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6The Daily Tar HeelFriday, October 16, 1987
Sports
Tar Heels hope to rebound against State
By HIKE BERARDINO
A&sis&t Spots Edtor
Talk about two teams going in
opposite directions.
Three Saturday afternoon's ago,
the North Carolina football team had
just destroyed Navy 45-14 and was
riding high at 3-1, while N.C. State
was still searching for a quarterback
and its first victory. (They would find
both that night against Maryland.)
This Saturday, in the 77th renewal
of one of ACC football's greatest
rivalries, it will be a confident
Wolfpack team that takes the field
at 12:05 p.m. in Carter-Finley Sta
dium against a Tar Heel unit filled
with self-doubt and wonderment.
"Our backs are up against the
wall," UNC's senior cornerback
Derrick Donald said. "No matter who
we were playing, this would be our
biggest game.
The urgency in Donald's words was
put there because of the Tar Heels'
consecutive home losses to Auburn
and Wake Forest the past two weeks.
Both were games North Carolina
could have won. But the latter was
a game UNC should have won.
"We didn't have that fire in our
eyes, that aggressiveness that we had
in our other games," Donald said of
last Saturday's 22-14 loss to the
Deacons, who were a I2-point under
dog to UNC. "It all comes down to
deep-down desire, and what's beating
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down within you."
Head coach Dick Crum, along with
many other members of the UNC
program, cited a belief that the
previous week's 20-10 loss to sixth
ranked Auburn was so disappointing,
so emotionally debilitating that UNC
was "flat" against Wake Forest.
Whatever the case, the Tar Heels are
at a crossroads.
"We can do one of two things,"
Donald said earlier in the week.
"Either we can sit and mope about
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it (the Wake loss) and feel sorry for
ourselves, or we can get back up on
the horse."
Whether or not UNC is able to do
that will depend greatly on the
Wolfpack, which suddenly caught fire
when quarterback Shane Montgo
mery was benched in favor of redshirt
freshman Preston Poag for the
Maryland game.
"Obviously, the big difference
between the way State is playing now
and the way it played earlier in the
year," Crum said, Mis the confidence
the players seem to have in Preston
Poag."
After an embarrassing season
opening loss to East Carolina, coach
Dick Sheridan's team was shut out
by Pittsburgh and held to three points
by Wake Forest in its next two games.
But Poag, an option magician who
doesn't have a bad arm either, stepped
forward to ignite State's dormant
offense.
The Wolfpack exploded for 42
points against the Terrapins before
ringing up 27 more against the Yellow
Jackets. After an off week last
Saturday, State is well-rested and
Game
Starting
UNC Offense
SE 32 Eric Lewis, Sr.
LT 71 Dan-ell Hamilton, Jr.
LG 60 Steve Steinbacher, Jr.
C 55 Jeff Garnica, Jr.
RG 51 Pat Crowley, So.
RT 65 Creighton Incorminias, Jr.
TE 80 Daryl Parham, Sr.
QB 14 Mark Maye, Sr.
FB 40 James Thompson, Jr.
TB 43 Reggie Clark, Fr.
FL 23 Randy Marriott, Jr.
UNC Defense
OLB 45 Antonio Goss, Jr.
DE 76 Tim Goad, Sr.
NG 96 Carlton Bailey, Sr.
DE 93 Reuben Davis, Sr.
OLB 90 John Reed, So.
I LB 54 Brett Rudolph, Sr.
1LB 49 Mitch Wike, Jr.
CB 37 Derrick Donald, Sr.
SS4 Norris Davis, Sr.
FS 7 Dan Vooletich, So.
CB 26 Skeet Baldwin, So.
Michael DouglasCton Cloie
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certainly capable of handing UNC its
third loss in a row.
"We're going to have to really rise
to the occasion," Crum said. "A lot
of our players have a lot of soul
searching to do. It's a matter of how
bad do they want to get the job done?"
Adding to the difficulty of the task
for UNC is the Tar Heels' zany
backfield situation. True freshman
Reggie Clark will become the fourth
man in seven games to start at
tailback for North Carolina. Torin
Dorn (ankle), Kennard Martin (sus
pension) and Clarence Carter (ankle)
are all unavailable, while last week's
starter Eric Starr is questionable with
a deep thigh bruise.
"I never thought we would have
to start a game this season with a
true freshman at tailback," UNC
offensive coordinator Randy Walker
said. "But it's just the hand we've been
dealt. There's a lot at stake out there
in the pot. We've got to find a way
to make it work, even if we hr e to
bluff our way through it." -
Another loss Saturday and it may
be time for Crum and Company to
fold 'em.
Day
Lineups
N.C. State Offense
SE 8 Danny Peebles, Jr.
LT 76 Lance Hammond, So.
