The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 15, 1985, Image 10

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    Page 10/The BattalionATuesday, October, 15, 1985
$1
good through Nov. 15
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Michigan
climbs to
No. 2 spot
Associated Press
Iowa remained No. 1 in the Asso
ciated Press college football poll
Monday, but Michigan edged ahead
of Oklahoma to set up a 1-2 show
down this Saturday, while surprising
Army cracked the rankings for the
first time in 23 years.
Iowa is No. 1 for the third week in
a row after defeating Wisconsin 23-
13.
Michigan, which’ blanked Michi
gan State 31-0, exchanged places
with Oklahoma. The Sooners
slipped from second to third despite
a 14-7 victory over Texas that
knocked the Longhorns out of the
Top Twenty.
Southern Methodist, a 21-14 loser
to Baylor, was the only other team to
fall out of the rankings.
Florida State fell to 13th and Ok
lahoma State dropped to 12th.
Meanwhile, Arkansas climbed from
sixth to fourth and Florida rose
from seventh to tilth by defeating
Tennessee 17-10.
AP Top 20 Poll
The Fop 20 teams in the Asso
ciated Press college football poll,
with first-place votes in paren
theses and season record:
1. Iowa (27) — 5-0-0
2. Michigan (20) —5-0-0
3. Oklahoma (12) — 3-0-0
4. Arkansas — 5-0-0
5. Florida—4-0-1
6. Penn State (1) — 5-0-0
7. Nebraska — 4-1 -0
S. Auburn — 4-1 -0
9. Brigham Young — 5-1 -0
10. Air Force — 6-0-0
11. Ohio State —4-1-0
12. Oklahoma State — 4-1 -0
13. Florida State — 4-1 -0
14. Baylor — 5-1-0
15. Alabama — 4-1-0
16. Georgia — 4-1 -0
17. LSU —3-1-0
18. UCLA —4-1-1
19. Army —5-0-0
20. Tennessee — 2-1-1
Others receiving votes: Texas,
Miami (Fla.), Arizona, Minnesota,
Texas A&M, Washington, SMU,
Maryland, Bowling Green, Colo
rado, Georgia Lech, Kentucky,
Pittsburgh, Purdue, USC.
TANK MCNAMARA*
Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds
Aggie netters to finish
rain-delayed tourney
By KEN SURY
.Spoils Writer
The Texas A&M women’s tennis
team will meet some Familiar net op
ponents as it Finishes a tournament
today at A&M — itself.
Rain showers Sundav evening t in
short the doubles semifinal matches
ol the Houston Fall Festival (HIT)
Tournament and left three Aggie
tandems to come home to the Omar
Smith Tennis Center and play each
other For the 11 I F championship.
A&M’s Kim Labuschagne and Ka
ren Marshall, who entered the tour
nament as the No. 4 seeded doubles
team, have nlread) made it to
championship match, even though
thev only played live games of their
semifinal match and w ere losing.
Labuschagne and Marshall were
behind 3-2 in the first set ol their
match against Rice University's Lori
Kronk and Wendv Wood. But then
the rain began to fall, anti Rite, de
ciding they could not reschedule the
match, opted to def ault instead.
“1 wish we could have finished,”
Labuschagne said Monday, "It
would have been a good match.
We've (Labuschagne and Marshall)
had a lot of slow stints, but then
usually pla> well anti take the later
sets."
The other two Aggie doubles
teams were also in action when the
skies opened up.
Vanne Akagi and Gave Lynne
Gensler, seeded No. I and last year's
tourney's champion, had just won
their first set against Fellow Ags Kel
lie Dorman and Helen Christiaanse.
(i-1. and Intel served the first point of
Vanne Akagi
the second set when their match had
to Ik* stopped.
So that leaves the three doubles
teams, familiar to playing each other
in practice, to fight it out for (he
HIT championship here, starting
about 2 p.m.— w eather permitting.
Marshall said it will not Ik* an easy
Final match against either Akagi-
Gensler or Dorman-Christiaanse, es-
peciallv since they're teammates.
Dorman said, “We’ll have to ex
clude the fact that we are playing
our teammates and treat it as any
other match."
Labuschagne added, “We'll go on
the court with ihe same attitude we
always have. It wouldn't change our
attitude even if it was Chris (Evert-
I.lovd) and Martina (Navratilova) we
had to play."
I he tandems of Akagi-Gensler
and Dorman-Christiaanse will pick
up their semifinal match >vhcre (hey
left oi l Sundav.
Kim Labuschagne
'■ I hat’s going to he one interest
ing match?’ Christiaanse said. “Al
though they’re our teammates, this
is a tournament and you have to try
to lx* serious alxuit it."
Gensler said that although she
and Akagi won the First set, "We
can't hold back. They’re talented
and they could Ixxit anybody."
Akagi also said she doesn’t like
plaving her teammates.
"We practice against each other,
so it s hard to go all out, hut it is a
tournament.”
In the tourney’s singles action,
which were concluded, Akagi lost
the championship match b-2,6-1,to
No, l seed Wood of Rice, but Akagi
said the match was closer than the
score indicated^
“I think I played pretty well,"the
third-seeded Akagi said. "We (Akagi
and Wood) must have had at least
eight deuce games. It was the cruaal
|X)iiilsthat I didn’t make."
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