ctoberj, ses ty ' n opposed l0cr ats, nuj ;nv ironme t: lr a 15-yjj or goods j, barriers borders of 6 oandQnj; !• Canada earlier In it on a be the largg n the Europe* n consume '60 millii onomicdoi put. ind Mexict : icials wee bserve jreementk Wednesdai ninistratio! could oeali 1995, b lomiesofal ader Richard contends ed and Okie nbaum,sail costS iext decade her Midws ri deal in the Sports Monday, October 5,1992 The Battalion Page 5 Ot 5ay at when it iy are not i or Clin- dll cam- on a lo- and en- to drum andidate e voter Final drive puts Aggies in elite ranks of football STEVE O'BRIEN Sports Writer Saturday's game, Texas Tech kicker Jon Davis ran to the Red Raiders' side line, celebrat ing his field goal which put Tech ahead of Texas A&M 17-16. Across the field, the Ag gie offense was preparing to take the field in a last ditched effort to win — to beat the Red Raiders on the scoreboard, knowing they had beaten them on the field. Play after play. Series after series. Tech had played an inspired, coura geous game, but they were outplayed. The Aggie offensive line, led by ju nior guard Tyler Harrison, center Chris Dausin, and senior guard John Ellisor who was returning from a knee injury, crammed the nation's best running attack down Tech's throat. But the Aggies had been inconsis tent throughout the game, and incon sistent play by a good team doesn't guarantee a win. It only promises that the game will be in reach near the end. And for the Aggies, it was. So with five minutes left, after Davis' celebration had ended and A&M received the kickoff, quarter back Jeff Granger slipped his helmet over his head, snapped his chinstrap down and ran out onto the field. Be hind him was a battered and bruised Aggie offense that had put up 387 yards of offense with only 16 points to show for it. live Red Raiders, had put up 293 yards p^f offepse an^khpd the lead. Starting on theipown 20, the Ag gies needed 80 yard's. Eighty yards to stay in the Cotton Bowl race. Eighty yards to keep their ranking as the fifth best team in the country. Eighty yards. Somehow, they did it. The Aggies, in what has become a See O’Brien/Page 7 Aggies give Red Raiders the boot A&M takes win from Texas Tech in final seconds By DON NORWOOD Sports Writer of THE BATTALION Alfred Hitchcock was known as the master of suspense. But he would not have had anything on the storyline of Texas A&M's 1992 football season. The Aggies added another chapter to the story of the comeback football team Saturday against Texas Tech at Kyle Field. In the final play of the game, A&M place-kicker Terry Venetoulias might not have been kicking into a wind blowing north by northwest, but he did his best cool, Cary Grant imitation by nailing a 21- yard field goal to pull out the Aggies' 19- 17 win over the Red Raiders. A&M's first Southwest Conference win of the season was, to quote a line from a less-Hitchcockian movie, 100 percent pure adrenaline. With four lead changes in the second half alone, 381 yards rush ing from the Aggies and 228 yards pass ing by Tech's Robert Hall, there might have been more than a few accelerated heartbeats. The Aggies final drive epitomized the high drama of a win that raised their record to 5-0, preserving their national championship hopes. Quarterback Jeff Granger shrugged off the weight of his critics' doubts in that drive, leading the Aggies 80 yards in just over five minutes to set up Venetoulias' field goal. The scariest point of the drive came at third down and eight yards to go at the Tech 42, when Granger slipped out of Tech defensive end Dusty Beavers' grasp to hit tight end Greg Schorp for a 13-yard first down reception. Although Venetoulias' field goal was obviously the most crucial play of the game. Granger's Houdini act in escaping Beavers was a close second, as A&M head coach R.C. Slocum was quick to admit af terward. /, ,*** "I was really proud of Jeff in thatsitua-4 tion," Slocum said. "He's made some ke^ plays in tough situations (this year)." * "I think a drive like that gives you con fidence for the entire year that if you get in that situation again, you can do it," A&M offensive coordinator Bob Toledo said. "If you don't do it there, then when you get in that situation again down the road, your kids don't believe you can do it. DARRIN HILL/The Battalion A&M running back Rodney