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The University of North Carolina Location: Chapel Hill, N.C. Chartered: 1789 Enrollment: 26,878 Chancellor: James Moeser Director of Athletics: Dick Baddour Senior Woman Administrator: Dr. Beth Miller Affiliation: NCAA Division I Conference: Atlantic Coast Nickname: Tar Heels Mascot: Rameses the ram School colors: Carolina blue and white Athletic department web site: www.TarHeelBlue.com Carolina Field Hockey Head Coach: Karen Shelton (West Chester, ’79) Record at UNC: 397-109-9 (24 seasons) Overall record: 397-109-9 (24 seasons) Office phone: (919) 962-5230 Office fax: (919) 962-1646 Assistant Coach: Jana Woolley (North Carolina, ’98) Assistant Coach: Grant Fulton (Univ. of Pretoria, ’97) Volunteer Assistant Coach: Kwan Browne Undergraduate Assistant Coach: Kelsey Keeran Administrative Assistant: Shelley Johnson Assistant coaches’ office phone: (919) 962-5219 Home Stadium: Francis E. Henry Stadium (Astroturf) Stadium Capacity: 1,086 Press box phone: (919) 843-7733 Game Staff: Jan Boxill (public address announcer), Sherry Salyer (game clock) Head Groundskeeper: David Andrews Athletic Training Staff: Doug Halverson, head athletic train- er; Laura Conner and Zach Fox, graduate student trainers; Jaime Kent, undergraduate student trainer Director of Field Hockey Marketing: Kris McGrath Field Hockey Secretary: Donna Cheek Team Information 2004 Record: 21-2 (4-0 ACC) 2004 ACC Tournament results: Champions (Beat Wake Forest 2-1 OT in the semifinals, beat Maryland 3-1 in the championship) 2004 NCAA Tournament results: Second round (Beat Richmond 3-0 in the first round, lost 2-1 to Duke in the sec- ond round) NCAA appearances: 21, most recent in 2004 NCAA Championships: Four – 1989, ’95, ’96, ’97 ACC Championships: 15 – 1983, ’84. ’85, ’86, ’87, ’88, ’89, ’90, ’91, ’93, ’94, ’95, ’96, ’97, 2004 Starters returning/lost: 6/5 Letterwinners returning/lost: 12/6 UNC Athletic Communications Assistant A.D for Athletic Communications: Steve Kirschner Assistant Director/field hockey contact: Dana Gelin Email address: [email protected] Office phones: (919) 962-2123/962-0083 Cell phone: (919) 357-6619 Field hockey press box phone: (919) 843-7733 Office fax: (919) 962-0612 Mailing address: P.O. Box 2126, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 Table of Contents Academics ..................................................Page 16 ACC Tournament History............................Page 27 All-America Selections................................Page 30 All-Time Results..........................................Page 27 Athletic Tradition ........................................Page 35 Atlantic Coast Conference..........................Page 20 Carolina Leadership Academy ..................Page 17 Chapel Hill ..................................................Page 36 Coaches and Staff ......................................Page 12 Department of Athletics ..............................Page 15 Directions to Henry Stadium ........................Page 2 Francis E. Henry Stadium ..........................Page 14 History of UNC Field Hockey ....................Page 31 Honors and Awards ....................................Page 30 Jersey Numbers ........................................Page 29 Letterwinners ..............................................Page 28 NCAA Championships ................................Page 34 NCAA Tournament History..........................Page 27 Opponents for 2005......................................Page 3 Player Profiles ..............................................Page 5 Pronunciations ..............................................Page 4 Records ......................................................Page 33 Results, 2004 Season ................................Page 18 Roster, 2005 ................................................Page 4 Schedule, 2005 ............................................Page 2 Series Records ..........................................Page 21 Statistics, 2004 Season ..............................Page 19 Student-Athlete Services ............................Page 16 Team Awards ..............................................Page 29 University Profile ........................................Page 37 U.S. National Team Players ......................Page 32 Year-by-Year Results ..................................Page 22 Supporting UNC Field Hockey The University of North Carolina has a long-term agree- ment with Nike, which provides UNC teams with shoes, apparel, equipment bags and other products. The contract, signed in 1994 and again in 1997, was extended for a period of eight more years beginning in July 2002. In addition to Nike products, the agreement provides $100,000 annually to the Chancellor's Academic Enhancement Fund for undergrad- uate teaching and $100,000 annually to the UNC athletic department to reward Olympic sport programs and coaches for academic and athletic excellence. www.TarHeelBlue.com Media and fans can follow the Carolina field hockey team and the rest of the UNC athletic program from anywhere in the world on the official site of North Carolina athletics. TarHeelBlue.com offers schedules, rosters, results and more for all 28 of Carolina’s varsity sports. 2005 Media Guide • Campus photos by Dan Sears • Action photos, headshots and facility photos by Jeffrey Camarati • Special thanks to the U.S. Field Hockey Association for photos and information • Printing by Theo Davis Sons of Zebulon, N.C. general information: CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY

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2005 CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE: PAGE 1

The University of North CarolinaLocation: Chapel Hill, N.C.Chartered: 1789Enrollment: 26,878Chancellor: James MoeserDirector of Athletics: Dick BaddourSenior Woman Administrator: Dr. Beth MillerAffiliation: NCAA Division IConference: Atlantic CoastNickname: Tar HeelsMascot: Rameses the ramSchool colors: Carolina blue and whiteAthletic department web site: www.TarHeelBlue.com

Carolina Field HockeyHead Coach: Karen Shelton (West Chester, ’79)Record at UNC: 397-109-9 (24 seasons) Overall record: 397-109-9 (24 seasons)Office phone: (919) 962-5230Office fax: (919) 962-1646Assistant Coach: Jana Woolley (North Carolina, ’98)Assistant Coach: Grant Fulton (Univ. of Pretoria, ’97)Volunteer Assistant Coach: Kwan BrowneUndergraduate Assistant Coach: Kelsey KeeranAdministrative Assistant: Shelley JohnsonAssistant coaches’ office phone: (919) 962-5219Home Stadium: Francis E. Henry Stadium (Astroturf)Stadium Capacity: 1,086Press box phone: (919) 843-7733Game Staff: Jan Boxill (public address announcer), SherrySalyer (game clock)Head Groundskeeper: David AndrewsAthletic Training Staff: Doug Halverson, head athletic train-er; Laura Conner and Zach Fox, graduate student trainers;Jaime Kent, undergraduate student trainerDirector of Field Hockey Marketing: Kris McGrathField Hockey Secretary: Donna Cheek

Team Information2004 Record: 21-2 (4-0 ACC)2004 ACC Tournament results: Champions (Beat WakeForest 2-1 OT in the semifinals, beat Maryland 3-1 in thechampionship)2004 NCAA Tournament results: Second round (BeatRichmond 3-0 in the first round, lost 2-1 to Duke in the sec-ond round)NCAA appearances: 21, most recent in 2004NCAA Championships: Four – 1989, ’95, ’96, ’97ACC Championships: 15 – 1983, ’84. ’85, ’86, ’87, ’88, ’89,’90, ’91, ’93, ’94, ’95, ’96, ’97, 2004Starters returning/lost: 6/5Letterwinners returning/lost: 12/6

UNC Athletic CommunicationsAssistant A.D for Athletic Communications: SteveKirschnerAssistant Director/field hockey contact: Dana GelinEmail address: [email protected] phones: (919) 962-2123/962-0083Cell phone: (919) 357-6619Field hockey press box phone: (919) 843-7733Office fax: (919) 962-0612Mailing address: P.O. Box 2126, Chapel Hill, NC 27515

Table of ContentsAcademics ..................................................Page 16ACC Tournament History............................Page 27All-America Selections................................Page 30All-Time Results..........................................Page 27Athletic Tradition ........................................Page 35Atlantic Coast Conference..........................Page 20 Carolina Leadership Academy ..................Page 17Chapel Hill ..................................................Page 36Coaches and Staff ......................................Page 12Department of Athletics ..............................Page 15Directions to Henry Stadium ........................Page 2 Francis E. Henry Stadium ..........................Page 14 History of UNC Field Hockey ....................Page 31Honors and Awards ....................................Page 30Jersey Numbers ........................................Page 29Letterwinners ..............................................Page 28NCAA Championships ................................Page 34NCAA Tournament History..........................Page 27Opponents for 2005......................................Page 3 Player Profiles ..............................................Page 5Pronunciations..............................................Page 4 Records ......................................................Page 33Results, 2004 Season ................................Page 18 Roster, 2005 ................................................Page 4Schedule, 2005 ............................................Page 2Series Records ..........................................Page 21Statistics, 2004 Season..............................Page 19Student-Athlete Services ............................Page 16Team Awards ..............................................Page 29University Profile ........................................Page 37 U.S. National Team Players ......................Page 32Year-by-Year Results ..................................Page 22

Supporting UNC Field HockeyThe University of North Carolina has a long-term agree-

ment with Nike, which provides UNC teams with shoes,apparel, equipment bags and other products. The contract,signed in 1994 and again in 1997, was extended for a periodof eight more years beginning in July 2002. In addition toNike products, the agreement provides $100,000 annually tothe Chancellor's Academic Enhancement Fund for undergrad-uate teaching and $100,000 annually to the UNC athleticdepartment to reward Olympic sport programs and coachesfor academic and athletic excellence.

www.TarHeelBlue.comMedia and fans can follow the Carolina

field hockey team and the rest of the UNCathletic program from anywhere in theworld on the official site of NorthCarolina athletics.

TarHeelBlue.com offers schedules, rosters, results andmore for all 28 of Carolina’s varsity sports.

