THE BATTALION Page 11 MONDAY, MARCH 31, 1980 iorts aseball team splits with azorbacks over weekend Couples wins tourney i § )n Sunday, cks in Fayettei Maff photo bv bnsi ts n By MIKE BURRICHTER Sports Editor the Texas A&M baseball team [lit a double-header with the Ipinsas Razorbacks Friday in a [h-shortened two-game series, (enny Rogers’ two-run homer in fourth inning of the opening ne led the Razorbacks to a 4-2 fory. The Ags, trailing 4-0 after innings, came back to win the md game 8-5. r reshman pitcher Rick Luecken [ his first game this season in the mer, giving up only five hits in six tings. However, two unearned torback runs in the first inning Roger’s shot broke up the pitch- duel. Arkansas pitcher Scott )or allowed only five Aggie hits I one earned run to pick up his i win of the season. Tabor is now while Luecken dropped to 6-1. lie Ags cut the Hogs’ lead to 2-1 [the third when Randy Woodruff |ked, stole second and scored on a jig Little single. Harry Francis the game up in the fourth when ■scored from third on an error, (ncis struck out but reached first passed ball, moved to second on Iney Hodde’s single and then :hed third on a double play to set [the tying run. iFreshman Robert Slavens became winningest pitcher in the South- |st Conference when he pushed record to 7-0 in the nightcap, tvens was hit hard in the early ling and it looked as if the Razor- icks might sweep the double leader. Kevin McReynold hit a Bee-nan homer to spot the Hogs to |3-0 lead after one inning. singles matchesaii! I the three The Ags rallied the rest of the way and finally took the lead in the seventh when they scored three runs to move ahead, 6-5. Freshman catcher Joe Szekely’s two-run dou ble tied the score at 5-5 in the seventh and Joe Paul Bramhall’s single scored Hodde to put the Ags in the lead. The third game was called off be cause of rain and won’t be made up. The Ags are now 10-4 in SWC play while the Hogs are 6-5. United Press International AUSTIN — Fred Couples shot a final-round 4-under-par 68 Sunday to lead the Houston Cougars to the team championship in the 14th Mir- ris Williams Intercollegiate Golf Tournament. Houston’s team total for the three- day, 54-hole tourney was a 2-over- par 866. Houston entered the final round with a one-shot edge over defending champion Oklahoma State, but held off the Cowboys all afternoon. Oklahoma State finished second at 872, passing up Oral Roberts, which came in third at 878 behind Joe Bas sett’s finalround 66. Two Ag fullbacks injured United Press International Second team fullback Ronnie James and third stringer Roger Wiley both went down with injuries Saturday in Texas A&M’s football scrimmage. James broke a bone in his left leg and dislocated his left ankle. Wiley damaged ligaments in his right knee and likely will have to undergo surgery. “It was an expensive day,” said coach Tom Wilson. “We went from a position where we had depth and finality down to one player and this was just the first week of spring prac tice. ” The only healthy fullback remain ing on the Aggies is starter David Hill. The standout of the scrimmage was quarterback Mike Mosley, who ran for 49 yards and completed 15 passes for 163 yards and two touch downs. Couples ended the day in fifth place at even-par and two shots be hind Rod Nuckolls of Wichita State, Cougar teammate Terry Snodgrass, and Texas A&M’s David Ogrin. Nuckolls and Snodgrass faded on the final 18 holes and Couples’ 68 was enough to overtake Ogrin. Cou ples, the low amateur at last year’s U.S. Open, won the individual title with a 4-under 212; Ogrin closed with a 71 and was runnerup at 213. Walker Cup holder Hal Sutton of Centenary was another shot back at 214. The win by Houston broke Okla homa State’s hold on the tourney. The Cowboys had won the past two Morris Williams titles and had cap tured three of the last four. Houston