Terrence Takes Off!
Transcription
Terrence Takes Off!
AgsIlllustrrated d AgsIllustra ated Volume 13, No. 8 September 8, 2003 Terrence Takes Off! Terrence Murphy KKeys eys AAggies’ ggies’ 228-26 8-26 VVictory ictory TABLE OF CONTENTS FEATURES Aggie Defeat Utah .................................................................................4-11 Game Photos.........................................................................................12-13 Virginia Tech Preview.. ....................................................................14-15 Soccer and Volleyball 2003................................................................16-17 Coach Fran and Virginia Tech ........................................................18-19 Baseball Recruiting.............. .............................................................20-23 HOW TO SUBSCRIBE Ags Illustrated is printed 17 times per year and costs $42.90 for a one-year subscription. To order a subscription call: (979) 690-9278 ADVERTISING For advertising, contact us at : (713) 896-6246 Ags Illusttratted Ags Illustrated is published monthly January, February, March, April, bi-monthly June/July, weekly September through November except for open dates, monthly December. Single issues cost $2.95; subscription rate for one year is $42.90. Ags Illustrated is published at P.O. Box 10069 College Station, TX 77842 979-690-9278. Address all editorial-related correspondence to Ags Illustraed, P.O. Box 10069 College Station, TX 77842 Ags Illustrated is not an official publication of Texas A&M University. Send address changes to Ags Illusrtated, P.O. Box 10069 College Station, TX 77842. For subscription inquiries, call 979-690-9278. Allow six to eight weeks for response. Give old and new addresses and enclose latest mailing address label when writing about your subscription. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Please send letters to: P. O. Box 10069 College Station, TX 77842 or email them to: agsillustrated@aol.com agsillustrated@aol.com In our next issue . . . Pitt Preview Issue VOLUME 13, NUMBER 8 September 8, 2003 EDITOR Scott Clendenin ASSOCIATE EDITOR Angela Clendenin CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Jason Lincoln, Ed Watson, CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS Brice Clendenin Texas A&M SID Subscribe Today!!! Ags Illustrated makes a great gift for every Aggie fan! Subscribe today and get the best recruiting and Aggie basketball and baseball coverage around. Ags Illustrated makes a great gift for every Aggie fan! Subscribe today and get the best recruiting and Aggie basketball and baseball coverage around. Enjoy 17 issues for just $42.90. First class postage is also available for an additional $9 for football season only and $16 for a whole year. Enjoy 17 issues for just $42.90. First class postage is also available for an additional $9 for football season only and $16 for a whole year. 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AgTimes.com Find this and other info on www.agtimes.com Subscribe Today!!! Ags Illustrated Visit us at www.agtimes.com for the latest in Aggie news, chat and message boards Page 2 17 Issues for 42.90 979-690-9278 AGGIE INSIDER LB Jared Morris Out for the Season Texas A&M Head Football Coach Dennis Franchione announced today middle linebacker Jared Morris, a senior from Brownwood, Texas, suffered a knee injury and will miss the rest of the 2003 season. "It is very disappointing to lose Jared to this knee injury because he is a fifth-year senior," Coach Fran said. "Jared worked so hard in the spring and off-season and played extremely well in the first game and a half. He is one of our leaders and we will look into every possibility of extending his eligibility." Morris recorded 14 tackles in the season opener against Arkansas State including one behind the line of scrimmage. In Saturday's game against Utah, Morris recorded four stops and was named by the Aggie coaching staff as the Special Teams Player of the Game. Morris underwent surgery late Sunday to repair a torn patella tendon in his left knee. sented the Aggies on the all-tournament team. The Aggies, who posted a season-low .129 hitting percentage in a three-game loss to Michigan on Saturday, rebounded to hit a season-high .311 against the Racers. “The team got the wake-up call last night,” A&M coach Laurie Corbelli said. “This was a huge match for us in terms of emotionally and mentally after having such a flat performance.” The Aggies led the entire first game and were up 19-16 when they took command as Lexy Beers (Manhattan Beach, Calif.) served A&M to 10 unanswered points. The Aggies hit .433 and posted five blocks in the 30-18 win. Kendra Felder (Corpus Christi, Texas) led A&M with six kills in the game, one shy of her career high for kills in an entire match. “We’ve never started a match as aggressively as we did today, and that set the tone for an aggressive atmosphere and more determination on the court,” Corbelli said. “That made the difference in the match.” Aggie Baseball Fall Practice Schedule Aggie Soccer Tops Utah 1-0 Fall practice starts on Sept. 18 and continues until the Fall World Series in October. Here is the tentative schedule for the FWS. Kat Krambeer scored in the 76th minute on Friday night to lead No. 6 Texas A&M over Utah, 1-0, in front of a season-high 2,106 fans at the Aggie Soccer Complex. Krambeer, a native of Brooklyn Park, Minn., received a through ball from Laura Probst at the top of the 18-yard box. With a couple of touches she beat the keeper and scored from the left side of the box into an open net. The goal was the first of the freshman forward's career. Probst was credited with the assist - her first of the season. "With the speed that we have everywhere, I think we are pretty good counter-attacking team," commented A&M head coach G Guerrieri. "Speed kills, and tonight it was Kat's speed that proved to be the difference in the match." With the win the Aggies improved to 3-0 on the season, while Utah dropped to 2-1. The win marked the 19th in a row for Texas A&M at the Aggie Soccer Complex. "This was a great win over a quality opponent," Guerrieri said. "I can clearly see why they are picked to win the Mountain West Conference." October 16th, double-header, both games seven innings. 5 p.m. October 17th, double-header, both games seven innings. 5 p.m. October 18th, Old-Timer game featuring former Aggie Baseball Players, Time TBA (Night Game) October 19th, single nine-inning game. 2 p.m. If you are not traveling to the Nebraska Football game you should start making plans to be in College Station to attend the 2003 Alumni game. The 2001 game featured over 130 former players including Ryan Rupe, Kelly Wunsch and Trey Moore. The 2004 spring schedule is now posted on the A&M website. Aggie Volleyball finishes Second Texas A&M defeated Murray State, 30-18, 30-22, 27-30, 30-25, to take second place at the Michigan/Pepsi Challenge at Cliff Keen Arena with a 2-1 record. Melissa Munsch (Columbus, Texas) and Laura Jones (Arlington, Texas) repreFind this and other info on www.agtimes.com Ags Illustrated Page 3 AGS I L L U S T R AT E D MESSAGE Dear Subscribers: It's here. After all of the dust has settled, here is your first issue of the restored Ags Illustrated magazine. Without your patience and support, this would not have been possible. For that we are most appreciative. As I explained in the boards on AgTimes.com, Scott and I have decided to move forward with the production of a magazine that is what Aggies are looking for. We have listened to the comments and know that good solid recruiting coverage, inside information, in-depth athletic department coverage and excellent commentary are what Aggie fans everywhere want. We are prepared to deliver that to you. For those of you who have been long-time supporters, and those of you who have just discovered us in the last year, please be assured that your commitment to us in the form of subscriptions will be honored into this year. Unfortunately, the finances are not there to continue doing the slick magazine-style format that we attempted to introduce last year. However, what's inside Ags Illustrated will remain the same quality journalism that Ags Illustrated fans have become accustomed to. As support from advertising and subscriptions grows, we will make improvements to the magazine as we are able. Thank you for your support and understanding. Re-discover Ags Illustrated and enjoy the first issue of the Fran era! We look forward to having you continue as a part of our family! Sincerely, Ed Watson Scott Clendenin Owners Ags Illustrated 17 Issues for 42.90 979-690-9278 Game Report 2003 Two Close a Shave... Ags Hold on for 28-26 Victory over Utah by Jason Lincoln photos by Brice Clendenin Reggie McNeal and the Aggie offense jumped on top 21-0 Find this and other info on www.agtimes.com Ags Illustrated Page 4 COLLEGE STATION, Texas - Texas A&M has a new coach, a new season and the same struggles to close out games. Except there was one difference. With the game on the line in the fourth quarter, A&M came through, stopping a two-point conversion and holding on for a 2826 victory. “It was just gut wrenching watching it,” A&M receiver Jamaar Taylor said. “It’s like watching your favorite soap opera, not knowing what’s going to happen at the end.” The soap opera that is A&M’s 2003 season has been rocky enough to rival any “Days of Our Lives” episode, but thus far has yielded a pair of victories. “If I had any dark hair it’s all gone now, that’s for sure,” A&M coach Dennis Franchione said. “That was a hard fought game.” The Texas A&M football team has long held the reputation of playing down to their competition level. The season opener’s 26-11 victory over Arkansas State lived up to that reputation as A&M looked anything but sharp in its debut under Franchione. For the first 20-minutes of week two, it looked like A&M would break out of that mold as they jumped out to a 21-0 lead over Utah with quarterback Reggie McNeal starting with a 9-9, 104 yard passing performance. Meanwhile, Utah’s offense struggled with fumbles and lackluster performances when playing in A&M territory. That was the in the first half, before momentum shifted thanks to three critical A&M turnovers in the third quarter that allowed Utah to cut the lead to 21-13. Before it was said and done, Utah outscored A&M 26-7 in the second half. The Utes (1-1) also had 97 plays of offense for 415 yards, while holding A&M to just 56 plays 17 Issues for 42.90 979-690-9278 and 368 yards. The final score was a 45-yard pass from Utah quarterback Brett Elliott to John Madsen with just eight seconds left. Elliott went for the twopoint conversion on a run outside, but Jonte Buhl stopped him short with a hit that left the Utah quarterback limping off the field and the Utes limping home 2-points shy of the