Friday, September 19, 1986FThe Battalion/Page 13 710 N. Rosemary!)] Bryan 846-1360 Sports i and right on Bryai >a in Town.! sstauran! (inner & Tea oupon all season begins or women’s tennis By Loyd Brumfield Assistant Sports Editor Be« Enchilada I, Cheese, Click US Caldo Defies 776- an >au \fter three weeks of intense workouts and intrasquad ■tches, the Texas A&M wom ens tennis team is ready to face competition from other schools, ■t begins today at 1 p.m. when (Sat & Sun) Bond-seeded Gaye Lynne Gen- sler of A&M takes on unseeded Bn Krieg of Southwest Texas State University in the second Texas A&M Four-Way Tennis l HH| Iournameut. Coach Bobby Kleinecke satB his team is well-prepared and ready to play. ■The players are ready and Bcious,” he says. “We’ve been at it for three weeks and, we haven’t Bl a chance to play other schools.” ■Three other schools — South- '.Bt Texas State, the University of sSouthwestern Louisiana and North Texas State University — B participate in the tourna- Bnt, although it will be based on Bividual, not team, competi tion. ^^■wo players from Sam Hous ton State University, Houng La- Band Jeana Burton, will make B trip and replace two USL Byers who could not make it. Bixteen singles and eight dou bles matches will be played in the Friday’s opening round. ■We ought to have a lot of suc cess,’ Kleinecke says. “There’s a lot of team unity on this squad.” Bleinecke says this year’s team should have more depth than last jMr's team, which won the jSjBthwest Conference title and finished 15th in the nation. di Ara 4 th it 25th 'M SC ■The level of the players is the i i i , same all the way down,” he says. “Ejery position is open and no ontislocked into one.” Blie top three seeds for the toiimament are all from A&M. n.-b a.m. Slphomore Karen Marshall, who Be it to the finals of the SWC A&M’s Karen Marshall No. 1 seed for tourney tournament, enters as the No. 1 seed, followed by Gensler, and ju nior Kim Labuschagne. Marshall and Labuschagne also come into the tournament as the top-seeded doubles team, while Gensler and freshman Jennifer Jones are third-seeded. Other seeded players from A&M include freshman Cindy Crawford at No. 7 and senior Laura Liong at No. 8. Labuschagne, who upset sec ond-seeded Heliane Steden at the NCAA tournament last year, says the players will back up each other even though they might end up playing one another. “We’re still a team,” she says. “We’re still going to support each other." Gensler says the team hopes to get more support from students this year. “We hope the fans get behind us,” she says, “especially because we won the conference last year.” The tournament will continue through Saturday and conclude Sunday at 1 p.m. Admission is free to the public. Eat Aggies wish for favorable script Photo by Greg Bailey A&M linebacker Aaron Wallace gets ready to Saturday’s 35-17 loss to the Tigers. A&M takes on sack LSU quarterback Mickey Guidry during last North Texas State here Saturday at 6 p.m. By Ken Sury Sports Editor Imagine this: A small Division 1- AA football team walks into the den of a national powerhouse that is hungry to win after being humil iated in an important game. The little school’s plan: Merely to escape alive. , B u Sports t hro ugh . a . sheer blood- Analysis and-guts de- mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm termination, this team of scrappy players knocks off the highly touted powerhouse for a major upset. The Aggies hope that’s not in the script this Saturday when they face North Texas State in their 1986 home opener at 6 p.m. in Kyle Field. Texas A&M is hungry to win and prove it belongs among the nation’s elite football teams after suffering an embarrassing 35-17 loss at the hands of Louisiana State University. The defeat dropped A&M from sev enth to 16th in The Associated Press poll. But unless the entire team suc cumbs to some rare tropical disease before Saturday, the Aggies should find little trouble with North Texas Slate. The Eagles, or the Mean Green — whichever you prefer — seem to be the type of team that could give a Di vision 1 team fits, however. Twenty- eight starters return from last year, including seven senior defensive players. The defense was strong in NTSU’s 7-0 season opening win over Southwest Texas State because the Eagles held SWTSU to 255 total yards. The Eagles use a wishbone of fense, something seen seldom by Southwest Conference teams, which are opting for more pro-style, pass- oriented offenses. Both quar terbacks, Bron Beal and Gene Pool, are sophomores who alternated at the position in the opener until Pool was sidelined with an ankle injury in the second quarter. He is probable for the game. Experienced defense and youth at quarterback. Hmmm, sounds like LSU. But NTSU Head Coach Corky Nelson already seems to concede the game to A&M, at least he did that orally in an interview at the begin ning of the week. Sounding just as humble as Ozzie and Harriet always did, Nelson said he compared the game to a David and Goliath confrontation — minus the slingshot. Of course, Nelson may just be try ing to get the Aggies overconfident in the hope of pulling an upset. But A&M Head Coach Jackie Sherrill, who has been stressing a one-game-at-a-time approach, is staying low-key about the game. Sherrill said the team was embar rassed about the loss to the Tigers, but would be able to correct the mis takes which cost it the opener — namely the weak play of the defense. Outside linebacker John Roper will not start, Sherrill said, because of a sprained ankle suffered in the LSU game. He said senior Steve Bul litt will fill in at the spot, although Roper was participating in running drills. Nelson said he expected A&M to be “mad as hell” about losing to LSU and take it out on the Eagles. That’s definitely in A&M’s script. Aggie Notes . . . Roger Vick’s 63 yards rushing against LSU moved * him into eighth place past Earnest $ Jackson on the A&M all-time run- ^ ning list. Vick now has 1,574 yards, £ 162 behind Larry Stegent (1967-69) > who holds seventh place. Wide receiver Shea Walker’s five * catches put him into 10th place on £ the A&M career reception list with 63. Another five would move him d past Tommy Maxwell (65) and £ Johnny Hector (67). ncakes ?at Sauce! read Back To School Wearing Contact Lenses!! ao n ;es Restaurant Center Quality Contact Lens Fitting and Follow-up Care Soft Daily Wear Lenses ■ $169 Clear Complete ■ $189 Tinted lijCludes examination, lens care training session, starter solutions Hmnd 6 mths. follow up care. Offer expires Oct. 15. Lenses for astigmatism or extended wear available at extra cost. 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