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6The Daily Tar Heel Tuesday. April 1, 1986 By TIM CROTHERS Assistant Sports Editor i Maryland lacrosse coach Dick Edell stood in the middle of Feter Field Saturday afternoon shaking his head with astonishment. "1 can't believe it; I've got to call my wife," he said over and over with glee. Mrs. Edell probably didn't believe it either. Minutes earlier Edell's fifth-ranked Terrapins seemed to have one foot firmly planted in the loss column before waking up to score five goals in the final five minutes of the match to steal a 10-9 victory from top-ranked North Carolina. The Hollywood finish was previewed by a first half that ended in a 3-3 stalemate. Maryland jumped on top early in the third quarter with the help of someone not dressed in a lacrosse uniform. Referee Ron Wilson ticketed the Tar Heels for two penalties that were seriously questioned by the North Carolina bench. The Terrapins took full advantage of both extra-man opportunities to lead 5-3 only five minutes into the period. The home-standing Tar Heels, who had lost only once at Fetzer Field in the last six seasons, began to press and at the appropriate moment, Wilson stepped into the spotlight again. Maryland's Tom Bedard was called for slashing on a swipe of his stick that appeared to miss its target. Midfielder Tom Worstell protested the call vehemently and compounded the Terps' penalty problems with an unsportsmanlike conduct call. With two Terps confined to the sideline, Dame Momentum reared her formidable head, this time in favor of the Tar Heels. Only 13 seconds after the dual penalties, UNC worked the ball around the Maryland net and found freshman John Szczypinski alone beside the cage for a point-blank shot past Terp goalie Jim Beardmore. With Maryland still one man down, UNC's Chris Galgano launched a 20-footer past Prrlmorf for North CamVtrii cfrnnr aofl in 1 cc'-onHc Tar Heel assist leader Pat Welsh assisted on Galgano's goal and the next three unanswered UNC goals as they jumped to an 8-5 lead with 1:40 left in the third period. After a shell-shocked Beardmore was charitably replaced in the Terp goal by Dennis Sullivan, Szczypinski capped off the UNC rally with an unassisted goal 18 seconds before the end of the period. "It was the worst feeling of my life," Worstell said, blaming UNC's offensive outburst on his unsportmanlike conduct. But Worstell would be vindicated. With just over seven minutes remaining in the match a Maryland fan shouted, "Hey guys, the goal is that orange thing in the middle of the field." The fan was mocking his team which hadn't scored a goal in nearly twenty minutes of play. But almost as if in response to the sarcastic fan, Maryland's leading scorer Brendan Hanley finally located the back of the UNC net at the 5:36 mark of the final quarter. Fickle Momentum was about to shift for the final time. Maryland scored three goals in the next three minutes to tie the score, 9-9, with 1:52 to play. "We sensed the momentum changing and we tried to ride the wave," Edell said. "We refused to lose one ground ball or one faceoff." In fact, it was in the faceoff circle rather than around the home goal that UNC lost this game. Maryland won 19 of the 23 faceoffs in the match, and all but one in the crucial final minutes. "We never got the ball on our end in the final five minutes," UNC coach Willie Scroggs said. With the score tied and time running out, the ball ironically found its way to Worstell Maryland's second-leading scorer who broke free and zipped a shot beneath UNC goalie Barney Aburn's outstretched stick with 25 seconds to go to seal the upset. "The screen was there so I shot low and luckily it went in," an ecstatic Worstell said after the match. Edell probably still can't believe it. Baseball emjoys weekend slmigffests By LEE ROBERTS Staff Writer What a strategy. North Carolina baseball coach Mike Roberts has cooked up a thrilling new formula for success: he simply fills out his lineup card and watches his charges score 15 runs a game. Sounds easy enough, right? It's sure looked easy lately, as the Tar Heels