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8 The Daily Tar Heel Thursday, Jan. 8, 1S76
Trimble takes
soccer honors
North Carolina freshman goalie Martin
Trimble got 25 of a possible 30 votes in
making the first team All-Atlantic Coast
Conference soccer squad.
Trimble, who was credited with 1 17 goals
saved this season, was joined by four
Carolina players who made the second team.
They were backs Zoltan Berky, who was also
named to the second team last year, and
John Rhodes; and forwards Eric Cook and
Tim Fenton.
UNC Head Soccer Coach Marvin Allen
said of Trimble, "There was no question
about it, he's the best goalie in the ACC. He's
dependable. He catches the ball well, is very
aggressive, understands the game, and
directs the players from that position."
Highlights of Trimble's season include
Carolina shutouts against Maryland (2-0)
and Duke (3-0) and a. strong performance
against national power, Clemson.
Trimble, a native of Merion Station, Pa.,
0
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AII-ACC Goalie Martin Trimble.
was moved from the junior varsity just prior
to the first varsity game. He didn't play until
the second varsity game and "once he broke
the habit of punching the ball, which keeps it
in play (as opposed to catching it for
Carolina control), he played great," Allen
said.
Basketball
Tickets for the UNC-Wake Forest
basketball game Jan. 14 were distributed
beginning at 5 p.m. Wednesday. Ticket
officials expected all availabletickets to be
distributed by closing time. Tickets for the
N .C. State game will be distributed Jan. 1 1 at
2 p.m.; Maryland tickets, Jan. 17 at 10 a.m.;
Clemson tickets, Jan. 28 at 5 p.m.; Virginia
tickets, Feb. 17 at 5 p.m.; and Duke tickets,
Feb. 24 at 5 p.m.
MIWTfirillilillHIIIIIIIMIIIIIillllllllllllllllii W""""1
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COUNSELOR OPENINGS:
Camp Sea Gull and Camp Seafarer
North Carolina's nationally recognized coastal boys' and girls'camps on
Pamlico Sound near Atlantic Beach and New Bern. 29th season. Camps
feature sailing, motorboating and seamanship plus all usual camping
activities (including skin-diving and golf course at Sea Full and
horseback riding at Seafarer). Opportunities for students (college men
and women), coaches and teachers who are LOOKING FOR MORE
THAN "just another summer job". Openings for NURSES (RN). June 8 -August
20. We seek highly qualified (ability to instruct in one phase of
camp's program), dedicated and enthusiastic staff members with
exemplary character and offer good salaries, room and board, plus the
opportunity of sharing in a meaningful and purposeful experience. Quick
answer upon receipt of a letter of application which should include a
brief resume of training and experience in area(s) of camp program in
which you are best qualified to instruct. Apply to Wyatt Taylor, Director,
Camp Sea GullSeafarer, P. O. Box 10976, Raleigh, North Carolina
27605. x
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KALSO EARTH SHOE 103'j East Franklin Street above the Hub' 929-9553
Heels, 'Pack tumble as
Deacons win Big Four
by Susan Shackelford
Sports Editor
GREENSBORO North Carolina
brought the highest national ranking into the
Atlantic Coast Confererce battle of the Big
Four Tournament last weekend, but could
only take home third place in the two-day
event.
It was unranked Wake Forest for the
second straight year that grabbed the Big
Four title. The Deacons won impressively
with a 15-point margin over N.C. State
Saturday in the championship, 93-78.
They beat Carolina Friday by 12 points,
95-83. In the consolation game Carolina
edged Duke, which lost to State 104-95
Friday, 77-74 for third. The games do not
figure into conference records.
Last year Wake ended N.C. State's 36
game winning streak in the Big Four's first
round, before going on to win the
tournament. This year Wake tarnished
Carolina's high national ranking of third. In
the championship game, Wake, which had
yet to break into the national standings,
knocked off the eighth-ranked team in N.C.
State. -
This week Wake is ranked seventh by UPI
and AP while Carolina is eighth and sixth
and State is 16th and 11th, respectively.
Wake Head Coach Carl Tacy said after
the tournament, "There is no question that
this year's win is more important than last
year's. Last year we had lost some games and
hadn't played as well as we have this year."