2005 Media Guide• Campus photos by Dan Sears• Action photos, headshots and facilityphotos by Jeffrey Camarati• Special thanks to the U.S. FieldHockey Association for photos andinformation• Printing by Theo Davis Sons ofZebulon, N.C.

general information: CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY

PAGE 2: 2005 CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

• 2005 Schedule

From the Raleigh/Durham International Airport and points east: TakeInterstate 40 West to exit 273-A (Highway 54W toward Chapel Hill). FollowHighway 54 for approximately three miles. After passing under the 15-501 over-pass, the road will go up a hill. At the top of the hill, take a left at the light ontoCountry Club Road. Take the first right onto Ridge Road. Shortly after turningonto Ridge, you’ll see Henry Stadium on the right, across from BoshamerStadium, the baseball field.

From points north of Chapel Hill: Follow I-85 South to Durham. At exit174, stay in the left-hand lane to get on 15-501 South, which will bring you intoChapel Hill. Exit 15-501 at the Highway 54 junction, following signs for the

UNC campus. Proceed up the hill and take a left at the light onto Country ClubRoad. Take the first right onto Ridge Road. Shortly after turning onto Ridge,you’ll see Henry Stadium on the right, across from Boshamer Stadium, the base-ball field.

From points west of Chapel Hill: Take I-85 North to I-40 East. Follow I-40to exit 270, 15-501 South. See directions from points north.

From points south of Chapel Hill: Take I-77 North to I-85 North. Follow I-85 North to I-40 East. Follow I-40 East to exit 270, 15-501 South. See directionsfrom points north.

• DIRECTIONS TO FRANCIS E. HENRY STADIUM

Day Date Opponent Site Time (Eastern)Sat. Aug. 27 Michigan (ACC/Big Ten Challenge) Iowa City, Iowa 3 p.m.

Sun. Aug. 28 At Iowa (ACC/Big Ten Challenge) Iowa City, Iowa 1 p.m.

Sat. Sept. 3 At William & Mary Williamsburg, Va. 1 p.m.

Mon. Sept. 5 James Madison Chapel Hill 3 p.m.

Sat. Sept. 10 At Temple Philadelphia, Pa. 1 p.m.

Sun. Sept. 11 Monmouth (At Temple) Philadelphia, Pa. 1 p.m.

Tues Sept. 13 At Davidson Davidson, N.C. 7 p.m.

Sat. Sept. 17 Old Dominion Chapel Hill 1 p.m.

Fri. Sept. 23 Duke Chapel Hill 7 p.m.

Sun. Sept. 25 Radford Chapel Hill 1 p.m.

Sat. Oct. 1 At Wake Forest Winston-Salem, N.C. 1 p.m.

Sat. Oct. 8 Boston College Chapel Hill 1 p.m.

Sun. Oct. 9 Stanford (At Wake Forest) Winston-Salem, N.C. 1 p.m.

Fri. Oct. 14 Wake Forest Chapel Hill 4 p.m.

Sat. Oct. 16 At Virginia Charlottesville, Va. 1 p.m.

Sun. Oct. 23 Maryland Chapel Hill 1 p.m.

Sat. Oct. 29 At Old Dominion Norfolk, Va. 1 p.m.

Sun. Oct. 30 Penn State Chapel Hill 1 p.m.

2005 ATLANTIC COAST CONFERENCE TOURNAMENTThurs. Nov. 3 First round College Park, Md. TBAFri. Nov. 4 Semifinals College Park, Md. TBASun. Nov. 6 Championship College Park, Md. TBA

2005 NCAA FIELD HOCKEY CHAMPIONSHIPSat. Nov. 12 First round Campus sites TBASun. Nov. 13 Second round Campus sites TBAFri. Nov. 18 National semifinals Louisville, Ky. TBASun. Nov. 20 National championship Louisville, Ky. TBA

All home games played at Francis E. Henry Stadium

CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY: following the tar heels

2005 CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE: PAGE 3

2005 Opponents

Notes on the 2005 Season• This season is Karen Shelton’s 25th as the head coach at UNC. She took over the pro-

gram in 1981 and has led the Tar Heels to four NCAA Championships, 15 ACCChampionships and 22 winning seasons. She begins the season three wins away fromreaching No. 400 for her career and ranks fifth among college field hockey coaches in all-time victories with a record of 397-109-9.

• Juniors Laree Beans and Rachel Dawson will miss at least four games (Davidson, OldDominion, Duke, Radford) while representing the U.S. at the Junior World Cup Sept. 15-24 in Santiago, Chile. Both players were part of the U.S. Under-21 team that finishedsecond at the Junior Pan American Championships in Puerto Rico in March to earn aberth in the World Cup competition. The U.S. is the No. 9 seed in the 16-team field.Ashley Judge is an alternate for the Junior World Cup team.

• Forward Karen Mann, who would have been a senior in 2005, elected to sit out theseason while representing her native Canada in the Junior World Cup in September.Mann, who is from Vancouver, scored 11 goals last season, second most on the team andmore than any other player with remaining eligibility. Mann, a psychology major, plansto return to school for the spring semester and play her final college season in the fall of2006.

• All five seniors from last year’s squad – Laura Douglas, Kerry Falgowski, CareyFetting-Smith, Keeran and Katy Potter – were starters. Returning players with startingexperience are (with career starts in parentheses): senior Naomi Weatherald (64),Dawson (45), senior Katy Tran (45), junior Brooke Miller (38), Judge (30), Beans (26),sophomore Heather Kendell (19) and sophomore Xan Funk (1). The 2005 squad is madeup of two seniors, four juniors, six sophomores, two redshirt freshmen and five truefreshmen.

Beans

Covering the Tar Heels• The Tar Heels play their home games at

Francis E. Henry Stadium on the UNC cam-pus. Credentials are not required for admis-sion, but advance notice that you will be cov-ering a game is appreciated. Media workspaceand internet access are available in the pressbox, which is accessible via the elevator at theback of the stands. • Interviews: To arrange weekday interviews

with UNC players or head coach KarenShelton, please contact Dana Gelin. Playersand coaches are available after every homegame following a cooling-off period.Media contact: Dana Gelin (919-962-0083;

[email protected])

Dawson

Mann

following the tar heels: CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY

Boston College EaglesWebsite: www.bceagles.comConference: Atlantic CoastHome field: Newton Campus FieldHead Coach: Ainslee Lamb (first season)Series vs. UNC: UNC leads 3-0

Davidson WildcatsWebsite: www.davidson.eduConference: NorPacHome field: Turf FieldHead Coach: Lisa Thompson (fourth season)Series vs. UNC: UNC leads 5-0

Duke Blue DevilsWebsite: www.goduke.comConference: Atlantic CoastHome field: Williams FieldHead Coach: Beth Bozman (third season)Series vs. UNC: UNC leads 60-8-1

Iowa HawkeyesWebsite: www.hawkeyesports.comConference: Big TenHome field: Grant FieldHead Coach: Tracey Griesbaum (sixth season)Series vs. UNC: UNC leads 15-2-0

James Madison DukesWebsite: www.jmusports.comConference: Colonial Athletic AssociationHome field: JMU Field Hockey ComplexHead Coach: Antoinette Lucas (second season)Series vs. UNC: UNC leads 25-6-1

Maryland TerrapinsWebsite: www.umterps.comConference: Atlantic CoastHome field: Field Hockey & Lacrosse ComplexHead Coach: Missy Meharg (18th season)Series vs. UNC: UNC leads 30-16-0

Michigan WolverinesWebsite: www.mgoblue.comConference: Big TenHome field: Phyllis Ocker FieldHead Coach: Nancy Cox (first season)Series vs. UNC: UNC leads 7-3

Monmouth HawksWebsite: www.monmouth.edu/athleticsConference: NortheastHome field: MU Field Hockey ParkHead Coach: Monica Morgan Levy (eighth season)Series vs. UNC: First meeting

Old Dominion Lady MonarchsWebsite: www.odusports.comConference: Colonial Athletic AssociationHome field: Foreman FieldHead Coach: Beth Anders (23rd season)Series vs. UNC: ODU leads 30-27-2

Penn State Nittany LionsWebsite: www.gopsusports.comConference: Big TenHome field: Bigler Athletic ComplexHead Coach: Char Morett (19th season)Series vs. UNC: UNC leads 17-5-1

Radford HighlandersWebsite: www.radford.edu/athleticsConference: NorPacHome field: Dedmon Center FieldHead Coach: Jeff Woods (20th season)Series vs. UNC: UNC leads 18-0

Stanford CardinalWebsite: www.gostanford.comConference: NorPacHome field: Varsity Field Hockey TurfHead Coach: Leslie Irvine (third season)Series vs. UNC: UNC leads 4-1

Temple OwlsWebsite: www.owlsports.comConference: Atlantic 10Home field: Geasey FieldHead Coach: Amanda Janney (first season)Series vs. UNC: UNC leads 13-3-1

Virginia CavaliersWebsite: www.virginiasports.comConference: Atlantic CoastHome field: University Hall Turf FieldHead Coach: Jessica Wilk (sixth season)Series vs. UNC: UNC leads 37-14

Wake Forest Demon DeaconsWebsite: www.wakeforestsports.comConference: Atlantic CoastHome field: Kentner StadiumHead Coach: Jennifer Averill (14th season)Series vs. UNC: UNC leads 27-12-4

William & Mary TribeWebsite: www.tribeathletics.comConference: Colonial Athletic AssociationHome field: Busch FieldHead Coach: Peel Hawthorne (19th season)Series vs. UNC: UNC leads 20-3-2

PAGE 4: 2005 CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

ALPHABETICALLY18 Leslie Barrows16 Laree Beans1 Marie Bounds10 Melanie Brill9 Rachel Dawson23 Stewi Downer20 Xan Funk15 Jesse Gey23 Hilary Hartman21 Kate Howard17 Ashley Judge8 Heather Kendell6 Brooke Miller24 Liz Morris11 Kate Scholl15 Alli Tanner26 Katy Tran12 Britt van Beek4 Naomi Weatherald

