Category Archives: Featured stories

Historic Olympic runner Beatty to speak Wednesday in Raleigh

Jim Beatty, a top middle-distance runner who was the first person to run a mile indoors in under 4 minutes, will be the speaker at the Wednesday, April 4 Raleigh Sports Club meeting.

He broke 11 American and three world records in 1962, and became the first American to simultaneously hold records in the 1,500 meter, 3,000 meter, 5,000 meter, one and three mile events. He attended UNC and won several ACC titles. He was a member of the 1960 US Olympic team in 5,000 meters. We will have a video highlight of his famous accomplishment.

Buffet lines open at 11:30 a.m. The Forks Cafeteria will continue to cater a Southern Buffet. The meeting location will again be at Highland UMC at 1901 Ridge Road at the intersection of Lake Boone Trail, just inside the Beltline. Annual dues for the 2011-12 season will remain $60. Weekly attendance fee will remain $14 and applies whether the member plans to eat lunch or not. All guests fees will be $20 per guest. Pick sheets and door prizes will be held.

Carolina Mudcats play host to the Cleveland Indians Tuesday

Journalist Clay Best writes, “The Carolina Mudcats will begin two new eras this coming week. In their final exhibition tune-up for the season, the Mudcats host the Cleveland Indians at 2 p.m. Tuesday, April 3, at Five County Stadium. Three days later, Carolina begins its run as a Single-A farm club of the Indians playing in the Carolina League, welcoming Winston-Salem.” To read more, please click here.

James Worthy discusses 30th anniversary of UNC’s ’82 championship

“What a great anniversary it is,” former UNC forward James Worthy told the L.A. Times referring to the Tar Heels 63-62 NCAA finals victory over Georgetown in 1982. “Coach Smith getting his first. Versus John Thompson. In the dome. I’d vote for it [as greatest], given the circumstances of who played in that game, the fact that we had lost to Bob Knight and Indiana the year before. Myself going against my high school rival from Gastonia, N.C., “Sleepy” Floyd. Playing that deep Georgetown team with Patrick Ewing. Big game going in, back and forth all the way, and the way it ended with Michael’s big shot and that pass.”

Read the entire Q&A here.

Tar Heels lacrosse upsets previously unbeaten No. 1 Johns Hopkins

No. 12-ranked North Carolina upset No. 1-ranked Johns Hopkins 13-9 in the Big City Classic Sunday night at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J. as

The victory marked the first time the Tar Heels had beaten a top-ranked opponent since a victory over Virginia in 1996. It was also Johns Hopkins’ (8-1) first loss of the season as North Carolina (8-3) was in control throughout the game. UNC’s Jimmy Bitter scored three goals while Marcus Holman scored two goals and had three assists. But the star of the game may well have been R.G. Keenan, who won 18 face offs on the day. “We know we can play with anybody,” Keenan said after the game. “The sky’s the limit. I know we’ve go the talent.”

The Tar Heels may be playing another No. 1 team at home Saturday against Virginia, which is currently No. 2.

Click here to read more.

Wolfpack’s baseball coach gets 800th career win in dramatic fashion

No. 9 NC State certainly had to work for head coach Elliott Avent’s 800th career victory, prevailing 7-6 over Virginia with a wild walk-off finish after two Wolfpack comebacks to win the series Sunday at Doak Field at Dail Park.

State (19-7, 8-4 ACC) rallied from a 3-0 deficit to take a 5-3 lead into the ninth, only to have that evaporate before two runs in the bottom half sealed the win. The Pack loaded the bases in the bottom of the ninth with one out, tied the game on Logan Ratledge’s RBI single, then won it on the next at-bat when Virginia catcher Keith Werman was pulled off the plate by an errant throw home. See video highlights.

“Unbelievable game,” said NC State head coach Elliott Avent. “I’m so proud of the way these guys battled. The [800th] win is special, I didn’t know until after the game, but it makes me think of all the people that have come through this program, and all the former players that still keep in touch. It puts a smile on my face to think about that.”

Ratledge hit his first collegiate homer earlier in the ballgame to kickstart the Pack’s first comeback, and finished 2-for-3 with two RBIs and a run. Jake Fincher went 3-for-4 with a run and two stolen bases to improve to 12 for the season. Danny Canela came through with an RBI on a sac fly to give NC State the lead in the seventh, part of his 1-for-2, one RBI, one run, two walk effort. Chris Diaz went 2-for-5 with a run. Tarran Senay hit the Wolfpack’s lone double in a 2-for-4 day. Trea Turner, Brett Austin, and Andrew Ciencin each had an RBI.