victory. “I told the team that college football games usually come down to a handful of plays,” Franchione said. “We played hard every snap and in the end we made one more play. I think we had a good first half and a bad third quarter. We need to get smarter and better with the football.” A&M (2-0) enters the off week with lots of room for improvement, particularly five fumbles, three of which resulted in turnovers. But it appears, at least for the time being, they will enter the off week knowing who their starting quarterback is. Reggie McNeal started under center for the second straight week, starting with a 9-9 passing performance and playing all 22:37 that the A&M offense was on the field. McNeal finished the game 12-18 with 145 yards and one touchdown. “During the week the coaches were pretty much doing the same thing, telling us we were both going to play,” McNeal said. “They didn’t name a starter until Friday night when we got into the hotel. I must have played good for them to keep me in. “Anytime you can get a lot more snaps you can get into a comfort zone. You can just go out and play your game. With all the playmakers I have around me, that helps too because I can just get the ball to them and they’ll make plays.” Courtney Lewis also distinguished himself as the go-to back, getting 16 carries for 100 yards. Starter Derek Farmer had five carries for 36 yards. A&M’s offense may not have pulled out all the stops yet, but they pulled out enough to make sure to get an early edge on the Utes. On the Aggies’ second possession of the game, McNeal handed off to wide receiver Terrence Murphy. Murphy came around from the left side and went untouched for 80 yards down the right sideline. The score came just one week after Murphy was robbed of a kickoff return for a touchdown when A&M’s Jamaar Taylor tripped him in the open field, 30 yards shy of the endzone. This time Murphy made sure no one, not even his own teammates could catch him as he sprinted into the endzone with over a 10-yard gap on the next closest player. “We worked on that play all week and knew we had a shot to make something happen,” McNeal said. “Getting the ball to Murph, the Photo by Brice Clendeninj Even the 12th Man Anthony Squillante was called upon to stop the Utah Rushing Attack Find this and other info on www.agtimes.com Ags Illustrated Page 5 playmaker that he is, we knew he could have a big impact.” The receiver’s run equaled the 13th longest run in A&M history and longest since 1997 when Sirr Parker took the ball 80 yards against Iowa State. Utah moved into A&M territory for the first time midway through the first quarter, getting inside the 30 when Marcus Jasmin stripped the ball from Bo Nagahi on a shuffle pass. Bryant Singleton jumped on the ball for the Aggies. On the very next play with the Aggies backed up on their own 16, McNeal found Murphy again, this time 50-yards down field where Murphy pulled in the pass with a diving, fingertip grab to put A&M in scoring position again. Lewis and McNeal ran the ball down to the 3yard line before McNeal and Murphy tried to hook up again. This time Utah was called for holding Murphy on the pass play and gave A&M first down at the 1-yard line. Keith Joseph plowed it up the middle on the next play to give A&M the 14-0 edge. The Wrecking Crew defense had an even bigger fumble recovery in the second quarter. After a Jacob Young punt pinned the Utes on their own 6-yard line, Utah’s Steve Savoy mishandled a pitch on 3rd and 1 at the 15 and the ball sailed all the way to the 4-yard line where defensive end David Ross jumped on the ball. On the very next play, McNeal found tight end Quinlin Germany in the back of the endzone for a 4-yard touchdown pass and a 21-0 lead with 10:41 left in the first half. A&M did not score again while the Wrecking Crew defense turned back two drives into A&M territory to keep the shutout intact throughout the first half. Utah came out of the gates in the second half with an offensive surge sparked by quarterback Elliott. Elliot turned a key fourth down conversion with a run up the middle and another conversion on third down with a 13-yard pass to Lynzell Jackson for Utah’s first trip inside the redzone.. Elliott added eight and six yard runs to set up a 2-yard touchdown run by Brandon Warfield. Utah missed the extra point, leaving A&M up 21-6. "I'm disappointed we didn't get the win,” Warfield said the Crockett native after the game. “But I was glad my family could come see me play.” Murphy fumbled the ensuing kickoff, giving Utah the ball back at the 24-yard line, but fourplays later Utah kicker Bryan Borreson missed his second kick of the night as the 39-yard field goal attempt sailed wide-left. The Aggies’ next possession only lasted two plays before a fumbled snap gave Utah a short17 Issues for 42.90 979-690-9278 field again. Corey Dodds recovered the fumble on the 18-yard line for the Utes. Utah scored four plays later on a six-yard run by Warfield. Borreson made the extra point to cut the lead to 21-13. “The offensive and defensive lines did a great job playing in the atmosphere against a good team,” Urban Meyer said after the game. They couldn't stop us running the ball. But there were a lot of positives, like the work of the o-line.” Murphy responded with another big play returning the next kickoff 67-yards into Utah territory. A&M could not convert, attempting a fake field goal run by Dustin Long that fell short. Murphy racked up 251 all-purpose yards on just eight touches with an 80-yard run, four catches for 76 yards, two kickoff returns for 85 "That was a gut-check for our team. We needed to stay level-headed. We let them back into the game but nobody panicked. We still have a lot of work to do. Each week we have to go through practice and be ready to play." Aggie QB Reggie McNeal yards and one punt return for 10 yards. Utah got no where on its next possession and tried a fake punt by Eric Weddle, who fumbled the ball at the Utah 41. Jaxson Appel recovered the ball for A&M and took it down to the Utah 25. A&M coughed the ball up again, this time on 1st and goal at the 1-yard line when Keith Joseph lost the ball before crossing the goal line. The play marked the 13th fumble of the game between the two teams and A&M’s third turnover. A&M did not convert a third-down until the fourth quarter when McNeal hit Murphy for a 21-yard pass. On the next play, Lewis ran 27yards untouched for the score, giving A&M a 28-13 lead. The play marked A&M’s first score since 10:41 in the second quarter. A&M had scored on three of its first four possessions of the game. Warfield answered with his third touchdown of the night, capping off a 14-play, 76-yard drive for Utah and cutting A&M’s lead back down to eight. Warfield plagued A&M in the second half, carrying the ball 27 times for 141 of his 180 yards total rushing, but the Utes came up two yards short in the finish. A&M closed out the narrow victory to improve to 2-0 entering an off week prior to facing a pair of ranked opponents in Virginia Tech and Pittsburgh. “We got it done. This is the second game Find this and other info on www.agtimes.com under Coach Fran and the first time we’ve had a close game like this,” senior linebacker Scott Stickane said after an 11-tackle performance in place of the injured Jared Morris. “I think it was great. In spite of the fact that it was a 2-point game, it was a win.” Of fensive Player of the Game Terrence Murphy 251 all-purpose yards, one touchdown. 80-yard touchdown run, 4 catches - 76 yards, 2 kickoff returns - 85 yards. Defensive player of the Game Jaxson Appel 2nd straight 13-tackle performance 5 Solo, 8 Assists, 1 fumble recovery, 10 yards, 1 pass broken up Photo by Brice Clendenin Utah’s Brandon Warfield ran hard all night for 181 yards and three touchdowns. Ags Illustrated Page 6 17 Issues for 42.90 979-690-9278 ✓ Aggies Report Card QUARTERBACKS C+ Reggie McNeal started and played the whole game this week. He was efficient in his passing but did not break any big plays on the ground. He lost two fumbles on the center exchange, and that hurt the Aggie offense. He finished the game completing 12-of-18 passes for 145 yards with a touchdown and without throwing an interception. He gained three yards on nine carries Dustin Long had one carry on a fake field goal for five yards. SECONDARY B With the exception of one big play, the Aggie secondary had a fine effort against Utah. With the trouble the front seven had tackling Brandon Warfield, the secondary had too many tackles on the hard charging running back. Ron Jones had a team high 14 tackles and his safety teammate, Jaxson Appel was second with 13 tackles. Byron Jones had ten tackles as well as forcing a fumble but he was flagged for interference in the endzone on a third down play.. Find this and other info on www.agtimes.com RUNNING BACKS by Scott Clendenin A- The Aggie rushing attack was a key to the victory. Courtney Lewis took a big step toward establishing himself as one of the Big 12’s best freshman running backs after picking up 100 yards on 16 carries, including a 28-yard touchdown run. Derrick Farmer picked up 35 yards on five carries but 28 came on one play. Keith Joseph had a one-yard touchdown run but his fumble inside the two yardline cost the Aggies another score in the third quarter. LINEBACKERS RECEIVERS Terrence Murphy dominated the ballgame with returns, receptions and runs. He scored on an 80-yard reverse for the Aggies’ first touchdown. He gained 76 yards on four receptions and his kickoff returns gained another 85 yards. Jamaar Taylor led the team with six receptions for 59 yards. Aggie tight end Quintin Germany caught a fouryard touchdown pass to put the team up 21-0. Another freshman, Earvin Taylor, had his first reception as an Aggie for six yards. C+ The defense only started two linebackers against Utah to match-up against their wide open offense. The key for the ballgame was an apparent knee injury to starting MLB Jarred Morris. He was injured in the third quarter after making four tackles. His replacement Scott Stickane had 11 tackles, including an assist on the two point conversion that would have tied the game with only six seconds to play. Archie McDaniel bounced back from a slow start in game one to make 7 stops. B+ DEFENSIVE LINE C The defensive front may take a lot of blame when a running back totals 181 yards, but others contributed in the total as well. The defensive line had plenty of plays with penetration into the backfield that did not result in tackles for loss. When the line was engaged, Warfield ran through the linebackers who were free and ready to make some tackles. Linnis Smith had eight tackles with two for loss and Marcus Jasmin had seven tackles of his own. Ags Illustrated Page 7 OFFENSIVE LINE B+ After struggling against Arkansas State, the Aggie line was up to the challenge