The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 08, 2001, Image 9

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    ndav, October 8, 2001
THE BATTALION
Page 9
Igs drop Baylor, 6-0
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By Jeremy Brown
THE BATTALION
s The No. 12 Texas A&M
:er team got revenge for
consecutive losses to
(lorby stomping the Bears
at the Aggie Soccer
plex Sunday night.
Me five different Aggies
tdgoals in the game, it was
forwards that led the way for
M by keeping Baylor goal-
per Stephanie Dempsey
irfire.
Senior forward Nicky
asher scored a goal on eight
and added an assist, but
ic importantly, the Hermann
rdnominee got her first win
ist the Bears.
it’s just one of those
Thrasher said. “With
talent we have this year, we
we are not going to let
m beat us. We took our
rout on them, and it shows
the scoreboard.”
Freshman forward Linsey
n added five more shots,
a goal and two assists,
the first 17 minutes, the
was played almost entirely
middle of the field with nei-
rteamable to mount an attack.
A&M got on the board first
en junior forward Heather
Pdale tried a shot from the
side of the goal but
mpsey was able to get her
idsonthe ball. However, the
Ibounced back into the goal
GUY ROGERS • THE BATTALION
Freshman forward Linsey Johnson slides for the ball against Baylor
midfielder Erin Freeman during the Aggies’ 6-0 win Sunday night.
off of Baylor's Melissa Humke.
Freshman defender Shannon
Labhart scored the first goal of
her career to make the score 2-0
four minutes later. The goal came
on a free kick from midfield 45
yards out.
Thrasher and Johnson each
added a goal before half to make
the score 4-0 at the break.
The Aggies kept the pressure
on Dempsey in the second half,
taking 15 shots and scoring two
more goals, while A&M’s
defense finished up the shut out.
The Aggies improve to 5-2-1
and 2-0-1 in the Big 12. Baylor
drops to 4-6 and 0-4.
Friday’s game with Houston
was canceled due to rain.
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Continued from Page 7
ites—the longest of his career.
The Bears’ Stiles replied,
meeting with a career long of
own and nailing a 50-yarder
give Baylor a 10-3 lead.
time winding ciown in
half and the Aggies needing to
ne,A&M drove to the Baylor
van!line in 13 plays.
with fourth-and-goal
*13Seconds left in the half,
LTgg/es turned to freshman
igback Keith Joseph. But
seph’sdive over the pile was
sortion Peer'tossfipped just short of the end
ne, ending A&M’s longest
usava Yoga-AILsfveofthe half.
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“We went all the way down
ite, but had a hard time get-
ig it in,” Slocum said. “We
Kn’t getting the surges we
edfromthe offensive line.”
Baylor held A&M to 116
rds on the ground, the worst
shingperformance this season
the Aggies.
“1 think our defense came in
reandplayed lights out,” said
es? Can Sabinei ^ f 00t b a n head coach
Evin Steele. “Our defense
ijedextremely well against a
ry talented A&M team. We
iiinthere and mixed it up.”
Baylor’s lead at halftime was
the first time the Bears have led
a Big 12 team after the first half
since 1998.
The lead lasted until near the
end of the third quarter.
On its opening drive of the
second halt', A&M moved deep
into Baylor territory again, but
the Baylor defense forced the
Aggies to settle for another
Scales field goal.
The kick brought the score
to 10-6.
“I’d say they are a much-
improved team,” Farris said of
the Bears, who returned sevfeh
defensive starters from last sea
son. “You’ve got to give Baylor’s
defense a lot of credit.”
As has been the case lately
for the Aggies, it was the
defense that stepped up, holding
the Bears scoreless in the sec
ond half while allowing Baylor
to drive past the A&M 40-yard
line just one time.
The Aggies’ lone touchdown
came six minutes later, as Joseph
scored on a five yard run.
The score gave A&M its first
lead of the game at 13-10, and
came on the heels of an 85-yard
drive — the longest scoring drive
of the season for the Aggies.
The A&M defense, which has
not allowed a point in the fourth
quarter this season, preserved the
lead in the final frame.
Freshman defensive lineman
Marcus Jasmin made the biggest
play of his young career, block
ing a 33-yard field goal attempt
by Stiles three minutes into the
fourth quarter.
The importance of Jasmin's
block was two-fold — it
allowed the Aggies to keep the
lead and gave A&M a chance to
run more time off the clock.
Two drives later, another
Scales field goal gave A&M a
16-10 lead with 3:37 remaining
in the game.
The Aggies had a chance to
put the game away after Baylor
turned the ball over on downs,
but the struggling A&M offense
stumbled again.
The Bears got the ball back
on their own 30-yard line with
37 seconds remaining.
The Bears drove to the A&M
40-yard line in four plays.
Junior cornerback Sammy
Davis batted down Cicero’s first
shot at the endzone with three
seconds left on the clock, setting
up Gentry’s last-second heroics.
“Any time the ball is in the
air, you never know,” said sen
ior defensive back Jay Brooks.
“Our secondary did a great job
of ripping [the Baylor player’s]
hands off the ball and coming up
with the it in the pile.”
KSU Game. 761(f
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Monday, Oct 8th, 1-2 pm 326 Academic Bldg.
Dr. Joe Feagin, Sociology Professor, University of Florida, is an internationally known sociologist
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Lecture Series
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Monday, Oct 8th 7-8:15 pm Rudder 504
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Welcome Reception for
Liberal Arts Students
Ml TO UIH
Six students will win lunch at the
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Register to win at:
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Monday, October 8
5:15 - 6:45 p.m.
Drawing will be held at the Welcome
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Where:
Stark Galleries, MSC
Dress:
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