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October 17, 1985
Page B1
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The Wonsley Wa
Leroy Wonsley follows the b
Winston-Salem State's 12-7 wir
Prep Football
Carver edg
By DAVID BULLA
Chronicle Sports Edito* ^ i-nrTrr^
Since last Friday night's Metro
4-A clash between Carver and
North turned into a clnofpct it
was appropriate that the kicking
game played a major role in the
Yellow Jackets' 7-0 win.
Carver, with place-kicker
Richard Daniels still out with a
broken wrist, received good performances
from reserve kicker
Stephon Debnam and punter
Napoleon Cloud. As it happened,
both were involved in the game's
only scores.
Cloud, who also plays wide
receiver, was on the receiving end
of a Chris Hairston pass with
3:55 left in the half. Debnam, a
sophomore, added the PAT kick
and those points turned out to be
enough as Carver posted its fifth
shutout of the season.
Carver's defense, the stingiest
in the Piedmont, set up that
touchdown. Carlos Ashby intercepted
North quarterback
Alan Huskins and returned the
ball to the Viking 17-yard line.
After a pair of running plays,
Daniels scrambled and hit a wide
1 I ^ A ft ? A f
open cioua ior me u-yara i u.
How much of a slugfest was it?
E'S^ - >^ |Mm
wij^jwbbbbmpbbbbbbbhhhbb
Ricky Gilkes: The Wake Fc
rrative of the West Indies, p
probably out of the United St
James Parker).
w CSI
dV
4.
?
*"*^M
Y
lock of Leonardo Horn, right,
i over Howard University last S
\es North for
North outgained Carver 135-108
and had two more first downs
(10-8); the penalty yardage was
almost identical (Carver 154,
M/^r?h 1 CO "r?/4 ^ t*"
nuiui uj; anu vai ?ci iui iicu lllc
ball over four times and North
five times.
The intensity reached its peak
in one seven-play sequence of the
third quarter. There were three
Sports I
Wa
WW By DAVID B&l
Chronicle Sports I
found life in the
V ^ P The Wake F
Vieux Fort, St.
Wf Minn., when he
cess of adapting
JK such incongruo
Prince.
mgL -M Wk "They are vei
T a junior at Wal
WL ferent ways. It
American cultui
St. Lucia, o
tropical island
>rest junior, a agriculture and
ionders future, approaches to s<
ates (photo by differences betv
this country.
SPORT
? M SM
'^*m I
W ML CMfr
;': 3 vjfJ^K '^H
during the 5-foot-9, 195-poun<
aturday; carries (photo by Jam
turnovers and two major
penalties in those seven plays.
"It was close all the way down
the line/' North Coach Jim Addison
said. "He (Hairston) just
made that one big play.
"We've been hitting ^his way
ill season. We knew Carver had a
good football team and we approached
the game with that in
Erofile
ike's Gilkes d
.LA
Editor
native of a Caribbean island, has
United States to be a learning exorest
soccer player, a native of
Lucia, moved to Minneapolis,
was 14^There he began the proto
American life, which included
us diversions as basketball and
y different cultures," said Gilkes,
Ice Forest. "We do things in diftook
me a while to get used to
re."
>nce French, then British, is a
Its primary industries are
tourism. In a way, the different
occer there and here epitomize the
/een the tiny Caribbean land and
I
SWEEK
... Lliar
F* <_^l
^ jttmr - -
d fullback rushed for a game-high
es Parker).
^ppp* ^aJB ^H
Carver's Chris Hairston, at left,
Charles Baldwin gets ready to pi
mind."
' Addison said containing the
fleet Hairston was critical to
slowing down the Yellow Jackets'
offense.
"We contained him almost all .?
night," the first-year North
i_ j ni v. i t i .t
coacn saia. ne oniy oroKe me
containment twice, once for a
20-yard gain and the other time
liscovers Ame
"Back home **The: play socce
finesse," Gilkes said. "They play
aggressive like football.
"When I came to Minnesota, the
a little below what I was used to.
more people started playing, whi<
more knowledgeable coaches. So
play has steadily improved."
