Wednesday, October 27, 1982The Daily Tar Heel7
Bbobts
Runner leaves
UNC, returns
to Oregon
By KURT ROSENBERG
Soft Writer
Matt Moss is back in Portland, Ore.,
waiting. Waiting for this January, when he
will enroll as a first-semester freshman at
Oregon State University. Waiting for
January of 1984, when he will first be eligi
ble to run ajmpetitively for OSU.
Oregon State's gain is UNCs loss. As a ,
high school junior, Moss had run the 800
meters in 1:52.3 and established himself as
one of the most sought-after half-milers in
the nation. North Carolina surprised a
number of other schools by luring Moss
far away from his home in the Pacific
Northwest. "A major victory," coach
Don Lockerbie had called it.
Last Thursday .Matt Moss officially
withdrew from UNC, and by Friday after
noon he was 3,000 miles from Chapel Hill.
Moss had problems of a personal nature
which he believed he would not have been
able to overcome by remaining at North
Carolina. His situation was made even
more difficult because he left UNC with
no negative words about the school, the
track and cross country program, his
teammates or his coaches.
It was a tremendous dilemma that had
plagued Moss since he arrived in August,
but finally he became convinced that he
had but one choice.
"It was probably one of the hardest
decisions I've ever made," Moss said
Saturday from his Oregon home. "I felt in
a sense like I was letting down my team
mates and my coaches, especially. But I
had to look toward my future."
Moss preferred not to go into the
specifics of his problems, saying only that
they were "somewhat personal." But he
did emphasize that his departure was not a
result of his experience with the school or
the athletic program.
"I would like it to be known that I had
no complaints about the university at all,"
he said. "Coach Lockerbie is a very good
coach and the team was great and the
facilities were incredible."
There was no reason for Moss to be
unhappy with his position on the team.
Recruited for track, he was a pleasant sur
prise in cross country, securing the No. 9
spot on the team this fall. His teammates
.and coaches saSriftSIenf and Lockerbie
considered Mo&late a potential suib-1 ;5d
half-miier. ,
- &
J - r
Matt Moss
But when he found that his emotional
problems were having a negative effect on
his daily life including his studies, his
eating and sleeping habits, and eventually
even bis running Moss made his deci
sion. "I couldn't concentrate on my
schoohvork, which means a lot to me," he
said, "and because I was getting behind in
school, it was affecting me even more."
Moss had been used to getting As in
school; after two months at UNC, he had
approximately a B- orCaverage, Locker
bie said.
Lockerbie and head track coach Hubert
West had been counting on Moss as an in
tegral part of North Carolina's middle
distance team. Essentially, he had been ex
pected to eventually fill the void left by
Todd McCallister, a standout half-miler
who graduated in May.
"We're just hoping that the other half
milers will adjust and take up the slack,"
West said. "We're just going to have to
work harder."
It seems that Moss, as much as anyone,
was aware that his departure dealt a big
blow to the team.
"Don (Lockerbie) was very upset and I
can't blame him for that," Moss said.
"He had every right in the world to be."
For the next few months, Moss can con
template his decision. Until he enrolls at
Oregon State next semester, he will work
at a- part-time job and concentrate on
training, which, he said, is "going very
well." He will work with his high school
coach and prepare for 1984. NCAA
regulations require that he must sit out a
year of competition after enrolling at a dif
ferent school.
As Moss ponders his future, Don
Lockerbie and Hubert West will reflect on
his two months at UNC. And painfully,
they too will ponder the future and what ft
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Donation 50$ per balloon Free Delivery
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DLUS-IVMTB DAGKETBAU. TICKETS
Student tickets are available for the Blue-White game which will
be played this Saturday after the Maryland Football Game, as well
as for the 2nd Blue-White Game scheduled on Saturday afternoon,
November 13 at 4:30 p.m. Present your student I.D. and Athletic
Pass t CermSchael Ticket Office between 8:30 and 4:30 p.m.
Students may also purchase up to three tickets In the student area
at $8.00 each in addition to their complimentary student ticket.
Sponsored by
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lldns gets starting nod against Maryland
By S.L. PRICE
Assistant Sports Editor
The only thing separating junior Scott Stankanvage
from the starting quarterback job is age. He passed for
four touchdowns and over 200 yards in North
Carolina's 41-9 pounding of N.C. State two weeks ago,
but he was only filling in for the injured Rod Elkins.
Elkins, a senior, is now healthy and will start against
Maryland this Saturday.
Coach Dick Crum believes that because Elkins, as a
senior, has less time in his life to play football, he
should start ahead of Stankavage all else being equal.
