r 21,191 ental The Battalion SPORTS >tic e( l Friday, September 21,1990 ate SWC votes to keep Arkansas “fieral can-1 Iffis as ’91 member h environ 6 °ur land r wildlife | tUre ,” said later fro ra st be recog- ' — violent, attacks on |use Crirai. -ommittee. I meet Oct on oferim- ■ronmenta! als include 'orate off;, ted of suck as’ main those who d laws is >aid. ifully clear years that *rs view the finds as a business. lolluters to tniinate the ! will ever ers would system be- ay people arcerntion, DAI’ES. DALLAS (AP) — The Southwest Confer- I ence Council voted Thursday to keep Ar- 1 kansas in the league for the 1991 football I season with all rights and privileges, indud- I ing competing for the championship. “Arkansas will be treated in 1991 just like I it’s a normal season,” said Dr. James Vick of I the University of Texas and president of I the conference council. Vick said the vote was unanimous to keep I the Razor backs in the league. Arkansas had I originally planned to play football as an in- [ dependent next year before joining the I Southeastern Conference in 1992. The Razorbacks, charter members of the I 76-year-old SWC, voted Aug. 1 to bolt to I the SEC by 1992 in all sports except foot- 1 ball. Arkansas Athletic Director Frank S Broyles said on Wednesday: ‘‘We’re happy I to do whatever (the SWC) wants to do in the I 1991 season.” Arkansas had a change of heart for 1991 I when it discovered the difficulty of trying to I schedule games for the eight SWC slots I they were losing. SWC Commissioner Fred Jacoby said, “It I is the professional and the right thing to do I on the part erf the conference.” Jacoby said he felt the SWC presidents I would approve the move when they meet I here Oct. 7. That vote is considered a for- I nudity. The action also provides relief for the I Cotton Bowl, which is involved in dis- I cussions with CBS over its contract. The I Cotton Bowl, which has the SWC champion I as its host team, will now get another year of I grace because the Hogs will be available to JI play in bowl game should they win the SWC I title in 1991. The SWC also announced other sweep ing changes in Thursday’s meeting of fac ulty representatives and athletic directors. Those included: • Changing home gate receipts from a I 50-50 split so that the home team would re- | tain all gate receipts in football and basket- | ball beginning in 1992. Schools would be al- I lowed, however, to work out minimum I guarantee packages with one another. • Changing fees for teams participating I in bowls. Teams will now get tea keep I $500,000 off the top before the SWC splits I the remainder. The current figure is I $300,000. The move will take effect after I this year’s bowl games. j • Allowing SWC teams to keep 80 per- B cent,of their television receipts for non-con- ■ fereoce national TV games with the re- I mainder going to conference. T he current iormhla is a 50-50 split. • Changing the split on regionally and nationally televised games between confer- I ence teams from 40 percent to 50 percent. I The other half will go to the conference, j • Rewarding a team with a second home I televised game under the SWC Raycom I package with an additional $25,000. [ • Rewarding schools who move games I from Saturday to he on television with an | extra $50,000 worth of television revenues. Jacoby said, “There was a spirit erf cor- I diality at these meetings which allowed us to I get a lot done.” Vick said, “It was a very positive atmo- I sphere. I feel a lot of satisfaction with what I went on. It’s good to have some issues clar- I ified. But there’s still other questions not re- I solved.” The SWC took no immediate action on I alliances with other conferences or the I movement of Southern Methodist home I games from Ownby Stadium to a larger sta- I dium. VIEEN ;psc MEEN ELEN. CEEN MEEN, INC, Ag softball team heads for tourney From Staff and Wire Reports Texas A&M’s Lady Aggie softball team heads into the World Series of the fall season this weekend in the Third Annual Coors Light National Invitatio nal Championship. The tournament, held on the campus of Western Illinois University, starts to day and runs through Sunday evening. Each team plays at least three games in pool play. A&M opens the tourney against Creighton this morning and will play Il linois State this evening at 5:30. The Ag gies complete pool play Saturday morn ing with Iowa State. Of the 16 teams involved, half were ranked in the NCAA Division I polls last season. Five of the teams, including A&M, competed in the NCAA playoffs. “We’re looking forward to this tour nament,” Lady Aggie head coach Bob Brock said. “It should he a great test for us. “This should give us a good indication of what we might go with in the spring.” A&M will be without the services of Sharia Cannon, who broke a toe in last weekend’s tournament at Central Park. Shannon Munger will be unable to play defense because of a sore elbow, but may be used in hitting situations. Defending champion Oklahoma State, A&M, Arizona State and Kent State are the top seeds in the tourney. The rest of the tournament field in cludes Western Illinois, Akron, Colo rado State, Eastern Michigan, Indiana State, Missouri, Southern Illinois, Uni versity of Texas-Arlington and Wiscon sin-Green Bay. Sports Editor Nadja Sabawala 845-2688 NCAA chomps Gators with bowl ban GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) — The Uni versity of Florida was placed on NCAA pro bation for the second time in six years on Thursday, and school officials were upset that the punishment included a postseason ban for this year’s football team. The NCAA chose to impose less than the minimum prescribed penalties in a case of major violations. The bowl ban for this season was the only punishment of the football program, and there was no ban on television appearances for either sport. The basketball program’s scholarships will be restricted, and it must repay at least $287,000 in revenue from the 1988 NCAA tournament because guard Vernon Max well played while he was ineligible. The Gators will be permitted 13 schol arships in 1991-92, two fewer than the max imum, and 14 scholarships in 1992-93. First-year football coach Steve Spurrier said the bowl ban was a more severe penalty than Florida deserved. “This has been a clean-run program in the last four or five years,” Spurrier said. “There’s been no cash payments, no buying tickets of players, no falsifying of tran