®l?p Sailg ®ar Hppl ■a M- *M| ' I:. gO #* :!l iIPp \M| V jt||| 1 S|| , pL | ißpj^^T^BP^r g ".. % xV I yHK > |I!!S <%&£ I OTHf^k^ : pMH v DTH/CHRJSGAYDOSH UNC sophomore Lori Gear goes to the basket against an N.C. State player Sunday. Gear scored 14 points on 4-of-9 shooting in UNC’s 88-86 loss. MEN'S BASKETBALL FROM PAGE 12 second half,” Smith said. “What really hurt us was Deane’s drives to the basket with the shot clock running down.” In the end, the Cavs were a far cry from their 1 l-for-38 showing in the first half. “Its pretty amazing that we could win this basketball game as poorly as we played at the offensive end in die first half,” UVa. head coach Jeff Jones said. “We really scrapped defensively in the first half. But as happy as I was about all that, we were pretty bad offensively.” My, how things can change. The Cavs ihot 18 of 28 in the second half, including 1 7-for-10 performance from behind the arc UNC vs. Virginia Score Box North Carolina 32 39 7! Virginia 24 49 73 " W ' ''' UNC (71) *9 ft A iwim im Calabria 36 3-8 1-1 14 4 3 8 Stackhouse 37 4-16 3-6 "6-9 1 4 13 .Wallace 30 8-11 5-7 3-12 1 4 23 sMtfnnis 37 8-13 06 0-1 6 4 16 D. Williams 36 4-11 00 1-2 4 1 11 Lwikkar 3 0-1 00 00 0 0 0 h*van 10 0-2 00 1-2 0 0 0 andiy 11 OO 00 1-2 0 1 0 Doth 0+ 00 00 0-1 0 0 0 •DIALS 200 2002 9-14 1436 15 17 71 ’wcaatasM - FG .452. FT .643. point goats - M 7. .353 (0. Wffiams 3-7, Stackhouse 2-3. Calabria 4. Mclnois 0-t Strilivan 0-1). Team rebounds -3. ' locked Shots - 7 (Wallace 6, Calabria) amovers - B (Stackhouse 4. Wallace l Calabria, dfoan) Steals - 2 (Stackhouse. WaSace). Wa.(73) St! ft rb In me at a pf tp 1 3-14 2-5 6-11 0 1 8 5 53 0-2 4-12 3 4 10 J 2-2 OO 4-7 0 4 4 1 30 3-3 2-5 6 3 10 1 11-13 2-3 1-3 5 3 28 3 4-15 00 0-2 1 1 11 0-2 00 1-1 0 1 0 1-3 00 1-1 0 1 2 f OO OO OO 0 0 0 M 2066 7-13 1942 14 18 73 - FG .439. FT .538.3pemt goals - we 4-5, Stories 3-11, Robinson V3, earn rebounds - 0. Blocked Shots 4, Deane, Stapies, Wi&fordj. 1 (Deane 5, Robinson, Staples). Steals fs-none Attendant*-8,357. : IpfflM !■ r>Tnn H I II L/ W Country Cooking |U JL/I1 U /'STUDENT BPECIAIN ft If mm *" ( this month only! )If I. ( I 'Serving Breakfast 6f Biscuits: Serving Lunch and Dinner: !l| Bam-11: 30am Mon-Fri Bam-3pm & 4pm-1 Opm ii\v || Sat Bam-10pm, Sun Bam-9pm j ||) 1 j Put A Little South In Your Mouth! /11 ||| 40S W. Rosemary St. • 942-5837 ~'Wl I' teraEigOßmaiiMlll PI rlfill Pfl ■ annual physicals for l laiuicu women and men Parenthood. ■ infection checks We understand ■ birth control VOUf needs. ® menopause services _ . ■ HIV testing and Two clinics to serve you: counseling call for an appointment: B cancer screeni 93 S. Elliott Road, Chapel Hill U confidentiality 286-2872 ® affordable fees 820 Broad Street, Durham ■ female clinicians (Spanned Parenthood” ||9^of Orange and Durham Counties, Inc. to finish at 44 percent from the floor. “Virginia—they're known forshooting like that, they’re streaky shooters,” UNC’s Rasheed Wallace said. “One person would hit it, then another one, and another one and another one.” Despite the 17-point turnaround, the Tar Heels still had a shot in the end, thanks to Wallace scoring 16 of his team-high 23 in the second half. Virginia’s front line was helpless in the paint against the 6-foot-10 sophomore. "Rasheed Wallace was excellent,” Smith said. “We came out the second half and thoroughly emphasized getting the ball inside to him whenever possible.” The strategy paid off. Virginia slowly started to cool off and Wallace caught fire, but UVa.’s Junior Burroughs free throws pushed the score to 71-66. “They played well. We competed and didn’t give up there in the end, ” Stackhouse said. “We had an opportunity to win it, but the ball bounced their way and didn’t bounce ours.” “DEANE FROM PAGE 12 had just nine points, his team was down by 10, and his coach thought he was being bothered by UNC’s Jeff Mclnnis. “He didn’t start the second half off very well,” Cavalier coach Jeff Jones said. “He turned it over a couple of times, had his head down. Mclnnis made a couple shots and got in Harold’s face. Harold got into a little bit of a one-on-one battle. I tried to put a stop to that very quickly. From that point on, Harold Deane was great.” Deane was not just great, he was great at therightmoments. With UVa. down 48-41 seven minutes into the half, Deane started the run that would decide the game. “They trap a lot, and they like to send two guys at you, and sometimes I really think it’s a gimmick defense to try to get you to speed up,” Deane said. “But if you