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The Daily Tar HeeVMonday, November 25, 1991S r """""" j" ' ' itMn Men's soccer beaked by Billikens in NCAAs .... ....a. . . fk.ft Staff reports ST. LOUIS The St. Louis Univer sity Billikens defeated UNC4-0 Satur day in the second round of the NCAA Men's Soccer Tournament before 1,085 fans at the Billiken Sports Center. SLU, ranked No. 2 in the nation and the South Region's top seed, raised its record to 19-1-2. Fourteenth-ranked UNC closed its season at 15-6-1. Four players scored for the Billikens as both squads braved 28-degree tem peratures and light snow throughout the game. Lamb leads By Jennifer Dunlap Staff Writer What a turnaround. After a crushing exhibition defeat to the Canadian National Team Nov. 17, the UNC women's basketball team started its regular season with some thing to prove. Well, the team proved it could be at the giving end of a blowout Friday afternoon in its season opener against USC-Aiken at Carmichael Auditorium. When it was all over, the scoreboard read: UNC 87, USC-A 56. But at the game's beginning, it looked as if the blowout might have been on its way in the other direction. The Pacers jumped out to an early 10-3 lead. Meanwhile, the Tar Heels racked up foul after foul, giving the Pacers the bonus with almost 1 2 minutes left in the half. "We were reaching," said UNC head coach Sylvia Hatchell. "We weren't playing defense with our feet. We put them on the foul line 1 8 times in the first half." ' But theTar Heels turned the momen tum around after Hatchell called a time out midway through the first half. The (JNC coach changed her defense to a full-court press. The switch seemed to frustrate the Pacers, as UNC forced some turnovers that resulted in fast-break baskets. Duke was just a big burden lifted off my back." The run also lifted a two-year burden off UNC's back. The extra point after Means' touchdown gave the Tar Heels a 40-1 4 lead and ended any hopes of a Blue Devil comeback. With its blowout victory in hand, UNC closed out a win that closely m irrored Duke's 4 1 -0 shut out of the Tar Heels two years ago in Kenan Stadium. .. In that game. Duke's Brown com piled 479 yards on 33-of-54 passing; after that contest, the quarterback said he could have done better. Saturday, Brown was 15 of 42 for 168 yards and one interception. ' "He had an off day when they beat us Duka 0 0 7 7 14 North Carolina 7 IS 13 14 47 First Quarter UNC Blount 8 run (Gwaltney luck), 1 0:55 Second Quarter UNC Gwaltney 19 field goal, 12 0 UNC R. Jordan 37 run (Gwaltney kick), 6:35 UNC Gwaltney 28 field goal. 0:01 Third Quarter Duke Farquhar31 from D. Brown (Gardner kick). 10:55 X)HC W. Henderson 3 run (pass failed). 4 23 UNC Faufcerson 3 run (Gwaltney kick), 0:12 Fourth Quarter Duke Jones 27 from D. Brown (Gardner . 13:50 XlNC Means 88 run (Gwaltney kick), 13:04 UNC W. Henderson 9 run (PignerB kick). 7:20 A 50.500 UNC Duke 25 13 62-351 21-38 178 185 39 31 14-24-2 18-43-1 2 42.0 6-383 20 3-2 8-103 2-19 37.07 22:53 First downs Rushes-yards Passing yards fletur n yards Comp-Ait-Int Punta-Avg. FumWes-tost Penalties-yards -Time of possession Individual Statistic Rushing: UNC Means 30-1B1; Jordan 1 2-1 08 ;W. Henderson 5-22 ; Stanieek 4-14: Williams 3-8. Blount 1 ; 0. Henderson 3-8; Faukerson 2-4; Atkinson 2-2. Duka D. Brown 13-32; Wright 2-4; Gallman 1-3; C. Brown 4-2; Jones 1 (-5). Passing: UNC Stanieek 14-24-2 178 Duke D. Brown 1 5-42-1 1 68. Gardner 1-1 -017. Receiving: UNC Holliday 3 50; Jauch 3 23: Blount 2 44. W. Henderson 2-22; Jordan 2 !8; Felton 1-12; Means 1-9. Duka C. Brown 4-36; Farquhar 3-43; Jones 2-40; Wright 2-3; Mays 1 -32; Ellis 1-17; Redmon 1 9; Breedtove 1-5. Missed Field Goals: Gwaltney 43. U off any footlons or large salad With tilt pu rerun of t medium toft drink. One eoupoit per tultomtr gar visit. ft0i"K0 V, iw Timberlyne Shopping Center 2:00 PM-9:30 PH 967-7771 WE DELIVER! The Billikens scored at 27:42 when Steve Kuntz hit a 9-yard shot off an assist by Jeff Davis. St. Louis then tal lied three goals in the second half be hind the play of Shane Butelte, Brian McBride and Mike Sorber. UNC goalkeeper Watson Jennison tallied nine saves, but the Billikens outshot the Tar Heels 17-8. Swimmers in 'Rama invite TUSCALOOSA, Ala. North Caro lina swimmers David Monasterio and Carrie S.ulc garnered second-place fin women's basketball to blowout 1 i Charlotte Smith North Carolina took the lead for the first time with 8:56 left in the first half, when junior guard