april 7, 2014
Post on 10-Mar-2016
213 Views
Preview:
DESCRIPTION
TRANSCRIPT
THE BLUE ZONE
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX sports.chronicleblogs.com
MONDAY, APRIL 7, 2014 www.dukechroniclesports.com
SportsThe Chronicle april 7, 2014
JESÚ
S H
IDA
LGO
/TH
E C
HR
ON
ICLE
sportswrapthe chronicle
MEN’S LACROSSE: OVERPOWERS NOTRE DAME • BASEBALL: SWEPT BY YELLOW JACKETS
NO MATCH
6 | monDAY, April 7, 2014 www.dukechroniclesports.com The Chronicle
With the Navy Health Professions Scholarship Program, get 100% of your medical school
tuition paid for. Along with a generous monthly stipend of $2,088 to help cover living expenses
as a medical student. Plus a sign-on bonus of up to $20,000.* And after taking advantage of
all that? Look forward to stepping right into an established, thriving global practice – where
the focus is all about your patients, not business.
WANT TO LEARN MORE? CONTACT YOUR NAVY MEDICAL OFFICER RECRUITER TODAY. XXX-XXX-XXXX | JOBS_districtnametogohere@navy.mil
*Contact a Navy Medical Of� cer Recruiter for details. ©2010. Paid for by the U.S. Navy. All rights reserved.
T H E P R O G N O S I S : P R A C T I C E P U R E M E D I C I N E A N D S T A R T O U T D E B T - F R E E .
502DAD
MO
F11
(800) 662-7419 jobs_raleigh@navy.mil
Register now.
Oh, my gosh! Is it time? It’s time.
summersession.duke.edusummer@duke.edu
Duke Dominates notre Dame
Kevin Shamieh/ChroniCle File Photo
Senior Jordan Wolf and sophomore Deemer Class led the Blue Devil attack against the Fighting Irish with a combined nine goals and three assists.
MEN’S LACROSSE
by Brian MazurThe ChroniCle
Duke flew into South Bend for a highly touted ACC matchup and then left with all of the luck.
Behind a fiery offensive performance, the no. 4 Blue Devils downed no. 7 notre Dame 15-7 Saturday afternoon at Arlotta
Stadium in South Bend, ind.The matchup was the two teams’ first
meeting as ACC foes, but a sense of fa-miliarity lingered on the field during the game. The programs have faced off against each other seven times since 2010 and twice in 2013, including a 12-11 Blue Devil win in the nCAA quarterfinals.
Saturday’s win was Duke’s sixth straight since back-to-back blowout loses to Mary-land and loyola.
“We’re playing really fundamental,” sophomore midfielder Deemer Class said. “Guys are working well shooting, playing with both hands, a lot of stuff we teach in the fall and just keep building as the season goes forward. We’re really buying into our system. The more we’re unselfish, the bet-ter the whole unit plays.”
Duke (10-2, 3-1 in the ACC) jumped out to a hot start in the first quarter, with attack Jordan Wolf scoring two goals and then finding Class for the team’s third goal
to go ahead 3-1.notre Dame was able to get on the board
when nick ossello scored his first of two goals on the afternoon. But the Fighting irish struggled to find an offensive rhythm and were hampered by a slew of one-min-ute penalties that resulted in a number of man-up opportunities for the Blue Devils.
it looked as if notre Dame (4-4, 2-2) fi-nally found the offensive spark it needed to cut into the Duke lead when Conor Doyle slid the ball past Blue Devil goalie luke
Aaron in the opening minute of the third quarter to make the score 6-3. But Duke was determined not to let this one get too close.
The Blue Devil offense responded with six straight goals and held the irish score-less for the remainder of the quarter. ex-plosive plays helped lengthen the lead, as midfielder Will haus took advantage of an overthrow, scooping up the ball and run-ning the length of the field to score his fourth goal of the season.
Wolf added his 37th goal of the season with 9:54 to play in the third quarter, boost-ing the Duke lead to seven. The senior finished the day with four goals and three assists. Class led the Blue Devils on the af-ternoon with five goals on 10 shots.
head coach John Danowski said that the play of Wolf and Class has been a major reason behind the offense’s success this season.
