Battalion/Page 15 January 26, 1983 sports TANK MCNAMARA OJW OJ£ W££K |M$1tAPOFfe gETWe&M 1M& RA v rWF$ ANP BOWL... ^rr LOOK& Afe1VJDU&tA \WE MIGHT a^i£ to Meer mepa PEMANP9 fOR FTAVER IKJ-rtRv/iBWS. by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds K JUST P9WNX3EAPE IHEM^ TO CONJplTiOM vajjcw/. TUCRE'S* 9RPRT& MEPIA TMl^ V6AK, 0OT TUEV'ee LOTS- MORE V » / ruu ~^ /r ■■ -i \J\ 1 ! ^JmkLX_JJ I ^ ^ t v ^l£LX.^W—C. utton says Hogs need ' stay close to Coogs United Press International Tsti FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — pas Arkansas basketball coach Eddie W Suijton said his 1 Ith-ranked ’ffas Razorbacks would be doing well mvwi tp hiake it through this week Ie • without a loss. JetsA® Getting past Texas Tech othe onight in Lubbock would be im- bettr pjtant to stay in contention with Houston for the Southwest n ^oliference crown and leave the Razorbacks with only one con- erence loss halfway through the eague play, Sutton said Tuesday. This game is very important rojpi the standpoint that we iced to win to keep pressure on sajdfcffioLston,” said the Arkansas encl, oach, whose Razorbacks’ only oss of the season came against ijovi he Cougars Saturday in j Tmston. ihyeneB ribuDoMTexas Tech is always tough i untilll.T home. We’ve played a lot of p ou James the last few days and we nibeJfd to get back to the practice :ourt. After Tech, we’ll have a nstraitc^n-day period to have some gut 1I1( j Hctices. We’ve got to improve eh tlit FPre we play Baylor.” ^? t£ ^H^oming off their 75-60 lost to Houston Saturday, the Razor- 11 J jacks posted an 83-64 SWC win e ' )ver Texas Monday night in Eddie Sutton says Hogs face tough road ahead Fayetteville. After the Tech game, Arkansas next plays No. 20 Wake Forest on the road in Greensboro, N.C., before start ing its second round of league play. The 1 Ith-ranked Razorbacks take a record of 15-1 overall, 5-1 in the SWC, into the battle with Texas Tech. Sutton said assistant coach Fred Trenkle scouted Tech and his report indicated the Red Raiders had a good starting lineup and played “with a lot of intensity.” The Arkansas coach said Tech’s Bubba Jennings prob ably was one of the best guards in the conference. He said the Red Raiders probably would come out in a 3-2 zone which could force Arkansas to turn to its outside shooting. “Jennings is a very good point guard,” Sutton said of the 5-10, 160-pound sophomore. “He’s tremendous at getting the ball into the hands of someone who can do somthing with it.” Sutton said he did not think his team played very well against Texas, despite the 19-point final margin. He said the Razorbacks had been making too many mental mistakes lately. “If we can survive this week, we’ll be okay,” he said. The Razorbacks defeated Texas A&M 66-64 earlier this season, one of the Aggies’ three confer ence losses. Texas A&M has yet to play Texas Tech, but the two teams meet Monday in College Station. The Aggies play Texas in Austin Saturday. ta 1 City H' ig :swotitai ant is 1 , in noi tali* sclav to 1 if theft »assis® r, liehosff jay t'f nt at, but' long MSC POLITICAL FORUM PRESENTS WASHINGTON DC EXTRAVAGANZA 19S3 MARCH 13-19 SPRING BREAK TRIP INCLUDES’ ROUND TRIP AIR FARE LODGING AT THE CAPITOL HILTON 6 BREAKFASTS & 5 DINNERS KENNEDY CENTER PERFORMANCE . . . AND MUCH MORE! TOURS: CAPITOL WHITE HOUSE:. ARCHIVES PENTAGON COST: $525.00 DEPOSIT OF $210.00 DUE 9 FEB SEE OUR NATION’S CAPITOL iorntet rep# vearl'_ SIGN UP NOW!! ^THemofual Student Centen_ FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 845-1515 COMING TO TEXAS A&M PHI KAPPA TAU FRATERNITY... ALREADY A LONG-STANDING TRADITION AT .. 