Page 12 THEr BATH ALIGN FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1981 Baseball The Aggies, 2-2, will take on St. Mary’s University Saturday in a doubleheader beginning at 1 p.m. at Pat Olsen Field. Starting for Texas A&M in the first game will be Rick Lueck- en, 1-0, and in the second game Robert Slavens, 0-0. Against Northeast Louisiana last weekend, the Aggies split in two doubleheaders, but batted .342 as a team. Men’s rugby The Ags, after losing twice last weekend to the Houston Heathens, try to change their luck Saturday when they travel to Dallas to take on the Reds. Women’s softball The second-ranked women, 4-0, are in Denton today for a doubleheader against Texas Women’s University, and will be in Arlington Saturday for a doubleheader against UT- Arlington. The Aggies won two from both those teams last Friday and Saturday at Bee Creek Park in College Station. On the mound for the Aggies will be Shan McDonald and Lori Stoll, both 2-0 this spring. Football The 98-man squad will hold its first spring scrimmage Satur day at Kyle Field. The men have practiced three days this week, but had a day off Thursday. Men’s track The Ags are in Laredo today for the Border Olympics. Texas A&M is the defending champion at the event. Last Saturday, the Aggies won 14 of 18 events in a tri-meet against UT-Arlington and Lamar at Kyle Field. Women’s track Twenty Aggie women will be in Austin this weekend to compete in a quadrangular meet against Texas, Texas Woman’s University and Abilene Christian University. The Aggies won 10 events in a dual meet against UT- Arlington last Saturday at Kyle Field. Men’s golf A five-man “second team” is in New Orleans this weekend to compete in an invitational golf tournament against teams in cluding LSU, Centenary, Oklahoma, Alabama and Rice. Paul Oglesby, Bart Cobb, Eric Joseph, Jacky Lee and Mark Esler will compete. Last weekend, teammates Danny Briggs, Gary Kreuger, Brad Jones, Richard Cromwell, Mike Miller and Jay Townsend won the Border Olymics Championship in Laredo for the second straight year. Polo The Texas A&M Polo Club is in Darien, Conn, today for the National Intercollegiate Championships. This afternoon, the Aggies will play the Shallowbrook Polo Club in a warmup. Men’s tennis The 20th-ranked Ags, 10-2, after defeating Arkansas-Little Rock 8-1 Wednesday and losing to sixth-ranked Clemson 6-3 Thursday, continue action today in the H.E.B. College Team Championships in Corpus Christi today. TCU baseball team looking good By RITCHIE PRIDDY Battalion Staff The TCU Horned Frogs 1981 baseball outlook is very promis ing, something almost foreign to the school. Fifth-year coach Willie Max well returns six of his top eight hitters from the 1980 season that saw the Frogs finish 19-28-2 for the season, 7-14-2 (sixth place) in Southwest Conference play. That represents the best TCU conference finish in five years. And they consider that successful. Of the 28 losses TCU suffered last season, 14 of them were one-run games. Along with those returning. Maxwell has brought in five junior college transfers and a dozen freshmen, and expects to top last year’s performance to establish a solid baseball tradition at TCU. Pitching seems to be the big question mark for the Frogs as they lost their top two starters to graduation. But TCU has several capable pitchers in senior right hander Greg Meyer (8-8, 5.47 ERA) and juniors Glen Pierce and Chris Leiss. Juco transfer Greg Moore could possibly break into the starting rotation. The Frogs, however have only one proven lefthander in Mark Heinitz (0-1, 9.45 ERA). Juco transfer David Shelbum will see some action. Freshmen Jeff Long and Mark Strickland are expected to serve as backups. “The jury is probably still out on just how good our pitching is going to be this season, but I’m confi dent we’ll be good enough to win, ” Maxwell said. Steady Eddie Pereira returns as team co-captain and starting catcher. Pereira is a proven defen sive player but can hit (.311) as well. First base is one of the positions still up in the air. Third baseman Carlos Barrett (.308) may get the nod but will have to fight off soph- omore gridder Steve Stamp (.308), who saw plenty of