Reliever Danny Healey (3-0) represented the last man standing out of the Wolfpack bullpen on a day that saw State use a season-high seven pitchers. Healey went 2/3 of an inning, holding Virginia hitless. Starter Logan Jernigan left after four innings, allowing three runs, all earned, on four hits, with one walk and three strikeouts. Vance Williams went 2 2/3 shutout innings as the third pitcher of the game, allowing one hit and striking out one.

Justin Thompson (2-1) took the loss for Virginia (18-10-1, 6-6 ACC) after pitching the final inning, surrendering two runs, one earned, on four hits and two walks. Starter Artie Lewicki lasted 5 1/3 innings, holding State to two runs, both earned, on five hits and one walk, while striking out four.

Virginia broke through for a 1-0 lead in the top of the fourth, scoring on a fielding error. Branden Cogswell led off the inning with a single to left. After a failed bunt attempt for the first out, Jared King singled through the right side on a perfectly executed hit and run to put runners on the corners. A one-out grounder to second fell out of Matt Bergquist’s glove as he tried to make the toss to second, plating Cogswell. Jernigan induced another double play ball from the next batter to end the inning.

The Cavs added a pair in the fifth. Nate Irving started the inning with a flare to right, then advanced to second on a wild pitch. Jernigan walked the next batter and left the game. Travis Orwig came in, walking one to load the bases for Williams. A sac fly scored one, and a squeeze play added the second to make it 3-0.

Ratledge led off the bottom of the fifth with his first collegiate homerun to cut the lead to 3-1. Fincher followed one out later with a single to right, went to second on a sac bunt, and stole third, but ended up stranded there.

State continued its comeback bid in the sixth, trimming the lead to 3-2. Canela scored the run after driving a one-out single to center. Senay pushed him to third with a double between the fielders in deep left center. Ciencin drove in the run on a foul ball to right, which Colin Harrington tracked down on a tremendous effort, flipping over the bullpen wall.

The Wolfpack leapt in front, 4-3, in the seventh. Fincher led off with a single, then stole second. Turner grounded out to move him to third. Austin fell behind 1-2, but fouled off five-straight before grooving a groundball under the diving third baseman’s glove for the game-tying RBI single. A hit and run helped Diaz single through the right side to put runners at the corners with one out. Kyle Crockett came in for Shane Halley, and gave up a sac fly to Canela to score the go-ahead run.

Virginia loaded the bases with one out in the eighth, but Chris Overman helped the Pack escape with the lead intact. A lead-off single, followed by a wicked hop on a grounder to third for an error put runners on first and second. D.J. Thomas relieved Ryan Wilkins there, striking out his first batter before giving up a single to load the bases. Overman came in after the single, and struck out his first batter, then popped up the next to end the threat.

The Pack stretched the lead to 5-3 in the eight. Ciencin led off the inning with a single to left. Ratledge bunted him over, and Bergquist made it runners at the corners with an infield single to first. A popped up bunt attempt gave Virginia the second out, but Turner chopped a ball over the third baseman’s head to score Ciencin.

The Cavaliers scored three runs in the ninth to retake the lead. Overman walked the first two batters of the inning, and a sac bunt moved them both into scoring position. Stephen Bruno came up with the game’s biggest hit to that point, a triple off the wall in right center to tie it up, 5-5, with one away. Healey entered the game, walking one and giving up a sac fly to score Bruno from third for the go-ahead run.

State had a few more bullets left in the chamber, though, scoring a pair in the bottom of the ninth for the win. Diaz rocketed a single up the middle, narrowly missing the grasp of Virginia’s shortstop. Canela walked behind him, and Bryan Adametz entered to pinch run. John Gianis bunted the pair into scoring position. Virginia intentionally walked Ciencin to load the bases with one out. Ratledge looped a single to right for the game-tying RBI. Bergquist finished the deal with a chopper to third, with Adametz scoring as the errant throw home pulled Virginia’s catcher off the plate.

– News release

No. 8 Duke stops No. 14 Syracuse in lacrosse

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. – Duke senior Robert Rotanz tallied four goals and junior goaltender Dan Wigrizer made four fourth-quarter saves to guide the eighth-ranked Blue Devils to a thrilling 12-10 victory over No. 14 Syracuse today at MetLife Stadium in the Konica Minolta Big City Classic.

The win is the second overall for Duke over the Orange and the first since 1978. The Blue Devils improve to 9-3 overall and stretch their win streak to six games. Syracuse falls to 4-4 overall.

Duke led 10-9 after a frenetic three quarters to set up an exciting final 15 minutes of lacrosse. In a game that featured five ties over the course of three quarters, Syracuse opened the final frame with a goal from JoJo Marasco to even the score for what proved to be the final time.

