Lift SJ£*IMILIL FRIDAY 3 p.m.vs. Arkansas 7 p.m. vs. New Mexico Olsen Field Sports t&mK ix I ©OKHmiL FRIDAY ®Ta dfeism Mmm OBawsmTOomE, no # ! 2:30 p.m. vs. Oregon 4:45 ».m. vs. Penn State , Aggie Softball Complex The Battalion Page 5 • Friday, February 27, 2004 .'Weekend tournaments roll into Aggieland tygies try to keep winning streak alive over weekend '.Hi'. Ktr® lie.- nrwlii By Kyle Davoust THE BATTALION The No. 14 Texas A&M team has started the •ason as impressively as its 7- record indicates. The start has ififans to wonder what has more impressive: the je pitching or offense? ii giving out its weekly Kids, the Big 12 Conference as not able to make this dis- inction as it awarded senior icier Justin Moore and soph- iniore shortstop Cliff Phillips 66 Pitcher (lie Week and Player of the W honors, respectively. Moore, who battled back rm a shoulder injury that lim- ledhim to eight total innings in lotol ®,continued his impressive whack by allowing two hits shoes itightinnings of work in an 8- lnctory over South Alabama. Pennington helped keep the pbats hot, as he had a .647 igaverage with five RBIs ida.882slugging percentage. Me it took the Aggies a le more than a week to play their first seven games, the flsix will come in a three- marathon as the Aggies nstthe 2004 Domino’s Pizza gie Baseball Classic, which tgmsFnday. The weekend tournament ilbe a double round robin, ii three games against both kUniversity of Arkansas and ileUniveisity of New Mexico, tit will be a big chai ns, and I hope I don’t (a lot of guys six pies; that's not the plan. The planislogetquite a few guys in ifrMane," said A&M coach M Johnson. “Six games in days, nine innings a piece, it tales a lot of mental toughness, it ties a lot of teamwork, it takes a SPORTS IN BRIEF ions i Iswii ivente MIS ibsi ndbt ut the JP Beato III • THE BATTALION A&M redshirt freshman pitcher Jason Meyer pitches in the Aggies’ 4-3 win over South Alabama Friday at Olsen Field. Meyer is 3-0 on the season coming out of the bullpen. Softball hopes to rebound in Aggie Invitational II lot of accountability that you have to show up and be able to play.” First up for the Aggies in the tournament will be Arkansas, which the Aggies have not faced since the Razorbacks defected to the Southeastern Conference back in 1991. The Razorbacks have also started the season hot. compiling a per fect 8-0 record behind an offense that is generating 10.6 runs per game. “Arkansas is putting up a lot of runs, but I don’t think they’ll be able to do that against our pitching because our pitching is really good,” said sophomore first baseman Coby Mavroulis. “It will be a contest to see if their offense is better or if our pitching is better, and I think that our pitching is better.” Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn believes that this experi ence will prepare his team for the road ahead. “Playing a team like A&M on the road three times should help get us ready for what we’ll see in (the Southeastern Conference): good pitching, good hitting and probably some rowdy fans,” Van Horn said. “It should help get us ready and let us know what we're going to be up against.” Almost forgotten in the three-team tournament is the University of New Mexico (0-2- 1), which enters this weekend looking for its first win. Van Horn cautions, however, that the team should not be overlooked. “I've been telling our play ers that New Mexico can hit,” Van Horn said. “They've only played three games, and they tied one and got beat by a good Nebraska team. They’re going to come in here hungry to play. Believe me, we're not looking past them. We’re throwing one of our best pitchers out at them.” By Ryan Irby THE BATTALION With its second home tour nament scheduled in two weeks, the No. 23 Texas A&M softball team will bring three new opponents into Aggieland this weekend to compete in the second half of the St. Joseph Aggie Invitational. No. 17 Oregon, Southern Mississippi (5-7) and Penn State (0-5) will bring stiff competition to the diamond as the Aggies (8- 7) look to gain valuable experi ence before moving into confer ence play. Last weekend, A&M defeated Boston University twice, dropped two to Illinois and finished out the weekend strong with a four-hit shutout over Texas A&M-Corpus Christi to compile a tournament record of 3-2. Of the three teams squaring off against the Aggies this weekend, one has already lost to A&M. Oregon (8-4) fell to the Aggies, 8-3, in the Fiesta Bowl Tournament played in Phoenix, Ariz. on Feb. 13. Head coach Jo Evans said she hopes history will repeat itself. “We have already played Oregon,” Evans said. “We played well against them, and I hope we can get back to that level.” Evans’ comments come as a result of play over the past two weeks that she viewed as being less than the Aggies’ best. “In most of the games, we did not play very well,” said A&M junior shortstop Adrian Gregory. “Once we get a few more games under our belts and find our comfort zone, we will be good to go.” A&M dropped a double- header to Houston two weeks ago when they were outscored 9-5 and let a four-run lead slip away in the first game. In tour nament play last weekend, A&M outscored opponents 12- 9 and came away with two shutouts. After focusing on improving defensive play in the Aggie Invitational I, Evans said the squad has pinpointed offen sive production as its objective this weekend. “I want us to be more aggressive at the plate, because 1 don't see us doing that right now,” Evans said. “I am looking forward to it.” The improved A&M offen sive attack is something that this weekend’s opponents will not be looking forward to as the Aggies continue to dominate on the base paths, compiling stolen bases at a blistering pace. The Aggies have racked up 41 stolen bases on just 43 tries, acquiring an impressive .953 stolen base percentage. Freshman centerfielder Sharonda McDonald is a per fect 11-11 on the bases and leads the team with 16 hits. Gregory leads the team in RBIs with 14 and is tied with senior Sherah Atkins for the team lead in homeruns with two. A&M's 8-3 victory over Oregon marks their highest offensive output of the season. . The Aggies will do battle with Oregon at 2:30 p.m. Friday, followed by a matchp with Penn State at 4:45 p.m. at the Aggie Softball Complex. A&M will play twice again on Saturday at 2:30 p.m. and 4:45 p.m. against Penn State and Oregon. The Aggies will finish with Southern Mississippi Sunday at 12 p.m. kas comes back in day two of championships Aggies expect close game from Colorado event of the Big 12 Swimming ill Diving Championships in Austin took see Thursday night, but Texas senior Ian Wertook all the excitement out of the ityard freestyle as he set a new Big 12 a time of 19.18 - 0.59 behind senior Matt Rose. Goiptodaytwo, the Aggies held a 74-40 ver Texas on the strength of their The 24-time defending Big 12 cham- Longhorns came back strong on day mmgfourof the day’s five events, te lone Aggie win was impressive as the A&M 200-yard freestyle broke the Big 12 record in a time of 11 iNo, 14 A&M women entered the day i a first place tie with Texas, but the ns also took four of the five events n’s side. freshman Alida DiPlacido won the leter diving competition to give' the air lone gold medal of the day. preliminaries start at 10 a.m. fithefinals starting at 6 p.m. By Troy Miller THE BATTALION When the Texas A&M men's bas ketball team takes the court against the University of Colorado 12:30 p.m. Saturday at Reed Arena, the Aggies will only be playing for pride. With only three games left to play, A&M (7-17, 0-13 Big 12) is guaran teed to finish last in the Big 12 while the Buffaloes (16-8, 8-5) are currently tied for fourth and are on the bubble for an NCAA tournament bid. “For that (CU to finish in the top five of the conference) to happen, and us not to go (to the tournament), they’d have to take (Texas) Tech or (Oklahoma), and we beat both of them,” said Colorado