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Loses opener to Terps
Tuesday, March 15, 1977 The Daily Tar Heel 7
UNC lacrosse takes to the turf
Baseball opens home season
Sophomore Greg Norris draws the
starting mound assignment for Carolina
today when the Tar Heels play their first
home baseball game of the year against
Atlantic Christian at 2:30 p.m. at Cary
Boshamer Stadium.
Having played seven games in Georgia
and Florida over spring break, the Tar Heels
will be home for eight games in the next
seven days and then host N.C. State in the
conference opener March 24.
After today's Atlantic Christian matchup,
Western Carolina visits Chapel Hill for a
doubleheader. UNC then has single home
dates scheduled with Old Dominion, High
Point, Campbell, Methodist and East
Carolina.
Coach Walter Rabb. in his 3 1st and final
year as head coach at Carolina, saw his team
win three and lose four on the season
opening road trip. The Tar Heels went under
the .500 mark Saturday when they lost in the
ninth inning, 8-7, to Georgia Southern.
"Right now I'd say I was disappointed but
not discouraged with the way we've played
this spring," l(abb said Monday. "1 think
we'll settle down to be a good ball club."
He indicated that Norris, a 6-foot-3, 210
pounder who played jayvee ball last spring,
would be his starting pitcher against Atlantic
Christian in the home opener. Norris was 4-3
in the North Carolina Summer League and
compiled a 2.36 earned run average.
-PETE MITCHELL
Yankee tix to be distributed
Student tickets for the exhibition baseball
game between UNC and the New York
Yankees April 2 in Chapel Hill will be
distributed today beginning at 5 p.m. in
Carmichael Auditorium.
Ticket distribution will be similar to the
way basketball tickets have been distributed
this year. Ushers will use the numbered card
system to determine the first 1,000 students
in line.
The 1,000 seats available to students are
one-half the seats in Boshamer Stadium. The
remaining 1,000 seats, along with 500
bleacher seats on the right field line, are to be
sold to the public, with Ram's Club members
getting first choice.
Students will also be allowed to sit on the
bank beside Avery Dorm by presenting their
UNC I.D. the day of the game. UNC
students will be the only ones allowed to sit
in this area.
Pep rally set tonight
A pep rally will be held tonight to boost
the Carolina basketball team as it
prepares to travel to College Park, Md.,
to play in the NCAA Eastern Regionals.
Carolina, after its win over Purdue
Saturday, will meet Notre Dame
Thursday at 9 p.m.
The pep rally, sponsored be the
cheerleaders and the pep band, will begin
at 9 p.m. at Carmichael Auditorium. A
parade will then wind across campus and
end at the Granville Towers parking lot,
where cheerleaders say the main activities
of the evening will occur. The basketball
team will be present at Granville.
By TOD HUGHES
Staff Writer
UNCs lacrosse team launches its 1977
campaign with high expectations after
coming off its finest season ever, which
included a 9-2 season mark, a trip to the
NCAA championships and a fifth-place
finish in the nation.
Saturday the new year opened on a sour
note, however, as the Heels lost out to
powerful Maryland 14-6 at College Park.
UNC trailed by only a goal after the first
quarter, but the Terps moved ahead 7-2 by
halftime. Maryland then tossed in three
goals in the first two minutes of the third
quarter and this proved to be the turning
point of the game. This put the Heels down
10-2, and although they played the Terps
even from there, the deficit could not be
overcome.
Despite this initial setback, prospects
remain bright for a successful year for the
Tar Heel stickmen.
"For the first time since I've been here
we've got some experience," Carolina Coach
Paul Doty said. "We finally have some guys
who have played real good competition
lacrosse for a long period of time. We have
more team depth than we've ever had,
particularly in the attack and midfield areas.
"If we have a weakness, it's our defense.
We graduated two starters off our defense
and we've had some injury problems there.
This was the strength of our team last year. I
think if statistics were taken of the big games
in Division 1. our defense probably had the
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All-America Tom Venier
lowest goals against of any team in the
country."
