1998 Texas A&M Football Preview Just Nguyen, baby! Jake Schrickung/Thf Battalion Texas A&M linebacker Dat Nguyen speaks at All-University Night last Wednesday. A&M linebacker triumphs over racism By Jeff Schmidt The Battalion Dat Nguyen (pronounced DAT-WIN) has come a long way in a short time. Nguyen recently received a degree in agricultural de velopment and is considered one of the best linebackers in the country. He has been featured in ESPN The Maga zine, USA Today, The Sport ing News and even had an article in Sports Illustrated before he ever played a down of college football. But it is thousands of miles from where Nguyen began, both literally and figuratively. The Dat Nguyen story be gan before Sept. 25, 1975, his birthday. It began when his parents left their home in Vietnam to flee from the Ho Chi Minh-led communists. Nguyen’s parents took their five children from their home near Saigon (now Ho Chi Minh City) — Nguyen’s mother was pregnant with Dat — and went to Thailand to wait for a U.S. Navy ship to evacuate them from Southeast Asia. “My dad basically left everything he had back there,” Nguyen said. “He didn’t speak any English or have any money and coming over here, didn’t know what to expect.” From there, the Nguyens wound up in a refugee camp in Fort Smith, Ark., where Nguyen’s moth er gave birth to him. A Catholic church in Kalama zoo, Mich., raised enough money to buy the Nguyen family a car. They lived briefly in Kalamazoo, but Nguyen’s father, Ho, decid ed to relocate the family be cause it was too cold in Michigan to make a living as a fisherman. The Nguyen family eventually ended up in Rockport, Texas, after stints in Dallas, New Orleans Vietnam, Ben Da, wl means “Port of Rock”) went back to shrimping opened a restaurant ar marine-supply shop However, the Ngm were not immediately cepted at Rockport. Perl h was because Ho catching more shrimp t ^ S m n p vals - The Ku Kluxl ca me in at the behes ome Anglo shrimper' few Vietnamese shrim were beaten, and sonS their boats burned. There was a lot of smn, but we did the thing- wejusti Nguyen said in a recent Sporting News article was always wondering ^ Parents would s! choose my Wends caref 0 just stay with relati They couldn’t trust anyc jobs, but they scraped up S 8h money to put their children through college. Fortunately for Ho and Tammy, they would not Hnn dt KT PayforDat ’ s educa- u°n - N8l ;y en took up foot- srliw 6 ln junior high school after he realized he pi T 188er fhan everybody bnl'J Was u either that or whpro ln m SC ^ 001, w hich is enerl dlS parents threat- not rip° Send him if he hid n °t clean up his act. mv fri^ 0U i d i Ust 8° out with late ” m ndS an< ^ come i n la te, Nguyen said, wniiia k Ngu yen, football sion f!n eC °i! ne a 8 00( f hiver- arp, 0n J the te nsion in the bring m d U Would actually together 6 C ° mmunit y closer see Nguyen on Page 12B. Last three Aggie games serve up tough opponents Welcome to the first Aggie Foot ball Notebook of the 1998 season. As you should know by now, Texas A&M lost 23-14 to Florida State on Monday, Aug. 31. It has to be consoling the Seminoles still had to come from behind to beat the Aggies despite A&M’s poor showing in the sec ond half. Back to the present? Flash back to 1996. A&M opened the season with a tough 41- 37 loss to Brigham Young in the Pigskin Classic. The team took some time off and then played a team from Louisiana. They ended up losing to the University of Southwestern Louisiana 29-22 after USL re turned two interceptions and one fumble for touchdowns. The Aggies ended up 6-6, the worst season in coach R. C. Slocum’s tenure. Fast-forward back to 1998. The current Aggies opened the season with a tough loss to FSU in the Kickoff Classic. The team took some time off and will play high-pow ered (more on that later) Louisiana Tech Saturday. Kinda spooky, huh? However, Slocum said he knows what he did wrong after the BYU game. “We probably worked too hard,” Slocum said. “We proba bly assumed the [1996] team was more mature than they were at the time.” Nguyen, Lose or Draw Senior linebacker Dat Nguyen had 13 tackles against FSU, giving him a career total of 383, fourth in A&M’s annals. He is on pace to be the school’s career leading tackier. Tickets do not runneth over Due to construction on The Zone, Kyle Field is about 12,000 seats smaller this season. The October 10th game aginst Nebraska is already sold out, with more capacity games ex pected in the future. A season for the records Louisiana Tech quarterback Tim Rattay has already thrown for 1,114 yards and seven touchdowns in two games this season. Compare that to Aggie quarter back Branndon Stewart’s season in 1997. Stewart threw for 1,429 yards and 10 touchdowns. Rattay is on pace for 6,684 yards (the NCAA record