nday • November 1i tienl The Battalion Page 7 Monday • November 18, 1996 Institute of Pharim es at the Universityo Tom there, the mari •d by airplane to here the cigarettes a ; ired-up Aggies send message to Blake, Oklahoma, 33-16 Ags’ 2nd-half surge downs Sooners By Tom Day The Battalion ruble lars chine, packed inci ivered to medical cei it patients to pickup. entire operation cos: As Aggie wideout Albert Con- 10 a year. ;11 dove for a 31-yard touch- i tiny — but thorniiwn grab with 2:24 remaining in various agencies ir tui day’s game, the 66,161 fans A, which adminis. esent at Kyle Field may have m, and its parent,liald a big thud. And it wasn’t the nt of Health and Arsons Mounted Cavalry firing s; the National Ins: e lannon. Duse, which acts as- It may have been University of Drug Enforcemen klphoma Head Coach John nust approve the ^ rake’s jaw dropping to the ed substance. ound as the Texas A&M Football Ha converted the unlikely pass lay to cap off a 33-16 victory /enthe Sooners. Jlready up by 10 points and eemingly content with running net f 'I Jt F* ie by keeping the ball yb Taillih the ground, A&M Head Coach .C. Slocum went for the knock- s ’96 as "a striking ut punch and called for the pass )r a healthy spac N to Connell, you can’t keep flai ®ie play was an interesting excla- latlon point in the wake of corn- left the ground, F len,s supposedly uttered by Blake t could be Russii^OFt the A&M team earlier in the eeable future. ee k' and also followed a heated ex- ister rockets. The’^fg 6 between the two coaches cientists on the p tiring pregame warm-ups. ters last week. “I was complimentary all week ssian space officia 1 t^Y comments about the Okla- Id showcase their oma team and coaching staff,” ting-edge proiec;l ocum sa id- “I said 1 thought their he painful (imiurW 7 was much like ours in that rogram. le Y started with some struggles, ;e compound ou nd as the Y ear has g° ne on ' their lary hailed the"rr an ' bas progressed and has got- eping Mir in orbi; :n better and I think they’re doing eb. 20, 1986. n excellent coaching job.” celebrated the 354 However, Blake was reportedly made Yuri Gaga: uc, tcd as saying Slocum’s descrip- h on of the Sooners was to “protect le the proof that prirnself) in case something hap Pat James, The Battauon A&M safety Toya Jones blocks an Oklahoma punt in the first quarter of the Aggies' 33-16 victory. :e space programi nnovative feature ite the evolutiono: urface and the in ienlists say there ens,” and that the Aggies were tore talented, but did not play as ard as the Sooners for 60 minutes. Slocum said he was angered by Blake’s statement concerning the Aggies and the Texas Longhorns. “There was some question (posed by Blake) about whether our teams played hard or that they were underachievers and I take ex- ception to that,” Slocum said. “We’ve won a few games around here, and I’m very proud of my players. Coaches have enough problems that they don’t need to be taking shots at each other.” Although he would not say it was a statement touchdown, Slocum said Connell’s late score was meant to show A&M was not coasting home. “They were going for it on fourth down and were still trying Stew Milne, The Battalion &M linebacker Larry Walker fl takes down Oklahoma fullback 'wayne Chandler in fhe first quarter Saturday at Ky\e Field. to make some plays,” Slocum said. “I didn’t want it to look like we were letting up in the fourth quarter and not playing hard.” Whatever was said between Slocum and Blake on the field pri or to the game, A&M outside line backer Keith Mitchell said the al tercation pumped up the team. “Coach Slocum was really of fended,” Mitchell said. “Coach Slocum is a really laid back guy and it was good to see him get in coach (Blake’s) face like that. It pumped me up personally and it was something that got us started and we came out ready to play.” The fired-up Aggies jumped on Oklahoma early. With winds gusting up to 23 mph at their backs, the Ag gies took advantage of great field position in three instances to grab a 13-0 first-quarter lead. A three-yard touchdown run by sophomore tailback D’Andre Hardeman and two chip-shot field goals by junior place kicker Kyle Bryant staked A&M to an early advantage. “We really wanted to focus on coming out in the first half and playing well like we did in the sec ond half against Baylor (last week),” A&M junior quarterback Branndon Stewart said. “We scored early on the first series and were able to put some points on the board, but we struggled until halftime.” The Sooners took advantage of the wind and the sputtering A&M of fense in the second quarter to strike back at the Aggies, putting 16 points on the board to grab the lead. However, the Aggies recharged their batteries at halftime and came out smoking in the second half. The Wrecking Crew held the Sooners to minus-one yard on 10 plays in the third quarter and the A&M offense maintained