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Western Carolinian Volume 54 Number 17

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  • Sports The Western Carolinian Page 13 (continued) Thursday, February 2, 1989 Lady Cats' Woes Continue; Lose to ASU & ETSU by Laura Goff Carolinian Staff Writer Western Carolina's women's basketball team continued to tell their tale of injuries and inconsistencies last week as they rivaled against Southern Conference opponents Appalachian State and East Tennessee State. The Lady Cats, who were already without the services of Lynn Rhymer cue to a knee injury at the beginning of the season, lost another player to injuries. Sophomore Kelly Parker, who plays forward, suffered a partially torn ligament in her right knee during last Thursday's practice. Thus, the adversity that WCU has been playing under has become even greater. Yet, according to Coach Baldwin, things should be beginning to get back in control with Lynn Rhymer resuming practice by Friday and Kelly Parker as early as the middle of next week. Western Carolina has been a bit unfortunate against conference opponents this sea son. The Lady Cats faced Southern Conference leader Appalachian State last [Tuesday night with a 7-5 record. The game was j played well in tha J first 20 minutes, Mclntlirff yet in the seconu half, it was just the opposite. "Our effort...was characteristic of the way we've played lately...just sort of self-destructed as turnovers and missed shots took us out of the game in the second half," said Coach Baldwin. Western ended the Tuesday night's outing in Boone 84-62, with a 41% from the floor and 22 turnovers. The Lady Cats were led by Kim Mclntvcff, who scored 13 points. Following close behind was Roxanne Williams and Dorvna Huffman, each adding 12 points. WCU's loss against Appalachian State dropped them to 7-6 on the season and 0-3 in conference action. On Monday night, the Lady Cats faced another conference opponent, East Tennessee State at the Ramsey Center. Once again, Western started out well in the game (11-0 lead), "but we gradually found ourselves playing more not to lose the game than playing to win. Our second half performance was very disappointing and we were not very sharp at all. You're not going to win games shooting 32% from the floor, and the bad thing is that most of the shots that were missed were wide open shots We...just looked I very flat," Bald-| win states. The' game ended in j overtime with al 69-62 home loss! for the Ladyj Cats. This puts a J 0-4 mark for|_ Western Caro- Shannon lina, which puts them in the conference cellar. Meanwhile, WCU continued to perform well against non- conference opponents as they defeated the Lady 49'ers 77-72. Saturday's game, which was also played at home consisted of back and forth scoring. WCU took a one point lead (11-10) seven minutes into the game. However, UNC- Charlotte kept pace with the Lady Cats, and by capitalizing on some of Western's turnovers, managed to put themselves in the lead during short spurts of the game. Yet, Western eventually downed the 49'ers. "I've showed some consistency in this [UNCC] game. I've got some good offense from Shirley Shannon, which we've missed prior to this game. It was probably our biggest win of the season as far as team effort goes," Coach Baldwin replied. Although the game was hampered by 28 turnovers, the Lady Cats shot 48.2% from the floor. Shirley Shannon led the Lady Cats with 19 points. Donna Huffman added 13 as well as Roxanne Williams. Once again, the Western Carolina's women's basketball team pulled in another home victory. The Lady Cats will go on to play Marshall University Friday, Feb. 3, followed by Winthrop on Monday, Feb. 6, and Furman on Wednesday, Feb. 8. UNCA (CONTINUED) the lead at 6 and never fell behind until the 2:39 mark of the first half. Terry Miller The Cats found themselves down by as much as six, but refused to let the Dogs go any higher. A Maurice Johnson layup tied the score at 30-30 with 2:30 remaining in the half. Foul shots by Robert Hill and Terry Miller, and a Miller jumper with 5 seconds on the clock took the Cats into halftime with a six point advantage, 36-30. The UNC-A team went to the lockers hitting only 46 percent from the field, and needing every one of Moore's 13 points to keep themintheballgame. The Cats shot 52 percent from the field and 61 percent from the line in the first half. The start of the second half saw Western jump to a quick 14 point lead as they outscored UNCA 8-0 in the first two minutes. The Cats would lead by as much as 16 and never fall behind. Although the Dogs were down, they never gave up and continued to fight off Western's attempts to break their spirit. With a 13 point deficit and only 4:42 on the clock, they began their second scoring run. Starting with a Keck jumper the crowd came alive. A front end miss of a one-and-one by Goettie only made them louder. Outscoring the Cats 11 -1 in the next two minutes brought