Friday, December 11,1987/The Battalion/Page 11 Sports Bowl system gets a ‘C’ at finals time By Hal L. Hammons Assistant Sports Editor So, as we merrily skip along be tween finals, I’m sure we all have the same, all-pervasive thought running through our brains. No, silly, not _ Analysis of collegiate football, of course. What’s happening, people? I’m talking about serious incom petence here. And it’s most evident in the great old dinosaur we have mown to know and loathe: the bowls. And it shows in the grade-out, and I grade very leniently. I actually failed only two of the bunch. Are you ready? A whopping 76.8 percent (a solid C) for the group of 18. Yes, 18. And that’s after the Cherry Bowl was dropped for being, excuse the pun please, the pits. Space does not allow me to prop erly analyze each one, more’s the pity. But let’s take them quickly. Dec. 12, California Bowl, Fresno, Calif. — San Jose St. vs. Eastern Michigan. Grade: D I’m not kidding. Eastern Michi gan. The only thing that keeps this game above passing is, well, passing. San Jose St. nas the original 50-per- game pass attack. Unfortunately that means the game will last longer. Dec. 19, Independence Bowl, Shreveport, Louis. — Washington vs. Tulane. Grade: F The founding fathers are turning over in their graves. Where did Washington place in the Pac-10, one of the weakest conferences known to man, fourth? Fifth? T his game died with Chris Chandler, ex-Heisman Trophy candidate, at Kyle Field. Dec. 22, All-American Bowl, Bir mingham, Ala. — Brigham Young vs. Virginia. Grade: D Boy, the viewers are going to flock to the boob tube for this one, huh? Maybe there’ll be a “Leave it to Bea ver” rerun on. Dec. 25, Sun Bowl, El Paso — Ok lahoma State vs. West Virginia. Grade: D Isn’t Oklahoma State the other school up there? Orange/black vs. Yellow/black. Color unnecessary on this one. At least OSU’s ranked. Dec. 25, Aloha Bowl, Honolulu, Ha. — UCLA vs. Florida. Grade: B- The batde of the could’ve-beens. The Bruins ought to be in the Rose Bowl; Florida lost five games to great opposition. Possibly the most talent in the pre-1988 games. Dec. 29, Liberty Bowl, Memphis, Tenn. — Georgia vs. Arkansas. Grade: C + Two boring, second-division teams pound on each other. Whee. And what’s with all this patriotic stuff? Dec. 30, Holiday Bowl, San Diego, Calif. — Iowa vs. Wyoming. Grade: C- Take heart, it’s almost New Year’s Day. Dec. 31, Freedom Bowl, Ana heim, Calif. — Arizona State vs. Air Force. Grade: C Yes, you too can have a mediocre bowl game in your local suburb. Dec. 31, Gator Bowl, Jackson ville, Fla. — South Carolina vs. Louisiana State. Grade: B + By far the best one so far. South Carolina lost to Nebraska and Mi ami; LSU tied Ohio State and lost to Alabama on bad days. Good game. Dec. 31, Bluebonnet Bowl, Hous ton — Pittsburgh vs. Texas. Grade: C + Watch a human battering ram named Ironhead pound into non existent Longhorn defensive tackles. Serves UT right for playing on New Year’s Eve with five losses. Jan. 1, Florida Citrus Bowl, Or lando, Fla. — Penn State vs. Clem- son. Grade: C- Battle of the over-rateds. Most had Clemson contending for the na tional championship — they couldn’t even pull it off with eight games at home. Penn State is just bad, and we’re not talking Michael Jackson here. Jan. 1, Fiesta Bowl, Tempe, Ariz. — Florida State vs. Nebraska. Grade: A Now we’re talking footballl The Huskers beat UCLA, Arizona State and South Carolina before finally losing to Oklahoma. The Seminoles lost by a heartbeat to Miami, and you can’t convince me they aren’t the best team in the country. Jan. 1, Cotton Bowl, Dallas — Notre Dame vs. Texas A&M. Grade: B Are you going to try to tell me people are going to watch this in stead of the Fiesta Bowl? Too bad — oughta be a good one if you like de fense. Tim Brown notwithstanding, 20 points probably will win the game. (Insider scoop: take the Ag gies.) Jan. 1, Sugar Bowl, New Orleans, La.— Auburn vs. Syracuse. Grade: B + People will Finally figure out what the Orangemen (what a name —• yuck!) have. Auburn’s a lot better than I gave them credit for a few weeks ago. Jan. 1, Rose Bowl, Pasadena, Calif. — Southern California vs. Michigan State. Grade: B- The Granddaddy draws the weak one of the New-Year’s-Day bunch, as usual. State’s one-dimensional, but that’s more dimensions than USC has. How they beat UCLA is any body’s guess. Jan. 1, Orange Bowl, Miami, Fla. — Oklahoma vs. Miami (Fla.). Grade: A + Give me a break. Just how perfect can a game get? A recreation of the 1986 Orange Bowl. The revenge- minded lunatics of Oklahoma. The conceit-crazed apes of Miami. An il legal-jobs scanaal in Soonerville. Three championship games in a row for the Hurricanes. Unstoppable of fense vs. unbreakable defense. Other unstoppable offense vs. other unbreakable defense. An undis puted national championship. And