The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 08, 1989, Image 10

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    11
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[Battalion
Since 1878
Spring Induction Banquets
April 4th & 5th
Free Steak Dinners
Compliments
Association of Former Students
Honoring
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Graduating Seniors
Class of ’89
April 4th & 5th
6:30 p.m.
MSC Ballroom
Tickets Available
March 28, 29 & 30 MSC
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Page 10
The Battalion
Wednesday, March 8,1989
O’Donovan leads Aggies past Deacons
Whitteker returns from injury
to spark 7-1 victory over Wake
The return of senior captain
Craig Whitteker and the consistent
play of junior Shaun O’Donovan
highlighted the Texas A&M men’s
tennis team’s impressive 7-1 victory
over Wake Forest at home Tuesday.
The victory improved A&M’s sea
son record to 4-7 while the Deacons
fall to 4-8.
A&M is undefeated against un
ranked teams.
O’Donovan began the contest in
top form in the top-seeded match,
taking the First set with a score of 6-
4, and was leading 4-1 in the second
when Wake Forest’s Siggi Degler
withdrew due to an injury.
O’Donovan has compiled a 6-4
season record thus far, and is unde
feated in one match since moving to
the No. 1 spot in the Aggie lineup.
Second-seeded Gustavo Espinosa
suffered the only loss for A&M in
the match, dropping a 6-3, 6-0 con
test to Wake’s Gilles Ameline.
Matt Zisette defeated Wake’s
Jorge Sedeno 7-6, 6-1 in the third-
seed match.
No. 4 position, where he has com
piled a 6-3 record.
Freshman Blake Barsalou also
took three sets to defeat Wake’s Jean
de Rivieres 6-4, 1-6, 6-2 in the Fifth-
seed match.
Whitteker made his return to the
lineup in the sixth-seeded position,
taking a 7-5, 4-6, 7-6 win from the
Deacons’Justin Chapman.
Whitteker said he was just happy
to be playing after being in bed three
weeks ago with a knee injury. But he
said he’s not back by any measure.
“Really, I was pretty lucky to win
the match,” Whitteker said. “It feels
good to play and I hope to get back
to where I was before the injury. It’s
good to get back and get a win.”
Freshman Doug Brown took his
fourth-seeded match with Wake’s
Doron Hartal to the three-set limit
before clinching a 6-7, 6-4, 6-2 vic
tory. Brown has achieved a 7-4 over
all record in the individual singles’
standings, playing consistently in the
In doubles action, the top-seeded
pairing of Espinosa and O’Donovan
had no trouble in defeating Wake’s
Hartal and Sedeno, posting a 6-2, 6-
3 victory while the second-seeded
team of Barsalou and Brown coasted
to a 6-4, 6-2 win over Wake Forest’s
Chapman and Powell.
Greg Dyer and Zisette spilt the
first two sets of their third-seeded
match with Wake’s Ameline and
Powell before the contest was called
at 6-4, 5-7.
A&M Head Coach David Kent
said the match was a good win over a
good Wake Forest team, and that the
Photo by Kathy 1
A&M’s top-seeded Shaun O’Donovan defeated Wake For
est’s Siggi Degler in straight sets Tuesday.
A&M squad would start rolling now
with the return of Whitteker.
“Whitteker had the knee opera
tion three weeks ago today,” Kent
said. “It’s unbelievable for a guy to
do that after only two days of prac
tice and no competition. It took a lot
of guts to come out here and win.”
Kent also praised the play of
O’Donovan and Zisette, as well as the
two freshmen, Brown and Barsalou
"O’Donovan is playing good ten
nis,” Kent said. “He really played
some top-flight tennis today and hai
provided good leadership to the
team.”
Mustangs begin spring football drills
DALLAS (AP) — The spring foot
ball healing process for Southern
Methodist’s national shame began
on a snow-fringed field Tuesday
with Coach Forrest Gregg promising
the school will restore its former
glory without cheating.
“Nothing that has happened is
going to take away from what this
place is all about and we’ll be back —
the right way,” said Gregg, a star
tackle at SMU in the 1950s.
Tight end David Bearden wore a
T-shirt, saying “Do You Believe In
The Second Coming?”
“I do,” Gregg said. “I believe SMU
will be back in the Cotton Bowl some
day.”
It’s been two years on the sidelines
serving hard time for SMU because
of a slush fund that reached the
highest offices at the proud univer
sity.
Bill Clements, now the governor
of Texas, was among those involved
in the fund while he was chairman of
the SMU Board of Regents.
A new school president, a new
athletic director and a new head
coach were brought aboard in the
fallout of the NCAA’s first death
penalty.
On Sept. 2, SMU plays Rice in a
stadium that will be familiar only to
those who followed Mustang football
in the 1940s and early 1950s.
SMU won’t be playing in 65,000-
seat Texas Stadium where Eric Dick
erson and Craig James lit up the
scoreboard.
Instead, the Mustangs will com
pete in their red and blue on cam
pus, in musty old Ownby Stadium,
which is undergoing a $1.5 million
facelift.
SMU’s thin team worked out this
fall but spring has brought an air of
optimism to “The Hilltop” because
Dla
players, students, and alumni can
see the looming schedule.
The intersectional schedule in
cludes Connecticut, North Texas,
and a November trip into the land of
the national champions, Notre
Dame.
Athletic Director Doug Single said
he didn’t try to get out of the con
tract with Notre Dame because “I
wanted our student-athletes to thrill
at the experience of playing in South
Bend.”
new class,” Gregg said. “What you
see this spring is not what you’ll see
this fall.”
Gregg had 70 players last fall (17
on scholarship) who worked 10
weeks. He had 68 report on Tues
day. He recruited nine linemen who
average 6-foot-4, 254 pounds.
Of the Mustangs who signed in
February, six are members of the
National Honor Society and six are
in the Who’s Who of High School
Students. Two received Presidential
academic awards.
game is all-out every play of even
game and every practice.”
SMU will have a wide-open of
fense similar to the Mustangs past
ing circus days of the 1950s will
Fred Benners.
“We will use the run-and-shootof
fense,” Gregg said. “We’ll throw tht
ball a lot. We’ll have a scheme de
signed to put a lot of points on ihi
board. I think that will interest pee
pie.”
It should be fun until the kickoff
for the young Mustangs.
“That game will be interesting,”
Osborn said. “Maybe that’s why
coach Gregg has us running six
miles a day.”
SMU collected 25 scholarship sig
natures in February but Gregg can’t
work with that group until August.
The freshmen report on Aug. 7 and
the rest of the squad on Aug. 9.
“We upgraded our talent with this
Gregg, who played for Vince
Lombardi in the NFL, stresses con
ditioning as the primary goal of
spring workouts.
“We’ll have to be in better condi
tion than our opponents because
we’re going to have fewer and
younger people,” he said.
will run a h
Defensively, SML
with a lot of change-ups.
SMU, which had played free am
loose with the NCAA rules, chedb
every little thing now.
“I want to develop a team that
doesn’t make a lot of mental mis
takes and plays 60 minutes every
game. The only way you play this
“A club team from England
wanted to come over and work om
with us,” Gregg said. “Were st
shorthanded we thought it was i
great idea. Then we called tht
NCAA and they told us it would cos
us a game.”
SMU has learned its lesson.
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