The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 13, 1992, Image 6

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DEFENSIVE DRIVING CLASS
April 17, 18, 1992 (6-10 p.m. & 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.)
April 28, 29, 1992 (6-10 p.m. & 6-10 p.m.)
1
I
I
Page 6
The Battalion
Monday, April 13,.—
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Harrison
first victor)
at A&M
Continued from Page5
jumper in history and was
eighth in the country.
Nelson said the whole
team performed well in
lays.
“We were coming offa
pointing Texas Relays, wherd
didn't have a good meet," 1
said. "There were a lot ofp
things that came out of this
ends meet."
Pavelka jumped 40 ft,
Wunsch finds curveball in victory over UT
to finish second behind Hare®
in the triple.
"That's a personal besiH
her," Nelson said. "Forher,?,
as good as Harrison's
mance. Her feat was
good."
Also in the women'sdhis
Shelly Redelsperger finishedi
end in the discus throw (Hf®
in.) Roz Hunt placed firslirB T h
4()0-meter dash (54.49), G® 0 o d
Buck w.is second in thehighiBoustt;
(5 ft. 113/4 in.) and Rosa8L ounc
placed first in the 100-meter;li[ ec j ( j^
By Steve O'Brien
The Battalion
A&M pitcher Kelly Wunsch
found an old friend on the mound
Sunday afternoon - his curveball.
Without it, Wunsch has looked
average, at best, this season. But
Sunday, with his curveball break-
5, the sophomore lefthander
over the plate.
"In Austin, all I had was a fast
ball and a changeup," Wunsch
said. "They weren't hitting my
fastball or my changeup. The
problem was I wasn't giving them
anything to hit."
Sunday, though, it was a dif
ferent story.
mg.
took care of the Texas Longhorns.
Wunsch allowed three runs on
three hits in six innings of work to
give the Aggies their only win of
the series over Texas, 11-5.
"I was throwing it for a strike
most of the time," Wunsch said.
"It helps a whole lot to have a
pitch to mix in there to keep them
off balance."
But Sunday wasn't the first
time the Longhorns have had
trouble getting hits off Wunsch.
Last month in Austin, the
Longhorn bats weren't making
much contact with Wunsch's
pitches.
Then, the A&M pitcher was
having trouble throwing the ball
Wunsch's
pitches - the
fastball, the
changeup and
yes, the curve -
found the plate.
"Kelly is
sometimes his
own worst ene-
Wunsch
my," A&M
head coach
Mark Johnson
said. "(Texas)
didn't hit him well, and very few
people do when he throws strikes.
He stayed in there longer than I
thought he would.
"We had some arms available,
and we weren't going to extend
him any further than we had to."
But Wunsch stayed in there
and fought, helping the Aggies to
their only win of the series. And a
win is exactly what the Aggies
had to have to keep their NCAA
tournament hopes alive.
"I don't know how down it
would have gotten us if we would
have lost," Wunsch said. "We've
been playing well. It's hard to get
down when you've played well.
"We were really fired up about
winning it. Our pride and respect
was on the line."
Johnson said he was im
pressed with how the Aggies
came back after a 10-3 loss Friday
night.
"I was very, very proud of our
guys, even (Saturday) night to
come back," Johnson said. "It
showed a lot of character. It's
something to grow on. I told the
team we need to keep it going."
If the Aggies plan to keep the
momentum going and gain an
NCAA tournament bid, Wunsch
has to keep in touch with his fast
ball.
It's a good friend for a pitcher
to have.
C
dies.
The women's 400-meterri
team finished first withapr;
sional qualifying timeoMi
The women also won the®:
ter relay (3:43.67).
For the men, Ty Sevinwas
ond in the javelin (199ft.lij
Donnie Bodron was firstir
3000-meter steeplechase (9:35:
Winston Chambers was
the 400-meter run (51.64
Scott Garvin was third in the
meter run (1:51.90)
"Donnie Bodron'spefon:
was one of the highlightsof
day," Nelson said.
In the 400-meter relay, b people <
gios t mished second (40.36)j Hie stre
took first place in the 16(KT the prot
relay (3:10.0). Knows
"Our (4 00-meter) relay la
did much better than theyh
been doing lately," Nelsons
"We're very pleased that;
could step up this weekend: 'I
perform well. 1 f fanhan
The Aggies' next meet is al P r0 P 0S f e
Baylor Invitational in Wacc P ro ec
April 17. al °“ b '
which tl
z<
J P
someth:
the
with
aggr i
panhar
conside
aggres:
arihani
The <
Counci
ordinan
zone c
anhani
This
Housto
crime
anhanc
fault tha
can blar
strange
Aggies' offense comes through in Longhorn finale, 11-5
Continued from Page 5
walked to load the bases.
Billy Harlan, who was pinch
hitting for designated hitter John
Curl, then singled to right to bring
in Hickey, and centerfielder Brian
Thomas followed with a run scor
ing single up the middle. Mar
shall scored when left fielder Eric
Gonzalez walked, and Harlan and
Thomas crossed the plate on a sin
gle by Harris.
Gonzalez closed out the rally
by scoring when relief pitcher
Ryan Kjos issued Trimble a free
pass.
Texas threatened late with a
four- run seventh inning, which
was highlighted by a three-run
home run by center fielder Calvin
Murray. But Texas couldn't close
the gap. A&M reliever Chris
Clemons ended the threat by get
ting third baseman Clay King to
fly out to right.
In the series opener, the
Longhorns took advantage of five
A&M errors and 14 Aggies left on
base to post a 10-3 victory. Senior
Scott Harrison, 7-2, pitched six
complete innings and struck out
five on his way to defeating A&M
sophomore Jeff Granger, 4-3.
Saturday, Longhorn senior
Doug Petit and Aggie senior Brian
Harrison squared off in a pitching
duel that lasted into the sixth in
ning.
Harrison held Texas scoreless
through five innings with the Ag
gies holding a 2-0 lead. But the
Longhorns posted four runs in the
sixth to take a 4-2 lead.
The Aggies tied the game at
four with two runs in the bottom
of the sixth, and Texas scored the
winning run in the eighth as Brax
ton Hickman tripled off reliever
James Nix to bring Chris Abbe
across the plate.
Gustafson said when regional
bids are announced, the selection
committee should realize this is a
tough conference and several
teams deserve recognition.
violatei
paranoii
might be
City i
as con:
estrict
equirin
ity ani
henev
anhanc
Reg
"All the teams are beating 6
other here, so there's not
be any real outstanding recoil
he said. "I hope they realizetej
a real strong conference and
three teams into the regionalsj
think Baylor has a real stn
chance, and the Aggies told
day like they re g ettin 8 their[ f wonder
about where they want it." |c
A&M will host Stephen® , rne r
Austin on Tuesday and willftlr ls 15 a
travel to Waco this weekend F e §g ars
take on Baylor in a series ft
could be vital in determining 0r trying
second place team and regie? the si
bids. The Bears defeated the. 1 0 war:
earlier in the season I difficul
gies
games to one in College Station [docume
ilocate tl
|nd phe
[Aggie]
lllaceme
■ousing
lounseli]
treet.
Many
bubble"
violatii
fet, thesi
tom on
1 'iew.
What
I'ho i:
'anhand
ight to
omeone
actics t
aoney.
ever res
free
anhandi
ae perso
Woulc
A&M April 13-17
Spring a*m* to 6 p.m*
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alicitatii
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THE
BLOOD CENTER
at Wadi?
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stricted
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hizens.
Blood Commons
Bloodmobiles at
Drive MSC & SBISA
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Student Government
any are
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