Monday. October 9. 1978 The Daily Tar Heel 5
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ar Heels look f oir answers 5
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No, 12 Mainland
otill tops in ACC
By BILL WELCH
Associated Press U riter
were learned about
Conference football
Two things
Atlantic Coast
Saturday.
One is that Maryland, after a year
without the ACC title, wants it back and
is headed on a collision course with the
remaining top contender. Clemson.
The other is that North Carolina,
defending champion in the ACC. has big.
big troubles.
The lessons came as I2th-rankcd
Maryland blasted N.C. State out of its
undefeated streak and No. 20 national
ranking, thrashing the Wolf pack with
lightning speed in the second half for a 31
7 conference win.
Carolina, its troubled offense
seemingly growing worse, found itself
embarrassed 7-3 by Miami of Ohio for
the Tar Heels' third straight loss.
The win left Maryland. 5-0 and 2-0 in
the ACC, atop the league's standings and
owning the only unbeaten record. Duke is
in second with a 1-0 league mark,
followed by N.C. State and Wake Forest
at 1-1.
Maryland 31. N.C. State 7
"We got beat by a good football team."
State coach Bo Rein observed. "We'll
never know how good, because we didn't
challenge them."
State, now 4-1. drew within a field goal
of Maryland in the third quarter, but was
shelled by two straight Terp touchdowns
within 24 seconds of the State
touchdown. Tailback Steve Atkins
returned a kickoff 98 yards for, a
touchdown, and on the ensuing kickoff
State's Dwight Sullivan fumbled and
Maryland's Steve Trimble recovered in
the end zone for another score ending
the Wolfpack's chances.
"Everybody has been kicking away
from me recently and I just said to myself
you've got to get that ball one time,"
Atkins said. "It was really Don Dotter's
ball, but 1 backed up and took it away
from him. As soon as 1 caught it, I saw I
could go all the way.'
Atkins ended with 132 yards rushing
while State's bruised Ted Brown gained
78 yards on 19 carries but did not start.
Clemson 38. VPI 7
Quarterback Steve Fuller played his
usual game: two touchdowns, nine of 15
passes for 128 yards and another 106
yards jjish m, ,p rorn p ting Coac h Cha r ley f
Pell to call him "tne best quarterback in
the country."
The other half of the Tiger tandem,
Jerry Butler, caught seven passes for 103
yards and set a school record for career
reception yards -1.603.
"Jerry Butler was nothing short of
great today," Pell said. "He's
tremendous."
Clemson, now 3-1, begins its
conference schedule at Virginia
Saturday, and plays all its ACC
opponents in a row, finishing with
Maryland Nov. 18.
Duke 20. Virginia 13
Virginia scored on Duke with a
halfback pass, but were stopped when
they kept trying it again, as Duke
managed to shake off a 52-0 shellacking
- of the week before at Michigan.
"1 am pleased with the victory," said
Blue Devil coach Mike McGee. "Virginia
has a good football team. They kept their
plays and executed them well. I thought
our defense played relatively well."
Duke is now 3-1 and is at Navy
Saturday. Virginia dropped to 1-4 and
meets Clemson.
Purdue 14. Wake Forest 7
Wake Forest's defense kept the
Deacons close all day, but the offense
managed only 42 yards on the ground.
Wake, 1-4, got its only score on a 9
yard run by James McDougald and held
a one-point lead briefly in the fourth
quarter before Purdue scored on Russell
Pope's 2-yard run.
I - : I
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I - x;: - x fS': x - ' - - o r t 1
I , Jr - $ s s V i
to dismal football BroMems
Freshman quarterback Chuck Sharpe releases pass
...Miami s ureg tumvan inea ror DiocK.aiuraay
u i n Alien jernigan
'Skins 7,
Heels 3
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
Rushing: Miami Hunter 21-64. Jones 18-69, Fortner
13-17. Conerty 1-minus 2. UNC Lawrence 11-26.
Sharpe 10-minus 11. Paschall 14-63, Johnson 8-24,
Burrell 12-50, Powell 1-0.
Passing: Miami Fortner 10-19-82-3, Treadwell 1-1-65-0.