had taken it 1977. • High Quality PREGNANCY TESTS • Immediate Appointments • Confidential Counseling • Birth Control Information • Termination of Pregnancy s. post oak no. I Vr WEST LOOP CLINIC 622-2170 2909 WEST LOOP SOUTH HOUSTON, TEXAS 77027 ded Reid Frefi v Wah, 6-0, M edged fiivciii )erto Jimenez bei 2, 6-1, Max Kind Maniya, 3-6, 6i ! i heat Mark Tlior.: ens track team USED Zood times in Dallas By KATHLEEN McELROY Sports Staff and Ron Ko«i Texas A&M Univeristy men’s , ]) av j s (q :k team and a gusty wind com- King beat Wl lc ^ to blow away the other schools 5 6-1, Freeman PP e h n g in the Dallas Invitational bated ' Maniya P Saturday. 2. 4-6, 6-3 and l!r he A gS ies — wh o won seven only'loss whenfi nts an< ^ finished second in three cat Kowal and! vere by junior Leslie Kerr and ior Curtis Dickey who were tied the meet’s most valuable per- dthatwintoein ” ers - )ing into the Art “ was our best meet, probably , David Kent) IUr best,” said Texas A&M head h Charles Thomas. “We had e real fine performances, e were voted the outstanding ,’Thomas continued. “Some of writers started calling it the as A&M Invitational meet. ” he Aggies also did well in their meet in the McAllen City of the s event, winning almost all the events. But in the Dallas meet dominated the track / the Aggies at as the Razorl n the nation, tool] les matches and latches. Joe Ison were tit Inst Arkansas. Sdj I, beat GregFe: n beat Clark Di. _ match, 5-7,«l as A&M hman, uppedli" nts - > 18-1 this now 2-2 inconfa overall. The id 23-3. The Agsi at 1:30 at the| ourts. It’s hard to explain,” Thomas err, who won the Southwest Conference 400-meter event last May, set a meet record in the 400- meter race when he finished in 45.98, beating the record in 46.6. Dickey, three-time NCAA indoor 60-yard dash champion, won the special invitational 100-meter in 10.1 seconds in spite of 20 mph winds. Dickey, winning his first 100-meter dash all season, streaked by Jerome Deal and Harvey Glance, both for mer NCAA sprint champions. While Dickey and Kerr have been winning all season long, Thomas said two Aggies were pleasant surprise winners. Freshman Mike Glaspie won the 110-meter high hurdles (13.95), and junior Billy Busch won the 400-meter hurdles in 51.81. The Aggie relay teams, who have had an outstanding season so far, again topped their competitors. The Texas A&M team of sophomore Steve Willis, junior Vernon Pittman, Kerr and Dickey won the 440-meter with a time of 40.29. The mile relay team — Willis, Pittman, Kerr and freshman James Washington — ran in 3:11.24 to capture that event. The Aggies didn’t do too shabbily , in the field events either. Chuck Perry won the high jump with a 7-0. Texas A&M finished second in three events — senior Mike Newsom in the javelin (221-2), and senior Tim Scott in the shot put (62-0) and the discus. The meet was a good warm-up for the prestigious Texas Relays Friday and Saturday in Austin’s Memorial Stadium. However, the Aggies will face stiffer competition since many of the outstanding teams in the region were attending the Louisana State Meet last weekend. “The Texas Relays will be tougher,” Thomas said of the meet in which about 200 schools will com pete. “The competition is the best we ll face until the NCAA meet. ” The NCAA outdoor champion ships will also be held at Memorial Stadium in early June. The Aggies will be in good shape for the Austin meet — the one excep tion being senior runner Philip Steen who pulled a leg muscle and will be out for two to three weeks. WANTED! $ Cash paid or will swap for Aggie Ring | Diamonds. I w diamond brokers international, inc. w § LEGANT EVENING . . . for that special touch of class. TUXEDO SALES & RENTALS formals 111 College Main U021 846-4116 Hop on down to ANIMAL, WORLD and check out the chicks... ... bunnies & ducks! 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