Monday, November 17,1986AThe Battalion/Page 9 ) Dog, 501 )urs ?’ ^havt ' oc| ificatiff Sports c onservative offense leads to Aggies’ downfall Hogs' Cotton hopes still alive as Arkansas prevails 14-10 By Ken Sury Sports Editor ■ The game could have been called “The Battle of Pork Chop Hill.” But for seventh-ranked Texas A&M, it ^bs more like Napoleon’s Waterloo. ■ No. 17 Arkansas used its stubborn defense and powerful rushing of fers- to gain a l4-10 victory Analysis aiid keep ■)tton Bowl hopes alive. A&M, which holds a half-game lead in the Buthwest Conference race, can Bnch a tie for the title by defeating Texas Christian this Saturday. ■ Had A&M won, it would have vir tually assured itself of a trip to the J Conon Bowl. But quarterback Kevin h HHurray and the offense that estab lished itself as a “team of destiny” with incredible comebacks over Bay lor and SMU couldn’t find the magic M in Little Rock’s War Memorial Sta- 'Twn! din in. ■“I felt like we had them right where we wanted them,” Murray Hd. ■•■■■For a while, it appeared A&M, now 7-2 overall and 5-1 in the con- feience, had just about everything ■ing its way. Minnesota had ■nned No. 2 Michigan 20-17, Notre Dame was ahead of Penn Hte (an Irish win supposedly would have brought No. 1 Miami to the Htton Bowl), and A&M had a first Hwn at the Arkansas 14-yard line wii i one minute left in the game. H\fter a two-yard run by fullback Roger Vick and a pass break-up by Aijkansas’ Erik Whitted, A&M faced a third-and-8. Wide receiver Shea Hiker was two yards into the end zone and wide open as he worked to n'd the middle, but Murray threw tha ball high and behind Walker. ■Then on the Aggies’ last despera- tion attempt with 38 seconds left, Murray was flushed out of the Hket and tried to hit Vick in the Hu front corner of the end zone. He pass went high, was tipped by \ J Arkansas’ Odis Lloyd, and Vick got a hand on it. But he couldn’t hold on and the football sailed to and then off tight end Rod Bernstine’s fingertips. Even if Bernstine had been able to catch the ball, his momentum and the Ra- zorback defenders were moving him out of bounds. “I should have caught the ball,” Vick said. “It was a nice throw. The defensive back jumped in front of me, but anything that hits your hands you should catch.” But it was only on the Aggies’ final drive that A&M’s offense looked anything like that high-powered ma chine spectators saw in previous games. A&M offensive coordinator Lynn Amedee said before the season be gan that the Aggies would have a pass-first offense. But A&M didn’t display that philosophy throughout the first three quarters. The Aggies looked more like the Razorbacks’ run-oriented flex-bone offense. And that worked for A&M after Arkansas scored the first touchdown of the game on strong running and a good mixture of pass plays. The Ag gies promptly returned the favor on an II-play, 80-yard touchdown drive that elapsed seven minutes and five seconds off the clock. Keith Woodside caught a 7-yard Murray strike for the score. Wood- side caught all five passes on the drive, en route to his 12-catch per formance, one shy of the A&M sin gle-game record held by Ken Mc Lean and Barney Harris. But A&M was too conservative af ter that. On its last drive of the first half, A&M condnously sent Vick, who had 28 carries for 117 yards, into the Arkansas line instead of try ing a deep pass play. A&M, with time running out in the half, had to settle for a Scott Slater 48-yard field-goal attempt, which was moved back five y^rds due to an illegal procedure call. But Slater, who was looking to make his A&M defenders Sammy O’Brient (90) and Johnny Holland (11) stop Arkansas’ Sammy Van Dyke for no gain on the sec- Photo by Dean Saito ond play of the seventh-ranked Aggies’ 14-10 loss to the Ra zorbacks Saturday at War Memorial Stadium in Little Rock. 13th consecutive field goal, missed. After the game, Amedee was asked about A&M’s conservative ap proach. “We tried to keep the ball under neath as much as we could,” Amedee said. “I think we felt field goal (on the last first-half drive) because of the (lack of) timeouts. That’s some thing we don’t usually do.” Coach Jackie Sherrill said Arkan sas kept A&M from throwing deep. “They were dropping eight and nine people off the line of scrimmage,” Sherrill said. “We had plenty of chances, but we didn’t catch the ball at critical times.” The most critical catch of the game was a questionable intercep tion by Razorback Nathaniel White on a third-and-5 play in the third pe riod. Murray was throwing a quick pass to Bernstine, but the ball slipped out of his hand and White dove for the ball. Television replays were inconclusive, but Murray said he felt there wasn’t any question. “Clearly to me, it hit the ground,” the junior quarterback said. The in terception ended a streak of 159 passes without a theft for Murray, who completed 21 of 35 passes for 180 yards on the game. Murray also became fourth on the SWC’s all-time pass completion list with 489 and he now has 6,000 career passing yards for fifth on the list. “I feel like the best team didn’t win,” he said. But the team that played better for the whole game did. Arkansas used its flex-bone well, keeping the See Aggies, page 11 ACADEMY • 1420 Texas Ave. S. (College Station/Bryan) 4 6 t < 6 « £ 6 6 6 6 « «> Olt 6 * e 6 « £ * « < < f fcTt O.i.O