The North Texas Daily (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 123, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 5, 1984 Page: 7 of 8
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Sports
The North Texas Daily
Page 7
Wednesday, September 5, 1984
Photo by BILL DOUTHART
Melissa Celcer, far left, Barb Greeri, Lisa Mangold and Lori De Angelis
Spikers prepare for season;
four starters to return
By KEN CURRIN
Staff Writer
The NT women's volleyball team opens the 1984
season Sept. 13 at Hardin-Simmons University in
Abilene, and coach Vicky Guy expects to field a team
with an even mix of experienced upperclassmen and
untested freshman.
Six players from last year's 17-14 team have
returned, and with (he final cut approaching,
seven freshmen arc vying for a spot on the team.
The Eagles are scheduled to play Richland Junior
College at home on Thursday, and Guy said every-
Women's Volleyball Schedule
Sept.
13
Hardin-Simmons
7 p.m.
A
Oct. 24
Texas Wcsleyan
7
p.m.
Sept.
18
Stephen F. Austin
6:30 p.m.
A
Oct. 26-17
Wesleyan Invitational
1
MA
Sept
25
Oklahoma
7 p.m.
H
Nov. 2*
Southwest Louisiana
7
30 p.m
Sept
28-29
Oklahoma Classic
TBA
A
Nov. 3*
McNeese State
2
p.m.
Oct
3
liast Texas State
7 p.m.
A
Nov. 7*
UT-Arlington
7
30 p.in
Oct.
5*
Lamar
7 p.m.
H
Nov. 8
Baylor
•7
p.m.
Oct.
10
UT-Arlington
7 p.m.
H
Nov, 13
Hardin-Simmons
7
p.m.
Oct.
12*
Northeast Louisiana
7 p.m.
H
Nov. 16-17
Southland Conference
I
BA
Oct.
13*
Arkansas State
11 a.m.
H
Tournament
Oct.
16
Oklahoma
7 p.m.
A
Oct
18
Texas Woman's
7 p.m.
H
*SLC matches
NT DAILY ADS-
Your best campus
exposure
ATTENTION
Student Organization Presidents
Organizations must be registered with the
Student Activities Center to have access to on-
campus resources. Registration forms available
in the
Student Activities Center
4th Floor, University Union
Deadline: Friday, September 28 4:30 p.m.
Golfers open season Thursday
By JOEY RICHARDS
Staff Writer
The 1984-85 NT women's golf season
opens this weekend al the Roadrunner In-
vitational golf tournament at New Mexico
State University in Las C'ruccs, N.M.
Senior Chris Tcno will lead the five
qualifiers for the NT team Thursday, fol-
lowed by senior Ingrid Norval. Three fresh-
men round out the team: Amy Hoke quali-
fied third. Georgia Hernandez, was fourth
and Carie Rice was fifth.
Coach Rosey Bartlett said the two seniors,
Teno and Norval, are playing well. "They
should be the leaders and are going to be
the superior players. I'm looking for them
to hold the team up," Bartlett said. She
said this tournament will be the first for the
three freshmen. "The freshmen are untested.
1 hope they come through."
Bartlett said Teno won the Lamar tourna-
ment last year in Beaumont, and both Teno
and Norval have consistently finished in the
top 10 of the tournaments they have played.
She said they both are striking the ball well
and should play well; however, she said since
this is the first tournament of the season,
"there may be a few jitters."
The teams competing in the tournament
are New Mexico State, the University of
New Mexico, the University of Arizona,
Texas Tech and Southland Conference rival
Lamar.
Bartlett said the University of New Mexi-
co and Lamar will be the teams to beat.
"The University of New Mexico has one
of the top five or six teams in the nation.
fhey made it to the NCAA (National Colle-
giate Athletic Association) tournament last
year. They lost their No. I player, so I'm
not quite sure just how good they will be
this year.
"We played pretty much even with Lamar
last year. They had a large freshman class
last year, and so they should be returning a
lot ol seasoned players However, they did
lose their No. I player, Lori Brock, who
went pro," Bartlett said.
She said the team will be playing the
Roadrunner Invitational for the first time,
so she does not know much about the course:
however, she said she expects it to be a
good course. She said the area has had good
weather this summer and the temperatures
for the area have been below normal for
this time of year.
Cagers score two recruits
Newman signs basketball freshmen stand outs
By JOEY RICHARDS
Staff Writer
The NT men's basketball team has signed
two freshmen recruits. Tony Worrell and
Vance Cranfill, to this year's team, assis-
tant coach Glenn Arnold said.
Worrell, a 6-7, 195-pound forward from
Goldsboro, N.C., was a two-year letterman
in basketball and a three-year letterman in
track for Goldsboro High School. Worrell
averaged 16 points and 10 rebounds as a
senior and was named all-district and all-
state in North Carolina. Arnold said Worrell
also played in the North Carolina East-West
all-star game, which he said is equivalent
to Texas' high school all-star game.
CRANFILL, A 6-4, 185-pound guard
from Berkner High School in Richardson,
averaged 20 points a game and was named
first team all-district in district I2-5A. Arnold
said Cranfill was named the most valuable
player in District 12-5A last season.
Arnold said Cranfill, a guard, shoots well.
He describes Worrell as a very good athlete.
He said they should help the team. "Of
course," Arnold said, "They all start out
as equals, but they should be an addition to
our program. They come from good pro-
grams. 1 think they'll help."
IN OTHER BASKETBALL news,
Arnold said that two players, redshirt Lew-
is Watson and freshman recruit Michael
Strange, will not be eligible this semester
due to academic ineligibility. Arnold said
that Strange is going to Ranger Junior Col-
lege and Lewis will sit out a semester.
UT coach expects larger crowds
body will get a chance to show their talents on the
court.
"We've been spending a lot of time working on
our timing, but it will take a few games before every-
body gets the system down," Guy said. "Through
the first third of the season we'll be doing a lot of
learning, and until we get to that point we'll just have
to do the best we can."
The best the Eagles have to offer should come
from returning starters Barb Green and Lisa Mangold.
Lori DeAngelis, co-captain from last year's team, is
expected to turn in valuable contributions from her
outside hitter position.
AUST IN (APK-Coach Mick Haley of the
Texas Longhorn women's volleyball team
says that four years ago, "we had trouble
getting 300 people" to watch a game. This
season, with a boost from the Olympics,
he expects some matches to attract more
than 3,000.
The game of women's volleyball has
changed dramatically all over the country
in the past 20 years.
Haley said the team averaged 9(X) to 1,600
spectators a match at Gregory Gym last
season, but he expects the success of the
U.S. Olympic team, which won a silver
medal, to boost those numbers considerably .
Once a club sport at UT.-Austin, volley-
ball now offers 12 full scholarships. The
Longhorn roster includes five women from
Texas, two from Michigan, two from Cali-
fornia and one each from Illinois, Indiana
and Minnesota.
In the 1960s. Haley said, coaches stressed
defense in women's volleyball. But in the
1980s, with training, women college players
will be slamming volleyballs at speeds of
up to 90 inph.
Haley said 6-foot redshirt freshman An ie
Albreeht of Battle Creek, Mich., can lift
more weight on an inclined press "than three
of four (UT) freshman football players. Not
many guys can go through this and survive."
Texas started two-a-day drills Aug. 13.
three-hour practice sessions morning and
afternoon with team meetings in between.
During school, the team practices three hours
daily.
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Eades, Trent. The North Texas Daily (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 123, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 5, 1984, newspaper, September 5, 1984; Denton, TX. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth332674/m1/7/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting UNT Libraries Special Collections.