- 1 mm0r - Sfc. Im . LJ LJ i Li n 01yhiiLQ)r i " .-v-. ! S .- - l - Xy it I I r to -: . I " yj ,,,,, ; 'I " 7 ? ' - 4 A " 4 ' - "t 2 " ''' ? 'i 15 ''' J O s 'ears makes saves as North Carolina netml UNO's Tom Sears looks upfisld on Fetzcr Field frolic . . .senior guards cage in run for Heels' third title LACROSSE SCHEDULE , Mar. 12 Hobart Baltimore, MD Kfar. 19 2:30 pm Towsoa State CHAPEL HILL Mar. 27 . 2:30 pm Adelphi Manhasset, NY Apr. 2 2:00 pm Marjland , College Park, MD Apr. 9 l.COpra Johns Hopkins CHAPEL HILL Apr. 12 3:00 pm Duke Durham, NC Apr. 16 2:C0pm Marjland-Daltiraore CHAPEL HILL County Apr. 23 3:C3pm Elmore CHAPEL HILL Apr. 23 2:C3pm Washington & Lee CHAPEL HILL Apr. 26 3:C3 pm Roanoke College CHAPEL HILL Apr. 30 2:00 pm Virginia Charlottesville, VA May 18 TBA NCAA Quarter-Raals TDA ' May 21 TBA NCAA Semi-Finds TBA May 23 ' 2:00 pm NCAA Finals . Rutgers, N J- By MIKE DESISTI Sports Editor It seems as crazy as a notoriously poor performer taking to tite stage in Elizabethan England, knowing that if the demanding crowd before him, beside him, everywhere but behind him wasn't pleased with the play, rocks and bottles would fly and the ac tors fall. What kind of masochist, woven leather basket on a stick, in hand, modified birdcage on head, would stand in the way of a band of similarly dressed thugs flinging rubber grenades at a net? A sick, sick man. Or Tom Sears. The goalkeeper for North Carolina's two-time de fending national champion lacrosse team has more than Americas Catalogue Store for a last name to draw attention. He's lost but one game in his last 27 times minding the nets. He's a two-time all-ACC selection and 1982 Conference Player of the Year. He's a two-time Ail American. He's won the Kenner's Award nation wide Goalie of the Year in both the 1981 and 1982 seasons. He was the 1982 choice for the Enner's Award, national Player of the Year. And he topped it all off with a Most Valuable Player selection in the 1982 NCAA championship match. The only thing close to being sick about Sears is that he's humble still. And he has fun playing goal. His way, at least. . "People ask me why I always carry the ball up field," he says. "It's no fun to just stand in the goaT and get hit with the ball." So he catches it. Then he initiates the attack with a well-aimed pass to a teammate no one knew was on the field, not until Sears had more or less laid the ball in the player's web like Lady Diana setting Little Wil liam in the cradle. Or he runs. Sears is known as well for his jaunts downfield with the ball when his outlets are covered and ries not as for his apparently self-sacrificing and un doubtedly impeccable housekeeping in goal. He doesn't like to shave much and wears his hair fairly long by conservative standards, but Sears is a meticu lous type of guy when it comes to lacrosse. He keeps the opponents' side of the scoreboard clean. In a game where 25 goals in 60 minutes is the rule rather than the exception, Sears plays protege to Ebe nezer Scrooge, having limited the Other Guys to a miserly average of 6.8 goals per game in his last two years as a Tar Heel. But that's not the only eccentricity Sears has in playing an eccentric's position. While the men tend ing the nets in hockey get their shins spanked by teammates' sticks before a game, while their soccer counterparts are "often flopping around on the ground before the kickoff like Mexican jumping beans on a lawn fertilized with Spanish Fly, Sears gets ready for a game in his own way. He relaxes. "I feel I'm different in that I take a different view of the game," he says. "I don't think there's any pressure on me. Pressure's what you make it. The calmer I can stay, the better I can react to the ball." For Sears, playing goal is like sitting in front of the studio switcher as a television director. Communica tion is the key, and he holds it. He's in charge of the defense and lets it know what's going on when it would otherwise be playing in the dark. "You're not assigned to one man," Sears says. "And a lot of times they (his teammates) have to listen to me to find out where the ball is." He picks up all the loose ends. Yet it's the team hardly a four-letter word to Sears that puts them together. "It's just like a machine," he says. "We do it together and don't rely on just one guy." Sears is a part of that machine which gears up after the Holidays, sta then consistently en route to that season, or therea School's out for ning themselves Una lacrosse teai finest squad in t Athletics are a argue that athlej not bouncing in , through the air a Kenan, or gettin ter's swat in Bos care to see the U And once agai "The best thinj Carolina, says lacrosse has beeri it should be. It Perspective. H all. They get the And so it goes w He stresses the life now, and it release. And it's 1983 UNC Lacrosse - 11 Tim Mealey So. G 23 Bill Ness Sr. M 35 Randy Cox 12 Mac Ford So. A 24 JoeySeivold Fr. M 36 Steve Green NO. NAME YR POS. 13 Tom Haus Fr. D 25 John Murphy Fr. M 37 ' John Haus 2 Mike Tummillo Fr. A 14 Terry Martinello Jr. M 26 Andy Smith Jr. M 38 Dean King 3 Mike Burnett Sr. AM 15 J.B.Howard So. G 27 Tom Sears Sr. G 39 David Harg 4 Jeb Saunders Fr. M 16 Kevin Gilligan So. M 28 Paul Danko Jr. A 40 Ken Wyker 5 George Pappas Fr. M 17 Ray Crosby Jr. M 29 Rusty Hueglin Sr. A 41 Pat McDon 6 Steve Martel So. M 18 Jeff Homire Sr. M 30 Bob Jones Sr. M 42 Arthur Bow 7 Paul Hazelhurst Jr. D 19 Dave Wingate Sr. A 31 Ward Steidle Jr. M 43 Brent Voelk 8 Dan Weintraub So. M 20 Greg Cox So. M 32 Robby Russell Fr. M 44 Bill Eyre 9 Keith Braddish Jr. A .21 Pete Voelkel Sr. M 33 Dan Andrews Fr. D 45 James Craw 10 James Koester . Fr. M 22 Brian Rice . Jr. M 34 Taylor Classen Fr. D 46 Greg Heado v Mogje (Q)pfi25aimo PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED -i- LENSES DUPLICATED CONTACT LENSES j ' ' fitted -polished - cleaned SUNGLASSES prescription - non-prescriptiori J OVER 1,200 FRAMES 121 E. Franklin St. L. JOHN C. SOUTHERN - OPTICIAN Phone:942-3254 Famous Foot Long Sandwiches , 132 E. Franklin St. 10:30 a.m.-2 a.m. Sun.-Thurs. and 10:30 a.m.-3 a.m. Fri. and Sat. SPLASH into spring with a colorful Aquarium System All Aquarium Systems 20 Gallon or larger -15 off Aquarium Stands15 off Aquarium Lights 15 off Now through March 31st University Mall 987-4810 6 Spring Sports Special I , Handbags & Luggage J i Z of Sturdy & Light Parachute Nylon y" "illri Franldin Chapel Hill 929-2620 : Above the VVhite Horse Restaurant f 8 pm Memorial Tickets $5, $6.50 ea; 8:3( J I ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR a ACCESSQ UNIVERSITY SQUARE (Next to Grcnviilo Tcvcrs) 133 VV, Franklin St. Open woeknite 'til 8 pm 942-1078