Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 16, 1966, edition 1 / Page 7
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September 16, 1966 THE DAILY TAR HEEL I : . . The Sportgcope By Bill Hags Page 7 Kir Heels Leave Wiih High Hopes The Atlantic Coast Confe h -i u.j "fort f?u fxamPle' ACC teams won 12 and work, onf. Wlth tGamS Utside conference. This r,tHil f t0 a Pfage of .400, which is not likely thvfarAnnt0 'he hearts of may otheii teams ber rtnr AorUs Ver and dead- Remem ber Carolina's 14-3 stunner over Ohio State last year and the 21-15 thriller .over Michigan State the year before. These things do happen. But not very often. A good way of judging the caliber of the confer ence is to look at the home schedules for ACC teams with outside games. This year, the ACC plays 13 out side opponents on the home grounds and 21 away, a rather unfavorable balance. And very, very few of the nation's big teams are coming into ACC terri tory. Georgia goes up to play South Carolina and Georgia Tech will play at Duke. Outside of that, the home schedule is unattractive. The road games are a bit different. Clemson travels to play Alabama, Georgia Tech and Southern California. UNC goes to Michigan, Notre Dame, Ken tucky and Georgia. Maryland journeys to Penn State and Syracuse. Duke will play Pitt and Navy away. Poor South Carolina must face LSU, Tennessee and Alabama on hostile grounds. State goes to Michigan State, Wake visits Auburn, and Virginia travels to Georgia Tech. The reason for other teams' staying at hime is Simple. Why should they travel out of the comforts of their own stomping grounds to play mediocre teams? There certainly isn't any prestige or monetary profits in that. So they have a "you come to us" pol icy. And whof can blame them? . Then, too, there is the fact that the ACC is not a bowl conference. Last year the ACC sent no one to bowl games and, in fact, hasn't sent a team since Carolina went to the Gator Bowl and State played in the Liberty Bowl in 1963. In comparison, the South eastern Conference had six teams in bowls last year alone, and they won five of them. Clemson hasn't been bowling in seven years, Duke in five, or Maryland in 10. South Carolina has been to one bowl game in his tory, Wake to two and Virginia to none. : There's a chance that the ACC may stop being a patsy this year, though. Carolina has good potential and State may give Michigan State more than they look for. Duke and Clemson will give their outside "Opponents" good tussles and' Paul Dietzel "may have a surprise or two with South Carolina. A spectacular upset or two would do the confer ence a world of good and perhaps let people around the country know that it plays a little football for business, and not for biding the time' until basket ball season. Soccer Co-Captains Are Seasoned 3-Year Veterans By SANDY TREADWELL DTH Sports Editor The 1966 Carolina football squad has its bags packed and its expectations high to day. At 4 o'clock this after noon Hickey's boys will climb into a bus at the Ram's Head parking lot and will begin their journey to the heart of Kentucky's Blue Grass lands. The journey ends Saturday night at Stoll Field in Lex ington. There at 8 p.m. before a hostile capacity crowd of 37,500 Carolina's long grid iron campaign will get under way. Last year's disappointing 4-6 record is all but forgotten. Today students in Chapel Hill and alumni all across the state anxiously await Satur day afternoons in Kenan Stad ium. They've heard about their team. They've heard that it should be good very good. They think about Talbott and touchdowns, and they expect to see a lot of both. Their team has experience this year. It also has lot of depth. It should have a strong aerial attack; and names like Riggs, Mazza, Lampman, and Wesolowski should give stren gth on the ground. Never have hopes been higher. Even Jim Hickey, a man who never goes out on a limb, admits it all could turn out to b3 a whole lot of fun. "I don't know how many, games we'll win, " Hickey says, "but I do know this team will be ready to play good football every Saturday." The Saturdays begin tomor row. Arid tomorrow the Tar Heels will be favored to come away from Stoll Field with their first victory. Expectations are not high in Kentucky. The Wildcats are expected to rank close to the bottom in their Southeastern Confer ence. Very likely no other foot ball team in the country lost so much seasoned talent as as did the Kentuckyians fol lowing their '65 season. . Represented among the de partures of 18 letterman were eight offensive and five de fensive starters. . Three were f ir s t string all-American choices, and a half dozen claimed a reported million dollars ; in professional con tracts, - "I'm trying to be realistic about, this- season," Ken tucky football coach Charlie Bradshaw says. "We have an inexperienced team, and we haven't much depth." Bradshaw's biggest problem is his offensive line. The chances are that he'll start four sophomores at guard and tackle against the Tar Heels. Bradshaw's main hope is his defensive platoon, which appears to be stronger, though less experienced, than last year's. ( Kentucky's backfield is also virtually untested against collegiate competition. Junior Terry Beadles and senior Roger Walz, a pair of quarter backs who have a combined total of 20 passes attempted in SEC competition, will be at the throttle. The overall backfield, with senior all-star candidates Larry Seiple and Bob Windsor at tailback and wingback, is