£661 ‘81 . XBpS3Up3y}^ MO nVI.LVfl aSvj Wednesday • January 18, 1995 The Battalion • Page 5 l^EKAS AGGIE BASKETBALL Womens team sets high hopes for season □ The Lady Aggies look to top last year's Sweet 16 appearance. By Nick Georgandis The Battalion The Texas A&M women’s basketball team galloped into the semester break in December with a perfect 4-0 record, still riding high on their miraculous Sweet 16 run last season. The road to the spring term was a bumpy one for the Lady Aggies, but the team is pointing to expe rience gained over the break as their springboard to suc cess in the future. “We still need to put things together, “ junior post play er Angel Spinks said. “We have not played as well in games as we do in practice. At this point, it’s all mental, we just need to be more confident.” That confidence was displayed in style Saturday as the Lady Aggies cruised by the University of Texas 75-61 at G. Rollie White Coliseum. A Lady Aggie record crowd of 4,103 saw A&M defeat the Lady Longhorns by the largest margin ever in an A&M win in the series. . i Stew Milne/THE Battalion Sophomore guard, Christy Lake dribbles upcourt. “This team met a big challenge today, “ A&M head coach Candi Harvey said after the Texas game. “These players just would not be denied. This was a nice statement to make at this point in the season.” The win moved A&M’s overall record to 10-4 and evened their Southwest Confer ence mark at 1-1.Conference play opened up on a sour note January 11 as A&M trav eled to Lubbock and was beaten soundly by the Texas Tech Lady Red Raiders, 100-76. Early in the season, Harvey said A&M was the team to beat in the conference. Despite the loss to Tech, Harvey did not back down from her previous statement. “We believe we can still win the SWC championship, “ Harvey said. “If we don’t believe that, why should we go out and play at all? We have the talent to win it.” Unlike most A&M students, the Lady Aggies were seldom “at home for the holi days” playing six of nine games on the road before Saturday’s win against Texas. De spite the rough schedule, A&M managed a 5-4 mark over the nine games. Harvey said although the team’s record has not shown it, the players have made great strides to wards playing better since the beginning of the season. “We’ve improved greatly, the players have adapted well to a new system, “ Har vey said. “They’re still thinking a little too much,, but it will reach a point where my system is a habit.” The Lady Aggies’ first game of the break was also their first loss of the season, a 77- 54 blowout at the hands of the University of Minnesota. Two days later however, A&M rebounded and gave future Big 12 op- . ponent Oklahoma a preview of what to ex- Bambi Ferguson looks to pass the ball during a pect in 1996 with a 88-74 rout of the Soon- game against The University of Texas, ers in Norman. At the end of 1994, the Lady Aggies competed in the SunBank Holiday Classic in Orlando. A&M compiled a 2-1 record in the tournament, knocking off both Appalachian State and Central Florida. Like last season, junior point guard Lisa Branch continues to lead the attack for A&M. Branch is cur rently leading the team in scoring at 14.7 points per game, and. leads both the team and the conference in assists with 7.0 per game. Also averaging in double digit points for the Lady Ag gies are junior transfer post Angel Spinks at 10.2 per game and junior post Martha McClelland at 10.6. McClelland is picking up right where she left off in last year’s break through season, leading the Lady Aggies in rebounding and field goal percentage this year. Stew Milne/THE Battalion No. Player Position Classification Hometown 10 Donyale Canada G Junior Austin, Texas 20 Lana Tucker G Sophomore Duncanville, Texas 21 Christy Lake G Sophomore Duncanville, Texas 22 Lisa Branch G Junior DeSoto, Texas 23 Kelly Cemy C Junior Corpus Christi, Texas 24 Shanae Ford F Sophomore Corpus Christi, Texas 31 Kim Linder C Freshman Amarillo, Texas 32 Carey Owens G Freshman Corpus Christi, Texas 41 Debbie Biermann C Senior Covington, La. 42 Sutton Helvey C Freshman Euless, Texas 43 Bambi Ferguson G Junior Jayton, Texas 50 Angel Spinks C Junior League City, Texas 51 Marianne Miller F Sophomore Stratford, Okla. 54 Martha McClelland C Junior Duncanville, Texas .'(■ jViv ft n v vhH' r r’i hi Sports Injuries •For operative and non- operative conditions of the extremities. •Therapeutic exercise to restore range of motion and restore strength in the upper and lower extremity musculature. •Therapeutic massage for pain control and muscle relaxation. Sports o Back Clinic &' 2011 A. Villa Maria Bryan, Texas 77802 (409) 776-2225