Texas A&M January rst The Battalion Sports January 21, 1983 Page 9 ti'ke a more decision e than er has," mistake, it appointmat s Itanic member^ ost Back home anv Lewis J Aggies to face ‘new and improved’ Mustangs by John P. Lopez the House l) Is Battalion Staff nt of Hugo Be-' A vear ago, the Aggie basket- d on this as tl >all team always breathed a sigh m.” if relief when they glanced at lied Berlanga heir Southwest Conference integrity and chedule and saw the letters S- C wellwv»L . ihersandhast*rhose letters stood for a lot ct.” noire than Southern Methodist t. 34, said M n versit y- T hey stood for rest, with Lewisi hey stood for cakewalk, they icre of teamwlM io1 ' ">‘ine to lielp my stats” md they stood for a mark in the er we will Lexas A&M “win” column, ly to promotrlS[ hose da y s are S one - >mic conditi(iinBrhe SMU basketball team is for all Te\ wcpably the most improved quad in the conference, which , a six-vear nakes man y A Sg ies nww g r '- i served on th n 4 e w ^ en lhe y see tlie letters Natural R ’-M-U on the schedule. ^HWhen the Ponies invade G. iollie White Coliseum Saturday it 7:30p.m., Aggie coach Shelby Metcalf said it will be just like ) I I d IVny other SWC squabble — a ■[fight. ms conimniet itals nple Mustang coach Dave Bliss has much-improved squad “ They are greatly improved,” Metcalf said. “They have a year of experience behind them and they have good team speed and quickness.” Metcalf said there isn’t any one player that has made the dif ference for the Mustangs, but rather the whole team has im proved. “I guess (Larry) Davis and (Jon) Koncak are their two best players, but their talent is really spread out,” Metcalf said. “We need to handle their press and have a good shooting perform ance if we want to win.” Senior forward Claude Riley agreed: “They have some good guards, so we need to match up with them and we need to hit the boards real hard. And I think if we deny Davis and Koncak the ball we’ll do good.” Davis and Koncak, on the other hand, will be trying to con tain Riley, who admittedly is due for a good performance after a lapse of mononucleosis. “I feel like I’m ready to go 100 percent,” Riley said. “I’ve been doing things in practice that I wasn’t able to do when I First got out of the hospital, so I think I’ll do a lot better.” Riley’s progress on the court spells relief for Metcalf. “We need a good game from Claude,” he said. “I didn’t know how long it took to get over that stuff (mono), but he’s finally get ting stronger and I’m glad to see that.” AGGIE FACTS: Texas A&M guard Doug Lee will not see ac tion for the Aggies Saturday af ter injuring a foot in the Baylor game. Lee should start practic ing again next week ... SMU 7- foot center Koncak should be a stellar force in the middle for the Mustangs Saturday night. Koncak currently leads the Southwest Conference in re bounding...While the Aggies have to contend with Koncak, the Ponies will have to deal with Texas A&M’s scoring power — from all angles. Sophomore leads Ladies in scoring Edgar’s work well-rewarded ias acquired k| Hospital, cil 1 T uesday. White will leal Memorial faa| ilication of sef Nelson, direr! irs for Scott i. ® & White, a 5W Frank L. Christlieb jened in 189:1- . aatution StafT ial, a 140-W® urln g lhe , 98 , 1 - 8 2 ,f ason ’ gni ^gg ie women s basketball coach Ipprri Rapp experimented with Ily we have ier lineup more times than an nstitutions. 'inventor would test his latest a task force'brainchild. The instituii -Using several different sets of hroughthep: itarters throughout the team’s tion the rarJ-20 season, Rapp found ability ; programs ocrinithe court, but the gears we- ita Fe facilit) ?en’t meshing as precisely as she ivould have liked. On the other hand, w hile each the terms of i of her teammates had an oppor- ed Monday, b tunity to start at least one game etain theirre> tiutof 29, freshman Jenni Edgar waited for her chance. By the end of the season, Edgar hadn’t started a game, but she averaged 5.3 points and 3.2 rebounds during 16 minutes played each game. But Edgar wanted to start, and she wanted it badly. She’d started throughout high school on the Dallas Bryan Adams var sity, so it wouldn’t be anything new. So the 5-foot-8-inch Edgar decided to get busy. She worked ... and worked ... and worked during the off-season until her wish came true. When the Aggie Ladies opened the 1982-83 season against Southwestern in G. Rol- lie White Coliseum, Jenni Edgar was one of the starting forwards. “I didn’t think it was fair that everybody got a chance to start a game last season,” Edgar said in an interview Thursday. “If I’m starting, that means the coach has confidence in me and thinks I can get out there and do the job. It hurt me, because coming from high school, being ‘it’ and ‘the one’ and then coming here and being nothing just plain hurts. “I knew that as freshmen, col lege players aren’t going to get to play. But when I came down here and saw that I had as much ability as the people who were starting, I just blew it off and decided to work harder.” And work harder she did. An all-district performer for four years in high school, Edgar had to make a slight change between seasons. “Last year, they were really expecting me to play point guard, but I’m not a point guard — I’m a short forward,” she said. “They really kind of hesitated about putting me at forward. I was rebounding pretty well, and I think they were surprised. “But during spring training, I just played ball like I knew how See EDGAR page 10 Aggie guard Tyren Naulls and Arkansas guard Darrell Walker spar under the basket during the Hogs’ 66-64 victory in G. Rollie White Coliseum Jan. 13. photo by Donn Friedman The Aggies are home Saturday against the SMU Mustangs in a game starting at 7:30. The Aggie Ladies will host SMU also, with a 5:15 starting time. < - - ‘,’ ‘ * * * * ‘ ' v i'*