"If Rod were a junior," Crum said at his weekly
press conference Thursday, "we'd view the situation
differently."
"These things do happen," Elkins said. "It looks like
they're just shoving him away, and I hate to have it look
like that." V
So Stankavage sits and Elkins plays. But Stankavage
is not unhappy with the situation.
"Being a quarterback, I'd love to play, take the
snaps," Stankavage said. "But being a football player,
I know it wouldn't be in the best interests of the football
team."
For the record, the best interests of the North
Carolina football team lie with Elkins, who sports a
21-2 UNC record when healthy. And when Elkins
ripped his knee dodging out-of-bounds in the Army
game, he put an end to his finest day under center.
Sidelined midway through the second quarter, Elkins
still managed to hit 12-of-16 for 176 yards in the air.
Another quarterback figures prominently in the Tar
Heel plans for this Saturday Maryland's Boomer
Esiason. Esiason, who is close to breaking several Ter
rapin single-season nassine records, has averaperr 217
yards passing, while giving up just six interceptioas.
As a result, Maryland has won big after losing their
first two games to Perm State and West Virginia: 49-22
over Duke; a 52-31 win over Wake Forest; a 38-0
shutout of Indiana State; 26-3 over Syracuse; and 23-6
over N.C. State.
Crum said that the Maryland contest is simply "the
toughest ballgame we've faced to date."
For the first time since last season, the North
Carolina football team can call itself relatively injury
free. Crum said that pre-season Ail-American guard
David Drechsler is at or near 100 percent, and that cor
nerback Greg Poole will also start. Tailback Kelvin
Bryant has fully recovered from the mysterious ankle
injury that kept him sidelined for much of the first four
games. ...
Pitt regains No. 1,
UNC still 10th
in AP football poll
i.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
Pitt (21) 6-0-0
Washington (28) 7-0-0
GefrgiaQ) 6-0-0
So Methodist (2) 7-0-0
Arkansas (4) 6-0-0
Nebraska 6-1-0
Arizona State 7-0-0
Penn State 6-1-0
Alabama 6-1-0
NORTH CAROLINA 5-1-0
UCLA
Southern Cal
LSU
Florida State
Gemson
Miami, Fla.
Oklahoma
West Virginia
Auburn
Michigan
6-0-1
5-1-0
5-0-1
5-1-0
5-1-1
5-2-0
5-2-0
5- 2-0
6- 1-0
5-2-0
1,109
1,105
1,010
976
909
824
784
763
740
642
610
542
401
314
307
286
194
135
124
118
Neither rain, nor sleet, nor
snow, nor hail can keep
The DTH from UNC. Look
for it in the 40 drop-boxes
across campus.
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Serving omelets, burgers
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Tickets $6.50 at
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Chapel Kill-Durham Exclusive!
poiby Walt Disney's
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Tar Heel basketball games slated for TV
From Staff Reports
; Seyeral television and cable networks have announced their schedules for airing college basketball games this
season, including 15 UNC contests.
In all ESPN will air 166 college games. .
JANUARY
15 at Virginia (NBC)
19 NCSU (ESPN)
22 DUKE (ESPN)
27 Wake Forest in Greensboro (ESPN)
29 Georgia Tech in Greensboro (ESPN)
FEBRUARY
2 at Clemson (ESPN)
10 VIRGINIA (ESPN)
13 VILLANOVA (NBC)
Following is the 1982-83 UNC televised
schedule:
NOVEMBER
20 St. John's in Springfield, Mass.
(ESPN)
27 Missouri in St. Louis, Mo. (CBS)
DECEMBER
16 at Maryland (ESPN)
19 at NC State (ESPN)
24 WAKE FOREST (ESPN)
MARCH
5 at DUKE (ESPN)
11-13 ACC Tournament in Atlanta, Ga.
(ESPN)
4 LSU in East Rutherford, N.J. (NBC)
Note: Home games in CAPS.
Black placed on waivers as Nets trim roster
The Associated Press
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. The
New Jersey Nets have announced the
release on waivers of two rookie guards,
Jimmy Black and Tony Brown, leaving
the team still one player over the Na
tional Basketball Association limit.
. Black, 6-foot-2 and 162 pounds, led
North Carolina to the NCAA champion
ship a year ago. He was the Nets' third
pick in the June draft and 59th overall
pick in the draft, according to a
spokesman for the Nets.
Brown, a 6-foot-6 inch, 195-pounder
out of Arkansas, was the Nets' fourth
pick in the draft and 82nd overall.
The cuts leave New Jersey with 13
players on the roster. The NBA limit is .
12, and the team must cut one more
player before Friday's season opener
against the Chicago Bulls.
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