The Daily Tar Heel Tuesday, September 6, 19887
Womnemi wood two. memi oe, In road soccer action
From staff report
North Carolina men's and women's
soccer coach Anson Dorrance took
his nationally ranked charges to the
Midwest over the weekend, and, as
Season openers go, both teams came
Out of the action in pretty good shape.
The top-ranked women's squad
Started this year's slate with a 5-0
Comp over Dayton Thursday night.
Senior Wendy Gebauer scored three
goals for the Tar Heels, and Shannon
Higgins and Pam Kalinoski added
$econd-half goals.
I Gebauer scored the Tar Heels first
goal of the season 26:50 into the
match, when Kalinoski broke
through the Flyers defense and
crossed the ball to Gebauer, who
ripped the nets from four yards out.
; The Reston, Va., native added her
second goal less than five minutes
later when she volleyed a Julie
Guarnotta cross into the Dayton net
from 12 yards away.
! Gebauer waited until Higgins and
Kalinoski scored to finish her hat
trick, doing so at the 87: 15 markfrbm
seven yards out.
The Tar Heels outshot the Flyers
34-4 on the night.
While Thursday was a laugher,
Saturday proved to be a scare, as the
Tar Heels had to go to overtime
before defeating 15th-ranked Cincin
nati, 4-1.
Gebauer opened the scoring at the
21:08 mark with a header from eight
yards. But the Bearcats Barb Volker
tied the score from five yards out 12
minutes later. The score remained
that way through the rest of
regulation.
But the Tar Heels broke through
for three goals in the extra period,
with Higgins, a junior from Seattle,
Wash., notching two goals, the first
c8:50 into the first overtime and the
; second on a penalty kick at the 114-
: minute mark.
Guarnotta, a junior, then tallied the
final goal at 117:34 to put the game
out of reach. The Tar Heels, who are
2-0 on the year following this wee
kend's action, travel to Fayetteville
Wednesday for a 4 p.m. match
against Methodist.
The men's squad opened their
season with a much more difficult
pair of matches, with, both coming
in the Adidas Metropolitan Life
Classic at Bloomington, Ind., home
of the University of Indiana. All four
teams participating in the classic were
nationally ranked.
. Friday night, the Tar Heels faced
off against the second-ranked Hoos
iers, losing a 2-0 heartbreaker that
saw the two teams even in shots at
12. However, the real difference in
the match was Ken Snow.
Snow, a sophomore All-American
forward, netted two second-half goals
to lead the Hoosiers. He opened the
scoring 5:40 into the half after Chris
Sciortino's shot from the left side was
deflected by Tar Heel goalkeeper
Darren Royer. Wes Priest then
headed the ball back in front of the
goal, and Snow drove it in from four
yards out.
Snow added an insurance goal with
just under 12 minutes to play as he
took a through pass from Mark
Behringer and scored on a one-on-one
breakaway with a shot to the
upper left comer.
The Tar Heels weren't without
their chances, though. Indiana goalie
Juergen Sommer had five saves on
the day, stopping two point-blank
blasts in the second half, one from
Derek Missimo from 12 yards out less
than a minute into the half and
another from senior forward Tommy,
Nicholson on a breakaway.
The Tar Heels evened their record
at 1-1 in Saturday's second-round
game, as senior back Donald Cogs
ville scored with 1:57 to play in the
second overtime to lead UNC to a
wild, 4-3 win over 12th-ranked
Evansville.
The. senior out of Trenton, N. J.,
took a pass from junior midfielder
Chad Ashton, beat a defender and
drove a low shot past Aces keeper
Jon Halliwill for the game-winner.
The match, played before a crowd
of 4,500, was a record-setter at the
six-year classic. The officials really
earned their pay, as there were a
whopping 77 fouls, 19 offsides and
1 1 cautions on the night.
"We didn't play that well, but I was
pleased that we scored four goals,"
Dorrance said afterwards. "We
missed some other chances and gave
up some layups, though.,
Campus Calendar
The Tar Heels led 2-0 in the first
, 6:46 of the match, with the goals
coming 1:40 apart. Junior midfielder
John Cocking opened up the scoring
at 5:06 and was followed by an
Ashton goal off a foul 100 seconds
later. '
But the Aces came back in the
second half to tie the game with a
pair of goals 19 minutes apart, with
Tom Nevin scoring at 52:37 and Rob
Paterson notting things up with 19
minutes to play.
