page nineteen/the journai/august 25,1972 basketball, imong others C is famous for its basketball ambitions. But in the excitement of the Hr a national title, many people have forgotten that UNCC also competes in ^er intercollegiate sports: golf, tennis, wrestling, and bowling, g against some tough opponents, last year's 49er basketball squad d a somewhat disappointing 13-12 record. The schedule for this season is ore formidable, and the 1972-73 edition of the 49ers will face these >uses without the help of Jerry Boggs, Norris Dae, Chris Black, Harold * and Terry Sloan. All have graduated. )ugh the team this year will be young, it may be UNCC's best ever, e recruiting by Head Coach Bill Foster has brought to UNCC some ig transfers from junior colleges, as well as some talented freshmen, who r will be eligible to play varsity basketball. ])r college transfers include Lee Holton, Donny Bevill, and Luther ^ Bevill, a 6'5", 210-pound standout from Walker Junior College in Sa, averaged over 18 points and 9 rebounds last season. According to Coach Bevill is an excellent defensive player. aman Bob Ball, from Tucker, Ga., is a likely prospect for the varsity. i)ys that Ball is "a great offensive player, one of the purest shooters ever 11 at UNCC." An all-state and honorable mention All-American, Ball Home of AMERICA’S FAVORITE GIANT PIZZA BIG 16” DIAMETER INTRODUCTORY SPECIAL PIZZA INN MENU SfiMill Madlum Larga ZARELLA CHEESE 95 1.35 2.05 )N 1.20 1.75 2.35 N OLIVE 1.20 1.75 2.35 KOLIVE 1.20 1.75 2.35 N PEPPER 1.20 1.75 2.35 1ROOM 1.30 1.85 2.70 ;R0N1 1.30 1.85 2.70 1.30 1.85 2.70 AGE 1.30 1.85 2.70 LOIAN BACON 1.30 1.85 2.70 JAIAPENO 1.30 1.75 2.35 ^OVY 1.30 1.85 2.70 lEESE,’/} SAUSAGE 1.20 1.75 2.35 lEESE,'/jBEEF 1.20 1.75 2.35 , INN SPECIAL 1.J0 2.25 3.20 & CHOPPED ONION 1.45 2.05 2.95 :R0N1 & MUSHROOM 1.45 2.05 2.95 ;R0NI 8. GREEN PEPPER 1.45 2.05 2.95 AGE & MUSHROOM 1.45 2.05 2.95 Added Ingredient .15 .20 .25 5655 l\l. TRYON 596 - 9598 6607 S. BLVD. 523 -3516 WBLCOME TO THE LAND OF THE GIANT by john lindgren averaged 31.1 points per game during his senior year. Last year, the offensive attack was largely based on Robert Earl Blue. This year, returning players Blue, Derek Jones, Marshal! Thaxton, Richard Guffy, Rick Dobson, and Lee Wilson will be joined by upcoming players from the freshman basketball squad of last year. Highly touted rising sophomores Rick Hanneburg, Geoff Bommer, and Will Barnes will likely make the varsity this year. Geoff Bommer will help the offensive scoring with his fine jump shot. Hanneburg may be the answer to UNCC's need for a big man in the center. Associate Coach Bill Moore predicts that this year's team will be quicker and more balanced. Improved rebounding and more bench strength will also help the 49ers as they try to improve on last year's record. Golf is UNCC's most successful sport, but the team this year may be hampered by the loss of its top star. According to Coach Floyd Kerr, there is a possibility that medalist Terry Mauney may not be returning to school. The team, which compiled a 17-1 record last year, may be helped by some promising freshman golfers, but Coach Kerr says that he will have to wait for registration to determine exactly what the prospects are. Kerr predicts that the golf team will be much stroner this year, since only one player, Terry Owen, has graduated. Returning players are Chuck Little, Danny Randall, Sam Spear, and John Fellenz. UNCC plays in matches against colleges and universities in the Carolinas and Southern Conferences. The University also plays against other independents. Among the tournaments that UNCC competes in are the Miami Invitational, the Metrolina Invitational, and the Etowah Invitational. Last year, the 49er golf team finished second in the Metrolina tournament and third in the Etowah Invitational. Coach Kerr invites all people interested in playing for this year's team to come to a meeting on September 6 at 4 p.m. in Room 222 of the gymnasium. This year's potential players will compete in a practice tournament that will be held soon after classes start. The exact date will be announced later in this newspapier and through other campus media. Wrestling is practically a forgotten sport on the UNCC campus. Coach Craig Alder has worked very hard on buidling interest and a team that could compete, but has met with little success. When Coach Flemming, the former wrestling coach, left the university system for a job in higher places, wrestling was pushed aside. Last season Coach Alden could field only a five-man squad: Cecil Carver, Gary Scotty, Charles Aker, Bobby Young, and Francis Boles. The usual wrestling team has about ten wrestlers. Because UNCC had only half a team, they were forced to forfeit about 30 points per match. As a result, the won-lost record was 0-9. If forfeits are excluded, however, the team compil^ an excellent 6-2-1 record. This year, wrestlers Aker, Boles, and Young