LAS CRUCES, N.M. - No. 16 Texas A&M recorded a 3-0 (25-16, 26-24, 25-20) sweep over Arizona to open the Borderland Invitational today at the Pan American Center.The Aggies improve to 4-3 and will return to the court this evening at 7 p.m. (8 p.m. CT) to face the host New Mexico State Aggies. Arizona, which is receiving points in the AVCA Top 25 Poll, falls, to 3-4.Texas A&M junior setter Stephanie Aiple ran a balanced offense, directing the Aggies to a .298 to .137 lead in team hitting efficiency while dishing out 32 assists to five players who had four or more kills apiece. Junior outside hitter Kiara McGee, junior opposite hitter Ashlie Reasor and sophomore middle blocker Kaitlyn Blake tied for team-high honors with eight kills each. Senior middle blocker Jazzmin Babers added six kills and also tied Blake with a match-high five blocks as the Aggies outblocked Arizona, 12-5. Freshman outside hitter Hollann Hans, drawing her second career start, added four kills and also finished with four aces, the most aces in a match by an A&M player this season.Junior libero Amy Nettles had a team season-high and match-high 20 digs, and defensive specialists Katelyn Labhart and Gabby Litwin also played backrow defense for the Aggies.Texas A&M took an early 2-1 advantage to open the first set and never lost the lead for the remainder of the frame. The Wildcats, who were outhit .241 to .031 in the set, had trailed by as many as five points but managed to get within 11-10 before Aiple started a 5-0 run with one of her three kills in the match. Arizona once again chipped away at the lead and got within 19-16 before Babers got a kill. Hans then stepped to the service line, where she would remain for the rest of the set. Hans served an ace, and then Arizona passed her next serve over the net, setting up McGee for the kill. Hans served another ace to put the Aggies up, 23-16, and McGee closed out the set-ending 6-0 run, teaming with Babers for a block and then tooling the Arizona block for the winning kill.There were 19 ties and nine lead changes in the second set as both teams hit below .090. The Wildcats had taken a 20-19 lead following an ace but were unable to pull away as Texas A&M tied the score four times before Babers got a kill to put the Maroon and White up, 24-23. Arizona staved off one set point with a kill but then served into the net to put Texas A&M up 25-24. The Wildcats next attack attempt hit the antenna, giving the Aggies the 26-24 win and a 2-0 lead in the match.A&M outhit Arizona, .567 to .321, in the final frame with Blake, McGee, Reasor and Babers combining for 16 kills without an error. The teams were tied at 5-5, before A&M outscored the Wildcats, 5-1, to take a 10-6 lead. Arizona got within 12-10 but could get no closer. The Aggies built their largest lead at 19-13, but the Wildcats later used a 4-1 spurt to get within 20-18. A&M later was ahead 23-20 when Blake posted back-to back kills to cap the victory.Kendra Dahlke led Arizona with 10 kills but was held to a .154 hitting efficiency. yeezy black friday . -- Washington Redskins tight end Fred Davis was charged Thursday with driving while intoxicated, a day after he was suspended for an NFL substance-abuse policy violation. Replica Yeezy . Robinson finished with 17 points, all but two in the second half, and Lawson had 14 after halftime and finished with a game-high 11 assists as the Nuggets handed Dallas its first home loss in eight games this season. J.J. Hickson led Denver with 22, and Kenneth Faried added 10 points and 10 rebounds. https://www.wholesaleyeezyauthentic.com/yeezy-700-outlet-130u/ .Y. -- Paul Byron and Matt Stajan scored as the Calgary Flames started a five-game road trip with a 2-1 overtime win over the Buffalo Sabres on Saturday afternoon. Cheap Yeezy From China . On Tuesday, Ottawa placed forward Cory Conacher and defenceman Joe Corvo on waivers as trade rumours swirl around the Senators. Yeezy Shoes . Tuesdays surgery at Atlantas Piedmont Hospital was performed by Dr. Xavier Duralde and Hawks team physician Dr. Michael Bernot. COLUMBIA, S.C. -- PJ Dozier had a career-high 21 points and No. 20 South Carolina improved to 7-0 for a second straight season with a 68-50 victory over Vermont on Thursday night.Dozier, the 6-foot-6 sophomore, helped the Gamecocks to a 13-1 run at the start of the second half. Maik Kotsar had eight points in the charge while Dozier had a 3-pointer and a thunderous finish to an alley-oop pass that had the crowd on its feet as South Carolina took a 49-32 lead.The Catamounts (6-3) could not respond to taller, quicker South Carolina.Dozier had three of the Gamecocks four 3-pointers in besting his previous high of 17 points, set in the season opener against Louisiana Tech.Kotsar had 14 points on 7-of-10 shooting, mostly from close to the basket, while Chris Silva added 12 points for South Carolina.Dozier had six rebounds, as did the 6-9 Silva, along with three steals.Anthony Lamb had 14 points, the only Vermont player in double figures.THE BIG PICTUREVermont: The Catamounts have won 20 or more games in coach John Beckers five seasons and had a trip to the NCAA Tournament in 2012 and the NIT in 2014.dddddddddddd. They do it with a mix of strong-shooting upperclassmen and enough young talent to compete in the American East Conference. But Vermont doesnt have enough firepower to keep up with a top-20 team like South Carolina. The Gamecocks defense kept the Catamounts off balance most of the way as they fell behind by 14 points in the opening half.South Carolina: For their success last week in defeating ranked opponents Michigan and Syracuse, the Gamecocks are very much a work in progress. One starter, Kotsar, and four of the five players off the bench are in their first years at South Carolina and several times an animated coach Frank Martin yanked players, loudly questioning their technique. He calmed in the second half with South Carolinas quick start.UP NEXTVermont gets almost a week off before starting three straight at home with Dartmouth on Dec. 7.South Carolina concludes a two-game home stand against Florida International on Sunday. ' ' '