The final 12 minutes was all Duke as the Blue Devils held Syracuse to six shots, forced four turnovers and held it scoreless for the final 13:41. Having not trailed since 7:28 of the second quarter, Rotanz came up big for the fourth time in the afternoon to put Duke in front, 11-10 with 12:04 to play. Jordan Wolf provided the assist for Rotanz’s score as the senior midfielder matched his career high four goals. Wolf finished with two goals and three assists to lead all Duke scorers.

The Blue Devils defense frustrated the Orange throughout the final 12 minutes of the game, holding the Orange scoreless for the last 13:41. Junior midfielder Jake Tripucka iced the victory for Duke with his first goal of the game at the 3:05 mark of the fourth quarter.

The first 30 minutes were back and forth, featuring four ties overall. The Orange led 5-3 early in the second quarter before the Blue Devils went on a 4-1 run to end the first half with a 7-6 advantage.

Rotanz led the charge in the second frame with three of Duke’s four goals, including the man-up score that put the Blue Devils in front 7-6 with 1:31 to play in the quarter. Wolf chipped in a goal between Rotanz’s strikes, while junior David Lawson and sophomore Christian Walsh also contributed scores in the second quarter.

Duke carried that momentum into the third quarter with consecutive goals for the largest lead of the entire game by either team at 9-6. Justin Turri started the scoring, while Wolf added his second to push Duke’s run to four unanswered and six of the previous seven.

The Orange stopped Duke’s run at the 8:28 mark of the third quarter with a fast-break goal from Tommy Palasek. The goal ended Syracuse’s 14-minute scoreless stretch and jump-started a three-goal run by the Orange that tied the game 9-9 with 2:46 remaining in the third quarter. Palasek led the Orange with four goals and an assist for five points.

Sophomore Josh Dionne put Duke up again with his first tally of the game with 36 seconds left in the third session and set up the thrilling fourth quarter.

Duke outshot Syracuse 42-29 for the game and won the ground ball battle 25-20. Syracuse won 14-of-25 faceoffs, including 3-of-4 in the fourth quarter. Seniors CJ Costabile and Michael Manley both picked up a game-high six ground balls. Wigrizer finished with eight saves for Duke, while Dominic Lamolinara had 10 stops.

Duke closes out its regular season home schedule next weekend, hosting Marist on April 7 at 3 p.m.

– News release

Sports-related videos

Bulls open with win

Corchiani, Gugliotta ejected

Marshall’s broken wrist

Creighton’s rough play against Carolina

Slapping at Henson’s wrist
Henson fouled

The wink after fouling Henson
Grant Gibbs winks after fouling Henson with a slap to the wrist

Rich Brenner dead at age 65

Frustrated State player turns question on reporter

UNC coach explains end of game

Butch Davis defends himself

Joe Gibbs hosts Redskins reunion

Wouldn’t it be nice if players had to stay three years once “committing” to college?

I ask this question every time a college player goes pro after one or two years – wouldn’t it be nice if players had to stay three years once “committing” to college? You don’t even have a major lined up after one or two years. It makes a mockery of the term “student-athlete.” It’s more like “becoming-a-big-wig-and-biding-your-time-until-you-can-go-to-the-NBA-athlete.”

Usually, but not always, these guys are players who are gifted as athletes and as students, not so much. Harrison Barnes and Kendall Marshall, both sophomores, have announced that they are turning pro. John Henson, a junior, wisely waited an extra year but he and the others could use more seasoning to become great NBA players. We’ll see if they become stars in the NBA or wind up like Ed Davis, who turned pro early and is averaging seven points a game in the NBA, or Marvin Williams, who turned pro early and is averaging 10 points a game in the NBA.

Sadly, since the NBA drafts on potential, it is more about how much money can I make right now. As UNC announcer and former player Eric Montross said, the players who leave early and succeed tend to be the players who dominate on the collegiate level. He added that this past season, Carolina didn’t have any underclassmen who dominated at the collegiate level. I suppose the argument could be made that Kendall Marshall dominated games with his point guard play but he has less than a year and a half of being a starter at the collegiate level, he averaged just eight points a game, and he never even made first team all conference. Will his game translate to being a star in the NBA or is it just that these guys dream about being in the NBA and now it’s their chance? Barnes certainly didn’t shoot very well this season. If he hadn’t come into the program with such high expectations, I doubt he’d be going pro after two years. He’s certainly going on potential.

At one time, I dreamed of working at the Washington Post but even if the Post offered me a high salary to leave Carolina after one or two years, I wouldn’t have done it. First, while I had potential, I hadn’t reached it yet. Plus, going through college and having a senior year was important to me. I wouldn’t trade the memories I have from my senior year for a million dollars. I promise, I wouldn’t. At one time a lot of boys like me dreamed of playing for Carolina – that was their dream, not playing in the NBA. If I were good enough, I would be more interested in where I could rank in the UNC record book or how many conference and national titles I could get. Of course few of us were good enough, and seemingly the ones who are good enough dream about the NBA instead.

