8The Daily Tar HeelMonday, March 14, 1988 Spools Scoreboard Men's Basketball ACC Tournament Friday UNC 83, Waka Forast 62 Waka Foraat Cartyte 4-14 2-2 12. Ivy 11-16 2- 3 24, Krttey 4-11 0-0 8, Boyd 3-13 2-2 10 Johnson 3-9 0-0 a White 0-0 0-0 0 CuBen 0-2 0-0 0 Ray 0-00-00 Wise 0-0 0-00 Sanders 0-10-0 0 Dickens 0-0 0-0 0 Totals 25-66 6-7 62 UNC Rend 9-13 3-4 21, Williams 7-13 4-6 20, Lebo 3-5 0-0 a Bucknal 4-8 2-2 10 Madden 2-5 1-4 5, Smrth 4-8 2-2 13, Chilcutt 1-2 0-0 Z Rtoe 1-1 2-2 4, Fox 0-1 0-0 0 Denny 0-1 0-1 0 Hyatt 0-10-0 0 May 0-0 0-0 0 Bstun 0-0 0-0 0, Jenkins 0-0 0-0 0 Totals 31-58 14-21 83. Halftme Score; UNC 39-28 Three-point goals Wake 6-22 (Cartyte 2-8, Johnson 2-8 Boyd 2-6), UNC 7-12 (Smith 3-5. Lebo 2-3. WUhams 2-2. Madden 0 1). Turnovers Wake 14, UNC 9. Rebounds Wake 36 (vy. Cartyte 9). UNC 37 (Reid 11). Assists - Wake 17 (Cartyte, Boyd A UNC 18 (Lebo 8). Fouls Wake 14. UNC 10 A 16,500. Saturday UNC 74, Maryland 64 Maryland Massenburg 4-8 1-2 9, Lewis 5-10 3- 4 14. WMiams 5-11 4-4 14. Gaflin 2-8 0-0 & Archer 1 -5 3-4 6, McCoy 3-8 0-0 9, Hood 2-7 2-2 & Dickerson 0-3 0-0 0 Johnson 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 22-60 13-16 Five ACC teams land NCAA tourney bids From staff reports The NCAA took the five ACC teams that made the 64-team tour nament and scattered them around the nation Sunday, with North Carolina's placement one of the most interesting. The Tar Heels were shipped off to the West Regional, which is one of the toughest regions. There, in Salt Lake City, Utah, the ACC regular season champions will face North Texas State in the first round on Thursday. ACC champion Duke is the East Baal ''Take 200 Connor Chapel Hill. NCj From E. Franklin St. turn on Couch Rd. Menton Realty Hours: M-F9-6. Sat 10-5. Sun i M J A SUMMER f"s! at) ... 'a. -- a l 's l. Make the transition into the business world selling yellow page advertising lor your campus telephone directory or tor other campus directones nationwide Gain valuable expenence in sales, marketing, advertising, and public relations Earn an average ot :3100 in 11 weeks Train with 200 other college students working lor University Directones Sign Up For On-Campus Interviews By March 22nd UNC-CH Career Planning & Placement Center Slide Show Presentation March 23rd. 210 Haynes Half. 7 8 prn HUniversity Directories ife to Campus Your Own Apartment. Now You Can Afford It. University Lake 968-3983 Royal Park 967S939 ( MEN'S TENNIS vs. Oklahoma 64 UNC Raid 7-15 5-7 19, Williams 8-13 0-0 17. Lebo 2-5 0-0 6, Bucknal 3-6 1-2 9, Madden 4-8 1-3 10 Smrth 1-6 0-0 2. Chilcutt 0-10-0 0 Kce 3-3 3-4 9, Fox 1-2 0-0 2 Totals 29-59 10-16 74, Haltbme Score; UNC 35-29. Three-point goals Maryland 7-21 (McCoy 3-6, Gatlin 2-8. Archer 1-2. Lewis 1-2. Hood 0-Z Dickerson 0-1). UNC 6-13 (Lebo 2-4, BucknaN 2-3, Williams 1-1. Madden 1-1. Smith 0-4). Turnovers Maryland & UNC 9. Rebounds Maryland 33 (Massenburg. Williams 7X UNC 38 (Raid 14) Assists Maryland 16 (Archer 6) UNC 23 (Smith, Madden, Buckna 4) Fouls - Maryland 15, UNC 15, A 16,500. Sunday Duke 65, UNC 61 Duke Ferry 8-20 2-4 19, King 0-1 0-2 0 Brickey 1-4 5-6 7. Snyder 3-7 2-2 11, Strickland 4-8 2-2 11. Koubek 0-4 0-0 0 Abdelnaby 0-2 0-0 0 Smith 4-8 4- 5 12 Henderson 1-2 2-2 5. Cook 0-10-0 0 Buckley 0-0 0-0 O Totals 21 -57 17-23 65, UNC Raid 3-9 1-3 7. Williams 0-4 8-8 8, Lebo 5- 11 2-2 16 Buckna 2-5 0-0 4. Madden 4-9 4-4 13 Smith 2-7 1-2 7, Chilcutt 0-2 0-0 0 Rice 0-5 2-2 Z Fox 2-2 0-0 4, Totals 18-5418-22 61. HaKtme Score; Tied at 37-37. Three-point goals Duke 6-16 (Snyder 3-5, Ferry 1-4, Strickland 1-3. Henderson 1-1, Koubek 0-0) UNC 7-15 (Lebo 4-8, Smith 2-3 Madden 1-Z Rice 0-1. Williams 0-1) Turnovers Duke 18. UNC 20 Rebounds Duke 37 (Ferry 10) UNC 38 (Raid 10) Assists Duke 14 (Snyder 7) UNC 13 (Bucknal 4) Fouls Duke 22. UNC 21. A -16,500 Region's second seed and will take the court at the Smith Center vs. Boston University. Also in the East is fifth-seeded Georgia Tech, which faces Iowa State in the first round in Hartford, Conn. N.C. State is seeded third in the Midwest and faces Murray State in Lincoln, Neb. Surprising Maryland, which prob ably earned its bid by beating Georgia Tech in the first round of the ACC Tournament, is the seventh seed in the Southeast and will take on Cal Santa Barbara in Cincinnati. Advantage of our Oxford Club" At Sunstone. we cater to the professional. Whether you prize elegant interiors, social activities, recreational activities or a convenient location. Sunstone has it all. Call and ask about our flexible leasina incentives. 