The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 01, 1992, Image 6

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Texas a&mSPORTS The Battalion
Tuesday, December 1,1992
Kasay kicks game-tying and game-winning points
Seahawks edge past Broncos in overtime
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SEATTLE — John Kasay,
whose extra point tied the game
after regulation time expired,
kicked a 33-yard field goal with
3:56 left in overtime to give the
Seattle Seahawks an improbable
16-13 victory over the Denver
Broncos on Monday night.
Seattle (2-10) trailed 10-0 after
one quarter and 13-3 well into the
final quarter, but tied it after
Kasay kicked a 33-yard field goal
with 5:20 left and Stan Gelbaugh
hit Brian Blades on the final play
of regulation. Kasay's kick sent the
game into overtime.
Kasay missed a 33-yard field
goal 4:47 into the extra period,
hooking the kick wide to the right,
but got a second chance after Gel
baugh drove the Seahawks from
Denver's 38 to the 14, helped by a
pair of penalties against the Bron
cos, including an illegal contact
call that negated an interception.
Seattle got a last chance in regu-
lation when Chris Warren re
turned a punt to the Denver 45
and Victor Jones drew a 15-yard
penalty for grabbing his facemask,
putting the ball at the 30 with 1:02
remaining.
With second-and-goal at the 10,
the Seahawks were called for
holding, but Gelbaugh hit tight
end James Jones for 17 yards on
third down, then found Blades for
only the eighth touchdown the
Seahawks have scored all season.
Denver (7-5), playing without
starting quarterback John Elway
for the second straight week, fell
into a tie for second place in the
AFC West with San Diego, one
game behind Kansas City.
Before the late surge, it ap
peared the Broncos would coast to
victory behind rookie Tommy
Maddox's first NFL touchdown
pass and two field goals by David
Treadwell.
Maddox, a first-round draft
choice from UCLA who passed up
his final two years of college eligi
bility, subbed for Elway for the
second straight game. He gave the
Broncos a quick lead with a 6-yard
scoring pass to Mark Jackson 4:19
into the game and Treadwell
added a 28-yard field goal just
over five minutes later.
Elway was made inactive just
before the game because of a sore
right shoulder. Maddox quarter-
backed Denver in a 24-0 loss to the
Raiders in Los Angeles last week
in his first pro start.
Denver made it 13-3 with 5:26
left in the third quarter on Tread
well's second field goal, a 36-
yarder that was set up by Wymon
Henderson's interception and 33-
yard runback to the Seattle 20.
Seattle's starting quarterback
Kelly Stouffer threw two intercep
tions and lost a fumble, giving him
eight turnovers in his past two
games. The Seahawks replaced
Stouffer with Gelbaugh with 9:27
left, and he gave the offense a
spark.
Gelbaugh got the Seahawks in
side the 20, but Doug Thomas
dropped an 18-yard pass in the
end zone with 6:09 left, forcing
Seattle to settle for Kasay's 33-yard
field goal that cut the deficit to
seven points.
Gelbaugh finished 12 for 21 for
164 yards and one TD. Maddox
wound up 11 for 26 for 127 yards
with one touchdown and two in
terceptions.
Maddox's TD pass was set up
by Tyrone Braxton's 40-yard inter
ception return to the Seattle 9. On
third down, Maddox found Jack-
son, who managed to keep both
feet inbounds for the score.
Denver went 52 yards in eight
plays to position Treadwell for his
first field goal.
The Seahawks finally scored af
ter forcing the Broncos to punt
from the back of their end zone
near the end of the first half.
Reedy hires
assistants
at Baylor
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
fuesday.
WACO — Chuck Reedy, in
coming new head football
coach at Baylor, has announced
the hiring of three new assis
tants - -Ken Rucker from
Arkansas, Ron West from
Southwestern Louisiana and
Chris Lancaster from Clemson.
Rucker and West will go to
work recruiting immediately
for Baylor, and Lancaster will
come aboard on Jan. 1, Reedy
said. Rucker will coach run
ning backs, and West will
coach offensive linemen or
linebackers, Reedy said.
The three will join Pete Fre-
denburg and Robert James on
the Baylor coaching staff. Fre-
denburg was retained from the
current staff of Grant Teaff as
defensive coordinator and as
sistant head coach, and James
remains as defensive ends
coach.
Teaff will become fulltime
athletic director after coaching
the Bears in a bowl game,
probably the John Hancock
Bowl in El Paso on Dec. 31.
\
'a
1
Guzman still not close Lady Aggies
to signing with Rangers Continued from Page 5
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ARLINGTON, Texas — Texas
Rangers pitcher Jose Guzman said
Monday he would prefer to re
main with the club, but said he
and the club aren't close on a new
contract.
The Rangers and agent Barry
Meister exchanged proposals on
Sunday, and club president Tom
Schieffer said “our numbers did
not match.''
Guzman said he hopes to de
cide by midweek where he'll play
next season.
Several teams have offered
Guzman four-year deals worth be
tween $13 million and $15 million,
but the Rangers apparently don't
want to go beyond a three-year, $9
million pact.
