he Battalion SPORTS 7 Wednesday, February 1, 1989 gs •pharmacni :acilityivlij ( i pital. ta ken sedan "n enough ,in g t0 happ, j* appear m, •ly about r uited subjt Jates for p[ ley were g,, a placebo were not n udes very t euphoric, * ni the place’,, ition appro,, now one oft Myers hast,. iolm, theco: •s. er anti-anxi, id Atavanit 00 million j, tlier compa: ion f'romthe® was firing aw the bant its were cot t sounded h: hot by there cross thestre said. “Th; i my seat at nil I heatd e up becauv •'ere going ;e number the sandu; hootings toa of the victii h shop. Ih nd fell dn d a car.. li Gras Hard-luck Aggies meet Horns tonight Texas upsets Vols Lady Horns, Arkansas win By Tom Kehoe SPORTS WRITER Shelby Metcalf and his Texas Ag gies will try to end a four-game los ing streak tonight when they take on Texas A&M at Texas • What:The Texas A&M Aggies (N- 11; 1-6 in the SWT) visit the Texas Longhorns (15-4; (i-l)in Southwest Conference action. • When: Tipof f is at 7:35 p.rn. • Where:Frank Erwin Center in Austin. • Radio/TV:T he game can be heard on KT AM-AM 1240 with Chuck Cooperstein handling the play-by- play and Duke Keith on color com mentary. the University of T exas at 7:35 p.m. in the Frank Erwin Special Events Center in Austin. The Longhorns will be a formida ble opponent, coining off a 96-65 win over SMU. The win kept Texas in a tie with I CC and Arkansas for the conference lead. A&M stands at 8-1 1 overall and 1- 6 in Southwest Conference play while Texas is 6-1 in the conference and 15-4 overall under new coach Tom Penders. This game will be the first meet ing between Penders and Metcalf . Metcalf has used many lineups up to this point in the season trying to find the combination that will put the Aggies in the win column. He said tonight’s starting lineup depends on who works best in prac tice this week. The Aggies continue to struggle in SWC play despite cutting their turnover average from 19.3 per game (prior to the SWC slate) to 1 1.7 in SWC games. Another curious sta tistic shows A&M having more points from the field than four of their SWC opponents and more re bounds against four of their SWC antagonists. A disparity at the free throw line and lapses at critical times have been major factors in the losses. On a brighter note, junior guard David has apparently snapped out of a slump in which he averaged only 2.2 points per outing alter averaging 12.8 over the season’s first 1 0 games. In the last three games, Williams has averaged 10.3 points with a high of 12 points against T exas Tech last weekend. ASSOCIATED PRESS Texas 69, Tennessee 67 Clarissa Davis, who wasn’t even supposed to play, scored 38 points, 28 in the second half, to lead No. 1 1 Texas to a 69-67 victory over No. 2 Tennessee Tuesday in an intersec tional game at Austin. The loss dropped the Vols to 18-2 on the season. Texas improved to 13-4. Texas officials had reported on Monday that Davis would miss the Tennessee game with a sprained an kle. But she suited up and led all scorers. A Tennessee turnover at 0:25, with Texas in a 68-65 lead, spoiled the Vols’ comeback hopes. Tennessee dominated the first half. Frost hit two more baskets, includ ing a rebound jumper at the buzzer, to help pull the Vols to a 33-25 lead at the half. The Lady Longhorns took their first lead, 43-41, with 12:08 remain ing on Davis’s jumper. Davis then scored Texas’ next 18 points. Gordon and Sheila Frost led the Vols with 18 points each. The Vols dominated the back- boards, pulling down 54 rebounds to Texas’ 36, hut faltered at the free- throw line, where they hit just 3-of- 13. Arkansas 84, Houston 82 The Arkansas Lady Razorbacks scored the final 10 points, including Juliet Jackson’s 10-foot fall-away jump shot at 0:02, to defeat the Houston Lady Cougars 84-82 in a Southwest Conference basketball game Tuesday night in Houston. Arkansas improved to 12-5 for the season and 6-2 in league play. Houston fell to 10-8 and 4-4. Houston led throughout the con test and led by 12 points with 10:37 to play. But the Lady Razorbacks outscored the Lady Cougars 27-13 the rest of the way. In overcoming an 82-74 deficit, Arkansas shut out Houston from the field over the fi nal 4:01. Arlene Brown led Houston with 19 points, and Sallie Routt added 18 points and 14 rebounds. Arkansas was led by Shelly Wallace who scored 24 points and grabbed 14 rebounds. NFL free agency redesigned n and Top in at 6 p.m. all and will off-campus