Monday. September 18, 1978 The Daily Tar Heel 7 ct 77 77 fm Mima j mi - ar s t ;:;! sMiXw,'.1. s .- fit 1 - - V V - '!;:;:;::t:::.:.''" 1 ? Y ..- h A II i VN v - ' VM K x VI Carolina's Terence Burr ell stopped in tracks during first period Saturday ...ECU'S Mike Brewington (96) made tackle on first and .goat play Kenan Stadium clock was winding down. The East Ci PsmtPti W(n n:irincT Ilia . .... i..vaiuuiiaoai une and 5 1. 1 50 persons no including. the players, freebies and the busv little fellows selling mixers and chasers were nervously wondering if the Pirates would score a final touchdown to win the football game. 1 ar Heels not m the game at the moment were clustered to the right side ol their sideline territory while Dennv Marcin. lar Heel delensive coordinator, was busy. telling linebacker Buddx C urry which defenses to use via a series of hand signals that made one wonder il Marcin was suffering from a case of hives or playing trail tc cop or both. Marcin s boss. Dick Crum. was about 30 vards upfield. standing near the 40 yardline on the side awav Irom the action It wasn t that the I ar Heel head coach wasn't interested in what was going on on the held. I o the contrary. Crum felt there wasn't a whole lot he could do at the moment. "I always stay away from the delensive coordinator." Crum said later. "1 don't want to keep telling him how to run the delense. I hat's his job. I don't want to cloud his thinking. But as soon as the Pirates lost their sixth fumble ol the alternoon to end their final drive. Crum was back in the thick ol things, looking for quarterback C lyde Christensen and telling him to hug the football for all of their lives. A few seconds later. Crum was strolling to midfield to congratulate ECU coach Pat Dye on the Pirates' improved showing over their first two games, perhaps adding that it was nice ihe Pi rate did n't ruin Crum s inauguaral as Carolina's new football coach. "I'm glad to gel thai first game over." Crum said. And although the character of I'NC's 14-10 win might have been a t oily at mid-season, it at least passed lor an opening game. 'Ihe lar Heels showed Saturday alternoon that the could have a very good football team this lall. I he also proed they could have many problems." "It was a "very typical opening game." Crum said. "We made some mistakes that we'll have to work on." Aiming those mistakes were: Illegal procedure and dela)-oi-game penalties' that helped stop three first half I NC drives deep in ECT territory: Poor timing on several plays, such as the one in w hich Hanker wt ome over. Carolina mmmm,tmwi V- -t -- Vj If' Wayne Tucker, running a simple down-and-out sideline pattern, turned to look at quarterback Matt Kupec in time to be hit in the lace mask with Rupee's pass; Confusion of the defensive secondary on several pass plays. On one play. Pirate Terry Gallaher had slipped 1 5 yards behind the U NC secondary and would have scored an easy touchdown if Leander Green's pass had been accurate. That was the comical play in which Gallaher slowed down, was hit by Bernie Menapace and fell to the turf with three Tar Heel defenders 46 yards closer to the UNC goal. "We've goi this game under our belt.' Crum said. "There's no substitute for experience. The Tar Heels had waited and waited and waited for their opening game, which came a week later than most schools' opener, and the Tar Heels' anxiousness showed Saturday afternoon. The game couldn't have come soon enough for Crum either, who had anticipated it since the day he was named head coach last January. But the Tar Heel coach, calm and relaxed after the game, said he was cool inside before his first game as a lar Heel. "You know. I was telling Coach Marcin that I felt calmertoday than when we played at Miami. he said. Crum took the team to a Durham motel Friday night to keep the players from" the temptation of campus activity. "You ever tried to sleep in a dorm the night before a game and get a good night's sleep?" he asked. At least Crum wasn't going to worry about sleep Saturday night. His first victory, though not a pretty one. still counts as much as a 50-0 romp, and wasn't unacceptable for an opening game w ith a new offense against a team that seethes at the sight of Carolina blue. But the Tar Heels w on't dw ell long on their w in. Maryland's in town this week. - Pack maintains lead over Heels in golf tourney By ALAN BOYETTE Staff W riter N.C. State dropped two strokes Sunday at Finley Golf Course but the Wolfpack maintained a four-stroke lead going into Monday's final round of a tri meet between State, Carolina and Duke. The final round will be played at Raleigh's McGregor Downs Golf Club. State shot a team score of 660 in the first round at Duke Friday, leading UNC by six strokes. The Tar Heels picked up two strokes Sunday, shooting a 672 for a second-round total of 1338. Duke shot a 673-677 for a third-place 1 350. , In the opening round, UNC's Phil Bland and David Whitfield both shot a par 7 1. Whitfield shot a 3-under-par 69 Sunday with two birdies on the front nine and a birdie and eagle on the back side. Freshman Joey Sadowski shot a second round 2-under-par 70 for the Tar Heels after finishing the flrst day three over. "Today We Baa couple" ofhigft scores," Sadowski .said,,. "but .they should . come down