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Summer hsseheH
and downs-
57
as ops a
0
Heels spill with UNC- W
By DAVID THOMPSON
Injuries deplete staff
John Marshall's single capped a two un
seventh inning as Carolina defeated UNC
Wilmington 4-3 in the first game of a double
header In North State College Baseball
League action Tuesday night.
Jamie McCuire pitched a three-hitter in
the second game as the Seahawks split the
doubleheader, winning 60.
Brian Ashley, 2-1, pitched 1VS innings-in
relief of Tim Breedlove to earn the victory in
the opening game.
"Tim did a super job for five innings,"
Coach Mark Scalf said. "He was not getting
the ball down, but he was able to get by. He
kept the lead runners off base, which is
important"
Trailing 1-0 in the bottom of the third,
UNC scored twice. With one out, Ronnie
Broome walked, stole second, reached third
on Mitch McClenes infield single, and
scored on Jeff Hubbard's sacrifice fly.
McCleney later scored on a Marshall single.
After one out and two walks in the
bottom of the seventh, Jeff Hubbard hit
what appeared to be a game-ending double
play, but Seahawk second baseman Tim
Whitehead committed a throwing error to
first allowing Broome to score and setting
the stage for Marshall.
The Tar Heels, who had not played for
nine days due to rain, fell behind early in the
second game.
UNC-Wilmington loaded the bases in the
second inning off Kyle Rhoades, who then
gave way to Ronnie Huffman. Huffman
walked the next batter to force in a run,
before a sacrifice fly and wild pitch gave the
Seahawks a 3-0 lead. They added another
three runs in the sixth inning for the final
score.
Carolina never threatened afterwards, as
McCuire faced 16 batters, only one over the
minimum, through the final five innings.
Scalf said he was not satisfied with the
team's performance. "We played fairly well
in the first game, but even if we had come
back and won the second game, I would not
be satisfied," he said.
He added that the team may have lost
some concentration in the second game. "I
don't know if they thought they would be
satisfied with a split or if that was all that's
expected of them," Scalf said.
One problem may be psychological, Scalf
said. "The players have shown they can play
sometimes, but in others they haven't," he
said.
The Tar Heels, now 6-12, play a double
header tonight at Campbell before returning
home to face East Carolina Saturday at 7:30.
Pitcher Chris Kahler is out for the remainder
of the summer league season," and pitcher
Bill Gallagher's mound career is over, Coach
Mark Scalf said Tuesday.
Kahler, who was expected to be one of
the top pitchers for UNC this summer, is suf
fering from a stress fracture in his right leg.
"I was coming' down with it at the end of
the spring season," Kahler said. "After the
layoff between seasons, I started off too
hard. I came back too fast which kept mak
ing it worse." .
Kahler is now undergoing a rehabilitation
program scheduled to last six weeks. In two
weeks he will start running and lifting weights.
He said he was planning to pitch for a
Maryland team in a Johnstown, Pennsylvania,
tournament in mid-August
"I don't want to be throwing in the tourna
ment if I'm not ready," Kahler said. "I have
to be careful to throw with my legs in shape,
or else I'll Ret a sore arm."
Gallagher pitched two games this summer
before conceeding. "I can't throw anything
with any decent speed, nothing effective,"
he said.
He had pitched only 1 V innings in two
years before this summer after undergoing
surgery to correct a rotator cuff injury.
"I don't know what I could feel (about the
injury)," he said. "There's no sense in beating
it into the ground."
Gallagher, who was offered a contract by
the Los Angeles Dodgers after finishing high
school, said he did not regret coming to
Carolina.
"I would have nothing now if I had turned
pro," Gallagher said. He added that he ex
pected to graduate in December, 1932.
Scalf said that Gallagher might get a
chance in the outfield a position he played
in high school in a few weeks after he got
adequate hitting practice.
DAVID THOMPSON
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