hope to the Asheville faithful as they had pulled within 3 at 70-67. But this was as close as they woul d come as Western held on to gain a four point revenge victory. Foul shooting almost cost the Cats a victory once again as they missed the front ends of four straight one-and-one opportunities. In all, the Cats lost a possible 24 points from the foul line. The difference was David Donerlson, who hit six free throws in the last minute, and scrappy defense. "I redesigned all three of our out of bound plays so the ball would be in Dave's hands. We upped Dave (Donerlson) from a Freshman to a Sophomore tonight," said coach Dave Possinger. "When we missed the one-and-ones our defensive intensity went up to a level. They could not get a good shot off. They scored 72 points, but look how hard they earned them." Possinger ended the night with a single thought, "This win is for Western Carolina University, Chancellor Coulter, Dr. Wanless, Poss's Pit, and the whole community. This win is for you." Cats Fall to The Citadel by Richard Sumner Carolinian Staff Writer CHARLESTON - Western Carolina's Catamounts saw the end of a two game winning streak Monday night with a 79-51 routing from the Bulldogs of the Citadel. Western experience their worst shooting night of the season. They shot only 36 percent from the field and managed only 8- of-18 from the foul line, after hitting 87 percent Saturday night against the Furman Paladins. "I told our kids we're not going to play a great game every night and this was one of those nights," said WCU head coach Dave Possinger. "The crowd took us out of the game early, and they simply kicked our rear ends. We didn't play well in any area. I can't think of anything positive to say." David Donerlson, Southern Comference player of the week last week, scored only 3 points on one-of-six from the three point line. Bennie Goettie, although fouling out with 7:47 remaining to be played, scored a game high 19 points. Keith Gray added 13. The Citadel's Ted Mosay and Patrick Elmore both scored 16 points and kept the Bulldogs in control from the start. They took advantage of seven WCU turnovers in the~firsTten minujtesto gain a 16- 7 lead. They remained-ahead entering halftime at 39-22. The second half started no better than the first with Western unable to get the ball to drop an d the Citadel hitting two three pointers (Ed Conroy and Leon Brj'ant) to spark a 47-22 advantage only 1:12 into the period. The Bulldogs hit 60 percent from the floor and 6-of-8 from three point land. James Stevens added 13 points, and Leon Bryant finished with 10. The Catamounts remain tied with VMI for last place in the Southern Conference. The next game for Western will be Saturday at 7:30 pm in the Ramsey Center. They will meet Appalachain State for another Southern Conference matchup. the first to the second half. Furman continually fought back at the lead and came within two at 61 -59 with over five minutes in the contest. They could come no further as Western's remarkable foul shooting came to. the rescue. Seven straight one-and-ones lead the Cats home with a victory to improve their conference record to 2-4 and their overall to 8-9. The Paladins were led in scoring by David Brown, who finished with 23, and followed by Joey Brooks with 12 and Bruce Evans with 11. Possinger praised his team's excellent zone defense in the second half. "We had to rely on our zone defense so we didn't foul out. . I thought we did a super job...we normally don't practice it a lot, we don't play it a lot. But when you have four guys on the floor with four fouls, you can't afford cheap fouls." FURMAN (CONTINUED) before half-time. During the break Possinger made "key defensive and offensive adjustments...every game we have won this year, our defense has won it." Offensively, the Cats turned to David Donerlson and his outside jumper. He lead the way with 19 points in the second half to bring his total to a career high 21. Bennie Goettie, who was playing with a hip pointer injury from the UNCA game, dropped 16 points through the basket, and Terry Miller added 13, while Keith Gray played a defensive role scoring only 12. Western never lead by more than eight after out scoring the Paladins 7-2 in the first four minutes of the half and achieving a 15-2 run from RESERVE OFFICERS* TRAINING CORPS "MY ARMY ROTC SCHOLARSHIP IS PAYIHG OFF TWICE." "W mm >•» ■ «<fe*; «*?* «»* * * » jm* .■».. -m, , k f^%t Isaac Hamilton, WCU Junior, Resident Assistant "My two-year ROTC scholarship is paying for most of my WCU education. It's worth over $10,000. But it's paying off even more with leadership experience and officer credentials impressive to future employers." Isaac Hamilton is one of many WCU students who have won Army ROTC scholarships. You can, too. N Apply now. Contact Major Leo French, Jordan-Phillips Fieldhouse, 2nd Floor, or call 227-7438. ARMY ROTC THE SMARTEST COLLEGE COURSE YOU CAN TAKE.
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