handle the ball well and look for the open guys out there, it’s easy to score against.” Deane made everything look easy in the second half, but he still had business to tend to after Jerry Stackhouse’s layup tied the score with 16 seconds left. Did he want the ball? “Definitely. Any time,” Deane said. “Even ifl’m 0-for-12 and the game’s on the line, I want the ball, because I feel that I can make something happen.” Kreul’s Trey, Gibson’s Points Lead Wolfpack on Senior Day BYROBBIPICKERAL ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR RALEIGH—Sunday was Senior Day, and no one at Reynolds Coliseum could forget it. The light show announced it. Two overtimes extended it. And the teams and fans will remember it In front of a crowd of 6,749, four N.C. State seniors played their last regular sea son games in Raleigh. Two forward Quicha Floyd and center Sarah McLeod earned their only starts of the season and combined to average more minutes than their reserve roles usually allow. The others —guard Tammy Gibson and forward Kolleen Kreul—led all scor ers and hit an improbable shot to force overtime, respectively, to lead the Wolfpack to an 88-86 double-overtime win over No. 11 North Carolina. “It feels great because people always say ‘Oh, youcan’tbeat Carolina,”’ Gibson said. “But now we’ve beat them, and it feels great because they’re cocky and ev erything, and now we’ve beat a cocky, great team.” “We can go out in the street now, ” N.C. State coach Kay Yow said. Thanks, first, to Kreul. With 12.2 seconds left in regulation, the native of Coral Spring, Fla., committed her fourth personal foul to put UNC’s > - ft ' , *^i>ftGß^''^“£ r< |i| 9*• j&k T j t J * K^Bl-''' Jfm . j |R R W # | ;i^^B|||||B'. i # jj j 'slj? ■' •f^?v' 1 I|||j|| ■<,.' ;' ■ llllflfl ifgjiii v ■ x " ,^JBpjfe ar .< DTH/lUSTIN WILLIAMS North Carolina senior Donald Williams (21) looks to make a pass around Virginia's Jamal Robinson. Williams made 3-of-7 3 pointers on the afternoon. "Where will you Surfing the cable channels in my Granville Towers room! Spaces Filling Quickly For /J*\ Fall & Summer 1995! University Square JHSL 929-7143 ife# N.C. State senior KOLIfEN KREUL hit a trey with 3.1 seconds remaining to force overtime. Tonya Cooper on the line and eventu ally give the Tar Heels a three-point lead. No worry for the 6-foot-l senior. With 3.1 seconds left on the clock, Kreul threw up a desperation leaner in which her feet scraped just outside the 3-point line. Bank. Swoosh. Onlythe second trey of her career, and it forced overtime number one. “By no means was that the play, ” Kreul said. Yow said, “That was a better play than I could have drawn it.” Next, enter Gibson. By the time Kreul hit the 3-point prayer, the 5-8 native of Hartsville, S.C., had al ready scored 23 points. In the overtime periods, Gibson added nine of the team’s 16points. Her final stats? Thirty-two points, 12boards, six assists and 50 minutes played. “I think Senior Day was a factor, not just for us but for our underclassmen they told us that they were going to do it for us,” Kreul said. “It had a factor, there is no doubt. It gives you a lot of momentum and a lot of adrenalin, knowing that this is or could be your last game in Reynolds Coli seum.” But it might not be. Sunday’s win gives State a legitimate shot at an NCAA berth it’s first since the 1990-91 season. “To this point, any team in the ACC that has ever gotten nine wins ’ — nine conference wins—has gone to the tourna ment,” Yowsaid. “Todaywegotourninth conference win.” State’s Senior Day also drew the largest crowd this year and fourth-largest ever for a women’s basketball game in Reynolds Coliseum. But the Tar Heels said it wasn’t intimidating. “If anything, I think we tried to generate that emotion towards ourselves,” UNC point guard Marion Jones said. “We’ve played in front of big crowds before, and we’ve been successful. I don’t think that played any part in the game at all.” UNC head coach Sylvia Hatchell said: “I love playing here and at Duke. I love playingboth places. I love the atmosphere. I love that it’s close. It doesn’t bother me at all ... they’re tough over here, just like we’re tough in Carmichael. So I enjoy the games here and over at Cameron.” Yow said Sunday’s win was State’s most significant game since 1991. But Kreul said it was even more important to the seniors. She said, “I’ll think about this and re member this for the rest of my life because it is my last game, and it makes it more special that it was against Carolina.” Viflanova Tops No. 1 UConn