Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 22, 1980, edition 1 / Page 7
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...... f i. w 4.- -k-J 4ii victory over Carolina St Thompson Usiyaa, who m:-ht b a national hero if h; played soccer in his native Ecndd State, Nigeria, proved to 2,000 spectators at UNC's Fetzer Field Saturday why he is Appalachian State's campus hero. On a team filled with talented players many from other countries Usiyan is the most talented, and against Carolina he lived up to his reputation, scoring two goals and leading ASU to a 3-0 victory. All-Atlantic Coast Conference defender Ducky Dudley marked Usiyan tightly throughout, but the Mountaineers sent him wide, and once he shook free t -rr " f V a l - M f V t-'''r f .J "He's the best player I've ever faced," Buckley said. "I was trying to deny hint the ball, but once he got it he would do amazing things with it. I played against him in the spring and he's gotten a lot better since then." Usiyan scored his 13 th and 14th goals of the season m the first half. With 27:15 left, Mark Schwartz positioned a corner kick toward the center of the goal where Usiyan broke free to head it past UNC goalie Kevin Kane. The second goal came with 1:41 left when he punched in a Keith Layne direct kick to send the Mountaineers into halfiime with a 2-0 lead. "The first goal was my fault," Buckley said. "The guy skimmed the corner kick and I went for the skim which left Thompson open. The second goal, Thompson was just incredible." Usiyan said he was used to being closely marked. "I'm always being denied the ball," he said. "I like being marked. Ducky was a very tough but clean defender, but when I'm cne-cn-cne I feel very confident in my abilities." Usiyan received a lot of support from his teammates. Layne and the other strikers kept the Tar Heel defense honest with their penetration and goalie Stephen Knowles and defender Emmanuel Igbeka turned back every Carolina offensive ihreat. ...Mountsinser offense m "Everyone played their hearts out," ASU coach Hank Steinbrecher said. "Everyone wanted this game. We were playing tactically very well. It was a total team effort. Thompson is worthy of Ail-American status, but we have many underrated players. Keith Lane is a workhorse and you can't beat Igbeka on defense." The victory ended years of frustration for ASU, which has come into the game with UNC in recent years as the favorite but never come away with a win. "We are the only sport at ASU to beat Carolina,' Steinbrecher said. "We've been so frustrated the last four years.'. UNC has been our , nemesis. I have difficulty keeping the player's minds off of the UNC 5"a The Tar Heel offense was stalled out thoughoyt most of the first half, but had several good opportunites late in the half. With five minutes left, Steve Turner went cne-cn-cne against Igbeka deep in ASU territory but was stopped with a slide tackle. The Tar Heels kept the pressure up in the second half. Knowles made clutch saves on shots by Nick Donnelly and the Mountaineers put the game cut of cn a score by Dick Elweil with four minutes left j I Hj tv.att Cows 3 fcsfcro Tcr zz Jzy tJazl'x anagod three goals in victory lit. Lmu.i UNC coach Anson Dorrance took an optimistic note from the loss, which dropped his team's record to 5-2. "We've played ASU well in the past, but cur wins have been upsets," he said. "We controlled more of this game than in past years even though we lost." ASU had averaged 1 1 goals a game coming into the contest and Dorrance said the defense had nothing to be ashamed about. "Ricky Marvin played one of his ' best games, and Ducky was fabulous. There aren't more than a few defenders better than him in the country." - Considering the quality of soccer seen at Fetzer Field the last two weekends with the ASU game and the Mayor's Cup tournament, it may be hard for area soccer fans to understand why only Clemson and Duke are ranked in the Top 20. "In my opinion, the ACC is the strongest from the top to bottom in the nation," Steinbrecher, a membe of the nominating committee, said. "The Midwest is strong, but there are four or five teams from here that can go with them." CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. N.C. State sephemcre quarterback Tel Avery had a nice vlcit to U. Va. Saturday afternoon, k-iing his Wcifpack to a 27-13 victory over the Cavaliers in the- game cf the season. ' Avery passed for 1 2D yards and rushed for 3 more as State raised its record to 2-0. Virginia dropped to 1-1 after an opening-week victory over Navy. After filling behind 7-0 early, the " Wolfpack rallied for a 17-7 halftime lead and its defence stopped the Virginia running game. Although Cavalier quarterback Todd Kirtley passed for 247 yards, Virginia runners got just 82 yards. A-ubum 35, Balie 23 AURBURN, da. Duke, going into the game a decided underdog, left Jordan-Hare Stadium having played Auburn a closer game than many anticipated. Duke battled from a 23-7 deficit after three quarters to make the final 35-23 behind the passing of reserve quarterback Brent Clinkscale. Qinkscale directed the Blue Devils to three scores in the first 12 minutes of the final period, and Auburn, having inserted reserves into the game when they developed the large lead, became worried. Duke's Scott McICinney attempted an onside kick with the score 35-28, and after confusion and a delay by the . officials, Auburn was ruled to have recovered the kick, and the Tigers ran out the clock. G-ccr,. C2mc v3 IS ATHENS, Ga. Clemson's defense held strong against Georgia, but the Eul'dc;s used a 67-yard punt return ir.i a 53-yard interception return to set up another score to defeat the Trcrs 20-16. Georgia defensive back Scott Woerner was responsible for both returns, which made up for a listless Bulldog offense. Va!;e Forest 21, The Ctr.f:! 