All posts by Cliff Barnes

No. 13 Carolina completes sweep of No. 1 Virginia

No. 13 North Carolina capped off a three-game series sweep of top-ranked Virginia (44-12, 22-8 ACC) as the Tar Heels (44-12, 20-10 ACC) used a three-run fifth inning en route to a 3-2 win over the Cavaliers Saturday afternoon on senior day at Boshamer Stadium.

Carolina tallied its first sweep of Virginia since 2005 and held the ninth-highest scoring team in the country to just three runs over the weekend series. The Tar Heels delivered a loss to Virginia starter Will Roberts for the first time in his career, as Roberts came into Saturday with a flawless 17-0 mark.

The Tar Heels tallied four hits, including a pair of doubles, in the three-run fifth as Seth Baldwin and Colin Moran came up with the run-producing knocks.

Brian Holberton started things off with a one-out double in the right center field gap and after moving to third on a wild pitch scored when Baldwin rocketed a ball past the second baseman as the infield was drawn in.

A single by Chaz Frank put runners on the corners and Frank moved to second with his ninth steal of the year putting two runners in scoring position for Moran. The Cavaliers went to the bullpen and brought in left-hander Kyle Crockett to face Moran.

The freshman was facing a 2-2 count when he went with a pitch and sliced it down the left field line, just inside the line and into the corner for a two-run double giving the Tar Heels a 3-1 lead.

After allowing one run over his first five innings of work, Chris Munnelly came out with a lead in the sixth and picked up a foul out and a ground out for two quick outs in the frame. A hit by pitch put Kenny Swab on base and a pitch in the dirt allowed Swab the opportunity to move up but Jacob Stallings pounced on the ball and fired to second to get Swab and pick up his 27th caught stealing of the year.

A lead off walk to open the seventh would end Munnelly’s day as Greg Holt would be summoned from the bullpen.

Holt would allow a walk and a bunt single to Keith Werman to load the bases for the top of the order. Holt was able to get a punch out of John Barr and a ground out by Chris Taylor but the Wahoos were able to push across a run on the second out of the inning, cutting Carolina’s lead to 3-2.

John Hicks turned on the next Holt offering and ripped it down the third base line but Colin Moran was there to corral it and fire to first for the third and final out of the seventh.

The Tar Heels used their traditional mix-and-match pattern in the eighth as Holt picked up a fly ball to center field before left-hander Tate Parrish did the same for out number two.

Freshman Shane Taylor came on and struck out Swab for the final out of the eighth keeping Carolina in front.
Carolina had a chance to add to its lead in the bottom half of the eighth when Tommy Coyle doubled off the right field wall and moved to third on a sacrifice bunt off the bat of Stallings.

With Ben Bunting at the plate Carolina attempted a safety squeeze but the Justin Thompson offering was in the dirt and the Cavaliers were able cut down the charging Coyle to stop the rally.

Closer Michael Morin was called upon for the ninth inning looking for his eighth save of the year and second of the weekend.

Morin allowed a single to right field to open the inning before buckling down and getting a fly out to right field for the first out and then struck out pinch hitter Shane Halley.

Pinch runner Mitchell Shifflet would steal second to put the tying run in scoring position but Morin struck out his second consecutive batter to end the game and cap off the series sweep.

Colin Moran equaled a season high with a perfect 4-for-4 performance at the plate and added to his league-leading total of 67 RBI.

Seth Baldwin brought production from the nine-hole for the Tar Heels as he was 2-for-3 with a run scored and a run driven in.

Morin becomes the first closer since Andrew Carignan in 2007 to register at least eight saves as Carignan closed out 18 games for the Tar Heels in the College World Series season.

Next up for the Tar Heels is a trip to Durham for the 2011 Atlantic Coast Conference tournament set to run May 25-29 at the Durham Bulls Athletic Park.

Carolina will be the No. 4 seed in the tournament and will be paired with No. 1 Virginia, No. 5 Miami and No. 8 Wake Forest in a pool-play format. Game times and dates will be announced at 3 p.m. on Sunday.

