BATTALION Page 5 Ags take on Stanford ordered all UK, Il1 tried lofor^ When they rein d threw stowi t. you think tli ' still in pone, c .’ Ashiquallii shot the Italian he said. The hot. hack toward.. Hid the Afgl» I Homuin.. iknown Tueshv mint was o Ko r and car. an anti-Talila I. said v >us other attii cles on the list was robfe? ire. and hoy- in the journi. in Jalalabad * ng attacked, attackers were! n fighters, ban. thev areti y just want io .... Thev were id JOHN LIVAS • THE BATTALION &M senior forward Nicky Thrasher goes up against an SMU player during the Aggies’ 2-1 win Sunday, he No. 8 Aggies will play the No. 4 Stanford Cardinal today in Palo Alto, Calif. By Jeremy Brown THE BATTALION The No. 8 Texas A&M soccer team will attempt to avenge its season-opening loss against No. 4 Stanford in the third-round of the 2001 NCAA Women’s College Cup Friday in Palo Alto, Calif. The Aggies gave up four goals in only six shots to drop a 4-2 decision to the Cardinal in San Marcos on Sept. 7. An unusual amount of rain in College Station forced A&M to move the game to the Southwest Texas Soccer Complex. “The thing that we were impressed with about Stanford was that they had the most organized defense that we saw all year long,” said A&M head coach G. Guerrieri A&M controlled most of the game, taking 14 shots, but only connected on shots by freshman forward Linsey Johnson and jun ior defender Jessica Martin. Johnson’s goal was the first of her record-breaking season. She scored 15 goals to break the freshman record of 13 set by Jamie Csizmadia in 1993. Stanford’s senior goalkeep er Carrie Walsh made four saves in the game, while junior midfielder Callie Withers The thing that we were impressed with about Stanford was that they had the most organized defense we saw all year long. — G. Guerrieri A&M soccer head coach scored two first-half goals. The early season loss dropped A&M to 1-2 against Stanford with the win coming in a 1997 match at the Aggie Soccer Complex. In its only previous trip to Maloney Field, A&M fell 3-0 to Stanford in 1998. “Ninety-eight was the last time we were out there,” Guerrieri said. “We went out there for a single game similar to this. We had a great weekend. We had incredible food. The sun was shining. We had a brilliant week end and then we absolutely stunk up the field for 90 minutes. It was one of the worst performances we have ever had.” In Stanford’s second-round game against Saint Mary’s, junior forward Marcia Wallis scored two goals in the first 11 minutes as the Cardinals won, 3-1. A&M won its second-round game against Southern Methodist University, 2-1 in overtime. Sophomore midfielder Kristen Strutz scored the winning goal with only 2:17 left in the game. Friday’s winner will move on to a fourth-round match up against the winner of Saturday’s game between No. 11 Nebraska and No. 5 Portland, the only other teams to beat A&M this season. Aggie basketball squad signs top prep star By Brian Ruff THE BATTALION hard-pressed t( Texas A&M basketball head coach Melvin Watkins announced Tuesday that one of the ation’s top shooting guards, Antione Wright of .awrence Academy in Groton, Mass., has ^igned a national letter of intent to play college asketball at A&M. Wright, a 6-foot-7-inch, 195-pound player was nked as the top high school shooting guard in the iountry by ESPN.com. Wright posted impressive lumbers during his junior year at Lawrence, averag ing 27 points, 13 rebounds and 3.7 blocks per game. “I am pretty happy with everything,” Wright said. “It was the loyalty of A&M overall that I chose A&M because every person I met there was genuine. —Antione Wright A&M basketball signee made me decide. They were always there, and they saw what I could do.” Wright was highly recruited by college bas ketball powerhouses Arizona, UCLA, Miami, Connecticut and Texas. “I chose A&M because every person I met there was genuine,” Wright said. “Each coach was family oriented.” Wright is ranked the fourth-best high school player in the class of 2002 by ESPN.com and is a consensus top-30 rated prospect. “Our coach staff, as well as our team, was very excited when we received Antione’s paperwork today, and know that he has officially become an Aggie,” Watkins said. “We look forward to him making a tremendous impact on our program.” The Aggies will lose senior guard Andy Leatherman next season after graduation, and Wright, along with freshman Daryl Mason, should make a young, exciting tandem to watch during the 2002-2003 season. Wright, a native of San Bernardino, Calif., has already met NCAA eligibility requirements in his fourth year at Lawrence Academy. “I want to bring my hard work to A&M,” Wright said. “I want to earn the respect of every player and make an immediate impact.” i]Co- | [LABLE ICEW* QUICK & EASY FOOTBALL, GAME PARKING! Need a place to park one block from the A&M Campus? The College Main Parking Garage (309 College Main) $5 Gameday Flat Rate 7 a.m. - 8 p.m! $l/hour 8 p.m. - 2 a.m. or The Promenade Parking Lot (Church Street) $10 ALL DAY PARKING ON GAMEDAY! Go to tHe game, tli e ii hang out at IVorthgate! % Walk to Kyle Field or take the free campus shuttle! Catch it directly in front of the garage! For more information call 764-3565. GR6ND OPENING WEEK (Mast be 18) $2 WELL a LONGNECKS ALL MITE. EVERY MITE... 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