“What it does is it gives us a little bit of bal-ance and we are able to stretch the defense a little bit from the perimeter,” Danowski said. “in the beginning of the year, we didn’t have that ability to do that [and] now that we can stretch it a little bit, it keeps defenses honest. if they slide quickly, you can move the ball. To-day also the film will show the kids were pretty unselfish as well.”
Although the Fighting irish tallied four goals in the game’s final quarter, the Duke de-fense held the notre Dame offense, which en-tered the game averaging more than 12 goals per game, to just seven goals on 34 shots on the day.
Aaron continued his breakout season in goal for Duke, and his five first-quarter saves were crucial to his team’s early advantage that endured throughout the game.
“every team in the country will say ‘We want our goalie to make that first save,’” Danowski said. “We want him to make that first one so he feels good about his role and seeing the ball. We made a couple of saves early and we were able to get the ball out.”
The Blue Devils are heating up at just
See M. LAcrosse, page 8
Blue Devils take NCAA quarterfinal rematch
ND 7DUKE 15
The Chronicle www.dukechroniclesports.com monDAY, April 7, 2014 | 7
OPERATION: Stores Administration PUBLICATION: ChronicleHEADLINE: DevilSpeak DATES: TBACOLOR: CMYK
ASK US YOUR QUESTIONS. GIVE US YOUR OPINIONS.
Connect with Duke University Stores!Give us your feedback on any of our operations via our online question/comment page, DevilSpeak.Just visit www.dukestores.duke.edu and click on the DevilSpeak link.
Duke University Stores.We are the Stores that Work for You!
Blue Devils hand Miami first ACC lossby Lucas Hubbard
The ChroniCle
last year against Miami, the undermanned Blue Devils only had five healthy players and were forced to forfeit both a doubles and a singles match. What a difference a year makes.
Playing with a fully healthy squad, top-ranked Duke gave away no freebies Sunday,
stealing a hotly-con-tested doubles point en route to an im-pressive 6-1 win against the no. 14 hurricanes at Am-bler Tennis Stadium.
“i told our team after the doubles that we took their best punch right there,” head coach Jamie Ashworth said. “i really don’t know how we won the doubles, to be honest with you.”
Miami (14-4, 8-2 in the ACC) held 5-4 leads on all three doubles courts before Duke made its move. At third doubles, junior Annie Mulholland and freshman Chalena Scholl claimed the final three games against Stepha-nie Wagner and lina lileikite for Duke’s first point. With the fifth-ranked duo of hanna Mar and Beatrice Capra fighting off match points in first doubles, the Blue Devils (20-1, 10-1) had to turn elsewhere to claim the dou-bles victory.
The 24th-ranked duo of junior ester Gold-feld and freshman Alyssa Smith was up to the task. Facing a game pair of hurricanes in the 28th-ranked pair of Melissa Bolivar and Kelly laurente, Duke held at 6-7 to force a tiebreak after a favorable net cord at 15-30. The duo
then roared to a 7-2 victory in the breaker to claim the match.
“There’s a big difference between 30-all and 15-40, of course,” Goldfeld said. “Alyssa and i just built on that, and i think we got a little bit of confidence from that point. We brought a little more energy, and that defi-nitely helped us.”
For a coach who has emphasized doubles from the start of the year, Sunday was a great sight.
“We just kept battling. every time we were down a break here, a break there, and we
stayed in there, and we made the girls from Miami play,” Ashworth said. “i thought we held our composure really well and that was a big thing for us, and then [we used] the momentum from the doubles [to do] a good job at the start of the singles.”
Duke ran out its deluxe singles lineup, sporting all four of its ranked players as well as the now-healthy Scholl at second singles, and the squad simply overwhelmed Miami.
Scholl was the first to claim a singles vic-tory Sunday, her second of the weekend. She thoroughly dominated no. 49 laurente en route to a 6-2, 6-3 win.