posses sion of the ball for over 20 min utes in the second half. A one-yard Hardeman touch down run and two more Bryant field goals put the Aggies up by 10 before Connell’s touchdown in the closing minutes. Hardeman finished the game with 92 yards on 23 carries while freshman Dante Hall carried nine times for 47 yards. Hall’s 18-yard run in the third quarter put him over the 500- yard rushing mark for the sea son, as he joined Hardeman and tailbacks Eric Bernard and Sirr Parker as the only foursome in school history to each reach the 500-yard barrier. Hall also returned six Okla homa punts for 102 yards. Saturday’s contest also marked the final Kyle Field appearance for 11 A&M seniors. “It was my last game here, and having won the game, I wouldn’t trade it for the world,” senior guard Calvin Collins said. Brandon Mitchell said up until the final period, it was hard to imagine it was his final home game. “In the fourth quarter, I was looking around at the faces in the crowd,” Mitchell said. “I am really going to miss playing ball here.” By Sara Duesing The Battalion If anything can be concluded following the Texas A&M Football Team’s match-up with the Uni versity of Oklahoma Saturday, it would have to be that A&M has simply dominated opponents re cently — in the second half. For the third straight week, A&M found itself behind on the score- board at halftime only to fight back to gain victory late in the game. As the Aggies rallied to defeat the Sooners in the third and fourth quarters in the face of winds up to 23 mph, A&M junior quarterback Branndon Stewart said the team was focusing on giving full effort for the entire 60 minutes. “We really did play the whole game,” Stewart said. “We just didn’t have some of the things go our way early on. In the second half, we played better and made some big plays to keep up the momentum.” After gaining only 80 total yards in the first half, the Aggies im proved in the second half, gaining 202 yards. The Wrecking Crew also came through for A&M, holding Oklahoma’s offense to just 34 yards in the second half after a 221-yard first-half showing. A&M Head Coach R.C. Slocum said A&M’s ability to move the ball on offense and take time off the clock in the second half recharged the defense. “It’s a part of football,” Slocum said. “If you give them a little lead to work with, most defenses do play better. I thought we were in a dangerous position, to be behind at halftime and to be facing that stiff wind in the third quarter. You’d like to come out and take control early, but it doesn’t always work that way.” The Aggies’ sharp level of play in the second half was in part sparked by words of motivation by seniors who were playing their last game at Kyle Field. Senior noseguard Edward Jasper said the seniors really wanted to finish with a win. “Early in the game, it was just the same mistakes that had been plagu ing us all year,” Jasper said. “We had a talk with all the seniors and we said that since this is our last go round, we couldn’t go out this way. “In the second half, we came out, fired up and ready to play, and we knew we had to cut those mistakes.” Oklahoma could only muster one first down in the final 30 min utes after recording 13 in the first half as the A&M offense stepped up for 20 second-half points. “By the second half, we had a feel for the game,” senior outside linebacker Keith Mitchell said. “We put a couple of blitzes togeth er and really went after them.” Sophomore tight end Daniel Campbell said the Aggies’ famil iarity with comebacks helped them out again Saturday. “It was a little frustrating to come out that first quarter and pound the ball like we hadn’t done in a while, and in the sec ond quarter have a little difficul ty,” Campbell said. “But we’d been in that situation before and we knew we could come back and win the ball game, and that’s what we did.” A&M 33, Oklahoma 16 OU 0 A&M 13 16 0 0 0 10 10 — 16 — 33 OU A&M First Downs 14 16 Rushes-yards 42-110 62-188 Passing yards 145 94 Comp-att-int 8-22-2 6-14-0 Return yards 26 102 Punts-avg. 8-39 8-37 Fumbles-lost 0-0 3-1 Penalties-yards 7-77 5-41 Time of possession 28:11 31:49 Stew Milne, The Battalion A&M tailback Dante Hall slips past the reach of Oklahoma linebacker Tyrell Peters Saturday. Hall rushed for 47 yards on nine carries. fjUjgBig 12 South icture izan (AP) — It was supposed to come down to the post-Thanks- giving Day duel between Texas A&M and Texas. And it still might. || Texas claimed a share of first ijace in the Big 12 South on Sat- wday with a 38-17 victory over Kansas. Meanwhile, Texas A&M F »CODLE st ^ ed in the hunt by beating t V" ■’^Oklahoma 33-16, knocking the i So oners out of contention. dStcBOnfl The A 8g* es ’ f ate is out °f their liP nds next Saturday, though. A&M U ^Jhpeds an Oklahoma upset over PITS jO/^ Texas Tech to create a true title game on Nov. 29 in Austin against Texas. I A Tech