The Heels return three All-America
players from their 1976 squad, midfielders
Randy Gilbert and captain John Donato
and attack Tom Venier. Other top returnees
include leading scorer Danny Cox, senior
Steve Sartorio. junior Paul Worstell and
junior college All-America Joe Yevoli. The
mainstays on defense will include John
Threshie and Doug Fierro, Rip Davy and
Dan Foley.
In order to qualify for the NCAA playoffs
in lacrosse, a team must finish in the top
eight in the nation. This means that strength
of schedule and won-loss record are
extremely important for teams with post
season aspirations.
It used to be that teams would schedule
everybody and go 7-4 and still get into the
playoffs," Doty said. "Now teams are,
dropping some of the stronger teams so
they'll go 9-2 and be assured of getting in the
playoffs. We find it a lot harder to get teams
to play us now. We used to be considered a
team that was easy to beat, but now we're not
that way anymore."
Last year the Heels were No. 5 nationally,
and Doty hopes his team can do better in 77.
"We've improved every year on our
national ranking in the last four or five years,
but its going to be more difficult this year for
us to be ranked as high. For one, people
know we're good this year. They'll be much
more prepared to play us."
Doty sees the Atlantic Coast Conference
race shaping up as one of the closest ever. He
cited Virginia. Maryland and UNC as being
the top three contenders, with N.C. State
and Duke a notch below.
"It's just like in basketball," Doty said. "In
order to win our conference, we just about
have to be a national contender."
Next, the Heel stickmen scrimmage Yale
Wednesday at 3 p.m. on the astroturf field.
Heels collect first place in Pinehurstgolf;
King, Buttner, McGough lead early efforts
Heels net victory over Gamecocks, 5-4
The UNC women's tennis team opened its
spring season with a 5-4 win over South
Carolina Monday in Chapel Hill. Jean
Scott's backhand down-the-line shot in the
first-court doubles match ended the ordeal,
as Carolina narrowly avoided a defeat at the
hands of a surprisingly strong Gamecock
squad.
South Carolina took wins on the first,
second and sixth singles courts to force a 3-3
deadlock going into the doubles play. The
Tar Heels gained a straight-set victory on
court three, but USC retaliated by winning
the second court match. Carolina's Susie
Black and Scott then won in three sets to give
UNC the 5-4 victory.
Singles: Cindy Kincaid (USC) d. Susie
Black 2-6, 6-2, 6-3; Deborah Cooper (USC)
d. Suzanne Bowron 6-4, 6-4; Nina
Cloaninger (UNC) d. Kathy Wheeler 6-0, 6
0; Rebecca Garcia (UNC) d. Beth Keil 6-3, 3
6, 6-4; Lisa Dodson (UNC) d. Cindy
Johnson 6-0,7-6 (5-3); Sally Wilson(USC)d.
Jean Scott 6-2, 6-2.
Doubles: Black-Scott (UNC) d. Kincaid
Johnson 6-3, 6-7 (5-2), 6-3; Wheeler-Cooper
(USC) d. Cloaninger-Dodson 6-3, 7-6 (5-3);
Garcia-Janet Shands (UNC) d. Ann Pasky -Cissie
Melson 6-3, 6-2.
KEVIN BARRIS
UNC netters move to 4-0
The UNC tennis team won three dual
matches over spring break, boosting its
record to 4-0. The team defeated West
Virginia 9-0, Furman 9-0 and Tennessee
Chattanooga 6-1.' Two doubles matches
were rained out in the Tennessee match.
Carolina travels to Guilford for a 2 p.m.
match today. :rf ' '...
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The UNC wrestling team narrowly
missed grabbing its first tournament victory
at the. Atlantic Coast Conference tourney
March 3-4 at College Park, Md. Carolina
finished second behind Virginia, 82-75'$.
Carolina wrestlers Jeff Reintgen, Scott
Conkwright and Chris Conkwright all won
individual titles in the tournament, and will
represent U NC in the NCAA championships
March 17-19 in Norman, Okla. Maryland
finished third in the tournament with 56-Vi
points, followed by N.C. State 50'2, Duke
32, andClemson 2xh- Reintgen, Dave Casale
and Tim Reaume represented Carolina in
NCAA competition last year.
