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LAW COMMUNITY JUSTICE
MAY GRADUATES
REPAYMENT OF UNDERGRADUATE EXPENSES
OR $30,000 SCHOLARSHIPS
The Police Corps is an exciting national scholarship
program for students who agree to work for a Georgia
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on Thursday, April 6. Room 143
Diamond
Dogs beat
Wofford 6-2
By GRAHAM GARRISON
The Red « Black
Wofford’s chances of an upset
at Foley Field hinged mainly on
whether or not It could catch the
No. 19 Diamond Dogs napping at
home. But after a 2-1 loss to
Samford Tuesday, it was obvious
Georgia was wide-awake for
Wednesday’s game.
Using a platoon of six pitchers
and solid hitting, the Dogs (20-
11) got back on track, sinking a
lowly Wofford (11-23) squad 6-2
to Improve to 16-3 at home.
Pitcher Bill Sharpton was
slated to start Wednesday, but
after seeing action in the loss to
Samford, pitching coach Daron
Shocnrock opted to give the
bullpen a good workout.
“We planned on the guys that
were going to throw," he said. "I
had my mind on which six we
were going to use. I had the
order, but I just didn’t have the
innings.”
Brandon Anglin (0-0, 6.75) got
his first career start at the head
of the rotation for the night. He
began the game shaky, walking
the first two batters before bal
ancing that with two straight
strikeouts.
However, Anglin struggled in
the second, walking three bat
ters to load the bases. After a
wild pitch scored a run to tie the
game at 1-1, Georgia coach Ron
Polk opted for pitcher Andy
Hussien (1-0, 8.10 ERA) to work
out of the jam. The junior would
come through to end the inning
and see work until the fifth.
“Andy's a guy that when he’s
throwing his stuff for strikes,
he’s going to force contact,
which I want in that situation,”
Shoenrock said.
That’s when Troy Davis (0-0,
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Softball splits two with Furman I
By CHRIS ADAMS
The Red * Buck
Any questions as to the
potency of Georgia’s offense
were answered Wednesday, as
the softball Dogs pounded
Furman 8-0 to open Wednesday's
doubleheader. The Lady
Paladins answered back to take
game two in 11 innings, 4-3.
“The girls came out and exe
cuted,” said assistant coach
Steve Chattin. “We had a nice
game offensively, defensively and
pitching."
Georgia wasted no time scor
ing in game one, placing one on
the board In the bottom of the
first. That run came courtesy of
a Corin Tassio sacrifice fly that
scored Michelle Tyree.
Tassio went on to have three
RBIs for game one.
“I just went up there relaxed
and swung the bat like normal,"
Tassio said.
Beth Adams knocked her
170th career hit in the bottom
of the third, setting a new
Georgia record.
But the bottom of the third
was not without controversy.
With two runners on and two
outs, Georgia first baseman
Lisa Shutt bunted. The relay to
first was wild, allowing two runs
to score, and Shutt to advance
to third.
An appeal came from the
Rinnan bench that Shutt had
missed first base and should
SOFTBALL
Georgia 8, Furman 0
Furman 4, Georgia 3 (11)
therefore be out. The appeal was
upheld, but the runs counted.
The Bulldogs produced three
runs in their half of the sixth for
a mercy-rule victory The first
run was a Michelle Tyree suicide
squeeze, scoring Shutt.
Then left fielder Monique
Rhoden scored Tyree and
Sabrina Pimentel on a double to
end the game.
Game one was tossed by
Natalie Price, who went the dis
tance allowing just one run and
chalking up seven strikeouts. 7,
“All my pitches were working
fairly well, and the balls that
were hit everyone made great
plays on,” Price said.
Georgia’s luck could not hol4)
in the second game, as FUrmaSj
outlasted another strong si*-,
inning performance by Price to
tie the Dogs late. A bloop single
between first and second base by
Chrissy Hacker gave Flirman the
lead. Rhoden, who had a second j
opportunity to play hero lot
Georgia, grounded out to end'
the game with Pimenta on third
base.
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A Sophomore pitcher Brandon Anglin got his first career
start for Georgia in the Dogs' 6-2 win over Wofford.
6.75 ERA) got his turn on the
mound. He pitched an inning of
scoreless work, giving way in the
sixth for Shaun Helmey (1-0,
13.50 ERA), who in turn handed
it off to Mark Miller (0-0, 2.08
ERA) in the seventh.
For five innings Wofford
starter Kyle Hadden (1-5) was
able to hold Georgia to only a 2-1
lead. But an RBI double by sec
ond baseman Andy Neufeld and
an RBI single by right fielder
Adam Swann quickly jumped
the Dogs ahead 4-1.
“We played good,” catcher
Doc Brooks said. “Sometimes we
get a little down during the
course of the game, and we just
need to stay up the whole
game.”
Brooks would put the game
away in the seventh with a two-
run dinger, his sixth of the sea
son, past the hazy lights over left
field. The shot secured a 6-2 lead
that Georgia's sixth and final
pitcher of the evening, Jody
Friedman (2-0, 3.57 ERA), would
hold in the ninth.
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