BY CLASSSeniorsKaty TranNaomi WeatheraldJuniorsLaree BeansRachel DawsonAshley JudgeBrooke MillerSophomoresMarie BoundsXan FunkJesse GuyHeather KendallLiz MorrisAlli TannerRedshirt FreshmenLeslie BarrowsHilary HartmanFreshmenMelanie BrillStewi DownerKate HowardKate SchollBritt van Beek

PRONUNCIATIONSLaree Beans ........................................................LARRYXan Funk..................................................................ZANJesse Gey ................................................................GUYKaty Tran............................................................TRAHN

CaliforniaKate HowardDelawareAshley JudgeMarylandMarie BoundsNew JerseyRachel DawsonHilary HartmanNorth CarolinaXan FunkHeather KendellElizabeth Morris

PennsylvaniaLeslie BarrowsLaree BeansMelanie BrillJesse GeyBrooke MillerKate SchollAlli TannerKaty TranVirginiaStewi Downer

AustraliaNaomi WeatheraldThe NetherlandsBritt van Beek

BY HOME STATE OR COUNTRY

# Name Pos. Yr. Ht. Hometown (High School/College) Major1 Marie Bounds GK So. 5-5 Ellicott City, Md. (Wilde Lake) Communication Studies3 Stewi Downer M/F Fr. 5-5 Fairfax, Va. (Oakton) General College4 Naomi Weatherald B Sr. 5-8 Delamere, South Australia (Immanuel) Recreation & Leisure/Psych.5 Alli Tanner M So. 5-4 New Providence, Pa. (Solanco) General College6 Brooke Miller M/B Jr. 5-5 Hummelstown, Pa. (Lower Dauphin) Communication Studies8 Heather Kendell F/M So. 5-7 Chapel Hill, N.C. (East Chapel Hill) Exercise and Sport Science9 Rachel Dawson M/B Jr. 5-9 Berlin, N.J. (Eastern) Business

10 Melanie Brill B Fr. 5-7 Fleetwood, Pa. (Oley Valley) General College11 Kate Scholl M Fr. 5-4 East Greenville, Pa. (Upper Perkiomen) General College12 Britt van Beek M/B Fr. 5-5 Den Bosch, The Netherlands (St. Jans Lyceum) General College14 Hilary Hartman B Fr.* 5-8 Essex Fells, N.J. (West Essex) General College15 Jesse Gey M/F So. 5-6 Green Lane, Pa. (Christopher Dock) General College16 Laree Beans M/F Jr. 5-4 Bethlehem, Pa. (Emmaus) Exercise and Sport Science17 Ashley Judge B Jr. 5-5 Wilmington Del. (Concord) Exercise and Sport Science18 Leslie Barrows F Fr.* 5-3 Easton, Pa. (Easton) General College20 Xan Funk B So. 5-4 Chapel Hill, N.C. (Chapel Hill) Exercise and Sport Science21 Kate Howard F Fr. 5-7 Carmel, Calif. (York School) General College24 Liz Morris F So. 5-6 Chapel Hill, N.C. (East Chapel Hill) Psychology/Comm. Studies26 Katy Tran GK Sr. 5-5 Grantville, Pa. (Northern Lebanon) Biology/Ex. and Sport Sci.

Head Coach: Karen Shelton (25th season) * Redshirted the 2004 seasonAssistant Coaches: Jana Woolley, Grant FultonVolunteer Assistant Coach: Kwan BrowneUndergraduate Assistant Coach: Kelsey KeeranAdministrative Assistant: Shelley Johnson

• 2005 Squad Roster

CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY: roster information

2005 CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE: PAGE 5

Undecided on a major … Spent part of the summer working at an advertisinginternship at Lehigh University … Is one of eight players on the roster from thestate of Pennsylvania

2004: Did not see action and will count the year as a redshirt seasonAt Easton (Pa.) High School: A four-year starter who holds her school's record

for career goals … All-area and all-conference as a junior and a senior … Herteam's Best Offensive Player in her sophomore through senior seasons … Servedas team co-captain as a senior … Also started three years for the varsity softballteam, earning all-conference honors and serving as team captain … Holds theschool record for home runs in a season and shares the record for career homers …Also lettered in swimming and in track and field

National/International: Has participated in the Futures Elite programPersonal: Born Dec. 10, 1985, in Flemington, N.J. … The daughter of Susan and

Richard Barrows … Her father wrestled at Wilkes CollegeMore on Barrows: Favorites: Pastimes – going to the beach and hanging out

with friends; Movie – The Notebook; Books – Freakonomics, Memoirs of aGeisha; TV shows – Sex and the City, The Real World; Sport besides field hockey– softball … After college, hopes to attend graduate school then work in advertis-ing … Dream job is to work at an ad agency in New York or another big city …Highlight of her athletic career has been coming to UNC … The person who hashad the biggest impact on her as a player is former UNC standout and assistantcoach Cindy Werley

Member of the 2005 U.S. Under-21 National Team … Will miss two weeks ofthe season while competing as part of the U.S. team at the Women's Junior WorldCup Sept. 14-25 in Santiago, Chile … Comes from the same high school programas former UNC standouts Kristen McCann,Cindy Werley, Meredith Lawrence and KatyPotter … Majoring in exercise and sport sci-ence

2004: As a sophomore, was the recipient ofthe Keller Award for Open-Play Assists …Played in all 23 games and started six …Scored three goals and added four assists …Scored the game-winner in a 2-1 victory atPenn State … Scored UNC's first goal in theACC Championship win over Maryland

2003: As a freshman, played in all 22games and started 20 … Scored seven goalsand had five assists for 19 points … Scoredthe first goal of her career in a 3-0 win overMichigan State on Sept. 6 … Had two goalsand an assist in a 6-0 win over Davidson onSept. 10

At Emmaus High School in Emmaus, Pa.: As a senior, named Athlete of theYear for field hockey by the National High School Athletic Association … All-America as a junior and senior ... Finished her high school career as Emmaus's all-time leader in points with 105 goals and 97 assists ... Her team won the state cham-pionship in 2001 and finished as the runner-up in 2002 ... Named Offensive Playerof the Year in her sophomore and senior years and MVP in her junior and senioryears ... Three-time all-state and All-Lehigh Valley Area selection ... Allentown

Morning Call Player of the Year as a senior National/International: Member of the 2005 U.S. Under-21 team and the 2004

Under-21 and Under-19 teams … Member of the U.S. Under-16 team in 2000-01... A camp and B camp participant ... Has played in the National Hockey Festival,the National Futures Tournament and the Junior Olympics ... Played for thePhiladelphia Fury in the U.S. Field Hockey summer league in 2002 and '03 and forthe Under-21 team in 2004

Personal: Born May 10, 1985, in Lancaster, Pa. ... The daughter of Amy andLarry Beans ... Has one sister, Deb Laser (34), who played field hockey at NorthernIllinois ... Her mother played field hockey and basketball at Albright College andher father wrestled at West Chester

More on Beans: Favorites: Pastime – going to the movies; Pregame meal –bananas; Movie – Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory; TV show – Lost; Sportbesides field hockey – lacrosse … After college, hopes to travel and have a success-ful career … Dream job is to be an ESPN announcer … Highlight of her athleticcareer has been winning a high school state championship … People who have hadthe biggest impact on her field hockey development are her high school coach andher mother … Her middle name is Lee, making her L.L. Beans

Beans’ Career StatisticsYear GP-GS Goals Assists Points2003 22-20 7 5 192004 23-6 3 4 10Career 45-26 10 9 29

One of two goalkeepers on the roster … Majoring in communication studies …Involved in the Carolina Leadership Academy

2004: As a redshirt freshman, appeared in eight games, playing a total of 138minutes … Made five saves and allowed one goal … Finished the season with a

goals allowed average of 0.512003: Did not see action and will count the

year as a redshirt seasonAt Wilde Lake High School in Columbia,

Md.: As a senior, named All-Howard Countyand honorable mention All-Metro, as well asteam MVP ... Second-team all-county in hersophomore and junior years ... Shared teamMVP honors as a junior and was named MostImproved Player as a sophomore ... Alsoplayed three years of softball and one year oflacrosse

National/International: National FuturesProgram in 2002 and '03 ... Played for theLady Bells indoor club team and for theVirginia Express Under-19 team, which wonits pool at the 2002 National Hockey Festival

Personal: Born April 18, 1985, in Ellicott City, Md. ... The daughter of James andJanet Bounds ... Has a sister, Angela (17), and a brother, Matthew (14)

More on Bounds: Favorites: Pastimes – drawing, listening to music, watchingmovies, grilling; Pregame meal – Italian subs; Movies – Empire Records, Goonies,Pirates of the Caribbean; Book – The Notebook; TV shows – Reno 911, Law andOrder SVU, Unsolved Mysteries; Sport besides field hockey – football … Alwaysplays in a tie-dyed bandanna and eats the same pregame breakfast: corn pops, fruit,bagel with peanut butter and banana, and orange juice … After college, hopes tocoach high school field hockey … Dream job is to work in sports management ormarketing … Since last season, has focused on improving her fitness and commu-nication … Highlight of her athletic career has been the 2004 win over Wake Forestin double OT and penalty strokes … Paints and sculpts, and considered going to artschool before deciding to continue her field hockey career

Bounds’ Career StatisticsYear GP-GS Min. Saves Goals GAA ShO2004 8-0 138 5 1 0.51 0

tar heel profiles: CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY

PAGE 6: 2005 CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

Member of the 2005 U.S. Under-21 National Team … Named Player of theTournament as the U.S. won silver at the Pan Am Junior Championships in PuertoRico in March … Will miss two weeks of the season while competing as part of theU.S. team at the Women's Junior World Cup Sept. 14-25 in Santiago, Chile …

