MEN] ALIO] : job o| ce emo. 'd) and 5 s he s Oscai- > power- novieij nhelis- is atb- music, a *ozb] i 1 \ Cl NEW* im lAndj ountrj.l ho donl in 19% personil ne na 'lit in y impot nportam ijorityoi : end w Pulit® ole.” Sports The Battalion Page IB • Tuesday, February 17, 2004 Patton-led Aggies streak into Huntsville Padres' loss is Aggies' gain as Patton stays at A&M A&M baseball tries to make it four in a row By Troy Miller | THE BATTALION For most elite college base- ballplayers, careers are finished in three seasons instead of the usual four. With professional contracts awaiting them in the minor leagues, once that third collegiate season is finished, iky’re usually gone. Once in a while, a player will inishout his eligibility in hopes of increasing his draft status, kit when a player is drafted in fie sixth-round after being pro jected much lower, the response is usually "Where do 1 sign?” But that wasn’t the case with lexas A&M senior outfielder Coty Patton. Patton declined a lixth round pick from the San Diego Padres to return for his tenior season as an Aggie. “It was a tough process,” Patton said. “1 was kind of teed out about it. Nobody told me 1 was going to be drafted that tiigh, so 1 was kind of shocked.” The prospects of having Patton’s bat in the third spot of the Aggie lineup after hitting 331 with 13 home runs and 58 RBls is a pleasant surprise to Aggie faithful, but A&M head coach Mark Johnson said Patton’s return is also valued because of the leadership Patton provides in the clubhouse. 1 think it’s huge (to have Pattonback),” Johnson said. "We ludted out. and I think Cory is going to have a great year.” toon has been the star everywhere he’s gone. At Owasso High School in to, Okla., Patton led his Ottathe Oklahoma Class 6A Slate Championship his junior season and to a state runner-up senior season. He hit Joshua L. Hobson • THE BATTALION A&M senior outfielder Cory Patton is warming up in the on-deck circle before batting in the second inning of Saturday's 15-0 Aggie win over Texas A&M-Corpus Christ!. Patton returned to A&M this season despite being picked in the sixth round by the San Diego Padres in the 2003 Major League Baseball draft. .380 and .388, respectively. Patton then moved on to Seward County Community College in Liberal. Kan. In the 2002 season, Patton hit .465 and led the nation with 31 home runs and 119 RBls. He was also named National Junior College Player of the Year and NJCAA Male Athlete of the Year in the 2002 season. With an impressive junior campaign after transferring to A&M, Patton proved that he could put up big numbers no matter the competition. But playing for a national championship and increasing his draft status weren’t the only reasons Patton stayed at A&M, nor were they the main ones. This past August, Patton got married, and now that he is starting a family, he said getting a degree became more impor tant than an early paycheck. Although Patton hopes baseball can pay the way in theTuture. he knows th^t, the odds of making the major leagues are long. “After my second semester last year. I was really close to getting my degree,” Patton said. “I had the opportunity to stay and play and finish my degree, and getting married definitely had a lot to do with it too.” Junior agricultural develop ment major Bobbie Patton, Cory’s wife, said she wasn’t influential in Patton's decision but she knows their future together weighed in. “Playing ball is what he See Patton on page 3B By Kyle Davoust THE BATTALION After opening the season with a three-game sweep over Texas A&M-Corpus Christi, the No. 21 Texas A&M baseball team will travel to Huntsville Tuesday to square off against Sam Houston State, which is looking to improve on last year’s disappointing 9-18 record. The Bearkats opened their season in the UTPA/A1 Ogletree Classic in Edinburg, Texas, two weeks ago. They played three games in the tournament, each producing a different result: a win, a loss and a tie. SHSU started off the tourna ment with a 7-2 victory over Texas-Pan American in which senior Ryan Raferty and fresh man Chris Cresset combined to pitch a four-hitter. The loss came at the hands of Southland Conference foe Lamar University. The Bearkats gave up seven straight runs as Lamar was able to rally from a 4-0 deficit to win 7-4. However, in the consolation game against Kansas with the score knotted up at 8-8 after the eighth inning, the game was called due to a curfew rule in order for KU to make a 4:20 p.m. flight back to Kansas City, Mo. “I’ve never been involved in a baseball tie other than maybe Little League and certainly not on this high of a level,” said Bearkats assistant coach Phillip Gutzman. “There was an agree ment before the game that we couldn’t start an inning after a certain time because they had a plane to catch, so that’s just kind of the way it went. It was tied and we reached that limit, so there was nothing we could really do about it.” While the Bearkats have already felt the after-effects of these three contrasting results, the Aggies have only felt the joy of winning this season. The Aggies are hoping to carry their winning momentum into Tuesday’s game. Its not going to get any easier, so we're going to have to get better and improve." — Mark Johnson Texas A&M baseball head coach “Definitely, to start off 3-0 and sweep our first series, that’s big for us,” said sophomore first baseman Coby Mavroulis. “And we’ll carry some of that momen tum into (Sam Houston State).” Aggie head coach Mark Johnson said he was happy with his team’s play against Corpus Christi, but that he still sees room for improvement and hopes to see more out of his club with each passing game. “It’s not going to get any easier, so we’re going to have to get better and improve,” Johnson said. “But we’re learn ing more about our ballclub and See Baseball on page 3B — Meet Navah Perlman the Norah Jones of classical piano itainmeK Var. openiif and# ay, isW titutefo itivep* 1 Trui Gifted. Beautiful. Extraordinary. Pianist Navah Perlman is fast becoming one of the brightest young stars of the classical music world. In this one-night-only concert, Navah will be joined by over 100 of Russia’s finest musicians and vocalists. If you’ve yet to discover the undeniable beauty of classical music, this concert is your big chance. MOSCOW STATE RADIO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA AND CHORUS Navah Perlman, pianist Wednesday, February 25 at 7:30 PM Rudder Auditorium TICKETS: 845-1234 or www.MSCOPAS.com LAGNIAPPE LECTURE SERIES: Join us for an informal discussion previewing the concert! Part of The OPAS Guild’s Patricia S. Peters Lagniappe Lecture Series, the discussion will be held prior to the performance at 6:30 PM in the Forsyth Center Galleries of the Memorial Student Center. buy tickets, be inspired OZONA GRIU- 4 wed *1 pints thurs s ! wells weekday unch specials 11-4