Thomas lowers his head to break a tackle from a Texas Tech defender during the Aggies’ 19-17 win over the Red Raiders. Thomas had his best day as an Aggie, running for 179 yards on 24 carries. "But our kids right now believe that we can win in the fourth quarter and we can win in the final drive, and that's half the battle." Granger himself described his comple tion to Schorp matter-of-factly, which is pretty much the same manner in which he performed the play. "I took a step and I felt some pressure from the back side, so I started to move up in the pocket and the next thing I knpw l almost went down," Granger said. "It; wa^ good to see Greg Schorp right the&e. He was wide open and there was nobody around him. I threw a strike to him and he turned around and got first down yardage. "That was the biggest offensive play of the game, I think, because the game was on the line and it was a crucial situation." Tech coach Spike Dykes grudgingly echoed Granger's assessment of the play. "We had a chance for a sack on third down, but give Granger credit - he made a great play," Dykes said. "I think Granger did a good job for them. He made the plays when they needed them." For the most part however. Granger's primary job against Tech was to hand off to running backs Greg Hill and Rodney Thomas and watch them trip the light fantastic. The former continued bis -re turn to the glory he enjoyed ago, rushing for 141 yards before leaving the game late with a minor groin ihjiity. And Thomas enjoyed the best game of his short college career, carrying the ball 24 times for 179 yards, including a key, 22-yard touchdown to put the Aggies up 16-14 in the fourth quarter. The duo's output on the ground See Aggies/Page 6 Venetoulias bounces back after miss By MICHAEL PLUMER Spar "' atritero j mK BArTAUO K ™" Texas A&M place-kicker Terry Venetoulias, in a brief fifteen minute span, went from being the fall guy to the player that heightened the Ag gies' chance for a possible national championship in 1992. The junior kicker missed an extra point in the fourth quarter in Satur day's game but rebounded with a game winning kick on the last play of the game mat gave the Aggies a 19-17 victory over the Texas Tech Red Raiders. While watching A&M embark on its game winning drive, Venetoulias was hoping for a chance to gain re demption. He said he wanted to show Texas A&M fans that he was better than his last extra point at tempt. "That was great," Venetoulias said. "I accept a challenge like that, 1 want a challenge like mat, I like a challenge like that. "I take the last second field goal the same as the first quarter field goal. It's all the same kick. "If it comes down to it for me to win the game with a field goal, I pre pare in practice each week to make it." On the sideline before a kick that would extend A&M's winning streak to 14 straight regular season games, Venetoulias said he was try ing to keep his focus on the upcom ing field goal attempt and not worry about his past indiscretions. "I'm not telling myself 'God I have to make this/ because IT l send myself to a nuthouse if I start think ing like that," Venetoulias said. "1 know what I did wrong, T know where I messed up on the missed ex tra point so I had to make the adjust ment come back and make the next one. "It's part of life. You have to overcome big obstacles and true champions always come back." Venetoulias did admit that his See Venetoulias/Page 6 iave noi a teacher rident and 3Ugh they ossibilty i, a school -eport the - mothers made last n police ley said >t know >n filed 01 )lice had as asked msferred OKifwy I - that •T said. ents uf ies. 0 ur ijuickl)' after an Med' cal SPECIAL INTEREST Plan Your Own Wedding Tues. Oct 6 -27 6- 8pm $22/student $2 7/nonstudent Bike Maintenance Tues. Oct 13 - Nov 3 7- 9pm (6-10pm last class) $20/student $2 5/nonstudent Low Cost, No Cost Energy Efficiency Tues. Oct 13 7-8:30pm Tues. Nov 17 7-8:30pm No fee for class. Be sure to register. Billiards Sat. Oct 24-Nov 21* 11am-1pm $28/student $33/nonstudent Star Gazing T/Th, Oct 6 - 29 7:30-10:30pm $35/ student $40/nonstudent How to Purchase a Diamond Wed. Oct 7 - 21 7-8pm $14/student $19/nonstudent Writing Children's Books Thurs. Oct 22 - Nov 12 6-9pm $33/student $38/nonstudent Electronics Wed. 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