Monday, At il 25, 1971
Tha Daily Tar Heef
In Carolina Relays
- TJT T
.i.L.(5L.
by David Zucchino
Sports Writer
The Carolina track squad swept to first
place finishes in eight of 19 events
Saturday afternoon on Fetzer Field to
run away with the championship of the
1 2th annual Carolina Relays.
Several Tar Heel performers came up
with their finest efforts of the current
Outdoor season to enable Carolina to
make a shambles of the rest of the Relays
field, which included track squads from
Carolina
Carolina's baseball team tied Maryland
for the ACC lead Saturday with a 12-5
victory over Virginia in Durham Athletic
Park, and what were the odds on that
when the season started?, , '
Back then, Coach Walter ilabb's hopes'
were riding on uriproven but promising
pitchers and a group of well-travelled
hitters whose averages last season hardly
made conference pitchers tremble.
But the win over the Cavaliers pulled
the Heels' loop record to 6-2, and they .
played Maryland , Sunday in a make-up
game to decide the ACC front-runner.
John Danneman, one of those "
freshman hurlers, upped his record to 4-2
with a nine-hit complete game, striking
out eight.
The Norfolk lefthander allowed no
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the four Big Four schools, Virginia, South
Carolina, East Carolina, N.C. Central,
Georgia, Florida State, Richmond,
William and Mary and Georgia.
N.C. Central picked up four first place
wins to finish second behind the Tar
Heels, while Duke and State had two first
place finishes apiece. Richmond and East
Carolina accounted for wins in the
remaining two events.
"I'm very pleased with the outcome of
the meet," stated UNC track coach Joe
Hilton following the Relays. "Many of
op
walks and gave up two runs in the top of
the ninth when the game was already
decided.
The only Virginian that Danneman
had trouble with was centerfielder Robin
Marvin, who had a double and a single.
He choked off productive Mike Cubbage
and allowed first baseman Steve Sroba
only one hit.
Larry Kiser led the 17-hit Carolina
attack with four safeties in five trips,
including a 425-foot homer in the second
inning.
. After Virginia retaliated with three
runs in the third, Carolina chased starter
Steve Brindle, who had been undefeated.
Brindle, gave up two walks and then
allowed singles to Kiser, Mike Roberts,
Doug Lanham, John Wilson, Bob Guthrie
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win eight o
our boys showed good improvement after
coming off of various illnesses, aad
several of them gave their strongest
performances so far this year. I just hope
we can stay fairly healthy from now on."
One of the Tax Heels most impressive
winners of the afternoon was freshman
half-mile specialist Tony Waldrop, who
overcame a substantial NCCU lead in the
next to the last lap of the sprint medley
relay and raced home to complete a
3:23.9 UNC triumph.
Carolina was devastating in the field
O
annua
and Danneman for six Carolina runs.
Lanham and Wilson picked up three
hits apiece, while Bobby Elliott,
Danneman, Kiser and Lanham drove in
two runs each.
Carolina took part of first place when
State defeated Maryland 14-6 in Raleigh.
The Terps have a 3-1 loop record.
The Tar Heels will see more of their
northern rivals this week. They travel to
Virginia Tuesday and Maryland
Wednesday in an attempt to stay near the
top in the ACC, a position which few but
the players expected them to assume.
Virginia ..00 3 000 002-59 1
Carolina 01 6 1 00 40 x-12 17 1
Brindle. Hilburri (3). Strange (5) and Beale;
Danneman and Roberts. WP Danneman (4-2)
LP Brindie 5-1 HR Kiser, Carolina, none on,
"second inning. .
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? 71
events as the Tar Heels placed 1-2 in the
broad jump and claimed the top three
positions in the high jump.
Broad jumpers Hubert West and Hank
r Snowden put in leaps of 23"SW and
23'8MT respectively, while Bobby Jones,
who starred in freshman basketball last
winter, went 6-6 in the high jump. Tax
Heels Charles Ball and John Rucker
finished behind Jones at 6-6 and 6-4.
The Tar Heels also grabbed two of the
top four spots in the pole vault, as both
Danny Deacon and Jeff Hilliker cleared
14'-6", with Deacon awarded first place
on the fewest number of misses.
Tar Heel sophomore Daryl Kelly fell
two feet short of his personal high in the
triple jump, but his 47'-23i" hop
Saturday was good enough to beat out
USC's Ron Rader for the top spot. Kelly
has reached 5 1 -4 indoors.
John Jessup was the other Tar Heel to
score in the field events as he produced a
54'-4" heave for first place in the shot
put.
Freshman Mike Garcia ran four laps in
4:16.4 to take first place honors in the
mile run, while Larry Widgeon mopped
up the productive afternoon with a flashy
14:05.6 finish in the three mile run.
Widgeon outdistanced his nearest
competitor, N.C. Central's Jim Howell,
by an eye-popping 17 seconds.
NCCU's four victories came in the 1 20
. year high hurdles, the 440 relay, the
shuttle hurdled relay and in the mile
relay, while Duke won in the 3,000 meter
2 steeplechase and in the two mile relay.
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1
Golfers place fifth, i
meet Cats again today
Carolina's golfers travel to Charlotte
today to play Davidson after finishing
fifth in the Chris Schenkel tournament
this weekend in Statesboro, Ga.
The par-71 Charlotte Country Gub
layout wfll be the site of today's match; it
will also host the U.S. Amateur
tournament in two years.
Carolina defeated the Wildcats handily
in a dual match last week and should be
favored to duplicate that victory today.
The Tar Heels compete in the final IS
holes of the Big Four tournament Friday
in Winston-Salem.
Memphis State finished a stroke ahead
of Carolina at Statesboro. Georgia won
the event, with Florida second and
Georgia Southern third.
Sammy Rachels of Columbia College
was medalist for the 54-hole event with a
212, a stroke ahead of Rollins Mike
Berlsford. .
Jack Hooks led Carolina's contingent
wiht a 220, finishing with a one-under-par
71. Marty West sandwiched a 75 between
two 73s for a 221.
Joe Hackler matched par in his second
round and finished at 223, while Lytton
Perritt carded a 224.
'The course was in good shape down
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there, but the greens were hard and
wouldn't hold many shots the first day,
commented Hackler.
"Then it rained three inches the ni&hi
before the last 27 holes, which made the
course more difficult for everyone
involved."
The Tar Heels were frequently undrr
par in practice rounds prior to the
tournament. I thought we were going to
tear the course up, but when the
tournament started everyone started
trying a little harder. The pressure
probably contributed to our higher
scores."
TRANSCENDENTAL
MEDITATION
5
Anyone cart begirt to use the full
potential of his mind in all fields of life.
There is a way to expand the conscious
mind, tap an inexhaustible reservoir of
energy and creative intelligence, and
bring fulfillment to life. The way, called
Transcendental Meditation, is a scientific
technique from man's ancient heritage.
It is a safe, natural and spontaneous
method for expanding the mind, and it
works for everyone.
Introductory Lecture
2: 00 & 8: 00
GerrardHall
Wednesday, April 28
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