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8 * The Red and Black * Tuesday, April 17. 1990
By TREVOR PADGETT
Sports Editor
Georgia vs. Georgia Tech on a
Saturday afternoon in November
with the pads a smackin’. What
could be better?
How about Georgia vs. Georgia
Tech on a Saturday afternoon in
April with sticks and masks and
a hard little orange boll and pads
a smackin’?
Sounds a little crazy. It’s not —
it’s 1 across**.
The University of Georgia La
crosse Club defeated Georgia
Tech 14-13 in sudden death at
Grant Field/Bobby Dodd Stadium
Saturday, in what was arguably
one of the most exciting battles
ever waged between the Dogs
and the Ramblin’ Wreck.
The Dogs, who held the lend
for most of the day, trailed by one
goal with less than two minutes
remaining. That’s when Tom De-
Carlo turned into a one man
show.
DeCarlo scored his sixth goal
qf the game with time running
out to send the contest into over
time; he then bent two de
fensemen to score the game-
winner. Rob MacKnight (4) and
Will DuPont (3) accounted for the
Dogs remaining seven goals.
‘This was a very important vic
tory for us,” said first-year head
conch Dwayne Smith. “It gives us
a good seed in the tournament
and puts us in a position to make
a run at the conference title.”
The Dogs stand at 5-2 overall
and 3-2 in the Southeastern La-
cross** Conference (SELC).
Georgia heads down the At
lanta Highway again this
weekend for the SELC conference
tournament. The Dogs’ first-
round opponent has yet to be de
termined, but the team to beat
figures to be two-time defending
champion Vanderbilt.
353-3158
CSHLAWSy)
Mens
Tracksters take third in Vulcan Relays
Earle goes a long way for track team
By TREVOR PADGETT
Sports Editor
Since her arrival on the Georgia
campus, Jolly Earle has had a tre
mendous impact — especially on
the roads and paths surrounding
Athens.
The Sonoma (Calif.) State Uni
versity transfer runs 10 miles a
day in preparation for her long dis
tance role on the women’s track
team — a role in which she has ex
celled since she transferred to
Georgia in the fall of 1989.
The 5-9 senior has broken two
school records and one meet record
en rout** to winning five of the six
outdoor races she has run this
spring; she placed second in the
other.
Most recently, Earle was named
the Most Valuable Female Per
former of the 1990 Magic City
Vulcan Relays this weekend in Bir
mingham, Ala., where she placed
first in both the 1500- and 3000-
meter races. Her 9:36.20 perfor-
By RANDY WALKER
Sports Writer
The No. 5 ranked Georgia
women’s tennis team (18-2) upped
it’s SEC record to 7-0 Sunday with
a 9-0 shutout of No. 14 Kentucky in
Lexington.
The shutout was the Lady Net-
ters sixth straight and 12th of the
season.
For Georgia coach Jeff Wallace,
the victory was his first over the
Lady Wildcats in Lexington since
he took over the coaching reigns in
1986. Wallace had beaten Ken
tucky only once prior to Sunday’s
confrontation — an identical 9-0
score last year in Athens.
“If you look at the score you’d
say, ‘Oh they clobbered them,’ but
that wasn’t the case,” Wallace said.
“(Kentucky) fought us hard and we
had to put out our best effort to
beat them. I was impressed with
Kentucky’s fight and spirit and our
mance in the 3000-meters at the
Vulcan Relays eclipsed the old
mark by more than six seconds.
Also winning for the women,
who placed third in the meet be
hind Auburn and Arkansas State,
was Monica Willis. The junior from
Jolly Earle: Senior distance
runner named MVP in 1990
Vulcan Relays
ability to rise to the occasion and
win every match.”
Except for a Maria Snlsgard
hiccup at No. 6 singles, the Lady
Netters were perfect.
After losing Georgia’s only set of
the match, Salsgard cruised to cap
ture the final two sets and defeat
Mindy Severt 5-7, 6-1, 6-2.
‘I was impressed
with... our ability.’
— Coach Jeff Wallace
SINGLES:No 1 — Shannon McCarthy (Ga ) d Mindy
Nelson (Ky.) 64, 7-5; No. 2 — Stacey Schcfflin (Ga.) d.
Susan KiingcnbcH (Ky.) 6-4, e>A; No. 3 — Caryn Moss
(Ga ) d. Antoinette Grech (Ky ) 63. 64; No 4 - Jill
Waidman (Ga.) d Lone Holm Larsen (Ky.) 7 5. 76; No 5
— Shawn McCarthy (Ga.) d. Helen Fabisiewic/ (Ky.) 63.
63. No 6 — Mana Salsgard (Ga.) d Mindy Severt (Ky.)
67.61. 62
DOUBLES: No. 1 — Shannon McCarthy Scheftl.n (Ga ) d
Kimgenfeerg Larsen (Ky.) 62, 64. No 2 — Shawn Me
Corthy Bogdonas (Ga.) d. Ndson-Grech (Ky) 62. 60.
No 3 — Mosv Waidman (Ga ) d. Severt fab is icwicr (Ky )
63. 63
NEXT: Hosts Auburn. Wednesday at 2 p m.
Atlanta captured honors in the
100-meter hurdles with a 14.55.
The man, who also placed third,
were led by Bill Jones at high
jump, Hans Schmidt at javelin,
Chris Howard at discus, and Senn
hanger in the 1500-meters.
Jones and Schmidt each became
three time winners this outdoor
season. Jones captured first place
with a season-high jump of 7-1 1/2;
RODEO
From page 1
Smitty Lamb, rodeo chairman
for the Block and Bridle Club, said
the student club first held the
rodeo to fund teams from the An
imal and Dairy Science Depart
ment. The teams compete on their
ability to judge meat, livestock,
horses and dairy products.
