5 ATI.| Sports The Battalion exas first roadblock for Aggies n\l ( By Nikki Knight THE BATTALION ■ Vying for first place in the Big 12, the No. 24 Texas A&M softball team will face rival University of Texas in its last home game for the season Wednesday night at the Aggie Softball Complex. ■ The Longhorns (23-19, 5-9 Big 12) are com ing off a tough loss against Oklahoma State University last Sunday to face the Aggies (30- If, 12-1), who beat University of Missouri at home last weekend. ■TB The Aggies will be looking to gain their 11th straight win before the challenge of conference fldlillftder University of Nebraska (34-12, 12-0) tins weekend. M I Aggie senior pitcher Jessica Kapchinski is coining into this game with confidence and a league-low ERA of 0.29. She has been strong in . ill [conference play with a record (11-1) that almost matches the team’s. ■ “We are looking forward to continuing our success,” Kapchinski said. “The challenge will to stay focused, stay relaxed and concentrate j^fthis game.” venraB Kapchinski was named Big 12 Softball ious JPitcher of the Week Tuesday. This was the sec- iond time this season she has received the honor. I A&M head coach Jo Evans said her team is confident going into this week but focused on Wednesday’s game. “We have been really good about not looking ;ad and playing it a game at a time,” Evans [id after the Missouri game. Freshman pitcher Christina Gwyn will start r the Longhorns and bring a 3.48 ERA to the Jwund. Gwyn pitched Saturday for Texas and allowed four runs and four hits in 3.2 innings, aking the loss. The A&M defense has been solid, but its em it batting average slightly trails the nghoms. The Aggies are batting .270 this sea- n. Sophomore outfielder Rocky Spencer and leshman Sharonda McDonald lead the team ■th batting averages of .359 and .319, respec- iyely. Junior infielder Adrian Gregory has three i>me runs and nine RBIs on the season. I The Longhorns will bring a .309 batting I'erage to the plate and look to use that as the la an Evan O'Connell • THE BATTALION Aggie senior pitcher Jessica Kapchinski struck out four people against University of Missouri last Saturday. The Aggies won 2-0. Kapchinski won Big 12 Softball Pitcher of the Week Tuesday, for the second time this season. team’s biggest advantage. Junior third baseman and last week’s player of the week for the Longhorns, Wynter Turner, has a .31 1 batting average and said the key to a win would be to score as many runs as possible. “The A&M game is always a good, competi tive, fun game,” Turner said. “We will be suc cessful if we play good offense and get into the mindset to score runs.” Longhorn sophomore shortstop Amber Hall will also pose a threat to the Aggies. She’s batting a team-high .398 with two home runs and 17 RBIs. A win against Texas will pave the way for the Aggies’ trip to face conference leader Nebraska this weekend. Trailing Nebraska by only one game, these last few conference matches will prove to be critical in determining the Aggies’ placement in the league and national standings. The first pitch in the mid-week face-off is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Wednesday night at the Aggie Softball Complex. Page 5 • Wednesday, April 28, 2004 U.S. men’s soccer takes on Mexico DALLAS (AP) — When the U.S. men’s national team takes the field against Mexico on Wednesday, the Cotton Bowl may not feel like home territory. The air horns, drums and flags that are found at most of Mexico’s games are sure to be out in force — just as they were during Mexico’s last Dallas stop — giving the game the look of a homecoming for the Tri-Colores. “You might as well be playing away, since it’s in Dallas it will be a predominantly pro-Mexico crowd,” U.S. forward Josh Wolff said. “It’s going to be chaotic.” The U.S. team hopes the friendly exhibition game will simulate the intensity of the upcoming CONCA- CAF World Cup qualifying matches, which start June 13 against Grenada in Columbus, Ohio. “I don’t know what the environment is going to be exactly, but I expect the crowd will be predomi nately a pro-Mexico crowd,” said U.S coach Bruce Arena. “But, we’re used to that. I think it’s a good environment for our players to be around in prepara tion for the bigger games.” Mexico last played in Dallas 14 months ago in a friendly match victory over Bolivia at Texas Stadium, in front of a crowd dominated by Mexico fans. After Mexico, the U.S. team has one final tune-up match, June 2 against Honduras in Foxboro, Mass. Should the U.S. team advance through its prelimi nary qualifying round, its six-game, four-team semi final round competition will begin in August. With 17 of team USA’s 18 players from Major League Soccer teams, there will be some familiar faces. But two players will be out with injuries: defend er Cory Gibbs, the only player on the roster from the hometown Dallas Burn (groin); and defender Dan Califf of Los Angeles (MCL). Colorado Rapids’ defenders Pablo Mastroeni and Ritchie Kotschau have been selected as replacements. Wolff is one of the five current U.S. players who was on the team that beat Mexico in the 2002 World Cup. The United States has won five of the last seven games in the series, each by shutout. “We’re definitely getting better,” Wolff said. “We know how to dig in when we get a lead, we have to be patient and wait for a goal.” Six members of the U.S. team have never played against Mexico, and Arena feels the exhibition will be a key game for inexperienced players, 'f! Bl I LOUPOT’S RflfllfQXflDEQ Duuivti i unco AN AGGIE TRADITION OF FRIENDLY SERVICE SINCE 1932 Need a Ride? SELL YOUR TEXTBOOKS TO LOUPOT’S BOOKSTORES & ENTER TO WIN A 2004 APRILIA MOJITO-SO SCOOTER WINNER AT ALL 3 STORES ! NORTHGATE 335 University Dr. 979.846.6312 979.846.0748 fax WOLF PEN PLAZA 1907 Texas Ave. S. 979.693.0838 979.764.7355 fax SOUTHGATE 308 George Bush Dr. 979.693.2278 979.764.7273 fax RESERVE YOUR SUMMER AND FALL BOOKS ONLINE NOW! www.loupots.com TEST DRIVE ONE TODAY! >/&*<&• Ms M & M POWER SPORTS 730 E. 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