The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 28, 1979, Image 11

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    THE BATTALION Page 11
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1979
l foDickey ends days as Ag back
lay <.
Kurtis Dickey and I do have some-
mingin common. This weekend, the
University of Texas game will be our
itnl lv as students at Texas A&M.
they hi''' I ^ 1K '’ as ^ 1C fi anic * s Iwing played,
' ^‘ il1 w 11 be able to reminisce about our
here at A&M because we ll
Sh be on the sidelines as specta
tors
■Tom Wilson announced Tuesday
it, in all probability, Dickey play-
).
;) st Pittsburg
^ins overC| f(
V( Juld malsell'
mer.
want,”
1 recordofl idjhis last down as an Aggie three
onents is Jpeks ago against the SMU Mus-
r e >gbt AFcHgs, It was against SMU that Dick-
s teams wildI|tbuffered a broken rib and was re-
■ved from the game. He hasn’t
s a long |jj- Epeared since,
s todetcrniiniMThe one-time-Heisman Trophy
playoffsan candidate was in too much pain to
1 advantag play against the Arkansas Razorbacks
earns have; M) weeks ago. He didn’t even make
tne trip to Fort Worth last week to
becomes si f H ° rned l ?'°T Vm
(() ( . (jure that he was missed either week.
i and Phii ri M Vha t began as a year full of hope
jh i H || for the Bryan native has ended on
md tl ip 6 sidelines. Dickey was touted as
Aggies’ answer to USC’s Charles
White and Oklahoma’s Billy Sims,
and Pi' jBut since the Aggies’ fourth game of
regular sea ,the year. White and Sims have run
]ples around Dickey,
ot only is Dickey missing from
nation’s top 10 rushers, but he
ks a distant third among SWC
Ihers this season. Dickey has
viewpoint
By Mark Patterson
tie on the6
two would!
-r, 4-2 again?!
9-3 against«
and haveetji
mmon opp
points in I
’ould detem
1,500
ey
|aled 808 yards (a far cry from the
he wanted at the beginning of
^season) to A.J. Jones’s 918 yards,
th trail Texas Tech’s all-Southwest
nference running back James
idnot’s 1,371 yards. All three are
gh for the season,
jl still can’t understand why Dick-
was touted as a Heisman Trophy
candidate at the season’s beginning.
Was it because he can run fast in
track spikes?
It’s true that Curtis Dickey is an
all-America when he’s on a track.
But on Astroturf, he’s just another
running back.
The people around the conference
seem to support that thought as well.
In his three years as a player in the
SWC, Dickey earned Freshman of
the Year honors and was named all-
SWC only once, that being last year.
Looking at the raw numbers he
has compiled, an argument can be
made in favor of Dickey’s value as a
football player. Dickey has totaled
3,699 yards in four years, second on
the SWC all-time rushing list to Earl
Campbell’s 4,443-yard total.
But the real value of a running
back rests in his ability to play every
game and get the big yardage against
the good teams — the teams that put
11 worthy defensive players on the
field. True, Dickey has rolled up big
yardage every year, but those three-
figure days have come against the
Boston Colleges and Virginia Techs.
Dickey seems to have one good
game a season. Three years ago it
came against Texas Tech (18 carries
for 127 yards). In 1977 it was against
TCU (20 carries for 178 yards). Last
season, Dickey was outstanding
against Iowa State in the Hall of
Fame Bowl when he rushed for 276
yards on 34 carries. And this season,
Dickey gained 184 yards on 34 tries
against Penn State.
But it was against Texas, Arkansas,
Michigan and Houston the past four
years that the Aggies needed Dickey
to play like an All-America back. He
didn’t. Against Texas the past three
years, Dickey has carried the ball 39
times for 89 yards. Last year, Dickey
carried the ball 15 times for 11 yards
in what now was his last shot against
the Longhorns.
But the professional scouts seem
to think Dickey has what a running
back needs to play in the NFL. A
sizable contract awaits A&M’s No.
22.
So now I have something to talk to
Curtis about on the sidelines Satur
day afternoon. I can ask him if he’s
happy about his college football
career, or if he wishes he could do it
all over again, to collect the awards
that have thus far eluded him.
Acker, taka
•out midnigl:
ttes later, pol
Batson said
Duckworth i
!• He was
2sday.
K
mrarr
this ymi
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Rockets and Spurs lose
United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Phil Ford bit a 16-foot jumper with five
seconds left to give the Kansas City Kings a 117-115 victory Tuesday
night over the Houston Rockets.
With the score tied 115-115, Rick Barry missed a 10-footer from the
baseline with 30 seconds left and it was rebounded by Ford. The Kings
then called time out and returned to the court to find Ford isolated on
5-9 Calvin Murphy.
Ford then worked to the foul line for his game-winning shot, also his
third basket of the fourth quarter.
Houston took a 115-110 lead on afoul shot by Robert Reid with 1:57
remaining. But Kansas City pulled within two on a basket by Ford and
tied it when Scott Wedman drove the baseline with 35 seconds left.
Houston shot itself out of the game in the final minute with Barry
missing three shots and Malone one. Barry also tried a potential
game-winning 3-pointer at the buzzer but it bounded of the rim.
The loss offset top performances by Houston’s Murphy and Moses
Malone, who combined for 60 points. Murphy hit 31 and Malone 29 for
the Rockets, who fell to 10-11 on the season.
In San Antonio, forward John Drew hit a season high 40 points to
lead Atlanta to a 143-120 victory over the San Antonio Spurs in abattle
for the NBA Central Division lead Tuesday night.
The Hawks now hold a one-game lead over San Antonio.
Drew hit 16 of 30 field goal attempts and garnered a game high of 13
rebounds as the Hawks outscored the Spurs 47-22 in the final period,
overcoming a 99-96 San Antonio lead.
The Spurs, playing without guard James Silas who was mysteriously
absent, surrendered 87 second half points. Silas was demoted from his
starting role Monday but was believed to be at a hospital with his wife,
who had given birth Monday afternoon.
The Hawks hit 40 of 53 field goal attempts in the final two quarters.
San Antonio hit only 21 of 49.
Drew’s three-point-play tied it at 38-38. Fine shooting by guard
George Gervin, who finished with 39 points to lead San Antonio, was
responsible for the Spurs’ halftime lead, 59-56.
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