The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 20, 1983, Image 13

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    )V1I1
inAD would favor Ag-’Runner game
>usband st: p rom the sports desk: Rudy Davalos, athletic dire-
' P ast ff" ditojat the University of Texas at San Antonio, says the
n gandtheri 0 | ( | runne rs would love to play Texas A&M in basket-
10 sU till! phe Aggies are the only SWC school UTSA hasn’t
arkln sa i<i brlpeted against.
nosebleeds ‘<J think it would be great to get A&M on the schedule
ur pintsol , t ]he next lew years," Davalos said. “They play every
prin the Dallas/Fort Worth area and they play every
Wliam Dfly,. i n t he Houston area which gives their alumni a
ho implanilJ, ce to see them play. I know they have a lot of
t in Clark (iriytnni support in this area too, so it would be very
operation. Uteficial for both teams if we played one game there
nd <>ne game here. It would give them the opportunity
3 (>lay in front of their San Antonio alumni and it
»"> MotOid give us the opportunity to plav another South-
t ttattmi frosVConference School.”
be, and thirfl
from ant»B ***
dd Me4 ij5 uole t ^ ie wee * i: University of Texas basketball
Bh Bob Weltlich, after his team took an early 10-0
14th-ranked Houston Cougars before
in Austin: “Houston is really
et about that. That’s why I don’t
.md requinfkj ihe 45-second clock. If we had been leading 10-0
O'i. MtoB ()Ut the clock, we would not have shot the ball the
^estof the game.” Texas has a 5-9 overall record and an
-3| Southwest Conference mark. The Longhorns’
rqblems continue to mount, as starting guard Jack
Vonhington quit the squad Monday due to the ‘press-
[ 1 lit re l * ie ^ * basketball program.
n John D»l , .
:ad over the
ie implant,(mg 77.52 Saturday
‘c. 4tosealrKl. There is no secre
alvt
ues
Surprise in Portland: Brian Joelson, a senior mem-
el of the Texas A&M men’s tennis team, defeated
ailing professionals Mel Purcell and John Austin in
cfGeorgia Pacific Invitational tournament last week
Tout of a hometown crowd in Portland, Ore.
In the first round of the tourney, Joelson outlasted
Purcell 7-5, 6-4. Purcell, the 24th-ranked player in the
world, won 300,000 while competing during 1982.
Joelson then defeated professional player Austin 6-3,
6-4 in the second roun<J, but was eliminated by Victor
Amaya, another touring professional, 7-5, 6-3, in the
tournament quarterfinals.
Thanks, I needed that: Texas Tech head football
coach Jerry Moore has received a second consecutive
one-year extension on his contract, which now runs
through 1987. Athletic Director John Conley said
Tech’s improvemert was obvious, and that Moore
Sports Mailbag
should be rewarded. 1 he Red Raiders were the surprise
team in the Southwest Conference this season, finishing
with a 4-7 record and in a tie for sixth place in the SWC.
Texas Tech defeated Texas A&M 24-15.
Doctor at work: Marquette University guard Glenn
“Doc” Rivers scored the 1,000th point of his college
career in a 71-65 victory over Arizona State earlier this
month. Rivers, a 6-4 junior, become the 19th player in
the school’s history to accomplish that feat and the 10th
player to score 1,000 points in three years or less. The
Warriors, coached by Hank Raymonds, defeated Texas
A&M 73-58 during December.
Track meet, anyone?: Track and field experts soon
will demonstrate their skills at the Dallas Times Herald
Invitational Track Meet, slated for Feb. 5 in Dallas.
Among the college names to be featured are Billy
Olson, named indoor athlete of the year by Track and
1 ii Id News after breaking the world indoor pole vault
record five times. Before the 1982 season, the record
had been the 18 -5 V4 that Dan Ripley cleared in Fort
Worth in 1979. Olson beat that mark eight times last
year, finally establishing a new record of 18’-10” at the
NAIA championships. Olson is a student at Abilene
Christian University ...
Akeem gets the point: The Houston Cougar basket
ball team was ready to board the plane from Hobby
Airport in Houston to Austin the past Saturday when an
elderly man approached sophomore Akeem Abdul
Olajuwon. The man, less then 5-feet-8-inches, looked
at the Cougars’ 7-foot center and asked how many re
bounds he had against TCU. Akeem said, “One.” The
man gave an astonished gasp, looked up and down,
turned and walked away. Apparently Olajuwon de
cided not let that happen again — he had 14 rebounds
against I exas on Saturday and 12 in the Googs’ victory
over Texas Tech on Tuesday.