7 WINSTON-SALEM Wake Forest, displaying some of the passing prowess that lifted it to a winning season in 1979, overcame The Citadel 24-7 Saturday night in Groves Stadium. Deacon quarterback Jay Venuto passed for 165 yards and running back Wayne McMillan rushed for 100 yards as the Deacons went to 1-1 for the season. m mm T1 :", K- Maryland 14, West Virginia 11 MORGANTO W N , W.Va. Maryland silenced West Virginia's potent offense it had scored 93 points in two games and scored a 14-11 victory. Tailback Charlie Wysocki led Mary land with 149 yards and both Terp touchdowns. West Virginia was hdd to a field goal by the Maryland defer.:: until the last minute of the game, when it scored on a 1-yard touchdown pass. Flordla 45, Georgia Tech 12 . ATLANTA Flordia, led by sophomore quarterback ' Bob Hewko, who threw two touchdown passes and ran for another, handed Georgia Tech its- second straight defeat, 45-12 Saturday. PIC. State minate era rr iraeii vmiK to vm 1 . n N.C. State placed six runners in the top 10 on its way to cross country victories over Virginia and North Carolina on the Finley course Saturday. The Wcifpack scored 23 points in the meet. Virginia finished second with 50 points and UNC was third with 59 points. "I thought we ran a good race, but State's always in good shape early in the season," Carolina coach Gary Hofstctter said. "We'll be ready when it counts (the Atlantic Coast Conference Championship)." ' Senior co-captain Jimmy Cooper was the top Tar Heel finisher, placing third overall. For almost the entire first half of the race, Cooper had a good chance of winning. "We were running pretty close up to the two-mile mark and nobody was making a move," Cooper said. "Then (Virginia's) Mike Cotton went for it. He took off and got a break off of us." Cotton won the race. The loss spoiled a record for Cooper, who had never run for a UNC team in a' dual-meet los3 before Saturday. Cooper said, "Records are meant to be broken. I mean I'm not going out and commit suicide over this meet." The Tar Heel co-captain said the outcome of the meet was unimportant. "This is really like a preseason for us. There's not a lot of pressure on us to ty NORMAN CANNADA Staff Writer when N.C. national cnampion win. We're just getting ready for the ACCs." Freshman Jack Morgan fared well in his first collegiate race for the Tar Heels, placing 13th in the meet and third for Carolina. "I didn't run as smart of a race as I should have," Morgan said. "I took off too fast at the beginning and by the last half of the race was hurting a lot." Morgan said he wasn't terribly disappointed at UNC's standing. "From what everybody has been telling me, State is usually ready very early in the season," he said. "I don't like to make excuses, but we're using these meets to get ready for the conference meet. We should be ready by t! (Van r or Vi ) inn 1 NORMAN CANNADA There was no surprise State's defending women's cross country team defeated North Carolina 19-30 Saturday on the Finley course. The Wolfpack was supposed to win, but the Tar Heel women proved that they would be a contender as the season goes along. "I thought we looked super out there,"- Carolina coach Hubert West said. "Everybody's coming along faster than I thought they would." The Tar Heels were without co captain Nancy Radford, who sprained her ankle in a Friday morning physical education class. Radford is expected to return to action by Tuesday. In Radford's absence, junior Maria Daniel paced the Carolina performance with a second-place overall finish against a talent-laden N.C. State squad. Daniel's time of 17:18 broke Radford's old school record. "We knew that when we lost Nacy, we had lost some very valuable points," Daniel said. "But, we've got a lot of good people here and everybody pulled together." DanieL said she was not very suprised at her high finish. "I figured I could at least finish in the top 10 anyway, since that's where I finished against State last year. But I've been running better, and I thought that I might be able to do better than just finish in the top 10." s 1 . k p-v Womtn'i golf in Blu Rtdg Invitational Boona. Won m ion ngoijerswin; men second ' Arnh?r bright rpct fcr the Trr HeeV;" Saturday was the performancecf several v' freshman, especially Joan Nesbitt, who finished seventh overall and second for the Tar Heels in. the race. "I wasn't very nervous before the race," Nesbitt said. "I was just a baby freshman corning in and there really wasn't any pressure on me to do well. But I guess there'll be a little more pressure for me to keep doing well." Although the Heels ran well, the closeness of the score was aided by two problems encountered by the Wolfpack. Defending national individual champion Julie Shea sat out Saturday's meet. In addition, two other All-America candidatesBetty Springs and Mary Shea got lost on the course and finished third and fourth respectively. State's Suzanne Givard was the meet's overall winner. The Tar Heels now have the week off from competition before traveling to Winston-Salem to take part in the Wake Forest Invitational meet. rrca StxTf Imports The tournament was played at Penn State, but it ended up more like a North Carolina intrasquad match as the Tar Heel women's golf team took the top four places and won the Penn State Invitational by C5 strokes. Sophomore Cathy Reynolds took first with a one-ovcr:par 220 total for the three-day event,' edging teammate Jul Nesbitt by one shot. Linda Mesean was third with a 229 total, and Carla Daniel was fourth with 235. The Tar Heels opened with a team score cf 300 on Thursday and followed that with a 302 on Friday and a 2S3 on ' Sundey. Penn State's b! e trm .was Duke's ;:."i' m If .-1 shot $:':2 lo take a six-stroke victory over runner-up North Carolina in the Yale Invitation Tournament. The Tar Heels were led by Mike West and Frank Fuhrer, who shot scores of 222 in the 54-hole event. West and Fuhrer tied Maryland's Noel Caruso for second in the individual standings, two strokes behind Kelvin Klier of Temple. Virginia was third in the team standings with a 903 score and Maryland ti., r-.-r.tj ACC scnooi hTThe49.- !.-:, t..:... ...:h place vUth a 913 total. gwffipffoh ; ,. , -.ipn 1-1- .'"""'r . . - -: - . , . - .... ........,.p .. . . . ..,r..ll,tv- ! ; v , ' ' . I If if f ! 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Sept. 22, 1980, edition 1
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