6The Daily Tar Heel Tuesday, February 28, 1989
Sports ::;
SeoiDOTS go out Sim style a
UNC routs-Mt
By DOUG HOOGERVORST
Staff Writer
"It might be. It could be. It is!"
Harry (Carey) normally refers to
a Chicago Cubs home run with these ,
immortal words but he would have
uttered them following the North
Carolina women's basketball game
Monday night.
And Carey's famous phrase would
have called desereved attention to
UNC's rout over Mount St. Mary's
of Md., 116-92. The win halted the
Tar Heels' 14-game losing streak
before they enter the ACC tourna
ment Saturday in Fayetteville.
For the year, UNC owns a 10-19
record, while Mt. St. Mary's fell to
17-8.
On senior night, North Carolina
center Merlaine Oden came through
with the best game of her career,
posting game and career highs of 31
points and 16 rebounds on an incred
ible 14-of-16 shooting. UNC senior
Jenny Yopp also played tremend
ously, dishing out a career-best and
game-high 6 assists without turning
the ball over.
Oden was all smiles coming out of
the locker room after the game.
"It feels good to w in," she said. "I'm
real excited about it because it's a
definite confidence builder going into
the ACC. 1 knew this was my last
game here and 1 wanted to go out
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7:00 930
with a win."
The Tar Heels controlled most of
the first half and entered the locker
room up by nine, 51-42. However,
the game was not out of reach,
especially with the three-point touch
of the Mountaineers, who hit 13 treys
in the game.
UNC delivered a stunning blow to
Mt. St. Mary's before the second half
began.
Mountaineer's coach Bill Sheahan
earned a technical foul as the teams
exited to their locker rooms following
the first half, and North Carolina was
awarded a pair of free throws and
the ball to start the second half.
Freshman LeAnn Kennedy, who
added a career-high 23 points, hit
both foul shots and Liza Donnell
nailed a 15-foot jumper to give UNC
a 13-point lead, 55-42, before Mt. St.
Mary's touched the ball.
The teams remained content to
trade baskets and remain in a 13 to
15 point Tar Heel lead until 13
minutes remained. From there, North
Carolina went on a 10-2 run to gain
a 19-point edge, 82-61.
Oden hit a jumpshot from the
elbow with the shot clock expiring
to start the spurt. Kennedy added a
pair of foul shots and Sheri Anderson
sank an open eight-footer before the
Mountaineer's Tracy Bradson hit a
pretty 16-foot pull-up jumper.
Oden responded with a bucket off
an offensive rebound and Tanya
Mary's
Lamb finished the run, hitting a tough
sliding shot from eight feet.
Mt. St. Mary's couldn't recover
from the wide 19-point UNC advan
tage despite their three-point touch
because of excellent Tar Heel
marksmanship.
U NC shot 59 percent from the floor
(48 of 81) and 82 percent from the
foul line (18 of 22), two places that
they have struggled this season.
"We took the same shots tonight
as we did against Wake Forest and
Duke but they fell tonight," Hatchell
said. "I think if we look to the future
its real important. We're the under
dog going in against Maryland
(UNC's first round opponent) but
they know how they can play."
Hatchell credited the high point
total to the team's staunch defense
in the man-to-man full-court
pressure.
"We played up and down the floor
and played a lot of players," Hatchell
said. "The harder we play on defense,
the better we are offensively. I felt
if you get your defense going you get
offense going and I felt that we
weren't tight enough early on."
Of North Carolina's first 20 points,
Oden netted 10 of them, all inside
on rebounds or good post moves.
"It seems when I have fun I play
better, and I had fun," Oden said.
Hopefully for the Tar Heels, Oden
will be having fun next Saturday
against Maryland.
On Tap
Today
BASEBALL at UNC-Wilmington,
Wilmington, N.O, 300 pm
LACROSSE vs. Penn State, Fetzer Field,
7:00 pm
Wed., March 1
BASEBALL at East Carolina, Greenville,
N.C, 3:00 p.m.
MEN'S BASKETBALL at Georgia Tech,
Atlanta, Ga, &00 p.m.