Lamb, a senior, said a profes
sional rodeo company helps stage
the event. The company brings in
animals, clowns, juages, musicians
and an announcer. Each year
Physical Plant employees haul in-
several tons of dirt.
Although the audience gasped
whenever a cowboy bit the dust, a
few people outside the Coliseum
showed concern for the rodeo’s
four-legged participants. Before
the event started, members of the
Student League for Environmental
and Animal Protection gave out
pamphlets calling the sport cruel
to animals.
The pamphlets cited the
crowded hauling conditions en
dured by rodeo animals and the
“bruising, bone-breaking” injuries
they sometimes sustain in the
arena.
But Mike Johnson, a rodeo
clown from Poplar Bluff, Mo., said
the activists don’t know what
they’re talking about.
Wearing an orange wig, baggy
pants and white clown make-up,
Johnson said, ‘They’re speaking
without all the facts.
“I welcome them any time to
Schmidt’s throw of 213-10 equaled
his season high.
Howard won his second meet at
discus with a heave of 170-1 1/2,
while Lunger got his first win in
outdoor with his 3:53.42 perfor
mance in the 1500-meter race.
‘The team, as a group, has been
improving with every meet,” said
track conch John Mitchell. “We are
making progress in all areas.”
come down and see what we do and
talk to us.”
Johnson, 25, quit riding bulls
seven years ago to become a clown.
“I wasn’t all that great of a bull
rider,” he said. “I was taking too
much punishment on that end of
it.”
Johnson called injuries an “occu
pational hazard.” As a clown, he
said, “You get hit a lot.
“We do a lot of comedy to fill in
spaces between events to give the
cowboys time to get ready,” he said
“It’s good for the crowd. In the bull
riding, our job is to keep the bulls
off the cowboys and to get ’em out
safe ... that’s the tough part of it.”
In addition to the clowns’ bad
puns and numerous jokes about
horse “poop" (another “occupa
tional hazard”), the rodeo offered
other entertainment, including n
swaybacked dancing horse, a “pig
tote” where teams put squealers in
wheelbarrows and raced them
across the Coliseum, and “the
smallest cowboy in the world” — n
monkey in n cowboy hat tied to the
back of a sheep dog.
Wearing chaps, a white cowboy
hat and a clinking set of spurs, bull
rider Andy Zilveti said rodeo is n
thriving sport. Zilveti, 25, goes to
about 100 rodeos a year. He’s been
riding bulls since he was 14.
Though a veteran rider, Zilveti
said he still isn’t too comfortable in
the saddle.
“Every time’s a close call it
seems,” he said, turning to spit
some tobacco juice in the dirt. “I get
pretty nervous.”
Lady Netters now 7-0
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Georgia Outdoor Rec Program
Information: 542-GORP
Spring Quarter Schedule
•PRICES
APRIL
Student Non-Student
17
GORP Outdoor Presentation Now Zealand Adventures “ Jett Adams
FREE
7 00pm Rm 213 Memorial Hall
All Welcome
20 22
CUMBERLAND ISLAND BACKPACKING
$35/$45
20 22
HANG GLIDING
$70/$80
21
ROCKCLIMBING. Ml Yonah
$50 $60
21
BEG HORSEBACK RIDING, Helen, GA
$25/$35
21 22
CANOEING CAMPING, Ogeechee River
$25/$35
28
ROCKCLIMBING Mt Yonah
$50/$60
2e
DAY HIKE, Appalachian Trail
$ 15/$ 20
28
BEG. HORSEBACK RIDING, Moonlight Ride & Cookout
$25/$35
28 29
CANOEING Upper Flint River
S30/S35
29
WHITEWATER RAFTING. Ocoee River
$30/$35
may
1
GORP Outdoor Presentation ’Southeastern Rockclimbing ’ by
FREE
two Mt Evetest '88 dimbets, 7 00 p m , Rm 213, Memorial Hall
All Welcome
4 6
BACKPACKING, Great Smoky Mts Natl Park
$20/$ 30
6
BOARDSAILING, Lake Herrick (11 AM 4PM)
$20/$ 30
6
BEG HORSEBACK RIDING Helen GA
$25/$35
11-13
BACKPACKING Pisgah National Forest
$20/$30
12 13
BEG, CAVING, Wet Cave TN
$35/$40
12 13
BEG. WHITEWATER CANOEING, Chattahoochee Nantahala
$25 $35
13
ROCKCLIMBING Mt Yonah
$50/$60
15
GORP Outdoor Presentation, "Sierra Nevada Flora & Fauna ’
FREE
Or Jim Absher, 7 00 p m , Rm 213 Memorial Hall
All Welcome
18 20
HANG GLIDING
$70/$80
19
ROCK CLIMBING, Mt Yonah
$50/$ 70
19
BEG HORSEBACK RIDING Helen GA
$25/$35
25 27
BACKPACKING, Standing Indian
$20/$ 30
26
ROCKCLIMBING, Mt Yonah
$50/$60
26
CANOEING, Broad River
$20 $25
26 27
BEG. CAVING, Sinking Cave
$20/$25
27
WHITEWATER RAFTING, Ocoee River
$30/$35
29
GORP Outdoor Presentation, TBA
FREE
7:00 p m , Rm 213, Memorial Hall
All Welcome
1-3
HANGGLIDING
S70/S80
2
ROCK CLIMBING, Mt Yonah
$50/$60
3
BOARDSAILING, Lake Herrick (11 AM 4 PM)
$20/$ 30
9
ROCKCLIMBING, Mt Yonah
$50/$60
23 July 8
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