– NEWS RELEASE –

Cavs drop first series of season; Heels go for sweep

Freshman left-hander Kent Emanuel withstood the test from No. 1 Virginia (45-8, 22-7 ACC) Friday night and No. 13 Carolina (43-12, 19-10 ACC) picked up a pair of eighth-inning runs to claim a 2-1 victory over the Cavaliers. Carolina’s two and three hitters, Levi Michael and Colin Moran, each drove in a run in the go-ahead eighth inning. The Cavaliers drop a series for the first time all season and the Tar Heels will look for the sweep on Saturday.

Virginia starter Danny Hultzen, a likely first round draft pick in next month’s MLB Draft, was in complete control early setting the side down in order through the first four innings. Hultzen struck out at least two batters in each of the first four frames.

The Tar Heels eventually got to Hultzen in the fifth when Tommy Coyle took a pitch the opposite way for a single to break up the perfect game. Coyle would not advance past first base but the single got things going for the Tar Heels.

Carolina put a pair of runners on in the sixth and moved the lead off man to third in the seventh but were unable to push a run across in either inning.

Senior Ben Bunting opened the bottom of the eighth with a lead off single through the right side and moved up 90 feet when pinch hitter Parks Jordan dropped down a picture perfect sacrifice bunt.

Chaz Frank turned in perhaps the at bat of the night as he battled Hultzen to a full count before drawing a walk. During Frank’s at bat Hultzen was charged with a wild pitch allowing Bunting to move to third and eventually putting runners at the corners for Levi Michael.

After watching the first pitch miss for a ball, Michael lined the next offering to center field and in front of a diving Kenny Swab tying the game at 1-1.

The ACC’s RBI leader, Colin Moran, strolled to the plate next and battled to a 2-2 count before lifting a pitch to right field, just deep enough to plate Frank from third and give Carolina a 2-1 lead.

Michael Morin would come on for the ninth and picked up a fly out and a strikeout swinging before facing John Barr. The Virginia left fielder lifted a ball behind first base that Tommy Coyle was unable to track down allowing Barr to reach second on a double.

Morin used his defense for the final out as John Hicks rifled a ball directly at third baseman Colin Moran who deflected the ball off of his chest and then fired to first for the third and final out as Jesse Wierzbicki scooped the throw to complete the victory.

Freshman Kent Emanuel dueled Hultzen for the first six innings allowing just two hits and one run, while striking out seven batters. Emanuel found himself in a bit of trouble in the second inning when Swab opened the frame with a double to left center.

The Cavaliers played small ball from that point moving Swab to third on a sacrifice bunt and eventually scoring the go-ahead run with a sacrifice fly from Reed Gragnani.

Emanuel had to work out of a few jams Friday night as his defense committed three errors behind him but the freshman was able to hold the ACC’s third-best hitting squad to just one run on the night.

Carolina’s pitchers have held Virginia, ranked ninth in the country in scoring, to just one run over 18 innings of work through the opening two games of the series.

Fellow freshman Andrew Smith delivered an inning and a third of scoreless baseball to bridge the gap to the eighth before R.C. Orlan came on to pick up the final two outs of the inning and eventually earn the win, the first of his career.

The series loss for the Cavaliers is their first of the season and Carolina will look for its fifth ACC series sweep of the year on Saturday when right-hander Chris Munnelly will square off against Virginia’s Will Roberts with first pitch set for 2 p.m.

Carolina defeats No. 1 Virginia in pitchers’ duel

As was expected a pitcher’s duel broke out Thursday evening at Boshamer Stadium as No. 1 Virginia’s (45-7, 22-6 ACC) Cody Winiarski and North Carolina’s (42-12, 18-10 ACC) Patrick Johnson twirled five innings of shutout ball. Winiarksi would be the first to buckle as the Tar Heels exploded for five runs in the sixth inning to take the lead and Patrick Johnson went on to throw the first complete game shutout by a Tar Heel since Alex White in 2009 as he improved to 10-1 on the year.

Johnson also joined Adam Warren as the most recent Tar Heel to post 10 wins in a season as Warren went 10-2 in his senior year for Carolina.

On the night, Johnson allowed just four hits, did not walk a batter and retired nine Wahoos via the strikeout. The nine strikeouts moves Johnson into fifth place in the Carolina career record books with 280.

The Conover, N.C., native retired the side in order in the second inning and finished out the game retiring the last 15 batters he faced.

Each team garnered a single in the very first inning but key defense helped keep the game scoreless as each team turned in a double play.