Guzman said a fourth year on
the contract is important to him.
“If they don't, it's see you lat
er,” Guzman said.
The Houston Astros and the
Chicago Cubs are the leading con
tenders if Guzman spurns the
Rangers' offer. The Seattle
Mariners also have been courting
Guzman.
Schieffer said the Rangers' pro
posal guarantees three years or the
contract with a club option for the
fourth year.
“We gave tlnem a number. It
was a generous offer. Whether it's
enough, I don't know. Now it's up
to Jose to decide what he wants/'
Schieffer said.
Guzman, who has won 29
games for the Rangers over the
past two seasons, spent Monday
with his wife and small child at
their home in nearby Colleyville.
The Rangers could have signed
Guzman at the All-Star break for
three years at $8.1 million, plus a
club option for a fourth year, but
instead offered $7 million. The
Rangers still thought in late Au
gust they could sign Guzman and
decided against trading him to a
pennant contender.
Once the trading deadline
passed, Meister raised the asking
price to more than $9 million.
Givens seemed to be quietly
enjoying the fruits of his labor,
knowing that the mountainous
slate of matches he set up for his
young team would be important
in his first trip to postseason play
since 1986.
"We really didn't duck any
body," Givens said. "I think peo
ple who know volleyball recog
nized the competition we played
against."
As for the competition facing
A&M this weekend, the jury is
still out. The Lady Aggies do
know that physical fitness will be
a key as they face four opponents
in two days.
The NIVC consists of four five-
team pools, with A&M placed in
Pool B. They tip things off at 2
p.m. on Dec. 4 against Loyola
v (Chicago), then play Minnesota at
7 p.m. The Lady Aggies wake up
to Maryland the next day, who
they play at 11:30 a.m. They close
out play in their pool at 3:30 p.m.
that day against Sacramento State.
If the Lady Aggies win their
pool, the road ahead gets no easi
er. They would then have to win
two matches on Dec. 6 to earn a
tournament championship.
The possibility of playing sh
matches in three days cannot ap
peal to the faint of heart. Butil
sounds like the Lady Aggies are
made of stronger stuff than that.
"It (the tourney schedule)
doesn't worry me at all, becausel
think our team is one of the most
highly conditioned around;
Wood said.
Edmiston was a little more cau
tious when asked if the Pool 8
slate would be more than she
could handle physically.
"I hope not," Edmiston said.
"I'll play as hard as I can fores
long as I can."
Givens said that the fitness far
tor was not a problem, as his tear
has four months of hard practices
behind it. He did say that theke;
will be desire, and whether or no:
the Lady Aggies have it.
"I think the schedule suits om
team," Givens said. "We have)
blue-collar work ethic. I thinkoui
players will rally behind that.
"I want this, more than any
thing, for our players and our pro
gram. I hope the players want it
just as much for themselves, the
University and the program."
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Continued from Page 5
means nothing if he does not win
every game. How else could you
explain the unceremonious
dumping of Majors, who nearly
lost his life trying to live up to the
lofty standards he set at his alma
mater?
When the Volunteers jumped
out to a hot start under assistant
Phillip Fulmer while Majors recu
perated from multiple-bypass
surgery, the handwriting was
quietly applied to the wall. What
it finally said last week was that a
final record of 8-3 and a berth in
the Hall of Fame Bowl won't
quite cut it. So long, Johnny.
Bruce doesn't have it much
better. He was fired last week
amid rumors of verbal and physi
cal abuse of his players, with the
CSU administration refusing to
pay the last two years of his con
tract. Never mind that his play
ers have actively voiced their
support for Bruce and their dis
dain for his firing.
As in so many other instances,
the voices of the CSU players
have gone unheard. And Bruce,
who was canned by Ohio State in
the late 80s after performing his
job with all the skill of legendary
predecessor Woody Hayes, is the
^ victim of his second unjustified
dismissal. Farewell, Earle.
The curious case of Kines typi
fies why so many Arkansas
alums are furious with athletic
director Frank Broyles. Broyles
admits he made a mistake in hir
ing Jack Crowe after Ken Hat
field left for Clemson, but that
failed to sweeten the bad taste in
the mouths of Razorback-ers
when Crowe was fired after
Arkansas' season-opening loss to
The Citadel.
But Kines performed ad
mirably as an interim, and was
loved by the Arkansas players.
Alas, we already how much
weight they carry. Toodles, Joe.
More importantly for Broyles,
Kines was a favorite of many
boosters. If Broyles does not
know how important their say is,
he's in the wrong line of work.
Perhaps Broyles' choice of
Danny Ford to replace Kines
speaks volumes of the win-at-all-
costs attitude. Ford is a winner,
having earned a national champi
onship during his successful
reign at Clemson. But Ford, like
Auburn's Dye, resigned under
the weight of NCAA scrutiny. If
you think that the NCAA has for
gotten about that, you don't
know them very well.
Come to think of it, we might
not know anyone involved with
college football very well next
year. If the turnover rate we
have seen throughout the past
week keeps up, no head coaching
job in Division I is safe.
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