I I t 6The Daily Tar HeelThursday, November 1, 1984 SPORTS SCOREBOARD Men's Soccer I NC 2. C ampbell I Campbell 0 . I INC 0 2-2 Goals: I'NC - Smyih. Nicholson Campbell - Doyle Assists: UNC- evey. Smyth. Hartman. Campbell - Reed Shots: tiNC 1 .1. Oampheli 4 Corners: I NC 6. Campbell 4 Sacs Campbell 7. UNCO Fouls: UNC 19. Campbell 14 Offsides: Campbell 4. UNC I Records: UNC 10-7-1. Campbell 8-5-2 Field Hockey I'NC 4, James Madison 6 UNC 2 2-4 James Madison 0 04) Goals - Judith Jonckheer. Beth I.ogan. Claire Dougherty. Louise Hines. Assists - Jonckheer. Lisa Morin and Mary Senlementes. Penalty Corners - UNC 18. J Mil 7. Shots -UNC 23. JMU II. Saves - UNC: Jan Miles 4. Kathv Mulvev I. JMU: Ciina Kuta 8. -Judith Jonckheer broke UNC's record for goals for a freshman she has 19 goals on the season. Marv Sentementes set a school record for assists in a season with 9. Calendar Friday WOMEN'S GOLF at Lady Wolfpack Golf Tournament. Raleigh. VOl LEYBAl.L at Pittsburgh Classic. Pittsburgh. Pa. Saturday FIELD HOCKEY at ACC Tournament. Charlottesville. Va. FOOTBALL vs. Maryland. Kenan Stadium. 12:15 p.m. WOMEN'S GOLF at Lady Wolfpack Golf Tournament. Raleigh. WOMEN'S SOCCER at N C. State. Raleigh. VOLLEYBALL at Pittsburgh Classic. Pittsburgh. Pa. Sunday FIELD HOCKEY at ACC Tournament. Charlottesville. Va. Presented by Draft House Cinema Thurs.. Nov. 1 7 & 9:30 Art School Carr Mill Carrboro Draft, Imports, Sodas and Free Popcorn $2.50 Art School Friends $3.50 General Public MADE MUSA Coming to UNC-IViaryland Football Game This Saturday? See the Blue-White Basketball game immediately following the football game. Complimentary student tickets available NOW at Carmichael JKIMIRJ US 1. The Teainm 2. The Record 3. The Experience WOMI AN iOI I m I mi Wollpack (.!t I annulment Kakigh MI NN SK t I R w SVako Kmcm Kiii I icUI. 2 p m NCAA Stats Individual Leaders Hushing C ar ds ds pg Mr. UN 16' 4 1 78 1218 IS22 121 I0W 147 7 16 922 HI. 7 168 KOI 114.4 172 818 102.2 Byars. Ohio St Mayes. Wash St Davis. ICU Horton. I NC 9.l.avette. Urn. l ech I.VRamseur. Wake Kiir. Passing Alt C pi Yds TIH 287 185 2o07 2.1 Bosco. BY U Long. Iowa Bell. Fla. Flutic. Bast. Col Cunningham. UNLV 10. Dewberry. ;. Tech I4.tppley. Clem. 30. White. Wake For. 192 121 212 192 126 Ml 168 M2 1 764 67 1095 H II 128 I2J 1812 17 1477 16 76 1193 75 1008 99 1025 5 10 8 Receiving Ct Yds Ctpg 80 1083 8.9 Williams. 111. Lockett. Long Bch. Henderson. Iowa St. Phclan. Bost. Col. White. Bwl. Green 56 55 39 47 890 824 549 352 70 6.9 6.5 59 Field Goals FGA FG J 25 20 Gpe 2 50 2.37 2.29 2.25 2.22 1.67 1.62 1.57 Prindle. W Mich. Lee. UCLA Butler. Ga. Jaeger. Wash. White. 111. IS.Miller. UNC 17.Cofer, NC St. I9.lgwebuike, Clem. 21 20 22 23 10 18 12 19 16 18 20 10 13 II ACC Standings Overall 3-04) 4-3-0 Maryland Virginia Wake Forest North Carolina N C. State Georgia Tech Duke 2-0-1 2-2-0 1-1-0 1-3-0 0-1-1 0-2-0 5-1-1 5-3-0 V4-0 3-5-0 3-3-1 1-6-0 AMERICAN GAMCER SOCETY v r- PLITT J THEATRES i mmwm i IUT HUlli Still' CAROLINA CLASSIC 3:00 TO CATCH A THIEF 5 00 FIRST BORN 7:15 9:15 THE LITTLE 700 DRUMMER GIRL 9:30 ii Offensive Brian Johnston: He found his By FRANK KENNEDY Sports F.ditor Brian Johnston. UNC's 268-pound defensive tackle-converted-center. won't give you the first complaint about tight-fitting clothes or worry about the tact that he's gained 20 pounds the last couple of years. As far as he is concerned, he's just the size he needs to be. "I'm kind of the carbon cut-out for center," Johnston says. "I'm about the right size and do the kind of things they look for at center, and that's fine with me." hnough so that Johnston would rather not go back to defense unless he absolutely has to. "I think I was a good defensive player, but that was about as good as I was going to get." Johnston says. "I think I could be a great center. My forte is probably offense more than defense. "After I leave here, if I play anywhere it will probably be on the offensive line - center, tackle or guard." That from a guy who has built most of his reputation as a defensive tackle. Injuries brought Johnston back to the offense. Preseason All-ACC center Har- Harris Barton: He values his By MIKE SC HOOR Staff Writer Somewhere between Saturday's game and Monday's practice lies an interim period for cleansing the mind of football tribulation. Like the neighborhood baker and candlestick maker, college football's student-athletes yearn for time away from their calling and its built-in pressures. Not every athlete starts fresh on Monday. Frustration and anxiety do Fri., Nov. 2 7:00 8c 9:30 admission $1.25 Tickets at Union Desk Carolina Uaioa Film Committee Presentation r. ... P w Richard Dreyfus in THE APPRENTICESHIP OF DUDDY KRAVITZ Thurs., Nov. 1 7:00 & 9:30 D0SiFL0 and bor two husbands R Sat., Nov. 3 7:00 & 9:30 HALLELUJAH, I'M A BUM Sun., Nov. 4 7:00 & 9:30 MX f - - ' Mil iff'" . - l J I ft. J's& line . ris Barton played very little in the team's first four games, and starting lelt tackle Pat Shee han injured his right foot against Wake Forest. Johnston got the call to move to center the Sunday before UNC's 28-2 1 win over N.C. State. Johnston is scheduled to play at that spot the remainder of the season, while Barton is manning Sheehan's position. Johnston is used to this fence hopping. He has been shuffled across the line of scrimmage so many times in his college career it confuses him to talk about it. He played most of his first two years as a reserve center despite coming to the Tar Heels as a defenseman, and in spring 1 983 he chose to return to defense. Crum said Johnston could have been one of the premier centers in the country had he remained on offense. "I went with defense because I thought it would be fun or something," he says. "Maybe it wasn't a good career not magically disap pear. The black cloud hangs overhead and it will not drift away. School gets tougher. Practice gets rougher. Injuries make you suffer. And you need a buffer. Barton Like a day without football practice. Harris Barton, UNC's former center and current starting left tackle, walked off the practice field on Tuesday before UNC's 28-21 victory against N.C. State. He had not played up to expectations in 1984. A preseason All-ACC choice at center. Barton had a left ankle that had troubled him since summer workouts. Brian Johnston moved over from defense to play center. Barton would be the utility man on the offensive line. "It's been such a frustrating year . . . tough both physically and mentally," Barton said. I hadn done well in v ELLIOT ROAD at E. FRANKLIN 967-4737 $2.00 TIL 6:00 PM EVERYDAY! 3:20 5:20 7:30 9:30 Terror in the Aisles (R) 3:15 5:15 7:15 9:15 DOLBY STEREO EXCLUSIVE Thief of Hearts (R) 2:50 5:00 7:10 9:20 Nick Nolte, Judd Hirsch Teachers (R) 1 1 SHOWS NIGHTLY H I Johnston H i M 'j imLi 7:00&9:15 J 3PIE5 Special Hours Thursday Thursday 6 pm-9 pm Ever3rthirig at least 10 off All sweats 15 off o All shoes 20 off DONT FORGET to register weekly for tickets to home football games to place your, SPECIAL ORDERS now to enter our SPECIAL ORDERS CONTEST o to order your class ring beginning Nov. 12 825.00 off all class rings Special Hours Home Football Weekends Th.-Sat. 9-9 S. 9-4 niche after move to center move, but I don't legret it." Crum couldn't have been too over whelmed with Johnston's return engage ment against State two weeks ago, when he tripped up quarterback Kevin Anthony three times. An additional week of practice paid off, as Johnston brushed aside the usually-stubborn Memphis State defense Saturday, and he never once stepped on Anthony's feet. "Brian just played an outstanding game," Crum said of the MSU effort. "He looked like he had been lining up there for four years." Evidence of Johnston's presence was seen in the successful use of the quarterback draw, in which Anthony raced up the middle, often untouched for eight-to-IO yards a clip. The Tar Heels first touchdown of the game was, in fact, an 1 8-yard quarterback draw. Johnston does not keep secret his desire to be in the spotlight. He likes the glamour positions; and that's what made the move to center difficult. "On defense, on any given Saturday you can be a superstar," he says. "You have a couple of sacks, nine or 10 tackles, and you're a superstar. Everyb ody likes to be that once in a