6The Daily Tar HeelMonday. March 14. 1983
Baseball lteam streaks to 12 1 record
From staff reports
When you talk about teams on a roll,
you must talk about North Carolina's
baseball squad. '
After going through a somewhat
mediocre season in 1982, posting a 29-27
record, the Tar Heels were expected to
improve this year with the nucleus of the
starting lineup returning to action.'
That the team has improved might be
something of an understatement after the
Tar Heels opened 1983 with a 12-1 mark
and a nine-game winning streak.
That record marks the best start ever
for the team, equalling a 12-1 mark set in
1972.
The Tar Heels most recent victories
came over Rider College in the first two
of a three-game series this weekend.
Freshman second baseman Mike Jed-
ziniak belted a two-run home run Friday
to lift UNC to a 6-1 triumph. Catcher
B.J. Surhoff went three-for-four from
the plate while Brad Powell was the win
ner on the'mound, giving up six hits and
striking out five batters.
The bats were in full swing Saturday as
the Tar Heels cruised over Rider 13-1
behind Jedziniak's grand slam homer and
Surhoff s perfect four-for-four day at
the plate. .
Jedziniak's grand slam keyed a second:
inning six-run explosion which put the
game away early. Surhoff contributed a
home run, triple, double and single to
complete the cycle.
Tom Reed was victorious on the
mound, scattering five'hits over nine inn
ings while striking out seven batters.
The Tar Heels were scheduled to con
clude their series with Rider on Sunday,
with that game to be followed by George
Mason in the climax of a doubleheader.
Results of those games were not
available.
UNC began its latest series of victories
with easy wins during the early days of
spring break.
The squad took UNC-Wilmington to
the cleaners on March 3 and 4 with wins
of 8-1 and 6-2. r .
In those contests, the Tar Heels swat
ted 26 hits, while limiting the Seahawks
to half that total. Powell and Scott.
Bankhead accounted for the wins on the
mound.
The team then opened a three-game
series in Lakeland, Fla., with a 5-3 deci
sion over Western Michigan on March 7.
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Office of Special Programs
66 Fifth Avenue. New York, NY 10011
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PLAYBOY photographer David Chan and his
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coeds for PLAYBOY'S Girls of the Atlantic
Coast Conference pictorial. To qualify, you
must be a female student registered full- or
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Call David Chan at the
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(919) 929-2171 March 14 a 15
Raleigh Hilton Inn (Raleigh)
(919) 028-0311 March 15, 16 & 17
Sheraton University Center (Durham)
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HaBaiina
26-game win streak comes to an end
acrosse team
stunned
Jby MIKE DESIST!
Sports Editor
BALTIMORE They came down
from the little school in the little town in
Upstate New York. They came down
from the rolling, waterside landscape of
the Finger Lakes region, that other part
of the Big Apple state. They came down
into Maryland Saturday. And they came
to play lacrosse. '
The Hobart Statesmen handed two
time defending Division I national cham
pion North Carolina its first loss in 27
games with a 12-9 upset win at Loyola
College. The Tar Heels' 26-game winning
streak was the third longest in NCAA
history. ic
Geneva, population 16,793, sitsf'at the
bottom of the hill-banked basin of Seneca
Lake. :y'
College included, the entire town has
fewer bodies than UNC.
And the Statesmen are hardly known
for their big-time athletic program.
Hobart is a Division III school, this
despite its lacrosse team winning the
NCAAs three years in a row. No athletic
scholarships, no extensive television
coverage, no nationwide following.
And against the Tar Heels, nothing to
lose.
"They were playing the University of
North Carolina, and for a Division III '
school, that's something," said UNC de
fender Randy Cox. 'They came out ready
to play and we didn't. I think we looked
at Hobart as the Division III national
champions, and not a team to be reck
oned with."
Any reckoning the Tar Heels did came
in the first 45 minutes of the game. En
tering the fourth and final period of play,
the teams were knotted at nine-all. But
two goals by HobartsJiDehnis O'Hara,
one by Jim GrunaldTaiid "the,, shutout
goalkeeping of Statesman starry Van
Arsdale provided the margjn'bt victory in
mopener
the season's opening game for both
Hobart and North Carolina.
The Tar Heels held a 7-6 advantage im
mediately following the half.
"We knew they were a good team,"
UNC goalkeeper Tom Sears said. "But
they played better than I thought they
were going to play. I think we'll start to
take things more seriously. We won't go
into a game so casual."
UNC outshot the Statesmen 43-33, but
the rest of the statistics had Hobart on
top.
Van Arsdale had 16 saves; Sears had 9.
Hobart picked up 76 ground balls, UNC
20 fewer. A most telling figure had the
Statesmen ahead in faceoffs, 19-6.
North Carolina coach Willie Scrpggs
had said before the game he wasn't sure
how hard it would be to win a third con-?
secutive national championship. "You
don't sit down day one and say, 'It's go
ing to be this hard,' " he said.
And not having lost in 26 games, you
don't sit down and expect a loss.
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