The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 11, 1980, Image 14

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    Page 14 THE BATTALION
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1980
New coach offers experience
By RICK STOLLE
Battalion Staff
Jan Cannon is a part-time coach
with full-time experience.
She has 31 years experience in
organized tennis and is the new
coach of the women’s tennis team at
Texas A&M University. She has be
gun programs for other schools,
added to existing programs at some
and has coached a Davis Cup finalist.
Cannon began her coaching career
at Edinburg with six new courts.
Fresh from Texas Tech she did not
know what to expect, she said. “At
Tech, we had to begin the women’s
program on a shoe-string,” she said.
“There were no funds for the prog
ram and the first year we recruited
intramural players for the team.”
She said the team played with its
own personal gear without much
help from the university. The new
courts were hard to get at Edinburg
but a nice way to start a team. She
didn’t know, she said, that it would
be the beginning of many uphill
fights.
She moved on to Abilene High
School two years later and her teams
won the district championship three
of the five years she was there. At
Monterrey High School in Lubbock,
she coached nine district champion
ship teams and one player who
reached the Davis Cup finals when
he later attended college.
Bobby Joyner was a three-sport
reject when he tried out for the ten
nis team at Monterrey High, Cannon
said. He was a tall, gangly youngster
who had been cut from football, bas
ketball and baseball.
“When we got him he could hardly
walk without tripping over his own
feet,” she said. “But he had the most
fantastic hand-eye coordination I
have ever seen.”
She said he worked harder than
anybody on the team and gradually
improved. After a year, all the teams
that had cut him wanted him back.
Joyner went on to play tennis at Trin
ity University and made it to the fin
als of the Davis Cup in doubles with
Chuck McKinley.
After 14 years at Monterrey, Can
non moved on to Amarillo, where
she remained for 10 years, Bryan and
ultimately, Texas A&M.
One of the reasons she came to
A&M was because of tennis coach
David Kent.
“We have known each other since
he (Kent) was in high school,” she
said. They have always coached in
the same areas and have kept in
touch, she said. Cannon attended
many of the camps in West Texas and
even played in some of the tourna
ments Kent organized.
He has a tremendous reputation in
West Texas and deserves it for the
work he has done out there. “We
have a good rapport and work
together very easily,” she said.
Coaches have to work together,
she added, if a program is to succeed.
“He will come over to help my girls
and I can go over to help the guys if
needed,” she said.
She said she had been at too many
schools where the two tennis teams
had been as far apart as possible. It
did not produce good results, she
said, and sometimes went as far as
antagonism toward the other
program.
She said one of the things that
makes coaching fun for her is watch
ing her “kids” grow. “It is a good
feeling to watch them go on,” she
said. “Like with Bobby (Joyner), you
can never tell just how far they will
go”
JIM KING,
BOOKSELLER
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A coach is like a second parent, she
said. They have to help the youngs
ter adjust. “Amy Gloss is from Ore
gon and had not been very far from
her home, so coming to A&M is a big
adjustment for her.”
It is a big adjustment on a good
athlete to begin competition at the
college level, she said. Many of her
freshmen have never played lower
than the top spot on their home
teams. Sonja Hutcherson never lost
a set in University Interscholastic
League (UIL) competition.
“I have told the girls they will have
to work hard and that the competi
tion is different here than they are
used to,” she said. They cannot get
discouraged, she stressed, because
they will have to get used to the
situation they are in.
That is one of the reasons all the
freshmen will be going to the Galves
ton Adult Open Tournament Satur
day, she said, for the experience. “It
will be a lack of experience that will
hurt us early in the season,” she said
“not a lack of effort. ”
The girls are very coachable, she
said. That makes it very easy to pre
pare for the competition.
She added that all the girls want to
play and need to learn.
“It will be done my way though. I
do have a little more experience than
they,” she said, “and any mistakes
will be mine as well.”
She said she is trying to add to the
schedule to try to make it even
tougher. “I believe, and always
have, that quality competition pro
duces quality teams.”
She said she will make sure that
when Southwest Conference com
petition begins, the Texas A&M
women’s tennis team can swing a
racket with anybody. “Above all,”
she said, “I want it to be fun for
everybody on the team.”
The team will leave Friday and
begin competition Saturday at the
Galveston Open. The team will con
sist of freshmen Amy Gloss, Laura
Hanna, Sonja Hutcherson and Mary
Hise. They will be led by sophomore
Liliana Fernandez and junior Ferol
Hinkle. Top contenders University
of Houston and Rice will be at the
competition. “It will give the fresh
men a lot of good experience, ” Can
non said, “and right now that’s most
important.”
■ i
1*2
'•*» •»* *
Texas A&M defensive lineman Mack Moore
(90) stops an Ole Miss Rebel runner behind the
line of scrimmage during the Aggies 23-20 win
SlafT photo Mi
last Saturday night. The 19th-ranked
travel to Athens, Ga. Saturday to take
15th-rankcd Georgia Bulldogs.
Ags to face Bulldog
Dogs, Ags ranked 15th, 19th
Here’s some information about
the Georgia-Texas A&M game which
will be played in Athens, Ga. this
weekend:
Countryside Stables
Stable Rental — Horse Boarding — Riding
Arena — 45 ac. Riding Area — Swimming
Pool
Call 696-2025
C
TEKE is
Unique
LOUPOT’S BUYING
USED BOOKS
NOW!