of 5,221 yards is held by former Houston Cougar David Klingler) and 42 touchdowns. Top five woes Take a look at A&M’s last three games. The Aggies played Ne braska, UCLA and Florida State. All three teams were (or are) in the top five. This has to be one of the most brutal stretches of games team has ever faced. any Impact starters Sophomore linebacker Cor nelius Anthony made his first start against the Seminoles and con tributed 10 tackles. Redshirt freshman Jay Brooks made the splashiest debut re turning a fumble for a touchdown and making five tackles. Getting his kicks Junior punter Shane Lechler is not a natural placekicker, but he may have to play one on TV (pay-per-view against Louisiana Tech). Lechler worked at kicker during practice this past week. Sophomore kicker Russell Bynum hit two extra points against FSU, but Slocum said they were shaky. Slocum will wait until game time before deciding on a kicker. LECHLER Frantzen? 10 18 Chad Ibs^uninrr^K 6 '^ 2 ' inch ’ 226 Texas Hp liaebacker horn Diana, Man hm? tarted 0llt as a 12 th Slocum a ^. irn P ress i v e enough m gave him jersey No. 59. m m ?° W backin g up Nguyen at inside linebacker. Injury update Rnhl e f hman lineb acker Harold Robertson will miss the L„ U1 n na Tech Same due to shoulder surgery. Junior wide receiver Matt Bum- gardner is doubtful for the game because of a sprained ankle. Junior guard Semisi Heimuli (sprained knee), sophomore wide receiver Chris Taylor (sprained an kle) , sophomore defensive lineman Rocky Bernard (stinger) and senior running back Sirr Parker (muscle pull) are probable for the game. Jeff Schmidt is a senior journalism major. 1998 Texas A&M Football Preview Photo Illustration by Jake Schrickling & Brandon Bollom/Thk Battalion Senior Branndon Stewart serves notice: the Aggie offense is his BY ROBERT HOLLIER The Battalion Every dark cloud has a sil ver lining. Or, look for the positive in a negative situa tion. Either way, that is what Aggie senior quarterback Branndon Stewart did with his college football career. In 1994, when Stewart was deciding where to play col lege football, he had a chance to come to Texas A&M, but he chose to take his talents to Tennessee. Unfortunately for Stewart, he was at the wrong place at the wrong time. He had all the skills to be the quarterback for the Volunteers. He had only one problem; Tennessee already had a guy named Peyton Manning. As a result, Stewart left Tennessee, transferred to A&M and brought a lot of hope, excitement and expec tations with him. “I wasn’t too disappointed about what happened at Tennessee,” Stewart said. “Peyton and I were playing well and the coaches had to make a decision. I wasn’t get ting outperformed. He just had a better understanding of the offense. “The first time I came to A&M, I was really impressed. A&M would have been my second choice if I hadn’t gone to Tennessee.” Now that he is in his third year as the Aggies’ starting quarterback, the fifth-year senior is looking forward to leading this team to another Big 12 South title and, he hopes, a lot more. “I think anytime you're a senior,” Stewart said, “the coaches and players expect more from you. They want us to help the younger players as much as possible.” In his career at A&M, Stewart has completed 257 passes in 495 attempts and has thrown 19 touchdowns and 11 interceptions. His most prolific game came in his sophomore year against Colorado. He com pleted 34 passes for 385 yards and one touchdown. However, his best game was last season against Oklahoma State. With the Aggies trailing the Cowboys by 15 points in the fourth quarter, Stewart led the Aggies to a come-from- behind 28-25 overtime win. He completed 18 passes for 226 yards and one touch down. But more importantly, the win seemed to spark the Aggies as they went on to win the Big 12 South and earn a trip to the Cotton Bowl. This season could have even better results as Stewart will be working with new offensive coordinator Steve Kragthorpe and an offense that will have the Aggies throwing the ball more. Kragthorpe is the Aggies’ fourth offensive coordinator in three years and he knew changes had to be made for A&M to compete at a higher level. “It’s not a big transition,” Kragthorpe said. “We’re going to do a lot of the same things as last year. The changes are subtle. It’s mainly the termi nology that we use. “We’ve got a senior quar terback coming back and he’s got a good command of the offense. He’s got a lot of support and guys are helping him make plays.” Even though this is Stewart’s fourth offensive coordinator, the changes are nothing new to him. “I’ve got a unique prob lem,” Stewart said. “Fve never had the same offensive coor dinator two years in a row. I’m used to coming in each spring and learning changes.” Director’s Cut