rocket-launching club bombed another three opponents this weekend, scoring 15 runs each game to extend their record to you guessed it 15 9 on the season. Friday, it was St. Bonaventure who ventured out to Boshamer Stadium and suffered the wrath of Roberts' bats and base stealers. The Tar Heels stole a school-record 14 bases and hit three home runs in their 15-3 win, as Brian Chandler swiped four bases and slugged a home run and Todd Kopczynski picked up his first win of the year. Saturday the Tar Heels won a thriller with Virginia, scoring three runs with one out in the bottom of the ninth for a 15-14 victory. Steve Mrowka's two- Clemson Masts women's tennis By PHILIP GITELMAN Staff Writer As expected, Clemson came to town and beat the women's tennis team, 8 1, last Saturday. The match went exactly as it should have. The third ranked Tigers played like the third ranked team and the top 25 Tar Heels played to their potential as well. No suprises, no scandals, no upsets it was a bookie's dream outcome. The scores were close, but UNC just couldn't get over the hump to break their ACC arch-rival. First-seeded Eileen Fallon snagged four games in the first set and had numerous close games in the second set but was unable to pull off an upset. Second-seeded Petra . A,,, Oy NORTH CAROLINA'S VAKDI IT ftCIS MOST EXCITING EST f R ANKHN 2 FILM SHOWMACE a VVyy vvvy j pm U A TVTTVT A U MDHERI woooYAuem KCOMSHATTWNQ HfT (i 5th Womtorlul WMkl 5-5 . a An mm mm ''SHI I UtXraCJi ........ ....--.I ..,..- , . - - . - J T I H I II Fl HOT ROAD at E. FRANKLIN IR IMl'JllH flfi7-4737 I 1 $250 TIL 6:00 PM EVERYDAY! m i i rm - "THE YEAR'S MOST WINNING COMEDY-DRAMA... -VktCfrtdnixMY Dmn raw iFifiMnf&ia I SJZzr Ceraldine Pace 'O- 1 TUETDIDTrtS: V 1 111 Li Hill W, Si , John Richard Rebecca so.HomoNfoore ta Heard Bradford Demoknw dwmpethimasibison ti . i.iii . i.i n o otu ibi uicieniikin . wm Wessels, in an aggressive net match, suffered the same fate and also fell in two sets. Swatting baseline returns and effective net-play took third-seeded Spencer Barnes to a three-set battle but eventually another UNC loss. The only UNC player to break out on top was sixth-seeded Liz Wachter. Clemson had already clinched the match after the singles competition by winning five of six matches, but the Tigers went on to add insult to injury by sweeping the three doubles as well. The match marked the second year in a row the Tigers have defeated the Tar Heels and it also ruined UNC's chances for a regular-season conference championship. Clemson has definitely made themselves the team to beat, but the UNC women proved they can play with them. UNC faces Duke at home at home on Tuesday at 2 p.m. April 8 to finish out its regular season before the ACC tournament. Scoreboard IM Standings Fraternity 1. DELTA UPSILON 2. PI KAPPA ALPHA 3. KAPPA PSI 4. PHI DELTA CHI 5. KAPPA ALPHA 6. SIGMA PHI EPSILON 7. SIGMA CHI 8. LAMBDA CHI ALPHA Residence Hall 1. TEAGUE A 2. LEWIS 3. TEAGUE B 4. MANGUM 5. EHRINGHAUS 6. GRANVILLE BW 7. GRAHAM 8. STACY 9. GRANVILLE CW 1 0. GRIMES 11. HINTON JAMES 12. AVERY '13.CONNOR 1265 1145 710 695 680 665 490 225 1460 1385 1315 1115 875 820 755 730 680 565 455 355 345 run single tied the score and then Howard Freiling singled in Mike Jedziniak for the game winner. And on Monday, a sunny spring beauty of a day out at Boshamer Stadium, the Tar Heels pulverized a hapless SUNY-Buffalo squad 15-1. This one was never close and probably shouldn't have been played, as Bill Robinson pitched his finest game of the year to completely dominate the Bills. Darrin Campbell led a parade of line drivers by going three-for-four on the day and knocking in three runs. North Carolina will usually get a lot of runs, but the young pitching staff has been a question mark all year. Monday, however, Robinson was excellent, leaving the game' after seven innings of three-hit, shutout ball. He is now 3-1 and has pitched 14-plus shutout innings in a row. 