! ;ip 990 Wednesday, September 26,1990 A&M volleyball team takes on Sam Houston By SCOTT WUDEL [Hhe Battalion Staff hole ind h has ible. season shook would > 354 d Wil- s in its ■ LSI' .7 if :r the to a 1 is rash 700 or igsea- A&M efused ers. In :s after illiams rds on ) is the II plat ns said i loss, ik that s fro ting all son in LSI. lion to en he “parn Tigers t used a fad hR.C. 6, but ip two ak last 960.3 theast- I Colo- id fin- series dingo 'as re- i have 'age 3 The Battalion Page 9 The Lady Aggie volleyball team II breathe a sigh of relief on the ray back into College Station to night. Texas A&M (3-9) plays the Sam louston State University Ladykats 16-3) today at 7 p.m. in Huntsville. After their game against SHSU, he Lady Aggies will play 10 of their icxt 13 matches in the friendly con- inesof G. Rollie White Coliseum. But Coach A1 Givens insists the earn is not looking past the Lady- ,ats. "We’re not looking past anybody t this point,” Givens says. “We’re nost concerned with just how- we’re playing on our half of the court.” The match in Huntsville will end a ong list of eight consecutive road ;ames for the Lady Aggies. A&M’s /in over Lamar Sept. 20 was their mly road victory of the season igainst eight losses. "We’ve had a tough two weeks on he road, no question about it,” livens said. The Lady Aggies have played a oadofTop 20 teams this season, all in the road. But Givens says the natches will be beneficial to the de- elopment of the young team. "We feel like we’ve learned from ilaying that caliber. Now we’ll find mt as we get into the conference nd this home stretch whether in- leed its going to pay dividends for is," he says. “I believe it will and the players believe it will, and that’s probably more important.” SHSU will not make it easy for the Lady Aggies to bring home their sec ond road victory. The Ladykats have won their last eight matches and have won all three tournaments in which they have played. This year the Ladykats return seven letterwinners from a team that posted a 25-14 record last year and finished second in the Southland Conference. A&M owns a 21-4 lead in the se ries with SHSU and beat the Lady kats last year. Givens says he will change the starting rotation again to find the right mix that will be best for the team. He has started 11 different players through the 12 matches of the season. A&M’s starting rotation will in clude regulars Elizabeth Edmiston, Amy Cumings, Diane Robertson, and Krista Hierholzer. Givens will also start Alysia McMath and bring on Kim Mitchell in different situations. Sheri Her- mesmeyer, who returned to match play last weekend after arthroscopic surgery, will fill the sixth spot. Givens says this lineup will be more mature and experienced, and will allow the younger players to de velop off the bench. The Lady Aggies next home match will be this weekend at G. Rollie White Coliseum. A&M will host the Hampton Inn-Texas A&M Invitational. Fielder shooting for 50 home runs as fans wait DETROIT (AP) — Would-be fielders of Cecil’s big blast are waiting, and the cheap seats rar ely have been so popular. T he count is two —and holding — for Cecil Fielder in the chase for 50 home runs. Fans with gloves in hand have crowded the left field seats since early September in hopes of a catching one of the burly Field er’s prodigious shots. If it’s the 50th homer, a fan could: — Donate it to the Baseball Hall of Fame. The Hall has the record 61st home run ball Roger Maris rocketed into the right field stands of Yankee Stadium in 1961. Fielder’s 50th would be part of its 1990 collection that will be displayed through 1992. — Sell it. Collectors say the ball could be worth $200 or more. — Trade it. Tiger officials say anyone wanting to give it to Fielder would be escorted by an usher to the stadium office, where the fan could meet the first baseman after the game, and pos sibly trade the ball for another ball, a bat or other item. — Keep it, as for what Tom House calls “a vicarious connec tion” to a star. “A baseball is a physical rep resentation that connects a per son of star status with a person of something less than star status,” said House, pitching coach of the Texas Rangers. “It ties