LG 62 Lenny Schultz, Sr.
C 55 Chuck Massaro, Jr.
RG 65 John Inman, Sr.
RT 73 Joey Page, Sr.
TE 81 Bobby Harrell, Jr.
QB 14 Preston Poag, Fr.
FB 41 Mai Crite, Jr.
TB 44 Bobby Crumpler, Sr.
FL 1 Mack Jones, Sr.
N.C. State Defense
OLB 97 Scott Wilson, Sr.
LT 93 Ray Agnew, So.
NG 96 Kent Winstead, Sr.
RT 91 Derrick Debnam, So.
OLB 53 Mark Smith, Sr.
I LB 49 Ray Frost, Fr.
I LB 88 Clayton Henry, Fr.
CB 24 Izel Jenkins, Sr.
SS 42 Chris Johnson, Sr.
FS 32 Michael Brooks, Jr.
CB 21 Joe Johnson, Fr.
DJH Picks of the Week
Those thunderous cheers you may
have heard on campus last Saturday
night weren't for the Producers, the
Voltage Brothers or those gutty little
Demon Deacons from Wake Forest.
No, that deafening din was reserved
for one of our very own defending
champion Mike (That's it! Here I
come! This is for real now!)
Berardino.
After five straight disappointing
weeks, BerMarino finally broke out
of his football funk to gun down his
trio of competitors. Most impressive
were his upset picks of Michigan
State over Michigan and, in a shocker
James Mike Patton Chris
Surowiecki Berardino McDowell Spencer
Games (43-14-2)746 (38-l9-2).661 (41-16-2)712 (38-19-2).661
UNC at N.C. State UNC NCSU UNC UNC
Duke at Clemson Clem. Clem. Clem. Clem.
Auburn at Georgia Tech Aub. Aub. Aub. Aub.
Maryland at Wake Forest Md Wake Wake Wake
Virginia at South Carolina USC USC USC USC
Tennessee at Alabama Tena Ala Ala Tena
Iowa at Michigan Mich. Mich. Mich. Iowa
Nebraska at Oklahoma State Neb. Neb. Neb. Neb.
Oregon at UCLA UCLA UCLA UCLA UCLA
Penn State at Syracuse PSU SU PSU PSU
NFL strike ends as
iMiion orders return
From Associated Press reports
NEW YORK The 24-day NFL
strike fell apart Thursday when the
union ordered its members back to
work without agreement on a new
contract. One key management offi
cial said the end came too late for
the strikers to play and get paid this
week.
"The union sent everyone back to
work, player representative Keith
Fahnhorst of the San Francisco 49ers
told The Associated Press.
William Judson, player rep of the
Miami Dolphins, also said he had
been told the strike had ended.
"We are going back in without an
agreement," Judson said. "We are
hoping the Dolphins take us back in."
But Tex Schramm, president of the
Dallas Cowboys and a member of the
NFL management council, said the
union waited too long.
"They're too late. The deadline was
Wednesday," Schramm said. "We've
made that clear to them all along.
Nothing was settled between the
union and the management council
on ah agreement to send the players
back to work. Union leader Gene
Upshaw and management negotiator
Jack Donlan talked by telephone but
Martin-suspended;
drags a possibility
By MIKE BERARDINO
Assistant Sports Editor
Kennard Martin, a redshirt
freshman tailback on the North
Carolina football team, has been
suspended indefinitely by coach
Dick Crum for "disciplinary
reasons."
According to the Durham
Morning Herald's Thursday edi
tion, "Sources close to the team
said the Tar Heels were given an
unannounced drug test Sunday
and that Martin did not pass. The
sources were unsure of the type
of drug involved."
Martin, a 5-10, 203-pound
native of Winston-Salem, would
have been the Tar Heels' second
string tailback behind freshman
Reggie Clark this Saturday against
N.C. State. His suspension further
depletes a UNC tailback corps
already weakened by injuries to
Torin Dorn, Eric Starr and Clar
ence Carter.
In addition to keeping him out
of games, Martin's suspension
prohibits him from practicing with
the team. Martin could not be
reached for comment Thursday.
"Anytime you suspend some
body there's a pretty good degree
of seriousness to it," Crum told
the Herald.
Crum would not, however,
confirm or deny if Martin had
been suspended for failing a drug
test.
Before this academic year,
North Carolina changed its drug
testing policy from mandatory to
voluntary. According to the
Tons and tons of fun for
non-revenue sports fans
By LANGSTON WERTZ
Staff Writer
Yet another weekend is here.
However, this one will be stranger
than most as the larger portion of
the Tar Heel faithful will return to
their hometowns (and the homes of
not even Beano Cook could have
foreseen, Purdue over Illinois.