942-0481 In Chape! Hill 'At JOB BRIEF: EstesParfc I l ,1 Lr a W ih.1 tin L' if 967-M31 Wrapping From staff reports Those South Florida newspapers probably didn't carry many Tar Heel sports reports now, did they? You probably want to know what hap pened to the teams since last week, right? Well, even if you dont, here are the results: Wrestling The wrestling team's "drive for number five," its quest for a fifth straight ACC wrestling title, fell short this year. Seventh-ranked N.C. State had four ACC champions, all in the lower weights, to win its first team title since 1983. UNC's 74.5 points were second to State's 83.25, as the title could easily have gone to either team. Third-place finisher Maryland had 62 points, while Clemson got 46, Vir ginia 30.6, and Duke 10.5 Senior Ail-American Rob Koll led the Tar Heels, winning his third ACC title, this one by default as he injured Phil Brown of Maryland at the 2:49 mark. The default cost Koll the tournament MVP award, which went to State's Michael Stokes. Junior Glen Pazinko earned his first ACC title at 190 pounds, defeat ing Maryland's Mike Owens 4-2. Other finalists included Enzo Catullo at 134 pounds, Lenny Bern stein at 142, and Ben Oberly at 177. Those three wrestlers lost by a total of six points, and if any of them had won their matches, the final outcome could have been very different. Another key factor could have been the absence of UNC freshman Jay Landolfo, who injured his shoulder three weeks ago. Landolfo defeated the eventual champion, Tom Meetze of Clemson, handily in a dual meet earlier this season. Six wrestlers will now advance to the NCAA tournament, to be held March 17-19 in Ames, Iowa Koll, Pazinko, Catullo, Bernstein, Oberly, and John Welch, who finished third at 126 pounds. Women s Basketball Coach Sylvia Hatchell's crew finally ended a long and painful season, bowing out in the first round of last weekend's ACC tournament with a 61-58 loss to Wake Forest. UNC shot terribly, to say the least - 7-for-24 in the second half; 15-for- 45 for the game. The Tar Heels lost 16 of their last 20 games en route to a 10-17 record, their first losing season in 1 1 years. Wake Forest had never defeated Recapping By JAMES SUROWIECKI Senior Writer GREENSBORO North Caro lina's road to the ACC finals was paved with the bricks of its opponents this weekend, as the Tar Heels shut down the offenses of Wake Forest and Maryland, and dominated the paint en route to two easy victories. UNC began the tournament in convincing fashion, crushing the Demon Deacons 83-62 on Friday, behind the frontcourt excellence of J.R. Reid and Scott Williams. The sophomore tandem found the inside more than hospitable, and scored with ease against Wake's Ralph Kitley and Sam Ivy. Williams had 20 points and eight rebounds, and also nailed the first two three-pointers of his career. Reid, whose performances in the first two games offered no hint of his vanishing act Sunday, ravaged Wake at will for 21 points on 9-of-13 shooting, and also ripped down 11 boards. He had his two nicest moments of the tournament Friday, as in the first half he beat his man with a dribble and drained a 12-footer and later dropped in a baseline jumper from an impossible angle. The key to the game for UNC, though, was its defensive effort, particularly on the Wake perimeter players. The Tar Heels limited the Deacons to just 38-percent shooting from the field, and three-point threats David Carlyle and Cal Boyd were a combined 7-for-27, for just 22 points. Carlyle and Boyd had been the keys to Wake's upset of UNC earlier this year, but Friday they seemed allergic to nylon. The lone bright spot for Wake was Sam Ivy, whose 14 first-half points ACC shot for a 63-59 lead with just 1:25 left. "Ferry was the key man," Krzy zewski said. "He's a complete