against the much more talented Utes defensive front. Playing together as a group is very important and having it grow between game one and two in the offensive line is almost expected. Geoff Hangartner started at center and his return to the middle of the line solidified the offensive front. They opened up holes that led to the Aggies picking up 223 yards rushing and not allowing a single sack in the ballgame. SPECIAL TEAMS B The Aggie special teams benefited again from the outstanding play of Terrence Murphy and he looks to take a kickoff return for a touchdown this season. Jason Carter did not allow lost yardage by letting punts hit the ground and continue to roll. Jacob Young averaged 35 yards a punt but most were punts where he tried to keep it in the redzone. Cody Scates participated in practice this week and should return to the starting lineup against the Hokies of Virginia Tech. 17 Issues for 42.90 979-690-9278 Editorial Diamonds in the Rough Utah is pretty good and where to find the unknown recruit... by Scott Clendenin Looking at the Utah game a week ago, I thought “I sure am glad this is year one of Urban Meyer at Utah and not year two.” That kind of advantage might have tipped the scaled in the Utes’ favor as the Aggies held on to a 28-26 victory. Utah is a good football team that has a chance to be very good because of Urban Meyer, just like the Aggies are a good football team that has a chance to be very good because of Coach Fran. The real difference is that Meyer will win in the Mountain West Conference because a team with great coaching and good talent can win that league’s championship. Coach Fran is in a league where great coaching needs great talent to win a championship. Hopefully the two main injuries that came out of the game will not affect both teams past their next games. On the two point conversion, QB Brett Elliot broke his left (non-throwing wrist) and will miss their Thursday night match up with California. The only way that a month from now that non-coaches, because the coaches must think highly of Utah after moving the Aggies into the top 25 after the narrow win, will give any respect to Utah is if they win games against Cal, Oregon or Colorado State. Now the Aggies will have to wait and find out if MLB Jarred Morris is out for any significant time after hurting a knee against Utah. The thinnest position on the team was middle linebacker and this may set in motion a series of events that could lead to one and possibly two true freshmen linebackers taking off their redshirts and playing this season. The only redeeming factor to this injury is that the Aggies do have extra time to prepare for Virginia Tech and they don’t have to face the talented Hokies this weekend. Speculating on who would take over for Morris, either of the Bay City Boys could move from outside linebacker to the middle linebacker spot. With the emergence of Justin Warren as a true freshman starter, that would keep him in a position where he is having an impact and it would keep the Aggies from starting two true freshmen if TaTa Thompson Find this and other info on www.agtimes.com Photo by Brice Clendenin R. C. Slocum only had to watch one tape of Terrence Murphy to see his potential moves up the depth chart and surpasses a gritty Scott Stickane. Losing Morris had a definite impact on the ballgame. With Morris out in the second half, senior running back Brandon Warfield exploded and kept the Utes in the game by himself. He rushed 29 times for 141 of his 181 yards after halftime and scored three touchdowns. Eleven of the fourteen plays on the drive that pulled the Utes to within 28-20 with 6:13 remaining were Warfield rushing plays primarily from the shotgun and right at the Aggies’ middle linebacker. It is strange to have to take time to apologize for the Aggie victory this week, but after you see Warfield and company run over other opponents you will begin to realize that they were not just another road kill opponent, and having this team dig down deep to pull out the victory only made the Aggies a stronger team. It also exorcised some of last year’s demons with the memory of fourth quarAgs Illustrated Page 8 ter failure fading from the returning starters’ memory banks. Too Deep in Talent The best two players on the field were two lightly recruited east Texas stars. Brandon Warfield and Terrence Murphy show the depth of talent in the state of Texas and how diamonds in the rough are so abundant that you can find a super star all over the state. I was the only person to rank Brandon Warfield as a top 100 recruit his senior year, and if not for academic deficiencies he would have ended up at a nice four year school where he would have started by his junior season. He was Crockett’s team captain as a senior and led them to a 11-1 record, scoring 541 points in those games. He caught my eye as I watched when future Aggie L’Tydrick Riley, Warfield’s cousin, started to emerge at quarterback 17 Issues for 42.90 979-690-9278 for the Bulldogs. Warfield was named district MVP and was second-team all-state before signing with Kilgore JC. He saw limited action his freshman season with only 350 yards rushing and three touchdowns to his credit before exploding on the scene his sophomore season. He was named first-team allconference and conference MVP after rushing for 1,460 yards and 22 touchdowns his while leading Kilgore to conference title and 2001 Red River Bowl championship. Kilgore had not made the playoff since 1992 and were predicted to finish no higher than fourth before Warfield changed all that. Kilgore was ranked No. 2 in the nation for junior colleges and Warfield was named 2001 J.C. Grid-Wire secondteam All-American. No one from Texas recruited after that tremendous season and he chose Utah over BYU. When Utah lost their leading rusher for the second straight season Warfield was called upon to rescue the Utes. He was set to redshirt that year and did not even suit up during the first two games, but he played in the remaining nine games, making five starts. Texas A&M is not the first team to see him wear down a defense either, in the five games where he had at least 20 carries, he averaged 150.0 ypg. He finished the year rushing 201 times for 919 yards and team high nine touchdowns earning second-team allconference honors. Compare that story to Aggie Terrence Murphy and it will show you how it takes just one look. Murphy & NEWS NOTES from the game Quarterback Reggie McNeal had 10 straight completions dating back to the Arkansas State game before he threw his first incompletion midway through the second quarter. It was the third-longest streak of completions in school history (record is 14 by Mark Farris vs. Colorado in 2000). McNeal started tonight's game with nine straight completions. McNeal finished with 145 passing yards (12-of18), the second most of his career behind his 191-yard performance last year against Oklahoma. Dustin Long played but did not attempt a pass for the first time since the 2001 Galleryfurniture.com Bowl. The Aggies took a 21-0 lead into halftime against the Utes, marking the first time A&M held their opponent scoreless in the first half Find this and other info on www.agtimes.com was lightly recruited in high school as Tyler Chapel Hill had fallen from a one time football power and state championship team to the lower ranks of their own district. Murphy earned offensive MVP honors at quarterback as he passed for over 1,100 yards and rushed for 512 yards and seven touchdowns his senior season. He committed to Baylor, but when Coach Slocum took a look at his highlight tape as a favor to a coaching friend, he knew that Murphy had the talent to play and play earlier at wide receiver in the Big 12. I may crow a bit today talking about Warfield being on my top 100 list, but Murphy flew under my radar as well. The main difference was Slocum’s eye for talent had already produced a load of All-Confernce players that were unknown on signing day, so I never batted an eye when the Aggies pulled him away from the Baylor Bears. Murphy started even before suiting up for his first game. Practicing with the team during the summer, the buzz was all about the freshman from Tyler. It wasn’t limited to practice as he set freshman records at A&M with his 36 receptions for 518 yards and three touchdowns and then followed that up with 36 more receptions for 599 yards and four more scores despite playing with a broken hand the first half of the season. He has dominated both games this year, featuring an all purpose attack. He leads the Big 12 and is seventh in the nation in all-purpose yardage at 195 per game. He has 80 yards rushing (and it was a touch- down), 95 yards receiving and 220 yards in kick off returns. His 55-yard kickoff return average is the best in the nation and it would even be higher if not for a trip by teammate Jamaar Taylor as Murphy was breaking free with only the endzone in his way. Murphy was a solid Big 12 candidate before the season but now, even in a conference that has two wideouts ticketed to be taken in the first ten picks of next year’s NFL draft, he has moved up the ladder and is now considered as dangerous as any player in the Big 12. Now don’t stop paying for the good recruiting info because most of the best players do get some attention, but realize that knowing what schools the superstars are looking at is their prime concern. Meeting and chatting a bit with Adrian Peterson after this week’s Aggie game, you can see the young man carries himself as well off the field as on it. He is not a diamond in the rough, but the last great running back in this state, LaDainian Tomlinson sure was and it never slowed him down under Coach Fran at TCU. Peterson is a superstar, but watch three years from now when the players that had recruiting “experts” scratching their head, also make significant impacts on the college game, just like Murphy and Warfield. since the Kansas game in 2002 (24-0 in Lawrence). Tight end Quinlin Germany grabbed his first career reception and touchdown on a 4-yard pass from McNeal. The touchdown also marked McNeal's first touchdown pass since the last year's win against No. 1-ranked Oklahoma. Keith Joseph's 1-yard touchdown plunge was his first touchdown since the Texas game in 2001, a span of 14 games. A 6-yard reception by true freshman Earvin Taylor in the first quarter was the first of his career. Representing the A&M student body on the 12th Man Kickoff team against Utah was Anthony Squillante, a junior defensive back from Southlake Carroll High School. A&M Captains were: junior Derek Farmer, senior Cody Scates, junior Byron Jones and sophomore Ronald "Ray Ray" Jones. Utah had 97 offensive plays. The most ever by an A&M opponent was 99 (78 run, 21 pass, 391 yards) by Texas in 1968. Photo by Brice Clendenin A&M had just 56 offensive plays for 368 yards, an impressive 6.6 yards per play. Ags Illustrated Page 9 Only Grades Limited Brandon Warfield 17 Issues for 42.90 979-690-9278 QUESTIONS 4 Scott Clendenin answers four key questions after the game. Utah Game The Aggies faced a very dangerous opponent in the Utah Utes, dangerous because they are strangers to the players and fans in Texas, dangerous because they had no fear of the Aggies and dangerous because when they picked up momentum in the second half, they knew how to exploit a weakness. 