Sports

Women’s basketball preview

Teams: UC Davis at Cal Poly

Records: Aggies, 7-9 (3-2); Mustangs, 9-7 (2-3)

Where: Mott Gym - San Luis Obispo, Calif.

When: Tomorrow at 4 p.m.

Who to watch: After scoring seven combined points in her three starts prior to UC Davis' matchup with UC Irvine, freshman Samantha Meggison shot her way back into double digits Saturday, scoring 10 points against the Anteaters in 25 minutes of play.

Wrestling preview

Teams: UC Davis at Cal State Bakersfield; San Francisco State

Where: Icardo Center - Bakersfield, Calif.; Main Gymnasium - San Francisco, Calif.

When: Today at 6 p.m.; Saturday at 7 p.m.

Who to watch: Senior Marcos Orozco went 3-0 at the Stanford Duals and has caught national attention in the 125-pound weight class.

Men’s basketball preview

Teams: UC Davis vs. Cal Poly
Records: Aggies, X-X (X-X); Mustangs, 3-13 (0-6)
Where: The Pavilion
When: Saturday at 7 p.m.
Radio: KHTK (1090-AM)
Who to watch: This time last year, Michael Boone was about to have the finest game of his career.

Men’s basketball preview

Teams: UC Davis vs. UC Santa Barbara

Records: Aggies, 8-10 (3-2); Gauchos, 8-9 (2-3)

Where: The Pavilion

When: Today at 7 p.m.

Women’s basketball preview

Teams: UC Davis at UC Santa Barbara

Records: Aggies, 7-9 (3-2); Gauchos, 10-6 (5-0)

Where: The Thunderdome - Santa Barbara, Calif.

When: Today at 7 p.m.

Women’s tennis preview

Who: UC Davis at No. 5 Stanford

Records: Aggies, 2-0; Cardinal, 0-0

Where: Taube Family Tennis Stadium - Palo Alto, Calif.

When: Today at 3 p.m.

Aggie Digest

Women's tennis

The UC Davis women's tennis team defeated Portland State, 5-2, in the season opener for both teams on Saturday. The Aggies won the doubles point before claiming four more points in singles. The Aggies were also able to capitalize on a short-handed Vikings' squad, which fielded just five players.

Aggies gymnastics impressive on the road

Last week the Aggies struggled on beam, finishing third. This time around, they dominated.

"We finished the meet on balance beam," said coach John Lavallee, "which the week before we had trouble with. We stepped it up and hit five of six routines. That's a real great sign, to perform that well under pressure like that on the end of the day."

Conference climbers

The UC Davis men's basketball team wants to begin a new era.

It wants to put the past to rest. It wants to be the next Big West Conference champion. It wants to bring the hysteria of March Madness to Davis.

After the team's recent road trip, people may want to start jumping on the bandwagon.

Gauchos make quick work of Aggies

The UC Davis men's and women's swimming teams were swept by UC Santa Barbara on Saturday afternoon in its first conference dual of 2009.

The defending Big West Conference champions made for a humbling appearance for the Aggies, winning 22 of 28 events on the day.

French, Aggies shoot past Anteaters

Haylee Donaghe is out for the season. Vicky Deely is redshirting. Lisa Peterson isn't ready to come back yet.

The UC Davis women's basketball team only has eight players, and that's the way it's going to be.

"We had a talk," sophomore Paige Mintun said. "This is it. It's no longer an excuse."

Gymnastics preview

Teams: UC Davis at San Jose State, BYU

Where: Spartan Gym - San Jose, Calif.

When: Today at 7 p.m.

Who to watch: In her first collegiate competition, freshman Jennifer Mueller set the stage for quite the career as an Aggie.

San Jose selects Amarikwa in MLS SuperDraft

Quincy Amarikwa's professional soccer career begins now.

The former UC Davis men's soccer standout was selected in yesterday's Major League Soccer's SuperDraft with the second pick in the third round (No. 32 overall) by the San Jose Earthquakes.

Men’s and women’s swimming preview

Teams: UC Davis at UC Santa Barbara

Where: Campus Pool - Santa Barbara, Calif.

When: Saturday at noon

Who to watch: After redshirting last season to compete as an open swimmer, junior Scott Weltz is back in the pool wearing Aggie blue and ready to take on UCSB.

Men’s and women’s track and field looks to hit the ground running

If you were to randomly ask someone from anywhere in the world outside the United States who their favorite athlete was, they would reply with someone who competes in track and field.

This isn't because track and field is a globally popular sport, but mostly due to the fact that to the rest of the world, the word "athletics" means what we call "track and field."