UNC Sharpe 10-31-109-1.
Receiving: Miami Mattison 3-84, Angelo 2-24, Jones
3-11. Warth 2-25, Hunter 1-3. UNC Rouse 2-30. Powell
2-32, Grey 2-15. Gay 2-22. Lawrence 1-minus 7. Loomis
1-17.
MIAMI Mattison 65 pass from Treadwell (Rowlands
kick) . "
UNC FG Hayes 47
Miami ,
Carolina
0 0 7 07
0 0 0 33
A 48.000
First downs
Rushes-yards
Passing Yards
Return yards
Passes
Punts
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards
Miami
15
53-1 48
147
34
11-20-3
6-40
2-0
210
Carolina
17
56-152
109
45
10-31-1
7-44
4-2
6-62
tarl"ia had just lost a football game to a team
Irom Miami. Ohio, that was good but not thai uood.
and 1 ar Heel tuns from the richest stockbroker to the
drunkest 1 ratty bagger were savin u what thev
thought ol the game and ol Carolina s performance":
Boo. And Boooooooooo. '
UNC running back Doug Paschal w as minding his
own business and sauntering toward the dressing
room at the time when suddenly he stopped and
turned tow ard the crowd. With a vengeful look on his
sweaty, dirty face. Paschal ye lied word s to the effect
that ii the fans didn't know w here thev could go. he
personally would tell them exactly wher e they could
go and what they could do w ith themselves once thev
goMhere.
'"They aggravate me no end." Paschal said a lew .
minutes later. "1 can't understand . how they can pull
for us when we win and turn their backs on us when
we loscWe don't need that. 1 wish they'd save their
S8 if they're going to be like that. The fans tick me off.
There's no need for that. I know it's just a few. but 1 .
wish someone would slin them or something."
Paschal was not arguing that the fans didn't have a
legitimate gripe. He and a hundred other players and
nine coaches know all too well there hasn't been
much to cheer for this fall. Doug Paschal was simply
very; very frustrated. And mad. And confusecl. And
liable to plant his fist in the nearest locker or ntose if
he was pushed too far. -One easily could guess that
Milwaukee would be much more famous in se veral
hours after Paschal had an opportunity to unleash
his emotions. "Yes. I'm very upset,'' he said.
Paschal is by no means the best running back to
ever play at Carolina. But he battles for the yard s he
gains as hard as anyone who's ever taken a handol f in
Kenan Stadium. He rushed for 63 yards on 1 4 carries
Saturday (UNC's best) from an offense that at times
was a veer, at other times an 1 and nearly all the time
no good.
"I know we're going to get better. I know we are, "
he said. "But you've got to wonder when the hell
we're going to jell. The offense has got to get it in their;
minds that we're gonna move the ball. We've just got !
to go out there and take it down their damn throats." .
The question at this stage of the season is obvious: 1
Why have the Tar Heels, with a wealth of talent
returned from last season's Liberty Bowl team, won '
only one game in four starts?
The answer is also obvious. Carolina has been
unable to generate any offense and the defense,
without Dee Hardison, Rod Broadway and Alan
Caldwell, is simply not as strong as the one that last
season spoiled opposing offenses as well as Tar Heel
fans.
But the reasons for all of this aren't so apparent.
Everyone has his own explanation.
"It's certainly not that we're not trying," split end
Jim Rouse said. "Nobody wants to win more than we
do. A bunch of us were around here three years ago
when we were 3-7-1. We know what it's like to lose."
LEE PACE
."Offensively we were Hat." Coach Dick Crum
said. "We looked like we were on the verge of
breaking out of it three or lour times. We just
couldn't get over the hump. Right now we're in a
. holding pattern. We just didn't improve the way we
should have. Well just go back and work on the
, fundamentals and stay with w hat we believe-in. We're
not about to junk anything or make any radical
changes."