Joining elite company: Houston junior Michael
Young became the 24th Cougar to score 1,000 career
points when he had 18 against Texas Tech Monday
night. Young is the third Cougar to reach 1,000 points
this season, as Clyde Drexler and Larry Micheaux each
reached that level against Pepperdine. Other members
of the UH 1,000-point club include Elvin Hayes (No. 1
at 2,884 points), Otis Birdsong (No. 2 at 2,832), Robert
Williams (No. 3 at 1,838), Louis Dunbar (No-. 4 at
1,765) and Dwight Davis (No. 5 at 1,741).
urnovers crucial in Aggie Ladies’ loss
Press Ini
N -Sen.Ed
lenied thed
report thats
agn before Ii
1988.
etter to tht
blished
aid, “Any
1 sideling
a or at any ||
false.”
dy, re
term
columnist Dji
1 olumnsetol ■
ut Kennedvi ^
not bother finet Duckham scores nine
tedy or amoints in loss to Arkansas
re writingJ
red in Sundi
The Arkansas Lady Razor-
backs took advantage of several
unforced turnovers to defeat
the Aggie Ladies 75-67 in Fayet
teville, Ark. Wednesday night.
Texas A&M, which never
trailed by more then nine points
during the game, saw its record
drop to 8-9 on the season and
1-2 in the Southwest Confer
ence. Wednesday’s game, one of
two being played between the
two teams this season, will count
on both teams’ league records,
due to the first-season format
being used this year in the SWC.
The Aggie Ladies trailed only
37-28 at halftime, but could nev
er rally enough to overtake
Arkansas, which now has a 10-4
record and a 2-0 SWC’ record.
Texas A&M coach Cherri
Rapp said her team’s turnovers
proved to be keys to the Arkan
sas victory.
“Arkansas is a well-balanced
team,” Rapp said, “but we did it
to ourselves. Unforced turnov
ers were one of the big problems
— traveling, loss of passes and
.min suggcsii
nisetts coup
; up supporti
med to f"
? occur.
, as said tob
Michael SJ
appoint a ten
it if Kenned'
inedy saidlx
seat on tht
vices Commi
r committee
lopes to sent
, ihe future
>00000#
me
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loss of ball control.”
Sophomore Janet Duckham
led the Aggie Ladies with nine
points and four other players
had eight apiece. Those players
were Lynette Joiner, Jenni
Edgar, Jackie Jones and Felice
Lewis.
Joiner added three rebounds,
three assists and three steals.
Sophomore post Ann Trinka
led Texas A&M with six re
bounds and Duckham had five.
The Aggie Ladies shot 42.6
percent from field and Arkansas
connected on 58.9 percent of its
shots. For the Lady Razorbacks,
Bettye Fiscus had 14 points,
Amanda Holley had 14, Erma
Greer had 13 and Doris Gaiser
had 10.
“We didn’t deserve to win this
game,” Rapp said. “We haven’t
played with any enthusiasm
since Rice (which Texas A&M
defeated 105-81 Jan. 8). We ha
ven’t played well and we haven’t
been aggressive. Somewhere, we
are missing the key.”
Rapp said after the game that
she may change the starting
lineup for Saturday’s game
against SMU in G. Rollie White
Coliseum at 5:15 p.m.
“We have the capability of
beating everyone in the SWC ex
cept Texas,” she said. “But
somehow we just aren’t getting
the production we need. We
might have to see who we can
put on the floor to help us to
start winning.”
photo by Donn Friedman
Driving the lane
Aggie guard Reggie Roberts scores over Arkansas’
Darrell Walker in the Razorbacks’ 66-64 victory last
week in G. Rollie White Coliseum. Roberts, who’s
averaging 17 points per game in Texas A&M’s four
Southwest Conference games, will lead the Aggies in
Saturday night’s home contest with SMU. The game
will tip off at 7:30 p.m. in the coliseum, while the
Aggie Ladies will host the Lady Mustangs at 5:15.
A small space
ji ^ i
in the. right place
'La.
makes. . .
A BIG SALE!
The Battalion
Classifieds
845-2611
1 FREE INTRODUCTORY CLASS OFFERED
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Call BETH POSEY, Stibara specialist, at 779-1000 and test
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Subaru offers technology ahead of its time, complete
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Closed Saturday
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* Sunday only and only on 1982 models.
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