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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 26, 1985)
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Post Oak Village BOW DYNAMICS Thompson may join repeaters Only five coaches have won consecutive titles Associated Press Georgetown Coach John Thomp son added his name to a select coacn- ing list last year when his Hoyas cap tured the national championship. Now, he is two victories from an even more exclusive grouping — the repeaters. It was an 84-75 victory over Hous ton last March that gave Thompson the NCAA college basketball title af ter his team had come so close two years earlier, losing by one-point to North Carolina in the championship game. “Winning the title was such a com plete feeling, one of satisfaction,” Thompson said before the start of the current season. “It was every thing I thought it would be. “Considering the fact that (UCLA’s) John Wooden won 10 and several other coaches have won more than one, there are very few people who have ever lived who can say they won a national championship.” Even fewer have repeated. Only UCLA and four other schools have successfully defended the title. Thompson said before the season began that he wasn’t thinking about repeating. “Hey, we’re going to defend the Big East First, then the national championship. We’re going to take this step by step.” The Hoyas are stepping along ni cely. Led by 7-foot, All-American cen ter Patrick Ewing, the Hoyas were the No. 1 team in the preseason poll. ‘V-Smith 3-2L BATTMJOtJ They held the top spot until a one- point loss to St. John’s snapped their 29-game winning streak. Within 48 hours Georgetown lost again, this time by two-points to Syracuse. They plummeted to second in the polls. Thompson righted the Hoyas, who went on to win the Big East tournament, Finish No. 1 in the Final poll and received the top seeding in the East Regional. The Hoyas four victories in the NCAA Tournament have been by a combined 60 points as only No. 6 Georgia Tech managed to come within 10 points, dropping a 60-54 decision Saturday. What made the Yellow Jackets, who start two 7-footers, even tougher was the fact that Ewing missed 12 minutes of the second half because of foul trouble. Still, the Hoyas prevailed. Now, they must face No. 3 St. John’s for the fourth time this sea son next Saturday in Lexington, Ky. in the semifinals. “We gear everything we do to the tournament,” Thompson said after the Georgia Tech game. “This is the Big Top, where the pressure is, where the excitement is. There is more pressure and excit ement for the Hoyas than any of the other teams that successfully de fended the title. They will have to win six games to bring home the ring from the original field of 64 teams. In 1972, UCLA had to win four games in the 25-team tournament. Now, the teams are seeded by the NCAA and sent any to of the four regionals as opposed to the days when a team stayed in its home re gion. Winning it is definitely easier than defending it, as evidenced by the fact that 35 teams have failed to re peat as champions. Will Georgetown become number 36 or will Thompson add his name to the list of Wooden, Henry Iba of Oklahoma State, Adolph Rupp of Kentucky, Phil Woolpert of San Francisco and Ed Jucker of Cincin nati — the repeaters? Texas A&M Sportscope A&M baseball team hosts Minnesota Mark Johnson’s Texas A&M baseball team (19-6) hosts the University of Minnesota Golden Gophers to a double-header beginning at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday at Olsen Field. North Texas State visits No. 7 A&M natters David Kent’s No. 7 Texas A&M men’s tennis team (13-2) host the North Texas State University Eagles in a dual-match Tuesday at the Omar Smith Tennis Center beginning at 1 p.m. Jan Baldwin’s Lady Ag netters travel to Waco to face the Baylor Bears in a Southwest Confer ence match. Ag softball team takes on Sam Houston State Bob Brock’s Texas A&M softball team tangles with the Sam Houston State University Bearkats at the A&M Field, located next to Olsen Field. T he double-header starts at 4 p.m., with the second game scheduled to begin at 5:30 p.m. TAMU rugby team wins 14th straight TCC title The Texas A&M rugby team captured its fourteenth consecutive Texas Collegiate Championship this past weekend in Dallas. A&M defeated Texas Tech and Houston en route to their showdown in the championship Finals against Stephen F. Austin. The Aggies walked away with a convincing 48-14 victory over the Lumberjacks. Overall, the Ags outscored their opponents 128-29. Eighteen Aggies were named to the Texas Collegiate Rugby Team, a group of all-stars who will represent the state in national competitions. Tigers think hot hand could decide tourney Associated Press MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Dana Kirk thinks that by the time teams reach the NCAA’s Final Four, it’s pretty much a matter of who has a good day that decides victory. “Eye always said that’s what tour naments are all about. Whoever has hot hands can prevail,” the Memphis State basketball coach said Monday. Kirk’s Tigers, ranked Fifth during the regular season, face Villanova in the NCAA semifinals Saturday. As his team began workouts to prepare for that contest, Kirk said the squad would work on basics for several days before he decides on a game plan for the Wildcats. “We’ll review and go with the things we’ve been doing to give us our 31 wins. We’re not going to com pletely get away from anything,” he said. Keith Lee, the 6-foot-10 senior forward who holds Memphis State’s all-time scoring tind rebounding re cords, has gotten into foul trouble in the past four tournament games. But Kirk said he’s not worried about a repeat of that situation. “I won’t anticipate anybody get ting into foul trouble. That’s not something we look for.” Many NCAA observers say Georgetown will be the team to beat for the championship, but Kirk said he’s not worried about Georgetown just yet. “I want to play Villanova,” he said. Vincent Askew, a 6-5 freshman guard who has started for Memphis State this year, said he would like to face Georgetown, however, in the NCAA Finals. “That’s the one I’m really looking forward to,” Askew said. “You can’t hold anything against Villanova be cause they’re a good ball club. If they weren’t, they wouldn’t be in the Fi nal Four. “But everywhere I go, I hear Georgetown this and Georgetown that; they can’t be beat and all that. They’ve lost two games. That proves they can be beat, and I believe we can beat them,” he said. 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