1 Did the offense gain any confidence after struggling against Arkansas State last week? The offense must have picked up confidence since they mashed Utah in the first half and had a 21-0 lead. Turnovers were the big problem, but two of those came on exchanges between center and quarterback and the other lost fumble was so close to being a touchdown that it might be considered controversial. The offensive front returned to the lineup that was expected before game one and Geoff Hangartner had a very solid game against another set of hard charging defensive tackles. 2 Photo by Brice Clendenin How have the special teams made such a leap in performance since last season? The question really has two answers because they really go together. A&M has benefited from coach Mark Tommerdahl and his positive approach to the special team units. The other factor is talent, and last season saw the special teams drained of talent due to injuries. Coverage units are made up of linebackers and defensive backs, but last year the dearth of injuries in the secondary were a drain on coverage teams as the year went along. Also no one ever questioned Todd Pegram’s resumé so his return to form is really not that surprising this season. 3 What do the Aggies need to work on the most in the break between the Utah and Virginia Tech ballgames? Find this and other info on www.agtimes.com Did the Aggie offense gain confidence this week? Coach Fran talked about his plan to break the season down into separate stages and the first stage is now complete. He expects to have the majority of the offense in place by Virginia Tech, and if they were holding anything back in games one and two, it will be used for sure against the Hokies and the following week against the Pittsburg Panthers at Kyle Field. Carl Torbush’s defense has had plenty of time to get ready for an active quarterback since the Aggies will also see them in droves once Big 12 play starts. The defense must tackle better and continue to run hard to the ball. 4 Are the Aggies “lucky” to have started the season 2-0, and will it take luck to continue the strong start? Ags Illustrated Page 10 The Aggies were not lucky to win the first two games, they made the plays needed to win. Moving into the Coaches’ Top 25 shows the respect that the coaching fraterity has for Urban Meyer and his ability to coach at Utah. The Aggies were unlucky with the injury to MLB Jarred Morris, and it will take a raised level of play from the rest of the defense to make up for his departure even if it is long term. Many will consider the Aggies “lucky” if they are able to pull out victories against both of the remaining non-conference teams on the docket. You can make your own luck and a ball bouncing the Aggies way would certainly go a long way toward erasing the past two injuryfilled and “unlucky” seasons in Aggieland. 17 Issues for 42.90 979-690-9278 Number Name Pos Ht., Wt, Class, Hometown School 1 Eric Green CB 5' 11" 189 r-Jr. Clewiston, Fla. Clewiston 2 Jimmy Williams FS 6' 3" 217 So. Hampton, Va. Bethel 3 Bryan Randall QB 6' 1" 221 Jr. Williamsburg, Va. Bruton 4 DeAngelo Hall CB/FL 5' 11" 195 Jr. Chesapeake, Va. Deep Creek 5 Marcus Vick QB 6' 0" 208 r-Fr. Newport News, Va. Warwick 6 Vegas Robinson LB 6' 0" 250 r-Sr. Chesapeake, Va. Deep Creek 8 Vincent Fuller CB 6' 1" 191 r-Jr. Baltimore, Md. Woodlawn 9 Vince Hall LB 6' 0" 255 Fr. Chesapeake, Va. Western Branch 11 Xavier Adibi LB 6' 2" 209 Fr. Hampton, Va. Phoebus 12 Richard Johnson FL 5' 10" 189 r-Jr. Baltimore, Md. Milford Mill Aca. 14 Fred Lee FL 5' 9" 180 r-Fr. Harrisburg, Pa. Bishop McDevitt 15 Josh Hyman SE 5' 11" 180 Fr. Chesapeake, Va. Deep Creek 16 Chris Clifton SE/QB 6' 4" 195 r-So. Chesapeake, Va. Deep Creek 17 Garnell Wilds CB 6' 0" 200 r-Sr. Tampa, Fla. Hillsborough 18 Mike Hinton CB 6' 2" 200 Fr. Burlington, N.C. Hargrave 19 Ernest Wilford SE 6' 4" 220 r-Sr. Richmond, Va. Armstrong/Franklin 20 Mike Imoh TB 5' 7" 194 So. Fairfax, Va. Robinson 21 Michael Crawford ROV 5' 11" 202 r-Sr. Baltimore, Md. Patterson 22 James Griffin ROV 6' 1" 191 Jr. Memphis, Tenn. East 23 Nic Schmitt PK/P 6' 1" 238 So. Salem, Va. Salem 24 Ryan Hash CB 5' 9" 172 Fr. Springfield, Va. Robert E. Lee 25 Kevin Jones TB 6' 0" 221 Jr. Chester, Pa. Cardinal O'Hara 27 Justin Hamilton SE 6' 3" 217 r-So. Clintwood, Va. Clintwood 28 Corey Gordon FS 6' 2" 213 Fr. Gainesville, Fla. Gainesville 29 Brian McPherson CB 5' 10" 184 r-Fr. Madison Hts, Va. Amherst Ct 30 Cary Wade ROV 5' 10" 175 So. Fairfax, Va. Robinson 31 Mike Daniels FS 6' 0" 209 r-Jr. Fairfax, Va. Fairfax 32 Cedric Humes TB 6' 1" 232 r-So. Virginia Beach, Va. Princess Anne 33 Chad Cooper LB 6' 2" 215 r-Jr. Herndon, Va. Oakton 36 Aaron Rouse LB 6' 3" 207 r-Fr. Virginia Beach, Va. First Colonial 37 Steve Canter FB 6' 0" 236 r-Sr. Virginia Beach, Va. Kempsville 38 Vinnie Burns P 5' 11" 199 r-Jr. New Orleans, La. St. Augustine 39 John Kinzer FB 6' 2" 230 Fr. Fairfax, Va. Robinson 40 Blake Warren LB 6' 3" 239 r-So. Clifton, Va. Centreville 41 Jordan Trott LB 6' 4" 247 r-So. Torrance, Calif. Loyola 42 James Anderson LB 6' 2" 220 r-So. Chesapeake, Va. Deep Creek 43 Doug Easlick FB 5' 11" 238 r-Sr. Marlton, N.J. Cherokee 44 John Candelas TB 6' 0" 209 So. Blacksburg, Va. Blacksburg 45 Mikal Baaqee LB 5' 11" 240 r-Jr. Columbia, Md. DeMatha 48 Brandon Manning LB 6' 0" 214 r-Jr. Harrisburg, Pa. Central Dauphin 49 Carter Warley PK 5' 11" 195 r-Sr. Richmond, Va. Fork Union 50 Mike Parham C 6' 0" 274 r-Fr. Petersburg, Va. Petersburg 51 Matt Welsh OG 6' 4" 288 Fr. Clifton, Va. Centreville 52 Jimmy Martin OT 6' 5" 291 So. Fairfax, Va. Chantilly 53 Nick Leeson LB/DS 6' 1" 237 r-Fr. Abingdon, Va. Abingdon 54 Bob Ruff DE 6' 1" 231 Jr. McMurray, Pa. Peters Township 55 Darryl Tapp DE 6' 1" 257 So. Chesapeake, Va. Deep Creek 56 Jonathan Lewis DT 6' 1" 299 So. Richmond, Va. Varina 57 Tripp Carroll OT 6' 4" 306 Fr. Charlotte, N.C. Andrew Jackson (Fla.) 58 Chris Pannell OT 6' 3" 279 r-So. Staunton, Va. Robert E. Lee 59 Barry Booker DT 6' 3" 266 Fr. Amherst, Va. Amherst 60 Jacob Gibson OG 6' 4" 299 r-Sr. Rocky Mount, Va. Franklin County 61 Reggie Butler OT 6' 6" 345 So. Keswick, Va. Monticello 62 Travis Conway DS 6' 4" 256 r-Jr. Richmond, Va. J.R. Tucker 63 Andrew Fleck C 6' 3" 286 r-Fr. Edmond, Okla. Santa Fe 64 Jake Grove C 6' 3" 300 r-Sr. Forest, Va. Jefferson Forest 65 Carlton Powell DT 6' 2" 281 Fr. Chesapeake, Va. Great Bridge 66 Will Montgomery OG 6' 3" 298 r-So. Clifton, Va. Centreville 68 Robert Ramsey C 6' 3" 307 r-Jr. Coraopolis, Pa. Montour 69 Danny McGrath C 6' 2" 300 So. Herndon, Va. Herndon 70 Kevin Lewis DT 6' 1" 292 r-Jr. Richmond, Va. Varina 71 Tim Sandidge DT 6' 1" 307 r-So. Madison Hts, Va. Amherst County 72 Jason Murphy OG 6' 2" 296 r-So. Baltimore, Md. Edmondson West. 74 Brandon Frye OT 6' 4" 280 r-Fr. Myrtle Beach, S.C. Myrtle Beach 75 Kory Robertson DT 6' 2" 296 Fr. Martinsville, Va. Magna Vista 76 James Miller OG 6' 6" 300 Jr. Pompano Beach, Fla. Ft. Lauderdale 77 Brandon Gore OG 6' 5" 332 r-Fr. Warrenton, Va. Liberty 79 Jon Dunn OT 6' 7" 343 r-Jr. Virginia Beach, Va. Tallwood 80 Robert Parker FL 6' 1" 209 r-Fr. Chesapeake, Va. Oscar Smith 81 Chris Shreve FL 5' 11" 183 r-Sr. Mouth of Wilson, Va. Grayson County 82 Lance Goff FL 5' 11" 199 r-Jr. Wytheville, Va. George Wythe 82 Brenden Hill SE 6' 1" 200 r-Fr. Newport News, Va. Warwick 83 Nathaniel Adibi DE 6' 3" 263 r-Sr. Hampton, Va. Phoebus 85 Jared Mazzetta TE 6' 4" 258 r-Jr. Flemington, N.J. Hunterdon Central 86 Keith Willis TE 6' 5" 261 r-Sr. Norfolk, Va. Norview 87 David Clowney FL 6' 1" 170 Fr. Delray Beach, Fla Atlantic 88 Michael Malone SE 6' 3" 202 r-Fr. Friendswood, Texas Friendswood 89 Robert Peaslee H/P 6' 0" 202 r-Sr. Pulaski, Va. Pulaski County 90 Jeff King TE/FB 6' 5" 256 r-So. Pulaski, Va. Pulaski County 91 Jason Lallis DT 6' 0" 264 r-Jr. Mitchellville, Md. DeMatha 92 Mike Brown LB 6' 2" 205 Fr. Palm Beach Gardens, Fla. P. Beach Gard 93 Duane Brown TE 6' 4" 256 Fr. Richmond, Va. Hermitage 94 Chris Ellis DE 6' 4" 234 Fr. Hampton, Va. Bethel 95 Jim Davis DE 6' 3" 255 Sr. Highland Springs, Va. Highland Springs 96 Noland Burchette DE 6' 2" 253 r-Fr. Richmond, Va. Highland Springs 97 Isaac Montgomery 6 DT 6' 4" 297 r-Jr. Princeton, W. Va. Princeton 99 Cols Colas DE 6' 0" 241 r-Sr. Plantation, Fla. South Plantation Christopher Albright FL 6' 1" 184 Fr. Grantville, Pa. Lower Dauphin Jesse Allen FB 6' 0" 227 r-Fr. Monson, Mass. Pathfinder Regional Mason Baggett OT 6' 1" 263 Fr. Richmond, Va. James River Chris Ceasar SE 5' 10" 178 r-Fr. Delray Beach, Fla. Spanish River Josh DeMaury DE 6' 3" 260 Fr. Troutville, Va. Lord Botetourt Jud Dunleavy PK 5' 9" 172 Fr. Roanoke Rapids, N.C. Roanoke Rapids Rashad Ferebee OG 5' 8" 271 So. Norfolk, Va. Granby Alexay Hairston QB 5' 11" 203 Fr. Martinsville, Va. Magna Vista Omar Hashish DE 6' 2" 229 Fr. Vienna, Va. James Madison John Hedge PK 5' 9" 167 Fr. Pulaski, Va. Pulaski County Stevie Ray Lloyd LB 6' 0" 219 Fr. Lynchburg, Va. Jefferson Forest Thomas McClelland TB 5' 11" 191 Fr. Fredericksburg, Va. Stafford Bart McMillin DS 6' 0" 213 Fr. Bristol, Tenn. Tennessee Roland Minor CB 6' 0" 181 Fr. Washington, D.C. H.D. Woodson Brandon Pace PK 5' 10" 191 r-Fr. Virginia Beach, Va. Kellam Ross Pinkett DS 6' 0" 224 Fr. Williamsburg, Va. Lafayette Cory Price - FL 5' 10" 168 Fr. Blacksburg, Va. Blacksburg Matt Roan 1 - TE 6' 4" 248 Fr. Dublin, Va. Pulaski County Winston Roett - QB 6' 2" 205 So. Vienna, Va. O'Connell Carlton Weatherford - FB 5' 10" 201 Fr. Danville, Va. Tunstall Virginia Tech Find this and other info on www.agtimes.com Ags Illustrated Page 11 17 Issues for 42.90 979-690-9278 Above: The Corps react to to a bad call Right: Brandon Warfield would not be denied the Zone Below: Coach Fran is Fired up. Facing page:: Terrence Murphy Scores!!! Coach Fran and Reggie Plan it out Football is a war in the Trenches photos by Brice Clendenin Find this and other info on www.agtimes.com Ags Illustrated Page 12 17 Issues for 42.90 979-690-9278 Find this and other info on www.agtimes.com Ags Illustrated Page 13 17 Issues for 42.90 979-690-9278 Scouting VA TECH 3 Keys Depth Chart Notes to the Virginia Tech Game by Scott Clendenin Frank Beamer (Va. Tech '69), whose teams have averaged nine victories a year over the last 10 seasons, is in his 17th year as the head football coach at Virginia Tech. Beamer has guided the Hokies to a 118-69-2 record. He became Tech's