4The Daily Tar HeelTuesday, February 11, 1986
dadldleouiieyeov Daps ACC aondl wmLM ewa
Dy LORN A KHALIL
Staff Writer
When North Carolina swimming
standout Melanic Buddemeyer was seen
hobbling down the pool deck at Bow
man Gray on crutches during last
Thursday's practice, a few hearts
skipped a beat. The All-American
sophomore broke a bone in her foot
exactly two weeks before the start of
the ACC championships, and it was
feared that she might not be able to
swim.
Fortunately for the No. 10 women's
team, the thought of not swimming
never entered Buddemeyer's mind.
Displaying the toughness that has
brought her world-class status, Budde
meyer was working out in the pool
hours after she broke the bone in her
foot.
"It mainly bothers me when I'm
kicking or pushing off the walls,"
Buddemeyer said of her injury. But the
pain she is experiencing may be out
weighed by the good that has come from
the injury. The idea of not being able
to swim has made Buddemeyer appre
ciate swimming more.
"Getting hurt has made me step back
and really think about how much I like
swimming and what it means to me,"
she said.
Only a winner can turn a potentially
negative situation into a positive one.
Melanie Buddemeyer has certainly
gotten a firm hold on mental toughness
and the consistency that goes with it
to become the champion that she is
today.
As a freshman, Buddemeyer had an
outstanding season. At the ACC cham
pionships, she won both the 100- and
200-yard butterfly events, establishing
new conference records in each. In
addition, she was a member of the
winning 400 medley and freestyle relay
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teams at the conference meet.
Buddemeyer then went on to the
NCAA championships where she
placed third in the 100 and 200 but
terflies, breaking her own ACC marks
in the process. For outstanding accomp
lishments such as these, Melanie was
named the team's most valuable per
former last year.
After her first year at UNC, Budde
meyer went home to Penn Hills, Pa.,
to train over the summer. Her hard
work paid off, as she earned a silver
medal in the 100-meter butterfly at the
United States National Swimming
championships.
By placing in the top two at
Nationals, Melanie gained a spot on the
U.S. team competing at the World
University Games in Japan. She took
a silver medal there and topped off the
summer with a fourth-place world
ranking in the 100-meter butterfly.
This season has been just as good,
if not better, than last year's for the
sophomore standout. Buddemeyer has
already posted faster times than she did
at the same point in the season last year.
For all of her athletic accomplishments
in 1985, Buddemeyer recently won the
Willis R. Casey award for the most
outstanding swimmer in North
Carolina.
"Melanie is a very task-oriented
swimmer," coach Frank Comfort said.
"She trains hard and has a very good
attitude toward her swimming.'
Sarah Durstein, co-captain of the
women's team, attributes Buddemeyer's
success to her strong competitivenes.
"Melanie gets psyched up for all the
meets," Durstein said. "She's a real
competitor."
Buddemeyer, who is majoring in
biology and German, said her goals
include bettering her times in the 100
and 200 butterfly as well as placing
higher in her other events, the 100
freestyle and the 200 individual medley,
at the ACC championships.
Buddemeyer will be joined by her
teammates when UNC swims against
N.C. State in the final challenge to
North Carolina's undefeated record
tonight at 7:00 at Bowman Gray Pool.
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DTHDan Charlson
Melanie Buddemeyer is the leader of an undefeated women's swim team
Wommeim jymmp to No. 13
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There's some stories that you can't
wait to get to the end of when you're
reading them the kind that when you
turn the page you ache for a. happy
ending because the characters have
made you feel.
The UNC women's basketball team
is such a story this season. Crippled by
three injuries to starters, the team has
nevertheless managed to come through
with 10 wins in its last 11 games and
lii-i
3
Ami
have now been rewarded with its highest
national ranking ever 13th in the poll
just released.
The Tar Heels escaped with two
harrowing victories in the past week
one of them over then-No. 3 Virginia,
which dropped to fifth in the latest poll.
Duke rounds out the ACC connection
at 20th.
It remains to be seen if this season
will provide a happy ending for the
women, but it's good to see another
positive chapter has been written.
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TOMORROW IS ASH WEDNESDAY
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at the Chapel of the Cross
"l invite you , . . in the r;rs of the Churchy to the observance
of a holy Lent, i?r jelf-;xa;in3t ion end repentance; by prayer,
fastir.g, and self-denial; sr-.d by readjr.g arvd Meditating on God's
holy Kord
Ash Wednesday Liturgy, The Book of Cordon Praver .
Wirestieirs ireacliDinig g3)al
By BOB YOUNG
Staff Writer
The eighth-ranked UNC wrestling
team rolled to its eighth straight dual
match win Sunday night with a 30-6
victory over Maryland at College
Park. . . .
A pretty simple statement, until you
look at the significance of the match.
1) It gave the Tar Heels a 16-win
season, the most ever by a UNC team.
2) It gave the team five wins in the
ACC, the most since 1981, when the
team was 5-2.