senior guard/forward Blair Wilson. “They haven't beat anyone we haven’t beaten. We’ve got close to 20 wins, and if you throw in a couple of sorry teams, we would have had that, but we chose not to go that route ” Wilson is actually incorrect in one of his statements. The only team that Texas Tech and OU have beaten that Colorado hasn't is A&M - not that Colorado is shaking in its sneakers. A&M is in the midst of a 13-game losing streak with its final three games against two teams fighting for an NCAA berth and Oklahoma State University, who is currently tied atop the Big 12 in first place. “We can't manufacture an atti tude,” said A&M head coach Melvin Watkins. “It’s just hoping you’re going to win, and in this conference you can't hope you're going to win - you've got to get it done.” The Buffaloes have been able to stay close to the top of the Big 12 due to the play of seniors Wilson and guard/forward Michel MorandaiS and junior center David Harrison. Harrison leads the Buffaloes with 16.8 points and 8.9 rebounds per game. Morandais is right behind Harrison averaging 16.3 points and three assists per game. Colorado head coach Ricardo Patton praises his top three players, but he said the team’s other players have made Colorado a better ball club. “In order to win basketball games, you have to be able to depend on your top players to show up every night,” Patton said. “One of the things that helps the top players show up is that we are getting contributions from other players to relieve some of the pressure off the top players.” A&M, on the other hand, hasn’t received top play from its stars. After garnering Big 12 Freshman of the Year honors for the 2002-03 season, A&M sophomore guard/forward Antoine Wright has hit just 36 percent of his field goal attempts this season, 28.5 per- . cent from beyond the three-point arc. Senior forward Andy Slocum has averaged only 5.17 points in the last six games despite starting off the season averaging close to a double-double. Senior forward Jesse King has fall en off after a hot start to the season after suffering a foot injury. “We had the ball in the hands of the people we want shooting it, and it doesn’t go down,” Watkins said after Wednesday’s 67-61 overtime loss to Baylor. “Players have got to make plays.” Nobody has been making plays for A&M all season, while Colorado players have been stepping into the limelight to lead their team to a prob able NCAA tournament appearance. That’s probably why A&M is in last place and Colorado is fighting for a conference title. “It would hurt not to go to the tournament,” Wilson said. “You never know what happens, and everybody needs to play with that urgency and enjoy this because it may not come again.” TAU 1 12th Man Team REWARDS PROGRAM ...Invites you to: 14 EarMiNg Rewards is Easy 3 Days * 6 Sports * *8 Events ^ Feb. 27 Saturday, '^00p.m, - Women’s Tennis vs. UTSA 12:00 p.m. - 2: 30p.m. - Softball vs. Sothern Mississippi 12:30 p.m. - 100p.m. - Baseball vs. Arkansas 2:30 p.m. - l'30p.m,. Equestrian vs. Auburn 3:00 p.m. - ^5p.m.. Softball vs. Penn State 4:45 p.m. - J'OOp.m. - Women’s Tennis vs. Iowa St. 6:00 p.m. - W p m. - Baseball vs. New Mexico 7:00 p.m. - Feb. 28 Men’s Tennis vs. UTSA Men’s Basketball vs. Colorado Softball vs. Penn State Baseball vs. New Mexico Softball vs. Oregon Men’s Tennis vs. SELA Baseball vs. Arkansas Sunday, Feb. 29 11:00 a.m. - Baseball vs. Arkansas 12:00 p.m. - Softball vs. Southern Mississippi 1:30 p.m. - Women’s Tennis vs. Missouri 7:00 p.m. - Baseball vs. New Mexico Spirit Weekend 2004 Yell Practice @ Olsen After TONIGHT’S Baseball Game SATURDAY @ THE REC 5k Fun Run/Walk Benefiting Special Olympics $5.00 entry fee includes a T-shirt Sign up TODAY from llam-3pm @ Rudder or Tomorrow at the race: Start time 8:30am SUNDAY @ OLSEN PAVILION 4:30-7pm Silent Auction Benefitng Special Olympics 4:30-6:30pm Baseball BBQ 12MSF and AAI Members are Free Guest are $5.00 for BBQ any questions please call: 846-8193