Thurs., March 2
MEN'S FENCING ACC
Championships at Raleigh, N.C, 5:00
pm
Fit, March 3
MEN'S AND WOMEN'S SWIMMING at
Tar Heel Invitational II, Koury Natatorium,
300 pm
WRESTLING ACC Tournament
College Park, Md, All day
BASEBALL vs. Seton Hall, Boshamer
Stadium, 300 pm
MEN'S GOLF at ImperiaLakes Classic
Lakeland, Fla, All day
Sat, March 4
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL ACC
Tournament Fayetteville, N.C, TBA
DTH Top 20
AP Top 20
1. Arizona (8) 289 1. Arizona (54) 22-3 1,305
2. Georgetown (4) 284 2. Georgetown (5) 22-3 1,219
a Indiana (2) 248 a Indiana 23-5 1,122
4. Oklahoma 241 4. Oklahoma 24-4 1083
5. N.Carolina 233 5. North Carolina 24-5 1052
& Syracuse 225 6. Syracuse (1) 23-5 990
7. Missouri (1) 220 7. Missouri 23-6 941
a Illinois 191 a Illinois 23-4 846
9. Duke 182 9. Duke (1) 21-5 825
10, Michigan 170 10. Michigan 21-6 676
11. Iowa 144 11. Iowa 21-6 590
12 Louisville 132 12. Seton Hall 23-5 588
13. Seton Hall 112 ia Stanford 23-5 511
14. Stanford . 94 14. Louisville 19-7 496
15. West Virginia 78 15. West Virginia 23-3 373
ia Florida State 74 16. Florida State 19-6 223
17. Mary's, Calif. 45 17. St Mary's, Calif. 24-3 184
18. N.C. State 37 ia UNLV 20-7 176
19. UNLV 34 . 19. Ball State 23-2 138
20. LSU 21 20. N.C. State 18-7 125
Others receiving votes: Ball State 14,
Evansvilie 13, Ga. Tech 9, Ohio State 6,
Virginia 6, La Salle 4, Memphis State 3,
Minnesota 3, Loyola-Marymount 2.
Connecticut 2, Wisconsin 2, Arkansas 1, New
Mexico 1, South Carolina 1, Sigma Chi B 1,
Jean Lutes 1, John Tower 1, Kevin Schwartz
1.
Others receiving votes: Louisiana State 122,
Memphis State 65, La Salle 51, Evansvilie 44,
Florida 3a Georgia Tech 27, Texas-El Pasp
a Georgia Southern 7, Pittsburgh 6, Texas
6, Kansas State 5, Ark.-Little Rock 4,'
Providence 4, Temple 4, Arkansas 3,"
Wisconsin a Boise State 2. Oregon State 2,
Minnesota!.
Netteirs ease by NSttaimy ILioims;-
K
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Women's Basketball
Wednesday's gam
UNC 11 S. Mt St Mary's 92
UNC Anderson 3-6 2-2 8, L Kennedy 8-12 7-8
23, Johnson 2-8 1 -3 6. Bradley 6-1 2 1 -1 1 3, K Kennedy
3-4 0-0 6, M. Oden 14-16 3-4 31. Lamb 4-6 0-0 9.
Yopp 2-4 0-0 4. Donnel 3-7 2-2 8. Gaftn 3-6. 2-2
a Chasten 0-0 0-0 a Totals 48-81 18-22116
Mt St Mary's Edwards 10-18 2-2 27. Balakonis
5-13 6-6 18, RhocK 4-9 6-7 14, McNutty 3-6 0-1 7,
Bradson 7-17 0-0 1ft Tart 2-3 1-2 5, Owens 1-1 0
0 Z Matoy 0-0 0-0 a Znk 0-0 0-0 a Swaftord 0
0 0-0 tt Totals 32-67 15-18 92
Haiflime Scots UNC 51-42. Three-point goals
UNC 2-5 (Lamb 1-2. Johnson 1-Z L Kennedy 0-1).
Ml St Mary's 13-28 (Edwards 5-10, Balakonis 2-4,
Rhock 0-2, McNutty 1-Z Bradson 5-10). Turnovers
UNC 1Z Ml St Mary's 14. Rebounds UNC 46 (M.
Oden 16), Ml St Mary's 29 (Bradson 7). Assists
UNC 17 (Yopp 6), Mt St Mary's 16 (Rhock 6).
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By DAVID J. KUPSTAS
Staff Writer
One thing that has always bothered
Penn State tennis coach Holmes
Cathrall is that his team usually plays
well against UNC but always comes
up a little short.
This was not a problem for
Cathrall Monday, however.
