I Page 8/The Battalion/Tuesday, February 12, 1985 SPORTS ~~ " Langston dreaming of ’88 Olympic gold By CHAREAN WILLIAMS Assistant Sports Editor Everyone dreams of Olympic gold, but few experience the feel ing. Texas A&M forward Lisa Lan gston dreams of the feeling, but, unlike most, she had a chance to experience it. Langston was one of 106 play ers invited to try out for the 1984 Olympic team. Although she didn’t make the final cut, Lan gston was thrilled just to get a chance to make the team. “It was a great experience,” Langston said. “I got to see (USC All-America) Cheryl Miller and the rest. That was the greatest thing I got out of going. It was really exciting.” Langston said she made a fatal mistake when trying out for the team. “I tried out for forward,” Lan gston said. “I should have been an off-guard. It was hard for me, being 5-foot-8 and having to guard (USC All-America) Pam McGee. “1 didn’t really go up there with the best attitude either. I can’t say I had a bad attitude, but I was just kind of passive.” Langston, a junior, returned to A&M an improved player. Last season, Langston was named to the All-Southwest Con ference team, averaging 16.8 points and 6.5 rebounds per game. This season, those statistics are looking even better. Try these numbers on for size —18.6 points and 7.7 rebounds per game. However, Langston said she isn’t satisfied with her perfor mance this season. “I’m not really pleased,” Lan gston said. “On paper everything looks great. There are a lot of things 1 wish I could do better — passing and defense. Those things don’t show up in the statis tics. “I can score 31 points and not Langston said the Aggies (10- 11, 3-7 in SWC) have improved since Lynn Hickey took over the A&M’s Lisa Langston head coaching job at the begin ning of the season. “We have definitely improved since the beginning of the sea son,” Langston said. “It was a combination of us changing to ward (Hickey) and her changing toward us. It has been a two-way street. She realized what we were capable of and we tried to give her what she wanted.” Although the Aggies are losing six players to graduation, includ ing three starters, they should be a better team because of Hickey’s recruiting, Langston said. “We should be much im proved,” Langston said. “She is going after tne quality athlete. There is a big difference between a good athlete and one that has all the fundamentals. “If we get just half the players they’re going after, we’ll nave a good team. With good players and a good coach, there is always the potential for a great team.” Langston said as far as this sea son, she, has been especially pleased with the Aggies’ dedica tion. “If I had to choose one thing I’ve been most pleased with, it would be the hard work we’ve put in,” she said. “We really work hard in practice and at the end of every game. We never give up no matter what the situation.” Langston was an All-American athlete at H. Grady Spruce High School in Dallas. She lettered in four sports and actually received more attention in track. “My school wasn’t really known for basketball,” Langston said. “I only received letters from A&M, Baylor and SMU. When (former A&M) Coach Rapp saw me the first time, she was actually re cruiting a girl named Fran Har ris. “I was an All-American in track, but I wasn’t even interested in running track in college. I got offers from Nebraska and schools like that. Sometimes I think about just going out there and running, just to see how I could do.” Langston, who got the name Leggs in high school, was in fluenced by her mother in the de cision to attend A&M. “This was the only school I visi ted,” Langston sain. “I was real shy, so my mother did most of the talking. She loved the campus and we knew educationally it was a great school. We were thinking education first. “My mother’s pretty right about most things. If my mother says it’s right then it’s usually right.” Professional basketball is a pos sibility for Langston following graduation. “I don’t know whether there will be a league in the U.S.,” Lan gston said. “It’s questionable right now. I might go overseas and play. It just depends on how I feel when I graduate. I will finish my degree before I do anything.” Coaching women’s collegiate basketball is also a possibility for the physical education major. “If I get a good coaching job after graduation, I will snap it up,” Langston said. “Working with Coach Hickey will help me. She’s well known in women's bas ketball.” Still, she just can’t give up the thought of Olympic gold. “If I play overseas, I will still be eligible for the ’88 Olympics,” Langston said. “I will be 24 years old. 1 figure I will still be a spring chicken.” Texas A&M’s Lisa Langston (14) puts up a shot against Mi ami (Fla.) Saturday night. 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With us, you can reach deep into the expanses of your imagination and help to develop technologies that literally reach beyond the stars. Our informal and encouraging atmosphere has produced a galaxy of opportunities. . .encompassing large software computer systems, communications and scientific spacecraft, alternative energy sources, high energy lasers, and microelectronics development. These opportunities are open to you. Take advantage of this opportunity to shape your future and ours. .. join a company that gladly makes space for the new expressionist. Tomorrow is taking shape at a company called TRW. Equal Opportunity Employer U.S. Citizenship Required On-campus interviews 3/7, 3/8 See your placement office for details. Electronics & Defense Sector St. John’s remains in top spol Associated Press St. John’s and Georgetown ■ mained No. 1 and 2, respectively,* The Associated Press college basit. ball poll Monday, while tne resi; th< Top Twenty swapped places. After a week of upsets, therJ fight was for No. 3, where Mich® became the top challenger to the iv, Big East powers. St. John’s received 63 of 641®. place votes and 1,279 points [rn the nationwide panel of sportswn. ers and broadcasters. The Redir« are currently on the nation's longs Division I winning streak - ii games — and they set a BigEj Conference record with Saturdi 70-68 decision over VillanovaJ consecutive league victories. Georgetown, which received ill other first-place vote, was nam second on every other ballot to fui with 1,217 points. Michigan, 18-3, which hadbte No. 8, made the week’s biggest ja and finished third in the votings 1,044 points. The Wolverines ba Big Ten foes Purdue and Illinois^ week. Oklahoma, 19-4, \unvoed (n seventh last week to fourth withf points, while Memphis State, wi received just five points less, (i from third to fifth. The Tigenal' fered just their second loss of tit: season last weekend whentheywtt! beaten by Kansas 75-71 on thenai Georgia Tech, 18-4, moved fnu 10th to sixth with 929 points alie registering Atlantic Coast Confe ence victories over Duke and Wi Forest last week. Duke, 174, »i next with 920 points, while Syraoa 815, Southern Methodist, 761,asl Kansas, 707, rounded outtheTi) Ten. Southern Methodist Cell ftotuk week's No. 4 ranking after suffeiifl road losses to Arkansas, 69-66,am North Carolina State, 82-78 inow time. Iowa led the Second Ten, fe lowed by Louisiana Tech, Noil Carolina, Nevada-Las Vegas, Tills Villanova, Illinois, Oregon State,l abama-Birmingham and Maryland Last week, the Second Tens Nevada-Las Vegas, Iowa, Kana Louisiana Tech, North Carolina,!) egon State, Tulsa, DePaul, Viliam and Maryland.