Tuesday • September 30, 1997 S The Battalion PORTS Wyatt lends experience to young team COURTESY SPORTS INFORMATION fliorKari Wyatt nears the finish line. By Jason Whitcomb Staff writer O n a scorching day in May 1996, Texas A&M cross country runner Kari Wyatt was running about as well as she ever had in her life in the Southwest Conference Track and Field Championships. As she ap proached the 16th lap of the race, she found herself in fourth place, but in dire need of some water. Instead of having a fantastic fin ish, Wyatt was pulled out of the race after passing out due to dehydration. “I was doing really well,” Wyatt said. “I just couldn’t stop wheezing. I couldn’t even keep my eyes open to see the track.” After she was pulled off the track, Wyatt expressed her disappointment to the A&M trainers. “I told the trainer that I let Coach Hinze down,” Wyatt said. “I said that my coach would take away my meal money because I didn’t finish the race. I even called him the devil.” Since that race, Wyatt, now a senior, has managed to bounce back in a very positive way. She even remains to have a great rela tionship with her “devil” of a coach. “He thought the whole thing was pretty funny,” Wyatt said. “We have a real good rela tionship and he wasn’t upset with me at all at the time. He knew I gave one-hundred per cent because I ran so hard I fell off the track.” This season, Wyatt is at the top of her run ning career. As the most experience member on the women’s team, Wyatt is enjoying her last season from a different perspective. Last year, she decided to redshirt because she wanted to run with this particular group of girls before she graduates in December. “I wanted to run this year because I want ed my last semester to be filled with cross country.” Wyatt said. “At the time, with the current group of freshmen gaining experi ence, I felt like we were going to be awesome this year and I wanted to be part of that.” Wyatt did not start running until she was a sophomore in high school. She had never even heard of cross country until her RE. coach told her that she should try out for the team. “The first day I ever ran I had to wear my mom’s oversized shoes.” Wyatt said. “I re member going home and telling my mom I just ran two miles. I couldn’t believe it. I guess that is where it all started.” Wyatt seems to always find motivation to kick her pace up. During the final lap of meets, she finds it very motivating when people in the stands talk trash to her. “When I am close to somebody, there are people in the stands that like to talk trash to me,” Wyatt said. “They like to say that I am weak and that I can be caught. That is when I just turn it on, as if to say T don’t think so, you can’t catch me’.” During her 72-mile a week practices, Wy att and her teammates find other sources of motivation to keep them going strong on their course. Sometimes, they run into the corps while they are running in formation. “I know that they work very hard, but in all fun, we love to pass them when they are running,” Wyatt said. “We’ve heard that they even have to do push-ups when girls pass them. I don’t know if that is true or not, but it is still fun to pass them up.” As the fall season continues, Wyatt is looking forward to passing more than just cadets in practice. She sees this season, her final season, as a veiy special one and hopes that all of her hard work will pay off and re sult in some gratifying finishes. tggre soccer set to get back on winning track \OTEBOOK W-i7 a Stephen Boudreau Staff writer [ fall good things must come to an end, then so must the Texas A&M Soccer Team’s nine game rinning streak. The 2-1 loss came itthe hands of the nation’s top anked team and defending cham- lion, North Carolina, in the annual Ididas Classic in Houston. Deja-vu. Prior to the loss, the 9-0 start this eason tied their best start ever. Last son, the Aggies pushed the enve- >e to a 9-0 intro before losing to in tenth-ranked Nebraska 1-0 in dime. The Tar Heels improved their ca- er record against the Aggies to 3- 0 outscoring them 9-1 in those three encounters. Big 12 goal Despite the loss, the Aggies still ac complished their goal of maintaining their hopes of winning the Big 12 championship. Led by an Alison Pe ters two-goal performance, A&M shut out Oklahoma State 3-0 this weekend and improved their conference best record to a perfect 6-0. A&M remains the only team with an unblemished league record in the Big 12. On the road again. The Aggies will hit the road for three weeks, playing consecutive games at Texas, Southern Methodist, Texas Tech and Baylor. The team will play in the St. Mary’s Tourney in Maraga, California on the weekend of October 19. A&M has outscored opponents 14- 4 in their four road games this year. Shut outs becoming common. Including five this season, the Texas A&M Soccer Team has recorded 39 shut out victories in the five-year history of the program. Please see Boudreau on Page 8. Marching To A Different Beat Rebel Menze making valuable contributions to A&M cross country team I i f j# A ‘'•-a COURTESY SPORTS INFORMATION Senior James Menze has been a valu able part of the Texas A&M Cross Coun try Team placing in the top three in two meets this season. By Jeff Webb Staff writer T he Texas A&M Men’s Cross Country Team has won their last two tour naments, and they can look to Senior James Menze as a rea son. Menze placed fifth in the Iowa State meet and third in the Rice meet, and is on a hot streak that could continue well past the North Texas Invita tional that will be held in Den ton on October 3. But who do the Aggies have to thank for Menze attending Texas A&M and helping out the cause? “My parents forced me to come here,” Menze said. “They’re really conservative re ligious people and I’m not, and they wanted me to come to a school that reinforced those values that I don’t have.” Menze does not always go along with the way others think things should be done, and that philosophy applies to his cross country career as well. While placing in the top five in the last two meets, Menze credits a few missed practices with his recent success. “I’m a lot more rested than everyone else,” Menze said. “After my race, he [Coach Hinze] sees I do really well be cause I’m so fresh, so he does n’t care anymore.” Menze should be fresh be cause he is coming off a 1996 season in which he was red- shirted. That enabled him to be eligible as a fifth year Senior. He worked hard last year, run ning 85-90 miles a week, with his sights set on a berth in the NCAA Cross Country meet. The last time Texas A&M sent a team to the NCAA’s was 1982 and Menze wants to get the A&M program back on track. Coach Greg Hinze feels that Menze provides much needed leadership for the team as they work to make the NCAA Tour nament this season. “He’s been running for a long, long time. He’s one of the guys the team looks up to be cause of his perserverence,” Hinze said. “James will proba bly shoot me for saying this, but he’s not blessed with a great deal of natural ability and everything he gets out of his body, he works hard to get [it].” It was difficult for Menze to sit out last year and watch A&M flounder to a low finish in the Big 12. A&M finished 10th in the Big 12 meet, but this year promises a top 3 finish in District VI. “Last year was a rebuilding year. It hurt sitting on the side line watching them, knowing that me and the other Seniors that were redshirted could have gone in there and really helped them do so much better than we did. I think it’s all going to pay off this year, especially if we get to the NCAA meet.” With hard work and more stand-out performances, Menze should be able to reach his per sonal goal of being All-District. If he does, you can be sure of one thing. He did it his own way. EWFSKE of what lurks in (he woods OPAS Jr. presents Little Red Riding Hood Sing along with your favorite red-caped heroine in the musical version of this classic fairy tale. But, look out for that cunning wolf! Saturday, October 4th at 3:00 PM & 7:00 PM Rudder Theatre Tickets are $6.50! Call the MSC Box Office at 845-1234. Accepting Aggie Bucks™ http://opas.tamu.edu OPAS Jr. is generously supported by the OPAS Guild. J PRINCIPLES of SOUND RETIREMENT INVESTING OVER ONE MILLION OF THE BEST MINDS IN AMERICA HAVE ALREADY CHOSEN THE BEST RETIREMENT SYSTEM. TIAA-CREF. W hen it comes to planning a comfort able future, over 1.8 million of America’s best and brightest count on TIAA-CREF. 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