scripts.” As part of the ruling, the NCAA cited former basketball coach Norm Sloan and former football coach Galen Hall, both fired last October, for unethical conduct. If either takes a new coaching job in the next five years, his hiring must be approved by the NCAA Committee on Infractions. Hall is now an unpaid graduate assistant at Penn State, while Sloan is coaching a pro fessional team in Greece. Chuck Smrt, director of enforcement for the NCAA, said the case was unique be cause the school took significant corrective steps after the investigation was disclosed. For that reason, Smrt said, the five-mem ber Committee on Infractions did not im pose the minimum proscribed penalties. The minimum penalties could have also included restrictions on postseason basket ball, recruiting in both sports and television appearances. Florida even faced the remote possibility of having its football and basketball pro grams shut down by the death penalty. But even though the school escaped se vere sanctions, university president John Lombardi took exception to the postseason ban on this year’s football team, which is 2-0 and ranked No. 19. “We are not entirely comfortable with a set of penalties that appear to us to ... penal ize the innocent for the sins of a prior gen eration,” Lombardi said. “This is particularly difficult when you recognize that these players and these coaches are now in the middle of their sea son, and these penalties at this time in their season appear to us to be a particularly dif ficult blow to accept.” The school has 15 days to appeal the sanctions or ask that the ban against the football team be delayed. " i.Niri.MMMWHIMM lilllllllillliilli Eagles soaring sky-high A&M readies for UNT by keeping concentration No. 12 Aggies set for Saturday By CLAY RASMUSSEN Of The Battalion Staff Photo by Phelan M. Ebenhack Texas A&M wide receiver Shane Garrett celebrates after catching a 68-yard touchdown pass from Lance Pavlas in the 63-14 win over USL last week. The Aggies, ranked No. 12 nationally, host North Texas Saturday. North Texas head football coach Corky Nelson wants his team to lly like eagles. R.C. Slocum would rather his team just produce another dead duck on Kyle Field. The No. 12 Aggies attempt to go 3-0 for die first time since 1984 when they host the Eagles this Saturday. Kickoff is scheduled for 6 p.m. After massacring Southwestern Louisiana 63-14 last Saturday, Slo cum’s Aggies still are preaching pa tience. Call it T he Slocum Doctrine: One Game at a T ime. “You never know from week to week how it’s going to turn out,” Slo cum said. “1 expected USL to come in here and play a great game and it turned out like it did. I expect North Texas to come in and play a great game, so all I can do is try and get us prepared to play them. “What you’d like to do as a coach is educate your team to the realities of football as you go and the fact that week-to-week you can’t go into a game thinking this team is good and this team is bad.” Slocum has developed a strong re spect for Nelson and his UN T pro gram. The Eagles are 2-0 and ranked No. 7 nationally in Division I-AA. “I’ve got a lot of respect for Coach Nelson and the job he’s done over there all these years,” Slocum said. See Aggies/Page 10 1 ii ' ' ' v ■ V" " NEVER Simmons waits as backup now, but looks to tomorrow By RICHARD TIJERINA Of The Battalion Staff T here were times as a freshman when Randy Simmons thought about giving up. The Texas A&M backup running back, plagued with the burden of injuries and fallen dreams, seriously considered transferring to another Southwest Conference school in 1987. Former head football coach Jackie Sherrill convinced him not to go. Now Simmons is glad he didn’t. “Coach Sherrill talked me out of it,” Simmons said. “He told me that my best chances were here, that if I transferred I’d lose a year and it would be another setback. I stuck it out here, and I’m glad I did. I don’t regret it one bit.” Three years ago, Simmons of McKinney, Darren Lewis of Dallas Carter were at the top of most national recruiting wish lists. But a funny thing happened to the two high school phenoms. Lewis is now the main man for A&M and a Heisman Trophy candidate. Simmons sits on the bench, and had to wait 38 games before See Simmons/Page 11 Battalion file photo by F. Joe A&M running back Randy Simmons runs for some of his 74 yards against SMU last year. Listed at No. 3 on the depth chart, Simmons now is hoping his chance to start will come after he has battled adversity on and off the field. Permian ruled ineligible to defend 5A crown AUST IN (AP) — Odessa Permian, the defending Class 5A football champion, was ruled, ineligible for the 1990 playoffs Thursday for violating off-season practice rules. A rival coach brought the violations to the attention of the University Interscholas tic League, which governs high school sports in Texas. The coach said he wit nessed controlled summer practices of Per mian players with coaches present. The Panthers, also known as “Mojo,” are among the most stories high school teams in the country. They finished the 1989 season with a 28-14 victory over Houston Aldine in the state championship game and the top high school ranking in the country. They won three state championships in the ’80s and were runners-up twice in Texas’ high est classification. The University Interscholastic League’s eight-member state executive committee on Thursday upheld an earlier district com mittee ruling that Odessa Permian had vio lated rules governing off-season training. The vote was unanimous. The UIL said the school broke practice rules twice in five months. Permian coach Tam Hollingshead was slapped with a pri vate reprimand in April for exceeding practice time limits. Hollingshead, in his first year as coach of the Panthers after seven years as an assis tant, was suspended from coaching for the next two games, and nine assistants were placed on one-year probation. “We are surprised,” Hollingshead said. “At this point, we do not know what avenue we will take. The team will be very upset when they hear the news. They’ll have to handle it. They’re going to have to put up a fight. “We are aboveboard and first-class,” Hollingshead added. “We still believe that we haven’t done anything wrong. We con tend in the present and in the past we were not in violation of any UIL rules.” The decision also rendered Odessa Per mian’s players ineligible for All-District football honors.