Majoring in business2004: As a sophomore, named first-team

All-America and the 2004 Atlantic CoastConference Defensive Player of the Year …Earned All-South Region, All-ACC and All-ACC Tournament honors … Started all 23games … Scored seven goals and had eightassists for 22 points, fourth on the team …Had a pair of goals in the ACC opener againstVirginia on Sept. 19 .. Finished with threepoints (one goal, one assist) againstAppalachian State on Sept. 22 … Named tothe NFHCA National Academic Squad, theAcademic Honor Roll and the Dean's List

2003: Selected as the ACC Freshman ofthe Year … The fourth UNC player to win thehonor… UNC's leader in goals with 19 …

Named the National Freshman of the Year by collegefieldhockey.com … All-ACCTournament and All-Southeast Region second team … Recipient of the team's Kenand Cheryl Williams Rookie of the Year Award ... Scored eight goals in a three-game span with three against Temple on Sept. 7, two vs. Davidson on Sept. 10 andthree vs. James Madison on Sept. 14 … Named to the NFHCA National AcademicSquad, the ACC Academic Honor Roll and the Dean's List

At Eastern High School in Voorhees, N.J.: New Jersey Player of the Year as asenior ... All-America and all-state in her junior and senior years ... Four-time all-conference pick and three-time All-South Jersey and All-Group IV selection ...Played on state championship teams all four years ... Also lettered for four years inbasketball, earning all-conference each year, and two years in lacrosse

National/International: Member of the 2005 U.S. Under-21 team and the 2004Under-21 and Under-19 teams … Pulled up to the National Team for a test seriesagainst Australia in June and earned her first cap … Played for the 2003 Under-20team, the 2002 Under-19 team and the 2001 Under-18 and Under-21 teams

Personal: Born Aug. 2, 1985, in Camden, N.J. ... The daughter of David andKaren Dawson ... Has seven siblings: David (28), Natalie (26), Andrew (24), Sarah(22), Meghan (16), Hannah (15) and Melanie (13) ... David played football andbaseball at Monmouth, Natalie played field hockey at Iowa and for the U.S.National Team, Andrew played football and baseball at Williamson TechnicalSchool and Sarah played at Iowa and is now a member of the National Team

More on Dawson: Favorites: Pastimes - writing, rollerblading, shopping, scrap-booking, hanging out with friends; Pregame meal - coffee and eggs; Movie - TheNotebook; Book - The Count of Monte Cristo; TV shows - Friends, Laguna Beach;Sport besides field hockey - wrestling … Before every game, dances with AshleyJudge … After college, hopes to play on the National Team and go to the Olympics,then be a mother … During the offseason, has focused on improving the mentalpart of her game … People who have had the biggest impact on her developmentas a field hockey player are UNC coaches Karen Shelton and Jana Woolley

Dawson’s Career StatisticsYear GP-GS Goals Assists Points2003 22-22 19 1 392004 23-23 7 8 22Career 45-45 26 9 61

Majoring in exercise and sport science … Coached at Chapel Hill High by for-mer Carolina player Amy Cox Vitt … One of three local players on the roster, alongwith Heather Kendell and Liz Morris … Captains the Tar Heels' Adopt-a-Highwayprogram

2004: As a redshirt freshman, played in 12 games and started one2003: Did not appear in a game and will count the year as a redshirt seasonAt Chapel Hill (N.C.) High School: First-team all-state as a senior ... All-con-

ference all four years of her career ... Shared conference Player of the Year honorsas a senior ... Earned team MVP honors in her junior and senior years ... Second-team all-state in her sophomore and junior years ... In basketball, earned team MVPand all-conference honors in her sophomore through senior seasons

National/International: Played for the Southern Charm in the U.S. FieldHockey summer league in 2002-04 ... Participated in the National FuturesTournament in 2003 and in the National Hockey Festival 2000-02

Personal: Born Aug. 6, 1985, in ChapelHill, N.C. ... The daughter of Ed and YvonneFunk ... Full name is Leslie Alexandra Funk,but goes by Xan (pronounced Zan) ... Hasone brother, Christian (21)

More on Funk: Favorites: Pastimes -Collecting pogs, erasers and stickers, and lis-tening to music; Pregame meal - Honey nutcheerios; Movie - Peter Pan; Book - To Killa Mockingbird; TV show - Oprah; Sportsbesides field hockey - basketball, tennis …After college, hopes to travel the worldbefore she gets a job … Dream job is to be afamous singer … Has worked on all aspectsof her game during the offseason …Highlight of her athletic career has been win-ning the 2004 ACC Championship … Saysher UNC teammates have had the biggest

impact on her development as a player … Served as a ballgirl for the UNC women'sbasketball team for five seasons, including the 1994 NCAA Championship cam-paign, and wears jersey No. 20 because it was Marion Jones' number when sheplayed basketball at Carolina

Funk’s Career StatisticsYear GP-GS Goals Assists Points2004 12-1 0 0 0

The daughter of a former UNC field hockey player, Kim Knickerbocker (1979-82) ... Gey is the first second-generation player to come through Carolina coachKaren Shelton's program … Had not declared a major

2004: As a true freshman, saw action in 20 gamesAt Christopher Dock High School in Lansdale, Pa.: Earned all-state honors

as a junior and senior and all-league honors her sophomore through senior years ...League and team MVP as a senior, when she served as team captain ... Holds thecareer records for goals and assists at her high school ... Also lettered four years intrack and field, captaining the team as a senior ... Holds school records in the 100-

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meter hurdles and the javelin ... All-league inthe javelin as a junior and senior ... Memberof the touring choir, with which she traveledin Europe during the summer of 2004

P e r s o n a l : Born July 1, 1986, inNorristown, Pa. ... Daughter of Wayne andKim Gey ... Has two brothers, Ryan (21) andTaylor (13) ... Her mother, KimKnickerbocker Gey, and aunt, JamieKnickerbocker Warren, both played fieldhockey at UNC

More on Gey: Favorites: Pastime – goingto the beach, hanging out with family andfriends, and taking camping trips; Book – ToKill a Mockingbird; TV show – The RealWorld; Sport besides field hockey: tennis …Since last year, has focused on improving herdefense … Highlight of her athletic career has been winning the A C CChampionship … Her mother has had the biggest impact on her development as afield hockey player ... Attended her first field hockey game, a UNC-Old Dominionmatchup in Norfolk, Va., at four months old

Gey’s Career StatisticsYear GP-GS Goals Assists Points2004 20-0 0 0 0

Has not yet declared a major2004: Did not see action and will count the year as a redshirt seasonAt West Essex High School in North Caldwell, N.J.: Named NFHCA

MidAtlantic Region All-America as a senior … Also earned all-state, all-confer-ence, all-county and Essex County Player of the Year honors in 2003 … TeamMVP as a senior … Helped her team to a state championship in 2002, when sheearned all-conference honors … Played three years of lacrosse, helping her team toa state title as a junior and earning all-conference honors as a senior … Letteredtwo years in swimming … Named a New Jersey Scholar-Athlete … Academic All-America in lacrosse

National/International: National Futures Tournament participant in 2004 …Also has participated in the National Indoor Tournament and the National FestivalTournament

Personal: Born Jan. 15, 1986, in Princeton, N.J. … The daughter of Mitch andSandy Hartman … Has three younger siblings: Shannon (17), Jonathan (14) andChristopher (10) … Her mother played squash at Bowdoin College and her fatherplayed soccer, basketball and golf at Manhattanville College

More on Hartman: Favorites: Pastimes – hanging out with friends, napping,watching movies; Pregame meal – an apple; Movie – Anchorman, the Legend ofRon Burgundy; Books – Tuesdays with Morrie, The Notebook; TV shows – TheOC, Nip/Tuck; Sport besides field hockey – lacrosse … After college, would liketo eventually be the CEO of a large company … Says her dream job is to be anEnglish teacher … Since last season, has focused on improving her defense in thecircle … Highlight of her athletic career has been winning a high school statechampionship … Her parents and coaches have had the biggest impact on herdevelopment as a field hockey player

Member of the 2005 U.S. Under-21 National Team … Selected as an alternatefor the U.S. Junior World Cup team, which will compete in Chile in September …Majoring in exercise and sport science

2004: As a sophomore, played in 20 games and started nine at back … Assistedon a goal in the regular-season finale at Old Dominion

2003: As a freshman, played in all 22 games and started 21 at backAt Concord High in Wilmington, Del.: Second-team All-America as a senior,

regional All-America as a junior and second-team all-state both years ... Four-timeall-conference pick ... Team captain as a senior ... Voted Most Improved three timesduring her career ... Also lettered three years in both track and lacrosse ... Memberof the 4x800 relay team that finished third in the state her sophomore year ... Inlacrosse, was first-team all-state, team MVP and the team captain as a senior ...Three-time all-conference selection in lacrosse ... As a senior, was her school'sOutstanding Female Athlete and recipient of the Paul Wellborn Award, which goesto an athlete possessing integrity, humility and courage

National/International: A member of the2005 U.S. Under-21 team and the 2004Under-19 team ... 2005 A camp invitee ...Participated in A camp in 2003 and B camp in2002-04 ... National Futures Tournament par-ticipant 2001-03 Played in the JuniorOlympics in 2001 ... Played for the MetroRush in the USFHA summer league in 2002and for the Southern Charm in 2004

Personal: Born June 2, 1985, inWilmington, Del. ... The daughter of Susanand Scott Judge .. Has one brother, Bobby(17)

More on Judge: Favorites: Pastimes –going to the beach, playing roller hockeywith her father and brother; Pregame meal –granola, yogurt and apple juice; Movie –Without Limits; Books – The Harry Potterseries; TV shows – Inferno, Will & Grace; Sport besides field hockey – soccer;Stuffed animal – Mr. Bear … Listens to music before every game … After college,hopes to play for the U.S. National Team … Dream job is to work for SportsIllustrated, ESPN or a sports team … During the offseason, has focused on improv-ing her fitness … Highlight of her athletic career has been winning the 2004 ACCChampionship

