THE BATTALION Page 7 FRIDAY, MARCH 9, 1979 v 1 the sports! 1 Aggieland 250 Racers return to TWS By MARK PATTERSON Battalion Sports Staff Load the beer, load the kids and come a’runnin’. It’s race time again. The Texas World Speedway kicks off its 1979 racing season this weekend with two days full of racing and chili cooking. Qualification runs and time trials for the Aggieland 250 and the Texas Race of Champions will be held Saturday beginning at 8:30 a. m. The two-day affair will be topped off Sunday with the running of the Ag gieland 250, bringing together the top stock car drivers in the country. The Aggieland 250 is scheduled to begin at 2 p.m. The field will be led by local fa- vaorite A. J. Foyt, the defending Ag gieland 250 winner. Foyt took a nar row victory over veteran driver Bobby Allison last year. The race this weekend marks the 23rd consecutive year that Foyt has raced with the United States Auto Club, since the organization came into existence in 1956. In the last three years, Foyt has competed in all 13 races held at the local oval, winning seven times. Last year’s victory started Foyt on his way to winning another US AC National Stock Car Championship, his first stock car title in the last 10 years. He will be driving the same Camaro in which he won the title last year. cceptedi] iation I]ons bably Jane were a| Rehab: ies defeat Lohos I United Press International ALBUQUERQUE, New Mexico kv»p(jl Sephomore forwards Vernon ^ J toith and Rynn Wright each scored • 3 points Thursday night to pace I A&M to a 79-68 victory over few Mexico in the first round of the 1 1 ational Invitation Tournament. . tCTexas A&M will play Nevada- eno, which defeated Oregon State . ,K1 Wednesday night, in the NIT - Thfe round Monday. The Aggies used a zone defense 4 hot shooting from the floor to kettommand of the game early, ew Mexico held the lead only ■ briefly in the second half. Prior to Thursday night, the H had lost only two home court imes in two years. ;ency su| of oib days' w n three liana and tegic Pet bed by I its total i 1 by Pit lion hi rrage ment ming imi ule. itarted ai| serious ; created! ). But | energy Id be isser pi Iran sbi iporary thin 30 widingil y, while iduled could /. There rve at tbi ; “They’re one of the best home court teams in the nation,” Texas A&M coach Shelby Metcalf said. “I’m very proud of our squad. “We were patient. We took good shots. There were times in the first half when we took a couple of bad shots.” The Aggies held a 38-34 halftime lead and maintained a small lead until New Mexico’s Larry Belin connected on a 20-foot jump shot to give the Lobos their only lead at 53-52 with 9:22 to play. Wright gave Texas A&M the lead again with a stuff shot 20 seconds later and the Aggies never trailed again. “I think the team finally got to gether and played a good basketball game,” Metcalf said. “They really had it together and really played to night.” New Mexico, which finished the season at 19-10, was led by Belin with 13 points. Texas A&M’s aggressive zone de fense prevented New Mexico from getting very many good shots. The normally high-scoring Lobos, who had averaged nearly 90 points per game this year, hit only 38.1 percent of their field goal attempts. Texas A&M, meantime, got sev eral easy shots off its fast break and combined it with the patient offense to set up short shorts by Smith, Wright and 6-11 center Rudy Woods, who finished with 15. The Aggies, who shot 62 percent from the field for the game, boosted their season record to 23-8. BOX SCORE TEXAS A&M (79) Wright 10 3-3 23, Smith 11 1-2 23, Woods 5 5-7 15, Goff 1 2-2 4, Britton 2 2-5 6, Ladson 0 2-3 2, Sylestine 2 2-3 6. Totals 31 17-25 79. NEW MEXICO (68) Abney 4 1-2 9, Logan 2 2-3 6, Roby 3 0-0 6, Jefferson 4 2-4 10, Felix 3 2-2 8, Saunders 4 2-2 10, Belin 6 1-2 13, Stewart 3 0-0 6, Williams 0 0-0 0. Totals 29 10-15 68. Halftime—Texas A&M 38, New Mexico 34. Fouled out—Abney, Logan. Total fouls —Texas A&M 17, New Mexico 23. Technical foul—Wright. A—18,038. Ladies lose in Oklahoma The Texas A&M women’s bas ketball team ended its 1979 sea son Wednesday night. The Aggies lost to Louisiana Tech 82-75 in the opening round of the AIAW regional tourna ment in Tulsa, Okla. Louisiana Tech was rated fourth in the na tion. For the Aggies, who finished the season with a 26-18 record, Karen Gentz scored 20 points, Susan Kimbro scored 14 and Kel ley Sullivan scored 10. In qualification runs last year Foyt set the speedway record for stock