Women’s Tennis let lid SPORTS IN BRIEF vas pan baseball takes leiiPn® wo games from ' I JCLA s _ lost, rts offe ■e is» : in ® n a wi ints ta an W ; of Gan illedinai the K itants e given ed in anas mi e. I of suicidi ■ded, to itSkyww srvices in Skyvie'N' tosewa') Eight was the magic number Los Angeles as the winner of iach game in Texas A&M base- s three-game series with i be ?>|jcla was the first team to each eight runs. .12 A&M started the road rip in a bad way, dropping the the armei irst game of the series, 8-6. attacksi foe Aggies (14-2) rebounded iaturday with an 8-4 win and the third game, 8-2, to give iraeliW i&M the series win. it simti A&M junior pitcher Zach antsandi lackson (4-0) started Sunday s in Gan it UCLA’s Jackie Robinson lemiliw Mum, earning his fourth win nt bomk nas many starts by giving up lemissid wo runs in 6.2 innings and Wing out six. The Aggies were led at the ilate Sunday by sophomore atcher Kevin Whelan, who had .jdiiestilteRBIs in game, two coming KP yfofj jffa second inning home run. UCLA (11-5) didn’t get on the aard until the bottom of the seventh inning when junior ^ shortstop Ryan McCarthy home- led off Jackson, prompting A&M coach Mark Johnson to in freshman pitcher Blake Rampeyfrom the bullpen. Rampey did not allow a hit in his2.2 innings of work to seal the win for A&M. The Aggies will face the University of Houston Tuesday at 7 p.m. at Cougar in Houston. Aggies complete winless Big 12 season The Texas A&M men’s bas- kWteam finished the sea- M/ess in conference, los ing to Big 12 conference cham- pionOklahoma State University, 7041, Saturday at Gallagher- Iba Arena in Stillwater, Okla. State (24-3, 14-2) its first outright confer ence title since winning the Big Conference regular sea son championship in 1964-65. TheAggies (7-20, 0-16 Big 12) ept the game tight early as Mi teams were tied at nine 9:03 into the game. The No. 7 owboys then unleashed a 12-1 run over the next 4:32 to uild an 11-point lead that ould never vanish. Oklahoma State junior inard John Lucas led the lowboys with 20 points and hree assists. a 14-point lead going into hesecond half, Oklahoma State lever let A&M within 12 points is it cruised on to victory. The Aggies were led by sen- or forward Nick Anderson md freshman guard Acie Law V,who both scored 10 points. be the No. 11 seed othe Big 12 Conference tour- lament and will face No. 6- eed Missouri at 8:20 p.m. hursday at the American lirlines Center in Dallas. top doubles team rjj|reaches final at La talla Invitational if arch 9 "ch 23 26428 ' C h 27 'ch 28 -ch 28 -ch 30 April 3 hi 34 April d April 7 1449 16-23 o life nyak! .! 5-23. duce3 natfe 11 npus Texas A&M’s No. 1-ranked duo f seniors Lester Cook and Ante latijevic got their wish Sunday they squared off against am and Richard Barker of lice University in the finals of the Annual Pacific Coast Doubles Championships, he Barker brothers, ranked 2 in the nation, were able to lefeatthe Aggies’ top team, 6-3 6-3, to maintain their per- ictrecord this season. and Matijevic swept the first five rounds, (inning their first four match- isin straight sets. They even (on locker room bragging ights along the way by efeating a team that includ- d A&M assistant coach huon Madden, 6-3, 6-3. The tournament results, icwever, should not affect rankings since the ournament is not sanctioned lythe Intercollegiate Tennis Issociation. Sports The Battalion rm iPsiMTOmm EEZZZmMmaM George P. Mitchell Tennis Center Page 7 • Monday, March 8, 2004 Aggie tennis overpowers Houston Evan O'Connell • THE BATTALION Texas A&M senior Jessica Roland returns a backhand in the Aggies’ 7-0 victory over Rice on Feb. 15. A&M beat Houston, 6-1, Saturday. Roland won her singles match over Houston junior Biljana Dimovska, 6-1, 6-0. By Jon Gilbert THE BATTALION The No. 16 Texas A&M women’s ten nis team earned its fifth consecutive win Saturday as it defeated the University of Houston, 6-1. A&M continues to play well and is solidifying itself as one of the premier teams in the Big 12 conference. “We’re definitely one of the teams to beat in the Big 12,” said A&M head coach Bobby Kleinecke. “We’re playing well and are going to be a difficult team to play down the road.” Although the match looked like a rout on paper, it was very tight during doubles. The Cougars’ doubles tandem of junior Biljana Dimovska and sophomore Miranda Foley beat A&M’s senior Roberta Spencer and junior Lauren Walker, 8-3. Dimovska and Foley, as well as the rest of the Houston team, played patiently and forced A&M to make errors. “(Houston) didn’t miss volleys, and we had never seen that,” Kleinecke said. “We needed to be more finesse. If anything, I should have warned court No. 3 more of their style. We didn’t come out flat, though.” Despite the team’s initial struggles, A&M’s other doubles’ pairs won their matches. Senior Jessica Roland and sophomore Nicki Mechem dominated their match. 8-2. On court No. 3, fresh man Anna Lubinsky and senior Danielle Lee earned a hard-fought 8-6 win to clinch the doubles point for the Aggies. In singles, A&M iced the victory. Walker, Roland, Lubinsky and Mechem grabbed quick victories, as they got off to quick starts and gave their opponents no opportunity to come back. Walker's sin gles win is her fifth consecutive dating back to the Wake Forest match on Feb. 22. “I just really came out focused,” Walker said. “I’ve stayed positive on the court and gone out there and taken care of business.” Not only is Walker winning, she is win ning in dominating fashion. She won 6-0, 6-1, Saturday, and has not allowed more than one point in a match since Feb. 21. “(Walker) is playing solid,” Kleinecke said. “She had been strug gling earlier in the year, and it’s been good to see her get in a rhythm.” The Aggies return to the court Monday when No. 30 University of Pennsylvania visits the George P. Mitchell Tennis Center. Pennsylvania (7-1) is off to one of its best starts in school history and boasts its highest ranking in school history. “The Penn match will be a great match,” Kleinecke said. “They beat Maryland. 