His Nittany Lions opened up with
a doubles win, but the Tar Heels
surrendered only one set after that
as they rolled to an 8-1 win. The Heels
improved their record to 4-2, while
Penn State fell to 1-2.
"I think in spots we played a little
better today," said UNC coach Allen
Morris, who wasn't satisfied with the
Tar Heels' 8-1 win over Elon on
Sunday. "I was a little disappointed
with our No. 3 doubles team, but
they're a team we're experimenting
with. They played well yesterday."
The third-seeded doubles team of
freshmen Joe Frierson and Chris
Mumford hung tough in the first set,
eventually losing in a tiebreaker.
Penn State's Jamie Savitch and Brad
Fielding took control in the next set,
though, and won 7-6, 6-3.
The match was held indoors at the
Chapel Hill Tennis Center because of
the rain. The athletic department
didn't even know if courts were
available until Monday morning.
. The tennis .team played second
fiddle to club members with reserva
tions and had only two courts for the
match's first hour.
Play began with doubles matches,
of which UNC took two out of three.
The Tar Heels' top-seeded team of
David Pollack and Don Johnson
handled Dave Welch and David
.Schoenly, 6-0, 7-6, while UNC's
Jimmy Weilbaecher and, Andre
Janasik handed Tim Hughes and
Scott Pickering their first loss, 6-3,
6-2.
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Feb. 27-Feb. 28
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Mar. l-Mar. 3
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Ordering your class ring this week gives you a
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In singles action, top-seeded Pol
lack upped his record to 4-2 by
beating Welch 6-4, 62. Number two,
Don Johnson, struggled with the
volatile Savitch before finally putting
him away 6-3, 3-6, 6-2.
"Don Johnson is not playing well,"
Morris said. "He's just having a bad
spurt." Johnson currently sits at 4
2, but Morris still doesn't think he
is playing up to his potential.
Thomas Tanner (5-1) bested
Schoenly 6-3, 6-4 in the no. 3 singles
match. Number six Janasik trounced
Jerod Ford 6-2, 6-0 to remain
saten. Fifth-seeded Weilbaecher
(3-2) defeated Hughes' 6-3, 6-1, and
no. 4 Bryan Jones beat Fielding 6
4, 6-2 to push his singles mark to 5
1. Considering he's won his last two
matches by 8-1 scores, Morris is a
hard man to please.
"These guys have got to start
playing better," he said. "I do not
think we have reached our potential.
I think we can play a lot better."
One thing that may have been
gnawing at Morris was the fact that
two of Penn State's best players were
in University Park, Pa., for this
match. Freshman Barry Wads worth,'
the number-one seed, left the team;
for personal reasons, and second-'
seeded Mark Cavalier is out of action
because of a broken finger. In
addition, two of Cathrall's other
players are ineligible.
Next year will be Penn State's year,'
or so says Cathrall. His strong
recruiting class is expected to bump
most of the current top six out.
"WeVe always beaten Penn State,
but they're always very scrappy,"
Morris said. "Even though the score
was 8-1, there were some pretty good
sets."
The Tar Heels have never lost to
the Nittany Lions in their 17
meetings.
UNC gets another shot at proving :
themselves at home for Morris next ;
Tuesday against William and Mary. ;
Then its off to California over spring ;
break for six contests. ;
"Well know a lot more about our ;
team when we get back from Cali-j
fornia," Morris said, adding that the-,
ladder should be fairly well solidified ;
after the trip. j
Basketball player of the
year finalists name
i
From Staff and Wire reports
Oklahoma teammates Stacey King
and Mookie Blaylock and LSU
freshman guard Chris Jackson were
among the 10 finalists announced
Monday for The AP college basket
ball player of the year award.
Stanford's Todd Lichti, Indiana's
Jay Edwards and Syracuse's Sher
man Douglas join Blaylock and
Jackson as the guards eligible for the
honor, which will be announced
Friday, March 31 at the Final Four, i
King was joined by forwards!
Danny Ferry of Duke, Sean Elliott;
of Arizona, Pervis Ellison of Louis-1
ville and Glen Rice of Michigan, f !
Lax Game Changed . .;
The North Carolina men's lacrosse;
game against Penn State, originally ;
scheduled for 3 p.m. today, will
instead be played at 7 p.m. today
under the lights at Navy Field (the
AstroTurf facility.)
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