potentially as powerful as last years. Ik V Charlie Bradshaw iattg socooooooooioooocoooooooooooaoooooooooocoooooci OBBY.f AND THE KM YT EM ACES! By DRUMMOND BELL ,'. DTH Sports Writer For the past three years co captains Jim Hammer and Bob- Johnson have been inval uable to Coach Allen's defen sive unit. Hammer, who hails from Princeton, N.J., has been a three year starter at fullback. During this period he showed ; enough ability and drive to be 'selected to participate in the Olympic team trials last spring. He made the final cuts and if he is able to perform as well as he had in the past, he will represent the United States in the next Pan Amer ican Games. Before coming to Carolina Hammer played most of his soccer in St. Louis, Mo., the soccer capital of America. However, he moved east and while at prep school departed from the game for four years. Johnson, the other captain and the goalie, is a resident of Summit, N.J. While at Summit high school Johnson played four years of varsity soccer before coming to Car olina where has was the start ing goalie on the outstanding ffeshmen squad of three years ago. My "Searching For SATURDAY NIGHT, SEPT. 17, AT THE AMERICAN LEGION HUT IN CHAPEL HILL 8 TIL MIDNIGHT Another Jokers Three Spectacular! Don't Miss It! scgssocc; CoiiffeFeMce Preview The 1956 Atlantic Coast Con ference football race gets un der way Saturday with seven of the eight teams scheduled for action. Clemson tioes not play until September 24. . The only conference game pits an improved Wake For est team against Virginia. The other teams face tough non conference opponents. N. C. State has the roughest assign ment. The Wolf pack plays na tionally ranked .Michigan State at Lansing. South Caro lina travels to the Bayou Country to play L. S. U. This game will pit new USC coach Paul Dietzel again t the team he once coached to national prominence. . In other action Duke plays West Virginia, Maryland takes on Penn. St., and "North Caro lina travels to Kentucky. In 1965 one game separated the top four teams in the con ference. Again this year there is no predominant favorite for "best in the ACC." Frank Howard's Clemson Tigers will boast a veteran team that finished in a tie for the 1965 ACC championship. Tiger chances have been greatly enhanced by the addi tion of halfback Buddy Gore, whom Howard calls the fast est Clemson back in 10 years. Up front the Tigers are so lid as a rock. They've led by 3SS JOIN CAROLINA'S FENCING CLUB ! No Previous Experience Ar Equipment Neces sary Just COURAGE ! The 8th Place Team In The Nation Needs YOU! First Meeting Sept. 29, 7:30 P.M. AT Woolen Gym a m - a i I'M SO PROUD IJUST PICKED OUT A UNIQUE GIFT FOR MY GIRL FRIEND 1 1,-- mc BEEH HUGS CCAIIFS ANIMALS PENNANTS HED NIGHT SHIRTS Carolina Blue Night Shirts s: iiiiiai mm mm KIBIP II. IS M tfrtt::::::::: elcome Back Students! Come See Our Newest Fall Feature: 1 in AU-American candidate Wayne Mass. The 240 pound tackle according to Howard, is "the best offensive tackle at Clem son in 30 years." Clemson must face an extremely hard schedule including Georgia Tech, Alabama, and Southern Cal. But Coach Howard feels optimistic and there are vi sions of a January bowl game in Tigertown. The Duke Blue Devils, un der new coach Tom Harp will feature a new offensive look to go with their solid defense. Quarterback Todd Orvald will be at the throttle of the "Winged T Attack" that Harp used so successful ly at Cornell. Orvald led the AC in TD passes last year.. He'll be throwing to fleet David Dunaway, who caught 21 passes last year for 5 touchdowns. Bruising fullback Jay Cala brese, second in the ACC in ground-gaining last year, re turn to give Duke a solid running threat. Page Wilson backs him up. Frank Ryan and Jake Devonshire are a couple of halfbacks who can break any game wide open. The defense will be leji by all-ACC linebacker, Bob Ma theson. The 245-pound Blue Devil may be one of the na ion's best. Duke faces Geor gia Tech, Navy, Notre Dame and Carolina in the last four games, and this rugged sche dule may take its toll on the Blue Devil record. But never count Duke out of the foot ball race. Maryland has a new coach, a new system, and 30 return ing veterans who couldn't win half their games last year. With a tough opening sche dule, prospects for a winning season are dim. New coach Lou Saban, who last year coached the AFL champion Buffalo Bills, has admitted that the Terps aren't quite up to the new "pre-at-tack". The only definite star for Maryland is Bernado Bramson, the place kicking specialist. The soccer-s t y 1 e kicker accounted for 36 points last year. Tomorrow! State, Virginia, Wake and South Carolina. WHA? Aristophanes' The Ecclesia zusea, a comedy, contains the single word, lopadotemac-hoselachogaleokranioleipsano-drimhypotrimmatosilphiopara-omelitokatakechymenokichle-pikossyphophattoperisteralek-tryonoptekephalliokigklopelei-olagoiosiraiobaphetraganopt-erygon. The word describes a goulash of 14-day old leftovers. 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Local one owner with low mileage straight drive with over drive. Radio, heater, tinted windshield, white wall tires. Finest Selection of New-Wolkstvageni Wcalsobavca 7a j 'good selection of " ' U 0 A il (3 IL i, jsjf other used care tlWPl- ! notlisted " ' JvD fit-IT ' -i'v"r-i Mi iWr .1 (-, i -mini. I irnm ' 11 ... ... . -,.,- V
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 16, 1966, edition 1
7
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