Friday, January 24, 1986/The Battalion/Page 13 By KEN SURY Assistant Sports Editor I While most Aggies were home en joying mom’s cooking, watching tele vision and gaining weight during the .holidays, the Texas A&M swim teams were training hard for this spring’s meets. A&M Coach Mel Nash said when his teams came back Jan. 2 for what’s termed “Christmas training,” he put his swimmers through the heaviest workouts any team has received in his seven years at A&M. Those workouts consisted of two- a-day workouts Monday through Saturday, Nash said, which amounted to 8-10 miles of swim ming each day. He added that al though swimming is less stressful on the body than running, those 10 miles of swimming equal a 30-mile effort by a runner. But now that classes have re sumed, he said, the number of work outs has decreased from 12 a week to nine, but the training will be as in tense as the presemester workouts. The Aggies swam in the All- American meet in Austin Jan. 10-1 1, which featured swimmers from SMU, Texas, Georgia, Kansas, Southern Illinois and several high school swimmers. But Nash said the team did not go to the meet hoping to win, since to successfully compete the swimmers would have to be somewhat rested before the meet. “Our swimmers were just exhaus ted,” Nash said. “We hoped to just hold our own against high schoolers. Some of the times on our swims were just horrible. “But there were some bright spots, and we did better than ex pected. But team points weren’t used, so we don’t know where we stood. It was a nice cross-section of competition.” All that preparation will begin to :ome into play today as the women’s team travels to Houston for a 4 p.m. xmtest with the Cougars. The team s still thin on depth, and Nash ex acts only five to six women to swim or this spring’s meets, including the southwest Conference Champion- ihips in Austin Feb. 27-March 1. “ The girls we have are top com petitors,” Nash said. “They will probably score more points per per son than the other SWT! teams, but as a team we can’t win a meet. They should do well at Nationals (the NCAA Championships). For our meets, we’ll just be looking for (good) individual swims.” While the women’s team has a lack of depth, the men’s team has an abundance of it. “Our men’s team is the strongest team we’ve ever had,” Nash said. “They’re progressing well, and we’re almost three-(men) deep in distance and strokes. Only Texas has better overall depth (in the SWC), so we have a lot of balance.” That depth and balance probably will be tested when UT visits here Feb. 15 for a dual meet with A&M. The only other dual meet scheduled for the spring is a Feb. 8 matchup here with Rice. That meet originally was scheduled for Saturday, but the date was changed due to a conflict with The Aggieland Open Swim Meet being held this weekend. After those meets, the men have one month to prepare for the SWC Championships held in Austin March 15. Nash said the top two men’s teams in the conference al ready are locked up. “Texas will definitely win and SMU will come in second,” Nash said. “We beat SMU in the SWC Re lays last semester, but the relays are our strength. I think the most inter esting competition will be for third- place between us and Arkansas. “Both of us have added people this semester to help us. Arkansas now has a top recruit in Mike Nufel, one of the top two sprinters in the country. We have Mike Kozlina from my hometown of Pittsburgh. He looked very strong in the All- American meet.” Kozlina was a High School All- American in the 100-yard butterfly and the 100-yard backstroke with times of 49.3 and 51.4 seconds. The NCAA Championships for the women will be held March 20-22 in Fayetteville, Ark., and April 3-5 in Indianapolis, Ind. for the men. A&M swimmers train rigorously for spring action Lady Aas hope to end skid Photo by DEAN SAITO A&M’s Evelyn Sanders (23) eyes the basket as she Lady Aggies’ 80-75 loss Wednesday. A&M hosts drives past Houston’s Sonya Watkins during the Rice Saturday at 5:15 p.m. in G. Rollie White. By DOUG HALL Sports Writer The third week in January was not a good one for Texas A&M Women’s Basketball Coach Lynn Hickey and her Lady Aggies. Prior to that week, the Lady Ags owned a 9-5 overall record and started Southwest Confer ence play with three straight vic tories. However, three straight losses to Texas, Texas Tech and Hous ton have left Hickey and her team desperately searching for a SWC win. Rice, which brings its 4-11 re cord to College Station Saturday evening for a 5:15 tipoff, would appear to be just the opponent A&M needs to play in order to halt its losing skid. But Hickey knows games in the SWC are never as easy as they ap pear. “Rice doesn’t have a good re cord (0-6 in the SWC),” Hickey said, “but they’re always tough to beat. They have a very scrappy team. “It won’t be a runaway. They have one of the best centers in the conference in Holly Jones (who is the second-leading scorer in the SWC, averaging 18.6 points a game) and a very good guard in DeDe Brantley.” Standing 9-8 overall, with only two conference opponents left in the first round of play — Rice on Saturday and Arkansas Jan. 28 — tdickey said the Lady Ags are still not performing up to their capa bility. “We are still searching for the chemistry and the one lineup that will work,” Hickey said. “Right now, the biggest thing we are lacking is leadership on the floor. That comes from the lack of ex perience.” Hickey said although she has been pleased with her offense, which has scored at least 75 points in all but one of its SWC games, she is disappointed with the team’s overall defensive per formance. “Our offense is good,” she said, “but the defensive pressure was maybe good for 10 minutes last night (in Wednesday’s 80-75 loss to UH). After that, they were hav ing no problems getting through our pressure. “For us to win, we have to run with the ball, get the steals and apply defensive pressure. One night, we are going td get both (offense and defense) together.” Hickey, who last year guided A&M to its first .500 record (14- 14) since the ’79-80 season, said she will probably go to a pressure defense for the whole game against Rice. “Last week was the toughest and most difficult of our schedu le,” Hickey said. “We were really hoping Houston would be one of the upsets that would help us fin ish in the top three (in the SWC). “Now, we have to protect our home court advantage and maybe upset Arkansas at Arkansas. That will be tough.” The SWC’s top six teams will face each other March 5-9 in Dal las’ Moody Coliseum for the con ference tourney. SPRING for the Chronicle! Get hopping now and watch big savings spring to life in your spring semester subscription to The Houston Chronicle. You can count on The Chronicle to keep the facts jumping-whether you follow pro sports, that “other’' university, your high school team, rock stars, films, fashions or the Houston job market. 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