player and he needed to be. He made some passes, hit some shots. He really kept his composure. At the end, he didn't check out mentally. He got it and were fighting for American Heart vourufe . Association g y p a very UNC before winning all three meet ings this year. Track Senior Jim Farmer, sophomore Mia Pollard, and the women's mile relay team all snagged Ail-American honors at the NCAA championships in Oklahoma City this weekend. Farmer ran a stellar 3,000 meters, finishing in 7:56.82, not even a full stride behind first-place winner Joe Falcon of Arkansas, who ran a 7:56.8. Pollard took a fourth-place spot in the 800-meter run with a time of 2:09.86. The mile-relay team of Pollard, Jill Irizzary, Kendra Mackey, and Shelby Moorman ran a 3:43.9, the fourth fastest UNC time ever, and fifth at the NCAA meet. The women's team, in their best showing ever, finished tied for 18th in the nation, while the men finished in a tie for the 19th spot. Lacrosse Using Ohio Wesleyan and Washington College as home warm ups for fifth-ranked Syracuse, the third-ranked Tar Heels had no trouble with the first two, but the Orangemen were another matter. Washington went down 17-5 a week ago Saturday. Junior attack men John Szczypinski and Neill Redfern led the way for the Tar Heels, with Szczypinski throwing in five goals and Redfern adding three goals and two assists. The Tar Heels then downed Ohio Wesleyan 8-4 Wednesday as Ted Brown scored the first two goals of the game en route to a game-high three. But in the Carrier Dome Saturday night, the Tar Heels lost a 12-11 heartbreaker in overtime. Orange man Gary Gait's fifth goal was the biggest, as it came with 25 seconds left in the sudden-death period. For the Tar Heels, Tim Welsh scored four goals. UNC had led 10-7 in the third quarter, but Syracuse rallied to send the match into overtime by scoring four of the last five goals in regulation. The loss dropped the Tar Heels to 3-1 on the season. In three games between the two schools at the Dome, the Orangemen have won all three in sudden-death overtime. Baseball The Tar Heels enjoyed the cozy confines of Boshamer Stadium throughout the week-long layoff, UNC's route to the kept the Deacons within striking distance at intermission, when they trailed just 39-28. Ivy finished with 24 points and nine rebounds, and was consistently able to work for position, receive the ball and then convert the shots. "Sam's just a great player," Reid said. "He did an outstanding job of getting the ball and taking it strong to the basket." Ivy scored 12 of Wake's first 15 points, but then disappeared, as UNC embarked upon a 21-1 run, keyed by three Ranzino Smith three-pointers and six points from Steve Bucknall. When the wreckage had been cleared, UNC led 32-19, and the Tar Heels cast nary a glance backward. "We played well coming out of the blocks and then we ran into a cold spot," Wike coach Bob Staak said. "We got the open shots and didn't make them. I think we got a little frustrated." The final 20 minutes provided more of the same, as UNC main tained its defensive pressure on the outside shooters while still chilling the Deacons' inside attack. With 16:46 to go, Carlyle hit a three-pointer to cut the Tar Heel lead to nine, but UNC quickly exploded on a 17-8 run that sealed shut the Wake season. "On offense, we were looking to push the ball up the court," Reid said. "Our defensive intensity was good. It took us a while to adjust to their screens, but once we did that we were able to shut down their inside game." Saturday, one might have expected UNC to have a little more trouble with its opponent's big men, partic ularly after Maryland's 84-67 demo lition of Georgia Tech on Friday. went right back up." But Ferry's hoop didn't end the game. Kevin Madden hit two free throws at the 57-second mark after grabbing the rebound of his own missed shot. Up two, Duke took its time before going to Ferry, but as he went up for the shot, Scott busy Spring Break despite watching their record fall to 5-8. UNC began the break by facing Seton Hall in a three-game series at Boshamer Stadium Friday. The first game saw the Tar Heels lose a 7-6 squeaker, after Seton Hall