Sports nbertyi) Weld *-^c kx/s ieen? -A fAiXI^ / ses rs iore water: f. nore vain Ted to (a limit, o think thi rove," sai: icane Air the 19511 jncertair f .gists ha« [ kills, wit' I saltwata | e. mpers af | igher tk poor ta | sors, las' I ce paid H [ pound. 2 harvesl that mud ut 70 pel ten in tit d fromd; ubtropiol shrimp® it doesn't re goinS daby. ice «r of of Sugf : ed$h® TlbUtcu it iservatk said. ‘ : e best h r mfi' FloWEI slong ^ a g r01l f ^esponsi OppOSi lexical 15 ts th e ^ and il osa, c hjobs^ omp lail1 , woi* 111 ?ver g e ‘- uld n Iren- i Detro 11 .all from tvork^ Monday, September 14,1992 The Battalion Page 5 Tulsa's a new team when facing A&M S omeone who watched Saturday night's game in Kyle Field should write a note to Texas A&M athletic director John David Crow and convey to him the follow ing message: KEEP TULSA OFF OUR SCHEDULE!!! What is the deal with these guys? Normally, a mild-mannered football team, when the Golden Hurricane takes on A&M, they play like there's no tomorrow. Last year, after the Aggies rolled in their opening game at home and steamrolled into Tulsa with momen tum, the Hurricane shocked the foot ball world by staging a second-half comeback and upending A&M, 35-34. For the men in maroon, it was a stinging defeat that would become their only regular season loss. It was a bitter pill to swallow. Not this year. Miracles weren't go ing to happen twice. Not in Kyle Field. After suffering the wrath of Stan ford in Disneyland and Louisiana State in Death Valley, the then seventh- ranked Aggies weren't going to let their nemesis from the north steal their show again. The fans knew it. The players knew it. Even the bookmakers, who favored the Aggies by more than three touch downs, knew it. But the Hurricane didn't know it Saturday. And ignorance is bliss. The Aggie offense bumbled in the first half as they have in the two prior games. They gave up three turnovers, racked up less than 100 yards total of fense and had the ball less than 11 S8S Whitley/Page 6 CHRIS WHITLEY Sports Editor Aggies continue late win tradition Wear-down tactic gives A&M 19-9 win over Tulsa By J. DOUGLAS FOSTER Sports Editor of THE BATTALION During Texas A&M's 1991 Southwest Conference championship football sea son, the Aggies developed a pattern of jumping on opponents early and killing the clock during the second half. In A&M's 19-9 win over Tulsa Satur day, the Aggies continued a different pat tern that has become commonplace dur ing the '92 campaign. That tactic: Wear down the opposition and do all the scoring in the second half. After accumulating only 95 yards in the first half, the A&M offense finally started firing on all cylinders to amass 191 yards in the second half and score the two touchdowns that would help pull out the victory. Defensively, the Aggies never had any trouble getting started. Tulsa was only able to gain 136 yards in the first half and had even less success in the final half, gaining only 48 yards. The biggest of the defensive stands for A&M came at the close of the second quarter, when two fumbles gave Tulsa the ball twice deep in Aggie territory. The first drive started with the Golden Hurricane owning a first-and-goal from the A&M 10-yard line. Four plays and a five-yard penalty later, Tulsa was forced to kick a 22-yard field goal. The second fumble produced the same results as Tulsa started at the A&M 21- yard line, and had to settle for a 40-yard field goal. Tulsa's three scoring drives went for a combined six yards. Junior linebacker Jason Atkinson said those two unsuccessful attempts by the Hurricane gave the Aggies the momen tum they needed to take the win in the second half. "I thought that was a < major milestone, holding them out of the end zone," Atkin son said. "Sometimes bad things like fumbles are going to happen, and it all comes down to how you react to the bad things that happen." The members of the A&M offense are KARL A. STOLLEIS/The Battalion A&M fullback Doug Carter cuts to the outside during the Aggies’ first scoring drive in A&M’s 19-9 win over Tulsa Saturday. Carter left the game in the second quarter with a sprained ankle and didn’t return the rest of the game. quick to point out that during the first three games of the season, it has been the famed 'Wrecking Crew' that has given the Aggies the chance to wear down op ponents and grab the victory at the end of the game. "Texas A&M is always going to have great defenses," sophomore tailback Greg Hill said. "It seems like sometimes the of fense struggles, but the defense never struggles." "The defense is the reason we won this game," sophomore quarterback Jeff See Aggies/Page 6 Buckley, Frazier becoming big- play specialists By DON NORWOOD Sports Writer of THE BATTALION The big play is the hallmark of an intimidating, big-time defense. From Tommy Nobis to Hugh Green to Steve Emtman, the torch has been passed over and over again as the great college defenses have separat ed themselves from the weak and forgotten. For Texas A&M, the last few years have seen them fulfill the ex pectations that are inherent in fea turing a defense called the "Wreck ing Crew." Every week, there are a select few that step up and make a difference, batting down a key pass or stopping a runner just inches from a first down. Saturday against Tulsa, it was simply Marcus Buckley and Derrick Frazier's turn. The important statistic for senior outside linebacker Buckley, who has made a habit of taking control of games, was not his seven tackles, but the fact that four of them were for losses totalling 19 yards. A&M jumps to No. 5—See Page 6 As for comerback and fellow se nior Frazier, his third interception in as many games was merely a timely reward for a game that saw he and his secondary mates effectively shut down the Tulsa passing game. "The big plays are what you ex pect from your seniors/' A&M head coach R.C. Slocum said. "They've been there before and they know how to handle pressure and make the big plays. "That's why coaches put such a premium on their senior players." Buckley turned in what became one of the most important plays of the game with 8:25 left in the first See Defense /Page 6 Let Your Future Take Shape at Radian Corporation “I was attracted to Radian because of the uni que opportunities in environmental work available to chemical engineers. 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