the two of them together in a way they never would be otherwise. “That’s why people will tear up a $500 suit to get a $6 baseball.” In 1974, Henry Aaron’s 715th home run off A1 Downing broke Babe Ruth’s career record. House caught it in the Atlanta bullpen. “It made me an answer in Triv ial Pursuit,” House said. “I do 10 or 15 clinics every year around the country, and I’m always intro duced as the guy who caught Hank Aaron’s 715th homer.” The last Detroit Tiger to hit 50 homers in a season was Hank Greenberg, who finished with 58 in 1938. He didn’t keep the 50th or the 58th, said his son, Steve Greenberg, deputy baseball com missioner. “My dad’s philosophy was that he was going to go out and do something even greater next sea son than he had done the pre vious year. He didn’t dwell on nostalgia, if you will,” Greenberg said. A fan might need some signed statements from ushers and other witnesses to prove the authentic ity of the ball, Tigers spokesman Dan Ewald said. When Fielder became the third player to hit a ball over the left- field roof at Tiger Stadium, on Aug. 25, Ewald presented him with that ball, recovered from a rain gutter by a member of the grounds crew. Then four fans showed up at the Tigers offices the next day claiming they had the ball. UPcgdeii 4LJP republican FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE ■ U.S. Naval Academy graduate ■ Nuclear engineer, U.S. Submarine Force ■ MBA, Texas A&M University ■ Successful local Businessman ■ Married 17 years, 3 children Pol. ikJv. paW for by Steve Ogden Campaign- Box 3126 Bryan Texas 77805 Hey Ags, hump it on over to the student Y general meeting Wed., H Sept. 26 at 7:00 p.m. ™ in room 226 in the MSC and uncover the exciting opportunities student Y has just for you. Come hear yell leaders speak on Aggie traditions! Gig' em! Call 845-0690 for more information p rep hoops star hooses Kansas DUNCANVILLE (AP) — Greg Ostertag, the most highly re cruited schoolboy basketball player in Texas, said the atmo sphere at the University of Kan sas attracted him to the school. The 7-foot-1 Duncanville High School center said Monday he has orally committed to attend the University of Kansas. Ostertag chose Kansas over Syracuse and Kentucky. “I liked the coaches, the play ers, the campus — pretty much everything about it,” (Ostertag aid. “The atmosphere and the program were just too much to turn down.” Tech’s Gill may play Saturday against Bears despite hurt knee LUBBOCK (AP) — Injured Texas Tech quarterback Jamie Gill may be well enough to play Saturday in a Southwest Conference matchup against Baylor, coach Spike Dykes said. Dykes announced that Gill did not tear cartilage in his left knee during last Saturday’s 34-32 victory against New Mexico. The junior sprained his knee and severely bruised his kneecap on a 16- yard run early in the second quarter. Moments before, Gill had fired a 73- yard touchdown pass to split end Rodney Blackshear to give the Raid ers a 7-3 lead. Dykes said Gill may see action Sat urday, but freshman Robert Hall will start. “His (Gill’s) progress is going to be up to how fast he can handle it,” Dykes said at his weekly news con ference. “There’s nothing wrong with his knee. Of course, it’s sore, swollen and tender,” he said. “Robert will start because he will get the majority of the practice time this week,” Dykes said. “Jamie will be limited in what he can do for the next few days, so Robert will prac tice. Whoever practices plays, that’s the way we do it.” Hall responded to his first exten sive college playing time with a 15- of-31, 316-yard, two-TD passing performance. He directed a game winning, 58-yard drive, culminated by Lin Elliott’s 37-yard field goal with 27 seconds remaining. Hall and freshman wide receiver Lloyd Hill accentuated the march with two critical plays: a 33-yard pass-and-catch on fourth-and-18 at the Tech 14 and a 31-yard comple tion on the very next play to move Tech within field-goal range. Dykes said he didn’t want to ex pose Hall to such a pressure-packed situation at this stage of his career. “That’s the last thing we wanted to happen,” Dykes said. Pils Continued from page 7 or real. This years’ Texas team might be [oodenough to break A&M’s six- ear winning streak and get the rnghorns back on the winning rack. It’s still early and even though leither team has yet to face a onference opponent, this year’s neeting between the two on Dec. 1 ould be the deciding factor on who oes to the Cotton Bowl. Texas is led by a defense laden fith sophomores and juniors, lowever, the defense is not lacking nsenior leadership with hard- itting safety Stanley Richard, lefensive end Oscar Giles and niddle linebacker Brian Jones lading the way. They continually held Colorado’s uper-twins, quarterback Darian lagan and tailback Eric Bieniemy, icheck last weekend as they put the luffs in third and long situations all ight. Texas lost the game because of its nability to hold on third-and-long ituations. Being able to do this will omeas the team jells while the year irogresses. Offensively the Longhorns are led iy an experienced Peter Gardere. The sophomore quarterback led Texas to midseason wins over )klahomaand Arkansas last year before a shoulder injury hampered his late season performance. Head coach David McWilliams, a captain on the Longhorns’ 1963 national championship team, drew heavy criticism after Texas dropped four of their last five games last year. The ’Horns were en route to their second straight losing season — something that hadn’t happened since 1937-38. McWilliams said he saw vast improvement in this year’s performance over last year’s and sees his team coming out of last weekend in good shape. “I’m proud of the way we performed,” McWilliams said. “We’re going to be a better team because of this.” He’d better hope so, because after a week off and a trip to Rice, his Longhorns play charged up Oklahoma and Arkansas in back-to- back weeks. The good news for the Longhorns is that they play the Razorbacks, Houston and A&M in the friendly confines of Memorial Stadium, in Austin this year. So look out and keep a sharp eye on the Horns this year. They might just stumble into being a pretty good team —well, at least good enough to go the John Hancock Bowl. Williams. Continued from page 8 ' , on21-of-30 games between the two t Baton Rouge. "Half of my teammates (from -SU) are gone,” Malone said. “I tally don’t know what happened, everything was totally different af- er we got back from the Hall of 'ame Bowl (a 23-10 loss to Syracuse in 1988). We had a hard spring that last spring I was there. A bunch of them said, ‘Forget it, I’m going somewhere else.’” But LSU’s problems won’t matter Saturday. The Tigers are 279-103- 18 at Tiger Stadium, known as Death Valley because of its raucous crowds. Through LSU’s first three ames, Williams is averaging 97.3 yards a contest. Malone said he would have an ad vantage against Williams on Satur day because he used to live, eat and iractice with him. “To be as quick as he is and as big she is, he’s a natural,” Malone said. But being with him all the time, you n kind of tell where he’s going to |o. It’s stuff like that most people n't pick up on —especially oppos ing teams. Malone said Williams is hard to stop regardless of how many films an opposing team watches, and that he can break a game open. “If you give the man a crack, he’s gone,” Malone said. “You’ve just got to get on him and beat on him. He’s a natural athlete. We’ve got to shut him down. “Instead of two people hitting him, you have to have eight or nine hitting him. I remember one time in practice, five of us had Harvey in our hands at one time. The next thing we know, he’s 80 yards down the field by himself.” Williams is hoping to recapture the form of his sophomore season, when he rushed for 1,001 yards. Ma lone said Williams must have an out standing senior season because he’s missed so many games due to inju ries. “I know how he thinks,” Malone said. “Harvey loves attention. This is his last go-around, and he knows he has to run the ball to get that big paycheck at the end of the road in the NFL. He’s serious.” $150 $150 $150 $150 $150 $150 $150 $150 $150 $150 $150 $150 $150 $150 $150 $150 $150 $150 $150 Athlete's Foot Study $iso Individuals to participate in an investigational drug research $150 study. 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