Toni Montgomery hit a 3-pointeY to make the score 18-15. In the second half, the Pacers contin ued to lose their composure, fouling more often and throwing the ball away. The Tar Heels, using a balanced attack of outside and inside shooting, never let USC-Aiken back in the game. The Tar Heels' balance also showed in the statistics. Senior guard Tanya 4 1 -0," Thigpcn said. "So I think we had an off day on defense today by letting them get 14 points." For the first half, it looked as if the Tar Heels would return Duke's 1989 favor at par, shutting out the Devils 20 Owhilecompiling hefty offensive totals themselves. UNC held the ball for 20:52 of the game's first 30 minutes. The contest began with a 70-yard kickoff return by UNC's Eric Blount that put the Tar Heels on Duke's 28 yard line. Eight plays later. Means re versed the ball to Blount, who raced 6 yards into the end zone. Clint Gwaltney's extra point made it 7-0. Blount said his beginning-of-the-game kickoff return was no surprise. "We thought coming into the game that we were going to be able to do that because of the way they run their lanes and stuff," Blount said. "I got two great blocks from (Brian) Bollinger and (Andy) Dinkin. There was a big hole there, and I just ran through it. "I believe my kickoff return set the tempo for the whole game." With the tone set, both squads re mained scoreless until the second quar ter, when UNC went on a rampage: After a pass from UNC's Jason Stanieek to Corey Holliday put the ball at Duke's 27, and a penalty advanced theTar Heels to the 1 3, UNC stalled and settled for a Gwaltney field goal with 12:04 left in the quarter. Score: 10-0. On UNC's next possession, Jor dan capped a six -play, 68-yard drive with a 37-yard run through the middle in which the junior emerged untouched. After a Gwaltney extra point, it was 17 0 with 6:35 left in the half. At Planned Parenthood, You're a Person. Not just a patient Planned Parenthood professionals care about your health. Your feelings. Your privacy. And your right to the best in family planning services and personal health care at an affordable price. Complete birth control services. Pregnancy testing and counseling. Gynecological exams yearly check-ups, Pap tests, breast exams, treatment for common infections Cervical caps and morning after pill, Village Plaza (next to Welkprin& Chapel Hill 93 S. Elliott Rd. 942-7762 820 Broad St., Durham 419-8081 ishes at the Alabama Invitational last weekend. Monasterio clocked in at 4 minutes, 39.31 seconds in the 400-meter indi vidual medley while S.ulc finished in 5:05.87 in the women's 400 individual medley. Monasterio and Szulc both finished fourth in the 200 butterfly with times of 2:06.71 and 2:23.13, respectively. Monasterio also helped lead North Carolina's400freestyle relay toafourth place finish. The meet, attended by eight Tar Heel Lamb led UNC with 1 7 points. She was 4 for 6 from treyland and shot 60 per cent within the circle. Montgomery, with 12 points, also shot 50 percent from the 3-point line. But UNC's second-leading scorer was an inside player, freshman forward Charlotte Smith, who had 16 points. Another inside player in double figures was center Sylvia Crawley with 1 1. Senior point guard Emily Johnson dished out 1 1 assists to round out the attack. Crawley and Smith each pulled down seven rebounds. All told, the Tar I Icels launched 1 2 3 point shots and made six of them. Hatchell said her offense was built around the outside shot. "All our offenses are set up to take the shot right around the basket or to take the 3-point shot," she said. For USC-Aiken, the scoring was far from balanced. Senior guard Tisha En gland scored 23 points and ran the of fense from the point. She was also a threat on the free-throw line, with nine of her points coming from the stripe. Ironically enough. Hatchell said En gland had signed to play for North Caro lina during her freshman year but had failed to qualify academically. "At halftime I told my players, 'Now you know why we signed Tisha F.n gland,'" Hatchell said. "She's a great player. She could play in the ACC, there's no question about it." from page 10 After a Jonathan Perry intercep tion gave UNC the ball at Duke's 22 with 2:21 left, theTar Heels advanced the ball to the 3 before a Deems May clipping penalty reversed the ball to the Duke 25. When a Stanieek pass to Holliday in the end zone fell incom plete, UNC settled for a field goal with :()l remaining in the half. Score: 20-0. At the start