Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 25, 1973, edition 1 / Page 3
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Tutdy, SpUmbr 2S, 1973 The DUy Tar Hetl Beat State, 21-20 V9 3 UNC Tl O m-mr i 36 w by Jim Thomas and Susan Shackelford Sport! Writers Carolina's junior varsity preserved a one point lead in the fourth quarter to beat the Wolflets of N.C. State. 2 1 -20, yesterday in UNCs Kenan Stadium. A spirited Tar Baby squad dampened the hopes of visitors N.C. State when end Steven Bnsson picked off a State pass with 2:46 remaining in the final period. However, the Wolflets fought back in the waning seconds of the game with a succession of pass plays, but time was not on their side. N.C. State's turnovers plagued the f . X A ,7 J J f I. J - -- ' St. - , V Tough going i r I1 Wolflets throughout the contest. In the first quarter Carolina's Brian Hughes recovered a State fumble to Tom McLoughlin, halting an early Pack drive. Also, in the same period Barry Wynings intercepted a State pass. Six plays later the Tar Babies missed a 33 yard field goal attempt. Horace Whitakcr and Rob Sygor for N.C. State led a 64-yard march that was climaxed with a Sygor fumble, recovered by UNCs Snider at the Tar Baby 26-yard line. During the first part of the second quarter neither Carolina or N.C. State could manage touchdowns on 73- and 65-yard efforts, respectively. With about 4:00 remaining in the half the Tar Babies' Billy Murphy T - i : - i against State (Staff photo by amy Lobratco) R tV itJLJ 1 m W m a I -I n la mm mm mm Sm' : --- T innn The BSR 810 and 710 have their brains in their shaft. A carefully machined metal rod holding eight precision-molded cams. When the cam shaft turns, the cams make things happen. A lock is released, an arm raises and swings, a record drops, a platter starts spinning, the arm is lowered, the arm stops, the arm raises again, it swings back, another record is dropped onto the platter, the arm is lowered again, and so on, for as many hours as you like. Deluxe turntables from other companies do much the same thing, but they use many more parts scads of separate swinging arms, gears, plates, and springs in an arrange ment that is not nearly as mechanically elegant, or as quiet or reliable; that produces considerably more vibration, and is much more susceptible to mechanical shock than the BSR sequential cam shaft system. When you buy a turntable, make sure you get the shaft. The BSR 710 and 810. From the world's largest manufacturer of automatic turntables. Pjggjj pSHij BSR (USA) Ltd.. Blauvell, New Yorfc 10913 intercepted a State throw at the N.C. State 25-yard line and rambled to the seven. Chuck Austin scored from the one-yard mark on a run up the middle. The extra point failed becquse of the poor snap from center, with UNC leading 6-0. Alternating with quarterbacks Caesar Campana and Pat Connolly, the Wolflets moved the ball 73 yards in four plays for a touchdown before half-time. The score occurred on a 34-yard pass from Campana to Sygar. In converting the extra point after touchdown (Pat) State moved ahead 7-6. In the third frame Carolina's Scott Reynolds recovered a Whitaker fumble on the State 34-yard line. The Tar Babies quickly capitalized upon this turnover with 36-yard scoring drive, pushing UNC ahead 1 3-7. The series of plays setting up the touchdown was highlighted by 1 2-yard pass from quarterback Carl Hoffman to end Brooks Williams. Nick Wilcc and Phil Wise also made carries of eight and seven yards, respectively. With 2:26 left in the third quarter Russ Clark fell on a Wilce fumble at the UNC 1 2. In four plays the Wolflets reached pay dirt on short ground plays shifting the score in favor of the visitors I4-J3. Carolina mounted its most impressive drive of the afternoon late in the third quarter. Beginning at the UNC 21 the Tar Babies moved 79 yards using on the clock 6:29 in 13 plays. The attack was led by the running of Wilce and Wise. Wise repeatedly chalked up yardage, bulldozing through the State offensive line. A 27-yard pass play from Hoffman to Mark Griffin sustained the drive on a second down and eight situation. Austin scored on a pitch-put around right end. With the two point conversion UNC grabbed a seven point lead. Fifty-four yards of penalities were assessed to the Tar Babies with almost ten minutes left in the game. A pass interference and two personal fouls moved the Pack from their own 27 to UNCs 19. Campana directed the Wolflets