THE ASSOCIATED PRESS STORRS, Conn. The cheer started in the last few rows of the upper comer of Gampel Pavilion. “Over-rated, over-rated,” became the rallying cry of the small group ofVillanova fans who had made the trip to Storrs on Saturday and it was aimed at top-ranked Connecticut. The sellout crowd of 8,241 cleared out quickly and quietly after the 15th-ranked Wildcats’ 96-73 victory in the the Huskies' first home game as a No. 1 team. The loss ended Connecticut’s tun at becoming the first Big East team to ever go undefeated in conference play. It stopped the Huskies’ league-record 18-game win ning streak and brought to an end their 27- game winning streak at home. It appears the first visit to the top of the poll for the Huskies (20-2, 13-1) will last only one week. The Big East race, which was all but signed, sealed and delivered to the Huskies with the anticipation of a three-game lead with four to play, is again open with Villanova (19-5, 12-2) just one game be hind. What made a second loss so hard to take was that it was almost as devastating as the first one— 88-59 to Kansas when the Huskies also heard the same cheer. But this one was at home and it was the worst home loss since a 78-50 defeat at the Hartford Civic Center to Georgetown in 1986-87, coach Jim Calhoun’s first season at UConn. It was the worst on-campus defeat since a 104-73 loss to Syracuse in 1972-73. Please Join Us George Takei STAR TREK’S MR. SULU Will sign his autobiography TO THE STARS TO THEM \ . \ V \ if, "v ijpNe' THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF GEORGETRKEI sum mriisiiiii. sum WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22 nd at 1:30 pm BULL’S HEAD BOOKSHOP t * UNC STUDENT STORES 962-5060 I IMSSa Monday, February 20,1995 WOMEN'S BASKETBALL FROM PAGE 12 UNC’s long-range shooters to get open looks. But the Tar Heels converted only three of their last 16 trifectas, including one of their last eight. “That’s when you’ve got to make some outside shots,” said UNC coach Sylvia Hatchell. “When Charlotte (Smith) gets the ball, it’s like flies on honey. She was finding our open people; we just didn't make the shots.” With ineffectual outside shooting, Jones and Smith looked to the inside. Jones cof lected 22 points while breaking down State’s defense, and Smith scored 21 points while corralling 10 rebounds as the Tar Heels built a 12-point lead with 11 minutes re maining. But with 10 minutes left, Yow called a timeout that seemed to relax her players, who responded with a 21-8 run over the next eight minutes. With two minutes left, State took its first lead of the game, 67-66. For the next 12 minutes, neither team’s lead grew more than three points. The teams traded baskets until the second over time. Smith scored UNC’s first bucket in the second overtime, but fouled out with three minutes remaining. The Tar Heel offense never recovered. They missed their last five shots, and looked uncomfortable with out their star. While State scored a paltry four points in the second overtime, UNC managed only two. But it was foul shooting again that plagued UNC. A successful free throw here or there, and the game might not have entered overtime. UNC connected on less than 70 percent of its charity shots. More importantly, theTarHeels missed the front end of three separate one-and-ones down the stretch. “We missed what, 15 (foul shots),” said UNC head coach Sylvia Hatchell. “It could have made a big difference. You don’t know how many of those were of one-and ones either.” UNC vs. N.C. State Score Box North Carolina 43 29 12 2 86 N.C. State 35 37 12 488 I UNC (96) fB rb MIIM M m a pf tp lawence 36 2-6 2-2 06 2 6 8 Smith 36 7-13 7-10 4-10 3 5 21 McKee 32 36 16 4-7 1 4 7 Real 12 04 2-2 1-3 0 0 2 Jones 47 6-11 11-15 26 4 4 22 Suddreth 3 00 00 00 1 1 0 Jackson 25 30 0-3 06 3 2 6 Gillingham 7 1-3 0-0 0-1 1 2 2 Coopef 24 06 44 0-2 1 2 4 Gear 28 49 44 0-3 3 2 14 TOTALS 250 2564 31-46 1443 18 27 86 Percentages— FG 391. FT .674. 3-point goals - 5- .278 (Gear 26. Lawrence 26. Jonas 63, Cooper 0-1, McKae 0-1, Smith 01; Team rebounds -7. Blocked Shots -1 (Lawrence) Turnovers— -20 (Smith 7, Gear 4, Jones 4. Jackson. Lawrence, .. McKee, Reid) Steals - 7 (Jackson 3. Jones 2, Lawrence. Smith) . NCSUfBS) <9 pRtgoal*- Z 6- 7.353 (Gibson 5-10, Kreai 1-1. Howard 06, Mitchell 0-1) team rebounds -2. Blocked Shots ; -0. Turnovers -19 (Gibson 7, Howard 5, Melvin 4. , Kreul, Webb) Steals -13 (Gibson 4. Mehiin 4, ♦ Webb 3. Davis. MitcheS). ’ Technical Fords- none Attendance-8,749. - ' , v '' , -* - > 7