SPOIRTg n xW t -v V .0 UNC shortstop Ron Maurer dives back Into third after a missed ueoimDS nysft mosses nopset Match with USG comes down By ERIC WAGNON Sat Writer The enthusiastic, partisan crowd at the UNC Tennis Center on Sunday could smell upset in the air, but the Tar Heel men's team just missed grabbing it. The eighth-ranked South Carolina Gamecocks withstood a strong UNC comeback for a 5-4 win. I think this is the best crowd the most vocal crowd that weVe had out here in a good while," UNC coach Allen Morris said. "This is Carolina tennis tradition. This is the way it used to be and the way we'd like to see it get back to." The decision came down to the final set of the number one doubles match between UNC's team of Don Johnson and David Pollack and South Carolina's team of Stephane Simian and Johan Karlen. North Carolina needed to sweep the three doubles matches to win after falling behind 4-2 in the singles. Morris pulled his team together after the singles play for a pep talk. I told them we were playing the eighth-ranked team in the country, and we could win all three doubles," Morris said. "I didn't want them to be disappointed at being down. I wanted them to forget . about the singles." The team responded well as the number two and three Tar Heel doubles teams managed straight-set victories to set up the dramatic finish. In the number one doubles match, South Carolina won the first set 7 6 (7-3) in a tiebreaker. Johnson and Pollack, however, inspired by the Brower, By NATALIE SEKICKY Staff Writer The USC-Spartanburg Rifles came to Chapel Hill Sunday, and someone forgot to pack the ammunition. It probably wouldn't have mat tered anyway, because the UNC softball team took the guns right out of their hands. The Tar Heels swept a twin bill from the Rifles, blanking them 6-0 and 10-0. North Carolina's record improved to 26-13. USC's pitching was no match for North Carolina bats as the Tar Heels banged out a total of 18 hits against three USC pitchers. The Rifles could manage only eight singles against UNC hurlers Tracy Brower (17-6) and Regina Finn (9-7). Brower chalked up her seventh shutout, Finn her fifth. In the first game, UNC scored the only run they needed in the bottom of the first. Theresa Buscemi led off with a walk, moved to second on Vicki Parrott's sacrifice bunt, and scored when the Tar Heels' leading hitter, Tracey Narwid (.291), singled to right field. Narwid took second when USC rightfielder Mary Jones threw home in an effort to cut down Buscemi. When Jones' throw sailed over catcher Tracey Long's head to the backstop, Narwid advanced to third. From there, all Narwid needed was a long sacrifice fly to left from cleanup hitter Michelle Rupp to make it 2-0UNC. itfS X? .. ..JA,. V- 1 N O 4 s v David Pollack crowd and the UNC doubles wins on the two neighboring courts, breezed through the second set 6-1, winning six straight after losing the opening game of the set. Johnson and Pollack fell behind in the final set 5-1 but rebounded to bring the score to 5 4. With Simian serving, South Carol ina won the game to capture the win. "Simian is just a great player," Pollack said. "He's got a great serve, and he's returning pretty well, so he carried the team." Simian, of D'Ozon, France, defeated Johnson 6-1,6-1 in the number two singles. Simian entered the match as the ninth-ranked singles player in the country and half of the fourth- and 21st-ranked dou Finn blank Spartaobyre in The second inning brought a USC pitching change and four more runs for the Tar Heels. Jenny Reed, who was 4 for 6 on the day with two triples, singled to center. Brower singled to left, and Maggie Moline walked to load the bases. A wild throw to the plate by USC shortstop Monica Henderson on Buscemi's ground ball allowed Reed and Brower to score and prompted USC coach Mark Cooke to bring in pitcher Laura Vinciguerra. The change did nothing to slow the Tar Heel attack. As in the first inning, Buscemi, Parrott, Narwid and Rupp combined to push runs across the plate for UNC. Three of Vinciguerra's first five pitches to Parrott made it to the backstop. Moline was thrown out attempting to score on the second wild pitch, but Buscemi was success ful on the third, and UNC led 5-0. Parrott eventually walked and moved to second on Narwid's sacfri fice fly to center. Rupp then smacked a line single to center, and Parrott, with an evasive head-first slide, beat a strong throw to the plate from Dana Brasfield to round out North Carol ina's scoring in the opener. Head Coach Donna Papa credited the Tar Heels' patience at the plate for their success against the USC pitching staff. "I think our hitters had really good discipline at the plate," Papa said. "They were