'TVe got a lot of confidence," said Robinson, who has struggled in his first three years but seems to have found his stride in his senior season. "IVe got more overall intensity and Coach (Roberts) has worked with me to build up my aggressiveness. I'm getting myself there." He was certainly there against Buf falo, setting the side down in order in four different innings and keeping the MOLLY RINGWALD PRETTY IN PINK(PG-13) 3:20 5:20 7:20 9:20 TOM HANKSSHELLY LONG THE MONEY PIT (PG) 3:15 5:15 7:10 9:10 6&W3Sfjps CLASSIC SLEEPING BEAUTY, 1958 WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS 3:30 5:10 7:00 8:30 Zjkl THEATRES JL, UST FftAJMLM STREET M2-Mt1 GO-BOTS (G) 1:30 POLICE ACADEMY 3 (PG) 7:30 9:30 CARE BEARS II (G) 2:00 3:45 5:30 3:00 LUCUS 5:00 7:00 9:00 wm& If I t PRIL FOOtS MY ...A cut above the rest. SHOWS NIGHTLY 7:05 & 9:10 Free J 8:00 I I Only We ay, Aprii 2 t wiiii ii 111 u i.i ii i -V t s - ' i- -r- --w- -r i- l If r VTTV fTTIf i ! i 1 1 u t ' J' --jy-ii ' " .11 1 or m LJlt MAM mmr. A m T 1 lk.T a a A O T I ?1 7i Airaon noaa, nexi 10 n a r w mi FREE EGG ROLL AND SPICEY CHICKEN WINGS Join us for Lunch on Tuesday or Wednesday and receive a FREE Appetizer with purchase of any Lunch Special. Choose delicious entrees from our 30 item special lunch menu. Lunch Specials include choice of three soups and ricelo mein for only $3.35 plus tax. This week's appetizers are: Tuesday Egg Roll, Wednesday Chicken Wings LUNCH ONLY m i OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FOR LUNCH & DINNER SPECIAL FAST LUNCH MENU FULL TAKE OUT SERVICE BANQUET FACILITIES Mon.-Fri. 11-2:30 Lunch Sat. & San. Noon-2:30 Lunch San.-Thars. 5-9:30 Dinner Fri. & Sat. 5-10:30 Dinner Call 967-6133 FOR RESERVATIONS & TAKEOUTS ALL ABC PERMITS WE CAN MEET YOUR DIETARY NEEDS UPON REQUEST i Hi 3 Sttt cmfln Am -mm 1 Tmm htm tmnm. m mumt mt tm MI MM too. IHIw Sweett Utt Es IT Me A TTai? IKIeellS Perfect Gift Idea! For the authentic Tar Heel Fan! MACVLAND (lEHk JNA VI3PC4 grcensBotOj rue. OfTicial Signatures of Coaches: Dean Smith, Dick Crum, Mike Roberts and athletic director John Swofford. Name to be placed on certificate (please print): Date to appear on certificate (Birth, Registration, Graduation, or when you became a Tar Heel Fan!): If multiple order, please add information on blank sheet. Name of purchaser: Address: City .State .Zip. CheckMoney Order Account MasterCard Visa Exp. Date Amex Certificate only-$ 19.95 Certificate matted-$24.95 Certificate framed (Free ACC T-shirt)-$39.95 T-SHIRT: Quantity ; Color: White Grey Navy; Size: S M L XL Total Amount Enclosed: Tax Included add $3.00 Shipping and Handling per order. Allow 2-4 weeks for delivery. May to: Carolina Graphics, 1507 E. Franklin St., Suite 136, Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Striking Carolina Blue Certificate. Great for home or office. Certificate features the individual's name and chosen date rendered in eye-catching Carolina Blue hand calligraphy. Available as certificate only ($19.95), matted on Carolina Blue mat ($24.95), or matted and framed w Glass Front Frame ($39.95). Plus Tax, Shipping and Handling. "Official ACC Tournament T-Shirt FREE with purchase of matted and framed certificate above. Or purchase separately. All ACC schools printed with school color surrounding the ACC Emblem. Five colors total. T-Shirt is high quality 5050 blend available in White, Grey, and Navy. $9.95 each. Bills' batters off-balance all day. Having the kind of hitting support Robinson had couldnt have hurt his confidence, either. The Boys of Bang started off quickly against Buffalo pitcher Marty Cerny, scratching for single runs in the first three innings, then heating up with two in the fourth. The contributors to Buffalo's demise were many: Campbell, Chris Lauria, Freiling, Glenn Liacou ras, Paul Will. Cerny was out of the game by the middle of the fourth, and his replacement, a pudgy right-hander by the name of Tim Dublino, proceeded to get mercilessly destroyed for the next three innings. The North Carolina starters gave way to the reserves by the sixth inning, and Scott O'Neal mopped up for Robinson. Perhaps out of a feeling of pity for Buffalo, he allowed a run in the eighth, but blew the Bills away in the ninth to finish it. North Carolina has now won eight of