3) It puts UNC wrestling at the .500
level (81-81-1) in ACC competition for
the first time in the 30-plus year history
of ACC wrestling.
4) The win puts the Tar Heels'
winning percentage at .825 for the year,
the best since the team was 12-0 in 1980.
5) It was UNCs 21st match of the
season, the most ever for a Tar Heel
team.
6) For ten out of the last 1 1 years,
UNC has lost to only one ACC team
N.C. State.
7) With a win over N.C. State this
Ash Wednesday, February 12, 1986
7:30 a.m. The Holy Eucharist: Rite Two
10:00 a.m. The Holy Eucharist: Rite One
12:15 p.m. The Holy Eucharist: Rite Two r
5:15 p.m. The Holy Eucharist: Rite Two
8:00 p.m. The Holy Eucharist: Rite One
10:00 p.m. The Way of the Cross; University Service
A priest will be available throughout Ash Wednesday for those who wish to talk
privately or to use the Church's Rite for the Reconciliation of a Penitent. Between
8:30 a.m. and the 5: 1 5 eucharist, a priest will be in either the church or the chapel.
Psalm 51 verses 15-17, a Psalm of David
O Lord, open thou my lips, and my mouth shall show forth thy praise.
For thou hast no delight in sacrifice; were I to give a burnt offering, thou
wouldst not be pleased. "
The sacrifice acceptable to God is a broken spirit; a broken and contrite heart,
O God, thou wilt not despise.
The Chapel of the Cross
on campus at Franklin St. between
Morehead and Spencer
Friday, UNC can go undefeated in
conference action for the first time since
1980.
All in all, a pretty significant win. But
not as significant as the Valentine's Day
Rumble with the Wolfpack, according
to coach Bill Lam.
"The match with State is going to
be very important in deciding the
seedings for the ACC tournament,"
Lam said. "And who gets seeded in what
position could be a crucial factor in the
outcome of the tournament.
The tournament, which will be held
in Raleigh at the end of February, has
belonged to the Tar Heels the past two
seasons, but even with the record this
year's team has compiled, Lam isn't
saving space in the trophy case just yet.
"This is definitely the best dual match
team that I've ever coached here," he
said. "But that doesn't mean that we're
a good tournament team. N.C. State
has a very tough team, and since the
tournament will be pretty much a two
team battle, one or two matches to
either team could decide the
tournament."
scoreboard
Wrestling
(Sunday's results)
North Carolina 30, Maryland 6
11 8 Palacio (UNC) technical fall over Orris (M), 2:50;
125 Aumiller (UNC) def. Lawrence (M) 5-2; 134
Catullo (UNC) def. Bottiger (M) 9-6; 142 Bernstein
(UNC) def. Desiderio (M) 10-1; 150 Cardi (UNC) def.
Schwab (M) 6-1; 158 Brown (M) def. Koll (UNC)
9-6; 167 Wilson (UNC) def. Schovall (M) 7-4; 177
Pepperack (M) def. Silvestro (UNC) 6-2; 190 T.
Davis (UNC) def. Holland (M) 19-7; Hwt & Davis
(UNC) def. Reese (M) 6-5.
Records Maryland 7-6, North Carolina 16-3-1
'-breaks school record for most victories in a season
Gymnastics
North Carolina 178.85, Comal 172.25
(Individual winners at Sunday's meet, Ithaca, N.Y.)
All-around competition: Stacy Kaplan (UNC). 36.80.
Floor exercise: Kaplan (UNC), 9.40.
Vault Kaplan (UNC). 9.40.
Balance beam: Missy Shafmer (UNC). 9.05.
Uneven paraM bars: Barbi Callaghan (UNCI 9.25.
UNC is now 7-0, the best start ever in the 15 years
of the program's existence
Men's golf
Doral Park National Coflegiate invitational, Miami, Fla.
North Carolina finished third in a field of 18 schools,
behind winner and host Miami (three-day total of 878)
and Georgia Tech (898). The Tar Heels finished just
two strokes behind the Yellow Jackets, recording a
three-day total of 900 over the par-72 Doral Silver Park
Course.
Greg Parker was, for the second week in a row,
the UNC top individual finisher, recording a 75-73-75
223 to finish eighth. Bryan Sullivan (226) was tied for
16th, while Brendan Kennedy (227) tied for 18th and
John Hughes (228) tied for 22nd.
Calendar
Today
WOMEN'S SWIMMING vs. N.C. State. Bowman Gray
Pool, 7 p.m.
Wednesday
MEN'S BASKETBALL at Clemson, Clemson, S.C 7:30
p.m.
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL vs. Duke, Carmichael
Auditorium, 7:30 p.m.
Friday
MEN'S & WOMEN'S TRACK at Millrose Games, New
York, N.Y.
WRESTLING vs. N.C. State, Carmichael Auditorium,
7:30 p.m.
American Heart Association
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