The Daily Tar HeelFriday, September 23, 19887
Sports
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UNC's Kathy Staley fends off two Iowa players in racing after the ball during Thursday's UNC win
Cross xounfiry to host ..meet
By MARK ANDERSON
Staff Writer
Tar Heel fans will get their only
chance to see the men's and women's
cross country teams run in a home
meet Saturday.
The gun will go off at 10 a.m. at
Finley Golf Course for an eight-team
field at the Tar Heel Invitational. The
competition includes Brevard, St.
Augustine, Old Dominion, Liberty,
UNC-Wilmington, William and
Mary and Campbell.
"These kids work very hard and
this is their only chance to run in front
of the student body," said UNC head
coach Dennis Craddock. "We would
appreciate all the support we could
Set. Finley is a flat, fast course which
.should make for an exciting race."
According to Craddock, both
teams should fare well. The men's
main challenge should come from
Brevard, a small school that concen
trates solely on distance running. The
women are also favored to win, but
Craddock expects the competition to
be heavy between teammates.
"We have a very close pack on the
women's team," he said, "and they
push each other well."
Craddock seems pleased with both
teams' performances so far. In their
only meet, the Wake Forest Invita
tional, the men placed third and the
women second. Individually, the men
were led by senior Mike McGowan
and junior Chuck Lotz, a surprise
second man after being projected as
third or fourth.
Sophomore Eric Hichman last
year's ACC individual runner-up
ran only a "fair" race by Craddock's
standards and looks to rebound
Saturday. Craddock also felt that the
three freshman runners, although not
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in the team's top se,n, handled the
competition well, and showed they
will be able to contribute down the
road.
The women were led by junior
Chryssa Nicholas and sophomore
Michelle Faherty, who "ran the best
cross-country race of her career,"
according to Craddock. "She didn't
over-race early, then held tough in
the middle and finished strong."
Freshman Kit Hoover and senior
walk-on Stacy Montford also ran
well, finishing in UNC's top five.
Both teams are proceeding on
shedule, Craddock feels. The wom
en's team has a strong pack of young
runners with diverse styles. They are
trying to rebound from last year's
finish in the ACC basement. Crad
dock attributes that to the lack of
experience, with four of the top six
runners being freshman.
"As sophomores, I'm trying to
prepare them better mentally for the
race," Craddock said. He feels the
team's depth will help in the long run,
by allowing the Tar Heels to adjust
to all types of courses and races.
Craddock is hoping to improve to
the upper division of the ACC this
year. N.C. State, Clemson and Wake
Forest are the top three teams, while
the Tar Heels will have to. beat
Georgia Tech to finish fourth.
As for the men, they have both the
experience and the front-runners.
Four of the Heels' top five runners
are 22 years old, providing a distinct
advantage for distance runners.
McGowan and Hichman are both
capable of running with the best. It
is this combination that Craddock
hopes will lead to joining Clemson
and N.C. State in ACC prominence.
"It will help us going in knowing
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we are one of the top three teams.
We can feel more secure and con
centrate on winning," the coach
explained.
North Carolina has just completed
its toughest week of practice to date,
with an increase in mileage and the
number of quality workouts. Both
teams have avoided injuries so far and
Craddock feels his runners are in
good spirits.
"Cross-country is a unique sport
in that everything builds up to one
day's performance. You have to plan
everything for the long run." said
Craddock.
This is not to say that the other
meets are unimportant, as coaches
use them for hard workouts and just
to gain race experience.
"You can practice all you want,"
the coach said, "but you need to learn
how to race."
Many coaches rest their best
runners by not letting them race until
the end of the season, but Craddock
does not subscribe to this theory.
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COME ON IN AFTER THE GAME!
By NEIL AMATO
Staff Writer
The North Carolina field hockey
team, ranked No. 1 nationally, passed
the first of their weekend tests,
upending seventh-ranked Iowa 2-0 at
AstroTurf Field Thursday evening.
UNC, now 5-0, must prepare for
games against second-ranked Old
Dominion on Saturday and defend
ing national champion Maryland
Sunday.
North Carolina tallied both its
goals late in an evenly-played first
half. With nearly 30 minutes gone in
the first stanza, Julie Blaisse put UNC
on the board with a smash off a
penalty corner. Blaisse, a junior from
The Netherlands, nailed a shot past
the Hawkeye defense after passes
from Kathy Staley and Leslie Lyness.
