Monday, September 23, 1985/The Battalion/Page 9 itions Mur. I >e of whid ba ck Ken- to takb an HorneJi ■'ey wasac- ‘rs were be. , s previoui : an assistani; Baylor. n - coupled ion alreadt wtball pro- is Morning list Randir -trill quite 'iiingtothe ?” i any differ. I nference. 11 een-in andl every one," I (the SWCjl i tny god; | J do about I 1, it’s a lol hen 1 wad! o (at Ala-1 saying thai f; ion during I; couldonltl ics" appear 1 AA rule vi-1 page new ensive cov- digger and iblem. Ht an athlete 15 years of in from of make him aalities out aid, “andl y are. Wei it of these t chance to ■5: ■0 Ron Oesti InerandPt is. Astros it talked pint’ torce in Oe bed his season fort win. Mas 11 strte home run, he first inti who took rl twice in i by Curtis ring singk ie fourth "t Duane ter scored rfiy. acrifice fl)' drove in 5 11 ogled, mo' -son was hi 1 on a gr 0 ®' >USE at njoy 3EEf /s. i nner n-Sat -10:30 TANK WFNAMAIIA by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds >0 e ^cssert 5:oo p.m. to close order $3.00 of hot delicious food get your choice of Aggies concentrate on season after NLU 'M. (continued from page 7) members (male and female), fans, press members and critics in atten dance at Kyle Field had discovered college football bettors weren’t the only interested parties with some thing to lose. “I don’t think we were worried at halftime,” said Stump, who com pleted 7 of 17 passes for 86 yards againsl a free-wheeling NLU de fense. “A lot of times we were down inside the 30-(yard line) and nothing happened. We just knew we had to get it into the endzone. I thought we could do that in the second half.” But questions remained of whether the Aggie defense could contain Indian quarterback Walter “Bubby” Blister, who passed and scrambled his way to 265 total yards of offense in the game, and keep their hands off NLU punier Kevin Duhe, who spent more time on his back than Gerry Cooney in a heavy weight bout. “Their quarterback (Brister) is ex cellent,” Sherrill said. “He gives them a chance to win some games and win their conference.” “Bubby Brister did a good job,” agreed NLU Head Coach Pat Col lins. “He was able to get out of the rush with his agility.” “Brister is a good quarterback,” A&M cornerback Jimmie Hawkins concluded. “He’ll go far.” Especially if he receives 15 yard head-starts and automatic first downs on stalled offensive drives. Both NLU touchdowns followed roughing-the-kicker penalties on A&M that gave the Indians first- down-and-second-chance to go. “I think their kicker did a pretty good acting job,” said A&M’s Lance Haverda, the guilty party on the sec ond infraction. A&M wide receiver Shea Walker said, “If we eliminate the penalties, we’ll be able to improve our perfor mance.” Offensive lineman Doug Willia- mas agreed, “It’s the same old thing. Once we iron everything out, we’ll How the AP Top 20 Fared: 1. Auburn (2-0-0) was idle. Next: at Tennessee. 2. Oklahoma (0-0-0) was idle. Next: at Minnesota. 3. USC (1-1-0) lost to Baylor, 20-13. Next: at Arizona St. 4. Iowa (2-0-0) beat N. Illinois, 48-20. Next: at Iowa St. 5. SMU (1-0-0) was idle. Next: at TCU: 6. Florida St. (3-0-0) beat Memphis St., 19-10. Next: Kansas. 7. Ohio St. (2-0-0) beat Colorado, 36-13. Next: Washington St. 8. Oklahoma St. (2-0-0) was idle. Next: vs. Miami (Ohio). 9. LSU (2-0-0) beat Colorado St., 17-3. Next: No. 11 Florida. 10. Penn St. (3-0-0) beat E. Carolina, 17-10. Next: Rutgers. 11. F lorida (1-0-1) was idle. Next: at Mississippi St. 12. UCLA (2-0-1) beat San Diego St., 34-16. Next: at Washington. 13. BYU (3-1-0) beat Temple, 26-24. Next: at Colorado St. 14. Arkansas (2-0-0) beat Tulsa, 24-0. Next: New Mexico St. 15. S. Carolina (2-1-0) lost to No. 19 Michigan, 34-3. Next: at Georgia. 16. Alabama (3-0-0) beat Cincinnati, 45-10. Next: at Vanderbilt. 17. Maryland (2-1-0) beat West Virginia, 28-0. Next: at No. 19 Michigan. 18. Nebraska (1-1-0) beat No. 20 Illinois, 52-25. Next: Oregon. 19. Michigan (2-0-0) beat No. 15 S. Carolina, 34-3. Next: No. 17 Maryland. 