The Tar HeelThursday, June1 , .1.9891-3. Sports ,' Lax loses on Final Four to Blue Jays Hopkins' defense shuts down Tar Heels in 2nd half By JOHN BLAND Assistant Editor For one-half of the NCAA semifi nal game Saturday afternoon at Byrd Stadium in College Park, Md., the UNC lacrosse team looked like it was going to go to the NCAA champion ship game for the fourth time in the 1980s. Unfortunately for the Tar Heels, their opponents, the Johns Hopkins Blue Jays, had a different opinion on the matter. Playing one of the best defensive games of the season, the Blue Jays clamped down and effec tively held the Tar Heels to one second-half goal en route to a 10-6 vic tory. The loss ended UNC's season with a 13-5 record. At first it seemed as if the Tar Heels would achieve the revenge it was seeking after suffering a regular-season loss to Hopkins, 16-10, at Kenan Stadium. UNC started out strong and quick, winning the first face-off on a JHU procedure penalty. Thirty-five sec onds later sophomore attackman Dennis Goldstein worked an inside roll against the Blue Jays normally watertight crease defense for the first goal of the game. A minute and 15 seconds later senior attackman Neill Redfern upped the Tar Heel lead to two off of a Steve Huff assist UNC's defense dominated early in the first quarter, but JHU got on the board at the 10:42 mark on a long, rifling shot by Brian Lukacz. Goldstein then worked his way in side, again off the left post, and scored on a bounce shot from point-blank range to give the Tar Heels a 3-1 lead. Johns Hopkins closed the gap and at the end of the first quarter the Tar Heels had a tenuous 3-2 lead. The style of play that has unfortu nately characterized UNC's squad this year reared it's ugly head in the sec ond quarter. While the Tar Heels had been playing nearly flawless lacrosse in the first quarter, in the second they began to get sloppy. Johns Hopkins tightened its pres sure defense and began to play a smothering man-to-man game that knocked the Tar Heels off-stride. Add that to several dropped and errant passes and a lack of communication and the picture for the Tar Heels wasn't getting any brighter. This was most evident when UNC's senior goalie Pat Olmert took the ball past mid-field without having any help stay behind (to keep four men on the defensive half of the field), thus giv ing the ball to the Blue Jays on the ensuing offsides call. Olmert must have also raised Tar Heel head coach Willie Scroggs' blood pressure a couple of points by playing outside the crease. On a situ ation in which UNC defenseman Joe Breschi was out on a penalty and the Tar Heels were a man down, JHU attackman Jeff Ihm stole the ball from Olmert on an ambush of the goalie and scored on the undefended goal. That goal gave the Blue Jays a 4 3 lead. But at 3:38, Dennis Goldstein fed the ball to Chip Mayer, on the restraining line, and the junior mid die, possessor of the most powerful shot on the UNC squad, cranked up and fired. The goal tied the game. A little less than two minutes later, it was Mayer who fed to Goldstein to give the Tar Heels a 5-4 halftime lead. If anything, the Tar Heels were saved by the offensive flatness of Johns Hopkins in the first half. Nei ther team seemed able to break the other's tough defense. In the first meeting between these two teams, April 8 in Chapel Hill, the score was tied 5-5 at halftime. The Blue Jays then exploded for seven third-quarter goals while holding the yggtt mfmmmmmmm f m-ffammmmm gags mm &Xi. 4 ' LiiipQ(il(rtiiir.wJuvii-J.-'il'a':'' : fa 4 nm4fv KXVUSW 1 e sifWi :' ft" V' " 1 f T ji.ii-M:jtJfiJyyjjii:iijlCi--'"WiiTO I : :: , l. y V. A v.-.- A A4 '"i AX ft " " Trf :-:a;a;.xavv:.:.:a:. . a-. UNC's Neill Redfern (14) tries to get past JHU's Dave Pietramala (43) Tar HeelSarah Cagla" Tar Heels to only one. Lately, however, the third quarter had been the domain of the Tar Heels. Against Towson State in the first round and Loyola in the quarterfi nals, UNC had tightened up defen sively and opened up offensively. This day, however, would be a near-repeat of the April 8 meeting. "We tightened up our defense in the second half," said Hopkins head coach Don Zimmerman, a former assistant at UNC. Added All-American defenseman Dave Pietramala: "We adjusted our slides from the crease at halftime to shut down their offense." "Shut down" indeed. In the fate ful third quarter the Tar Heels got no goals on seven shots. Dennis Gold stein, who had been using his inside rolls to near-perfection in the first half, was cut off from the left post (and the right post and everywhere else) by the shifting Hopkins defense. At 10:21 of the quarter, Hopkins' attackman Matt Panetta, on a fast break feed from attackman John Dressel, faked out Olmert and tied the score at five. After five minutes of intense defensive play by both teams, the Blue Jays scored again on a Greg Kelly solo shot. Redfern tried to tie the score at six on a last-second shot from the restraining line that went right into JHU goalie Quint Kessenich's stick. The fourth quarter presented two different teams. "We got stronger and stronger as the game wore on," Zimmerman saidp "Those fourth-quarter legs are really great to have." f Scroggs, the Bob Knight of col4 lege lacrosse, painted a different pic-s ture of his team: "In the second half,? we started to get unglued a little bit and didn't play our solid defense." The Tar Heels seemed to get des perate at times, and this was evident in the four and a half penalty minutes attributed to them. In contrast, JHU was awarded only one penalty in the entire game, a one minute slash call on Pietramala in the second quarter. But in the fourth quarter it seemed like a convention of lumberjacks with all the hacking going on, on both See LACROSSE, page 15 WW o) l I f jiJUiaaUUv SWIM INSTRUCTORS Needed to teach at Foxcroft Apartments 9:30-11:15 & 5:30-7:00 M-Th and at the YMCA 1:30-5:00 M-Th & 11:00-12:00 TTH for wore information contact CHAPEL HSLL-CARRBORO YMCA 980 AIRPORT ROAD 942-5156 Cal&ib Our chefs arc better by degrees. SEAFOOD RESTAURANT The cookm 's timed in seconds. Lunch 11:30-2:00 Monday-Friday Dinner 5:00-9:00 Sunday-Thursday 5:00-10:00 Friday & Saturday Hyw. 54 at 1-40, Chapel HillDurham, 498096967-8227 Atlantic Ave. at Spring Forest Rd., Raleigh 790-1200