The Tar Heels' second score was
an unassisted goal by sophomore
Peggy Anthon. With under a minute
to go in the first half, freshman Cathy
Osmers penetrated the middle of the
Hawkeye defense, forcing Iowa
keeper Andrea Wieland to challenge
her. Osmers and Wieland collided,
and Anthon picked up the loose ball
The DTH Campus Calendar is a daily
listing of University-related activities
sponsored by academic departments,
student services and student organizations
officially recognized by the Division of
Student Affairs. To appear in Campus
Calendar, announcements must be submit
ted on the Campus Calendar form by
NOON one business day before the
announcement is to run. Saturday and
Sunday events are printed in Friday's
calendar and must be submitted on the
Wednesday before the announcement is
to run. Forms and a drop box are located
outside the DTH office, 104 Union. Items
of Interest lists ongoing events from the
same campus organizations and follows the
same deadline schedule as Campus
Calendar. Please use the same form.
Friday
12 p.m. University Career
Planning and
Placement Servi
ces will have a basic
informational meeting
for seniors and gradu
10 a.m.
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and fired it into the empty net.
The second half was all Iowa's,
with the Hawkeyes outshooting the
Tar Heels 17-2. Iowa also had six
penalty corners to UNC's none. Iowa
dominated every statistic except for
goals scored.
The Hawlceyes had. numerous
scoring chances but failed to capital
ize, thanks in large part to UNC
goalie Evelien Spee, who had 12
saves, all in the second half. Tar Heel
coach Karen Shelton said Spee was
tested more on Thursday night than
at any other time in her career.
"She handled all the shots taken,"
Shelton said. "In practice we get on
her a lot, but I have always known
that she's a game player. When the
game is on the line, she's at her best."
One of Spee's clutch saves came
midway through the second half
when Iowa's Kris Fillat outran the
UNC defense and crossed the ball into
an open middle. It looked as if
Hawkeye Cherie Freddie (Krueger)
would slam the ball into the net, but
Spee woke up in time to smother
Freddie's scoring bid.
Iowa's best chance to score came
Campus Calendar
ate students on how to
use the UCPPS office
in 210 Hanes.
3 p.m. Carolina Commit
tee on Central
America will have an
introductory meeting in
211 Union.
6 p.m. Baha'i Club will meet
in Frank Porter Gra
ham Lounge in the
Union, to be followed
at 7 p.m. by a fireside
discussion of great
changes in the world
today.
9 p.m. Union Cabaret will
have "The Roberto
Griffin Group," jazz
music from be-bop and
swing to fusion.
breakfast in the Stu
dent Common at
Chapel of the Cross.
Cost is $1.
9 p.m. Union Cabaret will
present "Gillespie &
Tolz" and "The Natty
Bohos Acoustic Gui
tar," playing rock, tra
ditional tunes, and
some originals thrown
in for fun.
Sunday
5:00 p.m. WXYC will air 3030,
a weekly sports call-in
talk show. This week's
guest is Anson Dor
rance, coach of UNC's
men's and women's
soccer teams.
6:30 p.m. Student Environ
mental Action
Coalition will have a
Saturday
Anglican Student
Fellowship will serve
ii fit A TV Tf A "EXTRA
11:30
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on a penalty corner with 1:10 remain-.,
ing in regulation. After Freddie put
the ball in play, Tina Parrott rippe,d
a shot high to the right post that..
looked to be a sure score. But Spe.e '
was there in time, deflecting the,
rocket with her glove.
Those and other scares left many '
wondering if the Tar Heels let down
in the second half with a two-goal.'
lead. .(
"I don't think our intensity was as
high as it shouldVe been in the second,
half," senior co-captain Tracey Yujv,'
gin said. "We need to play just "as,
hard when we have the lead as when,
we don't."
Speaking of her squad's second-'
half lapse, Shelton added, "We had
a two-goal lead and we let down a
little. We feel good about the game
overall, primarily the first half. Wer
weren't pleased with the second half.
It left a lot to be desired." - -
Spee attributed the second-haljn
letdown to UNC's upcoming games,.(
saying that after the Tar Heels got",
two scores, they started "thinking
about the weekend."
general meeting in V
Murphey 111. Guest
speaker Rob Cox will
discuss the effective-
ness of grassroots
organizations.
7:30 p.m. Carolina Campaign,
for Dukakis and - '
UNC Young Demo-;
crats invite you to (he '
Union TV room to . rj
watch the Presidential j
debate between ' .
Michael Dukakis and
George Bush. -'
Items of Interest
Carolina Union Gallery has.
wall sculpture in stainless steely
brass and aluminum by Lila Katzeri.
Union Cabaret needs singers,'
dancers, musicians and entertainers
for Talent Night. Applications are
available at the Union Desk.
LATE SHOWS CI
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