Image provided by: Texas A&M University
About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (April 25, 1990)
ROTHER’S BOOKSTORES WHEEL OF FORTUNE SELL YOUR BOOKS & SPIN TO WIN 340 George Bush Dr. 901 Harvey GOLF TILL YOU DROP! Present this ad and take advantage of our all you can play special with cart. 12 50 Monday -Thursday All day with student I.D. Bryan Golf Course 823-0126 offer expires 5-10-1990 Brazos House Apartments 2401 Welsh • College Station Pool, Laundry, New FF Refrigerators. Just Remodeled! 693-9957 Longmire House Apartments 2300 Longmire • College Station Pool, Laundry, New FF Refrigerators. Just Carpeted! 693-7741 MONTHLY DRAWING FOR CASH! TOWNHOMES • DUPLEXES FOURPLEXES • HOMES AND APARTMENT HOMES HOURS: MON.-FRI. 9:30-4:00 SATURDAY 9:00-4:00 Yellow House Apartments Welsh & SW Pkway • College Station Pool, Laundry, New FF Refrigerators. Just Carpeted! 693-9957 D. R. Cain PROPERTIES Duplexes & Fourplexes Navarro & Howletree On the Shuttle route in Southwood Valley in College Station Office • 693-9957 NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL Bryan Properties Townhomes • Duplexes • Fourplexes Apartment Homes Some on the Shuttle route • All located in good neighborhoods » Locally owned properties » Caring, on-site management ► Monthly tenant newsletter * 24 hour maintenance service • Get-acquainted BBQ Social in Fall »Convenient to shopping, shuttle route and Texas A&M 3002 S. TEXAS AVE. COLLEGE STATION (409) 693-8850 Student Y POSITION OPENINGS Applications are STILL available for the following Student Y Staff positions: Vice-President for Program Development Director of Aggie Friends Director of Aggie Workshop for Kids Director of “Build Up To Bonfire” Director of Food For Thought Director of Share Group Director of sixty something Director of Youth Fun Day VI Applications available NOW in room 211 Pavilion Due: April 27th Questions? Call 845-0690 Talk about Kim Hill! KIM HILL IN CONCERT APRIL 26 7:30 PM RUDDER AUDITORIUM Tickets on sale now! $5 Rudder Box Office $6 at the door chp,1R AA STQP&* kinka'i 'TtUjtyMf! ***,£&'*'■ ' ■ 111 1 < Tj tne copy center Paged The Battalion Wednesday, April 25,19SfWedn r Sports Focus: Racism in the NFL Two Sides of NFL Racism Si ifo'' Roland S. Martin Reader’s Opinion Draft snubbing of black QBs simply racism F< ootball is a funny business. Professional football is even funnier. The NFL completed its annual slave auction on Monday ... usually referred to as the draft. After pouring over statistics, interviews and intelligence tests, the wise.scouts of the NFL chose the collegiate players that met the needs of their particular teams. In many cases, the value of a player fluctuated between a franchise player in one scout’s eye, to an overrated player in another. No greater example can be given than the case of Andre Ware. After racking up 4,699 yards and 47 touchdowns as a junior in Houston’s Run-and-Shoot offense, Ware was proclaimed as the “quarterback of the ’90’s.” His stock increased even more so after he was named as the winner of the 1989 Heisman Trophy. He then proceeded to win every major quarterback award in the country. Pro scouts loved him, college coaches wished they had him, and the dreams of playing quarterback in the pros were being fulfilled by every black high school and college quarterback who never got their shot. Then it all ended. After declaring himself eligible for the NFL draft, the critics came out of the woodwork to announce Ware was a suspect quarterback and a product of an offense that bloated his stats. Then came Jeff George. George completed his junior season by throwing for over 2,900 yards for Illinois. After George declared himself eligible for the draft, he “dazzled” the scouts with his quick release and his pro-sized body. Unlike Ware, George was never mentioned as a Heisman candidate and his name never came up in the discussion of who was the best in college football. Even though no one heard of George, he subsequently became the first pick in this year’s draft and signed a six-year, $15 million contract with the Indianapolis Colts. The question remains: Why him and not Ware? Opinion: At 6-1, Ware was too short to be effective in an orthodox NFL offense. Fact: Of the 107 quarterbacks on the 1988 NFL roster, 43.9 percent were between the heights of 6-0 and 6-2. Among this group were Jim McMahon, Dan Majkowski, Joe Ferguson and Joe Montana. I’m sure they were tpld they were too short. Opinion: Ware’s arm isn’t the sharpest. Fact: 4,699 yards, 47 See Martin/Page 9 Richard Tijerina Sports Editor Calling NFL racist not right, just ignorant M Battalion file photo by J.Janner Heisman Trophy winner Andre Ware wasn’t picked until the sev- * enth pick, leading some people to accuse the NFL draft of being racist since several black quarterbacks were overlooked. Beathard weaves NFL draft magic Associated Press With everyone in reach of a com puter terminal and a television cam era applying grades to the drafts of all 28 NFL teams, it’s advisable to heed the advice of a man who knows football better than most. “I can’t evaluate our draft until we’ve played,” said Bobby Beathard, the new general manager of the San Diego Chargers, who has had a pro found impact on the way teams draft. Beathard chose 17 players, eight of whom were- taken in the sixth and seventh rounds. He’s much more comfortable in mid-and late draft than with the fifth overall pick, the one he used to take Junior Seau. When he was with Washington, Bea thard got Mark Rypien in the sixth round and Dexter Manley in the fifth. That being the case, keep an eye on: John Friesz, qb, Idaho (6, 138); Frank Cornish, c, UCLA (6, 143); David Pool, db, Carson-Newman (6, 145); Derrick Walker, te, Michigan (6, 163); Jeff Novak, g, Southwest Texas State (7, 172); Joe Staysniak, t, Ohio State (7, 185); Nathaniel Lewis, wr, Oregon Tech (7, 187), and Keith Collins, db, Appalachian State (7, 193). Overall, the 1990 draft had some prime examples of what can best be called the Bobby Beathard ripple ef fect: BOBBY’S ABOUT TO STRIKE ... Sometimes just Beathard’s pres ence affects the draft. For example, while Chargers coach Dan Henning said Friesz, whom he got with the first pick of the sixth round, was the No. 2 quar terback on his board behind Jeff George, the No. 1 pick overall, the New York Giants thought otherwise. Three picks (and 12 hours) ear lier, the Giants shocked almost ev eryone when they took Craig Kupp, the Pacific Lutheran quarterback, who wasn’t listed in any scouting book. They hope to groom him as the successor to Phil Simms (More- head State ’79.) The Kupp pick was similar to Bea thard’s third-round pick of baseball player Jay Schroeder for Washing ton in 1984 and was also the kind of pick Beathard made for Rypien in 1986 and Stan Humphries in 1988, both on the sixth round. That is exactly what was on the mind of the Giants, who didn’t have a sixth-rounder. Tom Boisture, the Giants’ personnel director, said they wanted to take Kupp in the seventh round but were worried about the Chargers. ROOKIE OF THE YEAR (OR BOBBY BEATHARD Jr.) It was the first draft for New En gland’s new personnel director, Joe Mendes and he spent the two days making five trades involving 21 (count ’em, 21) picks. The Patriots started the draft with 12 picks, added three in the fourth round and a bunch more for next year, when they will have 15, includ ing seven in the first four rounds. Example: a deal Monday in which Mendes sent two seventh-round picks to Buffalo for a 12th-rounder and a 1991 fourth-rounder. That’s a trick — trading down and into next year — originated by Bea thard and perfected by San Francis co’s Bill Walsh, who he got nine con tributors to the last two Super Bowl winners between the third and sixth rounds in 1986. Mendes also traded down from No.3 overall two first-rounders who may be prime defensive players, de fensive end Ray Agnew and line backer Chris Singleton. Forget those personnel.guys who say they’re taking the best available athlete. As Paul Brown, who’s been around football for 50 years, said af ter his Bengals took three lineback ers, including James Francis on the first round and Bernard Clark on the third: “You draft for need. DoYi’t let anybody tell you differently.” aybe football is a funny business. But racism isn’t. I’m growing tired of repeated complaints that NFL clubs are drafting the players they want due to the color of their skin rather than the size of their abilities. If an NFL owner, general manager, coach or scout is actually intent on passing up the best player for their team because he’s either white or black, then he or she is in the wrong business. It’s time we start looking at facts and quit seeing through opinions. • Andre Ware vs. Jeff George. Ware threw all those thousands of yards and beaucoups of touchdowns in a collegiate offense that takes advantage of collegiate defenses. Ware had four receivers that spread the field so well that he often just had to pick which one was open, zip it to him and watch him run down the field. The Run-and-Shoot is deadly in the hands of a quarterback like Ware. That's why the Colts didn’t pick him. They don’thave the Run-and-Shoot. Indianapolis needed a quarterback with good size and a strong arm to replace weak-kneed Jack Trudeau and underachiever Chris Chandler. That’s where George came in. The junior from Illinois fits the Colts’ needs: a strong-armed passer who is cqnfident and will stay in the pocket. He is over two inches taller than Ware and possesses the soft touch on deep passes that the junior from Houston seldom showed. He also stays cool under pressure, and the Colts will like that. They now have a truly offensive line after trading Pro Bowler Chris Hinton, and George has the cockiness that General Manager Jim Irsay said he likes in a signal caller. George’s calm under pressure will come in handy in the NFL. Ware seldom was pressured in college. With four receivers to choose from, someone was usually open. Until the Cougars met up with a team that blitzed and gave Ware constant pressure — like Texas A&M. The Aggies stuck it to him, and Ware couldn’t respond. Ware was untested in a pro style offense. The first six teams that drafted Sunday — the Colts, the Jets, the Seahawks, the Buccaneers, the Chargers and the Bears — either don’t use the Run-and-Shoot or already are set at the quarterback position. Two teams could have safely drafted Ware Sunday. Both Detroit See Tijerina/Page 9 DA m — kdubat slovs puckW' Maveri NBA p land, sc In ' (games which : [Donald lin a m; icks p<> [was ass; [Williarr Now [Tarple and D jliams. "We [(Duckw on his jliams is offensh ! handle “It’s [cause l | of a per Opinio psser. Fact.'As msive ba tinning IFL qua jII out a dmit tha je Mont andall lore dan m sure le 40 vai- Cnce ag thy was ( eorge is osea. Take th FL team igh in tl :ers in th In the herson I en to an Contimit You say you can’t afford a new car. We say >AN« ARt* 0 you can. Introducing Volkswagen’s Financing Assistance Plan Attention Graduating Seniors Are you graduating in the next 4 mos. or have graduated in the past 12 mos. You Can Qualify for a New Car from Wayne Thomas Volkswagen. Your Job is your Credit. WAYNE THOMAS VOLKSWAGEN 111 S. Texas Ave.-Bryan 775-VOLK 4a ontinui luchdow on. Rj< nd Hous hat Ware ns pickei lick. Here’s t The Cc hey just ave Ken jieg is a lad no rea e any be as Vinm as comr ech star ears hav< And the They us nly have 'eete was tom USC Heis tasn’t take Either ; omething ley were ided not (as black, te first po So War hoice. He v if tf» M?'