Monday, Sc pUmber 23, 1S75 Tfct Dsify Tcr Heal 5
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Ohio State fullback Peta Johnson breaks away from North Carolina tackle Brian
Hughes (76) and middle guard Bunn Rhames (67) for nine of his 157 years rushing.
by Susan Shackelford
Sports Editor
COLUMBUS, OHIO The size of the
campus 49,900 students live there the
size of the stadium 87,750 spectators sat
there and even the size of the American
flag waving at the open end of Ohio State
University's horseshoe-shaped stadium
indicated the nature of North Carolina's
encounter with Big 10 Conference football
here Saturday.
Ohio State is big and wins big. Its victory
over Carolina was no. 500 in collegiate
victories and the 20th straight in Ohio
Stadium.
After a 32-7 defeat, UNC Head Coach Bill
Dooley said, "The big difference is their
strength. They are a strong football team
too much strength for us. We just can't
match their strength. I don't know about the
other Big 10 teams, but they (OSU) are really
physical."
Dooley's Atlantic Coast Conference
players battled admirably the first 20
Nette rs b la nk Mary Bald win
Carolina's women netters began their fall
season Saturday with a 1 5-0 whitewashing of
Mary Baldwin College in Chapel Hill.
The Tar Heels were devastating in racking
up their 27th win in their last 28 matches.
Mary Baldwin won only two sets in the 10
singles matches, "while UNC won the five
doubles matches in straight sets. Carolina
outscored Mary Baldwin 188-64 in total
games.
On the first two singles courts, Carolina
sophomores Carney Timberlake and
Suzanne Bowron were forced to three sets
apiece for their victories. Timberlake
defeated freshman Crissy Gonzales 7-6, 0-6,
6-4, while Bowron was victorious over
Heidi Goeltz 6-7, 6-2, 6-3.
For Timberlake, it was her first regular
season victory since November 2. She played
in only one match last spring because of a
shoulder injury.
Timberlake fell behind 5-3 in her match
with Gonzales then lost only three points in
the next three games to take a 6-5 lead.
UNC cops dual victory,
runs past State, Virginia
North Carolina's cross country team
notched victories over a pair of Atlantic
Coast Conference rivals Saturday, defeating
Virginia 24-32 and N.C. State 20-38. on a
muddy course at Charlottesville, Va.
Carolina sophomore Ralph King copped
individual honors as he covered the 5'2-mile
course in 27:29.3. Virginia's Robbie Pecht
finished second while State's Tony Bateman
crossed the line third.
Tar Heel Coach Bill Lam was pleased with
the victories but unsure of how much he
could ascertain about his harriers, because of
the poor course conditions. "The course was
in such bad shape that I was glad that
nobody got hurt. There were a lotta sharp
cutbacks and a coupla guys made wrong
turns," Coach Lam said. "Dave Hamilton
would've been right there with Bateman. on a
different type of course."
Prior to Saturday's opener, Lam said that
he would like to get his top seven runners
within a minute and a half of each other. H is
squad came within one man of achieving that
goal. Tommy Ward coming, off an injury
and after little practice, ran sixth for
Carolina, twelfth in the meet, clocking 29:54,
25 seconds behind King. Dave Hamilton was
fifth in 28:13 followed by Kent Taylor
(28:20) in sixth, William Southerland (28:29)
seventh and Henry Jones (28:38) tenth for
the Tar Heels.
Lam now turns his attention to the battle
against reigning ACC champion Maryland
next weekend. Carolina travels to Terrapin
territory Saturday, hoping to dethrone the
Terps in the early season contest.
-Bill Moss
Gonzales won the next game, forcing a tie
breaker which Timberlake won 5-2.
The second set saw Gonzales make only
four unforced errors, and run away with the
set 6-0. Timberlake jumped to a 5-2 lead in
the decisive third set then staved off a rally by
the tiring Gonzales to win 6-4.
In the first court doubles match, a visibly
tired team of Gonzales and Goeltz fell in
straight sets to the Tar Heels' Nina
Cloaninger and Rebecca Garcia. The UNC
duo spotted their opponents the first two
games before running off 12 straight games
for a 6-2, 6-0 triumph.
In singles the scoring went: Carney
Timberlake d. Crissy Gonzales 7-6, 0-6, 6-4;
Suzanne Bowron d. Heidi Goeltz 6-7, 6-2, 6
3; Nina Cloaninger d. Betsy Mikell 6-1, 6-0;
Rebecca Garcia d. Eloise Clyde 6-1, 6-3;
Jean Scott d. Jean Davis 6-0, 6-1; Linda
Matthews d. Shirley Douglass 6-0, 6-3;
Diane Sites d. Ann Munger 6-1, 6-4; Susie
Black d. Bonnie Smith 6-1,6-1; Lisa Dodson
d. Nanny Andrews 6-2, 6-1; and Mary Kay
McCormick d. Bootie Holmes 7-5, 6-1.
In doubles: Cloaninger-Garcia d.