Wake's outstanding shooting, particularly
against Carolina, was led by the
tournament's most valuable player, Jerry
Schellenberg, who made 18 of 26 field goal
attempts for the tournament and totaled 24
points against Carolina and 3 1 against State.
He was joined on the all-tourney team by
teammate Rod Griffin, Carolina's Phil Ford
and Tommy LaGarde, and State's Kenny
Carr.
Wake used a sticky zone and kept its
forces in tact after losing star guard Skip
Brown early in the second half of the first
round against Carolina.
When Brown left with about i7'2 minutes
remaining, the packed Greensboro
Coliseum, made up mostly of Carolina fans,
could sense that their Tar Heels would go
ahead for the win and meet N.C. State in the
finals Saturday.
But that ending never occurred, as Wake
Forest worked even more furiously on the
court because of the ever-present memory of
losing to Carolina last March in the ACC
tournament. In that game, led by eight
points with under a minute remaining, tht
Heels rallied to tie the score at the buzzer and
win the game in overtime. ' .
After Brown's departure, Carolina
whittled the Wake lead to a single point at
68-69 with 8:47 left, but that was as close as
the Tar Heels could get to the Deacons, who
steadily built their lead back to nine with4'i
minutes left. From 8:47 to 4:13 Wake
capitalized on Carolina's cold shooting and
turnovers, outscoring the Heels 12-5.
Wake Forest went on to establish an 11
point lead, 89-78, on the strength of foul
shooting by Schellenberg and Charley
Floyd.
Carolina guard Phil Ford converted a
three-point play at the 1:05 mark, but seven
seconds later when Lee Foye missed a free
throw, Wake's first such miss since early in
the half, Rod Griffin pulled down one of the
most crucial of his 15 rebounds of the night.
A 41.7 field goal percentage in the first
half, compared to Wake's 63.3, forced
Carolina to play catchup. Ford finished with
30 points, Mitch Kupchak 17 and LaGarde
15. In rebounding, LaGarde pulled down 11,
while Kupchak had nine.
Saturday in the consolation game, neither
Duke nor Carolina pulled away in the first
half, during which the score was tied at least
seven times.
In the second half, Carolina got its first
lead since 36-34 when Walter Davis, who
improved his shooting accuracy to 9-12 for
the game, hit a layup off a Ford assist for 56
54 with 12'i minutes left in the game.
Duke tied it at 56 before Carolina jumped
out to a six-point edge, 62-56.
Duke's Tate Armstrong then ignited a
comeback with 20- and 12-footers, as the
Blue Devils outscored the Heels 10-2 to go
ahead 66-64 on an inside shot by Willie
Hodge.
But Ford soon took Carolina into the
spread offense the four corners after
hitting a tieing bucket for 66-66. He went
one-on-one with Armstrong and converted
two straight three-point plays for 72-66.
Carolina's upperhand was preserved with
free throwing, as Duke had to foul in hopes
of getting the ball.
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UNO's Mitch Kupchak defends Duke's Jim Spanarkel in the Big Four. Willie Hodge
(left), Terry Chili await rebound.
Duke's Paul Fox clipped the Carolina
margin to two at 76-74 with shots at 14
seconds and 1 1 seconds. But LaGarde put in
the first of a one-and-one, and Duke's last
gasp came when Spararkel's first of a one-and-one
bounced off the rim with one second
remaining.
"Right at the end when Phil Ford had the
three-point plays, that made the difference. I
think we got good shots and made them,"
said Carolina Head Coach Dean Smith.
LaGarde had a strong performance with
19 points and 10 rebounds. John Kuester,
who held Armstrong to 10 points, had his
best scoring night of four holiday road
games, with 12 points. Ford added 14 and
Kupchak 10.
"I'm extremely pleased with Tommy
LaGarde throughout the tournament. He's
now played consistently seven halves of
basketball," said Smith.
Heels whip E I SU; overcome USF threat
by Susan Shackelford
Sports Editor
JOHNSON CITY, Tenn. The Dec. 20
game was billed as the biggest in East
Tennessee State's basketball history, but
that was the extent of the hometown
fireworks against nationally fourth-ranked
North' , Carolina. An , ETSU win never
materialized.
