>T Tuesday, October 7, 1986AThe Battalion/Page 7 Sports Success could spoil Aggie fans Photo by John Makely Six Aggies swarm over a Texas Tech player dur- Saturday’s game. A&M remained in the No. 14 ing Texas A&M’s 45-8 rout of the Red Raiders in spot in Monday’s Associated Press football poll. A&M faithful only happy with Cotton By Homer Jacobs Assistant Sports Editor Grunts and groans. Whines and moans. No, it’s not the dialogue of a por nographic movie. It’s the sounds of dissatisfaction and greed on the part of Aggie foot ball fans. '■ The sounds Viewpoint can be heard from the Dixie Chicken to “bull” ses sions in dormitory rooms. The conversations usually center around the fact that Texas A&M is on/y ranked No. 14; or that the of fense isn’t playing like last year; or that anything short of a Cotton Bowl appearance for A&M is an awful thought. Let’s face it, students and former students are getting greedy and spoiled, after just one year of Aggie gridiron success. What’s wrong with being the No. 14 team in the nation? What’s wrong with a 9-3 record? Granted, everyone wants to be a winner, but let’s not take winning for granted. For all the juniors and seniors out there, remember those games when the Aggies were the butt of jokes around the nation when it came to football? As bowl bids rolled around late in 1984, and the Aggies were strug gling to reach the .500 mark, the In dependence Bowl would have been incredible. Now, it’s Cotton or nothing. I can only feel sorry for Texas, Oklahoma and Nebraska fans. If these teams don’t reach their major bowls, the year is far from being a successful one. A&M Head Coach Jackie Sherrill hit the nail on the head earlier this year when he said that a Southwest Conference football team is mea sured by its success rate in the Cot ton Bowl, not the Sun or Bluebonnet bowls. If it’s any consolation, the Aggies are way ahead this season in terms of national rankings. It wasn’t until A&M beat South ern Methodist in early November of 1985 that the Aggies even moved into The Associated Press Top Twenty; and A&M still ended up the No. 6 team on January 2. Dreams of a national championship may have been dashed with the Aggies’ opening loss to Louisiana State University, but A&M still has a good football team, sometimes a great one. So the Aggies didn’t get the 45-0 shutout against Texas Tech; so the Aggies didn’t run up the score on North Texas State. As Sherrill and A&M players have reiterated, polls and rankings will take care of themselves. Let’s enjoy what the Aggies are doing right now on the football field, because success can be short-lived — just ask UT Coach Fred Akers. To think that the Longhorns were a fumbled punt away from a na tional title in the 1984 Cotton Bowl, a second half away from another Cotton Bowl appearance in 1986, and now T-shirts in Austin are bear ing the words “We’re Akers and Ak ers away from Cotton . . . Fire Fred!” Hopefully, Aggie fans won’t reach this point. Greed can be the root of all evil. I guess it all started when your dad used to bring back McDonald’s for lunch for the whole family, and undoubtedly, your hand reached for the fullest bag of fries. Maybe this season and in the fu ture, Aggie fans won’t need to have their fries and eat them, too. Akers hopeful despite dire forecast AUSTIN (AP) — Texas football I coach Fred Akers learned Monday [ that his Longhorn squad is a 24- point underdog to Oklahoma and drew laughter by responding, “I | hope they’re wrong.” Akers was asked if he could recall I a Texas team being such a big un derdog to the Sooners, and he said, I “No, I don’t remember, not in this game.” Any game? “No, never,” the 10-year Texas I coach told a news conference. Akers was asked what he thought [ of his team’s chances, and he said, I “I know they’re heavily favored. I I can see that physically and experi- [ ence-wise and everything else but j it’s been that way before.” Oklahoma was ranked No. 1 be- | fore falling to Miami 28-16 and is I now 3-1, averaging over 43 points a l game. Unranked Texas dropped its j opener to Stanford at home and I has eked out road victories over ' Missouri, 27-25, and Rice, 17-14. The Texas-Oklahoma kickoff in I the 81st meeting between the two