8The Daily Tar Heel Wednesday, October 12, 1988
Sports
Seniors lead the way as field
hockey deals Duke first I
By NEIL AMATO
Staff Writer
The second-ranked North Carolina
field hockey team ripped previously
unbeaten Duke 3-0 in its last regular
season home game in which senior
players received special recognition.
The victory upped UNC's record
to 11-1 and dropped No! 18 Duke
to 7-1-2.
North Carolina got on the board
eight minutes into the contest when
Julie Blaisse tallied her 12th goal of
the season on a smash to the right
of Blue Devil goalkeeper Lori Stark.
The goal was assisted by Leslie Lyness
and Jennifer Anderson. For the
senior co-captain Anderson, it was
her 34th career assist, which put her
four away from the school record.
Minutes later, the Tar Heels missed
a chance to add to their lead.
Following an unsuccessful UNC
penalty corner, Peggy Anthon missed
a tip-in from a cross by Kathy Staley.
Anthon did eventually capitalize
on a scoring opportunity with 10:49
remaining in the first half. The St.
Louis native dribbled towards the net
and stuffed the ball in past a lunging
Stark.
North Carolina's final score came
with 6:13 left in the second half from
one of the Tar Heels' eight penalty
corners. Blaisse received the ball from
Anderson and Lyness and poked it
back to senior co-captain Tracey
VARSITY
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The Blue-White Game on Oct. 29,
Immediately following the UNO-Maryland game
UNC vs. Marathon Oil
on Tuesday evening, Nov. 1 at 7:30 pm
UNC vs. the powerful, Olympic star
studded USSR National team
on Nov. 12, immediately following the UNC-VA
football game
HOW TO GET YOUR TICKETS:
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BLOCK SEATING AVAILABLE:
Student groups of 50 or more are wel
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Ticket Office with the group's athletic
passes for block seating.
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Yurgin. The Ail-American back
passed the ball to the left side to
sophomore Laurel Hershey. Hershey
blasted a shot to the far post and past
the bewildered Stark.
Although North Carolina domi
nated the final statistics, outshooting
Duke 31-9 and giving up just two
penalty corners, the Blue Devils
certainly had their chances to score.
Duke had the first chance to get
on the board with an early first-half
penalty corner. Sophomore Jann
Garbutt hit the ball to senior Kelly
Kopack who sent a pass through the
goal area that seemed headed for a
Blue Devil stick. But no one could
get to the ball and it rolled out of
bounds.
Ten minutes into the game, Duke
gave North Carolina 'keeper Evelien
Spee her toughest test of the match.
Senior Donna . Zavada penetrated
deep into the UNC end and forced
Spee to come out of the net. Spee -came
sliding out to deflect Zavada's
missile and then knocked the rebound
out of danger.
The Tar Heels could have easily
added to their 2-0 first-half bulge
when, with three seconds remaining,
Hershey launched a shot from 30
yards out. The shot was on goal, but
Stark was there to alertly stick the
ball out of bounds as the horn
sounded.
To start the second period, Blaisse
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stole an errant Blue Devil pass and
sped goalward. She dropped the ball
off to Hershey, whose shot was saved
by Stark. The deflection came to
Lyness, but the junior from Paoli,
Pa., sent the ball wide.
Duke's only second-half penalty
corner was wasted when sophomore
Allison Miazga whiffed and the ball
was cleared by the North Carolina
defense. The Blue Devils would only
have one more legitimate scoring
chance. ,
Duke frosh Tricia Gaudette got
around the UNC defense and fired
toward Spee. The Hummelstown,
Pa., native's rocket was on line, but
Spee lunged to her right to clear the
ball away.
The most exciting play of the
second half went for naught when
Stark saved a shot by Staley. The
junior from Endicott, N.Y., made a
full-field dash, duping several Duke
defenders. But she couldn't get
around Stark, who gloved Staley's
shot and sent it over the endline.
The win, North Carolina's 11th
shutout, was a special one for the
seniors. Tracey Houk, Yurgin,
Blaisse, Sharon Ross, Anderson and
Michelle Russell were each given
roses while their field hockey accomp
lishments were read during pre-game
introductions.
"We've all worked together for four
years," Russell said of her fellow
seniors. "We know what each other
is going to do before we do it."
. "I'm glad we could win tonight for
them," Anthon said of her older
teammates. "They're great friends of
mine and I'm really going to miss
them next year."
"They all played very well," coach
Karen Shelton noted. "I was glad they
all got to play the whole game. They
went out in grand fashion."
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UNC's Laurel Hershey works
tatistics,
Brown's state-of-teainm address
By MIKE BERARDINO
SSportsEdtor
"Statistics are for losers. " Scotty
Bowman
What the legendary hockey coach
has to do with college football and
North Carolina's quest for its first
victory of 1988 is not clear. But the
biting truth of the great mentor's
words flashed to mind midway
through UNC football coach Mack
Brown's weekly press conference.