Perhaps more importantly, Scholl’s return allowed the remainder of the Duke singles lineup to slide down, a transition that proved effective. The 24th-ranked Goldfeld was able to take a break from the no. 2 spot to play third singles, where she rolled 6-2, 6-4 against Clementina riobueno. Goldfeld’s win was her eighth in a row.
“i’ve been working a lot on being more aggressive and coming to net,” Goldfeld said. “i felt like i was moving well and hitting my serves well. Just an overall good day.”
At sixth singles, Monique Albuquerque
WOMEN’S tENNiS
See W. Tennis, page 9
JeSúS hidalgo/the ChroniCle
Freshman Chalena Scholl returned to action in Duke’s dismantling of the Hurricanes.
DUKE 7NCST 0
DUKE 6MIAMI 1
was able to keep the hurricanes alive, top-ping Duke’s rachel Kahan 6-2, 6-2. But soon, Duke’s 12th consecutive win was in the books.
no. 89 Smith won at fifth singles to give the Blue Devils the overall victory, besting Bo-livar 6-2, 6-2. Seconds later, Mar, ranked 31st nationally, posted a win against lileikite at fourth singles by the same scoreline.
in the final match of the day, no. 5 Capra and no. 61 Wagner waged a war at first sin-gles, splitting the first two sets. Capra then fell behind 7-3 in the match tiebreaker be-fore roaring back to claim an 6-2, 4-6, 11-9 victory.
Sunday’s victory was the Blue Devils sec-ond of the weekend, as Duke had no trouble dispatching one of its Triangle counterparts, sweeping n.C. State at home without drop-ping a single set.
The Blue Devils rode their first and third doubles squads, who notched identical 8-2 wins. Mar and Capra knocked off n.C. State’s Joelle Kissell and Sophie nelson, while Scholl and Mulholland topped the Wolfpack’s ni-cole Martinez and natalia Janowicz.
8 | monDAY, April 7, 2014 www.dukechroniclesports.com The Chronicle
A Huge Thank You to All of Our Volunteers!
National Volunteer WeekApril 7-12, 2014
For more information visit http://csc.civic.duke.edu
Tuesday, April 8: Popcorn SocialSponsored by the Duke Community Service Center and the Office of Service-Learning
Wednesday, April 9: #Ivolunteer CampaignShare pictures and thoughts about why you volunteer!
Facebook: Duke University Community Service Center • Twitter: @Duke_CSC
Thursday, April 10: Duke Campus Farm WorkdayPlant and harvest with Duke Campus Farm from 3-5 P.M.
Please contact Emily McGinty at dukecampusfarm@gmail.com for transportation
Friday, April 11: Tutor AppreciationSponsored by America Reads and America Counts
Saturday, April 12: dPS Invasive Species Removal 10 am-12:30pm, the Hebron Road Rare Plant Preserve
Lunch and Transportation are provided! For more information and to register visit: Http://bit.ly/NyORDI
TUTORING
GRE, GMAT, LSAT, SAT PREP
Attend courses at UNC, RTP, or online. Early Birds pay only $504. GRE PREP begins May 17th at UNC. 919-791-0810 or www.PrepSuccess.com.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
SUMMER JOB-POOL MANAGERS, LIFEGUARD,
ATTENDANTS
Pool Professionals is currently seasonal employees for the sum-mer. Flexible hours and GREAT pay. Work at a pool near you and enjoy a summer outdoors. Candidate must be hardwork-ing, self motivated and willing to obtain lifeguard certification if applicable. Contact us TODAY to set up an interview and se-cure your summer job! 919-787-7878
Email agreiner@poolprofession-als.com
DUKE SENIORS & ALUMNI
Duke alumni enrolled in Sum-mer Session receive a tuition grant of $1,506 per under-graduate course. Application required. Certain limits and deadlines apply. Questions? Contact summer@duke.edu or visit http://summersession.duke.edu/tuition
SPECIAL TUITION RATE FOR DUKE EMPLOYEES
Enroll in a summer or fall under-graduate course for academic credit for $975. Audit a course for $100. Course schedules now available. Certain limits and deadlines apply. For application/registration details contact 919-684-5375 or summer@duke.edu
SUMMER SESSION OFFER FOR EMPLOYEE CHILDREN
Qualified children of Duke em-ployees who enroll in Summer Session are eligible to receive a tuition grant of $1,506 per undergraduate course. Appli-cation required. Questions? Contact summer@duke.edu or visit http://summersession.duke.edu/tuition
CLASSIFIEDS
The Chronicle
classified advertising
www.duke-chronicle.com/
classifieds
ratesAll advertising - $6.00 for first 15
words, 10¢ (per day) additional per word
deadline12:00 noon 1 business day
prior to publication
by Brian PollackThe ChroniCle
After dropping four straight games, Duke’s triumph against rival north Car-olina last weekend seems like a distant memory.