winningest football coach in 1997 when the Hokies defeated Arkansas State, 50-0. Under Beamer, Tech football has enjoyed unprecedented success with 10 consecutive bowl appearances, three BIG EAST Conference titles and a trip to the national championship game. Tech won the BIG EAST title in 1999 and 1995 and shared it in '96. Beamer was voted BIG EAST Coach of the Year by the league's coaches each of those seasons. In 1997, he was inducted into The Virginia Tech Sports Hall of Fame, and following the 1999 season, he earned eight national coach of the year honors. Last season, the Hokies posted a 104 record, including a victory over Air Force in the San Francisco Bowl. During the 2000 season, the Hokies posted an 11-1 record that included a 4120 win over Clemson in the Gator Bowl. In 1999, Tech marched to an 11-0 regular-season mark before losing a hard-fought 46-29 game to Florida State for the national title in the Sugar Bowl. The Hokies ended the '99 season ranked No. 2 by AP. 1 WillVirginia Tech continue to throw the ball or will they return to their running ways? Despite featuring one of the best running backs in the courntry in Kevin Jones, the Hokies went to the air to win their season opener. Quarterback Bryan Randall was named the BIG EAST Offensive Player of the Week for his performance in the UCF game. Randall completed 22 of 28 passes in the game for 278 yards and three touchdowns. He also added 18 yards on the ground. The junior signal-caller directed Tech on scoring drives of 80, 62 and 76 yards in his first three series. He also directed a key 67-yard drive in the final quarter. Find this and other info on www.agtimes.com Virginia Tech set a school record with 36 first downs during the UCF game. The previous record was 34 against Akron in 1991. Juniors Richard Johnson and DeAngelo Hall, sophomore Justin Hamilton and true freshman David Clowney posted their first collegiate TD catches against Central Florida 2 How can the Aggies contain all the All-Star Candidates that are featured on this season’s Hokie squad? Only three players startered for the first time in Virginia Tech’s opening game. This team has allstar potential across the lineup. Randal is up for the Doak Walker award and RB Kevin Jones is on the Doak Walker list for the best running backs. Center Jake Grove is up for all the offensive line awards this year as well. On the defensive side of the ball, both defensive ends are candidates for the Lombardi and Hendricks awards. DeAngelo Hall is a pre-season Thorpe Award winner and can be an All-American at defensive back and return specialist as well. Punter Vinnie Burns is a Ray Guy candidate, along with Aggie punter Cody Scates, 3 How do the Hokies have a quarter back conterversy on their hands with the competition between Bryan Randall and Marcus Vick ? Texas A&M and Virginia Tech have a similar situation at quarterback. Even with an established returning starter up for national awards, Hokie fans are enthralled by a redshirt freshman named Marcus Vick. Vick, the younger brother of former Tech and current Atlanta Falcons' phenom Michael Vick, made his Tech debut during the UCF game. The younger Vick played two series against the Golden Knights and led Tech on a pair of 80-yard scoring marches. He finished the game 7-for-10 passing for 102 yards and tossed a 27-yard touchdown pass. The Hokie fans were calling for Vick to hit the field the same way Aggie fans were calling for Reggie McNeal last season in the season opener and will again against the Aggies. Ags Illustrated 2003 Record: 10-4 (3-4) Offense: Multiple Defense: 4-3 Coach: Frank Beamer Conference: Big East Stadium: Indian (65,500) Page 14 As the season progress, the coaches have decisions to make on playing someone or not playing them and using the season as a redshirt. Several of the freshmen may be listed on the depth chart and travel with the team despite not playing. The Aggies have had several offensive linemen, Seth McKinney and Calvin Collins are examples, that Va Tech would have been first in line to assume a position if a serious injury knocked a starter out for the season. Jon Roberson was not on the 105-man roster before the start of school, but after passing all the courses needed to keep his eligibility, he rejoined the team and could see action at slot receiver and on special teams very soon. He was explosive this spring. Depth Chart Texas A&M SE 19 Ernest Wilford (6-4, 220, r-Sr.) 81 Chris Shreve (5-11, 183, r-Sr.) LT 52 Jimmy Martin (6-5, 291, So.) 61 Reggie Butler (6-6, 345, So.) LG 60 Jacob Gibson (6-4, 299, r-Sr.) 66 Will Montgomery (6-3, 298, r-So.) C 64 Jake Grove (6-3, 300, r-Sr.) 68 Robert Ramsey (6-3, 307, r-Jr.) RG 76 James Miller (6-6, 300, Jr.) 77 Brandon Gore (6-5, 332, r-Fr.) RT 79 Jon Dunn (6-7, 343, r-Jr.) 58 Chris Pannell (6-3, 279, r-So.) TE 86 Keith Willis (6-5, 261, r-Sr.) 90 Jeff King (6-5, 256, r-So.) QB 3 Bryan Randall (6-1, 221, Jr.) 5 Marcus Vick (6-0, 208, r-Fr.) TB 25 Kevin Jones (6-0, 221, Jr.) 32 Cedric Humes (6-1, 232, r-So.) FB 43 Doug Easlick (5-11, 238, r-Sr.) 90 Jeff King (6-5, 256, r-Jr.) FL 12 Richard Johnson (5-10,189,r-Jr.) 27 Justin Hamilton (6-3, 217, r-So.) PK 49 Carter Warley (5-11, 195, r-Sr.) DE 99 David Ross 6-2 268 So-1L 95 Mike Montgomery 6-5 275 Jr-TR DT 97 Johnny Jolly 6-3 287 So-1L 93 Ju Parks 6-1 356 Fr-RS DT 59 Brian Patrick 6-5 293 So-1L or 91 Marcus Jasmin 6-5 318 Jr-2L DE 88 Linnis Smith 6-4 288 Sr-3L 98 Marques Thorton 6-2 275 Fr-RS SLB 10 Justin Warren 6-3 220 Fr-HS 41 Arch. McDaniel 6-1 227 So-1L MLB 57 Scott Stickane 6=1 238 Sr-3L 44 Ta Ta Thompson 6-4 236 Fr-HS ROV 49 Nur. Manning 6-2 230 So-SQ 42 Everett Smith 6-2 229 Sr-3L LCB 31 Sean Weston 5-10 180 Sr-3L 26 Jonte Buhl 5-10 171 Jr-2L RCB 11 Byron Jones 5-10 178 Jr-2L 6 Bryant Singleton 5-11 187 So-1L SS 23 Ronald Jones 5-10 179 So-1L 33 Keelan Jackson 6-1 219 Jr-2L FS 19 Jaxson Appel 5-10 196 So-1L 40 Kevin Mangum 5-11 191 Jr-2L P 20 Cody Scates 6-1 205 Sr-3l DE 99 Cols Colas (6-0, 241, r-Sr.) 96 Noland Burchette (6-2, 253, r-Fr.) DT 70 Kevin Lewis (6-1, 292, r-Jr.) 71 Tim Sandidge (6-1, 307, r-So.) DT 56 Jonathan Lewis (6-1, 299, So.) 91 Jason Lallis (6-0, 264, r-Jr.) DE 83 Nathaniel Adibi (6-3, 263, r-Sr.) 55 Darryl Tapp (6-1, 257, So.) ILB 6 Vegas Robinson (6-0, 250, r-Sr.) 40 Blake Warren (6-3, 239, r-So.) ILB 45 Mikal Baaqee (5-11, 240, r-Jr.) 41 Jordan Trott (6-4, 247, r-So.) OLB 48 Brandon Manning(6-0,214,r-Jr) 36 Aaron Rouse (6-3, 207, r-Fr.) BC 4 DeAngelo Hall (5-11, 195, Jr.) 8 Vincent Fuller (6-1, 191, r-Jr.) ROV 21 Michael Crawford (5-11,202,r-Sr.) 22 James Griffin (6-1, 191, Jr.) FS 2 Jimmy Williams (6-3, 217, So.) 31 Mike Daniels (6-0, 209, r-Jr.) FC 17 Garnell Wilds (6-0, 200, r-Sr.) 1 Eric Green (5-11, 189, r-Jr.) P 38 Vinnie Burns (5-11, 199, r-Jr.) WR 5 Terrence Murphy 6-1 191 Jr-2L 9 Earvin Taylor 6-3 217 Fr-HS ST 73 Alan Reuber 6-7 310 Sr-3L 70 Cody Wallace 6-5, 282 Fr-HS SG 76 A. De La Garza 6-3 317 So-1L 64 Kirk Elder 6-4 307 Fr-HS C 66 Geoff Hangartner 6-5 300 Jr-1L 54 James Milkavich 6-2 274 Sr-SQ QG 50 John Kirk 6-4 295 Sr-3L 71 Quentin Holman 6-2 349 So-SQ QT 67 Alex Kotzur 6-4 284 Fr-RS 74 Dominique Steamer 6-5 310 So-SQ TE 85 Taylor Schuster 6-5 260 Fr-RS 82 Patrick Fleming 6-5 271 So-1L SLT 3 Terrence Thomas 5-9 180 Jr-2L 80 L’Tydrick Riley 6-2 223 So-1L FLK 2 Jamaar Taylor 6-1 194 Sr-2L or 83 Tim Van Zant 6-1 195 Sr-2L QB 17 Dustin Long 6-3 205 Jr-1L or 16 Reggie McNeal 6-2 191 So-1L A 7 Jason Carter 6-0 197 Jr-1L 30 Nick Rhodes 6-0 202 Fr-HS FB 34 Keith Joseph 6-2 241 Jr-2L 24 Chris Alexander 5-11, 242, Fr-HS TB 1 Derek Farmer 5-11 202 Jr-2L 25 Courtney Lewis 5-10 187 Fr-RS K Todd Pegram 5-11 201 So-1L 17 Issues for 42.90 979-690-9278 Game 3 Texas A&M vs. VA Tech at Lane Stadium • TV: ESPN • Kickoff: 6:30 CST Overview One of the toughest venues in college football, traveling to Blacksburg will test the Aggies like no other spot on the schedule, until they travel to Norman to face OU. EDGE: VIRGINIA TECH Keep An Eye On By The Numbers Texas A&M Offense Rank Offense With NFL talent at quarterback, Total running back and wide receiver the Hokies present as balanced an attack as Carl Torbush’s defense will see this Rushing season. EDGE: VIRGINIA TECH Passing Defense Central Florida exposed the Hokie defense with a controlled passing attack to negate their pass rush. A&M has faced a similar offense in Utah. EDGE: EVEN 85 Virginia Tech YPG Offense Rank YPG 312.5 Total 509.5 10 46 177.0 Rushing 21 227.5 105 135.5 Passing 27 282.0 Defense Rank YPG Defense Rank YPG Total 39 311.5 Total 13 239.0 Rushing 75 159.5 Rushing 7 47.0 Special Teams Passing 20 152.0 Passing 47 No team in the country has had the success that the Hokies have on spe- * Ratings are for the 2003 season. Pass defense rated by yards. cial teams. They count on points every game and nothing fires their home crowd up more than a score. EDGE: VIRGINIA TECH 192.0 Five To Consider Coaching A matchup between two of the best 1. coaching staffs in the country with both teams having a week off to set up gameplans specific for each team. 2. Expect a low scoring ballgame. EDGE: EVEN 3. Intangibles The Aggies could have topped 4. Virginia Tech last season, and the confidence instilled by the new coaching staff has the players believ5. ing they can pull the upset. EDGE: TEXAS A&M Find this and other info on www.agtimes.com Can the Aggies blunt the special teams magic that fires up the Virginia Tech crowd? Can the Aggies break the 14-game winning streak the Hokies have in non-conference home games? How will the Aggies contain Kevin Jones, one of the most explosive backs in the country? Will the Aggie quarterback job be settled by the time the Aggies hit the field against VT? Will Coach Fran’s magic after an off-week travel with him? Ags Illustrated Page 15 QB Bryan Randall Was named Big-East player of the week after week one. Was MVP of the San Francisco Bowl last season and is a Davey O’Brien candidate. QB Marcus Vick Younger brother of Michael Vick has the whole Hokie nation excited about the future, despite having one of the best QBs in the nation starting. RB Kevin Jones Needs to answer the question “Can he carry the whole load” after splitting time the past two seasons. Preseason AllAmerican candidate. DE Nathan Adibi Picked up nine sacks last season and added another in the season opener. Adibi has appeared on Lombardi and Hendricks Award “watch” list. DB DeAngelo Hall First two way player at VT since 1997 and could be the first to start both ways in the last 40 years. Teams avoid his side of the field like the plague. 