victory leaves the Aggies out in the Big 12 cold and keeps Be Red Raiders alive. If Tech wins, the cruel reality for the Aggies Would be that the Red Raiders — Be team that would have elimi- A R D Rated them — would advance if ft&M defeats hated rival Texas. ' . !ai 1 The Longhorns remain in the ■river’s seat through this idle ■eek: A win and they’re in. . I “We took the hard road, but were ;here,” Texas guard Dan Neil said. ** ■ Baylor’s bowl hopes evaporated hen Missouri outlasted the Bears J9-42 in three overtimes. Baylor (4-6, 1-6) collapsed in league play fter starting 3-0 against weak in- ffcrconference competition. The Longhorns (6-4, 5-2) en ured a bowl appearance with leir win over fading Kansas, but down to wire their minds were on winning the South, which they can do with out help from anyone else. As the weather turned nasty in the second half, so did the Longhorns. “Our defense took total con trol,” said Texas coach John Mackovic of his team’s final two quarters of shutout ball. “We probably wore them down.” The Longhorns still showed their predictable vulnerability against the run, allowing Kansas star June Henley 209 yards and two touchdowns. Usually, though, they bent without breaking. Down in College Station, Texas A&M coach R.C. Slocum used as inspiration some quotes from earli er in the week by Sooners coach John Blake, who seemed to indi cate A&M had superior talent, even though their records were similar. The Aggies (6-5, 4-3), who struggled to a 3-5 to start the season, need a victory against Texas to earn a bowl berth re gardless of what happens in the Texas Tech-Oklahoma game. The Red Raiders routed Southwestern Louisiana and their 92nd-ranked defense against the run, using Tech’s last home game this season to show case Hanspard, who became the greatest rusher in school history. Soccer: Season ends with whimper in NCAAs Continued from Page 1 Senior forward Kristen Koop said Suddes’ second goal gave the Toreros the momentum they needed to carry them into the second half. “They got on us quick in the second half, and were able to use the momentum to their advan tage,” Koop said. “We have come back from being two goals down before, but they took the game right there. With sudden death in the NCAA, there are no gimmies.” Before the Aggies had time to regroup in the second half, USD senior midfielder Amy Goaziou scored off a corner kick at the 56:09 mark which sparked a three-goal scoring run for the Toreros. The other two scores came within four minutes of the first goal in the second half courtesy of San Diego se nior midfielder Michele Kennedy. The first goal came off a shot into the right side of the Aggie goal that bounced off the foot of A&M junior midfielder Sonia Ibanez, and the other, which marked USD’s fifth and final goal, came at the 60:22 mark. Guerrieri said that controlling and passing the ball was limited by San Diego’s defense. “They were able to close our passing lanes, which made our defenders hold on to the ball too long,” Guerrieri said. “This gave them a chance to use their ball controlling abili ties to score.” In the last 30 minutes of play, the Aggies scrambled to keep the ball, “The way it went was hard, but San Diego was on today. It's sad for our seniors.” Bryn Blalack Aggie forward played well. Even with 10 minutes left and the two-goal comeback, we still thought we could win.” Despite the hype of the NCAA Championships, the loss marked the end of collegiate soccer competition for the se niors on the team. Guerrieri broke down after the match and said he was not disappoint ed for anything ex cept for the seniors. “Our seniors will leave a legacy of not quitting and giving 100 percent,” Guerri eri said. "The legacy they will leave is how they finished. There is Stew Milne, The Battalion A&M senior forward Kristen Koop is taken down in the penalty box Sunday afternoon while she was on a break away. but were not able to make good on a shot until Koop slid the ball past San Diego senior goalkeep er Allison Worden with five min utes left in the game to pull the Aggies within three. Senior midfielder Allison Buckley recorded A&M’s last goal with less than three minutes left in the game to end the scoring. Buckley said after the two- goal rally, the Aggies still felt they could win the game. “They capitalized on their oppor tunities very well,” Buckley said. “We had a couple of mistakes, but we — no question that they hp (i™..! gave nothing less than 100 percent. “For Allison (Buckley) to get the last goal made an exclama tion of that. That is the way she has been her whole life.” Overall, Blalack said the Ag gies wanted to win and gave It their all until the very end. “The way it went was hard, but San Diego was on today,” Blalack said. “It’s sad for our se niors, who were an unbeliev able group of players on and off the field. You can’t put it into words just how much they will be missed."