Royer and Halliwill then kept the
offenses at bay through the rest of
regulation, with Royer making a
sliding save on a breakaway and
Halliwill answering with a one-on-one
save of a Nicholson shot late, in
regulation.
Halliwill then made another spec
tacular save of a Nicholson shot by
kicking the ball out of the goal with
his left foot 48 seconds into the first
overtime. Nicholson, a fifth-year
senior who sat out last season because
of a shoulder injury, finally got on
the scoreboard 3:08 into the first
The DTH Campus Calendar is a daily
listing of University-related activities
sponsored by academic departments,
student services and student organiza
tions officially recognized by the Division
of Student Affairs. To appear in Campus
Calendar, announcements must be sub
mitted on the Campus Calendar form by
NOON one business day before the
announcement is to run. Saturday and
Sunday events are printed in Friday's
calendar and must be submitted on the
Wednesday before the announcement is
to run. Forms and a drop box are located
outside the DTH office, Union 104. Items
of Interest lists ongoing events from the
same campus organizations and follows
the same deadline schedule as Campus
Calendar. Please use the same form.
Tuesday
3:00 p.m. Order of the Bell
Tower executives and
committee heads will
meet in the OBT office.
3:30 p.m. University Career
Planning and
Placement Servi
ces will hold a basic
information session on
how to use the UCPPS
office for seniors and
graduate students in
science, math and
computer science in
210 Hanes Hall.
4:15 p.m. UCPPSwiD hold a
resume writing work-
shop for science, math
and computer science
majors in 210 Hanes
Hall.
The Dally Tar Heel
will hold an informa
tional meeting for wri
ters, photographers
and copy editors in 226
Union:
4:30 p.m. U.S. Soviet
Exchange Project-
will have an informa
tional meeting in 206
Union.
5:00 p.m. UNC Moravian
Student Fellowship
will meet at the Union
desk and go to dinner.
For more information
contact Kathie Rollins
at 933-5938.
UCPPSwillholda
basic information ses
sion on how to use the
UCPPS office for
seniors and graduate
students in 210 Hanes
Hall.
5:45 p.m. UCCPS will hold a
resume writing work
shop in 210 Hanes Hall.
8:00 p.m. UNC Young Demo
cratswill hold its first
group meeting in 209
Union. Rep. David
Price will speak.
Students for Bob
Jordanwill meet in'
conjunction with the
UNC Young Demo
crats in 209 Union.
Items of Interest
Execntive Branch of the
Student Government commit
tee applications are available in
Suite C of the Union.
Union Gallery committee
presents two exhibits: Paintings by
Betty Bell and Mixed Media from
CenterGallery.
Carolina Union Activities
Board committee applications are
available at the Union Desk.
UNC Elections Board appli
cations are available at the informa
tion rack beside the Union Desk.
Please turn them in by Sept. 9
Delta Sigma Pi, the profes
sional business fraternity, is having'
sign up for fall rush Tuesday, Sept.
6 to Monday, Sept. 12 in front of
Carroll Hall. .
overtime period.
Ashton, who finished the night
with one goal and two assists, sent
Missimo a pass just past the midfield
line, and the Bedford, Tex., native
advanced the ball to Nicholson, who
put it past Halliwill for a brief Tar
Heel lead.
The Aces then tied things up for
the last time 32 seconds into the
second overtime. Nevin fed an all
alone Paterson, and he chipped the
ball over Royer and into the net.
Cogsville got the game-winner with
Evansville playing a man down after
Graham Merryweather was ejected
for leaving, the playing field to
celebrate the Aces' third goal.
Dorrance seemed exasperated with
the match. "This team needs to find
an identity, some confidence," he
said. "Tonight's game was a night
mare, and I thought the referee did
a great job." 4
After last weekend's excitement,
the Tar Heels hope to relax with a
3:30 match with Campbell
Wednesday.
TRY 302-A-East Main St.
Carrboro
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