17 Issues for 42.90 979-690-9278 Aggie Soccer, Volleyball Face Challenges This Season Katie Jo Spisak will be a force to reckon with on the Aggie D. Photo by A&M SID By Jason Lincoln Ags Illustrated With the tenured leadership of coaches like G. Guerrieri and Laurie and John Corbelli, the Aggie soccer and volleyball teams are constant contenders in the Big 12 and NCAA spotlights. Corbelli’s volleyball team advanced to the second round of the NCAA tournament for the 10th straight season in 2002, and Guerrieri’s soccer teams have gone to the postseason eight straight years dating back to 1995, including back-to-back appearances in the elite eight. The soccer team has higher expectations as ever, entering the season with a No. 6 ranking and starting off with three convincing victories. The volleyball team is unranked and picked to finish fourth in the Big 12, but typically rise to their competition, especially in Big 12 action. While the two teams will find it hard to match their recent accomplishments, the potential is there and the two teams dominate when playing in Aggieland. Find this and other info on www.agtimes.com No. 6 Texas A&M Soccer Don’t tell Coach G. Guerrieri and the No. 6 Texas A&M soccer team that rebuilding years are supposed to mean taking a step backward. Despite having to put four true freshmen in the starting lineup, the Aggies are off to a 3-0 start with wins over TCU, No. 22 SMU and Utah. Furthermore, A&M has yet to trail this season. The Aggies are coming off a 2002 Big 12 regular season championship and a season that saw A&M ranked as high as third. During the course of 2002, A&M suffered three straight early-season losses before rallying to post 16 straight wins up to the Big 12 Tournament championship where A&M fell 1-0. Guerrieri’s squad then rallied off three NCAA tournament victories, including penalty kick victories over SMU and UCLA to advance to the quarterfinals before losing to second-ranked North Carolina, 3-0. This year, A&M faces No. 1 North Carolina Ags Illustrated Page 16 again in non-conference action on Sunday, September 14, in Spring, Texas. While facing the No. 1 team in the nation, just five games into the season poses the biggest challenge on the Aggies’ 2003 schedule, A&M has much more to be concerned with – particularly its youth. Fortunately for the Aggies, a solid mix of experienced leadership is mixed in with its four newcomers in the starting lineup. Up front, the Aggies are led by junior forward Emma Smith. The team’s third leading goal scorer in 2002, is now the primary offensive weapon with the loss of All-Americans Linsey Woodard and Heather Ragsdale. She posted 11 goals and eight assists last season. Already this season she leads the team in points with two goals and one assist. All five of Smith’s points came against No. 22 Southern Methodist as she had a hand in all of A&M’s goals in the 3-1 victory. The victory was key for A&M as both 2002 matchups between the two teams went into overtime. Smith, who Guerrieri has often referred to as 17 Issues for 42.90 979-690-9278 the fastest player A&M has ever had, is joined by true-freshman Kat Krambeer. Krambeer, who scored the Aggies’ only goal in Friday’s victory over Utah, might just be faster than her junior counterpart up front. Krambeer is the latest in a trend of speedy forwards recruited by Guerrieri as A&M appears to concentrate on developing superior speed. The 2003 front line may be the fastest in A&M history. Three games into the season it appears to be working as A&M has scored on 20-percent of its shots, scoring 10 goals in three games on just 51 shots. Meanwhile, A&M’s opponents have combined for just 19 shots. In the midfield, A&M is anchored by its lone senior, Kristen Strutz. The central midfielder is the key to Guerrieri’s offense and Strutz has typified the position for the past three seasons. In the opening game, a 6-0 victory over Texas Christian, Strutz scored two goals, both assisted by Shannon Labhart. Strutz led the Aggies in assists in 2002 with 10. Amanda Burke and Laura Probst adds strength to the midfield position. Burke has two assists already this season, and Probst has a goal and an assist. The newcomer to the midfield is freshman Madison Klovstad who scored in the season opener and has two assists since then. A&M’s defense is anchored by its keeper, 2002 Freshman All-American Kati Jo Spisak. The 6-2 sophomore has been characterized by Guerrieri as the best in the country. So far this season she is 3-0 with two shutouts and just six saves. Her low numbers are thanks to A&M’s solid back line which features Burke playing at stopper and Labhart on the left side. Freshmen Linda Pierson and Annie Burnett have earned their way into the starting lineup in the backfield to close out the starting 11. Pierson is the younger sister of former A&M place kicker John Pierson. The 17-year old freshman scored A&M’s first goal of the season on a direct kick just outside the penalty box. A key to A&M’s season is their home schedule. The Aggies are 92-10-0 at home and hold a 19 match home winning streak dating back to a 4-2 loss to Nebraska in 2001. Key games for the Aggies this season are Sunday’s game against North Carolina in the Adidas Classic, home games against Washington State and Nebraska and the regular season finale on the road, October 31st against Texas. receiving votes in the polls. The Big 12 promises to have one of its strongest volleyball seasons to date with three teams in the Top 25 – No. 5 Nebraska, No. 14 Kansas State and No. 18 Missouri. Texas is sixth among teams receiving votes in the polls. The schedule will provide plenty of challenges for the Aggies who have a strong mix of experience but lack an individual standout player. A&M has a home match against defending national champion Southern California on Saturday, September 13 at 7 p.m. to conclude the McDonald’s A&M Invite. A&M will then have to travel to No. 5 Nebraska to kick off Big 12 action. Previous Corbelli teams have been characterized by one or two dominating players. This year’s squad will rely on depth and experience. In the middle A&M is anchored by fifth-year senior Tara Pulaski. At 6-2, Pulaski is known for her defense and is one of the best blockers in the league. Melissa Munsch and and Kendra Felder will also see action in the middle, except in more of an offensive role than Pulaski. A&M brought in just one heralded freshman in 2003, middle blocker Christi Hahn from Photo by A&N SID Texas A&M Volleyball The 2003 Aggie volleyball squad enters the season unranked, but is fourth among teams Find this and other info on www.agtimes.com Leander, Texas. On the outside, 6-2 outside hitters Laura Jones and Carol Price lead the Aggies offensive attack. Jones posted 74 kills in A&M’s first four matches. Jones was the 2002 Big 12 Freshman of the year with 3.77 kills per game, leading A&M’s offense. Running the Aggies offense is a two-person job for the time being. Junior Lexy Beers and sophomore Kari Kelley have shared time so far, both averaging over seven assists per game. Senior Rebbecca Wynalda will be the team’s designated libero this season. A&M started off the season winning the Duke Invitational at Cameron Indoor Stadium. Jones was named the tournament MVP, posting three consecutive double-doubles to get A&M out to a 3-0 start. The Aggies traveled to the Michigan/Pepsi Challenge where they improved to 4-0 before suffering a 3-0 loss to Michigan. A&M came back to conclude the tournament with a 3-1 victory over Murray State, improving A&M to 5-1. The Aggies kick off their first three of 13 home matches this season when they face Southwest Missouri State, Centenary and Southern Cal in the McDonalds/A&M Invite at G. Rollie White Coliseum. Laura Jones is set to dominate in 2003. Ags Illustrated Page 17 17 Issues for 42.90 979-690-9278 Coaching Match Up How Fran will Beat Frank by Ed Watson Now that two weeks are in the books, there are still big questions in Aggieland, and a lot of them. What were supposed to be coming-out parties for Dennis Franchione and the new era of Texas A&M football have instead produced two squeamish home wins over Arkansas State and Utah, two brave roadshows not necessarily steeped in gridiron glory and winning tradition. The disturbing Aggie rushing malaise in the opener are joined by defensive problems in stopping the run against the Utes. This is not what Woody Hayes or disciple Bill Parcells had in mind. And if that weren’t enough, next enter upon the Aggie stage Coach Frank Beamer, the trail boss of the Virginia Tech Hokies, one of the ruggedest, meat-and-potatoes football teams in college football. Frank and Fran are fundamentally alike in one profound respect – they believe in physical toughness. Beamer largely disdains the current rage of vertical, pitch-andcatch pyrotechnics in favor of the blue-collar blast and sweep packages of an “in your face” Power I formation, liberally infused with Veer option-styled quarterbacking by a versatile and highly-skilled athlete. Athletic quarterbacks and big-time tailbacks have been standard fare under Beamer, as names such as Jim Druckenmiller, Ken Oxendine, Lee Suggs, Kevin Jones and Michael Vick will clearly attest. On offense and defense, the Hokies are not fancy or tricky; they win largely by out-hustling and out-hitting people, and that includes special teams where VaTech is annually among the nation’s leaders in blocked punts and has blocked more punts than anyone in the nation since 1990. Both kickers return after solid 2002 seasons. In the return game, the Hokies may be even better, as All-America DeAngelo Hall, reportedly graced with 4.15 speed, averaged 16 yards on 22 punt returns including two for TDs. It gets worse. In addition to the two kickers, Beamer welcomed back eight returning starters on offense and nine on defense, including his entire front-seven package. QB Bryan Randall and the 210-pound TB with 4.3speed, Kevin Jones, will spearhead next Thursday’s Hokie offense. When the Hokies throw, 6’4” and 221pound senior WR Ernest Wilford usually catchFind this and other info on www.agtimes.com Virginia Tech may be Coach Fran’s Toughest Opponent Yet Photos by Brice Clendenin Ags Illustrated Page 18 17 Issues for 42.90 979-690-9278 es it. Wilford caught 51 last season for 875 yards and six TDs, including the back-breaker last season against the Aggies. Just for fun, compare Wilford’s 875 receiving yards to the Texas A&M single-season yardage record. On defense, Virginia Tech will attack and keep attacking, with senior DE Nathaniel Adibi, a 255-pound All-Big East performer with 4.5 speed and 17 career sacks. Along with Hall, a junior and also an All-Big East 200-pound CB, the Hokies’ defense is led by ILB Mikal Baaqee and his team-leading 112 tackles, 11.5 for losses. Virginia Tech’s offense has opened the 2003 season with 49 and 43-point artillery bombardments. The last seven seasons find the Hokies at 6316, including the four losses in last year’s “rebuilding season”, and Beamer is a beastly 5210 in Blacksburg in the last ten seasons, each a Virginia Tech bowl season. Though they experienced a few defensive problems late last season