selective, so it didn't really matter who the pitcher was." Brower was virtually untouchable Monday 14The Daily Tar Heel come w ,i?L - r squeeze play. The Tar Heels went bles teams with teammates Steve Longley and Ken Diller, respectively. Diller, who has suffered from a troublesome back injury, was orig inally scheduled to play with Simian on Sunday. After losing to Pollack 6-2, 6-4 at number one singles, however, USC's coaches decided to let Karlen play in his place, due to Diller's injury. At the number one singles slot, against Diller, ranked 65th nationally, Pollack, ranked 69th, started strong, winning three of the first four games. "In the last couple matches I started to come in more be a little more aggressive and I'm playing well," Pollack said. "He's had some chronic back problems, so I think they we're just trying to rest him (in the doubles). I don't think it affected him in the singles, though." UNC freshman Bryan Jones, of Kings Mountain, N.C., lost a close three-set match against Steve Lon gley, 6-3, 4-6, 7-5. Jones' number three singles match was the last singles match to finish, so the crowd, knowing that a Longley win would give the Gamecocks a 4-2 lead, helped inspire Jones to fight back from a 5-3 deficit in the final set. After Jones knotted the score at 5-5, Longley, ranked 21st nationally, broke Jones' serve and won his serve on a 3-3 no ad point to win 7-5. "The crowd almost helped pull us through this match," Morris said. "Particularly down here with Bryan (Jones), the crowd was behind him, and he got pumped up." Unlike Jones' match, teammate throughout the contest. She scattered four singles over seven innings' work, piling up seven strikeouts and allow ing three walks. Her control of the strike zone and ability to get USC hitters to swing repeatedly at her riser, which starts out in the strike zone and quickly rises out of it as it crosses the plate, left the Rifles' hitters confused and eight of their base runners stranded. On the season, Brower has an ERA of 1.13, has struck out 87 and has allowed 57 walks. She has 20 com plete games in 22 starts. The second game featured more of the same from both teams. In their first at bat, the Tar Heels produced three runs against Vinciguerra. Buscemi beat out a grounder to short for an infield hit, and once again Parrott sacrificed her to second. Narwid was out at first on a chop to third baseman Aneisa Bittner, and Buscemi advanced to third. A wild pitch by Vinciguerra put Carolina in the scoring column. Rupp singled to left, and senior Tracey Beine followed suit. With two out and runners on first and second, Gina Elmore, who was 3-3 in the second game, lofted a drive over USC left fielder Wendy Merchant's head for a double. After one inning, North Carolina led 3-0. In the third inning, UNC sent 11 battters to the plate and erupted for five runs. Narwid walked, took See SOFTBALL page 8 Monday, April 17, 1989 O jP U U p y- DTH David Surowiecki on to win, 7-6, in 11 innings. chamice to final set Andre Janasik's match went just two sets, but it may have been no less grueling. Janasik lost 6-1, 7-6 (7-3) to Karlen. Karlen played almost entirely from the baseline, making for some very long rallies. Janasik was up 5-3, serving for the second set,, when Karlen won the next two games to tie the score at 5-5. The players each won their service games to force the tiebreaker. In the tiebreaker, Karlen won four straight points after the tiebreaker score had been tied at" three to win the set and match. In the number five singles position, sophomore Thomas Tanner, of Rocky Mount, N.C., picked up North Carolina's second singles win, 6-2, 4 6, 6-3, over Lou Gloria. UNC's Jimmy Weilbaecher, a senior out of Asheville, almost forced a third set against Dave Herman, but lost in the second set tiebreaker to fall 64, 7-6. In the crucial number two doubles match, Janasik and Weilbacher defeated Longley and Rich Lynch, 7 5, 6-1. Jones and Joe Frierson picked up another Tar Heel doubles victory at the number three slot, winning 7 5, 6-3 over Gloria and Erick Sydour. With the loss, the Tar Heels dropped to 15-8 on the season. Looking toward the ACC tourna ment, scheduled for April 21-23 at Clemson, the South Carolina match gave the team some valuable expe rience against quality competition. "It was a real dogfight," Morris said. "I'm disappointed we didnt win, but going into the ACC, this has to give us confidence." WW 4 First baseman Jena Houttekier ( V U JtfJ 1 . ' t ::---:--:-:"v-: -jr . Y 4 Murray sets UNC field record, page 8 Levis leads rebirth as Tar Heels take two from Pack By DAVE GLENN Sports Editor It seemed ironic that the UNC baseball team would get a brand new scoreboard at Boshamer Stadium