ports Tuesday, February 7, 1984/The Battalion/Page 9 Winter Olympics start today See page 10 iceivedbiil e. Guys (It s. I hear]* )nt of Alt id could e, but ttei tbout noli ggies replace jokes with talent I have to graduate this summer and I’m mad der than Eddie Chiles about it. Just as Aggie ath- k tics, particularly football and basketball, are miiAg around, I’m going to be kicked out into the real world. In the four years since I graduated high school, the Aggie football team has a combined cord of 21-23-1, the basketball team is 63-45. Both teams are much too mired in mediocrity for a school that likes winners as much as Marcus Dupree likes quitting. red, she bf ie, which i| » required is," she i he was fomi? r securitiesi Dave Scott mp iransationi )me for i income to: atshethoufl The A&M football and basketball teams have (unisaid 'llenough pure talent for Bum Bright to move the ts." $ummer Olympics to College Station. But the im portant part is their age, or lack of it. J It is well documented how Jackie Sherrill TCP Started an all-freshmen backfielcl for much of * |983: beginning with quarterback Kevin Murray, then choosing between running backs Rod ■Nfl Bernstein, Roger Vick or Keith Woodside. Last year those guys were only “high school boys” playing on Friday nights. This year they started Iforthe highest paid college coach in America, f While these are just some of the freshmen that (tarted, there are more waiting on the benches. Sherrill’s recruiting crop was rated fifth best in the country by Dave Campbell’s Texas Football hetoffltl aud almost, all experts place it at (east in the top them. 10 nationally. Blue chip quarterbacks Craig haveHj Stump and Jay Hess were red-shirted. They’ll d to sbptill be freshmen. / itncn * Besides the freshmen, the Aggies have some experienced and talented sophomores, like de fensive backs Domingo Bryant, Wayne Asberry a respirat! and Darrell Austin, ccompanij s toa ’ om Kemi lad suffer in the, nes worked! lat after Bnj d stabili: ones sUi us inject . A few i [auldin Ml limp all her condlif badly." But Sherrill isn’t the only coach doing some baby-sitting. Shelby Metcalf has some players which are also new to the land of maroon-and- white. Leading scorer Todd Holloway is a first year Aggie. Add to him Winston Crite, Mike Clifford and Phil James along with sophomores Jimmy Gilbert, Kenny Brown, Doug Lee and A1 Pulliam and you’ve got a team that could tame a few Cou gars, butcher those Hogs and saddle some Ponies in two years. They might have a way to go yet, but all they need is the two years experience, and a little more depth. I here are problems with success and Jackie, Shelby and Co. will soon find that out. After they have won SWC championship after SWC championship, people will become accustomed to it, they will expect it, they will demand it. All Sherrill and Metcalf have to do is talk to Tom Landry. Poor of head coaches, what problems they will have just lor doing their jobs. Jackie and Shelby are going to create a bunch of success-spoiled Aggies. Ibis year’s freshmen, the non-athletes, at Texas A&M will be the worst of the lot. By the time they graduate in 1988, whenever the Aggies are mentioned people will no longer think “joke,” they will think “winner.” In four years, being an Aggie will be too easy, it will take all the fun out of it. People are going to forget what it’s like to grin-and-bear an endless series of Aggie jokes told by loving relatives. The poor freshmen students here, they just won’t know what it is like to stay for yell practice for most of the football games. Or to have UT spit in the face of our blazing bonfire. It’s just not fair that “lowly” freshmen get to have all the fun while I have to graduate this summer. But then I suppose I could change by major, again. There’s nothing wrong with a ninth year senior. Besides, I’m ready for the problems of success. (Dave Scott is a senior journalism major and is a sports writer for The Battalion.) The young Aggies maX trade X outh for for some - thing a little more subs* 3 ”' 131 next V ear as experi ence and talent raise hdP es of a promising season. Aaaie Women fall to Arkansas 83-70 By BONN FRIEDMAN And this year’s recruiting crop may bring more biuechippers. National signing date is Feb. 8 and the Aggies are hoping to sign many prospects. The Texas A&M women’ 5 basketball team fell 83-70 to lh e Arkansas Razorbacks at BarP' hill Arena Monday night. During one stretch, the Ag' gies fought back from a lT point deficit to a 30-all tie. BU L the Hogs charged back to lea^ 45-40 at the half. For the first 8 minutes of th e second half the Aggies held close, but then the Hog 5 changed defensive sets, putting 6’2” center Amanda Holley a 1 the top of a 2-3 zone. The Arkansas defensive change and the Aggies fatigu^ allowed the Hogs their fifth straight victory, raising their season record to 11-9, 8-2 in Southwest Conference play. Center Michell Tatum led the Aggies in the scoring de partment with 16 points, fol lowed by Beth Young and Jenni Edgar with 15 and Lisa Lan gston with 14. The Aggies had a good rea son to be tired out; they have played four games in the last seven days. “We just played so many games — it seems like we’ve been playing every other day,” Coach Cherri Rapp said. .TEXAS AGGIE MOTORCYCLE CLUB The Texas Aggie Motorcycle Club presents: “Take It To The Limit” starring Eddie Lawson & Kenny Roberts 7:00 p.m. Wed. Feb. 8 at Rumour’s non-members $1.00, members free states i iuth wot leanup t is shown® are cap oriheastj rkansas, , Georgpj louth oatently t Iwesttop*)'] a it thsaid'jl hat the M r to share'"j c'P forl 5 It is the' 0 ! ize theH rain p re0 f ! ions ats,< ases wat £r >! Meet Neeley Lewis Candidate for State Representative February 7,1984 8:30 p.m. 401 Rudder 10:00 80”(£l 9:50 mpacL toiOO Srf I'! • Organizational Meeting • Officer Elections • Discuss T-shirt Sales • Discuss first party j 4