For a good 10 minutes Tuesday,
Brown took the assembled press
corps by the hand and led them
through a list of statistical informa
tion culled from the first five Tar Heel
games losses all.
The one-page handout featured
nifty little categories with headings
like "Quarterbacks WeVe Faced" and
"Offensive Improvement." The
numbers below the headings were
intended to reflect two things:
1) UNC has faced some downright
nasty opponents this season, and
2) The Tar Heel offense, under the
direction of Jonathan Hall, is on the
right track.
Upon closer inspection, the page
full o' stats tells us the following:
1) North Carolina's helpless
defense has enabled passers from
Todd Ellis to Jay Gruden to Reggie
Slack to Mike Elkins to enjoy
relaxing, ultra-successful outings of
Corie
Mets into a
seventh game
From staff reports
, LOS ANGELES Kevin McRey
nolds went 4-forU, including a 2-run
home run, and David Cone pitched
a five-hitter to help the New York
vMets beat the Los Angeles Dodgers
5-1 Tuesday night to force a seventh
and deciding game in the National
League Championship Series to be
held in Los Angeles.
The Mets will send Ron Darling,
who won Game 3 in New York, to
the mound against Dodgers' ace Orel
.' Hershiser tonight at 8.
Cone, who was knocked out early
in Game 2, was masterful against the
Dodgers, at one point retiring 12
batters in a row until giving up back-to-back
singles with two outs in the
ninth inning. But Cone got pinch
hitter Mike Davis to fly out to
McReynolds in left to preserve the
victory.
pitches
Glassotf led Ad veirfea oig
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stat-padding, and
2) UNC's offense, expected to be
a team strength in the pre-season, has
gone from bad to worse to better, then
back to bad before finally approach-
ing respectability last Saturday in a
42-24 loss to Wake Forest.
But enough about numbers. Brown
also entertained the media gathering
with his admirable wit; admirable in
light of his team's horrible start,
which is tied with the 1967 team for
the worst getaway in school history.
The much-repeated truism about a
struggling man laughing to hold back
the tears seems applicable to the Tar
Heels' first-year coach. Brown
resorted to humor on several occa
sions Tuesday. Such as:
When reminded that N.C. State
coach Dick Sheridan had heaped
praise upon the Tar Heels, State's
next opponent, at his Monday press
conference, Brown giggled and said,
"I'm really angry with Milo
McCarthy, our running backs coach.
He must have sent coach Sheridan
our films from last year. Or maybe
it was 1980, because this year we are
definitely not a dominant football
team."
B When the subject of Brown's
frequently used analogy ("If your wife ,
hits you in the face with a frying pan
every morning, then you're not going
to want to get out of bed") came up,
he responded in kind with more self
deprecation. "My nose has been broken five
times," he joked. "Dont print that;
I'm not in the greatest shape at
home."
As soon as the guffaws died down,
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DTHDavid Surowiecki
wet turf during Tuesday's victory
highlight
Brown ventured right back in with
another zinger.
"After the game Saturday night I
saw my eight-year-old daughter,"
Brown said. "She was wearing her
little Carolina jacket and she looked
up at me and said, 'Daddy, we're not
very good, are we?' She knows it, and
she's eight."
In between the math class and the
stana-up routine. Brown took time
to address the difficulty of keeping
his team and its followers from
getting discouraged.
"It's a tough time for our players,
but they have to learn from adver
sity," Brown said. "Players that are
losing learn great lessons in life.
"But the toughest thing is for the
fans, because their friends are making
fun of them," Brown said. "I hate it
for them. They want the coaches to
just do something, to fix it overnight.
But it doesn't happen that way." v
How does Brown, at 37, avoid
acquiring a touch of gray in his black
mop? The secret, of course, is his
attitude.
"If we were in our fourth year, I
would have a little bit different
demeanor up here," he said. "But in
our first year, there are so many
positives. I Ve been impressed with the
way these young guys have picked
their heads back up.
"The thing we told them today was,
'If you cant do it, that's fine. Go do
something else. But don't you stay
around this football team being
negative at all. "
Brown's last words to the press
were delivered with particular ear
nestness "Thanks for being
positive." '
AP Top 20
1. Miami, Fla (52) 4-0-0 1.115
ZUCLAfl) 5-0-0 1,051
a Southern Cal (3) . 5-0-0 1,012
4. Notre Dame . 4-0-0 932
5. Florida State 5-1-0 817
& West Virginia 5-0-0 811
7. Nebraska 5-1-0 747
a South Carolina 6-0-0 704
9. Oklahoma , 4-1-0 663
10. Oklahoma State 4-0-0 599
H.CIemson 4-1-0 564
12 Auburn 4-1-0 538
ia Georgia 5-1-0 452
14. Wyoming 6-0-0 323
15. Michigan 3-2-0 298
1& Washington 4-1-0 257
17. Arkansas ; 5-0-0 239
1a Indiana 4-0-1 147
19.LSU 3-2-0 130
2tt Florida 5-1-0 77
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TIJUANA FATS, 403 W. Rosemary St.
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