gg The Battalion ; SPORTS Wednesday, May 3,1989 Ags must sweep Hogs for title )VfC By Richard Tijerina ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR The task the Texas A&M baseball earn faces this weekend is a difficult )ne — they must sweep their three- ;ame series against Arkansas for an indisputed Southwest Conference :hampionship. Going into the series against the Razorbacks, ranked fifth nationally n the latest ESPN/Collegiate Base- )all poll, the second-ranked Aggies rail Arkansas by only one game in inference standings. The Aggies were tied for the con- erence lead last Saturday after Ar ansas dropped the first game of a hree-game series against Texas Fri day night. However, the Aggies dropped jack down to one game behind the Razorbacks in conference standings when they lost the first game of a doubleheader to Houston Saturday. The two teams have been tied for the conference lead or within a game of each other all season. However, now they each only have three conference games left to play—against each other. The series this weekend at Olsen Field begins with a game Friday at 7 p.m. and concludes Saturday with a doubleheader starting at 2 p.m. Trailing the Razorbacks (42-8,16- 2) by a game, the Aggies (48-4,15-3) can ill afford to drop one of this weekend’s games if they want to win conference championship out right. The conference championship comes down to simple arithmetic: If they sweep the series, they win the championship. If they don’t sweep the series, the whole scenario be comes a little sticky. There are several ways the championship can be decided, but all of them come down to this week end’s series. • If the Aggies sweep the Razor- backs, A&M wins the conference championship outright. • If the Razorbacks sweep the Aggies, Arkansas would win the con ference championship outright, SWC Baseball Standings Team Record Pet. Arkansas 16 2 .888 Texas A&M 15 3 .833 Texas 12 6 .667 Texas Tech 8 10 .444 Houston 7 11 .389 Baylor 7 14 .333 TCU 6 12 .333 Rice 4 17 .190 marking the first time the Razor- backs have won a conference championship and making them the only team other than A&M, Texas or Texas Christian ever to win an SWC title. Arkansas would be the first team other than A&M or Texas to win the title outright since 1956, when TCU did it. • If the Aggies win two of three games against the Razorbacks, A&M and Arkansas will end up with iden tical conference records and would share the conference championship as co-champions. They each would be awarded a championship trophy and A&M would be the top seed at the SWC Post-Season Tournament May 17-20 because they would have won the season series with Arkansas. • If the Razorbacks win two of three from the Aggies, Arkansas would win the championship out right by two games. • If one or more of the games are rained out and are unable to be made up, Arkansas would win the championship outright because they have a higher winning percentage in conference games than A&M. In 1980, A&M lost its chance to tie for a conference title with Texas when one of its three games against Arkansas was rained out and never made up. Texas finished with a 18-6 SWC record and won the title outright. The Aggies finished with a 17-6 re cord for second place and went on to lose to Arkansas and Texas Tech in the the double-elimination SWC tournament in College Station that year. The four conference teams with the best SWC records go on to the SWC tournament in College Station. The Aggies, Arkansas and Texas all have assured themselves of being in the top three, but the race re mains close for the fourth and final tournament spot between Texas Tech (8-10) and Houston (7-11). TCU (6-12) is all but mathemati cally eliminated from the tourna ment picture. Texas Tech and Houston play a three-game series with each other May 12-13 at Houston. )b- thai wed Rich- Astros’ Davis what we need Jones fires Brandt from Cowboys; new owner cuts fat’ in organization IRVING (AP) — College player scout Gil Brandt, the last member of the original foursome who built the Dallas Cowboys from scratch, was fired by new owner Jerry Jones, who says the team he bought is “fat, fat, fat.” “He told me finances was the rea son, that he’s losing $29,000 a day,” Brandt told The Associated Press. “He’ll probably fire four or five scouts including Bob Griffin. “I told him I know I did as good a job as possible. I feel good about the 29 years I had with the Cowboys. But it’s a bad way for it to end. He didn’t even shake my hand.” Brandt was a baby photographer who dabbled in evaluating profes sional football talent when he was hired by club president Tex Schramm as the Cowboys chief tal ent scout. Schramm, Brandt, owner Clint Murchison and coach Tom Landry built the team in 1960 starting with an office in the Automobile Club building just off Central Express way. Murchison died several years ago after he had sold the team to Bum Bright. Jones, who bought the team from Bright on Feb. 25 for $140 million, fired Landry. Schramm resigned to become president of the Interna tional Football League. Brandt’s brainstorms included drafting track and basketball stars and using computers to analyze tal ent. He said leaving the team will be like going from “a mansion to a pup tent. But anything beats the water torture of the last few days. You’d jump every time the telephone rang.” The triumvirate management team of Schramm, Landry and Brandt took the Cowboys to 20 con secutive winning seasons (1966-85), including five Super Bowl appear ances and two world championships. Brandt said he had no immediate plans. “I have no plans to join another NFL team,” Brandt said. “I have had an offer to write a book. ” Brandt evaluated the talent for Landry, who made the calls. In the 1970s, the Cowboys were considered the sharpest organization in the NFL at judging talent. In recent years, the formula didn’t work. Of the last 15 players drafted in the first three rounds by Brandt, only four are now starters. The Cowboys haven’t had a win ning season since 1985 and finished 3-13 last year — second worst in their history. Only one player remained on the roster from the 1983 draft. Jones also has fired