The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 11, 1980, Image 11

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THE BATTALION Page 11
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1980
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Women cagers win Mean Green Classic tourney
By JON HEIDTKE
Sports Reporter
Texas A&M’s women’s basketball
Uteam didn’t play its best game of the
year but it did manage to pull off a
75-53 victory over North Texas State
to take the championship of the
Mean Green Classic.
“We had a lot of turnovers and
didn’t work hard to get the re
bounds,” said head coach Cherri
Rapp, who returned for the first time
to the school where she coached for
three years before taking over the
job at Texas A&M.
Mentally, it was hard to play
somebody that you have already
beaten by 32 points,” she said.
The Aggie ladies, who upped
their season record to 17-8, played
the title game without leading scorer
Lori Foreman. Foreman, the 6-2
sophomore transfer from NTSU,
watched the game in street clothes
after injuring an ankle in warmups
before the Texas A&M-Texas
Women’s University game on Friday
night.
“We don’t know how serious it is
yet,” said Rapp. “Hopefully she will
be back for the start of the playoffs
next week. ”
The Ags, who had beaten NTSU
82-50 three weeks ago, got off to a
slow start and needed time to thaw
out from Denton’s sudden snow
storm. Trailing by one, 11-10, the
Ags heated up and peeled off 14 un
answered points in an eight-minute
span. That put them up 24-11 and
they went on to take a 39-22 halftime
advantage.
Senior Peggy Pope, the Classic’s
Most Valuable Player, picked up 12
of her 17 points in the first half to
boost the Ags to a 17 point lead.
Then the Aggies got sloppy. In the
first seven minutes of the second half
the women turned the ball over eight
times and scored only six points. The
Eagles took advantage of A&M’s
Men swimmers take two,
women fall shy in Houston
delay i
st.Oi
S100,i*i
''een Ji
Oatej^
Mark Scott set a Texas A&M Uni-
ithavin; V ersity school record in leading the
Aggies to the first of two men’s dual
swim meet wins over the weekend.
The women’s team lost, 77-63, to
Houston in weekend action.
The men swimmers took 12 first
places and 15 second places in 26
questaj events as Texas A&M beat Texas
Tech in College Station, 65-48, Fri-
iiPiiffl day, and then UH, 59-54, Saturday.
Scott eclipsed the old Texas A&M
6cMn»f) 50-meter freestyle record of 21.33
v unitsHwith a 21.28 time.
James Brown took second in the 50
eestyle behind Scott with a 21.61 in
he Tech meet. Brown also took
iecond in the event at Houston with
21.97 but Scott was unable to break
seconds.
In the Tech meet, the 400 medley
elay team took first place with a time
f 3:32.13 to Tech’s 3:34.69. Rick
anzau took a two-second win over
ech’s Sid Glenn to win the 200
eestyle in 1:44.14. Tech’s Jay John-
esign
srway
aitories
ive
y, Date
floor,
coolil
each 11®
and ha
Golfers take
sixth in Pan
son finished first in the 100 freestyle
but the Ags’ Matt Hobart, Tom Ing
ram, Bill McCracken, and Ricardo
Cidall took the next four places. John
Oberto picked up an Aggie first in
the 200 individual medley with a
time of 1:58.10.
In the 100 freestylestyle, Rich
Suhs finished first with a clocking of
47.33, while Brown was second in
47.93.
The 200 backstroke winner was
Kevin Weaver in 1:58.28. Texas
A&M took first and third in the 400
Free Relay to finish the meet.
In Saturday’s meet at Houston,
Texas A&M won both relays again
and added firsts in the 100 freestyle,
3-meter dive and 200 breastroke in
stroking to the win. The Aggies had
strong showings in the 50 freestyle,
200 fly, 100 freestyle and 200 breast,
though. Suhs was the Ag winner in
the 100 freestyle, coming home in
47.50. Kerry Lacaze took the win in
the diving event with a point total of
317.20, and Ingram took the 200
breast in 2:15.20.