Gonzales-Goeltz 6-2, 6-0; Scott-Matthews d.
Baldwin-Mikell 6-1, 6-1; Timberlake
Bowron d. Clyde-Douglass 6-3, 6-0; Sites
Dodson d. Davis-Holmes 6-1, 6-2; and
Black-Leach d. Munger-Smith 6-1, 6-0.
Kevin Barris
Women's meeting
An organizational meeting for all women
interested in trying out for the women's
basketball team will be held today at 6:30
p.m. in 314 Woollen Gym. .
minutes of the cool fall afternoon, but the
brawn of the no. 2-ranked Buckeyes emerged
immediately before half time and simply
wore down the Tar Heels for the rest of the
game. The 32-7 loss puts the Heels at 1-2 and
OSU, 3-0.
After a sluggish first quarter, Ohio State
quarterback Cornelius Greene snapped his
almost napping offense into line. With 31
seconds left in the half, the Buckeyes clicked
off four plays for a 53-yard scoring drive that
left Carolina with a 12-0 deficit going into
the lockerroom.
The Buckeyes had scored for a 6-0 lead
with only 3:20 remaining in the first half, but
Carolina couldn't plow out of its own
territory for the tying score and had to punt
with 1:44 on the clock. OSU Head Coach
Woody Hayes saw the scoring drive for 12-0
as a pivotal point in the game.
"We had some problems in the first half.
The two big passes (21 and 27-yard pass
plays to Larry Kain)) in the quick drive were
really important. Once Greene started
hitting his receivers, we played good
football," he said.
But after halftime, Carolina asserted itself
on its first possession with an 80-yard
touchdown march, led by the running of
tailback James Betterson and the throwing
of quarterback Bill Paschall. In the drive
Carolina picked up five first downs, as many
as it had the entire first half, before fullback
Brian Smith went into the end zone on a 7
yard pass from Paschall, who had already
completed the drive's big plays of 17 and 19
yards to end Ray Stanford and Smith.
The score stood 12-7, but Ohio State,
which had not been scored upon till this
point in the season, was not intimidated.
Greene and star running backs Pete Johnson
and Archie Griffin revived the Buckeye's late
first half momentum on their next series,
cancelling out the Heels' touchdown with
one of their own a 71-yard push from the
Ohio State 29 in only seven plays to make it
19-7.
With 8:32 left in the third quarter, Ohio
State had assumed command. Other than
UNCs single scoring drive, Hayes said, "Our
defense smothered them. I was amazed their
Coach (Dooley) didn't pass anymore than he
did (after the UNC drive). That
quarterback's (Paschall) passes were on the
nose.
In the "two possessions following their
score, the Tar Heels couldn't get past
midfield.
OSU made it 26-7 with 13:01 left in the
game. That 6-pointer by Johnson, who
scored all the Buckeye touchdowns Saturday
and now has nine in only three games, set
stadium records for the most points (30) and
most touchdowns (five) by an OSU player in
a single game. Carolina again failed to get
out of its territory on the following
possession.
About four minutes later (8:48), OSU
pushed its total to 32 points, led again by
Johnson, who finished the game with I4S
yards rushing second only to teammate
Heisrnan Trophy winner Griffin, who had
157. Each of them had more individually
than the entire Carolina team, which posted
109 yards, 106 of which came from
Betterson. With 84 yards passing Carolina
gained only 193 yards on offense, compared
toOSUs 535.
Betterson normally alternates the tailback
slot with Mike Voight, who didn't make the
trip to Ohio State. Dooley, declining any
other comment on Voight's absence, said
"it's something personal between Mike and
me."
Carolina now leaves the "big-time" (Big
10) behind and must return for thii
weekend's game with ACC opponent, the
University of Virginia. Both teams are
fighting to stay out of the ACC cellar, so the
truly "big game" is Saturday at
Charlottesville.
Booters win in overtime,
slip by Davidson 3-2
The Carolina soccer team upped Us season
record to 2-1 Friday with a 3-2 overtime
victory on the road against Davidson
College.
Davidson proved to be a better team than
the Heels had anticipated. The Wildcats
were extremely quick and wasted no time
jumping ahead, scoring a goal less than four
minutes into the game.
UNC rallied to tie the game at the 10:20
mark of the first half. Left wing Steve Scott
put a hard pass across the middle and Olaf
Kampfschmidt drilled it in from five yards
out for his second goal of the season.
With 1XA left in the first period, a
-Davidson pass deflected off a Carolina
defender into the goal, giving the Wildcats a
2-1 halftime lead.
The only score of the second half came at
the 20 minute mark. Rob Hassold moved up
from his fullback position to head a corner
kick by Zolten Berky into the far left corner
of the goal for UNC. .
Left wing Peter Griffin scored the decisive
goal with two minutes remaining in overtime
on a lead pass from inside Tom Fenton.
Carolina opens a three-game home
schedule against Rollins College Friday
afternoon. The Heels host East Carolina
October 7 and Clemson, ranked no. 1 in the
nation, October 17.
-Mike Egan
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