4B
Tuesday, August 20, 2002
Recruit Chooses UNC Over MLB
3rd-round draft pick decides against St. Louis
From Wire Reports
Calvin Hayes of East Rowan High
School in Salisbury was drafted by the
Cardinals as the 102nd pick overall -
the final selection in the third round.
But Hayes decided to sign with North
Carolina instead. Hayes batted .465,
with five home runs and 29 RBIs. He
also had five doubles, five triples and 15
walks in 71 at-bats for the Mustangs.
“He’s a well above-average runner, a
shortstop who has great quickness in the
field and great speed,” scouting director
Marty Maier told Baseball America.
“He’s a guy we think will be a solid
defender, but also a guy who we think
has a chance to hit.”
Hayes was recommended to the
Cardinals by area scout and Salisbury
resident Randy Benson.
Hayes, a righthanded batter, has
been compared to players like second
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baseman Ray Durham of the Chicago
White Sox and former Cardinals third
baseman Terry Pendleton.
Hayes, 18, was the Rowan County
player of the year and the North Piedmont
Conference most valuable player in base
ball. He led the Mustangs to a 21-4 record.
Former Tar Heels Earn
Playing Time in Minors
North Carolina baseball players Russ
Adams, Chris Maples, Scott Autrey and
Adam Greenberg were selected in
MLB’sJune draft.
Adams was chosen by the Toronto
Bluejays in the first round with the 14th
pick.
Adams has seen some playing time
with the Dunedin Blue Jays and the
Auburn Doubledays - both Single-A
farm teams for the Toronto Blue jays.
Most recently Adams has played in 30
games for the Doubledays at shortstop
and currently has a .354 batting average
with 16 RBIs.
Adams, a junior from Laurinburg,
played first and third bases for the Tar
Heels and led the team with a .370 bat
ting average, 94 hits and 45 steals.
Maples was drafted in the sixth
round by the Detroit Tigers. He has
played in 16 games at third base for the
Oneonta Tigers, a Single-A affiliate of
Detroit. Maples earned 11 RBIs for
Oneonta, and has a .242 batting aver
age.
Maples, a senior from Hillsborough,
set school records with 190 total bases
and 48 extra-base hits.
Autrey was picked in the seventh
round by the Tampa Bay Devil Rays. He
has pitched in four games, winning two of
them for the Hudson Valley Renegades, a
Single-A affiliate of Tampa Bay. He has
pitched 16 innings for the Renegades,
earning a 3.21 ERA.
Autrey, a junior from Arlington, Texas,
had a 5-3 record as a pitcher for the Tar
Heels and led the team with 87 strikeouts.
Greenberg was drafted by the
Chicago Cubs in the ninth round. Since
signing with the team, Greenberg has
seen some playing time with the
Daytona Cubs, a Single-A club for
Chicago. Greenberg has played in seven
games as an outfielder for Daytona and
has hit .476, with one homerun and
seven RBIs.
Greenberg, a junior from Guilford,
Conn., led UNC with 17 home runs and
57 RBIs.
The four played in the NCAA
Regional Baseball Tournament for UNC.
The Tar Heels lost to South Carolina 3-
1 and finished the season 43-21.
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Sports
- f s ■ m -t
DTH/ANNE MEADOWS
North Carolina defender David Stokes (middle) dribbles through two American defenders during the 2001
NCAA tournament. Stokes will anchor the Tar Heel defense as the team seeks a second national title.
MEN S SOCCER
From Page 1B
on the same page come tournament
time.
“Everybody needs to come together
and get to the level we were at last year,”
Kneipper said. “If that happens, it’ll be
hard to stop us.”
And the Tar Heels don’t expect to
stop, not until the 90th minute of the
championship game in Dallas.
“Now that we’ve experienced the
final four and a national championship,”
Crawford said. “I think it’s tough to
expect anything less.”
Despite the uncertainty with the
defense, Stokes said not winning anoth
er national championship would be
“selling this team short.”
But it will be a much tougher march to
the final four this season, because teams
will be gunning for the national champs.
“It’s going to make us play that much
harder,” Kneipper said. “We can’t look
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at anybody lightly this year.”
Whether or not the Tar Heels can
defend their national title is a subject
Bolowich approached a bit more diplo
matically.
“Once you get into the flow,”
Bolowich said, “you never know what
can happen.”
The Tar Heels open the season on
Aug. 30 in Chapel Hill against Akron.
The Sports Editor can be reached at
sports@unc.edu