Virginia looked to have something going in the fourth when John Barr opened the inning with a single to right center but Johnson notched his fourth pick off of the year as he caught Barr flat-footed off of first base.

The Tar Heels were nearly the first team to get a runner to third base in the fourth when Colin Moran drew a one-out walk and Jesse Wierzbicki followed with a single to left center. Moran made his way to third on the play but as he slid to avoid the tag at third base he slid past the base and in his attempt to get back to the bag was tagged out on the play.

Danny Hultzen opened the fifth with another lead off single for the Cavaliers and Virginia proceeded to play small ball using a ground ball to the right side to move Hultzen to second before another ground ball moved him to third base.

Johnson picked up the big punch out to end the fifth as he got Jared King swinging on a 2-2 pitch to end the threat and get the Tar Heels at the plate.

Carolina turned in a similar effort getting a lead off single and back-to-back ground balls to move Jacob Stallings to third but a routine grounder to first would end the threat.

Chaz Frank opened the five-run sixth inning by drawing a walk and used his speed to get to third base on a single off the bat of Levi Michael. The ACC’s RBI leader, Colin Moran, lined a ball at centerfielder Kenny Swab allowing Frank to narrowly score ahead of Swab’s throw home.

An errant pickoff attempt by Winiarski of Michael at first base allowed the shortstop to move into scoring position for Jesse Wierzbicki who lined a ball into left field but the ball was hit too sharply to score Michael.

A sacrifice bunt from Ben Bunting moved Wierzbicki into scoring position and Jacob Stallings was intentionally walked to load the bases for Tommy Coyle.

Coyle hit a high chopper that third baseman Steven Proscia was unable to get a glove on allowing Michael and Wierzbicki to score extending the lead to 4-0.

Greg Holt made it 5-0 with a perfectly placed single through the right side to plate Stallings and give Patrick Johnson all the run support he would need.

Following a lead off single by the Wahoos in the fifth inning, Johnson buckled down and retired the next 15 batters en route to his 10th win of the season.

Jacob Stallings would tack on an insurance run in the eighth when he blasted his third home run of the year and first since March 9 over the left center field fence stretching the lead to 6-0.

Jesse Wierzbicki equaled a career-high with three hits on the night, while Levi Michael, Jacob Stallings and Tommy Coyle all tallied two hits for the Tar Heels.

Carolina will look for the series win on Friday but it will face a difficult task as freshman Kent Emanuel will face Virginia ace Danny Hultzen at 7 p.m. in Boshamer Stadium.

– NEWS RELEASE –

Skinner named Sporting News Rookie-of-the-Year

People scoffed when I played up the importance to the Carolina Hurricanes of 18-year-old rookie Jeff Skinner. Today, Skinner, who was the youngest player to ever make the NHL All-Star team, was named the Rookie-of-the-Year by Sporting News. More honors are to come.

Here’s what Skinner said about his first season in the NHL.

“There wasn’t one defining moment this season when I realized I was in the NHL to stay. It’s such a gradual thing. You come into training camp and you’re sort of a little uncomfortable and experiencing the new situation. Gradually you become more comfortable on the ice and feel like you belong.

“A fast start helped, and I was fortunate that I got to play with great players and great linemates early in my NHL career. I can thank the coaching staff and management in Carolina for giving me that opportunity. It ma kes the game so much easier when you can get tips from veteran guys who have been there. Guys like Erik Cole and Eric Staal were huge in helping my adjustment. You look at their careers and how they’ve played the game, it’s pretty unbelievable. Each guy has his strengths, and the biggest help is the little tips you get from them. At this level, the smallest difference can be huge, and they would always give me little tips off the ice.

“For instance, I came out of junior having played a lot of center. When I came to the NHL, I played a lot on the left wing. That was a bit of an adjustment for me. Erik Cole played on my right wing for the first bit and he would just tell me little things — like how to take a rim shot off the boards when a defenseman is pinching.

“It’s the sort of body positioning tips that make a huge difference. Like every season, there are ups and downs, and the challenge is finding a way to battle through the low points.

“That was the biggest thing for me this year — learning how to keep an even keel through such a long season. It was huge to find that happy medium.”