Judge’s Career StatisticsYear GP-GS Goals Assists Points2003 22-21 0 0 02004 20-9 0 1 1Career 42-30 0 1 1

Member of the 2005 U.S. Under-21 National Team … Majoring in exercise andsport science … Teammate of UNC classmate Liz Morris at East Chapel Hill High,where she was coached by former Carolina player Holly Huff Bruland

2004: Played in 22 games and started 19 … The first goal of her career was thegame-winner against American on Sept. 5 … Had two assists, one on the game-

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winner in the ACC title game … Named to the NFHCA National Academic Squad,the ACC Academic Honor Roll and the Dean's List

2003: Did not see action and will count the year as a redshirt season … Namedto the NFHCA National Academic Squad, the ACC Academic Honor Roll and theDean's List

At East Chapel Hill (N.C.) High School: South Region All-America as senior... Named conference MVP in her junior and senior years ... Four-time all-confer-ence selection and two-year team captain ... Her team won state championships in2001 and '02 ... Also played softball, starting in center field for four years ... Team'soffensive player of the year as a junior and a two-year team captain

National/International: Member of the2005 U.S. Under-21 team … Played for theSouthern Charm in the USFHA s u m m e rleague in 2002-04 ... National FuturesTournament in 2001-03 and Junior Olympicsin 2001

Personal: Born Feb. 15, 1985, inDurham, N.C. ... The daughter of Barry andGinny Kendell ... Has one sister, Erica (30) ...Her father was a member of the professionalmixed curling team in British Columbia ...Her grandfather George Davis played foot-ball at Virginia, her uncle Eric Davis playedfootball and West Virginia Wesleyan and hercousin Jessica Hart played field hockey atWake Forest

More on Kendell: Favorites: Pastimes –spending time with family, watching movies,

shopping, skiing, going to the beach; Pregame meal – peanut butter sandwich;Movie – The Little Mermaid; Books – Pride and Prejudice, Harry Potter; TV show– Desperate Housewives; Sports besides field hockey – softball, basketball, tennis,skiing, golf; Place to visit – Italy … After college, hopes to go to earn a graduatedegree in physical therapy then get a job, travel and start a family … Dream job isto be a famous actress … Since last season, has focused on improving her back-hand shot and different open-field receptions … Highlight of her athletic career hasbeen winning the 2004 ACC Championship … Her coaches and teammates havehad the biggest impact on her development as a player

Kendell’s Career StatisticsYear GP-GS Goals Assists Points2004 22-19 1 2 4

Member of the 2005 U.S. Under-21 National Team … Majoring in communica-tion studies … Is involved with the Carolina Leadership Academy and mentorsfreshman student-athletes through the CREED Program … Volunteers as part of theGet Kids in Action program

2004: As a sophomore, was the recipient of the Marjorie Moses Schwab UnsungHero Award … Played in 22 games and started 17 … Ranked second on the teamin assists with 11 and also scored two goals, both game-winners … One of hergoals came against Radford on Oct. 3 and the other was against Richmond in theNCAA Tournament

2003: As a redshirt freshman, played in all 22 games and started 21 … Scoredtwo goals and added six assists

2002: Did not see action and will count the year as a redshirt seasonAt Lower Dauphin High School in Hummelstown, Pa.: A first-team All-

America selection in her junior and senior years ... Also named All-State, Mid PennAll-Star and first-team Big 11 in 2000 and '01 ... Her team won the state champi-onship in 1998 and the Mid Penn Commonwealth title in 1998 and '99 ... Also com-peted in track ... 2002 Mid Penn qualifier in the triple jump and 4x100 relay

National/International: Member of the 2005 U.S. Under-21 team and the 2003

Under-20 team ... Alternate to the 2004 U-21team and the 2002 U-19 team … Member ofthe 2001 Under-18 team and the 2000 Under-16 team ... Participated in A Camp in 2000and '01 and B camp in 2000-02 … Played inthe U.S. Field Hockey summer league in2003 and '04

Personal: Born in July 25, 1984, inHarrisburg, Pa. ... The daughter of Bradleyand Barbara Miller ... Has one brother,Matthew (24), who played football atWilliam McDaniel College … Her fatherrecently was elected mayor of her hometown

More on Miller: Favorites: Pastime -reading; Pregame meal - bagel and fruit;Movie - Breakfast at Tiffany's; Books - TheCarolina Way, The Junction Boys; TV shows- American Idol, Law & Order reruns … Career goal is to stay involved with fieldhockey, especially with the Carolina program … Dream job is to be a personalshopper … Highlight of her athletic career has been playing at UNC and winningthe 2004 ACC Championship … Her parents and her older brother have had thebiggest impact on her development as a player

Miller’s Career StatisticsYear GP-GS Goals Assists Points2003 22-21 2 6 102004 22-17 4 11 19Career 44-38 6 17 29

Working toward a double major in psychology and communication studies …High school teammate of UNC classmate Heather Kendell ... Coached at EastChapel Hill High by former Carolina playerHolly Huff Bruland

2004: As a redshirt freshman, saw actionin 16 games … Scored her first career goal ina 4-0 win over Virginia on Sept. 19

2003: Did not see action and will count theyear as a redshirt season

At East Chapel Hill (N.C.) HighSchool.: All-state in her junior and senioryears and second-team as a sophomore ...Holds school records for career goals andpoints ... Named all-conference all four yearsof high school ... Also lettered three years inlacrosse, earning all-state honors and theteam's Unsung Hero Award as a senior

N a t i o n a l / I n t e r n a t i o n a l : 2005 A c a m pinvitee ... National Futures Tournament par-ticipant in 2001 and '03 and Junior Olympics in 2001 ... Played for the SouthernCharm in the U.S. Field Hockey summer league in 2002 and '04

Personal: Born March 8, 1985, in Chicago, Ill. ... The daughter of Dwight andLynne Morris ... Has one sister, Jenni (22) ... Her father ran cross country and trackat Duke

Morris’ Career StatisticsYear GP-GS Goals Assists Points2004 16-0 1 0 2

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Has not decided on a major ... At UNC, volunteers as part of the Get Kids inAction program

2004: Recipient of the Ken and Cheryl Williams Rookie of the Year Award …Played in 18 games … Scored one goal and had one assist, both in UNC's 6-0 winover Appalachian State on Sept. 22

At Solanco High School in New Providence, Pa.: Named NFHCA All-America and all-state as a senior ... All-con-ference in her junior and senior years ...Captained her team as a senior, when she alsowas named Outstanding Senior ... Team'sOffensive Player of the Year as a junior ...Also lettered in track and field, captaining theteam as a senior and earning OutstandingSenior honors ... Two-time district qualifierin the pole vault ... A member of the StudentSenate and the Varsity Club

National/International: 2005 A c a m pinvitee ... Participated in B camp 2002-04 ...Played for the 2001 Under-16 team, whichtoured Australia and the Netherlands ...National Futures Tournament participant2001-04 ... Competed in the Junior Olympics2001-02 and in the USFHA Summer Leaguein 2003

Personal: Born March 3, 1986, in Lancaster, Pa. ... Daughter of Doug and CindyTanner ... Has a twin brother, Alan, and an older brother, Josh (23) ... Her motherplayed basketball and field hockey at High Point

More on Tanner: Favorites: Pastimes - hanging out with friends, going to thebeach, shopping; Movies - Cinderella Man, Raising Helen, Love and Basketball;TV shows - Will and Grace, The Real World; Sport besides field hockey - tennis;Food - steak; Drink - apple juice ... Since last season, has focused on improving herscoring ability and taking on defenders 1v1 ... Highlight of her athletic career hasbeen being a part of the 2004 ACC Championship team ... Her parents and coach-es have had the biggest impact on her development as a player ... Wears jersey No.5 because it's the number of people in her immediate family ... Something few peo-ple know about her is that she lost her two front teeth in a bike accident in sixthgrade

Tanner’s Career StatisticsYear GP-GS Goals Assists Points2004 18-0 1 1 3

Working toward a double major in biology and exercise & sports science ...Very involved in campus and community service ... Mentors freshman student-ath-letes as part of the Carolina Leadership Academy's CREED Program … Memberof the Student-Athlete Advisory Council … Active in Carolina Outreach … Spentthe summer of 2005 studying in Vietnam

2004: As a junior, started all 23 games … Voted All-Atlantic Coast Conferenceand All-ACC Tournament … Named to the All-South Region first team …Allowed just 17 goals in 23 games for a goals against average of 0.78 … Had five

complete-game shutouts and shared six others with backup Marie Bounds …Named to the NFHCA National Academic Squad for the third year in a row andalso to the ACC Academic Honor Roll and to the Dean's List for the fall semester… An Arthur Ashe Jr. Sports Scholar … Member of the Academic All-District sec-ond team ... Recipient of an ACC Top VI for Service Award

2003: As a sophomore, played every minute of the season in goal for the TarHeels … Finished the year with a 1.22 goals-against averaged and nine shutouts …Had a season-high 12 saves in a 2-1 overtime loss to Wake Forest on Sept. 26 …Named second-team All-Southeast Region … Member of the NFHCA NationalAcademic Squad, the ACC Academic Honor Roll and the Dean's List

2002: Did not see action and will count the year as a redshirt season ... Namedto the NFHCA National Academic Squad and to the ACC Honor Roll

2001: As a true freshman, appeared in four games, playing a total of 43 minutes... Did not give up a goal ... Named to the ACC Academic Honor Roll and theDean's List

At Northern Lebanon High School in Fredericksburg, Pa.: Earned All-America and Academic All-America honors as a senior ... Also named to all-stateand all-county teams and honored as a league all-star ... Participated in indoor trackher sophomore, junior and senior years andoutdoor track as a senior ... Played softballher freshman through junior years