in completing two passes to Johnny Richardson for a total of 29 yards and a State touchdown. Trailing by one point, the Wolflets elected to gamble for the two-points needed for the win. Linebacker Billy Murphy knocked down a crucial Campana pass to squelch the Pack's victory thirst. On offense the Wolflets tossed for an impressive 258 yards out of a total of 367 yards on offense. Connoly completed three of four attempts, and Campana, 10-29. Most of the Tar Babies yardage was gained on ground plays with 204 yards rushing as compared with 62 yards in the air. I I- if .'I , . V - i ' ' 4 f v, u ; - - s i i i ' t . i '1 ' '- ,N i" '"'-n d xw V., ' V V '-..''J- - . .,y,, 9 i Halfback Mark Baldwin demonttratts the new secret defense of the North Carolina soccer team: flying. The defensive manuever totally mystified the ASU Mountaineers ACC race plot thickens by United Press International Maryland Coach Jerry Claiborne, his Terrapins in the running for the Atlantic Coast Conference title after a 23-3 thrashing of defending champ North Carolina, says last Saturday's match proved his squad can play "great all the way around." North Carolina State Coach Lou Holt, whose squad is tied for the early ACC lead with one victory (over Virginia) against no losses in the league, says the Wolfpack's Saturday match against second ranked Nebraska proved he has a "fine football team" despite the 3 1 -1 4 loss. As for a definite answer on w hich is finer, fans will have to wait until the two teams meet in Raleigh Oct. 1 3. Both squads take on non-conference foes this coming Saturday. State (l-l, I-0) will play Georgia, and Maryland (I-l, I-0) hosts Villanova. Maryland doesn't have another ACC game Toe-tied wedge.. .an embossed sandal with deep wooden sole. In Women's Shoes. SHOP IVEY'S I0AM-9PM MONDAY-SATURDAY IN RALEIGH PHONE 7S7-SSOO IN CHAPEL HILL PHONE 929-1 191 IN DURHAM PHONE 0 ASK LOR WX-II9I jziT- ( IN THE fft(EREJmX 1 6UZST em? mil wirts tocM.cf AT lC0l'R5f DOONESBURY scam new PIP YOUEVBR. 6ST SUCH 6X5 AT IT SEATS FOR. J3 WASN'T M46XtPJZ'S fASY. CONCEPT? JOAMlEf mKNWJ3"S MY ?AVOtTE CCN5P.ZA7UZ! I pavT KXU UHY- KAY B rrs H, 5 BOYSH COOP ICCKS! until the contest with the Wolfpack. though State does, playing Carolina Oct. 6. "Our defense was super and the offense was much improved in both running and passing," said Claiborne. The defense held Carolina, which until Saturday had won 1 5 straight ACC games, to a total I96 yards in offense. And the Terp offense, starring backup quarterback Al Neville with nine pass completions for I2l yards and two touchdowns, left Tar Heel Coach Bill Dooley wondering what the problem was. "Maybe we're not as good as some people thought we were or maybe we got a little too fat and started taking things for granted." he said. Holtz watched the Wolfpack build up to a I4-I0 lead after three quarters, only to have Nebraska score three touchdowns in the final period. "Mistakes caught us at the end," He said. leather 10.00 ,4 I'M U(C THeY HAVf A 6XSX FOCMCMCXe PAO 15 A FZ?K..ZAr3ES5 RICH. ONCE it3UR fa65ORSAK0 kOK CU3 AKE PAi? fCR.THS g$T S ALL PKCfiTi MATS P06JZAM fOfZ. TD.M16HT? I UMHS .. Th'B FIRST ACT IS XCZPTS FKOM HfS PiAXY Af7Z THAT THERE'S A CCVl JZ-UP SY?JOf$r5. FCilGUJEP BY A QiESTfON ASP A'&ZR PCRtOP. 1 , V . who lost to Carolina, 3-1. Tomorrow, the Tar Heels host ECU in a game to begin at 3 p.m. (Staff photo by Tom Randolph.) "The momentum su itched back and lorth. but they had it then." In the only conference bout of the coming weekend. Duke ( I-l . 0-0) v isits Virginia ( I -2. 0-I). The Blue DcviK. uith quarterback Mark Johnson throuing lor two touchdowns including one uith l:37 to play, beat Washington Saturday 23-2 1. Virginia, having trouble keeping its game consistent, will be trying to recover from a 3I-7 loss to Missouri Saturday. Carolina (I-l. 0-I) faces Missouri at home Saturday while Clemson (I-l. 0-0) goes on the road to Georgia Tech and Wake Forest (I-l. 0-0) will take on Richmond at Richmond. The Tigers Saturday lost to Georgia 31-I4 after having held a 7-3 halftimc lead, while the Deacons wound up on the short end of William & Mary's stick. 15-I4. after an Indian field goal in the closing minutes of play. s kOU KKCliS MJCH f CALUN6 THE LAST ACT IS HtS PLEA EOX. FCZSl'E&SS AS'P UKPE2 STAND1NQ. OH, I HEAJZ THAT'S GZEATf I J4 3 mm
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 25, 1973, edition 1
3
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75