The women took seven firsts
against Houston but were not able to
overcome the Cougars’ depth. The
200 medley relay team was awarded
a first on a disqualification and the
200 freestyle relay swam unopposed.
Tracy Johnson swam first in the 400
individual medley in 4:37.33 and
Shirley Hill took the 100 freestyle
with a time of 53.89. Hill also won
the 50 freestyle in 25.71. Jenny Hsu
was first in the 100 individual medley
in 1:03.03 while Hill finished
second. Johnson won another first,
in the 100 breastroke, in 1:09.91.
The women’s team, now 6-4, has
one more regular season meet left.
They will host Rice at P.L. Downs
Natatorium today at 4 p.m. They will
then compete in the TAIAW cham
pionships Feb. 28-March 1 in Fort
Worth.
The men’s team has completed its
regular season with a record of 6-3,
and will compete next in the South
west Conference championships in
Dallas March 6-8.
— Tony Gallucci
Am tourney
passf' "
1 Genii v MONTERREY, Mexico — Texas
nancer A&M finished sixth in the 24-team
iposedi*afield of the 54-hole PAn American
Ml&Intercollegiate Golf Tournament
i Saturday. Oklahoma State took the
itle with a 22-under-par perform-
McFs
ummei.
ch saii
ving.”
N
ES
rsestf
21,50
Oklahoma State’s 849 total was 16
shots ahead of runner-up Brigham
Young, which posted an 865. Then
came Oral Roberts at 877, TCU at
883, Texas at 884 and Texas A&M’s
886.
“This was the strongest field we’ll
see until the NCAA championships, ’
said Aggie coach Bob Ellis. “Hous
ton finished eighth, so the Southwest
Conference had four teams in the top
eight.”
Bob Tway of Oklahoma State set a
meet record in winning the indi
vidual championship with a 15-
under-par 201. Bob Clampett of
Brigham Young and Joe Rossett of
Oral Roberts tied for second at 211.
Dave Ogrin and Richard Crom
well led A&M’s five players with
four-over-par 220’s. Dan Briggs had
a 221, Gary Krueger had a 225 and
Steve Bowman had 227.
— Hick Stolle
Monday nite is
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lackadaisical play to pull within five
at 45-40. Shelby Kettle led NTSU’s
comeback by hitting for 12 of the
Eagles’ first 18 points of the second
half.
But the Aggies got back on track
with 10 points from Trigg Crawford
down the stretch and were able to
pick up their sixth straight win and
eleventh out of their last 12.
Crawford, filling in for the injured
Foreman, turned in a strong per
formance, hitting 16 points and
yanking down nine rebounds.
Kelly Sullivan and Lola Baker hit
12 and 10 points respectively to
round out the double-figure scoring
for the Ags. Pope also led the team in
rebounds with 12.
The Ags hit almost 50 percent
from the floor for the evening (32 of
65) compared to the Eagles’ 39 per
cent (24 of 61). The Eagles also shot
poorly from the charity stripe, con
necting on only 31 percent of their
shots. They missed several front
ends of one-and-one situations in the
final period.
The Ags reached the finals of the
tournament by knocking off TWU,
79-65, on Friday night. Foreman,
making her return to Denton, provd
her ankle injury had little effect by
pouring in a season-high 39 points.
She hit on 16 of 20 field goals, seven
of nine free throws and grabbed a
game-high 15 rebounds.
Both teams traded buckets
throughout the opening period.
A&M went into the locker room dur
ing intermission with a slim 39-34
lead paced by Foreman’s 19 points.
Ten straight points to start the
second half got the Aggies on the
right track. The Aggies opened up
their biggest lead of the game (26
points) midway through the final
frame at 66-40. The Pioneers battled
back but still wound up 14 points
down at the final buzzer.
Pope was second on the team in
scoring and rebounding with 15
points and eight caroms.
The women are back in action
Tuesday night at 7:30 p.m. inG. Rol-
lie White Coliseum against USC.
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