The Blue Devils seemed to be headed in the right direction after sweeping the Tar heels for the first time since 1994, but a mid-week loss to liberty and a swept series against Georgia Tech quick-ly brought them back down to earth.
Duke was dominated by the Yellow Jackets, falling 7-4 in the series opener Friday, drop-ping a 5-1 ballgame Saturday and losing a 1-0 pitcher’s duel in the finale Sunday at russ Chandler Stadium.
inconsistent play has plagued this Blue Devil squad all season long. in conference play, Duke has swept series versus notre Dame and then-no. 19 north Carolina but suffered series sweeps at the hands of Pittsburgh and now Georgia Tech—marking an unusual stretch in which the Blue Devils have been a part of a weekend sweep for four straight weeks.
“We’ve got to be more consistent,” head Coach Chris Pollard said. “When we play well, we can beat anybody on our schedule, and we’ve shown that. When we don’t play well, we can lose to anybody on
our schedule, and we’ve shown that on the other side. i really think we just need to focus on the consistency of our ball club and getting some guys going individually.”
Duke (17-16, 7-8 in the ACC) was ham-pered by an inconsistent offense against the Yellow Jackets (19-13, 8-7), who came into the weekend on a four-game losing streak.
The Blue Devils put up a four-spot in the third inning of Friday’s game—highlight-ed by rBi singles from second baseman Andy Perez and designated hitter Matt Berezo—but could only muster one run in the final 24 innings of the series.
“We just didn’t push enough runs across the board over the course of the weekend,” Pollard said. “Ultimately, it boils down to some guys that are capable of swinging the bat better than they are right now. We need to work really hard with those guys individually to get those guys going at the plate.”
Duke did receive some good news in the offensive department with third baseman Jordan Betts returning to the lineup. The senior had been forced to watch his teammates from the bench for the past two weeks after injuring his back against Pittsburgh, but came back to start all three games this weekend. Betts—who leads the team with a .510 slugging percentage and is second with a .350 batting average—picked up three hits in Sunday’s game and could provide a huge boost for the beleaguered lineup moving forward.
“i hope [he can jumpstart the of-fense],” Pollard said. “he needs to be one of those guys, certainly. he had three hits today. he’s a guy that we’re going to need to lean on heavily over these last 24 ballgames.”
The lack of production at the plate meant that the Blue Devils wasted a mas-terful performance on the mound Sunday from sophomore Michael Matuella. The right-hander breezed through the Geor-gia Tech lineup, needing just 87 pitches to make it through eight four-hit innings. Matuella (0-1) was handed a hard-luck loss despite taking a perfect game into the sixth inning, and struck out six while al-lowing just one unearned run to lower his season erA to a sparkling 0.82.
Blue Devils swept by Yellow Jackets
nicole Savage/the ChroniCle
Despite a stellar performance from Michael Matuella Sunday, Duke could not find any offensive success against Georgia Tech.
BASEBALL
the right time with postseason play around the corner. But even though the team’s suc-cess over the last month evokes reminders of Duke’s 2013 championship run, Danowski thinks his team and coaching staff can look at some aspects of his team’s play before facing a number of high-profile teams in the ACC and nCAA tournaments.