Despite the performance, our
fearless hero is still tied for the cellar
with Chris (Vlad!) Spencer, who also
has 38 wins this year. Second place
is manned by Patton (Ghostpicking
Roommate) McDowell, who myste
riously registers all his picks by phone
and announces each game aloud, as
if waiting for advice from someone
who really knows football.
Oh, yes. We almost forgot. Our
leader, by a two-game margin, is
James (Vienna Sausage Head) Suro
wiecki. Good for him.
were still stuck on one point, how
long to extend the 1982 contract.
But Schramm said even if there was
an agreement, the players couldn't
play this week.
Meanwhile, players all over the
league rushed back to camp, includ
ing the entire teams from Buffalo,
Atlanta, Cleveland, Kansas City,
Seattle, Washington, New Orleans,
Indianapolis, Philadelphia, Denver
and the Los Angeles Rams.
But the Redskins and the Browns
left after meeting with their coaches.
Meanwhile, in Seattle, where a
convoy of about 25 cars carrying
regular players arrived at 10:25 a.m.
PDT, a bus carrying replacement
players was turned back from team
headquarters. "We're fired, we're
fired," players shouted from the bus.
Reaction from around the league
Was mixed.
"I dont know about the rest of
them, but I'm ready," said Dolphins
quarterback Dan Marino, a member
of the union's executive council.
"It's really caving in," said Dave
Puzzuoli of the Browns, who had 16
players report before Wednesday's
deadline. "I feel betrayed. With
friends like this, who needs enemies."
LiVi I HUT, rl mi i mMwS5-v',n,-Wa mil 1 1 rrmmYrMirfTJ
Kennard Martin
Herald's source, most of the Tar
Heels signed releases before the
season allowing the school to
drug-test them periodically.
Martin started the season as
UNC's third-string tailback
behind Dorn and Starr. An ankle
injury to Dorn against Illinois gave
Martin considerable playing time
the next week at Oklahoma, and
Starr's ineffectiveness in that game
propelled Martin into the starting
lineup for the Georgia Tech game.
A pulled hamstring forced Mar
tin out of the Tech game in the
second quarter and he missed the
Tar Heels' next two contests
before returning to rush for 14
yards on four carries last Saturday
against Wake Forest.
other school colors) to enjoy fall
break.
But alas, friends, not all Tar Heels
have the chance to visit Mom and
Dad this weekend. Many UNC
athletes instead must take to the fields
and the courts to partake in the
jubilant exultation of emotion that
men call sport. '
Anson Dorrance's 18th-ranked
men's soccer, team has a 2 p.m. date
Saturday on Fetzer Field with the
Terrapins of Maryland. The top
ranked women, who were held to a
scoreless tie by underdog William and
Mary Wednesday, figure to be on the
warpath when N.C. Wesleyan visits
Saturday and Alabama comes in
Sunday.
Betsy Gillespie, a senior midfielder
who paces the Tar Heels in goals this
season with 12, will lead the field
hockey team into Evanston, 111., for
three rugged games. From Friday to
Sunday, the Tar Heels will meet
Northwestern, Purdue and Northern
Illinois.
The men's and women's cross
country teams will travel to Virginia
for an invitational meet against 50
teams from around the country. The
men's race will begin at 10:30 a.m.
on Saturday, and UNC will be led
by junior Mike McGowan and senior
Reggie Harris.
The women, led by senior Vicki
Verinder, will take off on a 5,000
meter course at 1 1:30 a.m.
Coach Peggy Bradley-Doppes and
the women's volleyball team will try
to rebound from their loss to Duke
at home on Tuesday, a defeat the
coach called her most disappointing
ever. Hoping to change Bradley
Doppes' mind-set, the netters will
travel to Floyd-drenched Florida for
the Oct. 16-17 South Florida
Invitational.
The Tar Heels play Tulane and
Southwest Texas State on Friday,
and South Florida on Saturday. Then
1 on Sunday, UNC meets Central
Florida in a non-tournament event.
Yes, there's another busy weekend
slate for UNC, and more than enough
excitement for the faithful Tar Heel
to shake a stick at.
Fenner's trial
moved back
From Associated Press reports
The murder trial of former Uni
versity of North Carolina football
star Derrick Fenner has been post
poned until Dec. 7 at the prosecu
tion's request.
"I needed more time to pursue
some new information from one of
the witnesses," prosecutor Mary
Scherstrom said Tuesday by tele
phone from Maryland. "One of my
investigators is working on that now."
Ms. Scherstrom declined to com
ment on the witness or the new
information. She said about 25
people are under subpoena to testify
for the prosecution, none of them
from North Carolina, where Fenner
attended UNC.
Judge Jacob Levin of Prince
George's County Circuit Court
approved the postponement at a pre
trial hearing. The trial originally was
set to begin Oct. 26.
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