j teams is at 2:35 p.m. at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas. A sellout crowd of 75,587 is as- ; sured, and the game is being re- “We’re going to have to go out there and really play a heck of a ball game to stay on the field with them — that’s all we want our play ers to understand, and they won’t have any prob lem understanding that. I hope they all intend to go up there and win the ball game. ” — UT Coach Fred Akers on the OU-Texas game. gionally televised by ABC-TV. “They’re a good football team, we know that, and we expect it to be a heck of a ball game,” Akers said. “We’re going to have to go out there and really play a heck of a ball game to stay on the field with them — that’s all we want our players to understand, and they won’t have any problem understanding that. “I hope they all intend to go up there and win the ball game.” A reporter said he had heard that TV news had reported Akers was considering resigning, but Ak ers said, “Oh, no.” Asked if he felt an “extra urge” to win because of various news re ports that Akers’ job might be shaky, Akers said, “I don’t need any extra urge.” “I don’t know how anybody could help me want to win any more than I do,” he said. Akers disclosed that freshman bluechip recruit Duane Duncum might start his first game at middle linebacker, and said freshman Alex Waits is now Texas’ No. 1 punter. Duncum would be the first true freshman to start at linebacker for Texas since Doug Shankle in 1978. Akers also said a bruise on tackle Rick Houston’s lower leg might re sult in more practice work for freshmen linemen Stan Thomas, 6- foot-6 and 270 pounds, and Charles Seafous, 6-6 and. 308. Asked if running back Edwin Simmons, who was suspended for disciplinary reasons, would play against Oklahoma, Akers said, “There’s no change on Edwin Sim mons as yet.” By The Associated Press The Top Twenty teams in the Associated Press college football poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, 1986 record, total points based on 20-19-18-17-16-15-14-13-12- 11-10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 and ranking in last week's poll: Record Pts Pvs 1. Miami, Fla. (55) 5-0-0 1,155 1 2. Alabama (2) 5-0-0 1,084 2 3. Nebraska 4-0-0 988 3 4. Michigan 4-0-0 959 4 5. Penn State (1) 4-0-0 937 5 6. Oklahoma 3-1-0 867 6 7, Auburn 4-0-0 828 7 8. Arkansas 4-0-0 726 6 9. S. California 4-0-0 709 9 10. Iowa 4-0-0 614 11 11. Arizona 4-0-0 605 10 12. Washington 3-1-0 504 12 13. Baylor 4-1-0 430 13 14. Texas A&M 3-1-0 393 14 15. Arizona St. 3-0-1 392 16 16. LSD 2-1-0 268 18 17. N. Carolina St. 3-0-1 133 20 18. Stanford 4-0-0 111 - 19. Mississippi St. 4-1-0 86 - 20. Clemson 3-1-0 77 - ?er a Auto Service “Auto Repair At Its Best” General Repairs on Most Cars & Light Trucks Domestic & Foreign OPEN MON-FRI 7:30-5:30 ONE DA Y SERVICE IN MOST CASES CALL FOR APPOINTMENT 846-5344 Just one mile north of A&M On the Shuttle Bus Route 111 Royal, Bryan ■■H] Across S. College From Tom’s B-B-Q SCHULMAN THEATRES 2.50 ADMISSION 1. Any Show Before 3 PM 2. Tuesday - All Seats 3. Mon-Wed - Local Students With Current ID’s. 4. Thurs. - KORA “Over 30 Nite” •DENOTES DOLBY STEREO PLAZA 3 226 Southwest Pkwy 693-2457 CR0CIDILE DUNDEE pc is TOP GUN rs EXTREMITIES s ill MANOR EAST 3 Regular Haircuts $5 MSC Barbershop Lower Lever MSC 846-0629 Shoe Shines Hours: 8 a.m.-5 p.m. M-F Manor East Mall 823-8300 RUTHLESS PEOPLES STAND BY MEs 7:20 0:40 TOUGH GUYS i SCHULMAN 6 2002 E. 29th ‘LINK s 775-2463 FUGHT OF THE NAVIGATOR ps 7:15 5:30 KKYS 105 Presents $ DOLLAR DAYS $ This Week’s Features Are: '‘KARATE KID II ps NOTHING IN COMMON ps-13 FERRIS BUELLERS DAY OFF ps f UNIVERSAL GROCERY & SNACK BAR \ CHINESE LUNCH SPECIAL $2°° -Eggrolls & Wontons- Imported Oriental Groceries-Exotic Foods All within walking distance of Campus Across from Blocker Bldg. & St. Mary Center 110 Nagle-C.S 846-1210 Ski Winterpark January 9-16, $285.°° includes: Condo accommodations n 5 days, 4 days skiing, lift tickets, and ski rentals • Roundtrip trans. call: Steve Buras 696-7958 Rick POPP 846-7506 Lori Claesmann 693-9611 Classified 845-2611 TOESimw Kincsmnr AUCTION Tuesday, Oct. 7 Viewing 6-7 pm Sale Time 7 pm 200 S. 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