while. time away from school that week and the team wasn't winning. The pressures of playing and schoolwork had built up for two years. It would have happened even if I had not made a position change. There was an overload and I had to get away. I had an anxiety attack." But Barton has studied relaxation and motivation since high school, when he worked with Dr. Ron Hodges, an Atlanta hypnotist. Hodges helped him gain the 50 pounds he needed to play major college football. Barton said he began hypnotic training before it became fashionable for athletes. "I learned a lot in sports psychology, like seeing things in my mind and establishing goals," Barton said of his sessions with Hodges. "But a lot of things had slipped by since I've been here. Things were going wrong and I should have made a conscious effort to stop them. I forgot how to use the techniques correctly. "I felt like I let the team and myself down when I walked off the field. I apologized to my teammates and they agreed that it could happen to anybody." Anybody but Barton, it would seem. STATE-OF-THE-ART CINEMA TWO THINGS YOU SHOULD KNOW.. 1 . Orson Welles' 1 938 "War of the Worlds" broadcast was not a hoax. 2. Buckaroo Banzai stands between you. the President (his buddy), nuclear disaster and having a nice day. THE ADVENTURES OF F A N Z A I in Kintek Stereo PQ 3:00.5:00.7:15,9:30 PERSONALIZED WOMEN'S HEALTH CARE Our private practice offers confidential care including: Birth Control -Free Pregnancy Tests Relief of Menstrual Cramps Abortion (to 20 weeks) Gynecology Breast Evaluation 109 Conner 942 - on all Home Football Weekends Saturday 9-9 Sunday 9-4 TACKLE THE TEKP' "At centf r, I could probably have the best game of my career and nobody would notice except the coaching staff." He said most people have miscon ceptions about the center position. "I don't think many people realize what kind of position that is," he says. "To have somebody line up about that far from you (he puts two fingers about a fourth of an inch apart) and you have no step. "Basically, you take about a three inch step and somebody's right into you, and you're snapping the ball, too. YouVe got to have a lot of upper body strength to move that defensive lineman around." A good Sunday bench press keeps Johnston in shape for the task. With a 455-pound press to his credit, John ston leads the team in weightlifting. He says he has upped his weight by 20 pounds since snapping the ball in 1982. Game sense certainly helped John ston to make the transition. "He is a natural football player," says Matsko. "He has good quickness, good agility and good strength, but the thing that impressed me most was that he had a tremendous recall of the offense." And pressing 455 pounds can't hurt. football Enrolled in UNC's School of Business Administration, Barton's ambition is an MBA, not the NFL. Hell mention family life, career aspirations and his newest sports psychology application in the same breath. "Schoolwork, social life and football are all demanding," Barton said. "You can't be overloaded. "Football is a matter of who's more mentally prepared. I know I've got to block (Clemson nose guard) William Perry in his home stadium ... in front of 75,000 people. I use sports psychol ogy to get ready for game situations. "I can close my eyes and envision every play and every blocking scheme, hear the crowd, see our mistakes and correct them in my mind. I can go through the entire game situation in my mind from the time I enter the locker room until I leave the field if I concentrate. "It's my way of dealing with pressure. The more I think of it (the game), the better 111 do." Harris Barton should consider him self lucky. He is positive, goal-oriented and, oh, so motivated. And best of all, the black cloud has drifted away. Late Shows 11:45 Fri. & Sat. THIS IS SPINAL TAP -LIQUID SKY (19th Week!) "AT THE TOP OF IT'S CLASS IT IS A GREAT MOVIE" 1 1 5rSl& ALBERT JACOUEUNE ANTHONY i ;&v?Z finney essn Andrews 1 ONLY SL J UST0W TRIANGLE WOMEN'S HEALTH CENTER Dr., Suite 2202 Chapel Hill. N.C. 0011 .r 942-0824 Across from University Mall 151 E. Franklin St. Downtown Chapel Hill 942-0127