8
Monday, November 1, 1999
Tar Heel Trio Haunts Demon Deacs
avuh 20 minutes to play,
biMc fi vard Kim Patrick
whvc. ed a diving header
inti tn Tar Heels' first goal.
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St a\!
• he nth Carolina’s shots started
back of the net, it might as
he been a roll call of the women’s
is top-three goal scorers.
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I Women’s
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Wake Forest 0
UNC 4
I--.,: md Anne Remy to defeat
i! Vake Forest 4-0 on Sunday at
A... id.
Fiorance and Remy have
s.o:- : acre than half of North
Care. goals this season to rank first.
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v curator/Environmental Educator in the North Carolina Botanical
. arden since 1975
v iopel Hill Parks & Recreation Commission, Chair
aapel Hill-UNC Land Use Planning Panel, Environmental Chair
v taping Orange County’s Future, Exec. Committee
*v Hope Chapter - National Audubon Society, President
idpei Hill Comprehensive Plan Work Group
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second and third
on the team,
respectively.
Patrick started
the Tar Heel scor
ing spree at 64:49.
Junior Tina
Murphy took two
consecutive shots
that were deflect
ed by Demon
Deacon goalkeep
er Erin Regan.
While the second
deflection was still
in the air, Patrick
converted a div-
Sophomore
Anne Remy
notched a goal and
an assist for the third
consecutive game in
UNO’s 4-0 victory.
ing header to give North Carolina (16-2,
7-0 in the ACC) the lead.
“I watched the ball bounce off of
everyone,” Patrick said. “I was deter
mined to get it in. Tina really kept fight
ing and kept attacking it, which really
helped me.”
Ten minutes later, Fiorance, who is
the second leading scorer on the team
with 10 goals, lofted a ball from 15 yards
‘“People Ciiten when fan Wa\d
talki. in hid, calm, and quiet way,
about environmental protection
and community, planning,, fan
ii, the kind o$ peMon toe need
on the Down Council. ”
SOauid R. SodAchalk
UNC-CH Professor, City and
Regional Planning Department
Lehman Brothers
Finance Division
cordially invites undergraduates to attend a presentation
on career opportunities in
Financial Control & Analysis , Treasury and Tax
Wednesday, November 3rd
7-9 PM
Chancellor East
Carolina Inn
out that beat Regan to put the Tar Heels
ahead by two.
The scoring barrage continued when
Remy dribbled through the Demon
Deacon defense to bang in an unassisted
goal, her ninth of the season, at 78:14.
Remy has produced a goal and an assist
in each of the last three games.
“With Meredith and Anne’s goals,
they’re goals of a personality,” UNC
coach Anson Dorrance said. “You want
the kind of players, and obviously we’ve
got one of the greatest ever in Mia
Hamm, that gets the ball, carves up a
player on her own and sticks it. That’s
what Meredith and Anne did.”
Freshman defender Leslie Gaston
received a Remy pass and scored from
13 yards out to notch her second goal of
the season and close out the Tar Heel
scoring.
“I was very excited. I certainly didn’t
expect it,” Gaston said.
The first half of the contest looked
grim for North Carolina. The Tar Heels
outshot Wake Forest 11-3, but neither
team could put the ball into the net.
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Sports
Regan made seven saves for the Demon
Deacons.
“We were scrambling,” Dorrance
said. “Wake plays a very good posses
sional game coming out of their defen
sive third and through the midfield.
Then goalkeeper is one of the best in the
conference.”
But in a span of 15 minutes, UNC put
any hopes Wake Forest (13-5, 4-3) had of
giving the Tar Heels their first defeat in
the ACC since 1994 in the toilet.
“The first half was frustrating,”
Patrick said. “Once we got that first goal,
our team always opens up.”
UNC ended its regular season unde
feated in the ACC. The Tar Heels will
enter the ACC tournament at Fetzer
Field on Thursday as the top seed
against Florida State.
Said Dorrance, “We came out of this
game a little healthier, which excites us
because we’re going to need every avail
able body for the ACC tournament.”
The Sports Editor can be reached at
sports§unc.edu.
Field Hockey Gets 2 Wins
On Road Trip to Virginia
North Carolina’s field hockey squad
captured two wins this weekend against
William & Mary and seventh-ranked
Old Dominion.
Sunday against William & Mary, No.
6 UNC (15-4) used two second-half
goals to defeat the Indians. Sophomore
Katie McDonald scored her third goal
of the season four minutes into the sec
ond half. Forward Kristen McCann
added the Tar Heels’ second point with
an unassisted goal with 20:20 left in the
game.
Against the Monarchs on Saturday,
the Tar Heels needed a little more help
from a different source. Sweeper Jana
Toepel, who did not play when the Tar
Heels beat ODU 1-0 on Sept. 18, was
responsible for both goals in UNC’s
2-1 overtime victory.
Old Dominion scored four minutes
into the first half on Marina
DiGiacomo’s shot. Toepel tied the game
with 20 minutes left in the first half.
On the Tar Heels’ fifth penalty comer
of overtime, Toepel was able to score
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ON THIBOAD
again, giving UNC the victory at
Foreman Field.
The Tar Heels next play at 4 p.m.
Friday in the ACC Tournament in
Winston-Salem when they face the win
ner of Duke and Virginia.
Women’s Golf Places Bth at Tourney
The North Carolina women’s golf
team took eighth place at the Furman
Invitational on Sunday. Sophomore
Heather Angell led the Tar Heels with
an 11-over-par 225 to finish in eighth
place individually.
The Tar Heels fired a three-round
total of 303 to finish 11 shots back of
tournament champion Wake Forest.
UNC senior Marcy Newton shot a
final-round score of 76 to finish second
on the Tar Heel squad and 21st individ
ually at 231.
From Staff Reports