LOUPOT’S BOOKSTORE
Northgate — at the corner across from the Post Office
AGGIE
BACR-TO-SCHOOL
SPECIAL
CHICKEN FRIED STEAK
with Cream Gravy, Mashed
Potatoes, Green $1 99
0631,8 and X plus tax
Soft Roll
SPECIAL GOOD AFTER 5 P.M. OMLY
BRING THIS COUPON TO RECEIVE
THIS SPECIAL PRICE
Wyatt’s Cafeterias
804 N. Texas — Bryan
"Backing The Aggies"
KICKOFF— 12:30 p.m. CDT on
Saturday, Sept. 13.
CROWD — 53,000 in 59,000-seat
Sanford Stadium. Georgia students
don’t begin classes until Sept. 17.
6,000 student tickets remain unsold.
LAST WEEK — Quarterback
Mike Mosley ran for 116 yards, pas
sed for 128 more, and scored two
touchdowns in leading Texas A&M
to a 23-20 win over the Mississippi
Rebels in Jackson, Miss. Frosh Hers-
chel Walker scored two second-half
touchdowns in leading Georgia to a
16-15 win over Tennessee in Knox
ville.
NEXT WEEK — The Aggies
open their home schedule against
Penn State, with the kickoff set for
7:30 p.m. Georgia plays host to
Clemson in Athens at 1:30 EDT.
COACHES — Tom Wilson is in
his second full season as head coach
after taking over at mid-season in
1978. His overall record is now 18
wins and 10 losses. Vince Dooley is
beginning his 17th season at Geor
gia. Dooley has won three South
eastern Conference Championships,
and has taken teams to 11 bowl
games. His overall record is 119
wins, 56 losses, and six ties.
OFFENSE — A&M’s primary
offense is the “I” formation. Georgia
also operates out of the T“.
DEFENSE — A&M will use a 4-3
set while Georgia counters with the
split-60.
Aggie softb
a pitch dur
van and h<
an
mn
United Pre
SERIES — The
against the Bulldogs. In IS
won 40-20; in 1952, 111!
19.54, 6-0.
RADIO—For the scot:|
a row Dave South
play-by-play and Steve FiR)ALLAS — /
color for the Mutual RadioBrs after Toni
Twenty-two Texas markHfield at RF1
signed up for the broacbtMtime this we
FM Abilene, KACV-FMlBteam had hi
KOKE Austin, KAYC Dijuper Bowl.
Port Arthur, KORA Bnif But, he said.
Station, KSIX Corpui® won a signfi
KRLD Dallas-Ft. Worth,fWith only a fe
Paso, KQUE Houston, KlBralked out oi
do, KOCA 1 jOngviev llB across a p;
KILL Lubbock, KUR\ lotcl where he
Brownsville, KWEUwia gathering
Odessa, KWLW-FM SanBs coach nean
WOAI San Antonio, OlBits marquee
man-Denison, KTEMBlom, it’s bar
Kileen, KTYL Tyler, "(ghat, of cour
Antonio, KKIK Waco, Me and he sim
Wichita Falls. Brnessage.
AGGIE INJURIES—SilfRegardless o
Dawson tore up a left beB, Landry sa
Ole Miss and likely willPot hard to be
undergo surgery this weeBpi you have
were a number of other to get har
sprains and strains, butall?rDallas’ 17-3
well in time to playagainstfashington Red
TEAM TRAVEL -IWner, howeve
will leave College Stationf to digest.
Friday on a Braniffcharted “h i^j a set(
ter an equipment stop ®Weh it really
the team will arrive in Wt you can’t
10:55, then bus to Athens jjometimes it d
’ to be an exc
Baseball
Standings
I sn t an exciti
■|We enjoyed
took in the g
sual charaete
e on another
American League
National League
East
W L
Pet.
CB
East
W L
New York.
87 52
.626
Montreal
76 63
Baltimore
84 55
.604
3
Philadelphia
75 63
Boston
75 61
.551
10‘/2
Pittsburgh
73 67
Milwaukee
74 67
.525
14
St. Louis
62 76
Cleveland
71 67
.514
15 Vi
New York
59 80
Detroit
71 68
.511
16
Chicago
.54 84
Toronto
59 80
.424
28
West
W L
West
W L
Pet.
GB
Los Angeles
79 60
Kansas City
87 53
.621
Houston
79 60
Oakland
70 71
.496
17^2
Cincinnati
77 63
Texas
69 70
.496
VJVi
Atlanta
71 68
Chicago
59 79
.436
26
San Francisco
67 72
Minnesota
61 79
.428
27
San Diego
62 78
California
55 83
.399
31
Seattle
51 88
.367
35
DIETING?
Even though we do not prescribe diets,
we make it possible for many to enjoy a
nutritious meal while they follow their
doctors orders. You will be delighted
with the wide selection of low calorie,
sugar free and fat free foods in the
Souper Salad Area, Sbisa Dining Center
Basement.
USED
GOLD
WANTED
OPEN
Monday through Friday 10:45 AM-1:45 PM
QUALITY FIRST
Cash paid or will swap for Aggie K> f
Diamonds.
diamond brokers infernationalj'
H
FI
COLLI
SERVIt
I 693-1647
A Please, no plated, layered or gold-filled items as their precit
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