13th Annual Big Ten/ACC Challenge matchups announced

The 13th annual Big Ten/ACC Challenge Presented by DICK’S Sporting Goods on Nov. 29-30 will be highlighted by Duke at Ohio State and Wisconsin at North Carolina — four traditional power programs expected to be highly ranked entering the 2011-12 season – and an expanded format with new Big Ten member Nebraska. ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU and ESPN3.com will combine to broadcast all 12 games of the two-day event, one more than in the previous 12 Challenges.

The 2011 Challenge involves six teams ranked an early preseason top 25 by ESPN.com senior college basketball writer Andy Katz, including three in the top five: No. 1 North Carolina, No. 3 Ohio State, No. 5 Duke, No. 11 Wisconsin, No. 21 Florida State and No. 23 Michigan.

This year’s event – top college basketball programs playing for conference supremacy and the Commissioner’s Cup — will include 11 teams that played in the 2011 NCAA Tournament: Clemson, Duke, Florida State and North Carolina from the ACC, and Illinois, Michigan, Michigan State, Ohio State, Penn State, Purdue and Wisconsin from the Big Ten.

The ACC has won 10 of the first 12 Challenges with league teams winning 72 of the 119 games played. A year ago, the Big Ten won its second consecutive Challenge by a 6-to-5 margin. Home teams won six of the 11 games in 2010 and five of the contests were decided by eight points or less, including two by three or fewer points.

In the event of a 6-6 tie in the Challenge, the Commissioner’s Cup will remain with the conference that won the Challenge the previous year.

• Following a First with a Rematch: Georgia Tech and Northwestern will follow the first meeting between the programs (Northwestern 91-71) with a second consecutive Challenge showdown.
• Pursuing Perfection: Boston College will look to continue its undefeated streak in the Challenge when the program hosts Penn State. The Eagles have won their previous five games.
• Going for 12: Duke, which lost its only Challenge game in 2009, will look for its event-record 12th win. Duke also won its previous Challenge game against Ohio State, 91-76 in 2002.
• Commissioner’s Cup: The Big Ten won the Commissioner’s Cup for the second consecutive year; the ACC won the previous 10 Challenges.
• First Challenge Matchups: nine of the telecasts will feature first-time Challenge matchups: No. 11 Wisconsin at No. 1 North Carolina, No. 21 Florida State at Michigan State, No. 23 Michigan at Virginia, Miami at Purdue, Clemson at Iowa, Indiana at NC State, Penn State at Boston College, Virginia Tech at Minnesota and Wake Forest at Nebraska.
• Four’s a Charm?: Illinois and Maryland will meet for the fourth time in the Challenge with the Terrapins winning the previous three matchups (69-61 in 2007; 72-66 in 2006; 76-63 in 2001).

2011 Big Ten/ACC Challenge schedule – times and networks are to be determined
(Rankings refer to preseason top 25 by ESPN.com senior college basketball writer Andy Katz)

Tuesday, November 29
Miami at Purdue
Northwestern at Georgia Tech
Illinois at Maryland
No. 23 Michigan at Virginia
Clemson at Iowa
No. 5 Duke at No. 3 Ohio State

Wednesday, November 30
Indiana at NC State
Penn State at Boston College
No. 21 Florida State at Michigan State
Virginia Tech at Minnesota
Wake Forest at Nebraska
No. 11 Wisconsin at No. 1 North Carolina

Getting home field edge doesn’t always work out – Ask UNC lacrosse

No. 9 ranked North Carolina got the No. 8 seed in the NCAA tournament and thus got to play its first round game at home. Unfortunately for the Tar Heels, they were matched up against Maryland, which had a better record, was higher ranked (eighth) and had won the ACC tournament.

That ticked off Terrapin team came down to Chapel Hill and dominated early and late to defeat the Tar Heels 13-6 to advance to play top-ranked Syracuse in the second round.

In the first few minutes, Maryland got up 3-0 but UNC’s Billy Bitter keep the Heels in it with two goals to draw the home team to withinn one goal. But the Terps, who had a 7-2 faceoff edge early, scored three more goals fairly quickly to get back up 6-2.

The Heels managed a pair of goals late in the first half, including a third by Bitter, to make it 6-4 at the break. It was still close at 7-5 until Maryland reeled off six straight goals to break it open.

Drew Synder led Maryland, 11-4, with four goals while Bitter finished with three for Carolina, 10-6.