National/International: A member of the2003 U.S. Under-20 team ... Also a memberof the 2002 Under-19 team and the 2001Under-18 team ... Played with the Under-20team in the 2003 U.S. Field Hockey summerleague and with the Southern Charm in 2004... Also played in the summer league in 2001and '02 ... Participated in A camp and B campin 2000 and '01

P e r s o n a l : Born March 9, 1983, inHarrisburg, Pa. ... Daughter of Phap andSusan Tran ... Has one sister, Amy (24), whowas UNC's starting goalkeeper from 1999-2002 and is now a member of the U.S.National Team

M o re on Tr a n :Favorites: Pastime -baking; Pregame meal -yogurt and a bagel withpeanut butter; Movies -Finding Nemo and any-thing with Jackie Chan;Book - Runny Babbitby Shel Silverstein; TVshows - A n y t h i n gexcept The Simpsonsand South Park (due toextensive viewing);Sports other than fieldhockey - softball, any-thing that involves innertubes and water; Breakfast - banh bao and ca phe sua da… After college, hopes to work with collegiate student-athletes in some aspect oflife skills development … Dream job is to live in a foreign country, teachingEnglish or working with athletes … Since last season, has focused on improvingher communication and basic kicking and footwork … The highlight of her athlet-ic career has been the 2004 season, “being a part of something so monumentallybigger than myself and truly understanding the meaning of ONE” … Her sister,Amy, and parents have had the biggest impact on her development as a player …Spent eight weeks last summer in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, where she tookintensive Vietnamese language classes, studied the Vietnamese culture and did anindependent research project on the fitness habits and facilities in Ho Chi MinhCity

Tran’s Career StatisticsYear GP-GS Min. Saves Goals GAA ShO2001 4-0 43 2 0 0.0 02003 22-22 1555 86 27 1.22 92004 23-23 1535 68 17 0.78 5Career 49-45 3133 156 44 0.98 14

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Working toward a double major in recreation & leisure and psychology ...Serves as PR officer for the Student Recreation Society ... Volunteers as part of anadaptive aquatics program ... The firstAustralian to play field hockey at UNC

2004: Played in all 23 games, starting 22… Named All-Atlantic Coast ConferenceTournament for the second time in her career… Scored four goals, including the game-winner in a 1-0 victory against Old Dominionon Sept. 18 … Had the tying goal againstWake Forest on Oct. 2 in a game UNC wenton to win in penalty strokes … Named to theACC Academic Honor Roll and the Dean'sList

2 0 0 3 : As a sophomore, started all 22games at back … Served as a team co-captainalong with Carey Fetting-Smith ... Named tothe ACC Academic Honor Roll and theDean's List

2002: As a freshman, started all 20 games, playing every minute of the season... Named to the All-ACC Tournament team ... Recipient of the team's Ken andCheryl Williams Rookie of the Year Award ... Scored one goal and contributed oneassist ... Her goal came in a double-overtime win at Duke on Oct. 5, when shescored in the 67th minute to send the game into the first overtime period

At Immanuel College in Adelaide, South Australia: Recipient of the L.H.Leske Memorial Shield as Sportswoman of the Year and the Norleen Fiebig Trophyas the field hockey team's Most Outstanding Player ... Named Most ValuablePlayer in soccer ... Also played tennis ... Recipient of the Margaret MckenzieMemorial Prize for all-around participation in sports ... Member of the IndependentGirls School Sports Association field hockey team 1997-99 ... Has taken part inathletic and cultural exchanges to the U.S. and Japan

National/International: Former member of the Australian Junior Youth Squadand the South Australian Under-21 team ... Played for the Under-18 team 1999-2000 and the Under-16 team 1997-98 ... Member of the Seacliff Hockey Club inthe Premier League from 1996 to 2002 ... Played for the Under-17 cricket team in1998 and also was a member of the 1998 South Australian Junior CricketDevelopment Squad ... Played for the Southern Charm in the U.S. Field HockeySummer League in 2004

Personal: Born Feb. 3, 1982, in Adelaide, South Australia ... The daughter ofMichael and Julie Weatherald ... Has five siblings: Malcolm (26), Jessica (22),Cameron (18), Tanya (16) and Megan (16)

More on Weatherald: Favorites – Pastimes: spending time at the beach, play-ing footy and cricket in the back yard; Pregame meal – chicken stirfry; Movies –Top Gun, Pirates of the Caribbean; TV show – The OC; Saying: “No worries”;Sport to play besides field hockey: tennis … Season – summer ... After college,hopes find a job that lets her travel the world … Something few people know abouther is that she has terrible eyesight … Since last season, has focused on improvingher distribution speed and decision-making skills … The highlight of her athleticcareer has been last season’s No. 1 vs. No. 2 penalty-strokes win over Wake Forest– “the game had it all! ” … The people who have had the greatest impact on herfield hockey development are her parents and Jane Lamprey, because “they weresupportive yet critical in my development, not only as an athlete but as an individ-ual” ... Spent the summer in Florida working for the Eagle Harbor Recreation andAquatics Department

Weatherald’s Career StatisticsYear GP-GS Goals Assists Points2002 20-20 1 1 32003 22-22 0 0 02004 23-22 4 0 8Career 65-64 5 1 11

• Newcomers

At Oley Valley High School in Oley, Pa.: Berks County Player of the Year andfirst-team all-state as a senior ... Second-team all-state in her junior year ... Herteam won four county championships and reached the state semifinals three times... Also a member of the basketball and track teams

National/International: Played for the winning Under-19 team, West Chester,at the USA Field Hockey Futures National Championship in July ... AttendedOlympic Development Select Team trials in 2005

Personal: Born Aug. 21, 1987, in Reading, Pa. ... Daughter of Lynn andTimothy Brill ... Has three siblings: Alison (20), Teryn (16) and Timmy (10) ... Herfather played baseball at St. Joseph’s and in the minor leagues

More on Brill: Favorites: Pastimes – hanging out with friends, dancing, eating;Pregame meal – strawberry-kiwi fitness water; Movie – Goonies; Books: TheNotebook, The Wedding; TV shows: Will & Grace, The OC, Family Guy, TheSimpsons; Sport besides field hockey – basketball; Shoes – flip-flops ... Alwaysputs her right shinguard on first while preparing for a game ... Wears jersey No. 10because her family always wears numbers that are multiples of five ... Goals aftercollege are to be successful and have a loving family ... Dream job is to be richenough not to have to work ... During the offseason, worked to improve her offen-sive and defensive one-one-one moves and on containing the opposition ... Personwho has had the biggest impact on her development as a player is her coach,Donna Long, because “she has taught me everything and really pushed me to bebetter”

At Oakton High School in Vienna, Va.: As a senior, earned all-region and all-district honors and was named second-team all-state … Washington Post All-Methonorable mention … Also competed on the basketball, soccer and track teams …In soccer, served as captain and earned all-district honors as a senior … In track,two-time all-district and all-region pick … A class officer and member of NationalHonor Society

National/International: Played in the National Indoor Tournament in 2003 and'05 … Part of the Olympic Development Program for soccer

Personal: Full name is Anne-Stewart Downer and goes by “Stewi” … BornMay 14, 1987, in Pittsburgh … Daughter of Steph and Bill Downer … Has twoolder brothers, Kip (24) and Cole (22) … Cole is a senior on the Clemson footballteam

More on Downer: Favorites - Pastimes: watching sports and vacationing withher family, skiing and running; Pregame meal - yogurt; Movie - Top Gun; Book -Lance Armstrong's It's Not About the Bike; TV show: Friends; Sport besides fieldhockey: soccer … Favorite quote is one her father shared with her: “The differencebetween the possible and the impossible lies in one's determination” … Careergoal is to be a sports broadcaster and her dream job is to be an ESPN anchor …During the offseason, has worked on her skills and on keeping the ball on her stick… Selected to be a Hecht's Prom Fashion Show model and was crowned PromQueen

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At the York School in Monterey, Calif.: Lettered four years in field hockey… Also played soccer and ran track … In soccer, honored as Monterey CountyHerald Athlete of the Week and twice named to the league all-star team … Intrack, three-time team MVP and all-league selection … Recipient of the York Cupas her school's top female athlete in 2004 and runner-up for the award in 2005 …Also on the newspaper staff and president of the Haiti Club … Rides and trainshorses … Attended the American School in London her senior year and playedfield hockey for the Hampstead and Westminster Hockey Club in the PremiereLeague … At ASL, set a school record in the shot put

Personal: Born Aug. 26, 1987, in San Jose, Calif. … Daughter of JeanneHoward and Bradley Zeve

More on Howard: Favorites - Pastimes: dancing, photography and being withfriends; Pregame meal: peanut butter and honey on whole wheat bread; Movies:Coach Carter, Jerry Maguire; Book: High Fidelity by Nick Hornby; Sports besidesfield hockey: soccer, dance and horseback riding; Bands: John Mayer, U2 …Drinks a cup of green tea before every game … Wears jersey No. 21 because it'sher father's favorite number (because it was worn by Roberto Clemente) … Careergoal is to be a lawyer, journalist or trauma surgeon … Dream job is to be a stuntwoman or hurricane pilot … During the offseason, focused on improving herstick skills and positioning … Highlight of her athletic career has been medalingin all track events in which she competed at ASL … Dr. Marcia Karwas, her firstfield hockey coach, and Coach John Ables have had the biggest impact on herdevelopment in the sport … Spent the summer as an intern in the editorial depart-ment at the Monterey County Weekly and also took a trip to Morocco

At Upper Perkiomen High School in Pennsburg, Pa.: Finished her career asher school's all-time leader in goals and assists … Earned all-state honors twice,all-area honors three times and all-conference honors all four years … Her teamqualified for the state tournament three times and won conference titles her fresh-man and junior years … Set school single-season records for goals and assists …Also played four years of lacrosse and one of basketball … In lacrosse, was sec-ond-team all-conference and honorable mention all-area as a senior … Member ofNational Honor Society and student council