on and on and on. .. . Jan. 2, Hall of Fame Classic, Tampa, Fla. — Alabama vs. Michi gan. Grade: C + Jan. 2, Peach Bowl, Atlanta, Ga. — Tennessee vs. Indiana. Grade: C Take these together as games un fortunate enough to be played while everybody reads the paper about The Big Game and all the ones they missed while watching other ones. Not bad matchups, but poor timing, fellas. A&M hoopsters back in action against SFA The Texas A&M basketball team will be back in action Sunday af ternoon at G. Rollie White Coliseum against Stephen F. Austin State. A&M Head Coach Shelby Metcalf said, “We wanted to give the kids a study break with the 2 p.m. starting time. You need a relaxed body for an alert mind.” This will be the second time the two teams have met this year. In the first round of the Jowers Jamboree Dec. 4 in San Marcos, A&M defeat- edthe Lumberjacks 72-67. A&M, 4-2 so far this year, has sur prised many with their strong shoot ing this season. The Aggies lead the Southwest Conference with a 53.4 percent average from the field. Their 55.2 percent average from the three-point area also leads the con ference. SFA lives and dies by the three- point stripe. Guards Scott Dimak and Eric Rhodes ranked second and fourth, respectively, last year in three-point shooting. As of Tuesday, A&M’s Darryl Mc Donald was leading the conference in scoring with an average of 19.8 points pier game. Tipoff for the game is scheduled for 2 p.m. Smart money on A&M to beat hefty spread By Hal L. Hammons Assistant Sports Editor I’m not a betting kind of guy. But if I was, I wouldn’t let the line drop any low^p^on the Cotton Bowl. I saw opening ith lines with Opinion Notre Dame as eight- point favorites over Texas A&M. It’s not by accident that it’s dropped to less than six. People in the know realize A&M isn’t eight points weaker than Notre Dame. They aren’t six points weaker, either, and the line probably is going to drop some more to show that. The straight fact of the matter is that A&M will very likely win the game, and the Aggies cer tainly are going to keep tne game close. Note: • The Irish are on a down note. Their last two games, both losses, destroyed their already- bleak hope for a national championship, and the Cotton Bowl and A&M look a lot less in viting and intimidating than the Orange Bowl and Oklahoma. • Tim Brown did not deserve the Heisman Trophy, no matter how weak the competition was. He’s had two atrocious games in a row against Penn State and Mi ami, and he’s coming off a shoul der injury he got diving for a ball. • Jackie Sherrill isn’t going to let Tim Brown take a punt or kickoff back for a touchdown. The Aggies faced a similar threat in Eric Metcalf in the Texas game. Craig Stump just didn’t punt it to him, and all of the Ag gie kickoffs were grounders. • The Cotton Bowl/Heisman Trophy Jinx. Trophy winners don’t do well in post-season, and the Cotton Bowl is especially no torious. Witness mediocre show ings by Bo Jackson, Doug Flutie and Earl Campbell in their fare well performances. • Despite having a Heisman Trophy flanker, the Irish have no passing game. Remember what happened to Arkansas when they brought a running attack alone — one much more potent than Notre Dame’s — into Kyle Field. • The Aggie defense is incred ible. It’s even tougher against the run. • The only time Notre Dame has faced a defense as good as A&M’s —at Miami — they did not score. • The weakness of the Aggie defense — overpursuit — is no secret. A&M will be working on misdirection plays constandy un til New Year’s Day. Remember: Texas and Metcalf were the pier- feet combination to exploit the weakness, and they couldn’t do it. • Craig Stump probably will start at quarterback for A&M. ; Yes, Aggies, that’s good. He- proved against Texas Christian that he can pass effectively some times. The impiortant thing is that he will pass, opening up the rush ing lanes for Keith Woodside, Matt Gurley and Darren Lewis. If the offense stagnates, Bucky Richardson will be more than ca pable of coming off the bench to save the day, much like in the Texas game. • Notre Dame won’t score many more than 20 points against John Ropier and the Aggie de fense. A&M’s offense, working against an average-at-best Irish defense, ought to be able to sup ply that much. • The Cotton Bowl crowd will not exaedy be non-partisan. The Aggie alumni and students should outnumber the Irish, and . all of the local fans will Not only Aggies in the- Dallas area, there is, . . . well, let’s face it: a significant degree of ha tred in Texas directed toward South Bend, Ind., due in part, like it or not, to an anti-Catnolic sentiment that does exist in this state. Many Texans have two fa vorite teams: their own and the team playing Notre Dame. That should put a few more Aggie sup- pjorters in the seats. Aggies. 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