scored four runs in the eighth inning. Freshman Kreg Gresham took the loss to drop to 1-1. A seven-run fourth inning sparked by Dave Arendas' two-run base hit led the Tar Heels to a 10-4 win Saturday. Jim Dougherty picked up the complete-game victory to move his record to 1-1. In the rubber game of the series on Sunday, the Tar Heels won 7-4. Ron Maurer's two-run homer in the fifth inning led a Tar Heel comeback that tied the game at four, and UNC pulled away in the sixth, scoring three runs, with Paul Warzocha's double leading the way. Sophomore Michael Hoog went the distance for the Tar Heels, improving to 2-1 on the year. But UNC had its win streak snapped at Boshamer Tuesday as Pace (N.Y.) College jumped out to a 4-0 lead and took advantage of five errors to slip past the Tar Heels, 5 4. William Espinal pitched a com plete game for Pace to pick up the win. Scott Lodgek (0-1) took the loss. For the Tar Heels, senior Chris DeFranco went 2-for-4 with one RBI. Thursday's matchup with South Carolina at Boshamer was rained out, but that didn't matter, as the Tar Heels kept busy with two games Friday. Rutgers won the first mat chup 5-1 after scoring three runs in the first inning off Hoog (2-2). Then the Tar Heels lost a tough one to Western Michigan, 5-4. Maurer went three-for-four with a homer and two RBIs. Chris Cornac chio took the loss, but he was only supported with four Tar Heel hits. Finally, UNC downed Rutgers 7 5 Sunday as the Tar Heels upped their record to 5-8 on the season. Dough erty went the distance for his second straight complete game, evening his record at 1-1 in the process, and Tom Nevin went 3-for-4 with two doubles on the afternoon. Softball After defeating Furman twice in a double-header at home, 4-0 and 3 2, UNC faced Florida State in Tallahassee, and lost both games of another double-header to drop to 5- Instead, the Tar Heels manhandled the Terrapins, quelling their potent inside play and defusing their guards' three-point shooting while cruising to a 74-64 win. Saturday was Reid's best game in a long time, as he scored 19 points and, more importantly, grabbed 14 rebounds. Though he was just 7-of-15 from the floor, he was a presence throughout the contest, and kept Maryland's Brian Williams and Derrick Lewis in foul trouble. The Terrapins refused to front Reid and deny him the ball, and the 6-foot-9 sophomore took full advantage, unveiling his full offensive repertoire. "For some reason, Maryland likes to play behind the post player," Reid said. "I love the defense like that, because it gives me the opportunity to do anything I want. I could give a quick ball fake and go either side, so I was trying to drop-step to the baseline and get a basket or a foul." The Tar Heels dominated the first half, and when Reid hit two free throws at the 3:43 mark, led 28-19. The Terrapins, though, responded with a short run, as Tony Massenburg and Lewis picked up garbage baskets inside and Keith Gatlin and Rudy Archer nailed three-pointers to cut the UNC lead to 35-29. Archer's trey, though, was the final bright spot for Maryland. Reid opened the second half with a 14-foot baseline jumper, and the Tar Heels raced from the gates, pushing the ball inside and choking off the Terrapin offense. Jeff Lebo, who had just six points and three assists against the Terps, sank a trey at the 13:15 mark to cap a 17-7 run and put UNC up 52-36. Maryland would get no closer than 10 until late in the game. Williams stripped him of the ball. King Rice picked up the loose ball and burst downcourt, with only Snyder back. But Rice somehow missed the layup and Duke's Kevin Strickland came away with the rebound. He threw the ball ahead to Robert Brickey for what should have been a game-ending slam, but Brickey somehow lost control of the ball and Snyder came away with it. He was fouled by Jeff Lebo and coolly drained both free throws for the win. "I thought that Robert was going to dunk it, and I was looking for a good seat," Snyder said about the final seconds. "I felt like I was going to make the free throws." Snyder was at the line late because Duke shut down Reid early, closing off the big man's inside game and 3 on the