of the second half, it appeared as if the Duke offense might reemerge. On the Devils' first posses sion, Brown engineered a 14 play, 73 yard touchdown drive that was capped by a 3 1 -yard pass to tight end John Farquhar with 10:55 left in the third. But the UNC defense stood tight thereafter, as linebackers Thigpen, Dwight Hollier and F.ric Gash contin ued to pressure Brown. Gash and I lollier finished with three tackles and a sack. Thigpen had six unassisted tackles. Duke managed only one more score in the contest, a 27-yard pass from Brown to Walter Jones. UNC responded with two touchdowns by fullback Wil liam Henderson, one by fullback Mike Faulkerson and Means' 68-yard jaunt. All in all, bowl bid or not. UNC's victory stood as a monument to the Tar Heels' seniors, who withstood back-to-back I -10 seasons before last season's 6-4-1 record and this year's 7-4 outing. "These seniors have been through a lot of hard times," said UNC head coach Mack Brown. "(They) really felt like it would have been a finishing touch to win seven games, put themselves in a position to go to a bowl and hang on and hope that happens. "I think it's amazing what they've been able to do." now available Special Rates for Students! L. i swimmers, was a tune-up tor uinc s dual meets with Duke today in Koury Auditorium and at N.C. State Tuesday. Harriers in NCAA finals The UNC men's cross country team will compete in the NCAA Champion ships today in Tucson, Ariz., the team's first appearance in the finals since 1 985. Led by sophomore Andre Williams, the Tar Heels finished third in the NCAA District III Championships Nov. 16 in Greenville, S.C. Williams came in third individually in the meet. Another North CarolinaUSC-A iken connection is through Pacers head coach Gail Moody-Johnson. She played un der Hatchell for four years at Francis Marion College, and later assisted Hatchell there before both left the school for their current coaching positions at UNC and USC-Aiken. "I knew she'd have them fired up," Hatchell said. "I thought they played an excellent game." USC-Aiken (58) Jones 1-11 57. Snyder 1 -5 1 2 3. Sims 2 8 0-04. England 6-1 2 9-1 2 23, Ryana 3-6 0-0 6. Smith 0-0 0-0 0, Busby 0-0 0-0 0, Henry 0-0 2 3 2, Franklin 3-5 5-8 11. Davis 0-0 0-0 0, Cleveland 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 16-45 22 31 56. North Carolina (87) Kennedy 0 20-0 0. Bradley 0-2 1-21, Crawley 5-91211. Montgomery 4-122-212. Johnson 3-7 2 2 8, Smith 7-9 2 4 16. Sampson 2 6 0 0 4, Lamb 8-10 1-2 17. McKee 3-3 3-4 9. Gillingham 4 6 1-2 9, Turner 0-1 0 0 0. Suddreth 0-2 0 0 0. Totals 34-69 1 3-20 87. HaHtime North Carolina 44, USC-Aiken 29 Fouled out none. Rebounds - USC Aiken 32 (England 7). North Carolina 40 (Crawley, Smith 7). Assists - USC Aiken 7 (Snyder 3). North Carolina 20 (Johnson 1 1). Siftals- USC Aiken 5 (Jones. Sims 2). North Carolina 16 (Crawley, Sampson 3). Turnovers - USC Aiken 34 (England. Ryans 8). North Carolina 22(Kennedy6). Bkxks -USC-Aiken 1 (Jones). North Carolina 2 (Crawley. McKee). Total fouls - USC Aiken 1 7, North Carolina 24. Attendance - 250 Carolina Open(s) home slate, wins 4 By John C. Manuel Staff Writer Ric Flair was not there, but UNC's wrestling team fought like a champion Saturday at the Carolina Open. Id by junior Shane Camera, who won outstanding-wrestler honors for the tournament, the Tar Heels had fourover all winners, one second-place finisher, and two third-place competitors. The tourney's finals were held in Carmichael Auditorium, while the opening-round matches took place in Woollen Gym. Camera, moving up from the 167 pound class where he won last season's ACC title, won the 177-pound weight class by decision against Bret Gustaf son of Tennessee-Chattanooga. "The guy Shane beat was fifth in the nation at 177," said UNC head coach Bill Lam. "Shane was eighth at 167, so we're very pleased at the way he moved up." Sophomore Ty Moore, ACC runner up at 1 18 pounds last year, dominated Chowan's Corey Dye in the 126 final. The Tar Heels' other two winners were freshmen. At 142 pounds. Dave Leonardis defeated Chris Burns of Wilkes Community College, and at 150 pounds. Marc Taylor decisioned Vic Balmeceda of Appalachian State. UNC freshman Jody Staylor lost a Save the MONDAY Return of the louse Highbal I T thru December 31 J Lm mm mm mi mm m m mm mm 25 to 50 OFF EVERYTHING IN THE STORE Home and car stereo Telephones Furniture Portable stereos Radar detectors CB radios Short waves Answering machines Accessories ChapelHill