The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 16, 1989, Image 13

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P0. 80x80728. Lincoln. NE 68501
Monday, October 16,1989 The Battalion Page 13 H 1
photo by Jay Janner
UH’s Chuck Weatherspoon bowls over A&M defenders Wil
liam Thomas (11) and Mickey Washington (1) on Saturday.
Aggies
(Continued from page 11)
too far. When the Cougars beat
Arizona State, they were flagged for
23 penalties.
However, the Aggies’ Wallace was
the king of intimidation Saturday.
His removal of Ware’s helmet sig
naled the end of game, he said.
“Grabbing Ware’s helmet relieved
a lot of frustration for me ... it was
when I had his helmet in my hand
that I finally sensed that we were
going to win,” Wallace said.
Although Ware got much more
attention than Pavlas coming into
the game, his performance was a let
down. He completed 28 of 53 passes
for 247 yards and a touchdown, but
was intercepted three times.
Ware was pressured all day. He
was sacked twice by William
Thomas, once by Trent Lewis and
once by Wallace. Thomas’ sacks were
both blindside hits, and one caused a
fumble.
Thomas said he wasn’t suprised
that the A&M defense stopped
Ware.
“We’ve done it the last two years,
and he knew that we were going to
come at him, and we did. That’s our
style of play,” Thomas said.
A&M Coach R.C. Slocum said his
team wasn’t intimidated by Houston.
“We knew what we were up
against,” Slocum said. “The scheme
of our defense enables us to do some
things other people can’t do.”
Slocum was pleased with the Ag
gie defensive effort, he said.
“It’s more difficult for a quar
terback to have people flying around
his ankles and face and still throw,”
he said. “Throwing the football is a
rhythmic thing.
“Our plan was to disrupt his tem
po,” Slocum said. “We mixed the
blitz and the zone. That’s a danger
ous style of play, but it was some
thing that we had to go with.”
Ware wasn’t suprised.
“They did what we expected them
to do,” he said. “We just didn’t exec
ute.”
Defense, execution, scoring and
intimidation:
The Aggies did it all better Satur
day.
Pavlas
(Continued from page 11)
play of the game for either team.
“The big key was our balanced of
fense,” Pavlas said. “We wanted to be
able to throw it and run it.”
The Aggies did both. For the first
time this year, the Cougars were out-
gained in total yards. UH led the na
tion in total yardage going into the
game, but the Aggies outgained the
Cougars 414-369.
With Pavlas at quarterback, the
Aggies kept the ball longer than the
Cougars — one of A&M’s goals com
ing into the game. It marked the
third consecutive year that A&M
held the ball longer than UH.
It also marked the third consec
utive year the Aggies beat the Cou
gars. UH Coach Jack Pardee, an All-
American linebacker at A&M in
1957, has yet to beat the Aggies.
“The defense played with a lot of
heart out there today,” Pavlas said.
“They played a great game and did a
great job. Our running game was the
big key. But you’ve got to have great
defense to back you up.”
The Aggies gained 251 yards on
the ground. Running back Darren
Lewis led the team with 120 yards,
including a key 84-yard gain in the
fourth quarter. Fullback Robert Wil
son rushed for 115 yards and one
touchdown.
“The offensive line did a really
great job all day,” Pavlas said. “Basi
cally, we stopped ourselves with
turnovers, and I blame myself for
those.”
Pavlas suffered three intercep
tions — the most for him this season.
He now has seven interceptions on
the year, but has completed 82 of
136 passes for three touchdowns. He
is averaging 165 yards per game.
His statistics still are far off from
Ware’s this season, but Pavlas said
he’s more concerned with how well
the team performs than how impres
sive his personal statistics are.
“I’m not really that concerned
with all the ink (press clippings),”
Pavlas said. “I just wanted to get
some wins. Today was just a total
team effort.”
A team effort that was led by the
team magician.
Longhorns standing
tall after OU upset
DALLAS (AP) — The David Mc
Williams’ era reached its highwater
mark on Saturday.
“It’s the first time we’ve been able
to defeat a Top 20 team,” he said.
The Texas Longhorns defeated
the 15th ranked Oklahoma Sooners
for the first time since 1983 with a
come-from-behind 28-24 win fash
ioned on Peter Gardere’s 25-yard
scoring pass to Johnny Walker.
Only 93 seconds showed on the
clock.
A weeping McWilliams, who had
been under alumni fire, accepted
the game ball in the locker room af
ter the game.
“I’d like to dedicate this win to all
the seniors who haven’t beaten Okla
homa,” Gardere said. “And coach
McWilliams.”
Oklahoma nose guard Dante Wil
liams praised the redshirt freshman
quarterback.
“He played great,” Williams said.
“I can tell he’ll be a great quar
terback some day.”
Texas started an all-freshmen
backfield and was an 18-point un
derdog to 15th ranked Oklahoma.
Yet it was the Longhorns’ fans who
tore down a goal post and carried
McWilliams off the field.
Williams said he thought Gardere
had overthrown Walker.
“Somehow he came down with the
ball,” McWilliams said. "W’ell, we fi
nally beat Oklahoma. This means we
can turn things around and be a
good team. I think the team knows
now what it takes to be a champion.”
Gardere didn’t earn a starting job
for the ’Horns until last week against
Rice. .
Oklahoma coach Gary Gibbs gave
Texas a pat on the back for its rally.
“I give Texas credit for the way
they came out and played,” he said.
“For the most part, we dominated
the second half until their final
drive.”
Gibbs, Oklahoma’s former de
fensive coordinator, was attempting
to win his first game against Texas
since Barry Switzer retired.
Running back Ike Lewis said,
“Texas was fired up and ready. No
one likes to lose, especially a game
like this.”
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