will return. Carver and Scotty have graduated. UNCC's tennis team, which compiled a 5-8 record last year, will be hurt his year by the graduation of the top tennis player, John Jessen, and alternate James Cuthbertson. Returning members are Eddie Hege, James Fulbright, Bruce Dawson, Palmer May, and Jim Curtis. The team, which sat out post-season play last year, is coached voluntarily by Joe Kingery, assistant basketball coach. According to one member of the bowling team, "we've been getting creamed." Hampered by the loss of top bowler Jimmy Furr, the team compiled an 0-6 record. Furr will be back In action this year, as will the rest of last year's team, so prospects of improvement are good. In addition to Furr, the team members are John Lindgren, Gene Benfleld, Doug White, Keith Clark, Dick Riemin, and Danny Bullman. Volunteer coach is Donald MacKay. Because the National Collegiate Athletic Association does not recognize bowling, UNCC's team is a member of the Southern Intercollegiate Bowling Conference. The conference includes teams from the University of Virginia, University of Maryland, UNC-Chapel Hill, South Carolina, Georgia, Tech, University of Georgia, Clemson, and others. The conference is split up into divisions. UNCC's division includes the University of Tennessee, Clemson, and Appalachian State University. New sports -by john lindgren Soccer will be the next sport added to the UNCC sports program, according to Director of Athletics Harvey Murphy. If plans go according to schedule, UNCC’s first intercollegiate soccer team will take the field in the fall of 1973. Also in the works for the future are intercollegiate swimming and track and field programs. The motivation behind the planned additions is UNCC's desire to retain its membership in the National Collegiate Athletic Association. In order to be eligible for NCAA membership, a college must participate in at least five intercollegiate sports, and must have one intercollegiate sport each season. UNCC tacks five sports - the NCAA recognizes only basketball, golf, tennis, and wrestling - and there is no intercollegiate sports activity in the fall. In past years, the University has fielded a cross country team in the fall. Cross country has been deleted, however, because in its last year the team had only three members. If it were not for UNCC's ambition to be a basketball power, NCAA membership would probably not be a top priority. Once UNCC is in the NCAA, the school would be eligible to compete in post-season tournaments against some of the best basketball teams in the region - teams like UNC-CH, South Carolina, and the basketball powers in the Northeast. NCAA membership would also mean a shot at a national basketball title. One major obstacle - paying a coach - stands in the way of the implementation of the soccer program. Money can be budgeted for the operational expenses of the soccer team, but no money can be budgeted for a coach's salary. According to state regulations, the state legislature cannot allow budgeting for additional coaches as long as more teaching faculty members are needed. At the rate that UNCC is growing. It will face a need for more teachers for several years. Until the University's growth stabilizes, either the soccer team will be delayed or it will have to depend on a volunteer coach who cannot devote his entire time to the team. 1972-73 UNCC Basketlrall schedule DATE OPPONENT SITE November 27,1972 Morehead State University UNCC Gymnasium November 30, 1972 Baptist College of Charleston UNCC Gymnasium December 2, 1972 Bryan College UNCC Gymnasium December 5, 1972 Marshall University Huntington, W.Va. December 9, 1972 University of Oklahoma UNCC Gymnasium December 16, 1972 Atlanta Baptist College UNCC Gymnasium December 20,1972 Kent State University Charlotte Coliseum January 4, 1973 Athletes in Action Gastonia, N.C. January 6, 1973 East Tennessee State University Johnson City, Tenn. January 8, 1973 Austin Peay State University UNCC Gymnasium January 11, 1973 Samford University Birmingham, Ala. January 15, 1973 Tulane University New Orleans, La. January 18, 1973 Sam ford University UNCC Gymnasium January 20, 1973 Georgia State University UNCC Gymnasium January 24, 1973 Austin Peay State University Clarksville Teni.. January 27,1973 University of Iowa Iowa City, Iowa February 1, 1973 Tennessee Tech University Cookeville, Tenn. February 3, 1973 Appalachian State University Boone, N.C. February 5,1973 University of Southern Mississippi UNCC Gymnasium February 10, 1973 Tusculum College UNCC Gymnasium February 14, 1973 DePaul University UNCC Gymnasium February 17, 1973 Georgia State University Atlanta, Ga. February 19, 1973 Georgia Tech University Atlanta, Ga. February 22, 1973 Marshall University Charlotte Coliseum February 24, 1973 North Carolina State University Raleigh, N.C. February 28, 1973 Clark College UNCC Gymnasium March 3, 1973 Cleveland State University UNCC Gymnasium