"The system is much more complicated than it
used to be."" free safety Bernie Menapace said. "We're
having problems learning it. Like with the veer
offense, if one guy misses his assignment it's all over. I
I've got a lot more checks and keys and reads on
defense now. I'm still learning how to lead the
defense." ,
"We had a great year last year." tight end Bob J
Loomis said. "People feel that can carry us through ':
games this year. But it can't. We've got to go out and ;
win them just like we did last year. Until people
realize that, we'll have problems." ' '
Crum has answers, for the moment, at least, to two '
problems that have kept his offense from developing: :
Chuck Sharpe is off the bench and Amos Lawrence is ;
on it. '.
Crum has said for more than a month now that the -freshman
Sharpe is Carolina's best quarterback, but :
Crum hesitated to use him earlier because of his age. :
"You throw a. young kid into a pressure situation,"
Crum said before last Saturday's Pittsburgh game, '
"and if he does okay, fine. But if he doesn't, it could :
1 wreck him." . . ;
But after neither Matt Kupec nor Clyde '
Christensen could move the offense to Crum's liking :
in UNC's first three games, the coach decided to go :
with Sharpe. "I would imagine he will start the next
game," Crum said. ' ' : ' :
And although Crum would not comment on the ;
performance of Lawrence, who rushed for 27 yards :
on 1 1 carries, the coach didn't seem too pleased with"
l last season's ACC Rookie of the Year. "We used two
-backs in the second half (Paschal and Terence :
- Burrell) whp were giving us good effort," Crum said. :
Asked if that meant Lawrence was not giving his best I
effort, Crum said. "I won't comment on that."
Whatever the reasons for Carolina's sluggish
per forma nee, Saturday, they've got to be worked out
this week. A loss Saturday at Wake Forest and, well, .
bar the door, Katie. "This is definitely a crucial
veek." Loomis said. "If we can get things going this
' week we'll bekay. If we don't...."
Bob Loomis couldn't answer that second part. He.
hopes he won't have to.
Mofstetter leuds cross c aim try; soccer wins on road-
upset
From page 1
wide open. I just kept 'thinking 'get the
ball to me.'"
On the next series Sharpe was
intercepted, and all eyes were on the
Carolina sideline waiting for somebody,
ikher Clyde Christensen or Matt Kupec.
to come in and get it going.
"1 feel as low as I've ever felt." said
Christensen, who played most of the Pitt
game and none of the Miami game. "I feel
down for the team. To sit there the whole
game just kills me.
"What we need is to blow somebody off
the map." he said. "1 really felt today'
would be the day,"
Sharpe tried all the way. attempting to
mount game-winning drives three times
in the last five minutes and coming up
with nothing.
MON.,TUkS.. WED ONLY
"109 1010 1011
., From Staff ndvy ire Reports n-S.i
The UNC men's cross country took a step toward
national prominence Saturday by placing second
behind fourth-ranked Tennessee in the Tennessee
Invitational in Knoxville. ' ;
The previously unbeaten Tar Heels, paced by the'
second-place finish of junior Gary Hofstetter, came
within five points of a major upset, losing 48-43.
Carolina led the race with less than 500 yards to go
but was outkicked.
"We had 'em beat with a quarter mile to go."
Hofstetter said. "The only reason they beat us was '
because we've had no speed work yet.
"When we hit the speed work, people are going to
be very surprised," he said. , '
Hofstetter raced head-to-head with Tennessee's
top runner, only to be outs printed at the stretch. His
time of 24:13 was-five, seconds. -slower than the
winner's. .
"He beat me in the last 200 yards," Hofstetter said.
I didn't take the third or fourth miles hard enough. I
guess I was just a bit too conscious of the pace."
The women's team finished third behind unbeaten
N.C. State and Florida State at the N.C. State;
Invitational in Raleigh Saturday. ' -
State routed the field, grabbing the first four places
in the race. Wolfpack sophomore Julie Shea took
individual honors in course record time.
Freshman Nancy Radford was Carolina's top
finisher for the third straight week, placing eighth,
with a time of 18:37 on the 5,000-meter course. UNC
coach Hubert West called the Wolfpack "a sure bet
to win the ACC." '
Carolina, Virginia and Maryland each will
contend for second place, he said.
John Fernandez and Hugh Bennett scored first
half goals Saturday to pace Carlina to a 2-0 soccer
.victory over the High Point Panthers in High Point.