By LEE PACE
Assistant Sports Editor
It was about this time a year ago that
things looked pretty good for UNCs men's
golf team.
The Tar Heels had followed a successful
fall campaign with second-place finishes in
their opening spring tournaments and found
themselves ranked sixth in the nation at one
point. If anyone stood a solid chance of
catching Wake Forest in its annual Atlantic
Coast Conference championship run, it was
Carolina.
But soon after the Heels' tee shots were
finding the rough; their approach shots were
landing in the sand traps and their putts were
going anywhere but into the hole. And by the
time the Heels trudged in with a fourth-place
finish in the ACC tournament, they were
ready to call a mulligan on the whole season.
"We've all wondered what happened last
year." UNC Head Golf Coach Mike
McLeod said. If there's any way of avoiding
it this year we'll do it. I think last year we
might possibly have relaxed and gotten a
little complacent after we saw our names in
print -But 1 think it's made us work harder :
this year."
Prov ided the Tar Heels can avoid a similar
slump this year, they might very well equal
the expectations of last spring's team. And
they've gotten off to a good start, finishing
sixth, first and third in three tourneys the last
two weeks.
Nam?
Address
CityStateZip
W77
FLOWERS DAY
MARCH 21, 1977
CAMPUS CHEST AUCTION
- MARCH 24. 1977
CAMPUS CHEST CARNIVAL
-APRIL 14, 1977
ZBT MILE OF PENNIES
-APRIL 23. 1977
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The Tar Heels opened with the sixth best
performance in the 32-team Bing Crosby
Tournament in Guadalajara, Mex. The
UNC effort, which, according to McLeod.
"wasn't terribly disappointing since we were
competing against teams from the
Southwest that had been playing all winter,"
was led by Kevin King's four-day total of
287.
Carolina then slipped by Brevard (Fla.)
Junior College by three strokes to capture
the Pinehurst Intercollegiate Tournament,
with King again being low man. He fired a
three-day total of 228.
"We didn't have anybody finish in the top
five," McLeod said. "But we didn't have any
bad scores. That's what did it balance."
UNC then collected a third place behind
Wake Forest and Georgia in the Palmetto
Classic in Orangeburg, S.C. Bill Buttner and
John McGough tied for third place in
individual competition, both recording
even-par 216s for three days. Buttner would
.have challenged for first had he not suffered
a double bogey, a triple bogey and a bogey
on the last hold each day.
"Buttner has really arrived," McLeod said
bf the junior who was rated as only the No. 5.
player on the team. "He's shown he can be
one of our steadiest players. The biggest
thing he needed was confidence in himself.
He's never realized how good he is."
Buttner, who made the team as a walk-on,
is cocaptain of the squad along with junior
Bill Sibbick, who made all-ACC as a
freshman.
McGough and King both started last year
as freshmen, with McGough taking medalist
honors in the Palmetto Classic.
"McGough has yo-yoed a little this year,"
McLeod said, "having some bad rounds for
him and some good ones. King is extremely
confident and extremely capable. He attacks
the course with the ferocity of a toy terrier.
He's a small guy, but he's not afraid of any
course or anybody."
The top six is rounded out by juniors
Johnny Elam and Freddie Palmer. E lam,
who doubles as the Tar Heels' football
punter, has not yet played up to McLeod's
expectations, as he's been hampered the last
year by a knee injury.
"Elam doesn't seem to be recovered
completely from his knee injury," McLeod
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John McGough
said. "It doesn't consciously hurt him, but 1
think it apparently still affects him. He has to
get his confidence back. He isn't attacking
the course quite like he should."
Palmer, said McLeod, has steadily
improved and adds additional depth to the
squad. Billy Varn blends more depth and is
capable of "moving up the ladder quite
high."
A good indication of just how good the
1 977 Tar Heels are will come this weekend in
the Iron Duke Classic in Durham.
"How we finish at Duke will give a good
indication," McLeod said. "If we do well we
could be off and running."
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