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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 4, 1982)
sports Battalion/Page 15 February 4, 1982 i. (continued from page 13) without light. p- The Aggies returned to the . coliseum floor shortly after the I rv power came on, but then re- 4.(1 turned to the locker room about 9:30 while Metcalf and assistant coach Barry Davis discussed the 1 o situation with referees and 4.J Baylor Coach Jim Haller. Metcalf, upset by the outage A&MV delay, did not want to continue the eve- , the game, while Haller wanted II, whilj to start the second half rather pshaw fj than waiting for the lights to be tie oil; restored. Metcalf said later that ; the Ad the Aggies were not forced to timed resume play in the second half, in wop land that the power shortage had ■id tht e{ l ua lly penalized both teams. awwonMGame officials contacted Cliff medleyBpeegle- commissioner of the i the iipWC, after which referee Lynn omen i Shortnacy g ave the following leestylej! statement: 14 ( tl, t M“I had a talk with Mr. Speegle H (he and I asked him what he vomenr^ ou ght we should do. He told Feb. 2"i me that the decision is up to me • n ofliv H the referee of the game. It’s tr Womj| The Soifc, npionsH March 4 my opinion that we can play, so we will.” At 10:01, the coliseum announcer told the crowd of 8,650 that the game would be played, even though less than half of the lights were working. The Bears came out of their locker room at 10:05, when the scoreboard clock began count ing down the nine minutes be fore tl e start of the second half. Two minutes later, the Aggies came out and began warming up, with only the emergency lights and a few others working. At 10:20, one hour and 55 mi nutes after the power outage, the second half began. When Texas A&M center Rudy Woods picked up his third foul of the game with 19:49 left, Baylor forward Daryl Baucham went to the free throw line for two shots. As he was about to shoot the first, all the lights in the coliseum came on, so the two teams played the remainder of the game with complete lighting. Metcalf irs (continued from page 13) Texas Christian University. The \ggies, after winning their last Ra PP%o games against the Lon- llin § ,u ^horns and Cougars, are now 6- losu(te( gwC play and 13-6 for the it tht Reason. wing i'. Arkansas, at 6-2, is in first Ireshi place, while Texas Tech, Baylor alongaijnd Houston are tied for fifth ie said, tfith 4_5 conference records. onfidcnBfThe Aggies took the initial five gaiiead of the game when Riley tip- jhing j jed in a missed 15-foot jumper his vear :) yS uar ^ Tyren Naulls. Neither ln „ 10 jj,:eain established a lead greater :han two points until the Bears Ladies%4it ahead 11-8 with 14:53 re- ie UmWnaming in the half, mheSt# Texas A&M regained the lead ,rnamenl[g|i7 w ith 9:10 left when re serve center Lonniel Bluntson’s steal was turned into two points a 19-foot jumper by guard ^^R^ggie Roberts. The Aggies’ J I»ary Lewis scored on a 17- ^Ttooter, then knocked a Baylor Ij|ass into the hands of Roberts, passed to Naulls for a layup, f That put Texas A&M ahead ,.22-19 with 7:44 left in the half, [0/i| ut th e A.ggi es couldn’t "build their lead. After Roberts hit an Inderhanded layup on a fast break to make it 24-21, Teagle connected on a 21-footer and a 17-footer to give Baylor a 25-24 ead with 5:21 left. cove The Aggies took another tree-point lead, 28-25, at the tree-minute mark when Mike "homasand Milton Woodley hit itnpers. After another layup nd following foul shot by loberts made the score 31-27, he Bears scored the final five >oints of the half to take the one- >oint halftime lead. Teagle con- erted a three-point play and cored on a rebound layup for five points. eagle finished the first half With 13 points, while teammate __^Daryl Baucham had seven. For Texas A&M, Roberts had 11 -and Naulls had six. Both teams lNil finished the half with 16 re- Lii-I-bounds, while the Bears outshot ‘he Aggies from the floor 56 percent to 44 percent. When the second half finally iegan, the Aggies tied the score it 33 on Naulls’ three-foot jum per, but the Bears pulled ahead igain on a 15-footer and a 21- Eboter from Teagle. At the 13:30 mark, after the Aggies lad tied the score at 38 on Maulls’ 21-footer in the lane, Saylor took a 41-38 lead on a Teagle free throw and a 13-foot umper. When Naulls and Bluntson cored on jumpers in the lane to [ive the Aggies their last lead of the game, 42-41 with 11:41 left, the Bears’Joe Copeland andjay Shakir scored inside the lane to put Baylor ahead 45-42 with 10:53 remaining. Texas A&M closed to within one point four more times, with the last being at 53-52 with 3:07 left in the game. With 2:31 left, a costly tech nical foul was called on the Texas A&M bench. When the Bears’ Ozell Hall went up in the air with the ball, Woods knocked it loose for a moment. Everyone on the Aggie bench called for traveling on Hall, but the re ferees didn’t see it that way. Met calf said after the game that a remark by assistant coach Barry Davis prompted the call for a technical. The Aggies cut the lead to 57- 55 with 1:15 remaining, but a free throw by Shakir with three seconds left iced the game for the Bears. During the final 1:15, the Aggies had chances to win the game, as Woods came up with a loose ball at the Baylor end of the court. After Naulls missed an 18-footer, the ball went out of bounds off Woods and the Bears had the ball with 38 seconds left. Copeland was fouled by Naulls, but missed the front end of a 1-and-l, and Woods came up with the rebound. Roberts missed an 18-footer, and Naulls committed his fifth foul of the game to send Shakir to the line for the final point. Metcalf said he was proud of the team’s performance, ack nowledging the fact that the Aggies had chances to win late in the game. “We had chances ... but with 38 seconds to go, we took a bad shot (Naulls’ 18-footer),” Met calf said. “We should have taken a better shot and gotten some penetration. “If we had gotten ahead in the second half, I was going to put in the big lineup with Lonniel Bluntson, Claude and Rudy and go into a zone, but it was never possible to do that. I wanted to go into a four corners if we had gotten ahead by a point late, but we never had a chance to do that either.” The Aggies ended the game shooting only 37 percent, while the Bears finished at 49 percent. Haller wasn’t sure what day it was, but he said that his team defensed Riley well after his career-high performance. “There were so many big plays there at the end that were keys to the game,” Haller said. “Certainly the technical was a big difference because it came at a crucial time. All 1 know is that it was a big victory for us.” QfTCU beats Rice; stays tied for third in SWC United Press International •vFORT WORTH — Darrell -fg ^Browder hit an 18foot jump ihot with four seconds left Wednesday night to give the Texas Christian Horned Frogs a Iramatic 58-57 victory over the free Owls. I The win kept TCU tied for ■ bird in the SWC race with a 6-3 9 ecord. The lead changed hands diree times in the final minute vith Ricky Pierce putting Rice in ront at 57-56 with two of his 26 The Store Worth Looking For! points. Rice led by three at the half, but the Owls could hit only 10 of 27 shots from the field in the second half and saw their record drop to 3-6 in conference play and 12-10 overall. Four TCU players scored in double figures with Jeff Baker andjoe Stephen each having 14, Browder picking up 13 and Doug Arnold 12. TCU, enjoying its best season in 10 years, boosted its season mark to 11-8. 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