20. Illinois (1-2-0) lost to No. 18 Nebraska, 52-25. Next: No. 7 Ohio St. Sunday thru Wednesday evening See you for Dinner! It's a good time for the great taste of McDonald’s’" offer good Sept 22-Oct 23 801 University Dr.•825 Villa Maria*2420 Texas Ave*2930 E. Hwy 21 be able to march 80 yards on any body.” While Williams’ prediction re mains to be proven, the Aggies showed they could certainly march the ball on Northeast Louisiana — and in the fourth quarter to boot. With the possible outcome of the game hanging in the balance, no less. A&M, leading 24-17 and driving for the game-clinching score, churned out big yardage on the ground, while running big chunks of time off the clock. “I never believed they could march the length of the field,” NLU’s Collins said. “I think that’s when their depth really hurt us — in the second half. “There is a gigantic difference in depth when you have 25 more schol arships (the difference between Divi sion 1 and Division 1-AA) and I think that was one of the major fac tors in the game.” The revitalization of the A&M rushing game certainly ranks up there somewhere. The Aggie offensive front cleared moving van-sized holes for running backs Anthony Toney (106 yards on 22 carries), Roger Vick (76 on 16), Keith Woodside (97 on 12) and a supporting cast of thousands. They picked up the blitz fairly well in most passing situations and only allowed one sack of an A&M quarterback (Stump). And they played like an offensive line that outweighed their oppo nents by 40 pounds per man. By the end of the game, the Ag- ies had rolled up 539 yards of of fense, 31 first downs and 313 rush ing yards, all of which are the highest totals since the ’82 Rice game. “Our offense was able to do a lot of things tonight,” Sherrill said. “I am very pleased with the way we are working toward having a very good offense, one which can run and throw the ball equally well.” And score points. And win games in the clutch. And do it all with the possibility of a potential scandal hanging over their heads. r, Christiaanse paces Ag netters at tourney and enjoy every minute of it! 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Mon.-Frl. 7a.m.-9 p.m. Sat. 9 a.m.-l p.m. 3710 E. 29th By KEN SURY Sports Writer Texas A&M’s Helen Christiaanse placed second in singles play, while third-seeded Kim Labuscnagne and the doubles team of Cathy Nutt and Julie Vaughan earned consolation victories in the four-team intercolle giate women’s tennis tournament at A&M’s Omar Smith Tennis Center Sunday. Christiaanse, A&M’s No. 5 player last year, entered the finals after up setting top seed Teresa Dobson of TCU Saturday. But she lost the fi- jials match to TCU’s No. 2 player, Rene Simpson, in straight sets, 6-2, 6-1. Simpson gained entry to the finals after upsetting A&M’s Vanne Akagi, the No. 2 seed in the tournament. After the loss, Christiaanse com mented on Simpson. “I’ve seen her play in Canada; she’s a very hard hitter,” Christiaanse said. “She played a great match. I felt I had a really great tournament, but it just wasn’t my match.” In the singles consolation match, Labuschagne defeated Oklahoma’s Anne Gibbons 6-2, 6-2. In doubles action, Nutt and Vaug han rebounded from an early loss to take a pair of matches to earn conso lation honors. A&M first-year women’s tennis coach Bobby Kleinecke said he felt his team did better than he thought they might for their first tourna ment of the ’85 season. “It gave me a chance to see them play, other than in practice,” Klei necke said. “It showed us what we need to work on.” Kleinecke also said he was im pressed with the play by the doubles teams, especially since they are chan ging to a more aggressive playing style. “Your import isn’t fixed until I say it’s fixed. —Gary Stevenson, Quality Dealer. 99 We service anything with four wheels and a foreign name: TprirjTi BHiil Gary Stevenson’s QUALITY Pontiac* Bulck* GMC • Subaru 601 S. TEXAS/BRYAN/779-1 OOO • OPEN UNTIL 6 P.M. Men's: All ioo% cotton washed herringbone mountain shirt, Billy Goat canvas pant and web belt. 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