Batlg ffiar Bl Late Spider Rally Nearly Snaps Home Opener Streak BYROBBIPICKERAL SPORTS EDITOR The last time North Carolina’s men’s basketball team lost its home opener, the year was 1929. That’s 66 opening ‘W’s in a row an almost unbelievable stat. 4:o9kft e "' s ßasketball daynightatthe ,. l £!jI Smith Center, ***' 83 that record was under attack —and the streak seemed to be falling fast. After building a 23-point lead against VHV fa IUVBRSOIHI Score Box ffiehmond 24 52 76 North CaroSn* 47 36 83 !t <* i pi t> 00 0 4 7 5-8 0 5 17 1-4 4 3 1 1-3 $ 4 17 1-5 4 4 15 1-10 10 1-3 0 2 5 00 6 0 0 1-2 0 4 10 SO 0 0 0 0-2 0 10 1-10 0 4 20 15-34 13 7B t*-3(stvnson. 15 {Poole 3, MetCmoev 2. Team 2, Cofmor. 2, Cueto, Poole). I v Nr i mamLi.M Wmljm ~W * * ~ Sr DTH/ERIK PEREL North Carolina guard Shammond Williams (3) drives past a Richmond defender in the Tar Heels' 83-76 win Tuesday night. Williams had four assists. ping away, chipping away, and we just gained the momentum and went with it,” said Richmond coach Bill Dooley. But it wasn’t just a Spider spark that allowed the comeback—it was a Tar Heel letdown. UNC showed less fire in the sec ond stanza than its first-half gusto, as both its shooting and defense slowed down. “We weren’t as tenacious on defense— the intensity wasn’t there the second half,” Calabria said. UNC got out of its one-point jam via a Shammond Williams. The Greenville na tive swiped the ball at midcourt and turned the play into a layin-plus-one when he was fouled by forward Adam Mobley. The Tar Heels never relinquished more than a four- SPORTS point lead after that. UNC started the first half on a tear, as center Serge Zwikker got 10 of his team first 13 points. Then the freshman triumvi rate of forwards took over, as Ademola Okulaja, who started his first game as a Tar Heel, scored seven of his nine points int he opening stanza; Antawan Jamison had seven points and four boards; and Vince Carter converted a two-handed jam from a JeffMclnnis pass from mid-court. “It was really just a tale of two halves,” Dooley said. “Our kids came out in the first half — and we tried to do something (before the game) about the aura of playing in the Smith Center, but I think in the first half it didn’t work too well, obviously.” UNC Stumbles in Second Stanza After Rocking Richmond in First BYTODD GRAFF ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR First half success may have come to easy for North Carolina Tuesday night. The Tar Heels completely overwhelmed Richmond in the opening stanza, as Serge Zwikker dominated his smaller counter parts on the inside, drilling all five of his shots, and UNC got seven points each from the freshmen trio of Ademola Okulaja, Antawn Jamison and Vince Carter. “Our kids came out in the first half, and we tried to do something about the aura of playing in the Smith Center, but I think in the first half it didn’t work too well obviously,” Richmond coach Bill Dooley said. The Tar Heels looked like a well-oiled machine in mid-season form preparing for the postseason. “In the first half, we were complement ing each others’ game,” Carter said. “We were looking for each other.” And they were looking for each other in the right spots. Zwikker benefited from much of the passing, getting easy look after easy look underneath. Then Mclnnis had a steal near half court, and he found a streaking Vince Carter, who electrified the crowd with his first slam in the Smith Center, a two-handed tomahawk. From there,UNCboltedtoa 15-4 run to lead by 25 with four minutes left in the first half. “We really thought we had the game in the bag,” Carter said. But it was too easy. It seemed that the Tar Heels almost lulled themselves to sleep with their stellar first half. “It’s hard to keep going and keep that big lead," Mclnnis said. “It’s hard to keep playing with intensity if you’re up 20 or 30 points. “We died down a little, and they were making their 35.” GMAT Prep Class Last Chance to Register! Classes, onlys32o Quality ® Weeknight classes start Tues., Dec. 5 • Saturday classes begin Dec. 2 DUKE UNIVERSITY Office of Continuing Education and Summer Session CALL 684-6259 to Register Make Plans for the Holidays.. .NOW! CALL 942-0251 Earn S2O TODAY as a new lifesaving plasma donor! •New and Returning (those who have not donated In the past 30 days) Plasma Donors. Earn SBO In 14 days based on 4 donations approx. 1 hr. each. SERA-TEC BIOLOGICALS 109 1/2 E. FRANKLIN STREET • CHAPEL HILL *r $12,95 long PERMONTH Fast as lightning. Unbeatable price. As the world’s largest paging network, Page Net goes to great lengths to deliver a world of reliablity, features and service fora mere $12.95 a month. IN TOUCH AND INGENIOUS (919) 942-9115 4000 West Chase Blvd. Suite 190, Raleigh, NC 27607 Wednesday, November 29,1995 Suddenly the Spider shots that were missing in the first half were falling from everywhere. Backcourt mates Carlos Cueto and Daryl Oliver combined to hit eight-of nine 3-pointeis in the second half, after missing all four in the first. “It seemed like to me they made every 3 in the second half,” Mclnnis said. But it wasn’t simply that Richmond’s shots started to fall. Sure, Cueto and Oliver nailed shots with defenders in their faces, but they also saw a good share of wide open 3-pointers. “We weren’t as tenacious on defense, and the intensity wasn’t there the second half,” UNC guard Dante Calabria said. And during stretches, the Tar Heel of fense was almost as obliging. While the Spiders were in the midst of a 38-18 run, the Tar Heels failed to move the ball as crisply as the first half. They settled for long-jumpers and quick shots rather than the multiple passes that earned them easy first-halfbuckets. “When you have a large lead, you still have to come down and make good shots, ” UNC coach Dean Smith said. “You can’t come down and shoot quickly. “No. 2, defensively, you have to know each time to limit them to one shot. They got second shots. You have to know who the shooters are.” Carter said, “In the second half we got to the point were we wanted to one-on-one things. “I think that hurt us.” And as the Tar Heels’ lead slowly de creased, they never could find the remedy. It was only on a Shammond Williams steal steal and 3-point play with three minutes remaining that the Tar Heels had finally suppressed the Spider run. “I’m sure it was a learning experience,” Calabria said. “But, we should have put these guys away. We had them down pretty good. You get complacent and that’s what happens.” PAGEiai’S’ 9