“i hope we keep getting better,” he said. “i hope this isn’t the ceiling. i think the fourth quarter [we let up]. The faceoff game we have to continue to look at. We know their kid liam [o’Connor] is dynamite. We got worked in the fourth quarter in the faceoff game and we failed to clear a bunch of times. There is plenty of ammunition for the coaching staff to get better.”
M. Lacrosse from page 6
GT 7DUKE 4
GT 5DUKE 1
GT 1DUKE 0
“it was one of the best pitched games i’ve ever seen [by Matuella],” Pollard said. only three balls reached the out-field the whole ballgame. he gave up four singles, three of them were infield hits. he didn’t walk a guy. he completely dominated the game.”
Duke will return to action 6 p.m. Tuesday as it welcomes in-state oppo-nent n.C. Central to Jack Coombs Field. Pollard said that—despite the team’s up-and-down play and lackluster offense—he is not jumping to panic mode and is willing to stick with the same approach they’ve had all season.
“[This weekend] doesn’t change any-thing in terms of how we approach day-to-day,” Pollard said. “i’m not sure if, at this point, it’s an overall approach issue as much as it is that we’ve got to look at each guy that’s underperforming right now relative to where we think he can be and try to get those guys going.”
The Chronicle www.dukechroniclesports.com monDAY, April 7, 2014 | 9
ACROSS
1 “America’s Most Wanted” host John
6 Bedwear, informally
9 Meager
14 Prized violin
15 Triumphant cry
16 “Yup”
17 Operatic singer on a sofa?
19 “I ___ for animals” (bumper sticker)
20 Taken care of
21 Curved path
23 Mountain goat
24 Kooky
26 Ins’ partner
28 Chitchat about a dressmaking template?
33 “May ___ excused?”
35 Former part of Portuguese India
36 Set of keys?
37 Complimentary road service in Sierra Leone’s capital?
42 Like Dylan Thomas, by birth
43 Oozy stuff
44 180° from WNW
45 Egg-hunting time in the Orient?
50 “___ Man,” Emilio Estevez film
51 Former capital of Italy?
52 Pizazz
55 Many a C.E.O.’s deg.
57 Broadway’s ___ O’Neill Theater
61 Sheriff’s star
63 Memorize lines for a Shakespearean king?
65 Evil character in “Snow White”
66 Mess up
67 Superman’s adoptive parents
68 “Pasted” or “wasted,” for “drunk”
69 “Balderdash!”70 Art Deco, for one
DOWN 1 Money rolls 2 Parisian girlfriend 3 Wash 4 Lyric unit 5 Insinuate 6 ___ Beta Kappa 7 Software
platform suitable for Starbucks?
8 Actress Stone of “Casino”
9 Easily pranked teacher, maybe
10 New Jersey governor whose first name starts his last name
11 “Moby-Dick” captain
12 Zap in the microwave
13 TV’s “___ Factor”18 “Please stay!”22 Quarter of a
quart25 “Man, that
hurts!”27 Reel-to-reel ___28 Banana skins29 Mountain chain30 ___ Tots31 Son of Seth32 Investment firm
T. ___ Price33 “___ Never Meet
Again” (Elvis song)
34 La ___ Tar Pits38 Hormone in the
pill39 Quaker pronoun40 Baby horse
41 More optimistic
46 331/3, for a record album: Abbr.
47 More high-minded
48 Elephants’ feelers
49 “Bald” baby bird
52 Outdoor meals with hamburgers or hot dogs, say, in brief
53 Fidel Castro’s brother and successor
54 Notion
56 Commercial prefix with postale
58 “___ meeny miney mo”