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Editor’s note: This is the first of 12 columns The Battalion will run by for mer Marquette University basketball coach A1 McGuire. Throughout the course of the basketball season, McGuire will offer his insight and humor weekly to Texas A&M sports fans. Being a college basketball official is an impossible job. No matter what he does, he can’t please anybody. I’ve always said that only God could ref ... and he’d pre fer the home court. There is no way these guys do it for the money. The Big Ten, for example, pays $300 per game, plus mileage, with a $75 per diem, and a percentage if they stay over. But most referees have to have another job, because the NCAA says they can only work three games a week. It’s done for their love of sports — so they can remain a part of the bucket game and stay close to the well. I truly believe there’s no such thing as a dishonest official. He’s like the weather man. He doesn’t decide where the snow falls, he just points out where it does. But I do think sometimes the crowd can work on the subconscious of the official. He might make some calls trying to appease the howling mob. But it’s done subcon sciously. If a coach is going to be successful, there are certain things he must recog nize about officials, like fast and slow whistles. The lirst thing a coach must find out in a game is if the coaches are blowing the whistle fast or slow. A fast whistle is a high school whistle that normally doesn’t allow any contact. Normally you can get this early in the game. We call these types of fouls “tickle fouls,” and right away, as a coach, you must immediately call off all pressure, Coileqe- Badketbcdl "“ReitteuA by Al McGuire both full and half-court. On the other hand, if it’s a slow whistle — a pro whistle — you play man-to-man and apply the pressure. But if it’s a fast whistle you go to the zone defenses. Normally, the ref that works in front of the bench, which we call “static row,” is the more mature official, the leader of the group. He’s the one you don’t yell at. You usually jump on the guy who’s farth est away. When you jump an official, re member, it’s not for the call he just made, but for the next one. You’re planting seeds you hope will germinate in his sub conscious. An example: If you play against the big man, a Keith Lee (Memphis State forward) you say to the ref: “Hey, that guy is camping in the lane! Four, five, six seconds!” Or if you’re against a great quarterback, you say, “Watch that Fos ter! He charges on his drives!” These are all just tricks of the trade. But now, all of a sudden, you’ve planted the seed. The ref is overconscious of a certain thing, and every so often from the bench you remind him. It’s some thing you learn over the years, and it adds up to experience. All officials have idiosyncracies and the smart coach plays to them. Some know the rule book frontwards and back wards, so maybe before the game you ask him about a crazy rule, stroking the offi cial, like, “What if you take a shot with two seconds to go, and the lights go out?” or that sort of thing, to try to butter the official up. Some coaches keep a book on officials. Some refs favor charging, some favor blocking, some have quick or slow whis tles. Some allow you to play like it’s foot ball and some think the game is crumpets and tea. Some are wilters. That is, if you yell at ’em, they fade out of the game. Others are rednecks, because if you yell at them they come back at you. Some are politicians, thinking of next year’s assign ments, because in some conferences where officials are rated, they drop off the back 25 percent and add new officials the following year. A mortal sin in basketball is a split crew, which means one ref is from one team’s conference and the other is from the other team’s conference. This, in my opinion, is wrong for two reasons: It’s difficult for the officials and it’s not mor ally right for the game. The officials have never worked together before, so you’re going to get inconsistencies. And the visiting coach feels the one guy is there to protect him, the other guy to hurt him, that sort of thing. In my opinion, in an intersectional game the refs should come from the con ference or area of the visiting team. All contracts are two-year contracts, so the next year it would be done in reverse. For the NCAA tournament, each con ference assigns official crews. During the early games, the NCAA has people observing the crews, grading them, and allowing the best ones to keep going along as the tournament progresses. So there’s pressure on them, too. If the crews produce, they go on. It’s that simple. PRE-LAW SOCIETY MEETING Wednesday, Jan. 26 7 p.m. Rudder #410 W. R. Vance, Steve Rogers, and Gains West in a panel discussion. 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