The emotion on the Terp sideline was very high most of the game. Too bad for Carolina that the Heels didn’t either draw a different opponent in the first round or had to travel to College Park instead. The emotional edge may just have been reversed.

In other action, homestanding Duke held on to defeat Delaware 15-14. For more on that game, please click here.

State’s Leslie caught up in our politically correct society

N.C. State’s C.J. Leslie has been forced to apologize for a comment he tweeted where he said he’d rather not have a gay person in the locker room.

Really? It seems pretty tame. While many may feel differently, he was just saying how he feels. This is political correctness run amok. No one would have said a word if a female basketball player said she didn’t want a heterosexual male in the locker room.

Leslie didn’t say he hates gay people or anything particularly derogatory about gay people. He’d simply rather not share a locker room with someone of a different sexual orientation.

As soon as the tweet came out, radical groups and sensitive N.C. State officials came down on Leslie, who released this statement: “Wanna apologize for hurting or offending any 1 with my tweets yesterday…Was watching espn about it and didn’t think before I tweeted. Meant no disrespect to any 1.”

I believe him but left-leaning sportswriters aren’t giving him any breaks. For instance, Tim Hall, who covers ACC basketball and football for 99.9 The Fan and 620 The Buzz, wrote “Let’s be real, the apology was only a formality. Did he suddenly change his personal view on how he would feel with a gay athlete in his locker room in a 24 hour span? The apology probably isn’t for having the opinion, just for tweeting it.”

So, evidently in our policitically correct society, we are supposed to apologize for our opinions. Leslie’s opinion is Leslie’s opinion and many Americans believe it is a legitimate concern. He should have a right to it without being PC-ed to death.

First three UNC football games to be televised

North Carolina’s first three football games will be televised this season, including a 3:30 p.m. ESPNU matchup against Virginia on Sept. 17 in the third week of the year. ESPNU is available in more than 73 million homes nationwide.

Tar Heels start the season with three consecutive home games for the first time since 2006, beginning with a 3:30 p.m. matchup against James Madison on Sept. 3. The game will be televised on the league’s new syndicated Regional Sports Network, which will be available throughout the ACC footprint, and includes Fox Sports South.

Carolina’s non-conference contest vs. Big East rival Rutgers will be televised by the ACC Network at its new 12:30 p.m. kickoff time. Other times and television schedules will be released later.

Bulls rally falls short at DAP

The Durham Bulls brought the tying run to the plate in the bottom of the ninth inning in the form of Leslie Anderson, but his deep fly to center field was caught to preserve a 7-5 win for the Indianapolis Indians on Monday night at the Historic Durham Athletic Park.

Before the game, the Bulls all-time winningest manager Bill Evers threw out the ceremonial first pitch, pop star Clay Aiken performed the National Anthem and bi-planes from the World War II era did a flight over the ballpark.

Brandon Guyer led off the Bulls ninth inning with a single and Felipe Lopez then singled to put runners on the corners with no one out. Guyer scored on a wild pitch cutting the Indians lead to 7-5. Wood was able to get Chris Carter to pop up to second baseman Josh Harrison, struck out Russ Canzler and then got Anderson to fly out to end the game. Wood picked up his fifth save of the season.

Carter got the Bulls on the board first with a two-run double off of Indians starter Jose Ascanio in the first inning that scored Ray Olmedo and Ruggiano and gave the Bulls a 2-0 lead. In the second inning Jose Lobaton hit his third home run of the season to left field to give Durham a 3-2 advantage. The Bulls added to their lead again in the bottom of the third inning when a Canzler double, Anderson single, and Lobaton single loaded the bases for JJ Furmaniak, who hit a sacrifice fly to give the Bulls a 4-2 lead.

Indianapolis got to Dane De La Rosa (3-2) for five runs on six hits in the seventh and eighth innings. This included a two-run home run from Adam Lambo in the seventh that tied the game at four. The Indians added a sacrifice fly in the seventh to grab their first lead of the game 5-4 and would add two more in the eighth.

Garrett Olson (1-0) worked three innings allowing only one hit while walking to and striking out one, to earn his first victory of the season. Durham will continue their four game series against Indianapolis at the Durham Athletic Park at 7:05 p.m. on Tuesday May 10 when they will send Edgar Gonzalez (2-2 3.69) to the mound against the Rudy Owens (2-3 5.81).

– FROM NEWS RELEASES –