At one time, guys were going pro because of family hardship but that’s not the case with Barnes, Marshall or even Henson (who could still stand to put on some muscle so he won’t get tossed around in the physical NBA). It’s disappointing to see guys go pro without truly being college students. The basketball rule ought to be more similar to the baseball rule. You can go pro right after high school but if you go to college you have to stay three years. Those who go to college then truly become student-athletes, anything less and it becomes “rent-a-star” for a year or two. (For those who ask, but what if they get hurt in college and their draft stock plummets? There are now insurance policies for that sort of thing so they’ll still get plenty of money. Philosophically, they could get hurt in the pros too and never amount to much as a player and would be getting money they never really earned.)

The college game and ultimately the NBA game would be better if guys had to stay three years. Barnes and Marshall, we hardly knew ye, and in a year or two we may hear about you as little as we hear about Davis and Williams. But, you’ll have a wad of money at a younger age – another potential negative that I’ll save for another discussion.

National high school tournament in Cary runs through weekend

Debuting this week in Cary, the USA Baseball National High School Invitational (NHSI) brings together 16 of the top prep teams in the country to compete against each other in what will instantly become the premiere event on the high school baseball calendar. As no event currently brings in a level of talent from top to bottom that which the NHSI promises, the eventual tournament champion will kick off their respective season with recognition as the top high school baseball team in the country.

The NHSI will be held March 28-31, 2012, at the USA Baseball National Training Complex (NTC) in Cary, and will feature not only the top teams in the country, but some of the best amateur baseball players as well. Baseball America and The Town of Cary are partnering with USA Baseball in the hosting and presenting of the event.

Baseball America (BA) is a leader among media outlets in the coverage of amateur baseball, and it utilizes its bi-weekly magazine, website, podcasts, and social media to provide a continuous stream of news and updates. BA delivers year-round high school prospect coverage through its high school preview, preseason and postseason All-American teams, player and team of the year awards, and Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft feature. BA also compiles preseason and postseason top-50 prospect polls, and a bi-weekly top-25 team poll.

The Town of Cary is one of six cities across the United States to be designated a Championship City by the NCAA, and it serves as the home to the NTC. The Town of Cary has hosted numerous high profile events at the NTC in recent years, such as an NCAA Regional and Super Regional for the University of North Carolina — Chapel Hill in 2008, and the NCAA Division II Baseball Championship from 2009-2013. USA Baseball’s various National Team programs utilize the NTC for training as well as competition, and the federation also hosts events like the 14U and 16U Cups, and the National Team Identification Series in Cary as well.

The NHSI is a 16-team, single-elimination championship tournament. Each participating team is guaranteed to play four games. The NHSI will present participating athletes with national exposure in addition to providing the opportunity for the best teams in the country to compete against each other. BA will assist USA Baseball in thoroughly researching and inviting the country’s best teams.

NHSI Schedule:
View the tournament schedule
• Tournament schedule to be completed no later than 3 p.m. on Saturday (March 31).

Wolfpack gymnastics chosen to host an NCAA regional April 7

The NC State Gymnastics program has been selected to host a 2012 Collegiate Women’s Gymnastics Championships regional, according to an announcement by the NCAA on Monday. The Wolfpack will also compete and be joined in the Raleigh Regional by Florida, Kent State, North Carolina, Ohio State and Penn State.

The action will get under way on Saturday, April 7 at 4 p.m., in Reynolds Coliseum. NC State will begin the meet on vault and then have a bye before competing on bars and beam. The Pack will then have another bye followed by competition on floor to close out the day.

NC State enters the regional currently ranked 20th nationally with a Regional Qualifying Score of 195.870, which is used for seeding. Florida is the top seed nationally with a RQS of 197.445. Ohio State and Penn State are the 12th and 13th seeds with an RQS of 196.245 and 196.230, respectively. Kent State is ranked 26th with a RQS of 195.400, while North Carolina has a 195.010.

In addition to the six teams that will be competing to advance to the team finals, five all-around competitors and one individual event specialist for every event have also been invited to the regional for a chance to advance as an individual. The gymnasts that are not on a qualifying team were selected to participate in the regional by having a RQS of 9.4 or better.

The top two teams, along with the top two all-around competitors (from teams who are not already advancing) will advance to the national championships in Duluth, Ga., held at the Gwinnett Center April 20-22.

Five of the eight teams in the East Atlantic Gymnastics League (EAGL) received bids to the NCAA tournament, including Maryland, West Virginia, North Carolina, New Hampshire, and NC State.

– News Release