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Volleyball hosts 111. State
tonight, 7:30, Carmichael
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The Daily Tar HeelFriday, October 11, 19917
Men's soccer battles
Terps at home Sunday
North Carolina's seventh-ranked
men's soccer team, 9-2-1 after victories
over Winthrop and Duke, faces Atlantic
Coast Conference rival Maryland Sun
day at 2 p.m. on Fetzer Field.
Maryland has won five of the last six
games with UNC and leads the all-time
series 27-14-2. The Terrapins have
struggled so far this season, with a 1-5-3
record and an 0-2-1 ACC mark.
Maryland, which tied No. 3 Wake
Forest, features a balanced attack as
nine different Terps have scored once.
Goalkeeper Carmine Isaaco boasts a
1 .50 goals against average.
Volleyball squad hosts
Redbirds, Seminoles
UNC's struggling volleyball team
returns home this weekend for games
with Illinois State and Florida State, the
ACC's newest member. The Tar Heels
(8-1 0, 0-1 in the ACC) have lost nine of
their last 13, and the competition is not
getting any easier.
Illinois State (8-6), which has won
20 or more games each of the last three
seasons, is led by senior outside hitter
Lisa Rolf. UNC takes on the Redbirds
tonight at 7:30 in Carmichael Audito
rium. Florida State (10-3) is 1-0 in the
conference afterdefeating Virginia. The
Seminoles invade for a 6 p.m. contest
Saturday in Carmichael. FSU has a 9-1
edge in the all-time series with UNC.
Men's golfers hit road
in Nicklaus Invitational
UNC'smen's golf team, last season's
NCAA runnerup, will travel to Dublin,
Ohio, for the Jack Nicklaus Collegiate
Invitational Saturday through Monday.
The tournament, held at the Muirfield
Village Golf Club, will use a modified
match-play system.
Women's soccer travels
north to face Patriots
North Carolina's top-ranked
women's soccer team (12-0, 2-0 in the
ACC) will take on No. 13 George Ma
son in Fort Belvoir, Va., Sunday.
UNC leads 1 l-J-JJ.in the series with
GMU and has won the last six meetings.
George Mason defeated the Tar Heels
in the 1985 NCAA final.
Men's tennis sends 3 to
Southern Collegiates
Seniors Bryan Jones and Chris
Mumford and junior Sean Steinour will
compete for 19th-ranked UNC today
through Sunday in the Southern Colle
giate Championships in Athens, Ga.
All three players will play singles
and two of the three will compete in
doubles, although UNC head coach
Allen Morris hasn't determined which
two will play.
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Lookin' out
UNC tackles
By Dave Heiser
Staff Writer
Round two begins this weekend in
Chapel Hill as the No. 6 North Caro
lina field hockey team attempts to
avenge a 1 -0 loss to No. 1 Old Domin
ion two weeks ago.
The match will take place Sunday
at 2 p.m. on Navy Field.
UNC is coming off a two-game
road trip, which resulted in a 4-0 loss
to Maryland Sunday and a 3-1 win
over William & Mary Monday.
Head coach Karen Shelton said her
team was glad to be back home.
"We're looking forward to spend
ing some time in Chapel Hill and play
ing in front of our fans," she said.
Home should indeed be a welcome
sight for the 7-4 Tar Heels. All of the
team's losses have come on the road.
The archrival Monarchs enter with
a perfect 1 1 -0 record. ODU leads the
series with UNC 15-12since 1978,but
UNC is the only team to have beaten
the Monarchs in the last three years.
Shelton had praise for the Mon
archs. "ODU is very talented," she
said. "They are unquestionably the
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strongest team in the country."
Despite UNC's Sept. 29 loss to
ODU, Shelton was still pleased with
her team's effort.
"Even though we lost, we felt we
played tough and strong," she said.
"We are the only team to hold them
under three goals this season."
In fact, the Tar Heel defense held
the Monarchs to only nine shots in the
first contest. The UNC offense tallied
four penalty corners, only one less
than Old Dominion's five.
Shelton would like to see another
low-scoring game. "We're hoping for
another close one," she said.
UNC's chances could be hurt by
two key injuries. Senior midfielder
Nancy Lang is still hobbled by a foot
injury suffered in the first Old Do
minion match. Freshman Barbara
Hansen may also be sidelined.
Despite the injuries, Shelton main
tained her optimism. "Even if they are
out, I'm confident with who we have,"
she said.
what's it
worth?
Find out at the kickoff ceremony
for The Bicentennial Campaign
for Carolina.
11 a.m., Friday, October 11, 1991
on the steps of South Building facing
Polk Place.
F. N T f. NNI.U
P A I (, N ' '
o
All faculty, staff and students
are cordially invited to attend.
No. 1 women's soccer struggles
to defeat black-and-Blue Devils
By Jason Bates
Staff Writer
Hey Duke! Have I got a deal for you.
Whatta ya' say you come play the North
Carolina women'ssoccerteam a friendly
little game in Chapel Hill? After all, it's
only a 12-mile trip. But just to make it
more interesting you have to play
without four of your starters.
No problem.
Nobody gave the Blue Devils a
chance at all, but behind the play of
sophomore keeper Gretchen Young,
Duke dropped a close ACC match, 3-1 ,
to the Tar Heels.
No. 1 UNC improved its record to
1 2-0, 2-0 in the ACC. The hobbled B lue
Devils lost their fourth straight match
and fell to 6-6-1 , 0-2-1 in the ACC.
The game had all the makings of a
bloodbath. Duke had a serious case of
the injury bug going around. Four start
ers, including the team's leading scorer,
were unavailable.
Only four minutes into the match,
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UNC junior Kristine Lilly had a one-on-one
against Young, but the Duke
keeper won. She stopped another Lilly
solo run 10 minutes later, and the tone
of the match was set.
Young was able to almost single
handedly hold the Tar Heels off, as she
recorded 13 saves.
But UNC's relentless pressure and a
few Duke mistakes were just too much.
"To get three goals past her was a
tremendous accomplishment in light of
how well she was playing," said UNC
head coach Anson Dorrance. "She was
outstanding. She played well from be
ginning to end and basically made a
great game of it."
Sophomore Paige Coley put the Tar
Heels on the board at the 3 1 :23 mark in
the first half after swiping a pass from a
Blue Devil fullback.
Seven minutes later, freshman Tisha
Venturini set up Lilly with a cross pass.
The resulting header rebounded off the
crossbar onto the feet of UNC's Angela
Kelly, who blasted it home from near-
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The Tar Heels opened the second
half playing without Lilly. They contin
ued to dominate play but couldn't tack
on an insurance goal.
It was Duke who punched in a goal,
the first scored on the Tar Heels at horne
this season, with 22 minutes left in the
game, cutting the score to 2-1 .
Lilly returned five minutes later, and
any Blue Devil hopes were extinguished.
With five minutes to go, Lilly set up
Venturini for the final goal of the game.
Duke may not have won the game,
but the squad certainly won a measure
of respect from the Tar Heels, who may
face a healthy Blue Devil squad in the
ACC tournament.
"They played with their hearts,"
Dorrance said. "I credit them because I
thought they played an outstanding
game. They played with intensity. They
never gave up. (Head coach Bill)
Hempen and his athletes deserve a
helluva lot of credit for today's performance."
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