season. " ' They lost twice to 16th-ranked Central Michigan, 1-0 and 4-1, before moving on to the South Florida Invitational in Tampa. There, coach - Donna Papa's Tar Heels lost to host ' South Florida 2-0, to Florida State 2-1 and to 18th-ranked Louisiana Tech 3-0. On Saturday UNC got back on the : ' winning track, defeating Virginia (2- -' 0) and Temple (3-0), before once :: again losing to Eastern Michigan (4- " !) UNC's overall record now stands ' at 7-9. Men's Golf ' The Tar Heel golfers were in Lakeland, Fla., for the ImperiaLakes Classic, but maybe they spent too' ' much time on the beaches, as sug gested by their 19th-place finish in a 21 -team event. The top UNC finisher was Peter . Brennan, whose three-day total of 21 8 didn't even place him among the leaders. Georgia Tech led the team competition. On their trip back, the Tar Heels stopped in Columbia, S.C., for the Gamecock Intercollegiate. There, they finished second to host South Carolina, with Jim Sowerwine firing a second-place 217. Men's Tennis The Tar Heels aced Tulsa 7-2 a week ago Saturday at the HEB tournament in Corpus Christi, Texas, to up their record to 5-3 on the year. " ' John Bristow, Thomas Tanner, ; Andre Janasik, Rod McGeachy, , James Krege and Derek Wielbaecher all won singles events for UNC. Janasik and David Kessler picked up a doubles win, too. On Saturday, UNC thumped Rich mond 8-1 in Virginia. The top six Tar Heel seeds won, but the top-seeded doubles team of Don Johnson and Tanner lost the only match of the day. Gymnastics In their only action over Spring . Break, the Tar Heel twisters finished second at the Auburn invitational tri meet. Auburn's 182.3 points paced the teams, while UNC had 179.25 and West Virginia 175.4. Individually, the Tar Heels were;' led, as always, by Stacy Kaplan, who finished second in both the vault, with a 9.2, and the balance beam, with a. 9.4. Carrie Suto finished first in the -bars With a 9.5, and also grabbed third in the floor exercises. ACC final Where the Tar Heels had domi nated the boards in the first half, that second-half run was, as usual, keyed by defense. Maryland, at one point, scored just once in seven possessions, and finished the game shooting 37 percent from the field. Brian Willi ams, who looked magnificent against Tech, hit just five of 1 1 shots, and as the game progressed moved farther and farther away from the hoop. His shots changed from power moves to soft jumpers. "Brian just didn't have a good offensive game," Reid said. "We wanted to put the body to him and make him hit the jump shot." Williams, though, at least kept his head in the game. The same cannot be said for Lewis, who had just five points in the final 20 minutes. His disappearance, along with that of Massenburg, who had only two second-half points, put the scoring burden on the Terp guards, and they only responded when the game was out of reach. . Gatlin had sparked the win over Tech, but was 2-of-8 from the field Saturday, while Archer was a less-than-scintillating l-of-5. Only Teyon McCoy's trio of treys in the final five minutes . kept the final score reasonable. "We did an excellent job of boxing their big guys out," Lebo said by way of summary. "We got the ball inside to the people we wanted to and they hit some nice turnaround jumpers." And where North Carolina hit Friday and Saturday, its opponents missed, as the Tar Heels followed the basketball-bricked road right into Sunday's final. from page 1 frustrating him. What had been billed . players turned instead into a Danny Ferry promotion, as Ferry tho-. roughly outplayed Reid and did a (m1am4iI a yv W -v V i w afAncniAlir lata in the second half. Duke's emphasis on Reid in the . first half left the perimeter game open, ; and the Tar Heels took full advan- tage, hitting six treys, including three . by Lebo. That Reid was scoreless in '. the first 20 minutes and yet the score ' was tied at 37 at intermission was a I testament to UNC's guard play. " But when examination time came I for the offense, the Tar Heels failed. As Duke taught, they listened, and ' realized that in the face of another ACC Tournament defeat, there is still -much they have to learn. '