THOMASVILLE TIMES Double TVouble Duke, UNCfall in ACC road games over weekend. See Stories Below Sports TUESDAY, OaOBER 26,2010 tvillesports@yahoo.com ncHsaa state volleyball playoffs Lady Panthers flawless against Bears Calendar TODAY Volleyball Chapel Hill @ Ledford 7 p.m. Soccer N. Forsyth @ Ledford 7 p.m. WEDNESDAY Soccer E. Davidson ©Thomasville 7 p.m. Soccer Ledford @ Asheboro 7 p.m. FRIDAY Football Thomasville @ Salisbury 7:30 p.m. Football E. Davidson @ W. Davidson 7:30 p.m. Football Ledford @ So. Guilford 7:30 p.m. SATURDAY Cross Country NCHSAA Reqionals TBA MONDAY Basketball Milligan JV @ DCCC 7 p.m. Golf NCHSAA State Golf Tourney TBA Got Sports? Get it in the Times TODAY! 888-3631 tviilesports@yahoo.com BYZACH KEPLEY Sports Editor WALLBURG — It is safe to say the Ledford Lady Panthers have quickly forgotten about their loss in the Mid-Piedmont Con ference tournament last week. On Saturday afternoon, Led ford played one of its best games of the season from start to finish, dismantling Gray’s Creek 25-12, 25-9, 25-10 in the first round of the North Carolina High School Athletic Association 3-A state playoffs. The visiting Bears had little chance to catch their breath in the game, as LHS was constant ly attacking at the net. Chloe Barnes led the wpy with 10 kfils, while Stevi Williams and Cady added seven kfils each and Kai- tlyn Otey had six. Emily Vernon set up 18 assists and Ray was one behind with 17. , ; “We decided on Wednes day that we were going to find a kfiler instinct and that we were going to push ourselves to be consis tent throughout all three games,” said coach Kara Perri er. “We have a tendency to start strong and then stop, so ^e have a new motto — ‘Start strong, stay strong, finish strong.’” Ledford completed phase one ••to of the motto, getting kfils on the first three points and racing out to a 10-1 lead. Gray’s Creek would close the gap to 16-11 mid way through the first game, but the Panthers put the hammer down to the end, getting four kfils from four dif ferent players down the stretch. The Bears kept in better contact during the sec ond game, trailing only 10-7 and getting offensive them selves. Ray brought the boom with a kill on the next point, and the Panthers were out of sight to the end. Ahead 16-9, the Pan thers once again reeled off nine consecutive points to reach 25, finished by a Barnes screamer to the hardwood for the kfil. WUliams and Ray started the attack in the third set with a pair of kfils, as Ledford completed its fine day with a commanding 15- point win in the third frame, fin ished by what else, but a kfil by Wfiliams. “In voUeybaU, having three days of practice in a row is rare, and that was what we needed ap parently,” Berrier said. “We had very few mistakes today. Maybe - we just got them all out of our' system Tuesday night.” Ledford, 21-3, wifi host No. 2 seed Chapel Hill (22-3) today at 7. SPRINT CUP SERIES Hamlin owns Martinsville Narrows Chase lead by Johnson to 6 BY REID SPENCER NASCARMedia.com Va. MARTINSVILLE, — Dead heat. WeU, almost. Denny Hamlin won Sunday’s Turns Fast Re lief 500 at Martinsvfile and trimmed fifth-place finisher Jimmie John son’s lead in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup to six points with four races left in the sea son. The closest Chase ever through six races is on a collision course toward next Sunday’s AMP En ergy Juice 500 at Tal ladega Superspeedway, the most dangerous and unpredictable race in the Chase. “We’re back, baby,” Hamlin exulted in the radio as he approached the finish line. “Awesome See HAMLIN, Page 8 TIMES PHOTO/ELlbt-DUKE Martinsville race winner Denny Hamlin dives to the inside of Kevin Harvick on Sunday to take over the top spot ai)ct cruise to the victory, closing the points lead down to six points with four races left. Next Race: /^mp Energy Juice 500 @ Talladega (10/31) NCAA FOOTBALL NCAA FOOTBALL Hurricanes blow by Tar Heels, 33-10 BY BRIANA GORMAN Durham Herald Sun MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — North Carolina entered Sat urday’s game against No. 25 Miami riding a four-game win ning streak and a wave of con fidence after losing its first two games of the season. The Tar Heels had managed to set aside the distractions of the ongoing investigations into agents and academics and had a chance to stay in the hunt for the ACC championship game against a program it had beat en the past three seasons. Instead, UNC’s offense played one of its worst games of the season with three turnovers and the depleted defense finally showed its inexperience, as Mi ami took advantage fi)r a 33-10 victory at Sun Life Stadium. The loss dropped the Tar Heels (4-3,2-2 ACC) to fourth in the league, with games against Florida State, Virgipia Tech and N.C. State still looming. Mi ami (5-2,3-1) moves into second place in the Coastal Division. “It’s disappointing just be cause it’s a loss,” UNC senior safety Deunta WUliams said. For the past three seasons, turnovers had been the differ ence in the games between the schools and this year proved to be no different - except this time the Tar Heels were on the losing end. UNC got on the scoreboard first when Casey Barth capped See BLOW, Page 9 Hokies hammer Blue Devils in Blacksburg BY STEVE WISEMAN Durham Herald Sun BLACKSBURG, Va. — Virgin ia Tech brought the hammer dovm on Duke early Satmrday and left the Blue Devils scram bling for answers. The No. 23 Hokies scored on five of six first-half posses sions, routing the Blue Devils 44-7 in an ACC football game before a crowd of 66,233 at Lane Stadium. Duke (1-6, 0-4 ACC) lost its sixth consecutive game on a day when the Blue Devils of fered little resistance. “Virginia 'Tech completely dominated us,” Duke senior safety Matt Daniels said. The Coastal Division-lead ing Hokies (6-2. 4-01 continued to trend in the right direction, notching their sixth consecu tive win since opening the sea son with losses to Boise State and James Madison. “When you play well and you have success, it builds con fidence,” said Virginia Tech coach Frank Beamer, who col lected career win No. 235 to move past Bo Schembechler and sit alone at No. 10 on the aU-time Football Bowl Subdivi sion wins list. “You can’t talk your way into it. You have to do it.” Duke coach David Cutcliffe and his players said they came into the game as prepared as they could be to deal with Vir ginia Tech’s talents. See HAMMER, Page 8