r 6,1984 aim MO Sports Thursday, September 6, 1984/The Battalion/Page 13 Women’s soccer team hits stride See page 15 ’ t1 ' andi H-up'e in tticj 'e-ft ;» toul^ homeless. 1 ^ll certainij • typhoon m, ies since li killed Condon's Ags improve to 3-1 A&M whips Sam Houston ft relief P the niosiK, the Iniei^ >ecl a global^ C,1| eigencv# ■‘fleeted \icu a tions Dium, • the French it sls tance Con, re nee alsooft rnmeqi «!*. ‘lay a board at, »the tinymiri “le of the®. By TONY CORNETT Sports Writer The Texas A&M women’s volley ball team opened their home season before a crowd of 219 in G. Rollie White Coliseum Wednesday night with a convincing win over Sam Houston State University. Billie Aggies took the best three- out-of-five match in straight games 15-6, 15-9, 15-10 while raising their overall match record to 3-1. ■A&M Head Coach Terry Condon was pleased with the way the team played. "I thought they did real well,” said Condon, “We were trying a lot of new plays and we were running our offense a little bit different. They really ran some nice offensive plays. I was really pleased to see some of the things we’ve been doing in prac tice come through in this match. Be cause this is were we got to do it against teams like this. All in all, I was very pleased with their perfor mance.” Sam Houston State Head Coach Brenda Gray said that her team was “scared to death,” out on the court against the Aggies. The Bearkats had three new play ers on the floor after a recruiting year that brought in a lot of fresh man talent. Coach Condon gave the Bearkats credit for their agressive style of play. “They’ve always been a scrappy team,” Condon said. “FWery time we’ve played them there have been times during the match when we’ve had problems. They were a little bit stronger offensively. They hit the ball a little bit better than they have in the past.” Coach Condon didn’t substitute as many of her players in and out of the game as she’s been accustomed to, but she had a valid reason. Condon is looking for continuity. “I’m trying to let them play more all-around at the beginning of the year so maybe I won’t get stuck in positions that I don’t won’t to be later on,” Condon said. “T hey gell a little better together and play better defense, hopefully. It may not work, but we’ll see.” The next game for the Aggies will be Monday night against the Univer sity of Georgia in G. Rollie White Coliseum at 7:30 p.m. Iftons onthei ao, -150 milm lay by then* '>in the sea* sue of Asiai; lain, wardia uul u icdiou om theruia <1 18 peoplr and scons i \onnr, ’ sed casi ler. a l\S. Dj me seterine ■ Kin? free • ovember, ut Ling cm plows eel that hiii and Groceni i nspector. ja found "venj is during da igned lothd Hy 1982. D* muTousdoc u \ a nous am e once cau$ ig in a halln and acafflffi Terrible tackling takes the wind out of Hurricanes’ No. 1 ranking "Our players don’t tackle very well," Miami Head Coach Jimmy Johnson said. "It wasn’t as much of a problem against Auburn because we were more of a swarming defense, and we were not in a position of hav ing to make too many one-on-one tackles. But against Florida we didn’t have that kind of swarming, fanatical tackling, and it almost cost us. ” United Press International 1 NEW YORK — You know it’s still early in the season when the coach of the No. 1 team in the nation says his players can’t tackle. |v But that’s the reward the defend ing champion Miami Hurricanes got from Head Coach Jimmy Johnson after knocking off Auburn and Flor ida within six days to move into the top spot in the United Press Interna tional Board of Coaches’ ratings. ■ “Our players don’t tackle very well,” Johnson said. “It wasn’t as much of a problem against Auburn because we were more of a swarming defense, and we were not in a posi tion of having to make too many one-on-one tackles. But against Flor ida we didn’t have that kind of swarming, fanatical tackling, and it almost cost us.” H Miami received 30 of a possible 35 ffrst-place votes and 513 points to take a comfortable lead over No. 2 Nebraska (415), No. 3 Texas (337), No. 4 UCLA (330) and No. 5 Clem- son (311). B Nebraska received four first-place votes. Teams receive 15 points for first-place votes, 14 for second, etc. Miami, ranked fourth in presea son, jumped to No. 1 after running its nation-leading winning streak to 13 games. The Hurricanes edged preseason No. 1 Auburn 20-18 and topped Florida, ranked 18th in pre season, 32-20. Auburn fell to sixth in the ratings, followed by No. 7 Penn State, No. 8 Ohio State, No. 9 Michigan and No. 10 Oklahoma. Rounding out the Top 20 are No. 11 Alabama, No. 12 Brigham Young, No. 13 Arizona State, No. 14 Iowa, which received one first-place vote, No. 15 Notre Dame, No. 16 Boston College, No. 17 Southern Methodist, No. 18 Washington, No. 19 Florida State and No. 20 Pitts burgh. Boston College soared four spots after a 44-24 win over Western Car olina. Miami and Clemson, a 40-7 winner over Appalachian State last Saturday, each jumped three places. BYU, unranked in pre-season, vaulted into 12th after a 20-14 upset over Pittsburgh. Florida State also crashed the ratings this week follow ing a 48-17 blowout of East Carolina. Pitt took the biggest fall, slipping 13 spots from its No. 7 pre-season rating. Florida dropped out of the ratings along wih Georgia, which was 19th in pre-season and hasn’t played a game yet. In games pitting ranked teams against each other this week, Michi gan hosts Miami and Alabama meets Boston College at Birmingham, Ala. Saturday. It will be Miami’s third game against a ranked team in 12 days. Including Michigan and Alabama, 11 Top 20 teams open their seasons this Saturday. Nebraska hosts Wyoming, UCLA visits San Diego State, Penn State hosts Rutgers, Ohio State hosts Oregon State, Okla homa hosts Stanford, Arizona State hosts Oklahoma State, Iowa hosts Iowa State, Notre Dame plays Pur due at Indianapolis, and Washing ton hosts Northwestern. Also, Clemson visits Virginia and Brigham Young hosts Baylor. The Pac-10 and Big Ten are the most well-represented conferences with three teams each. UCLA, Ari zona State and Washington are from the Pac-10; Ohio State, Michigan and Iowa from the Big 10. , Photo by PETER ROCHA Texas A&M’s Angi Smith (#1) spikes the ball from the cor ner during the Aggies’ home opening three-game sweep of Sam Houston State Wednesday night in G. Rollie White Col iseum. Chemine Doty (#10) awaits a possible return. All Summer Clothing ■Shirts • Shorts ■ Bathing Suits • Golf Slacks 40% off ifnMtiatB Prices effective thru Sept. 15 Spurts ftauftsv 2023 Te * as 7 7 T 9 ™ n 7 s 6 hire Cen,er $5.00 OFF WITH THIS COUFOIV (on $10 or more purchase) at CLASSIC CLEANERS 703 W. Villa Maria Bryan, Tx. 77805 or FASHION CLEANERS 315 B Dominik College Station, Tx. 77840 For dry cleaning only. Coupon must come with cleaning. Coupon valid through Sept. 13,1984 40% OFF 28.8? 20% OFF. 0W $89.8? 0W $39.8? \T0R, iW $129.95 $1.45/LB' iter MSG CAREER DEVELOPMENT ANNOUNCES Officer Applications Available for: Treasurer and Subclirmn of Correspondence Pick up applications in SP0 (216 MSG) Due Mon. Sept. 10 5:00 pm to Secretary or C.D. mailbox Interviews; Wed Sept 12 or by appointment Any Questions Contact Heather McBreen at 845-1515