The Daily Tar Heel Wednesday, April 17. 19857
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Oy KURT ROSENBERG
Staff Writer
Just inside the North Carolina
clubhouse under the stands at Bosha
mer Stadium, a piece of yellow legal
paper hangs on the wall. Scratched
hastily in black magic marker, the
message is clear: "40.'
The sign represents the unofficial
requirement for a trip to the NCAA
regionals. Forty or more wins will
assure the North Carolina baseball team
a fourth consecutive appearance in the
NCAAs. And 40 is the exact number
of wins the Tar Heels will have if they
win a fourth consecutive ACC tourna
ment this week.
The ACC coaches UNC's Mike
Roberts excluded slept easily Tues
day night. They went to bed with the
knowledge that upon arising this
morning, ready for the first round of
the tournament, they would not be
awakening in the state of North Carol
ina, but rather in Atlanta. For the first
time in six years, the tournament will
be held outside the Triangle area of
North Carolina. It was in Raleigh in
1980, in Chapel Hill from 1981-83 and
in Durham last year.
The general consensus is that the
ACC coaches noticed a distinct corre
lation between the site of the event and
the success UNC was having. The Tar
Heels believe the tournament was
moved 'from Chapel Hill to Durham
because they had won it twice in a row,
then to Atlanta when they swept
through it last year.
They're gonna move it to Mexico
if we win it this year," North Carolina
second baseman Mike Jedziniak says.
But the UNC players said they felt
that moving it to Saskatchewan, or even
to New Zealand, would make little
Wednesday, April 17
Village Cable Channel 11
Watch Wednesday night at 10:00!!!
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More fun & games, Carolina style!
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An encoure presentation of "The Half
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Catch both shows on Village Cable
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difference. Certainly, they would rather
play at home. But the Tar Heels
approach is that while they can take
the tournament away from North
Carolina, they can't take the tourna
ment championship away from UNC.
"We're the ACC champions," Jedzi
niak says. "We're the team to beat, and
1 think we're gonna win this tourna
ment, too. We know what we have to
do to win. If I put myself in another
dude's shoes on another team, I'd be
saying, 'God, these guys have won three
in a row, and they won it in five games
(the minimum) last year.' "
The irony is that while the Tar Heels
generally are viewed as the team to beat
in this year's balanced tournament, they
enter it seeded only third. Virginia and
Clemson finished their conference
schedules with records of 9-4, and the
Cavaliers emerged as the top seed after
winning a coin toss. UNC finished at
9-4-1, N.C. State at 8-5, Georgia Tech
at 6-7-1, Duke at 5-8-1, Maryland at
5-8 and Wake Forest at 1-12-1. Had
it not been for the Tar Heels' suspended
March 19th game against Duke being
ruled a tie after UNC had taken a 6-
2 lead, however, they would have
finished in first place.
North Carolina opens the tourna
ment today at 10 a.m. against Duke.
The Tar Heels will start Greg Karpuk
(5-2, 2.97 ERA) and if they win will
probably have Roger Williams throw
on Thursday against either Clemson or
Maryland. The other games today are
Virginia-Wake Forest at 1 p.m.,
Clemson-Maryland at 4 p.m. and N.C.
State-Georgia Tech at 7 p.m.
Virginia, Clemson, UNC, N.C. State
and Georgia Tech all appear to have
realistic chances of winning the tour
nament, at least if the remarkable
balance that characterized the regular
season is an indication.
"It's gonna be the best tournament
ever," Roberts says. "There doesn't
seem to be a real dominant team. When
you realistically look at it, Georgia Tech
may be the team to beat because they're
playing at home. For everybody else,
it's a toss-up."
But predictions all depend on whom
you talk to. While Yellow Jackets coach
Jim Morris agrees with Roberts, saying,
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"It's up for grabs, N.C. State coach
Sam Esposito says, "There's no clear
cut favorite, although you sort of have
to go with Carolina. And though
Clemson's Bill Wilhelm also emphasizes
the balance, he too says, "North
Carolina is the best.
That might be difficult to dispute
when you consider the Tar Heels' play
of late. After its dismal 9-10 start, UNC
has gone 26-3-1 during the last month.
There are no questions about North
Carolina's offensive potency. Led by
B.J. Surhoff (.405, 13 home runs, 43
RBI, a school-record 69 runs scored,
26 stolen bases and just 3 strikeouts),
Scott Johnson (.372, 20 homers, 74
RBI, .782 slugging percentage), Devy
Bell (.328, 9 homers, 35 RBI), Chris
Lauria (.361) and Walt Weiss (.3 10), the
Tar Heels have accumulated almost
eight runs a game and have hit 69
homers.
And their pitching has been solid the
last month. Williams (7-1, 2.66 ERA)
may be the ACC's best pitcher. Karpuk
has had a good year, Brad Powell (3
4, 2.50) has been very sharp recently,
and Steve McGuire (3-1, 3.23) is more
than adequate. Todd Kopczynski (6-2,
3.60) and Tim Kirk (1-1, 2.95) head a
deep bullpen.