against Pitt, Syracuse and Miami, the Hokesters had no problem squelching R.C. Slocum’s offense in last year’s 13-3 win at Kyle Field, the first non-conference home loss for the Aggies in six years. Some time back, the smart money in Las Vegas concocted the cumulative homefield edge factor in points, adjusted frequently to reflect the current and overall fortunes of a program. To give you an idea of the challenge confronting our Aggies in Blacksburg next Thursday, here are some Vegas homefield point factors for a few elite programs with redoubtable homefield advantages: Ohio State –4, Michigan -3.5, Nebraska –4, Florida –5, LSU –4, OU –4.5, Texas –3.5, Texas A&M –5, Notre Dame –4, Virginia Tech –6. In short, Vegas says stay away from Blacksburg! And for you Aggies clinging to any final vestige of confidence, Virginia Tech coincidentally opened with Arkansas State last year. The final score was 63-7. Got the picture? This slugging match will be an extremely tough and physical test, an uphill struggle for a painfully youthful Texas A&M team that got even younger and more inexperienced with the loss for the year of 5th-year senior and starting three-year linebacker, Jared Morris, to a torn patellar tendon. The Aggies must play much, much better than they’ve played since last year’s OU game. They must play with fury but they also must play with intelligence and guile. How can the Aggies win; how will Fran beat Frank? The Aggies must begin their mission where every successful team lays the winning foundation – and that’s with the kicking game. Last year, Tech blocked seven punts, but that number next Thursday must be zero, so Cody Scates or Jacob Young must be quick with the punting. Find this and other info on www.agtimes.com PK Todd Pegram also must be poised and accurate, as a field goal might easily be the difference in a tight defensive game like last year’s. Aggie coverage units must play aggressive and flawless, yet the Ags will probably need another big return or two from T Murph or Jamaar Taylor. Kicking away from DeAngelo Hall may be the better and smarter part of Aggie valor. On offense, the Aggies learned last year from our 28 rushes for 38 yards output that challenging the Hokies with a frontal assault is frustrating and fruitless. The Hokies love to be physically challenged. It is Virginia Tech’s game, and when an opponent machos it up to play power ball with the Hokies, they might generate similar to the three points the Ags did last year at Kyle. Guile and trickery must be the offensive order of our day next Thursday. We must spread the rugged Hokie defense and run them off the LOS and out of the box. Pre-snap motion could set up advantageous match-ups downfield for Murphy and Taylor, and the Ags must use their playmakers when plays are needed to move chain and maintain possession. We must not be afraid to throw the ball, as the Hokies surrendered more than 200 yards passing nine times last year, and lost three of those games. First-down possession passing could be effective at keeping the fleet Hokie OLBs off the LOS and their safeties patrolling the backline and not up in the box pinching the Aggie running game. Courtney Lewis must have running lanes, so the vertical dispersion of the Hokie defense is a basic requirement. As well, McNeal could have deep opportunities here as the Hokie pass defense got scalded last year for 300 yards by the ‘Canes on only 12 completions and 403 yards by Syracuse on 24 aerials. Looks like the Hokies can be had in the intermediate and deep zones. Offensive balance and creative playcalling is a must for the Aggies, along with controlling the most vital stat in football besides the score, and this is Turnover Margin. Last season, the Aggies turned over the ball twice more than the Hokies and lost by 10. They must reverse that TO margin this year, and that begins by hanging onto the ball. Reggie must put all the center exchange problems behind him and the skilledposition ball handlers must protect the ball against an obviously opportunistic and veteran Hokie defense. TO margin will again be key! With Morris’s departure along with the sudden porosity in the Aggie front seven, the Aggie defense suddenly is under the police lamp with the Hokies. Beamer will attempt to grind the young Aggie rushing defense into bone meal. Last year the Hokie offense averaged 48 rushing attempts per game while they passed an averAgs Illustrated Page 19 age of 19 times per contest. It’s no secret that the Hokies will run the football, with Kevin Jones banging between the tackles and wide, and QB Bryan Randall probing Carl Torbush’s option defense on the flanks. In option situations, the youthful Aggie DEs and OLBs must play solid and consistent assignment football, and they must tackle much better than they’ve tackled in our first two outings. In short, the Wrecking Crew must grow up quickly and summon a physical and herculean performance to stuff a powerful Hokie rushing attack. Only one way to beat the Hokies physically, and that’s to help the young DL by selling out the LBs and safeties to stop the run. Those 4819 run/pass numbers tell us what needs our attention. CBs Sean Weston and Byron Jones must be entrusted to lock down the Hokie WRs leaving the Aggie safeties or nickel to “fly around” and make big plays blitzing or stuffing Jones or Randall before they can find any daylight. Unpredictable safety help, however, would probably be wise to assist on the backline with Wilford, sometimes deep and then sometimes in the short hook and hitch zones in the mid-seams. A big step-up and a pick from Jaxson Appel could spell the difference here. Our young DL will be physically assaulted by the VaTech rushing attack, so in light of this certain and imminent assault, the Wrecking Crew may as well decide that we will be the assaultor and not the assaultee! Fran has taught toughness every day since he’s been at A&M, and now is the time for a progress review of this new tenet. Tested, we will be, as this game will be a no-nonsense confrontation of physical wills. Read on to find out who accomplished all this! If a young Aggie defense can stiffen against a sledgehammer Hokie rushing attack, the VaTech passing game has been highly inconsistent, generating more than 200 yards on only two occasions all last season. Our pals at Pitt, 14-12 losers to the 2002 Aggies at Heinz Field, have had Beamer’s number two years in a row. After winning 38-7 at Heinz in 2001, the Panther defense last year again arrested the Hokie running game for only 130 yards on 45 carries, and then covered downfield well enough to limit Virginia Tech to only 145 yards on 12 completions, while recording seven sacks. Pitt ran a balanced 275/208 offense, outgained VaTech 483 to 275, broke even on TO margin and won the game in Blacksburg, 28-21. As we see, all this can be achieved by mortal men. But our youthful Aggies must grow up in a frenzied hurry and play tough and smart beyond their years. So how will Fran beat Frank? Easy …. he’ll call Pitt head coach Walt Harris! 17 Issues for 42.90 979-690-9278 Reload! Aggie Hardballers Load Up at Key Positions Kyle Nicholson is no stranger to Olsen Field, and will lead a strong recruiting class that should contribute early on the Aggie diamond. Photo by Scott Clendenin Find this and other info on www.agtimes.com Ags Illustrated Page 20 The Aggies look to fill few offensive holes with the class of 2004, but adding depth on the pitching mound was a prime concern. The Aggies had to withstand a late push by MLB teams as school started later than normal, and those draft picks were the focus of the teams that had their rights until they stepped foot in their first class in Aggieland. Another important matter was RF Cory Patton turning down a large offer from the San Diego Padres to return to school. Patton was only one of four juniors that were drafted in the first ten rounds that is returning to school. His return gives the Aggies returning starters at each and every position from last season. One of the Aggies’ top signees was left-handed pitcher Doug Frame. Frame was told shortly after the draft that if L. A. couldn’t sign Cory Van Allen (a Baylor signee) he would be in line for a larger signing bonus. After failing to come to terms with third round pick Van Allen, the Dodgers turned first to Grayson sophomore SS Andy LaRoche, paying the 39th round pick one million dollars and using up much of their draft money on the potential Rice Owl. They made that late push for Frame, but the Dodgers did not break the bank to attract the talented lefthander. He still turned down a six-figure signing bonus to stay on board with the Aggies. “We are excited about getting started with a good mix of experienced players and talented new players,” commented Johnson. “We lost a lot of players to the draft last season, and we had a couple of others being pursued by professional baseball who decided to come back to school. Obviously, we are happy about that.” The Aggies needed help on the mound, and this recruiting class certainly brought in talented arms. Seven of the pitchers are left-handed and seven of them have been drafted by major league baseball before coming to Aggieland. With the money Texas A&M had set back for two players who eventually signed, Kyle Parcus and Scott Beerer, the Aggies were able to fill the last two roster spots with JC All-American outfield Travis Bartek and LHP Zach Jackson. Bartek was the best center fielder in California this past season. Playing at Feather River JC, the Golden Eagles advanced to the final four for the first time ever, and Bartek was a big reason why. He batted cleanup this season and hit a team high .399-7-54 with six triples and 19 doubles while walking 12 times and only striking out 16 times in 208 at-bats. He led all of California with 35 steals and was only caught stealing ONCE all season long. As a freshman he hit .341-3-34 with four triples, nine doubles while stealing 8-of-12 bases. LHP Zach Jackson will move to the top of the 17 Issues for 42.90 979-690-9278 pitching rotation next spring. At 6-5 and 220 pounds, he will be the biggest left-handed pitcher for the Aggies since Kelly Wunch left after the 1993 season. Named Freshman AllAmerican after going 10-3 at Louisville, his performances on the mound were even better last season as a sophomore but his record ended up being 7-6. This summer he pitched in the Cape Cod League where he went 6-0 with a 1.88 ERA. He pitched in the All-Star game and led his team to the playoffs. He was rated as the league’s third best left-handed pitcher and was the league’s 16th best prospect. He has a fastball that tops out at 92 mph and a great change up. Coach Lawler will work on tightening up his breaking ball as he changes arm speed to tip off hitters just a touch. He struck out 48 in 52.2 innings of work while walking only ten