Carolina romped over the Buccaneers of
the Ohio Valley Conference 104-67 in
Freedom Hall Civic Center. Carolina never
trailed, jumping out 16-6 with about five
minutes gone in the televised non-conference
game. By halftime, Carolina had mounted a
20-point command, 53-33.
In the second half Carolina forward
Tommy LaGarde, who finished with 15
points and 10 rebounds, put in a pair of free
throws and a pair of field goals to ease the
lead to 25 points at 66-41 after only four
minutes. The biggest Carolina surr;e began at
the 1 1:00 mark when the Blue Team (second
unit), led by Tom Zaliagiris and Bruce'
Buckley, outscored ETSU 14-0 to establish a
38-point margin, 92-54.-
Carolina, which shot 64.1 per cent from
the floor, had four players to score in double
figures. Walter Davis had 18 points on nine
for 1 1 from the floor. LaGarde was six out of
10 for his 15 points. Mitch Kupchak
connected on 12 of 13 and finished as the
game's high scorer (24) and high rebounder
(11). Guard Phil Ford was nine of 11 in
getting his 19 points.
Casual Corner's Money-saving,
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ETSU was Carolina's first opponent in 12
days. Carolina players hadn't entered a
contest since a very physical 90-77 victory
over Kentucky Dec. 8 in Charlotte and had
been taking final examinations at school.
"The layoff was probably good for us," said
North Carolina Head Coach Dean Smith.
"It gave us a chance to heal some bruises."
TAMPA, Fla. Two days after playing in
hill country, North Carolina got a drastic
. change of scenery in anothef non-conference
contest. A window view of Florida's white
sandy beaches replaced Tennessee's rolling
gray hills, but the biggest difference was the
degree of competition on the court.
South Florida, coached by former
Virginia player Chip Conner, challenged the
national status of Carolina. With five
minutes remaining USF was within three
points of Carolina, 60-63, in Curtis Hixon
Auditorium, but the four-corner, spread
offense preserved the win for Carolina.
' LaGarde hit a layup for 65-60 at 3:38, and
about a minute and a half later when USF
threatened to cut the Carolina lead to two,
Phil Ford stole the ball in the USF backcourt
and layed it in at 1:21. That made it 68-62
Carolina, and USF called time out with 59
seconds remaining. '
USF missed two crucial shots before its
star guard Doug Aplin stole the ball for a
layup and 68-64 with only three seconds left.
With0:01 on the clock, Ford hit a pair of free
throws for the final, 70-64.
USF first led at the 14:49 mark in the first
half. Mike Dickerson, who ended with 13
points, hit the go-ahead layup for 10-8.
LaGarde responded with seven straight
points to push the scoreboard in favor of
Carolina 15-10. LaGarde had a thiee-point
play off a layup, two free throws and a follow
shot off a missed Ford layup.
" USF again took r: the ieadr 2019, on a
Dickerson shot with 9:33 left in the first half,
but as LaGarde had done, Kupchak put in a
three-point play to re-establish the Carolina
edge, 22-20. Carolina expanded its
advantage to 43-33 at the half.
After halftime, Carolina had a cushion of
as much as 14 points (55-41), but the Golden
Brahmans kept fighting back. Aplin, who
had 16 points for the game, sank two free
throws, two jumpers and got a basket off a
Walter Davis goaltending charge. Those
eight points and two jumpers by Eddie Davis
pulled USF within three at 60-63.
Comparing Carolina's ETSU and USF
performances, Coach Smith noted the lower
shooting percentage against USF, but said
the team showed better defense and
rebounding. Carolina shot only 44.8 per cent
from the floor against USF, as opposed to
the overwhelming 64.1 against ETSU.
"Tommy's really playing well," Smith said
of LaGarde, who had perhaps his best two
successive games against ETSU and USF. He
was high scorer and rebounder against USF
with 24 points and 15 rebounds.
Against USF, Ford had 18 points. John
Kuester had eight assists, and Kupchak had
13 rebounds. Walter Davis also added 11
points.
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