public rela tions director Doug Todd, a mem ber of the front office staff since 1971; Don Wilson, club treasurer for 18 years; Ann Lloyd, assistant ticket manager for 20 years and Bob Friedman, director of photographic services, who had been with the club 28 years. Joe Bailey, Schramm’s assistant since 1977, fled the purge to join Schramm in the International Foot ball League, as did Suzanne Mitch ell, director of the Cowboys’ cheerleaders. Jones justified his employee-cut ting binge by saying, “I have to make the best decisions I can. We will turn off the lights. Sometimes you have to make hard decisions. You just have to put together the folks you want to go forward with. ” Brandt served as a part-time scout for the Los Angeles Rams under Schramm in the 1950s. When Schramm took command of the ex pansion Cowboys, he immediately hired Brandt. Brandt, a native of Milwaukee and a graduate of the University of Wisconsin, also was a super sleuth at finding free agent talent such as wide receiver Drew Pearson, and de fensive backs Cliff Harris and Ever son Walls. On March 2, Brandt said Jones told the front office people in a meeting: “Let me put your minds at ease. You don’t have a lifetime con tract, but if you do your jobs that’s good enough for me. Schramm said he hated to see all the people he hired “cast aside in a needless manner. It also hurts to see them described as ‘fat.’ They worked many long hours to make the Cow boys into what they are today. The manner in which this has happened has surprised me.” a hero for kids to look up to rot; ton! It ill! ed i 3ther J. nter- more rim that :oun- oes- affil- ie I liltot The sports world needs more Glenn i; Davises. Davis plays baseball for the Houston Astros and leads the National League in I!home runs. More importantly though, I Davis has told the Houston Astros 1 management that he doesn’t want to be [associated with the managements’ home I run production sponsored by Anheuser- Busch. Budweiser is a major sponsor in the ■ televising of Houston Astros home games. I As part of a commercial package, anytime a ■ home run is hit by an Astro, the r? sportscasters cut away with an Anheuser- | Busch/Budweiser screen and announce the I player’s name along with the slogan, “This I Bud’s For You!” The problem is that Davis, the National I League’s home run leader, is active in anti- | drinking campaigns. “Personally, I don’t drink and I don’t I want to be associated with it,” Davis says. “I B try to set a standard and be a role model for a lot of other people. ’. Talk is cheap, so Davis goes the extra mile. During the off-season, Davis makes about 250 public appearances to talk with high school and middle school students about the dangers of alcohol abuse and drunk driving. “I don’t want to be sending out mixed signals to young fans,” he says. That is the reason he went to the Astros’ management and asked not to be part of the promotion. It’s refreshing to see an athlete in the limelight take this positive approach and realize a responsibility to the public. Athletes are people and as such are entitled to their privacy, but as athletes they serve as role models for youth. They must be held accountable for their actions that might influence youth negatively. Case in point: Lawerence Taylor. Taylor is an All-Pro linebacker for the New York Giants. He has been instrumental in the Giants’ rise during the 80s. Naturally, youngsters look toward Taylor’s success and use him for a role model. What do they do when Taylor is suspended for drug use? What kind of message is Taylor trying to send to his fans when he writes his autobiography and brags about showing up for games high on cocaine, and when he relates stories about the relative ease in eluding the NFL’s uranalysis tests? The problem extends deeper than just an isolated player in professional football. These incidents pop up all over the sports world. Ben Johnson, Canadian Olympic great, and six other Olympians were stripped of their medals after it was discovered they were using steriods. It seems the public is made aware of athletes’ illicit drug use daily. On top of that, we hear the same names over and over. It must be a hard lesson for some to learn. Davis himself learned the hard way. Involved in a serious alcohol-related car accident at 17, Davis doesn’t want others to learn the lesson the same way. “That scared me sober,” says Davis. “I don’t want other kids to have to go through that. ” It was only recently Davis learned about the Anheuser-Busch/Budweiser promotion. Upon discovering that his name was being used in connection with it, Davis went to management and asked to be excluded. “Players live in glass houses,” he says. “People look to us. Kids pattern their lives after us. I think every ballplayer should set an example... people are watching you all the time.” It’s time for athletes, management and society to pull together and be responsible for their actions. A stricter policy of drug- user enforcement needs to be instituted either to rehabilitate users, or get them out of the public’s eye and out of professional sports. “We need heroes, we need role models, we need guys who can stand up and say you don’t need to follow the crowd,” he says. What we actually need is more Glenn Davises. 4^ TVSt? Registration Applications are now available in your Student Finance Box (Room 217 MSC) or in the Student Programs Office (Room 216 MSC)!!! Fee: $20.00 Deadline: May 19, 1989 Applications may be turned in at Carol Griffin's desk in Room 216 MSC NEW MANAGEMENT Lots of Changes: TRAVIS HOUSE Sand Volleyball courts Ceiling fans Mini blinds Covered parking Sun screens New carpet available 505 Harvey Rd. College Station, TX 77840 693-7184 Open 8-6 Mon-Sat Alpha Kappa Psi National Professional Business Fraternity Proudly announce its newly inducted members for the 1989 Spring Semester. JON ARMSTRONG SHANE BARTON RICK BROWN BILL CAVANAUGH JULIE DAVIS CHRIS FISCHLER HANS GEORGE TAMARA HANNES GINGER JOHNSON JEFF JUDAH KATHLEEN KENDRICK MARK MCALLISTER BRIAN MCGREGOR MICHELLE MILLER KELLY NORWOOD BRIAN RICKMERS MIKE RYAN GRETASCHRAEDER RENE SMITH TODD STORCH Congratulations Kappa Pledge Class