The win raised the Tar Heels' season mark to 6-1 -2:
Carolina faces UNC-Greensboro at 4 p.m.
Wednesday on Feter Field.
Fernandez, scored first on a shot to the lower right
corner of the net which slipped by the High Point
goalie. Glenn Harris assisted on the play. Bennett's
goal came on a header off a Fernandez corner kick.
"It was pretty much our game." UNC coach Anson
Dorrance said. "But we did have more chances to
score than we demonstrated."
UNC outshot High Point 25-1. .
i. iiiuti jr.tm i .i f ; , i- vi,f m sk.
vn,n;Ue'liNX."Fieldn.ocke.teiHn made ajaJumtiSeW
Showing" in Roanoke. 1 Va.. last weekend: bating
Kalamazoo and Roanoke, and losing to F.asiein
Kentucky and VPI.'
The weekend moved the Heels' record to -3. one
which Coach Dolly Hunter considers mediocre,
"This team is like night and day," Hunter said.
"We can be the best teamNin the world one day and
totally different the next."
The Tar Heels played like "the best team in the
world" in only one of their games last weekend,
delivering a 7-0 shutout to Kalamazoo. "We played
perfectly." Hunter said. "We looked like a national
caliber team. It was exciting to "see every player
playing her best."
Bashi Buba led the Heels with four goals against
the Michigan school, while fellow forwards Laurie
GinterAnn. Donio "and Laura Bauman each added
scores in the romp.
The Heels also beat Roanoke, although less
convincingly at 4-2. with three goals by Donio and
one by Bauman.
The Tar Heels defeats came in their first and third ,
games of the series against Eastern Kentucky, 1-0
and VPI, 2-1, with Buba scoring the lone goal.
"I think we learned a lesson this weekend." she
said. "When it comes to the state tournament well
know we have to give it all we have."
The team plays at High Point Tuesday against a
team known for its aggressiveness and eagerness to
Sports
Women's golf
in Lady Seminole
InvitationaPat
Florida State
play. Thursday the Heels return home for a game
against rival UNC-G.
The junior varsity defeated Durham Club 5-0 last
Wednesday, lost to Pfeiffer 4-2 in overtime
Thursday, and lied N.C. Club l-l Sunday on Marie
Sheehan's goal.
Oral Roberts University shot a three-round total
of 842, taking a four-stroke victory over Arizona
State in the Jim Corbett Invitational Golf
Tournament held "Wednesday through Friday at
Louisiana State in Baton Rouge. La.
The UNC golf team shot 871 for ninth place in the
1 5-team tourney, as sophomore Frank Fuhrcr led the
Tar Heels with a one-under-par 215. Senior Kevin
TCing'posted 4L2.1 .Offlmen MikeWest and
Todd McGrew "each finishing'at 222.'
The UNC women's volleyball squad bounced back
from poor performances recentlvl pounding
Guilford College 11-15. 15-4. 15-10 and 15-4;
Thursdav night.
'This wasVeally a crucial match for us." I ar Heel
coach Beth Miller said. "We had had a couple of bad
matches lately and we needed this win."
1 it the first game of the match the Tar Heels had
trouble getting started, falling behind early "It
seemed like it took us a long time to get warmed up."
Miller said. "We were also hitting a lot of serves out
of bounds."
Once the Heels did "warm up" however, they were
very hard to stop. Guilford seemed to be able to do
nothing right as Carolina led by an 8-0 score at one
point iin the second game to win handily.
The Tar Heels played much better overall in the
third game of the match, running up a 12-1
advantage at one point in the contest.
"I thought we played much better in that game,"
Miller said. "We were getting good passes and we
didn't sniss a serve in the game."
The Tar Heels dominated the fourth game of the
match, taking an early 7-0 lead. Guilford could not
seem to get the plays they got in the first contest as the
Heels won the match easily.
Carolina, now 8-4. faces Louisburg College
Tuesday in an away match.
Clinic planned
for Im officials
A short clinic lor anyone
interested in officiating
intramural volleyball or
soccer will be held 9 p.m.
Wednesday in 304 Woollen
Gym.
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