store only Sorry, NO special orders NO layaways 'Except cellular phones Volleyball ousted early in ACC tourney by FSU By David Monroe Staff Wrifcf CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. Florida State scalped the North Caro lina volleyball team In the first found of the ACC Tournament Friday night in Memorial Gymnasium. The sixth-seeded Seminoles rolled into the semifinals by sweeping the third-seeded Tar Heels 15-7, 1 5-6 and 15-7. UNC concluded its season with an 18-15 record, 4-4 in the ACC. Duke defeated seventh-seeded Vir ginia Sunday for the ACC crown. The top-seeded Blue Devils swept the Cava liers 15-12, 15-5, 15-5. Duke had de feated Georgia Tech in the semifinals, and Virginia had knocked off FSU. Friday, UNC found itself looking uphill throughout its quarterfinal up set. TheTar Heels fell behind by scores of 13-2, 6-0 and 1 1-0 at the start of games one, two and three, respectively, "We never put the pressure on Florida State to challenge them to make a clutch play," said North Carolina head coach Joe Sagula. "It's tough to win when you are giving up five or six points at the beginning of each game." The Seminoles chopped up the Tar Heels from the start. In game one, FSU turned a 2-2 score into a 13-2 advan tage before UNC scored again. "We were playing scared to lose instead of wanting to win, which is what happens when we play aggres sive," said junior Setter Amy Peistmp. Game two began similarly for UNC, as FSU jumped to a 6-0 lead. But the Tar Heels turned things around by nar rowing the score to 6-5. But just as quickly as UNC had closed the deficit, FSU regained the momentum. The Seminoles extended their lead back to six by scoring the close final to Joe Stukes, who is five years his senior, at 134 pounds. The open competition enabled wrestlers like Stukes, who have either exhausted their eligibility or who will be redshirted this year, to compete. UNC senior Pete Welch, who won the ACC title last year at 158, finished third at 167 with a decision over Matt Caro of Maryland. Returning ACC finalist Todd Hartung, wrestling in his familiar 190 I i Z r turkey for Thanksgiving IET STISFFEi j j 933-3767 310 W. Franklin mm mm wmi mm mmm mm mtm m mm mmmm next five points. "I think we all started to look at each other for answers and no one had any," Peistrup said. In game three, Florida State picked up right where it had left off by racing out to a quick 11-0 lead. The momen tum was clearly In FSU's favor, and a trip to the next round was not far away. Before the match, Sagula said good defense would be a key to victory fof the Tar Heels. Unfortunately for North Carolina a team that prided itself on good defense the entire season good defense did not exist against FSU. ' "Our defense directly affect how our team plays as a whole," Sagula said. "Because we were real sluggish on defense, we could not get anything going on offense, either. The Tar Heels enteied the tourney look ing for their third ACC title In the last four years. Several UNC player said they had overlooked the Semi noles, a team North Carolina had eas ily beaten during the regular season. "I think we completely overlooked this team," said senior Melissa Mroczek. "1 think since they were so prepared, we couldn't get it together." The Seminoles, who only won two ACC matches in the regular season, played one of their most consistent matches of the year against UNC. "Obviously, that's the best we've played all year," said FSU head coach Cecile Reynaud. "I thought we really concentrated. We were aggressive the whole time and made some good deci sions." Peistrup agreed that FSU was oft target Friday. "They played a great match and we didn't." she said. "We should have given them a better match. It's hard to end the season like that. 1 still can't believe it." ! i class, pinned the Terrapins' Mike Caro for a third place finish. Lam said he was pleased with the work of his wrestlers, considering the level of competition the open provided "There were 220 wrestlers here, and by the quarterfinals, things were pretty tough," he said. "But I'm very pleased with the attitude of the team. They're not afraid of hard work, and it's one of the best attitudes I've seen in my 19 years of coaching." , , in " I 5 I 1 i . ,a. . J, m. TUESDAY 50C DRAFT Lie Mutic With Two B's Phase (formerly Cream of Soul) St. Vl . cover atter iv Scanners A $10.00 (Minimum Sj
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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