either to in the pa- iclude Par- /, the Sail- ms Greek float will ardi Gras necklaces, 2[C)ld coins) id gum, to jgrams NEW YORK (AP) — Many will be household names. Some may even be legends. On Wednesday, many of the NFL’s biggest stars could become free agents when the league puts into effect its new contract plan. A radical departure from the old free agency system, it is being im posed unilaterally without a uni6n contract and will unconditionally free more than 600 players. Each team will be allowed to protect just* 37 of the average of 59 on its roster. “You’U see Super Bowl players. Pro Bowl players, very big names,” said l ex Schramm, president of the Dallas Cowboys and a member of the owners’ Management Council. ( “But there will be reasons for them — they’ll be ba?P¥ftedical risks, they’ll be older. A lot of them will be getting good salaries, own homes in the area, things like that . They won’t want to move.” Under the old plan, players of fered a contract by another team could move only alter their team waived its right of first refusal. The new team would also have to com pensate the old one with draft choices. Only two players in 10 years moved under that system, most re cently, linebacker Wilber Marshall of Chicago, who signed a $6 million, five-year contract last year with Washington. He joined the Redskins after the Bears declined to match the offer and Chicago got two first- round draft picks in return. Parts of that system remain in ef fect — protected players whose con tracts have expired still would be subject to first refusal, and teams signing them would have to part with draft choices. The rest, under contract or not, will be free until April 1 to go elsewhere without com pensation. Although few teams have identi fied unprotected players, the con sensus is that most will protect younger players with potential while leaving older, more established play ers unprotected. The older ones have less incentive to move; high sal aries, or injury problems that make them unattractive to prospective bid ders. The Chicago Bears, for example, have already said they will not pro tect three starters from their 1986 Super Bowl champions, including 31-year-old linebacker Otis Wilson and cornerback Mike Richardson, 28. Wilson, coming off reconstruc tive knee surgery, vowed to return to haunt the Bears. The New York Giants will proba bly leave unprotected 29-year-old nose tackle Jim Burt, who has a his tory of back problems, and starting guard Billy Aid, also 29. Others likely to be set free include quarterback Danny White and de fensive tackje Raqdy White of Dal las; running back Tony Dorsett, de fensive end Rulon Jones and cornerback Mark Haynes of Denver. running back Ottis Anderson of 1 the Giants; defensive end Bruce Clark and nose tackle Tony Elliott of 'New Orleans and center Dwight Ste- iphenson of the Miami Dolphins) Magic leads Lakers past Houston HOUSTON (AP) — Magic Johnson recorded his NBA-lead ing 11th triple-double and Mi chael Cooper sparked a third- quarter scoring run Tuesday night to lead the Los Angeles Lakers to a 125-114 win over the Houston Rockets. Johnson had 17 points, 11 re bounds and 10 assists for his fourth triple-double' in his past eight games. A.C. Green led the Lakers with 24 points, followed by James Worthy with 23 and Cooper with 16. T he win is the Lakers’ ninth in their last 10 games. Sleepy Floyd led Houston with 37 points, a season high for him. Akeem Olajuwon followed with 25 points and 11 rebounds. Los Angeles outscored Hous ton 24-6 to open the third quar ter, with Cooper scoring eight of his 11 third-quarter points, as the Lakers opened an 87-67 lead with 5:34 lef t in the period. A 3-point shot by Cooper and a basket by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar gave the Lakers a 92-71 lead be fore Houston narrowed its deficit 98-84 going into the fourth quar ter. The Lakers led by as much as 24 points, and Houston was never closer than 11 in the fourth quar ter. Parity has turned the NBA upside down rade he lot dur- >ur vehide i must re- fore 5 p.nv The NBA All-Star game is going to be played Feb. 11 in I louston and with it brings the hall wax point in the 1988-89 NBA season. This is the time when teams that are serious about contending for the championship in June take stock and get ready for the home stretch. This year the teams that are preparing for the title run just might surprise