its last 10 games heading into today's 3:00 p.m. showdown with N.C. State in Raleigh. Ken Turner, who won Saturday's Virginia game and is now 5-1, will pitch this afternoon at Doak Field. The odds are good that North Carolina will score 15 runs again. Golfers fifth at Iron Duke By MIKE BERARDINO Staff Writer DURHAM Like a cheap economy car, North Carolina's lOth-ranked men's golf team spent the major part of last weekend knocking and pinging its way around Duke Golf Course before kicking into high gear on Sunday to salvage a fifth-place finish at the Iron Duke Classic in Durham. Paced by a final round of 68, UNC's John Hughes was the low individual for the Tar Heels and tied for eighth overall. After an opening round score of one-under-par 70 on Friday, Hughes' game exploded in his face, leaving the scar of a 77 on the junior's scorecard. Hughes struggled on a course which he blistered last October. As did the rest of the team, shooting a combined 25 over par on Saturday. On Easter Sunday, however, Hughes and the Tar Heels pulled a little resurrection job of their own. Highligh ted by a Hughes eagle on the par-5, 535-yard fifth hole, UNC swept to a combined front nine total of three under. The eagle surprised Hughes as much as it did the handful of onlookers who witnessed it. Having taken just two shots to land approximately 35 feet left of the hole, Hughes converted the tricky uphill- Avoid the Jottery blues Apply now' All apartments on the bus line to UNC Fantastic Social Program Call today for full information 967-223 1 or 967-2234 In North Carolina call toll-free 1-800-672-1678 Nationwide, call toll-free 1-800-334-1656 then-downhill effort. "That was some thing," Hughes said of the putt. "I was just trying as hard as I could to two putt. I wasn't even entertaining thoughts of making it." Meanwhile, UNC senior Bryan Sul livan, playing two groups ahead of Hughes, was making noises of his own with a bogey-free 34 on the front nine. The Tar Heels' No. 2 player bottomed out a pair of birdie putts on both par 5 holes to account for his total. Classmate Kurt Beck also posted red numbers, with a front side 35. But paradoxically, as the day grew hotter, North Carolina cooled off a bit. Hughes could only manage one birdie on the backside a 22-foot chip-in from the front fringe at the par-4 1 1th en route to a solid, if unspectacular, final nine. Not that he didn't have his chances, as Hughes missed birdie opportunities from 10 feet at No. 12, three feet at No. 14, and eight feet on 18. Nonetheless, Hughes was moderately pleased with his final round. "Today (Sunday) was a little more typical of the way IVe been playing lately," he said. "I struggled all day long. But 1 hit a few good shots." "John bounced back well (Sunday) after a 77 (Saturday)," UNC coach Devon Brouse said. "He's asserted himself as our No. 1 player." Sullivan fired a final-round 69 to drop his tourney total to five-over-par 218. Greg Parker (75-73-73 221) was next for UNC. Beck, playing a birdie less backside, notched a 72 on Sunday to go with a pair of prior 77s. Freshman Jim Sowerwine posted a final round 74 for an overall total of 16-over-par. Georgia Tech, ranked seventh nationally, outclassed the 24-team field and cruised to the team title by 13 strokes over both second-ranked Wake Forest and Clemson. Tech sophomore Bill McDonald edged Firman's Jack Kay by one shot for individual medalist honors. Next up for North Carolina is the Tar Heel Invitational. The home match, held April 11-13, will be UNC's last tuneup for the ACC Tournament. 1? PERSONALIZED WOMEN'S HEALTH CARE Our private practice offers confidential care including: Birth Control Free Pregnancy Tests Relief of Menstrual Cramps Abortion (to 20 weeks) Gynecology Breast Evaluation PMS Evaluation and Treatment TRIANGLE WOMEN'S HEALTH CENTER 109 Conner Dr. Suite 2202 Chapel Hill. NC 942-0011 or 942-0824 AcroM from University Mall JM WEDNESDAY BASEBALL vs DAVIDSON 6:00 pm Boshamer Stadium w jt fc ejr n 11 i v
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 1, 1986, edition 1
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