cars, clocking 173.36 miles per hour on the two mile paved oval. But the task of repeating as Aggie land 250 champion will be hard to do. The best stock car field ever as sembled at TWS will take to the AJ. Foyt track and try to unseat Foyt and earn the $6,310 first prize money. Janet Guthrie will make her Texas racing debut when the only woman to qualify for the Indianapolis 500 takes to the track this weekend. Guthrie will be behind the wheel of a Camaro built by Bay Darnell, the 1977 winner of the Texas 500 run at the speedway. The car, sponsored by Armstrong Mould and Glass Company of In dianapolis, was driven to victory twice last year by two-time Indy 500 winner Bobby Unser. “With the car she’s driving, Janet has a very good shot to win this thing,” Speedway President R.C. Conole said of Guthrie’s shot at the title. “The car has been very well prepared by Bay Darnell and has a chance at upsetting A.J., Bobby (Al lison) and Terry Ryan.” Allison will he trying to roll into the winner’s circle for the first time at the speedway. Last year Allison protested Foyt’s victory, claiming that Foyt had bumped him on one of the early laps in the race. It took US AC scorers a week to review the race and overrule Allison’s protest, awarding Foyt the title and the 300 National Driving points that accom pany the victory. The running of the Aggieland 250 will be preceded by the Texas Race of Champions, scheduled to begin at 1 p.m. Sunday. The top stock car drivers in the state will compete in the fourth annual contest to deter mine the top short-track driver in the state. A second Race of Cham pions will follow the running of the Aggieland 250. And if cars aren’t your fancy, the second annual Texas World Open Chili Championship will be held Saturday, with the winner receivng an automatic berth into the National Chili Championships held in Ter- lingua later this spring. Saturday night a live band will perform for the overnight campers on Texas World Speedway’s infield. Tickets for the races and weekend activities are selling for $10 to $25 and may be obtained at the speed way. aiders fall to Hoosiers ;t 1 if. - 1» its joiK has dii round J inced 5 scienti!] makeup ; add nei rigin ■mes tw have a rings liscovef | Uranui ;hted M ncy ai [r snioi piter i heduW n and ■xamini 11 ! moon* solar sys I ring disl ;r 2t° 0 res J U P' United Press International LUBBOCK — Led by junior for- ike Woodson’s 30 points, the igiplihed Indiana Hoosiers de late! Texas Tech, 78-59, Thursday i| in an opening round National ivitlition Tournament game. The game was tied only once at •2 vfith 58 seconds gone — as the in Hoosiers built up a 21-point f 35-14 with 3:01 remaining in ilf. or errors by Texas Tech led to ie Hoosier first half 3919 margin, ut Indiana helped its own cause by itting 18 of 26 field goal attempts jr 68 percent. pie Raiders, by contract, hit 19.4 rcent on six of 31 attempts. About all Tech could muster be fore a 10,000 standing-room only crowd was an 18-16 first half edge in rebounding. Three of the Indiana starting five, which did not include a senior player, hit for double figures. Sophomore Ray Tolbert added 18 and junior Butch Carter hit 11. Texas Tech was paced by freshman forward Jeff Taylor with 15 points — 11 of them in the second half. Senior Geoff Huston added another 14 for the Raiders, now 19-11 for the season. The Hoosiers took the floor in the second half and ran off nine unan swered points to increase the mar gin to 48-19. With 5:25 remaining, Indiana led 71-40 in a game that was not as close as the final score might indicate. The Hoosiers, 19-12 on the year, will meet the Mississippi State- Alcorn State winner in Bloomington, Ind., on Monday. BOX SCORE INDIANA (78) Woodson 11 8-9 30, Tolbert 8 2-2 18, Turner 0 1-2 1, Wittman 4 0-0 8, Carter 4 3-4 11, Eells 1 0-0 2, Risley 3 0-0 6, Reish 0 0-0 0, Isenbarger 1 0-0 2, Totals 32 14-17 79 TEXAS TECH (59) Hill 5 0-0 10, McPherson 0 2-2 2, Brewster 2 1-2 5, Huston 7 0-0 14, Williams 2 1-1 5, Taylor 5 5-6 15, Baxter 3 2-2 8, Little 0 0-0 0, Parks 0 0-0 0, Washington 0 0-0 0, Sanders 0 0-0 0, Totals 24 11-13 59. Halftime—Indiana 39, Texas Tech 19. Fouled out—none. Total fouls—Indiana 14, Texas Tech 17. A—10,000. r ALTERATIONS 1 IN THE GRAND TRADITION OF OLD TEXAS WHERE MOTHER TAUGHT DAUGHTER THE FINE ART OF SEWING — SO HELEN MARIE TAUGHT EDITH MARIE THE SECRETS OF SEWING AND ' LTERATIONS. "DON’T GIVE UP — WE’LL MAKE IT FIT!" 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