The differences extend to the spc
played other than soccer. In St. Luc
his alternative to soccer; here, he g
and track a try.
Yet, perhaps the inimitable pc
Prince, a Minneapolis native, offer
contrast to his native niltnr#?
"The first time I was introduce
really strange," Gilkes said. "But a
customed to American culture, he <
strange.
"He's a very good musician and 1
lot of people in Minneapolis. A whc
4
9
noun
coluri
HH College
Ram
|H Hov
Ml By DAVID BULL
Chronicle Sports E(
Bobby
touchdown on a
' m, game's end, but
I J^Pi? Winston-Salem S
win over Howard
"For some od<
downfall at this p
of last Saturday
Buve games. "The
sixth game of th
figure out if our t
from week to we<
Two years ago
teville State. Las
20-14.
44We proved s
Junior continued
way now. We ha
here. We survivec
week. We'll be r
Junior was or
Rams' lineup wit
7-6. Subbing for
effective passer,
22-yarder to Ma<
right into the hai
44Spanky" Johns
But Junior won
the next two Ram
102 yards on 21 pic product drove
PU
? ^y^t? M
Bfc
, searches for an opening in thi
it a fake on a Yellow Jacket defen
for the touchdown pass. He's
that kind of threat."
Cloud, who punted five times
for a 37-yard average, saved his
best kicks for last. With his team
protecting the 7-0 cushion, Cloud
kept North in unfavorable field
position. The junior booted a
45-yarder on the first play of the
fourth quarter and the Vikings
rica through
t with more cians come from N
harder here ? proud of what he'
Many of Prince
cVill u/oc nnrarv hlarV fa
vj r* * a IV v VI r? uo pvi MA J V/1UV IX I U
But more and Prince's lyrics maj
:h brought in Gilkes can partis
the quality of theme, for he is a
Minneapolis to liv
>rts Gilkes has two adopted childr
ia, cricket was a Vieux Fort hospi
ave basketball ed there, too. "W<
Gilkes has exc
>p music star America soccer \
ed the starkest High School, he a
meters at the state
:d, he seemed "Basically, I liki
is I became ac- also believed I wo
didn't seem so Wake Forest w;
tively recruited Gil
le influenced a Florida, Provide
)le lot of musi- Pie*
s
I
dups,
nns and profiles.
Football
is survive
>ard scare
.A
Jitor
had just scored the winning
i 14-yard run 40 seconds from
he was already analyzing why
tate executed so poorly in its 12-7
i University.
d reason, we always have a little
oint in the season," said the hero
night's win, the Rams' fourth in
i last couple of years, the fifth or
ie season we would be trying to
earn is good enough to keep going
?k."
, there was a 13-13 tie at Fayett
year, WSSU edged the Broncos
omething to ourselves tonight,"
. "We feel like we can go all the
d to get through this point right
I and now we got Fayetteville next
tady to go."
i the spot when he entered the
h 10:22 left and his team behind
Dana Walker, who had been an in
Junior completed his first toss, a
iha Paul. But his next pass went
ids of Howard free safety Willie
on.
ldn't let the error unravel him. On
possessions, the Charlotte OlymWSSU
into scoring position. The
3ase see page B5
M I
b North defense; the Vikings'
der (photos by James Parkef).
took over on their own 35-yard
line.
His next punt sailed 51 yards
and put North, 3-3, at its own 11
with 7:12 remaining. Halfback
Dwight Glenn raced 21 yards on
first down, but that was the last
Viking first down of the night.
Til take a win anyway I can
Please see page B15
soccer
linnesota now P#?onl#? arp
s accomplished."
's lyrics deal with the contemmily
in America. Although
r be too intense for many of us,
illy identify with the artist's
foster child, having moved to
e with a pediatrician, who had
en. His natural parents work at
tal. His foster parent had workc
go a long way back," he said,
elled as an athlete. An allMayer
at Minneapolis' Brock
Jso was a runner-up in the 100
track meet.
e soccer better," said Gilkes. "I
uldn't get too far in track."
is one of four schools that ackes.
He chose WFU over South
nee and Wisconsin-Parkside
ase see page B4
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