you. Usually you could count on the Boston Celtics or the Los Angeles Lakers to lie leading the wax with the other right on the leader's tail. Boston and Los Angeles have won all but one title in the eighties. T his year may be different. Parity has struck the NBA and done so with a vengeance. Boston (a team everyone loves to hate) has fallen on hard times. How hard? Boston is playing below .500 and has been for most of the season. Boston (20-21) has lost seven games at the Garden so f ar this year. Time was when Boston at home meant a xx in. guaranteed. Things are so bad at home that even the Indiana Pacers (1 1-30) beat the Celtics at home. For Boston’s sake and its fans, Larrv Bird can't get better fast enough. With Boston in the dumps, Los Angeles should be running away with the league and on their way to their third staright NBA title, right? Wrong. T he Lakers are not in as bad as shape as the Celtics but, they do have problems. At 29-13 the Lakers own the second best record in the league. Stan Golaboff Sports Writer However, the Lakers, who own the best home record in the league, can’t seem to win on the road. Last year the L.akers were 15-7 on the road at this point. T his year they are 1 1-12. T heir last road victory before Sunday’s thrashing of Dallas was on Dec. 13. Despite this fact they are still near the top. So who is on top at the halfway point? Is it Detroit? The Pistons did knock the Celtic s out of the playoffs last year. They took the Lakers to seven games in the Finals. I hex hav e everyone back from that team and were picked by many to vx in it all. The Pistons aren’t even on top of their division. Detroit is four games out of first, although they do own the third-best record in basketball at 27-13. an rRoad >f The ant AT A&M NEARLY EVERYBODY (36,000 active, affluent Aggies) Reads The Battalion ALPHA EPSILON DELTA THE PREMEDICAL AND PREDENTAL HONOR SOCIETY OF TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY Requirements: 1. Overall and Science GPA of 3,2 2. Completed 45 Hours Pledge Information Meeting Feb. I, 1989 7 p.m. 402 Rudder Tower - £*Ic*vnHall Novus/RCA Recording Artist New Age Pianist Tuesday, February 14 Sr. VALENTINE'S DAY 8:00 p.m. Rudder Theatre tickets $6.00 Tickets available at MSC Box Office more Information call 845 FREE BROILED CRAWFISH THURSDAY AND FRIDAY 5:00 P.M-WE RUN OUT 2 DRINK MINIMUM BRAZOS LANDING SEAFOOD GRILL AND BAR 103 Boyett 846-3497 AT NORTHGATE The Battalion Since 1878 • We Deliver • 846-5273 • We Deliver • 846-5273 • I6&M Steakhousef $ 108 College Main, Northgate T » (D Chicken Fried Steak incl. Baked Potato or Fries, Salad, Texas Toast, Iced tea 99 Dine in only Expires 2/07/89 • We Deliver • 846-5273 • We Deliver • 846-5273 • AM/PM Clinics CLINICS Our New College Station location « > offers Birth Control Counseling , Women’s Services Female doctors on duty Student 10% discount with ID 693-0202 OVERWHELMED BY READING ASSIGNMENTS? ? YOU CAN CUT YOUR STUDY TIME INHALE ASSOCIATED READING CENTERS Is offering a FREE ONE HOUR INTRODUCTION to the dynamic techniques for reading and studying “So,” you say. “If the Lakers have the second- best record and the Pistons the third and Detroit isn’t in first, then the best team in basketball must be in the Central division." You’re right. A drum roll if you please. The top team is the Cleveland Cavaliers. The Cavaliers? T he Cavs (31-9) have compiled the best record in an odd way. Normally the team with the best record has the best home record. The Cavs are 18-2 at home, good for fourth in the league. However, They do have the league’s best road record at 13-7. In fact they are just one of three teams in the NBA that sport a winning record on the road. The other two are the Pistons at 10-9 and the Milwaukee Bucks at 11-9, both Central Division teams. What makes the Cavs record even more impressive is that they are successful on the road at a time when 65 percent of the home teams are winning, which is up from 55 percent for last year. The Cavs have also compiled this record in the tough Central Division which placed five ol its six teams in the playoffs last year.This year only the Indiana Pacers don’t have a winning record in the division. Cleveland is also 20-5 against the tough Eastern Conference. Even the Lakers, the best ol the West, are only 8-7 against the East. But Cleveland as a front runner? Come on? 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