Sunday, April 13, 1969
THE DAILY TAB HEEL
Page
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Wake
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It Was a Frustrating Day All Around
. . . Wake Came From Behind To Win 4-3.
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UNC Defender Hits The Dirt
. . .UNC Won 14-7.
One weekend
Major Smith,
Lieutenant Schaffer,
and a beautiful blonde
named Mary
decide to win
World War II.
By OWEN DAVIS
DTH Sports Writer
Carolina played a baseball
game Saturday afternoon as if
it were an anxiety experiment
in a psychology lab.
The Tar Heels were
repeatedly frustrated against
Wake Forest and lost a 4-3
Atlantic Coast Conference
decision.
It wasn't that UNC could do
nothing well. The Tar Heels
cracked 12 hits and had
numerous base runners. The
problem was that Carolina was
continually unable to score
when there were perfect
opportunities.
Twelve UNC runners were
left on base in the game and in
only one inning was there not a
Tar Heel stranded.
For instance, in the seventh
frame, Carolina got four hits
but scored only once. In the
eighth, the Tar Heels tried a
suicide squeeze with a runner
on third but the batter failed
to make the bunt. The runner
was easily tagged out, and then
the batter, Tommy Donaldson,
lifted a long fly to center field,
which would have scored the
run if the squeeze had not been
attempted.
And earlier in the fourth, a
Tar Heel singled to the outfield
with a runner on second, but a
run did not cross because the
baserunner stumbled while
starting on the hit.
It was enough to make a
man pull his hair out
Wake Forest meanwhile
only needed one player to
polish off Carolina. He was
Bob Blanton, who knock
two consecutive homers ana
drove in three runs.
Such slugging wasn't
expected of the bespectled left
fielder either. He had been to
bat only 10 times in 13 games
before Saturday's contest and
used mainly as a pitcher.
But in the fifth inning, with
his team down 1-0, Blanton
blasted a 365-foot drive over
the left-center field fence to tie
it.
One more run scored in the
fifth, and in the sixth, Blanton
stepped to the plate again. This
time there was a baserunner at
second, so he lifted a towering
shot to left which traveled
about 350 feet.
That made the score 4-1.
Blanton wasn't finished,
however. After starting pitcher Pres Ruddell and Clem.
Ruffin Branham allowed four Medley singled, and it was-
hits in the seventh, Coach Neil pinch hitter Rusty Prindle's job
Johnston chose Blanton to hurl to bunt them both to scoring
the final two frames. position. After fouling off two
He gave up two hits, a walk attempted bunts, Prindle hit
and hit a batter, but becau.se into a double play, which left
Carolina cut its own wrists, only Medley at second. Skip
Blanton escaped with a save.
The Tar Heels scored first
with a run in the second. Ron
Lemonds walked, stole second
and was plated by Charlie
Thomas' single.
Hull and Eddie Hill next
singled consecutively, but
Medley was the lone run to
score in the inning to make it
4-3.
Denton got his third hit, a
UNC's Doug Lanham later, double, in the eighth, and went
Stickmen Destroy W&L
With Solid Team Effort
doubled in the fourth and
could have scored easily on a
single by Danny Denton, but
Lanham could not loose his
spikes from the dirt soon
enough. He stopped at third,
and the next two batters went
out.
Lemonds scored again in the
sixth when he tripled and came
home on Denton's single.
Carolina had many
opportunities to tie or go
ahead in the last three framss,
but blew them.
The seventh was when
Coach Walter Rabb must hjtve
wanted to take his boys to the
woodshed for a spanking.
to third on Thomas bun single.
But that's when Donaldson
missed the squeeze attempt,
and it typified UNC's
performance Saturday.
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W. Franklin
By ANDY SCHORR
DTH Sports Writer
The entire Carolina lacrosse
team got to play in Saturday's
1307 victory over Washington
and Lee. The Tar Heels
dominated play throughout
most of the game.
"We had better personnel,"
said North Carolina's head
coach Fred Mueller. "It was a
the cage for the second time.
Finally near the UNC goal
the Tar heel defensemen along
with Kramer, who left the
cage, fought for a loose ball
with the Washington and Lee
attackmen. The Generals won
out and their midfielder, Tim
Chriss, beat Kramer back to
the goal to make the score.
Tom Heard, the third
member of the UNC first
well played game and our big fttac ended the first quarter
lead gave us a chance to relax
and let everybody on the team
play."
Harper Peterson and Pete
Aitken were constant offensive
threats for Carolina as well as
Ray Seipp, Tom Heard and
Mike Tiernan.
by flipping to Aitken who
made the third goal for
Carolina.
To begin the second quarter
UNC attackman Peterson went
right in and scored unassisted.
He then took a quick pass from
Aitken and relayed to Seipp to
On the midfield Temple f6 , fifth goal
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still only showing one goal in
the record book, Tar Heel
attackman Heard grabbed a
loose ball in front of the
visiting team's goal and
whipped it right past the
defenders.
The Generals scored only
once in the third period when
Barton Goodwin took a pass
from Scott Neese and put it
past Carolina's Kramer.
In the final quarter
Carolina's Aitken managed to
get the ball out of the crowd of
Washington and Lee defenders
and into their goal for UNC's
thirteenth goaL
Against mostly Tar Heel
substitutes, Neese scored three
more for the Generals with one
assist by Wich to give
Washington and Lee their total
of seven.
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Grassi, John MacNaughton,
Andy Scott and Will Verhoff ,
showed great hustle and ,
consistently kept the ball down
at Carolina's offensive half of
the field.
Defensemen John
MacCorkle, Paul Truesdell,
John Hamschek and John
Gussenhouen were ferocious
and limited the Generals'
opportunites for good shots. .
Pete Kramer play goalie for
the Tar Heels but was relieved
late in the game by Bob
Manekin. Kramer made six
saves in the first three quarters
and Manekin made three saves
in the fourth.
From the very beginning the
Tar Heels got possession of the
ball and started firing shots at
Bill Ingersoll, the Washington
and Lee goalie. In the first
quarter Carolina took 12 shots
and the Generals took only-5.
On a fast break halfway
through the first period Seipp
passed to Peterson in front of
the open General's cage to
make the first goal for UNC.
Fifteen seconds later
MacNaughton took a feed from
Seipp and slipped the ball into
The Tar Heels rounded out
their scoring effort in an
explosive second quarter when
(midfielder Grassi passed , to ,
agile freshman attackman
Tiernan who put in UNC's
seventh score.
Whit Morrill did some work
, for the Generals in the second
quarter as he scored two goals
on assists from Joe Wicb.
In the third quarter UNC
did more of the same scoring.
The Tar Heels blazed in five
goals.
MacNaughton scored on a
pass from Peterson, and then
Peterson put one in by himself.
Seipp fliggped to MacNaughton
for UNC's tenth goal and then
he fed Peterson to set up
another score. Tiernan threw a
pass to evasive Aitken who
made UNC's twelveth.
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