In what has become an annual harbinger of the next school year, Texas A & M Baseball gathered for the ninth painting-a-Thong annual Sabbath morning aggie baseball. This year, the project has the Aggies at the home of Mrs.. Janet Goode in College Station.
The brown and white Nine rounded a crew of 45, including all the players and the entire coaching staff aggie baseball, to paint the exterior of the house and landscape the yard of the residence of Mrs.. Goode.
"This sets the tone from the first day I want to be a team," said head coach of Texas A & M Baseball Rob Childless. "We want to have a positive impact not only on the field and in the classroom but in the community aggie baseball. Servants want to be part of the structure of this team aggie baseball.
"Once again, the guys did a great job aggie baseball. After nine years, it still amazes me what can be done by 45 children in six hours, when we all know what we do and we all have the same goal in mind. This is something that we can learn from. "
Coach Childless established the Paint-A-Thong in 2006 and now every year is the first activity of the school year team aggie baseball. The Paint-a-Thong brought the Aggies five homes in College Station and Bryan to four in the last nine years.
"It's a good way for players to know that we will work hard for everything we get aggie baseball," Childless said. "This is a good" first event "for the team to work together and work hard to achieve something."
Residences are needing help contact churches and local organizations such as Habitat for Humanity, the Army Hello and care for the elderly.
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