59 The “N” of N.A.A.C.P.: Abbr.
60 Scottish Gaelic
62 Coll. major of many writers
64 Paintings, sculptures, etc.
PUZZLE BY ANDREA CARLA MICHAELS AND MICHAEL BLAKE
Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS.AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information.Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year).Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16
17 18 19
20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31 32
33 34 35 36
37 38 39 40 41
42 43 44
45 46 47 48 49
50 51
52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
61 62 63 64
65 66 67
68 69 70
L A B A M B A A T A V I S TI P A D A I R S I S E N O RR E T W E E T K T H X B Y EA S E A N E B U L A
R E V O P E N T O PS U P E R E G O T A B L EN N E S N A K E B I T T E NA C R E U N C L E S A D DG O O G L E G L A S S I T OS I N G E U N T I L N O W
L I O N C U B D R ES E N S O R F O W L
P A J A M A S P A D T H A ID V D C A S E T M O B I L EF I S H N E T S A M E O L D
The New York Times Syndication Sales Corporation620 Eighth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10018
For Information Call: 1-800-972-3550For Release Monday, April 7, 2014
Edited by Will Shortz No. 0303Crossword
The Chronicle Best/Worst thing about Old Duke:
Too loud, didn’t go: ...................................................................NationalParkeStacy’s Mom/Wasn’t Fountains of Wayne: ......................................... StiehmyHeard there was Cheerwine/Left when there wasn’t: ............BacceslovethisCrowd surfing/Falling: ...........................................................................mouseRight outside my dorm/Right outside my dorm: ............................nickatniteFill-in LDOC/Nothing to look forward to now: ....amandaplease, EasyBreezyLost the memory along with my keys, phone and dignity: ............Mr. TeethPlaying along on my air guitar in my room: ..................................... Mr. JortsBarb Starbuck prefers the musical stylings of Beethoven: .....................Barb
Student Advertising Manager: ..................................................James SinclairAccount Representatives: .............................. Jennifer Bahadur, Peter Chapin,
Courtney Clower, Alyssa Coughenour, Rachel Kiner, Tyler Deane-Krantz,Chris Geary, Liz Lash, Hannah Long, Parker Masselink, Nic Meiring,
Brian Paskas, Nick Philip, Cliff Simmons, Lexy Steinhilber
Creative Services Student Manager: ................................. Marcela Heywood
Creative Services: ..........................................................Allison Eisen, Mao HuRachel Kiner, Rita Lo
Business Office .........................................................................Susanna Booth
Find the answers to the Sudoku puzzle on the classifieds page
Fill in the grid so that every
row, every column and
every 3x3 box contains
the digits 1 through 9.
(No number is repeated in
any column, row or box.)
Duke Youth Programs has an opening for
a Clerk III. The duties include performing
routine clerical activities. This is a seasonal
position, lasting from the last week of May/
first week of June through the end of July/first
week of August (approximately 10-11 weeks
total). The position involves working four
hours per day, 8:30-12:30 Monday through
Friday, for a total of 20 hours per week.
Perfect opportunity for an undergraduate or graduate student!
For information: tpatters@duke.edu
Youth Programs
Summer Job OpeningClerk III
W. TeNNIs from page 7
JeSúS hidalgo/the ChroniCle
The Blue Devils were able to pick up their 19th and 20th victories of the season this week-end as they defeated N.C. State and Miami at home.
even with top players Capra and Goldfeld taking the afternoon off in sin-gles, Duke had no problem against the Wolfpack (7-9, 1-8). The success started at the bottom of the ladder for the Blue Devils, with the squad claiming straight-sets wins at fourth, fifth and sixth singles to secure the match victory.
The top three spots were more con-tested as the Wolfpack rallied in the second sets, with each set going at least 12 games, but Duke still emerged un-scathed. Smith defeated Martinez 6-1, 7-5 at third singles, and Scholl, playing first singles for the second consecutive match, beat Kissell by the same score-line. Mar completed the sweep at second
singles with a 6-3, 7-6 (7-5) win against rachael James-Baker.
having a healthy Scholl back is crucial for the Blue Devils, and this weekend was a big step in the right direction for her.
“She’s getting better every match,” Ash-worth said. “every time we step on the court she’s getting better and better and smarter. every day she’s a day healthier and i’m sure that when we play on Friday she’ll be better than she was today.”
With three matches remaining in the regular season, Duke still has work ahead to remain in good position among the crowded ACC field.
“There’s a ton to play for, and we’re trying to give ourselves days off in the ACC tourna-ment,” Ashworth said. “But this team does a really good job about taking it one match at a time.”
top related