in 1989. After all, neither the Tar Heels nor their opponents had been scoring a whole lot of runs in the present campaign. Zeros had become almost fashionable. But Sunday, with the N.C. State Wolfpack as their guests, the Tar Heels lit up the new scoreboard to the tune of 13 runs and 20 hits, sweeping a doubleheader from the hard-hitting State squad. The Tar Heels upped their record to 22-10 with the victory and sport a 10-2 ACC record, second only to Clemson's 10-1 in the conference. The Wolfpack dropped to 24-12-2, 7-7 in ACC competition. In game one, the Tar Heels opponent on the hill was Wolfpack starting pitcher Preston Poag, who doubles as one of State's starting quarterbacks on the football team. Considering the events to come, the Tar Heels might have had Poag thinking about becoming a one-sport man. But not baseball. Poag learned that when you throw a baseball, it often comes flying back at you at tremendous speeds. The Tar Heels proved that point time after time. With the Tar Heels trailing 4-1 in the fifth inning, second baseman Dave Arendas got the Tar Heels rolling with a one-out single to center. After Darren Villani grounded out short to first, Jesse Levis came up big once again for UNC. The junior backstop, batting lead off for the first time in his UNC career, smashed an 0-1 Poag fastball over the 336-foot sign down the right field line for a two-run blast, his fourth home run of the year. Levis, who was hitting .364 entering Sun day's action, was 5 for 8 on the afternoon with a double and four RBIs to go with the homer. The Tar Heels' next batter, senior center fielder Tom Nevin, continued his emergence from an early-season slump with a follow-up shot to left center field. Nevin's solo shot seemed to carry forever, finally landing just beyond the outstretched glove of State left fielder Steve Shingledecker to bring the Tar Heels even at 4-4. UNC coach Mike Roberts said that was the turning point. "We got the back-to-back home runs, and that put us right back in the ball game," he said. The Tar Heels' three-run fourth inning gave UNC starter Michael Hoog another no-decision, his fourth consecutive start without a win or a loss. softtbaDi x,- stretches to complete a double offensive UNC reliever Jim Dougherty took the mound for the Tar Heels in the sixth inning, as Roberts went to his ace to hold off the Pack in this game scheduled for seven innings as part one of the twinbill. But Dougherty promptly coughed up a two-run homer to State first baseman Steve Shepard, who annih ilated UNC pitchers all afternoon Shepard, who finished the day with three homers, a double, three runs scored and five RBIs, smashed a Dougherty fastball over the 352-foot mark in right-center field to give the Pack the lead at 6-4. "We just couldnt get Shepard out all day," Roberts acknowledged. But Tar Heel pitchers Dougherty, Brad Woodall and Rich Fernandez got everyone else out and watched as the Tar Heels mounted yet another comeback. Nevin, who had four hits on the day, led off the UNC sixth with one of his two doubles to start the ralty After a Mark Kingston walk and a Ryan Howison sacrifice bunt, Ron Maurer was hit by a pitch to load the bases. Arendas played the clean up role well, lining a two-run double off the base of the left field fence, scoring Nevin and Kingston to tie the game at six. After a scoreless seventh, the Tar Heels survived a scare in the extra frames when the Pack rallied in the ninth against Woodall, who entered the game an inning earlier. Right fielder Chris Woodfin led things off with a double to left field. Then, the Tar Heels dug deep into their bag of tricks to save the day. With " Woodall straying from the mound, Woodfin casually stepped off of second base, only to find Arendas with ball in glove tagging him for the first out of the inning. It was the old hidden ball trick, one that UNC has used four times this year in the late innings of close games. Sunday, it made the difference. "The hidden ball trick has been real good to us," Roberts said. "If Wood fin stays out there (at second), we probably lose the ball game." After a double (which would have brought home the go-ahead run) and a walk, Roberts went to Fernandez. The sophomore from Philadelphia got two fly outs to put an end to the State rally. The new scoreboard entertained one of the season's larger crowds until the 1 1th inning, when Nevin took the spotlight. Nevin led off with a double to left off State reliever Brian Bark, who took the loss. Then, with Woo dall bunting, Nevin strayed off second but beat Bark's throw back to the bag. Woodall was safe at first. On a similar See BASEBALL page 9 sweep . v. - DTHTom Clark play in Sunday's doubleheader ' ' 'ill " ' $