The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 12, 1981, Image 10

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    Page 10 THE BATTALION
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1981
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Battalion
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I UlUAR
Volleyball team hosts
Valentine Invitational
By RICHARD OLIVER
Sports Editor
Some of the best volleyball
players in the nation will overrun
the gyms of Texas A&M Universi
ty Saturday.
From 8 a.m. to 9 p.m., the sixth
annual Texas A&M Valentine’s
Day Invitational Tournament,
hosted by the Aggie men’s team,
will be held in G. Rollie White and
several gyms in the new addition
of Kyle Field.
The event will consist of 47
teams, and Aggie Coach Dave
Schakel is excited.
“We have this tournament for
the benefit of the players, ” he said
Tuesday, “but we have it here at
Texas A&M hopefully to enlighten
the students as to the exciting
aspects of volleyball and get them
interested.”
Schakel’s Texas A&M squad has
put together an impressive string
of performances since last spring,
winning a dual match against arch
rival Texas last year and winning
the regional championships. The
team is the defending champion
of the Valentine’s Day Invitation
al, but Schakel expects this year’s
road to the finals will be tougher.
“A&M won last year, and we
had a good team,” he said. “Every
body’s back from last year’s squad,
except one player who went to
play with UCLA a couple of years
ago,' but he’s back with us this
year. ”
John Kelly, the player return
ing, is joined by fellow center Les
Templeton, middle blockers
Schakel and Mark Piwonka and
outside blockers Tim Friedlander
and Foriboriz Estockri on the
Aggie squad.
The tournament, which was a
big hit last yeEir at the University,
will be bigger and better in ’81 due
to the addition of the new gyms on
the east side of Kyle Field.
Last year’s event consisted of 20
teams, 10 each in men’s and
women’s classes. In 1981, howev-
‘We have this tourna
ment for the benefit of
the players, but we
have it here at Texas
A&M hopefully to en
lighten the students as
to the exciting aspects
of volleyball and get
them interested. ’
team, which consolidatedlastyej
with another strong squad fieldeii
by the Dallas Volleyball Asso®
tion. That merger will ubdoubtd-
ly make the YMCA sqtisl
tougher.
“That puts together the fe
players in Dallas,” said Sdiald
“and they’ll be much stroif
than last year.”
The Aggie women’s volleyk!
team, which finished fourthintlt
state tournament last fall, ala
held at Texas A&M, willbew
peting in the AA division of f«
women’s class. Two otkei
women’s teams representhj
Texas A&M will be competingi
the A division.
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er, there will be more than twice
that many, with 27 teams compet
ing in the men’s division and 20 in
the women’s.
Furthermore, the tournament
will have a AA class, for profes
sional caliber players, and an A
class for other teams.
The AA tournament will have
three pools competing in both the
men’s and women’s divisions. In
the A tournament, there will be
three pools in the men’s and only
one in the women’s. The top two
teams from each pool will reach
the quarterfinals of the tourna
ment.
Schakel said that although
Texas A&M will be fielding the
strohgesf men’s team its ever had,
the competition will be rough.
The main trouble will most likely
come from the Dallas YMCA
Schakel stressed the womeii
competition will be exciting, nil
several name players compctii}
Among those flayers is Tern
Lutheran College s Patty DowdA
who has served as captain
women’s U.S. Olympic vol
team the past three years. Ik
team was ranked much hi|
than the men’s Olympic si
summer, although the
Olympics were boycotted by Ik
United States.
Tex
bef<
Chi
pro
f
indi
T
C
By
It to
jme t<
SMU r
jCoa
The men’s and women’s findWedm
will be held at 8 p.m. Saturday® Hot of
the main floor of G. Rollie Wliitf ame”
Coliseum. Admission pricefortk bwn,
final matches will be $1.50 at lk iethe
door, or $1 for advance tick ime.
which may be picked up at a tail The
set up in the MSC. All otkatabas
matches will be free. Proti (ifthe
from the finals will go to pay ttieir si
penses for the men’s and womi Ihe M
tournament entry fees and gashlas “oi
transportation to and from eveitle tea
during this semester. fecond
There will be boards postedd Kell
day on the walls of the gyms giviiallark 1
the respective records of tbladies
teams in the tournament. Hi smm
Texas A&M women willbepltf
ing on the fourth floor of Eas
Kyle, while the men will be co®
peting on the third floor.
Conference statistics
Here’s a rundown of SWC stats
as of Wednesday:
SCORING AVERAGE — Wil
liams, Hou 25.6, Teagle, Bay
20.0, Pierce, Rice 20.0, Browder,
TCU 19.9, Thompson, Tex 19.0,
Hastings, Ark 16.0, Piehler, SMU
15.0, Smith, A&M 13.5, Reed,
Ark 13.1, Taylor, Tech 13.1,
Swannegan, Tech 13.1.
FIELD GOAL PERCEN
TAGE — Micheaux, Hou 60.0,
Hastings, Ark 59.4, Hill, Tech
56.9, Thompson, Tex 56.8, Wil
liams, Hou 55.3, Teagle, Bay
55.3, Peterson, Ark 52.5, Pierce,
Rice 52.1, Taylor, Tech 52.1,
Piehler, SMU 51.6.
<A
>1
4
FREE THROW PERCti
TAGE — Browder, TCU 85,i
Reed, Ark 81.3, Swannegan, TedLtJ
79.3, Baker, TCU 78.3, William 0
Hou 77.5, Teagle, Bay tm
Cadis, SMU 75.3, Welch, SMlf
74.8, Taylor, Tech 74.1,
son, Tex 70.1.
Rebounds — Thompson,
12.2, Drexler, Hou 10.1, Smil
A&M 8.4, James, SMU U
Wright, A&M 7.4, Swannegai
Tech 7.3, Teagle, Bay 71
Micheaux, Hou 7.0, Young, Hot
6.7, Austin, Rice 6.7.
Average Scoring Margin'
Arkansas +10.7, Houston +9.1
Texas A&M +4.0, Texas +21
Rice +1.6, Tech +1.4, BaA
-1.7, TCU -4.5, SMU -7.9.
0
Field Goal Percentage- ^
Houston 52.0, Arkansas S'lliOO
Texas 50.7, Tech 48.8, BaC ;
47.5, Texas A&M 45.8, Rice45i[
TCU 43.9, SMU 43.7.
Free Throw Percentage-
Texas 72.8, Tech 70.9, Arkansi
70.6, SMU 70.3, Rice 66.6,®
65.3, Baylor 65.2, Houston 631
Texas A&M 62.1.
Rebound Margin — Ten 1
A&M +6.2, Arkansas +2-
Houston +2.7, Tech +2.0,®
+ 1.9, Texas +1.8, Rice+99
Baylor +0.5, SMU -3.6.
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