SPORTS (he battalion 3B Thursday, September 18, 2003 September 18, >r less (price must ig personal possessii If item doesn’t sell, to qualify for the 5 :ancelled early. DTORCYCLE ;i Ninja 500R, 8900 miles xJ condition. $3000 must saki Vulcan 1500 saddlebags, straight 5848. 979-220-4546. Brian Ruff • THE BATTALION ia R1. lO.OOOmi., m ipe &extras, K&N Mux. |&M Defensive Coordinator Carl Torbush and the Aggie ifense will look to slow the Hokies' ground attack. SV650S. Silver &blac ertect condition. 91 0-2930. MUSIC < Mobile DJ*’- Peter 8to| experienced. Special^ lokies dntinued from page 1B Defensive coordinator Carl Torbush hopes to amu functions. Ughts/srctJanufacture depth at the linebacker position in vwhere. Book earV! f , r»4 ■ rder to compensate tor the loss of Moms. “Scott Stickane will start,” Tombush said. “But e ^ g°' n g t0 rotating in about six different aii LaRue 979-575-987t |nebackers to fill those three slots.” Used mostly as a special teams player in the past, his will be Stickane’s first start on defense. While slowing Jones will be the Aggies’ top pri- rity, Tech has other offensive options that will ywhere. Book early vww partyblockdj.com h 14yrs experience tooti; rock and with original ms Uternate Country! Amencr; for a replacement bass pa red, moderate travel, m. only. Contact 0 525. bass amp with Rrebass' 550. Very nego. Also.! i hardshell case $450. ? Sig XII prove tough to stop. Returning quarterback Bryan Randall - who is being pushed by his highly touted backup, Marcus Vick - was a model of efficiency last year against the Aggies. In what was his first road start, Randall completed 10-of-ll pass attempts with no interceptions. Randall’s favorite target, preseason Belitnikof nominee Ernest Wilfdrd, and two-way playmaker DeAngelo Hall will give the Aggie secondary its toughest challenge this season. Wilford provided the only big play in last year’s game and says he expects to have a big game despite the weather predictions. “1 play better in inclement weather,” Wilford said. “The defense has to react to what we’re doing. They play a little off because they don’t want to get beat deep and when they’re backpedaling, there’s a possibility they might slip.” While recognizing Wilford’s exceptional talent, Tombush reiterated the fact that stopping the run comes first. "We really can’t focus too much of our efforts to stopping Wilford because that would take anoth er man out of the box on the running game,” Torbush said. "Stopping the run will be our number one priori ty in this game.” On the defensive side, the Hokies return nine of 11 starters to a unit that last fall held the Aggies’ offense to just 156 yards and three points — a per- formance that led to the demotion of then-offensive coordinator Dino Babers. Even though head coach Dennis Franchione was not around last year, he is well aware of that offen sive performance. "The offense has been reminded that they did not play very well in that game,” Franchione said. “Any offensive kid that has any pride about him is going to accept the challenge to redeem himself.” A&M falls to No. 8 Nebraska Tune Crew available tofU s. private parties. sp& ys. weddings. Sound, Lf , great rates. Discountpan lable. 979-260-1SZ rnative/Texas Country te (layer. Call Kevin 979-2- PETS or Albino $300. 14)477-4575. Negot& les lor adoption! SSte rabies. The Cat'sCe* ;k lab puppies for sal! $v iOMMATES SO/mo +1/3utilities on 1315 Continued from page 1 B Washington State. Kickoff for both games is at 2:30 p.m. Kansas Gets Offensive Folks in Lawrence, Kan., are accustomed to iffensive production from their Kansas Jayhawks, Hit the scoreboard often gets more use in basketball ;ames than on the gridiron. Kansas (2-1) has disproved that notion the past wo weeks with offensive outbursts in their 46-24 ind 42-35 victories against UNLV and Wyoming. The Jayhawks’ high-scoring victories already :qualed last season’s win total. Second-year head coach Mark Mangino, the offensive coordinator on Oklahoma's 2000 national ?hampionship team, appears to be putting his B itamp on the program. With the Big 12 North s wantedasap for3/2to )j v j s j on wea k er than previous years, the |ayhawks might be able to steal a conference vic- jory this season, a feat they failed to accomplish n 2002. imate needed tor 3/2 houf Call Julie 764-4333. The Texas A&M volleyball team (7-3, 0-1 Big 12) came up just short in its Big 12 opener against the Nebraska Cornhuskers on Wednesday at Nebraska Coliseum. After four games, the teams were even at two games won apiece. The Aggies rallied back from a 30-28 setback in the first game to take games two and three, each by a score of 30-26. However, Nebraska proved too tough, as it rallied back with 30-26 and 15-9 wins to take the match, 3-2. The five-time defending league champion ‘Huskers improved to 9-1 overall and 1-0 in the Big 12 with the win. NU has now won 70 straight conference matches. The Aggies will return to action on Sunday when they visit the University of Houston. Sunday’s match will begin at 2 p.m. As an engineer in the U.S. Air Force, there’s no telling what you’ll work on. (Seriously, we can’t tell you.) 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