A2322
1598:Sept.-
ports
Page 9 • Wednesday, September 9, 1998
I Show-Stopper
on may be the best net-minder in the Big 12
to a 3-1 reco:
ournei
? Aggies'te
?y will be er
jst ol (he lea: -
id based oc
itches, they ha
as they ma:;
‘nt Team.
Sykora lead;
Is and 41 dii
; 5.4 kills a c'
Woolsey is sf
kills wilh 36,:
AARON COHAN
The Battalion
niejWilson is not just an-
r face in the crowd at
is one of the nation’s best
rs in Division I soccer.
iad along the way was not
nedbut it also was not
s on[ the athletic, young
ilson, a junior from Mem-
n., plays soccer with an
stinct for goalkeeping,
her taller-than-average
ilson has defended the
it were her own territory,
taught at a young age
though technique does
have to first keep every-
of the net,” said Wilson,
/ilson, that has been her
(she baffles opponents by
g their shots every chance
â– ver, the Tennessee product
id not come to A&M. Wh
eeling with current A&M
:oach G. Guerrieri was a
f fate.
.ympic Developmental Pro-
jional team selected her as
>er. Wilson and Guerrieri
he to meet. At the time,
i was goalkeeper coach for
mal team.
m and Guerrieri developed
working relationship on the
IER
field. Wilson said it was a premium
deal entering a program headed by
a well- known coach.
Now in her third year at A&M,
Wilson has accomplished about
everything that one player could do
in a soccer career.
Her freshman year was filled with
honors. In her first year, she earned
Big 12 Rookie of the Year, First-Team
All Big 12, and Soccer America All-
Freshman Team honors.
Guerrieri said he knew he had a
gem guarding his team’s goal.
“She is one of the most out
standing all-around goalkeepers I
have ever seen,” Guerrieri said.
During her sophomore year, Wil
son commanded the box with a
Central Regional low 0.71 goals
against average.
She earned First Team All- Big
12 Honors and was elected to first
team honors from both Soccer
Buzz and the NSCAA All Central
Regional Team.
Wilson demolished the school
record for GAA in a single season,
and has posted 16.5 shutouts,
which is a record to which she con
tinues to add.
“I feel that my biggest achieve
ment here is that I have improved
mentally since I was a freshman,”
Wilson said. “It means more than
the numbers.”
With the mental readiness that
she has accustomed herself to, Wil
son is able to prepare better for
games. Wilson said she sees her
mental lapses as her only downfall
out on the field.
“I love seeing action in the
games, but sometimes when I be
come lackadaisical in games where
there isn’t a lot of action, I can get
out of focus,” Wilson said.
The pressure that she tends to
deal with comes oddly enough
from these smaller games where
the action isn’t big, rather than the
larger games.
Wilson and her defenders co-ex
ist like beer and pretzels; you can
not have one without the other.
“We have the best defense in the
Big 12,” Wilson said. “I don’t see
the ball terribly too much because
of my defense.”
The defenders that try to keep
the opposition off Wilson’s back
feel the same way. Junior Ashley
Fendley said Wilson is the best.
“Melanie is the best keeper in
the air,” Fendley said. “She helps
solidify our back line.”
Wilson said she is looking to
dominate the Big 12 teams along
with many others this season.
She said she wants to break
even more records and set the stan
dard for top goalies in the nation.
With a little less than two sea
sons to go in her college career, Wil
son has her sights set on becoming
the best goalkeeper around.
Mike Fuentes/Tuk Battalion
Texas A&M goalkeeper Melanie Wilson shut the door on the University
of New Mexico on Monday. The Aggies won 7-0 with Wilson’s shutout.
is third,
'hether
w or nc
SEE
%
3ARU- sor
led from Page8
addition to her offense, her game is
nsively and personality oriented that
going to be taking on a lot of other
3 well. I think she is ready and capa-
eading this group. (Amber) Woolsey
N-en through the program and been
h the drills.”
gjjmtributors
i^jh only two returning starters from last
/F team, the Aggies will depend heavily
itributions from sophomore Heather
McWhirter and freshmen Michelle Cole and
Jenna Moscovic.
McWhirter has 20 digs
and one block in the
young season.
Cole is third on the
team with 29 kills and her
25 digs is second best on
the team. Her 3.63 kills per
game is also second.
Moscovic has 20 digs
and her 108 assists leads
the team. She is averaging
15.43 assists which also leads the team.
“We have so many young players,” Cor-
CORBELLI
belli said, “who are so eager and hungry to
learn more and get on the court. Although
there is a lot of youth, there is also enough
experience and talent that it will be exciting
to see how we make it all come together.”
Power Ball
The Aggies have made the most of their
opportunities on the opening serve. A&M
has 19 aces so far to only six by their oppo
nents.
They are averaging almost two aces a
game.
The Aggies are also doing a good job on
the defensive side of the ball. A&M has 177
kills to their opponents’ 158 and the Aggies
have 164 digs to 147. They are averaging
17.7 kills a game and 16.4 digs a game. The
Aggies have also blocked three shots in their
first three games.
“Because we are so physical and our
speed is there, I think we are going to be
a fine defensive team,” Corbelli said. “I
think defensively we are going to be
very good.”
Robert Hollier is a senior
journalism major
SPORTS IN BRIEF
Aggies sweep SWT
to notch 3-1 record
The No.19 Texas A&M Volleyball
team improved its record to 3-1
Tuesday night by defeating South
west Texas State
University 15-6,
15-8,15-13.
The Aggies
were led by se
nior outside hit
ter Stacy Sykora
who recorded
14 kills.
Summer
Strickland and
Heather McWhirter led the de
fensive effort with 16 and 12
digs, respectively.
A&M travels to Ann Arbor, Mich,
this weekend to compete in the
Michigan Tournament.
The Aggies open their home
schedule Sept. 15 against the
Houston Cougars.
STRICKLAND
Aggies sweep SWT
to notch 3-1 record
HOUSTON (AP) — Place-kicker
Cindy Wright has made it into the
record books again.
Wright, the first girl to join West-
bury High School’s football team,
last Thursday became the first girl
in the Houston Independent School
District to score in a football game.
“It’s pretty cool. It’s something
to be proud of,” Wright said.
The senior kicked an extra point
in Westbury’s 28-8 win over Jones
High School.
Other girls have played football
in HISD, but none has scored.
For the past 10 years, soccer
has been Wright’s game. Then
last spring her soccer coach
asked her to try kicking for the
football coach, after the Rebels’
only kicker graduated.
She tried out with other soccer
players, hitting field goals from 25,
30, 35 and 40 yards.
“She hit it from 40 yards dead
center,” coach George Campbell
said. “I told her if she wants to play,
I have a uniform for her.”
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