=ra m nc ex: Section B »rt$ 2B, 3B; Opinion 7B; World 8B |day, November 16, 2000 iU] Sports Page IB THE BATTALION ggies sweep Baylor Jree Holz I Battalion fhe Baylor Bears seemingly for- 10 show up Wednesday night at G. lie White Coliseum for their vol- |»all match against Texas A&M, as Aggies crushed Baylor, 15-3, 15- 5-4, in less than 80 minutes. fThis was not the team we saw a weeks ago," said A&M coach |ric Corbelli. “1 was very proud of iperformance tonight. We kept at- cing and were rarely on the de rive. We slowed down some of |r key attackers, and they lost |ie confidence." The Aggies improved to 12-5 in [Big 12, and Baylor fell to 7-11. sits in fourth place in the con- dice behind Nebraska, Kansas |te and Missouri. t&M began the first game by go on an 11-0 run with kills from* Iside hitters Michelle Cole, Erin f)son and Christy Clark and mid blockers Heather Marshall and [a Pulaski. The Bears scored their first two points of the game on a kill and a block, but the Aggies responded with two consecutive blocks by Clark and Marshall. “This was not the team we saw a few weeks ago. ... We kept attacking and were rarely on the defensive. 99 — Laurie Corbelli A&M volleyball coach After a Baylor timeout, A&M sur vived 13 sideouts before posting two more points on Baylor miscues. The Bears scored their third point on a block, but, after four game-point opportunities, the Aggies ended the game on a Baylor hitting error. To start the second game, A&M once again jumped to a dominating lead. With A&M ahead, 8-0, Baylor put two points on the board on a kill and an A&M hitting error. A Cole kill ended Baylor’s streak, and the Aggies regained control of the game. Blocks from Cole and Marshall sealed the second game. In game three, a block by Marshall posted the Aggies’ first point, but the Bears responded with two consecu tive kills to tie the game, 1 -1. The Aggies extended their lead with a Marshall ace and consecutive kills from Pulaski and Gibson. Another Gibson kill put the Ag gies ahead, 5-2, and A&M scored six straight with more kills from Cole and Gibson. The Bears scored only two more points on kills, and the Aggies ended the game on another Baylor hitting error. CODY WAGES/The Battalion See Volleyball on Page 2B. Texas A&M middle blocker Heather Marshall returns against the Baylor Bears Wednesday night. The Aggies dominated Baylor, sweeping the Bears to solidify their position in the Big 12 rankings. A&M finishes preseason with victory By Jason Lincoln The Battalion CODY WAGES/Tm. Battalion [xas A&M guard Jamaal Gilchrist fights for possession against a Lithuanian player, pe Aggies held the Europeans to their lowest point total on their 10-stop U.S. tour. The Texas A&M men’s bas ketball team opened up with a 17- 0 run and went nearly 11 miputes before giving up its first field goal in the final exhibition game of the season in front of 2,637 fans at Reed Arena Wednesday. The Aggies’ defensive show ing allowed them to work up a 27-point lead within the first half over Lithuania’s Kraitene Marijampole. The Aggies fin ished the preseason with a 79-55 win, giving the Lithuanians their lowest scoring total in their 10- stop U.S. tour. “We put an emphasis on de fense,” said A&M coach Melvin Watkins. “If you go back to the first exhibition game, we were not pleased with the defense, lack of intensity and no effort. The size and the making of a bas ketball team is when you are not pleased with something, you go back and make it better, and I was pleased with the fact that we came out and started out the game with intensity on defense.” The intensity worked — A&M held the Lithuanian team to only 35 percent from the floor, while the Aggies shot just shy of 50 percent. However, the Aggies lacked the performance from the charity stripe, shooting just 53 percent free throws to Kraitene Marijampole’s 91 percent. “Today we just tried to work on our defense and make sure were on the same side all the time — get in there and get on the boards,” said forward Keith Bean. Spurred on by point guard Ja maal Gilchrist’s return from in jury, the A&M offense took on new life as Gilchrist dished high and low. All four of the other starters scored in double figures. Forwards Bean and Nick An derson led the surge from down low. Bean posted 17 points with six rebounds and Anderson scored 14 with eight boards. Bernard King and Carlton Brown rounded out the Aggies’ top scorers with 13 and. 10 points. Brown also posted nine rebounds as the Aggies beat the Lithuanian team on the glass by a 42-34 margin. No A&M player played more than 30 minutes, and only one healthy player was on the floor for less than 10 minutes, as Watkins made a concerted effort to vary the lineup to get his en tire roster some game time be fore the season begins. See Basketball on Page 2B. C= |-| W f=M5 -V:, ■ 41# / * *4 ARE YOU WHO YOU THINK YOU ARE •*o PHOENIX COLUMBIAryi picturesLLI sony.com/the6thday [America Online Keyword: The 6th Day|