The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 03, 1987, Image 8

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Sports
A&M splits twinbill with
Aggies' Fry throws no-hitter
La. Tech
in 14-0 1
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CHARLES C. SCHROEPPEL, O.D., P.C.
DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY
By Ed Bodde
Assistant Sports Editor
Texas A&M’s bats came back to
life, rapping out 14 hits in the sec
ond game of a double-header with
Louisiana Tech Monday afternoon,
but it was pitcher Darryl Fry who
stole the show.
Fry threw his first collegiate no
hitter as the Aggies blasted the Bull
dogs 14-0 and gained a split of their
double-header. Louisiana Tech won
the first game 5-1.
A&M is now 14-2-1 for the year
and ranked No. 19 in the ESPN col
legiate baseball poll. Louisiana Tech,
whose season has been hampered by
rainouts, is 2-1.
Fry had been struggling of late,
starting the contest with a 6.75 ERA,
but Monday’s game was different.
Fry (2-1) went the full seven innings,
walking only one and recording six
strikeouts.
“In the (bull) pen before the
game, I felt I had good touch on my
pitches,” Fry said. “My curve ball was
working better than it has in a long
time.”
Fry said he hadn’t been able to
throw the curve for strikes early in
the season.
“My main objective was to get
back on track and win a game,” Fry
said. “But I’m glad it turned out this
way.”
It was the first Aggie no-hitter in
Olsen Field since Mark Thurmond
accomplished the feat in 1978.
It was only appropriate that the fi
nal out be a ground ball back
through the box. Fry handled it and
threw to Daron Dacus at first base to
end the game.
“I was going to sacrifice my body
to knock it down,” Fry said.
The Aggies got all the runs they
needed in the first inning. Losing
f iitcher Jordan Stanley (0-1) walked
ead-off man Don Wren, who
promptly stole second base.
Shortstop Ever Magallanes then
lined a single to right field to score
Wren, and Scott Livingstone’s single
then sent Magallanes to third base.
Stanley continued to be hit hard
as John Byington lined to third, but
Chuck Knoblauch followed with still
another single to right field, this
time scoring Magallanes for a 2-0
lead.
Second baseman Terry Taylor
grounded out, but Livingstone
scored on the play; and when Tim
McWilliam doubled into the left-
center-field gap scoring Knoblauch,
the Aggies had a four-run first in-
ning.
Although Fry would not need any
more help offensively, A&M added
single runs in the third and fourth
innings and eight in a fifth inning
highlighted by Livingstone’s three-
run shot off the scoreboard in left
center. It was Livingstone’s seventh
homer of the year as he finished the
game 2-for-3 with four RBI. Taylor
added three RBI on 2-of-4 hitting.
of-4 hitting.
“We bounced back well,” Coach
Mark Johnson said. “The day be
longs to Darryl Fry.”
And also to Richie LeBlanc, who
pitched the Bulldogs to a 5-1 victory
in the first game. LeBlanc (2-0)
seemed to have the Aggie batters
off-balance as he scattered seven hits
over seven innings.
“LeBlanc is an outstanding pitch
er,” Johnson said. “He’s going to be
tough to beat.”
However, the Aggies certainly
didn’t look like a 13-1-1 team going
into the first game. A&M’s starting
pitcher Pat Wernig (2-1) took the
loss as he gave up five runs on seven
hits.
Only two of the runs were earned
as the Aggies committed four errors.
But Wernig often got into trouble
with his five walks.
Louisiana Tech was able to get
three runs in the second inning on
two hits, two walks and a throwing
error by Magallanes.
The Bulldogs got their fourth run
on Charlie Montoyo’s third-inning
blast, his first of the year.
The final Louisiana Tech run was
the result of a walk, another error
and a solid base hit.
A&M was able to avert the shutout
as Dacus drove in Taylor with a sac
rifice fly in the final inning.
A&M will take on Hardin-Sim-
mons in a 1 p.m. double-header to
day at Olsen Field.
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Photo by Tom Ovni*
Texas A&M pitcher Darryl
in A&M’s 14-0 victory over
Fry releases the final pitch of a no-hitter
Louisiana Tech.
don’t YOU come
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GENERAL MEETING
March 3, 7 p.m
601 RUDDER
and join the fun!
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Tod;
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Grt