4-3, just like we did. They also played William & Mary. So, they're a good team. We need to be ready to play. It will be good to play prime time, and hopefully we'll be able to get a lot of people out to support us.” First serve is set for 6 p.m. It will be the last match of a five-match home stand as the Aggies will travel to Louisiana State University and the University of Nebraska next weekend. Equestrian takes two of Records fall at three shows over weekend Indoor Nationals Sharon Aeschbach • THE BATTALION A&M junior western rider Casie Lisabeth rides Mikey during the reining section of the western show held at Freeman Arena Sunday. By Jordan Meserole THE BATTALION The western squad of the Texas A&M Equestrian team is no longer the national champi on - for now. Despite winning two out of three shows this weekend, the Aggies remained behind regional point leader Oklahoma State University. A&M entered the three-show event 25 points behind OSU for the top spot in the region. A&M, who is the previous two-time national champion, had an opportunity to overtake OSU, but was unable to completely close the point gap. The first day didn’t go as well as the Aggies had hoped, with A&M finishing second behind West Texas A&M University. Aggie juniors Kelly Johnson and Lani Jurena both had the only first place finishes for A&M in the day one events, which qualified the two for indi vidual regional competition. Jurena has been riding com petitively for only two years as compared to many of the other equestrian team members who have been riding since elemen tary school. “I’ve really come a Jong way,” Jurena said. “I’ve often thought back to my very first practice when it seemed like I wasn’t doing anything right.” The second show of the weekend put the Aggies in better position. A&M finished the show in first place ahead of OSU, with West Texas A&M finishing third. A&M juniors Katie Forest and Casie Lisabeth took first place in both reining events for the show. A&M entered the third show with a very distant opportunity to beat OSU for the top regional spot. The Aggies finished the weekend on a high note, though, taking first place in the third show, giving the Aggies two wins for the weekend. OSU head coach Larry Sanchez said the weekend was tiring for his team. “I don’t care if we’re 10 points or 100 points ahead,” Sanchez said. “Unless the other team is numerically and statistically out. I'm still going to be nervous. We came out and rode well and did n’t let them close that gap.” On the individual side, OSU senior Kristen Dickerson cap tured the region point total beat ing out A&M’s Forest, the former point champion. Forest had to place first in the event to advance to regional competition. “I was so nervous I felt sick,” Forest said. “I feel like I can breathe once again.” Forest said a secret handshake between her and junior teammate Natalie Hill helped ease her fears right before the event. “I’ve won almost every time we’ve done it, so I wasn’t about to stop,” Forest said. Despite a second-place finish to OSU, A&M still has the opportunity to advance to the national championship by advancing through regional and zone competitions. “It’s nice that the door is not completely shut yet,” said A&M head coach Tana Rawson. “We’re just going to set our goals for each competition and see where we end up.” By Ryan Irby THE BATTALION Legend has it that William Tell shot an apple on the top of his son’s head with a bow and arrow. Texas A&M senior All- American archer Mary Zorn would consider this feat noth ing more than a day’s work. Zorn secured her place in the archery record books this week end at the 35th South Region Indoor Nationals held in G. Rollie White Coliseum, when she not only broke her personal records, but shattered the indoor American record and tied a world record, taking home first place in the women’s compound division. Zorn finished with a record 1.177 total points out of a pos sible 1,200, breaking the American record of 1,174 held by last year’s Indoor National champion, Christie Bisco. Zorn’s previous personal record was a 1,171. Her 593 of a pos sible 600 points on day two of the tournament equaled the world indoor record. A&M head coach Kathy Kissinger expressed the admira tion she has for her prized archer. “I am very excited for her,” Eissinger said. “She continues to amaze us and keeps adding to it.” For Zorn, the exhilaration of writing her name into the record books was more than she could grasp at the close of her final collegiate indoor round. “It hasn’t really sunk in yet,” Zorn said. For nearly three hours Friday, Saturday and Sunday, Zorn and other archers main tained an intense focus on their targets during more than 20 rounds of competition each day. When arrows had been counted and each bulls-eye totalled, A&M walked away with the top I 1 spots in the compound division, with Zorn and teammate Amber Dawson leading the field. Dawson, an All-American, finished the tournament in second place in the. compound division with 1,157 points. In the recurve division, A&M freshman Corrine Yohann walked away with the gold after firing a 1,088. But it was Zorn who stole the limelight, shattering records and staking her claim in archery lore. “I just stand back and watch her shoot,” Eissinger said, describing her coaching tech niques when it comes to Zorn’s incomparable talent. “I am basically providing support and not so much coaching on the compound.” Zorn, who stands like a stat ue frozen in time in preparation to fire one of her award-win ning shots, attributed success to her uncharacteristic approach. “I sing songs when I shoot,” Zorn said. “Pressure actually makes me focus more; it keeps me from think ing about other things.” The Aggies will begin re focusing on their next competi tions when the outdoor season begins Monday. Eissinger said her focus is moving forward after her club’s record setting day. “We are going to make the transition to outdoor,” Eissinger said. “We’re going to get out there and fling some arrows so we are ready to go when that time comes around.” Zorn and the Aggies will shoot again March 27-28 at the Lone Star Tournament in Austin. !\