this summer and will compete with Robert Ray for the Friday night starting assignment next spring. Jackson will be the top pitching transfer pitcher to enter the Big 12 this season and the Aggie coaches hope to see as much success as J. P. Howell had with Texas last year and Aaron Marsden did with Nebraska the past two years. Last season as a sophomore with the Cardinals, Jackson was 7-6 with a 4.31 ERA, setting school records for starts (19) and innings pitched (112.2). He had 75 strikeouts and 29 walks. He might have been the victim of too much work last year at U of L, pitching several weeks on the weekend as well as mid-week. When he was in a rhythm he dominated, in six of his starts he pitched seven plus innings while allowing two earned runs or less. Once again the Aggies enrolled top 100 high school talent. In addition to Frame, the Aggie coaches were ecstatic RHP/SS Austin Creps made it to campus this fall. Both players were rated among the nation’s top 50 prospects (by Teamone Baseball and Baseball America respectively) when the season began. Returning starter Robert Ray was also a top 50 player entering his senior season. Creps was on the USA Junior National team last year and is another two-way star in the making for the Aggies. Battling a sore shoulder this spring and his intentions to attend A&M pushed him out of the draft this spring. Concerns about his shoulder were dismissed when he pitched in the upper eighties and lower nineties at the THSBCA All-Star game in June. He went 7-1 and a save with 100 strikeouts and eight complete games. Frame was rated as a second to fifth round pick before the draft by Baseball America, and Photo by Scott Clendenin Austin Creps will play a key role next spring at Olsen Field Find this and other info on www.agtimes.com Ags Illustrated Page 21 not being drafted on the first day was one of the biggest surprises in the draft. Pro scouts normally don’t let a lefthander that hits 92 mph drop in the draft, but the Aggies certainly benefit from their oversight. He went 8-2 this year with more than 100 strikeouts. RHP/SS Kyle Nicholson is very familiar to Brazos Valley baseball fans; he was the closer this year for A&M Consolidated. He will remind fans of Cliff Pennington, a great fielder with a cannon arm and a competitive desire that is overlooked by pro scouts since both players were less than six feet tall. Nicholson was the best player on the best team in the state, and the he will be on the field early as an Aggie, either on the mound or in the field. He hit .337 with 10 stolen bases and an on-base percentage of .405 while on the mound he posted a 3-1 record and nine saves with a 1.56 ERA in 34 2/3 innings. Other newcomers who will contribute on the mound are William Blackmon (thirty-ninth round pick of Toronto), Brett Jackson (30th round draft and follow by the Yankees in 2002), Kyle Marlett (draft and follow 36th round pick of New York Yankees in 2002 as well), and Franco Cardinale. Blackmon went 7-1 this season and had an ERA of 1.66 with 98 strikeouts and only four walks. Blackmon went 10-3 as a junior, his first season on the varsity for Arlington Heights. He is a strike thrower like former Aggie star Matt Ward, making up for average speed with outstanding control. Cardinale is very similar to Blackmon; he went 5-5 this year while striking out 59 batters in the hitting rich Western JUCO league. Jackson, from the left side and Marlett from the right had to turn down significant money from the Yankees this year and went undrafted in 2003 after turning down the Yankees. The Bronx Bombers made a strong run at Marlett after he shut down Walter’s Junior College 9-1 to advance San Jac to the championship game in this year’s tournament. He struck out eleven, only allowing just six hits in a ballgame against a hot hitting team that had scored 31 runs in their first four games. He struck out at least one batter in every inning to improve to 9-3 on the season. As a freshman he went 6-2 for the Gators. Jackson went 10-2 with a 2.10 ERA as a freshman was an All-Conference selection in 2002 and named to the 2003 Texas JUCO AllStar Team. He was named to the 2003 Academic All-Conference Team and the 2003 Academic All-American Team with a cumulative 3.84 grade point average. This year he was 8-1 with a 4.04 ERA. He has the school record in career wins with 18 and winning percentage of .857 17 Issues for 42.90 979-690-9278 Photo by Scott Clendenin Above: Kyle Nicholson could also be a factor at the plate Below: Jarrett Turner is already a terrific athlete (18-3). He also finished in the top five of innings pitched in a career with 137.3. He was also a member of the USA JUCO National Team along with future teammate Cory Patton that topped the Chinese National Team last summer. Jackson won the game he started which helped the USA Team to a series victory. RHP Blake Rampy, a teammate of Frame at Tomball High, also signed up with the Aggies this spring. He originally signed with San Jacinto last fall. Rampy was used as the closer for Tomball with Frame and junior LHP Troy Patton (rated as high as the #2 pitcher in next year’s class) starting most of the season. He went 4-1 with a 0.93 ERA while striking out 32 in 30 innings pitched. He threw a no-hitter against Mineral Wells right before district play started for Tomball. Last year he went 5-1, with a 1.70 ERA. Rampy has a fastball that touches 91 mph and a good changeup that will remind fans of Logan Kensing. Seattle drafted Rampy in the thirty-third round this summer. Even with an emphasis on pitching, the posiFind this and other info on www.agtimes.com Ags Illustrated Page 22 tion players give the recruiting class great balance, and veterans will face stiff competition to keep starting positions with such a talented group coming on board. Creps and Nicholson will get a chance in the field as well as on the mound and Bartek could push Ruggiano to left next season. Austin Boggs, a tremendous third base prospect, is the son of former #2 overall pick Tommy Boggs (who signed with Texas out of high school). The elder Boggs runs the Austin Slam summer league baseball program and is a great ambassador for the amateur game and is the biggest fish in the pond for central Texas summer league programs. Austin is a smooth switch hitter with a great knowledge of the game. He played shortstop in high school before this season, but his future was at the hot corner and he is a year ahead of the curve following a tremendous senior season. He led Connally to the high school playoffs for the first time ever this year and they lost to Brenham in three games in the regional final. Boggs showed in that series the glove, arm and bat that will have him on the field early in Aggieland and he also has that competitive desire, playing quarterback and leading Connally deep in the football playoffs as well. Jarrett Turner played on a surprisingly poor Pine Tree team this year out of Longview. He was the team, literally. He earned all-state honors while hitting .558-4-9 while stealing 13 bases. He batted leadoff (hitting over .600 in district play) and that is why he only had nine RBI while hitting four homeruns. At the THSCA All-Star game, he was easily one of the most impressive athlete on the field. He turned a Cory Van Allen 90+ fastball around and hit the fence halfway up at the 407 sign in right center field, and he later missed a long homerun down the foul line in right. MLB.com’s preview before the draft said he would be a Major League right fielder in the future. The son of former Aggie baseballer Buster Turner, the scouts would have drafted him very high if not for his ties to Aggieland. Andrew Baldwin, Steven Holdren, and Todd Stroud are three additional junior college players with a similar pedigree to last season’s JUCO stars Beerer, Justin Ruggiano and Patton. Baldwin and Stroud were named to the JUCO World Series all-tournament team and each hit more than 15 homeruns this year and both hit over .450 in the JUCO World Series. Baldwin played quarterback and catcher at Bryan High. He was newcomer of the year as a sophomore in the Round Rock district. He started two seasons in right field for the always talented San Jacinto team. Baldwin hit .314 with 43 RBI as a 17 Issues for 42.90 979-690-9278 Photo by Scott Clendenin Austin Creps and Austin Boggs were teammates this summer at the THSCA All-Star game freshman. Stroud, while catching, was honorable mention freshman AllAmerican at New Mexico after he hit .392-5-26. He moved to outfield this year and showed his power the second half of the season for Grayson as they returned to the World Series. Holdren is a left-handed hitter that might move first base to give balance to the Aggie lineup. He hit .378 this season with 17 doubles, five triples, and 13 home runs. He led the nation with 64 walks and had an on base percentage of .583. 2003-2004 Aggie Baseball Recruiting Class Name OF OF LHP INF LHP LHP RHP/INF LHP C INF LHP LHP RHP RHP/INF C RHP LHP OF/C OF Find this and other info on www.agtimes.com Yr-Exp B/T Andrew Baldwin, Jr-TR R/R Travis Bartek, Jr-TR R/R Will Blackmon, Fr-HS L/L Austin Boggs, Fr-HS S/R Franco Cardinale, Jr-TR L/L John Michael Cline, Jr-TR L/L Austin Creps, Fr-HS R/R Doug Frame, Fr-HS L/L Lee Harughty, Fr-HS R/R Stephen Holdren, Jr-TR L/R Brent Jackson, Jr-TR L/L Zach Jackson, Jr-TR L/L Kyle Marlatt, Jr-TR R/R Kyle Nicholson, Fr-HS R/R Grady Norton, Fr-HS R/R Blake Rampy, Fr-HS R/R Tyler Soeder, Fr-HS L/L Todd Stroud, Jr-Tr R/R Jerrett Turner, Fr-HS R/R Ht Wt 6’1 200 6’0 180 6’6 215 5’10 185 5’11 185 6’ 170 6’2 170 6’ 225 6’ 180 6’ 210 6’4 190 6’5 220 6’3 215 5’11 185 5’11 190 6’2 170 6’1 160 6’2 210 6’2 195 Ags Illustrated Page 23 Hometown (HS/Transfer) Bryan, Texas (Bryan/San Jacinto JC) Sparks, Nev. (Reed/Feather River JC) Arlington, Texas (Heights) Pflugerville, Texas (Connally) Lafayette, La. (St. Thomas More/Frank Phillips CC) Palestine, Texas (Elkhart/Tyler JC) Spring, Texas (Klein) Tomball, Texas (Tomball) Spring, Texas (Spring) Overland Park, Kan. (Shawnee South/Butler CC) Henderson, Texas (Henderson/North Central CC) Cranberry Twp., Penn. (Seneca Valley/Louisville) Enid, Okla. (Enid/San Jacinto JC) College Station, Texas (A&M Consolidated) College Station, Texas (A&M Consolidated) Tomball, Texas (Tomball) The Woodlands, Texas (The Woodlands) Weatherford, Texas (Weatherford/Grayson CC) Longview, Texas (Pinetree) 17 Issues for 42.90 979-690-9278 w ne Up e th rm ow a h h tc W e S s a C gie am ay Ag e-G urd m. . t Pr Sa 0 a 1 The Zone Monday thru Friday Line-up 1a-5a ESPN Radio All Night 5a-9a The Mike & Mike show from ESPN 9a-11a The First Word w/Louie Belina 11a-2p The Jungle w/Jim Rome 2p-5p Dan Patrick Show 5p-7p Chip Howard’s SportsTalk Te xa s n et to ck us Ro g Bi X II Ho n Br n a y Vi Co ll e g e to F ki l l a b t o Fo us ng Ho s r e g l n l a R a s b a t Tex o o ns