in Raleigh the way mine did today." State's Tom Reynolds led all golfers with a 3-under-par 68 after the first round, but finished with an 81 Sunday. Duke's Charles Boiling leads the Blue Devils with a 3-over 176. Looking to Monday's final round UNC coach Devon Brouse said, "State will have a definite advantage playing on their home course, but we haven't played our top three players yet. Using them will neutralize the odds some." John McGough, Kevin King, and Frank Fuhrer will fill the first three positions for UNC Monday, as both Duke and N.C. State have played its top players already. V'fTl iTTVi. Spoirts ACC football roundup Ted Mfowii rises to TV (occasion By BILL WELCH Associated Press W riter in football That Ted Brown, he knows opportunity when he sees one. Brown., N.C. State's senior runningback who's being touted as the ACC's first legitimate Heisman Trophy candidate, got a chance to show why w ith a network television audience Saturday. And he used it by grounding out 198 yards and a touchdown with second and third efforts as State downed Syracuse 27-19. Brown did it without a break-away-run his longest was 23 yards -but with "It's just the first game blues. I guess." Matt Kupec said of his offense. "It was a sluggish effort and you gotta be disappointed." Offensively, things didn't look a w hole lot different from last year. Carolina began running wide., but Kupec said. "Their defense reacted well and shut it off." So the backs were hurled into the line on dive plays; Crum even used the 1 formation occasionally and ran the triple, option off the veer only a couple times. Even when the running game was halted. Crum used the pass sparingly. "Yeah. 1 anticipated us throwing the ball more. I felt we'd throw 20 times and I guess 1 threw about seven." Kupec said. "I guess he (Crum) thought it would be a defensive struggle or something." Crum said his squad, was doing the basics so poorly it really couldn't get ambitious on offense. From page 1 "Our.timing was so oft that the th.ngs w e wanted to do on offense. 1. didn't think we could do. The defense won the game for us." ECU' gained confidence in the second half andgtjf'J uptUe.giy in feit second possession. Kupecbrou'ght the 'far Heel; back with the key play of ihe game later in the third quarter. He was forced out of the pocket near the ECU bench when he spoted tight end Bob Loom is and lotted a pass to him at the Pirate five. Loomis bulled his way in and UNC was back in tront. Carolina never got another first down. And the Pirates kept getting better and making fewer mistakes. "We beat Carolina in every phase but ihe score.-Ifs just that every time they needed a big play they got it." defensive back Gerald Hall said. "They"got all the breaks. Other than thatrwe bottled em UP-" consistent gainers on sweeps and up the middle plunges. He carried 33 times, averaged six yards a carry, and ran his career yardage to 3.574. Despite Brown's workmanlike running. State needed a third-quarter field goal and a 6-yard scoring run by Billy Ray Vickers to come from behjnd in the second half and subdue the Orangemen. ' ' C lemson 58, Citadel 3 "This was a very important game lor Clemson. a very big w in." Coach Charley Pell said after his Tigers had bullied The Citadel. "We have worked hard for a month, as hard as any team I've ever coached, and for them to come out and. perform as they did today. 1 think is a pretty good testimony for the hard work they put in." The season opener was a tuneup for next week's trip to Georgia, and ACC Player of the Year Steve Fuller completed all nine first half pass attempts, then sal out the second half. . The Tcrps. now 2-0. got the break w hen Neal Olkew ick recovered a fumble on the Louisville 20 with less than three minutes remaining. Virginia Tech 28. Wake Forest 6 After falling victim to Coach Bill Dooleys first win at VPI. Wake Foresi coach John Mackovic said he wasn't too disappointed. "The team was in there plugging." he said. "We knew there were going to be setbacks, and as long as we keep on improving and don't dwell on the setbacks, we'll be okay. I still feel optimistic about the season. We're I -I." Navy 32, Virginia 0 Luckless Virginia is now 0-2 and still has yet to score a point this season. Navy's blanking marked the eighth time Virgina has been shut out in its last 14 games. EC UNC 18 13 64276 54174 51 96 11 45 3100 8120 544.8 737.3 7-6 2-2 5-55 . 7-76 0 0 7 310 7 0-7 014 Carolina 14, ECU 10 First Downs Rushes-yards Passing yards Return yards Passes Punts Fumbles-lost Penalties-yards East Carolina North Carolina UNC Burrell 1 run (Hayes kick) ECU Sutton 5 run (Lamm kick) UNC Loomis 28 pass Irom Kupec (Hayes kick) ECU FG Lamm 39 A 51.150 INDIVIDUAL RUSHING East Carolina (attempts, yards) Green 10-42, Hicks 12 52. Sutton 19-80. Harrel3-2. Collins 7-41, Hawkins 10-50. Greer 1-5. Cobb 1-minus 1. Washington 1-5 North Carolina Lawrence 11-44. Paschal 9-91. Kupec 6-minus 7. Christensen 8-8, Mack 3-1 1, Sturdivant 10-14, Burrell 7-13 INDIVIDUAL PASSING East Carolina (completions, attempts, yards) Green 3 1051 North Carolina Kupec 6-860. Christensen 2-436 RECEIVING East Carolina Washington 2-47. Hawkins 1-4 North Carolina Loomis 2-59. Sturdivant 3-10. Rouse 1 18. Paschal 1-8. 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