action there last season. Senior co-captain Trey Brooks (.276) has second base tied down, having moved there from short stop. “Trey’s a natural second base- man and that was his position in high school. He feels more com fortable there,” Maxwell said. Juco transfer Warren Oliver may see some action at second as well, but seems to have the short stop position anchored. Last season’s starting second baseman, Steve Mariz (.317) has moved over to third base and will probably start there. Carlos Bar rett may also figure in at third. Gone are rightfielder Scott Ringnald and centerfielder Don Peterson, who led the team in hit ting (.361 and .345 respectively). But the outfield positions seem se cure in the hands of centerfielder Luis Rojas (.272) and leltfielj Randy Knust (.338). Therm; a four-way battle for rig) tween newcomers Scott Wajn Kenny Grafton, Mark 1 Barry Davis. “We’re stronger defensivi than we were last year I Maxwell said, sizing up hislej Myers, Haller are put out over SWC tourney losses United Press International SAN ANTONIO — Texas Tech coach Gerald Myers and Baylor coach Jim Haller were bothered by their respective losses Thurs day at the Southwest Conference Championship tournament. For Myers it was his players, and for Haller it was his team’s schedule. Myers said it was the way his players shot and ran, or didn’t run, in the final moments of their 66-58 loss to Texas. “I was disappointed in the way we played the last half of the second half,” Myers said. “I was proud of the way our guys came back in the first half, but we just couldn’t keep it.” Texas center LaSalle Thomp son, the games’ leading scorer with 21 points and 13 rebounds, agreed with Myers. He said some of the Texas Tech players were tired in the second half. “(Clarence) Swannegan got tired and started missing his shots, and he was tired on defense,” Thompson said. “When that hap pened, he started playing behind me instead of in front. ” Swannegan, a freshman center who showed muscle under the backboards against a more experi enced Thompson, scored six of his eight points in the opening mi nutes of the second half, expand ing the Texas Tech one-point half time lead to five points. After Swannegan’s scoring ex plosion, he put up few shots. But Swannagan wasn’t the only Texas Tech player who slowed down. The team attempted 24 shots in the second half compared to 32 in the first period. For Baylor’s Haller, it was the final two weeks of the season in TCU-Baylor boxscore TCU (56) — Cucinella 4 0-1 8, Johnson 0 0-0 0, Frevert 2 0-1 4, Bridges 3 4-4 10, Browder 8 0-0 16, Baker 7 4-5 18. Totals 24 8-11 56. BAYLOR (47) — Teagle 8 3-6 19, Hall 2 0-14, Copeland 1 2-2 4, Nunley 4 0-0 8, Shakir 0 0-0 0, Battle 3 2-4 8, Blake 1 2-2 4, Temaat 0 00 0, Kaiser 0 0-0 0, Sears 0 0-0 0, Lincoln 0 0-0 0. Totals 19 9-15 47. Halftime — TCU 28, Baylor 23. Fouled out — none. Total fouls — TCU 13, Baylor 17. A — 11,621. o Z< Z N oM o a LUNCH SPECIAL Good Only 11:30 AM-4:30 PM 846-8861 $2.00 OFF any LARGE 2 OR MORE ITEM PIZZA OR $1.00 OFF ANY SMALL 2 OR MORE ITEM PIZZA. ONE COUPON PER PIZZA. FREE DELIVERY WITHIN LIMITED AREA. 4407 TEXAS AVE. 1504 HOLLEMAN — EX PIRES 3-31-81. Texas, Tech box TEXAS (66) — Howland 3 2-2 8, Wacker 3 6-6 12, Thompson 8 5-7 21, Carson 2 0-0 4, Montgom ery 6 2-3 14, Harper 2 3-4 7, Wendlandt 0 0-0 0. Totals 24 18-22 66. TEXAS TECH(58)— Hill 1 0-0 2, Brewster 4 0-0 8, Swannegan 4 0-0 8, Jennings 6 0-0 12, Taylor 7 2-2 16, Smith 4 0-0 8, Nichols 0 0-0 0, Franse 2 0-0 4, Washington 0 0-0 0, Williams 0 0-0 0. Totals 28 2-2 58. Halftime — Texas Tech 36, Texas 35. Fouled out — none. Tot al fouls — Texas 10, Texas Tech 19. A — 11,621. LO ,\r TOP IT TO YOUR HEART S CONTENT — FREE! Every Friday In March... PURCHASE A 14" CHANELLO’S CHEESE PIZZA AND GET ANY TOPPINGS YOU WANT — FREE! AS MUCH OR AS LITTLE AS YOU LIKE! Sorry — Our 2 Free Coke Special Is Not Valid During This Offer. FREE DELIVERY Offer expires 3/31/81 846-3768 which the game. Bears had only one He thought it left his players rusty against a hot-handed Texas Christian team which took the Bears’ post-season hopes by a 56- 47 margin in the quarterfinals. 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