krivacs scored 28 points in Texas’ 23rd straight victory in the Super Drum. “The guards beat us tonight,” said Body Woods Aggie junior David Britton, who had said before the game Texas A&M’s guards were better than Texas’. “I can t really say what hap pened. Krivacs was hitting them from anywhere. He’s a helluva shoo ter. I didn’t figure Branyon would do that good.” The Longhorns hit half of their shots for the evening while the Ag gies hit only 33 percent. Vernon Smith hit nine of 23 shots and Tyrone Ladson hit two of 13 shots contributing to Texas A&M’s poor field goal percentage. “Nobody (for Texas A&M) could hit from outside,” Smith explained. “Our post men just couldn’t get in side. We didn’t have enough movement on offense. Our guards just didn’t penetrate their zone. “I think we took them too light. This was just the night for them.” Metcalf agreed that the stars were shining bright for the Longhorns. “I didn t see anybody out there in white that didn’t have a good night,” the Aggie coach commented. “They re just a very intelligent ball club. But there’s no way I’m going to fault these (Texas A&M) players. They’ve been too good. We re 15-4 and we’ve played some good ball clubs.” Smith scored 18 points and grab bed 11 rebounds for Texas A&M, which out-rebounded Texas 55-46. Rudy Woods hit eight of 11 shots, scored 17 points, got ten rebounds and blocked four shots. ‘Woods is the best post man I’ve ever seen, Texas coach Abe Le mons said. “He’ll be the best in this league in the next couple of years. ” “I’m still real high on A&M. We just played better tonight.” The Longhorns played much bet ter and increased their conference record to 5-1. Texas also kept its perfect record in the Super Drum, a record that Britton had hoped to break. T’ve got another shot next year, the New York junior college transfer said. “I don’t want to stay upset and dwell on the loss ’cause we’ve got another game coming up. The Aggies, now 4-2 in confer ence play, host TGU Wednesday night. Texas A&M is ranked 14th in this week’s UPI top 20 poll while Texas is ranked 16th. "Texas just put a clinic on for us, that’s all,” Metcalf said. “Those things are going to happen.” Yessir, just as sure as the sun sets in the west. Standings THE FORTUNE COOKIES Chinese Restaurant 1313 S. College - Bryan Serving Peking - Szechuan - Cantonese Dishes 822-7661 TUESDAY NIGHT SPECIAL $1 OFF ALL DINNERS with this coupon limit one coupon per customer :ition! Yariety of ‘jobbers’ hwart Aggie hopes BOX SCORE TEXAS A&M (66) Woods 8 1-4 17, Britton 0 0-0 0, Wright 1 0-0 2, Goff 3 2-2 8, Smith 9 0-0 18, Ladson 2 2-2 6, Sylestine 0 4-4 4, Jones 2 2-2 6, Paderson 1 0-0 2, Schlicher 0 1-2 1. Totals 27 12-16 66. TEXAS (89) Baxter 1 0-0 2, Branyan 11 7-8 29, Stroud 5 1-1 11, Krivacs 12 4-6 28, Moore 3 2-3 8, Shepard 3 4-6 10, Dotson 0 0-0 0, Stephens 0 1-21, Boyd 0 0-10, Blundell 0 0-0 0. Totals 35 19-27 89. Halftime — Texas 43, A&M 31. Fouled out — None. Total fouls — Texas A&M 25, Texas 15. Technical — None. A — 14,503. Texas 5-1 .833 Baylor 4-2 .667 Texas A&M .... 4-2 .667 Texas Tech 3-3 .500 Arkansas 3-3 .500 Houston 3-4 .429 Rice 3-4 .429 SMU 2-3 .400 TCU 0-5 .000 TUESDAY’S RESULTS Baylor 70, Arkansas 67; Rice 59, TCU 56; Texas 89, Texas A&M 66; Houston 82, SMU 78. 7:30 p.i Jniversih' „ By SEAN PETUl Battalion Staff > wiH ine#STiN — The Texas Aggies yelled to Austin’s Super Drum to 7:30 p in land give the Texas Longhorns ballet ir first defeat in their 16,000-seat offered, ne but were foiled in their at- ipt by a garbage man, a pickpoc- comedi. i a nd a rainbow-shooter, ants to staiBcp Horns had the old double- is 8 p m|ck-pack offensive attack led by ior forward Tyrone Branyan, Hi as the "Garbage Man for dug up baskets after the initial t, who managed to pick up 29 nts worth of garbage to stop the ties in their tracks. Ve Horns’ second weapon was 1 a meetimV' guard, Jim Krivacs who > the puhlM bounce his rainbow jump ts pff the top of the Drum's roof general intfea points. MSC. ’he two seniors accounted for 57 cq fi-omTflf bon&horns’ 89 points. In fact, i||( | jj, two were only nine points short | 342 Z,i; itie A ^ ies ’ 66 He pickpocket in the story was Korns’ John Moore who stole rested d ball four times and played out- ling defense. r | really thought it woidd be a 5 ’ m ’ m buster here tonight,” said Texas :h Abe Lemons. “Texas A&M late vaca: ted off the season playing great ; of Engiafjwe started playing poorly. Now, y College re playing very well and they are Ki'iglit now. in which rhere are S ome let downs during linood «H as(m anc j some teams tend to ! popub'into a hum-drum attitude, he 0 p.m. i»HBut the Aggies have the per- nel to come out of it. Who ws, we could be down next e, you can’t tell in this confer- e." the Longhorns continue to play way they have in their last four iries, they will be virtually im- ible to stop. Krivacs is hitting the outside again, Branyan is Wing better than ever and Phillip J Ivfiid has come into his own to sol- J I Uhe Horns. The team is moving playing together like a chain- iship team. ffnllip (Stroud) really helped us ght, said Moore. “He got in relfor the rebounds and played blunder the boards all night, itioud neutralized the Aggies inside, said Branyan. go inside and do all th We let him dirty work bile Ron Baxter and I waited for him to get the rebound. The Longhorns managed to stay with the Aggies on the hoards all night. The Ags pulled down 55 re bounds to Texas 46 yet it seemed that the Horns controlled the hoards as much as they controlled the game. Texas defense and A&M s cold shooting were.two key factors in the game. The Horns forced the Aggies to shoot from the outside more than they' wanted and held Aggie Rudy Woods to only , four points in the second half, taking away the Ags in side strength. “We just forced the guards to take more shots from the outside than usual, Moore said. “Rudy had a lot of points in the first half but we con centrated on him in the second half and held him.” “If they were gonna beat us,” Branyan said, "it would have to be with the outside shot. We just sag ged in on Rudy and managed to stop him and get a lot of rebounds. We knew that by' taking away their in side shot they would have to change their plans and maybe make mis takes. ” The Aggies hadn’t faced a confer ence team with Texas outside shoot ing ability and it showed. The Longhorns were able to control the tempo of the game. At times the game looked like a track meet with the Horns fast-breaking left and right and other times they slowed it down and worked for a good shot. “We really' started getting our game together after we lost to (Texas) Tech, Branyan said. “We were pretty humiliated after losing to them on television. But since then everything seems to be coming together for us. It was really good to play A&M here first before going there, he said. “There s not as much pressure going there now because they have to beat us there. T m glad to be in first place at the moment,” Lemons said. “I ve never been cocky but I feel good about it now. You just never know what’s going to happen. I’m sure it will be a great game when we go over to A&M.” "It might have been a different story il we had been playing over there (at A&M),” Branyan said. It just may be a different story when the Horns visit G. Rollie White Coliseum, but this story’ is over for now. 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