The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 25, 2001, Image 9

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    Thursday, January 25, 2001
SPORTS
THE BATTALION
Page 9
Aggies fall to Cowboys, 76-64
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STILLWATER, Okla. (AP) — Maurice Baker scored
22 points and Oklahoma State used a late rally to beat
Texas A&M 76-64 Wednesday night.
Oklahoma State (13-3, 4-1 Big 12)
outscored the Aggies 14-4 in the final
three minutes of the game after the two
teams had stayed within five points
through the first part of the second half.
A&M (6-12,0-6) took advantage of
cold shooting by OSU and some key 3-
pointers by sophomore guard Bernard
King and junior guard Andy Leather-
man to keep the game close until the
end, when OSU made key free throws down the stretch
to seal the win.
It was the fifth straight win for OSU and the sixth
straight loss for the Aggies.
Baker hit 4-of-7 3-pointers and grabbed 10 rebounds.
KING
Oklahoma State outrebounded the Aggies 46-32, led by
12 from Fredrick Jonzen.
The teams played even through the first seven min
utes of the game, but OSU went on a 10-0 run to take a
23-13 lead on a 3-pointer by Victor Williams with 10:35
left in the half.
Then the Cowboys got sloppy. Up 27-18, the Cow
boys committed three turnovers and two fouls, and the
Aggies cut the lead to 27-23 on a jumper by Carlton
Brown with 5:47 left in the half.
The Aggies hung in through the rest of the half and
were ready to head to the locker room down just 37-36,
but Andre Williams tipped in an inbounds pass at the
buzzer to give OSU a 39-36 halftime advantage.
King led the Aggies with 19 points. Leatherman
scored 15 and Brown had 14.
Victor Williams had 14 points for the Cowboys.
Olajuwon, Rockets owner meet
playoffs among topics discussed
HOUSTON r'nnle fnr
(AP) — Hakeem VJVUlbJUT
Olajuwon, un
happy with his role on the rebuilding
Houston Rockets, met with team
owner Les Alexander prior to
Wednesday night’s game against the
Philadelphia 76ers.
“Hakeem and 1 had a pleasant
meeting today, very productive,”
Alexander said. “We both want the
same thing, and that is to win the
playoffs.”
Asked if that meant Olajuwon
would finish out the season with the
Rockets, Alexander said: “He’ll be
here, we’ll see. The rest is confiden
tial. Right now we’re just trying to
win the playoffs.”
Olajuwon is in the final year of a
contract and earns $ 16.5 million this
season, making him very difficult to
Freshmen
Continued from Page 7
their success so far this season.
Woodard will see more action at the
point guard position since sopho
more Meg Banahan went down
with a season-ending knee injury
against Oklahoma. Banahan was a
solid player off the bench for the
Aggies.
trade. He has played a lesser role this
season and asked the Rockets to con
sider trading or waiving him.
Olajuwon declined comment be
fore the game.
«
We both want the
same thing, and
that is to win
the playoffs. ”
— Les Alexander
Houston Rockets owner
Rockets general manager Carroll
Dawson said it was highly unlikely
“Chereny is really coming
along,” Gillom said. “With Meg
gone, she is getting more time to
play and to practice with the
starters.”
Woodard, who came from North
Side High School in Memphis, was
a member of the Nike Stars of the
South team before joining the Ag
gie squad.
“I love their athletic ability. They
the Rockets
could trade the
future Hall of
Earner and remain under the salary
cap for next season.
The Rockets activated Olajuwon
from the team’s injured list prior to
the game and placed center Kelvin
Cato on the injured list with a par
tially torn left rotator cuff.
Olajuwon, recovering from a
cyst on his right knee, had been on
the disabled list since Jan. 9 and
missed 12 games. Olajuwon has av
eraged 10.2 points in 29 games this
season.
Cato injured his rotator cuff
against Sacramento on Jan. 13 and
has missed Houston’s last five
games. Cato also spent time on the
injured list from Nov. 9-Dec. 16
with a left ankle sprain.
are still learning to finish their
shots, but, every game these girls
are getting better and better,”
Gillom said.
In Florida, the upstart Williams
was a major part of two high school
state championship teams, and if
her freshmen counterparts continue
to improve, Williams ^rnay relive
those championship days on a col
legiate level.
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