UNC could have the deepest staff in
the conference, and pitching depth
generally is viewed as the area in which
tournament is won and lost.
But the Tar Heels clearly will have
to play better than they did in some
of their ACC games this year, when they
lost four times after holding the lead.
And though they have tradition on their
side, in the tournament anything is
possible.
"Everyone's tough, Devy Bell says.
"It's gonna be neck and neck, like the
basketball tournament, where no one
had any idea who was gonna win.
Nobody can predict who's gonna win
the ACC tournament.
Virginia
Record: 30-1 0, ACC 9-4. Seed: First
Coach: Dennis Womack.
Leading Hitters: Jeff Booker .453, 34 RBI; Keith Kowalski
.365; Woody Hall .361, 10 HR, 42 RBI; Bill Narleskl .342,
8 HR, 42 RBI.
Leading Pitchers: Tim Burcham 7-1, 2.68 ERA; Andy
Koontz 4-1, 3.20; Bob Malloy 4-2, 4.82; Yogi Biggs 5
Clemson
Record: 27-17-1, ACC 9-4. Seed: Second
Coach: Bill Wilhelm.
Leading Hitters: Jim McCollom .406, 16 HR, 53 RBI; Bill
Spiers .379; Mark Biegert .361 ; Dillon .31 9, 27 RBI.
Leading Pitchers: John Pawlowski 7-1, 3.38 ERA; Randy
Mazey 4-0, 3.08; George Stone 7-3, 3.28.
North Carolina
Record: 35-1 3-1 , ACC 9-4-1 . Seed: Third
Coach: Mike Roberts.
Leading Hitters: B.J. Surhoff .405, 13 HR, 43 RBI; Scott
Johnson .372, 20 HR, 74 RBI; Devy Bell .328, 9 HR, 35
RBI.
Leading Pitchers: Roger Williams 7-1, 2.66 ERA; Greg
Karpuk 5-2, 2.97; Todd Kopczynski 6-2, 3.60.
N.C. State
Record: 29-14, ACC 8-5. Seed: Fourth
Coach: Sam Esposito.
Leading Hitters: Doug Strange .388, 7 HR, 41 RBI; Mick
Billmeyer .377, 10 HR, 41 RBI; Bob Marczak .365, 32
RBI.
Leading Pitchers: Paul Grossman 8-1, 2.51 ERA; Robert
Toth 6-0, 3.24; Hugh Brinson 4-3, 3.31.
Georgia Tech
Record: 26-11-1, ACC 6-7-1. Seed: Fifth
Coach: Jirri Morris.
Leading Hitters: Steve Newbern .41 1, 7 HR, 31 RBI; Scott
Jordan .396, 6 HR, 35 RBI; Walt McConnell .381, 7 HR,
44 RBI; Pete Geist .350, 6 HR, 30 RBI.
Leading Pitchers: Kevin Brown 6-3, 2.53 ERA; Keith
Fleming 5-3, 4.56; Roger Kinard 4-0, 2.84.
Duke
Record: 18-13-3, ACC 5-8-1. Seed: Sixth
Coach: Larry Smith.
Leading Hitters: Bud Nixon .356, 3 HR, 25 RBI; Erik
Albright .344; Chip Mathes .330, 21 RBI; Gordie Austin
.321.
Leading Pitchers: Scott Bromby 8-3, 4.01 ERA; Alan
Soyer 3-3, 3.76; Don Fowler 2-4, 4.44.
Maryland
Record: 1 4-1 7, ACC 5-8. Seed: Seventh
Coach: Jack Jackson.
Leading Hitters: Bryan Davenport .417, 4 HR, 36 RBI;
Paul Schlagler .386, 10 HR, 32 RBI; Alex Pauley .352,
10 HR, 34 RBI.
Leading Pitchers: Dave Karczeski 3-1, 6.63 ERA; Ed
Russell 2-5, 5.50; Alex Pauley 1-0, 4.34.
Wake Forest
Record: 22-21-2, ACC 1-12-1. Seed: Eighth
Coach: Marvin Crater.
Leading Hitters: Tommy Gregg .424, 1 1 HR, 41 RBI; John
Morabito .383, 5 HR, 39 RBI; Darryl Barnes .370, 1 HR,
7 RBI.
Leading Pitchers: Keith Ksansnak 4-0, 2.64 ERA; Randy
Talley 2-0, 3.20; Mike Featherstone 2-4, 3.80.
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A student musical and
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April 18-20
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On July 4th, 1985
A 94Z Radio Listener will win
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1. WZZU, ("94Z"), is conducting a contest called the "94Z
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5. From Thursday, March 28, 1385, through Wednesday. July ;
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Once a person has registered for the Grand Prize drawing
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