National/International: Four-time Futures and National Indoor Tournamentparticipant … B-camp participant in 2004 … Played on the winning teams at the2004 USA/Canada Challenge and at the 2004 NIT

Personal: Born July 27, 1987, in Sellersville, Pa. … Daughter of Harvey andDeborah Scholl … Is the youngest of nine siblings, following Ellen (36), Ann-Marie (34), Harvey (33), Daniel (31), David (29), Rebekah (28), Gregory (25) andMelissa (23) … Melissa played lacrosse at Ursinus College … Her grandfatherplayed baseball at Ursinus and an aunt, Joanne, played tennis there … Anotheraunt, Liz, played field hockey at Cedar Crest College

More on Scholl: Favorites – Pastimes: traveling, art and hanging out withfriends; Pregame meal: buttered noodles; TV shows: Desperate Housewives,Grey's Anatomy and Lost; Sport to play besides field hockey: lacrosse … Puts onher socks, shinguards and shoes in the same order before every game … Duringthe offseason, focused on improving her speed without the ball … Her club coach-es have had the biggest impact on her field hockey development … Spent part ofthe summer as a hospital volunteer

Attended St. Jans Lyceum and played for HC Den Bosch club team … Herteams won three national championships and two South Netherlands champi-onships … Played for the South Netherlands district team … Also played tennis

Personal: Born Oct. 19, 1986, in 'S-Hertogensbosch, The Netherlands …Daughter of Mirjam and Peter van Beek … Has one brother, Jop (22), and one sis-ter, Lynn (16)

More on van Beek: Favorites - Pastime: hanging out with friends; Pregamemeal: a banana … After college, hopes to attend medical school in TheNetherlands then work in sports medicine … Her parents and former coach havehad the biggest impact on her field hockey development … Spent part of the sum-mer traveling to Turkey and Thailand

Tar Heel Traditions• WHY TAR HEELS?University of North Carolina athletic teams are known as the

Tar Heels because North Carolina is “The Tar Heel State.”One legend has the nickname being applied to the state’s resi-

dents as long ago as the Revolutionary War. According to this story,the troops of British General Cornwallis were fording what is nowknown as the Tar River between Rocky Mount and Battleboro whenthey discovered that tar had been dumped into the stream to impedetheir crossing. When they finally got across the river they found theirfeet completely black with tar. Their observation that anyone whowaded North Carolina rivers would acquire tar heels led to the nicknamefirst being used.

Others say the nickname was acquired during the War Between the States. Duringone of that war’s fiercest battles a column supporting North Carolina troops was driv-en from the field. After the battle, the North Carolinians who had successfully foughtit out alone, happened to meet the regiment which had fled to safety and were greet-ed with the question, “Any more tar down in the Old North State, boys?”

“No, not a bit,” shot back one of the North Carolina soldiers. “Old Jeff’s boughtit all up,” he went on, referring to Jefferson Davis, President of the Confederacy.

“Is that so? What’s he going to do with it?”“He’s going to put it on you’ns heels to make you stick better in the next fight.”Upon hearing of the incident, Robert E. Lee smiled and said to a fellow officer,

“God bless the Tar Heel boys.”A letter found in 1991 by State Archivist David Olson lends credence to another

more direct theory. A letter from Maj. Joseph Engelhard describes a fight involvingmen from North Carolina in which Lee was heard to have said, “There they stand asif they have tar on their heels.”

• WHY A RAM MASCOT?For nearly 70 years, North Carolina’s mas-

cot has been a ram. Since Carolina’s nicknameis Tar Heels, it might seem strange to have aram as a mascot, but there is a good explana-tion. It’s offered by Vic Huggins, Carolina’shead cheerleader back in 1924.

“In 1924 school spirit was at a peak,”Huggins once explained. “But something seemed to be missing. One day it hit me.Georgia had a bulldog for a mascot and State a wolf. What Carolina needed was asymbol.”

Two years earlier the Tar Heels had posted a brilliant, 9-1 football record. The starof that 1922 team was a bruising fullback named Jack Merritt, nicknamed “the bat-tering ram” for the way he plunged into lines. It seemed natural to Huggins to linka mascot with Merritt’s unusual sobriquet.

Rameses the First was shipped in from Texas, arriving just in time to be intro-duced at a pep rally before the VMI game. Then the ram was taken to Emerson Fieldwhere Carolina was an underdog to a strong VMI team. For three quarters the TarHeels battled the visitors to a scoreless tie. Late in the fourth period Carolina’s BunnHackney was called upon to attempt a field goal. Before taking the field he stoppedto rub Rameses’ head for good luck. Seconds later Hackney’s 30-yard dropkicksailed between the goalposts, giving the Tar Heels a 3-0 victory and a legendary mas-cot.

tar heel profiles: CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY

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It took just one visit to Chapel Hill, more than two decades ago, to convinceKaren Shelton that she never wanted to leave. “When I saw the campus and thefacilities and met the team,” Shelton says, “I knew I could build a program here.”Shelton took over the North Carolina field hockey program in 1981 and has led theTar Heels to national prominence in the form of four NCAA Championships, sixNCAA runner-up finishes, 15 Atlantic Coast Conference titles and 22 winning sea-sons. With a 3-1 victory over Wake Forest on Oct. 27, 1998, Shelton notched the300th win of her career, all at UNC. She hit the 350-win mark on Oct. 25, 2001,when the Tar Heels earned a 3-0win over Virginia. She heads intothe 2005 season three wins awayfrom 400.

Heading into her 25th seasonin Chapel Hill, Shelton’s careerrecord stands at 397-109-9, a .778winning percentage. She has beennamed National Coach of the Yearthree times and ACC Coach of theYear seven times, including 2004.

“Karen has built a program ourschool is very proud of, both forthe team’s success on the field andfor the way it represents our uni-versity,” says UNC athletic direc-tor Dick Baddour.

Not only has she built a strongprogram, she was a driving forcebehind construction of Francis E.Henry Stadium, which was dedi-cated as the home of the Tar Heelsin the spring of 1999. With acapacity of 1,086, Henry Stadiumalso includes meeting rooms andlocker rooms and is one of thefinest facilities of its kind.

In addition to achieving on thecollegiate level, Shelton’s players have excelled in national team play. A total of 21players have been members of U.S. National Teams and at least one of Shelton’sformer players has been on every U.S. National Team since 1989. Many other TarHeels have played for junior teams, and current squad members Laree Beans,Rachel Dawson, Ashley Judge, Heather Kendell and Brooke Miller are members ofthe 2005 Under-21 Team.

Born Nov. 14, 1957, in Honolulu, Hawaii, Shelton spent the first 10 years of herlife on Army bases from Aberdeen, Md., to El Paso, Texas. (Her late father, James,was a lieutenant colonel.) With four brothers and two sisters, she was never at a lossfor playmates and enthusiastically participated in whatever sport the day wouldbring. She was in fifth grade when her father retired and the family moved toPennsylvania. Shelton also played basketball and lacrosse and competed in track,but growing up in the cradle of field hockey, that was the game she grew to love.

At West Chester State College, Shelton played on three national championshipfield hockey teams and one national championship lacrosse team. Three times shewas named field hockey’s national player of the year, a streak that has never beenequaled and has been approached only by two-time winner Cindy Werley, a UNCplayer from 1993-97 who won the honor in 1996 and 1997. Shelton earned a bach-elor’s degree in health and physical education in 1979, then spent one year as assis-tant coach at Franklin & Marshall College while also teaching and coaching atMiddle Township High School in New Jersey.

She was a member of the U.S. National Team from 1977-84 and started for thesquad that won a bronze medal, the nation’s highest finish in Olympic competition,at the Los Angeles Summer Games in 1984. Her international experience alsoincludes the 1979 and 1983 World Cup competitions and American Cup tourna-ments in 1982 and 1983. She was U.S. Field Hockey’s Athlete of the Year in 1983and was inducted into the USFHA Hall of Fame in 1989 for her achievements as a

player. In 1999, she was named the Delaware County Field Hockey Athlete of theMillennium by the Delaware County Daily Times.

Away from field hockey, Shelton enjoys reading and spending time at the beach.She is married to Willie Scroggs, a senior associate athletic director at UNC whocoached the Carolina men’s lacrosse team from 1979-90. Under Scroggs’ direction,the Tar Heels won NCAAtitles in 1981, ’82 and ’86.Their son, William, is 15.

Even in the off s e a s o n ,however, field hockey is neverfar from Shelton’s mind. In thesummers of 1999 and 2000,she coached the SouthernCharm to the championship ofthe United Airlines FieldHockey League, the USFHAelite summer program. Sheserved as assistant coach in2001, 2002 and 2003, as theCharm took three morecrowns, and was co-headcoach of the team in 2004.

She has served as directorof Olympic developmentcamps on the Carolina campusand helped bring the U.S.National Team to Chapel Hillfor training in 1994. That sum-mer, UNC played host to boththe men’s and women’snational teams from GreatBritain as well as theJamaican women’s squad. In 1996, Chapel Hill was Great Britain’s pre-Olympictraining site.

A very visible ambassador for UNC and its athletic programs, Shelton wasinducted into the Order of the Golden Fleece, a campus honor society, in March of2002.

The Shelton File• Born Nov. 14, 1957 in Honolulu, Hawaii• Graduated from West Chester State College in 1979• Three-time National Player of the Year at West Chester• Head coach at UNC since 1981• Record of 397-109-9 in 24 seasons • Three-time National Coach of the Year (1994,’95,’96)• Seven-time ACC Coach of the Year (1986, ’87 ,’88, ’89, ’94,2000, ’04)• Coach of NCAA Championship teams in 1989, ’95, ’96 and’97• Ranks fifth among all college field hockey coaches with 397career wins• Member of the U.S. Field Hockey Association Hall of Fame• U.S. National Team member from 1978-84• U.S. Olympic bronze medalist in 1984

2005 CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE: PAGE 12

Shelton with husband Willie and son William

Heading into her 25th season at UNC, KarenShelton ranks fifth in total wins among allcollege head coaches.

CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY: head coach karen shelton

2005 CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE: PAGE 13

Following a stellar career as a UNC goalkeeper, Jana Woolley is in her eighthseason as a Tar Heel assistant coach.

A two-time All-America selection, Wo o l l e yhelped Carolina to NCAA titles in 1995, ’96 and’97. In the 1996 championship game againstPrinceton, she earned a 3-0 shutout. Her goalsallowed average that season was 0.61, the best inthe nation.

Her 46 career shutouts still stand as a UNC andAtlantic Coast Conference record, and her 14shutouts and goals against average of 0.43 in 1994both are tied for the school and ACC records.

Then known as Jana Withrow, Woolley earnedAll-America andAll-ACC honorsin her junior andsenior years and

was named All-ACC in 1995, ’96 and ’97. Sheearned a spot on the All-NCAA Tournament teamas a sophomore in 1995.

A former member of the U.S. National Team,Woolley earned her UNC degree in 1998. In Juneof 2005, she married Matt Woolley, whose sister,Abbey, played field hockey at UNC from 1998-2001. Matt earned his Ph.D. in economics fromUNC in May and is now a research analyst atMoody’s in New York.

Grant Fulton is in his first year on the UNC staff and brings to Chapel Hill awealth of international experience as a coach and a player.

For the last two years, he has coached in his native South Africa, where he hasserved as an assistant for both the men's and women's national teams. He also hasbeen an assistant coach and player for the University of Pretoria men's first team.

Prior to returning to South Africa, he spent part of 2002 in Canada, where hewas the head coach and manager for the Vancouver Hawks Field Hockey Club,working with male and female players of all ages. He coached and managed sev-eral club and school teams from 2001-02, and he was a player and coach for OranjeZwart, a club team in The Netherlands, in 1998-99.

From 1996-99, he co-founded and helped run Sport for Africa, which promot-ed a variety of sports to children ages 7-18 in Pretoria.

A graduate of the University of Pretoria, he represented his home country at the1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta and appeared in a total of 60 international match-es with South Africa's National Team.

Kelsey Keeran, a two-time All-America player at UNC, will serve on theCarolina staff in 2005 while completing her undergraduate degree. She is workingtoward a double major in business and Spanish.

Keeran finished her career ranked ninth on UNC’s all-time points list with 113and tied for 10th in goals with 48. As a senior, she was voted MVP of the 2004Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament as Carolina won the title. The team’s MVPin her junior and senior years, Keeran also was a two-time All-ACC pick. A first-team All-America selection in 2003 and ’04, she is the 11th player in program his-tory to earn the honor more than once.

Keeran also competed one year as a member of the UNC swimming and divingteam. An outstanding student, she was named to the ACC Academic Honor, theDean’s List and the NFHCA National Academic Squad multiple times during hercareer.

A member of the 2005 U.S. National Team, Keeran is from Sunbury, Ohio.

Shelley Johnson, a former field hockey standout at the University of Michigan,is in her third year as a member of the Tar Heel staff, serving as the team’s admin-istrative assistant.

A native of Houston, she graduated with distinction from Michigan in 1997 andearned a master’s in education in 1999. She played for the Wolverines in 1996 and’97, earning All-Big Ten and all-region honors as a senior, when she led the teamin assists. She served as an administrative assistant on the Michigan staff in ’99 andwas an assistant coach at Duke from 2000-01.

Johnson, who is enrolled in UNC’s sport administration graduate program, hasbeen active in the development of the Carolina Leadership Academy, a key com-ponent of the UNC student-athlete experience instituted in the fall of 2004.

Kwan Browne is in his first year on the North Carolina staff and serves as thevolunteer assistant coach. He brings to UNC experience as a coach and player atthe highest levels of international field hockey.

A native of Trinidad & Tobago, he earned a spot on the country’s SeniorNational Team at age 15 and now serves as the squad's assistant coach. He has beennamed Trinidad's Player of the Year five times and the English Hockey AssociationPlayer of the Year twice. He was the Player of the Tournament at the 2004 Pan AmCup.

Browne has served as coach of the East Grinstead Hockey Club in the EnglishPremier 1 Division and of his alma mater, London Metropolitan University.

He earned a bachelor's degree in law and a master's in European and interna-tional law from London Metropolitan and recently took the New York Bar Exam.

coaching staff: CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY

2005 CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE: PAGE 14

Home of the Tar HeelsIn April of 1999, the North Carolina field hockey and women’s lacrosse programs dedicated their new home, Francis E. Henry Stadium. Inside the Tar Heels’ spacious field hockey locker room, each player has her own full-length locker, with ample storage space and a plaque bearing

her name and number. Next door is a film and meeting room with computers, a big-screen TV and a kitchen area. The coaches’ locker room providesanother place for reviewing film The building’s entranceway houses a sizeable trophy case, which accommodates the Tar Heels’ four NCAA Championshiptrophies and leaves plenty of space left for those yet to be won.

The stands seat 1,086 fans and also house a concessions stand, restrooms, and sports medicine and storage areas.The 12,000-square-foot facility, first-class in every way, could not have been built without contributions from hundreds of Tar Heel supporters. Their

generosity is celebrated throughout the stadium, from the engraved bricks out front to plaques on the Carolina blue seats in the stands. Inside are signsrecognizing more donors whose gifts helped make the facility a reality.

2005 CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE: PAGE 152005 CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE: PAGE 15

Dick Baddour• Director of Athletics

Dick Baddour, a 1966graduate of the University ofNorth Carolina, was namedDirector of Athletics on June25, 1997. In his eight yearsas director, the UNCDepartment of Athletics hasu n d e rgone a number ofchanges, yet remains one of

the premiere programs in the Atlantic CoastConference and in the nation.

The Goldsboro, N.C., native heads a program thatwith 28 varsity sports is the largest in the ACC.Carolina prides itself on a strong overall athleticprogram and finished ninth in the 2004-05Director's Cup, a measure of NCAA postseasonsuccess. The Tar Heels, inaugural winners of theCup in 1994, have finished among the top 10 teamsnine times in the competition's 12 years.

Baddour is in his 39th year of continuous serviceto the university. He graduated from UNC in 1966and was appointed Assistant Dean of Men in 1967.He served as Assistant Dean of Admissions andAssistant Dean of the UNC School of Law and alsoearned a Master of Arts degree in education prior tojoining the athletic department in 1986.

In 2001, he received the Distinguished ServiceMedal from the UNC General Alumni Association.

Active in Chapel Hill community affairs, he is apast president of the Public School Foundation andhas served on the Parks and RecreationCommission. He and his wife, Lynda, have twosons, Allen and David, and a daughter, Jennifer.

Dr. Beth Miller• Sr. A s s o c. D i rector of A t h l e t i c s

Beth Miller is in her 21styear supervising NorthCarolina's highly-successful26-team Olympic Sportsprogram and serves asUNC's Senior Wo m a nAdministrator. She is a 1968alumna of Appalachian StateUniversity with a B.S.

degree in health and physical education. She has amaster's from ASU and earned a Doctor of Artsdegree in physical education at Middle TennesseeState in 1974.

From 1969-72, Miller served as the head volley-ball and basketball coach at Appalachian State. Shebecame head volleyball coach at UNC in 1975 andled the Tar Heels to four consecutive ACC titlesfrom 1980-83 and five postseason tournamentappearances. She also coached softball at Carolinafrom 1978-79.

In 1979, Miller was named Athletic BusinessManager. She retired from coaching volleyball after1983, but continued to handle all financial affairsfor the department through 1987. She has overseenUNC's Olympic Sports program since 1985.

Miller currently serves on a number of AtlanticCoast Conference committees, including those forwomen's basketball, women's golf and volleyball.She chairs the Awards Committee and is a memberof the Committee on Equity. She also serves onUNC's Housing Advisory Board.

Miller is a native of Landis, N.C.

Department of Athletics Mission StatementThe Department of Athletics has offered high quality athletic programs for many years. Through a dedicat-

ed commitment to educational interests, competitive athletic programs, and integrity in all areas, the student-athletes, coaches and staff strive to bring credit and recognition to the University.

The mission of the Department is to sponsor a broad-based athletic program that provides educational andathletic opportunities for young men and women to grow and develop, and to serve the interests of theUniversity by complementing and enhancing its diversity and quality of life. Coaches, as educators, are founda-tional to this process. In keeping with the University’s efforts to offer programs of regional and national acclaim,the Department’s athletic programs strive for competitive excellence within the Atlantic Coast Conference orother similar institutions. Through its athletic programs, the University seeks to unite students, faculty, staff andalumni in a common and shared experience. The Department seeks to contribute to the diversity of theUniversity by offering opportunities for enhanced racial/ethnic, cultural and geographic representation.

To fulfill this mission, the Department, with the approval of the Board of Trust, has developed principles ofoperation to provide guidance and direction to its personnel. This Mission Statement and accompanying princi-ples require strong dedication and commitment from all who participate in, coach in and support the Departmentof Athletics.

Department of Athletics Statement on GamblingThe mission of the Department of Athletics is to sponsor a broad-based athletic program that provides edu-

cational and athletic opportunities for young men and women to grow and develop. In keeping with theDepartment's mission and the University's commitment to educational interests, competitive athletic programs,and integrity in all areas, the Department of Athletics strongly condemns the influence of gambling on intercol-legiate athletics.

Student gambling is a significant issue on college campuses. Student-athlete involvement in gambling hasproduced many tragic situations, both for student-athletes and the universities they represent. Student-athletesoften compete in contests that generate interest from those involved in gambling and, possibly, organized crime.If given the opportunity, those interests will not hesitate to exploit the position student-athletes hold on collegecampuses. As such, the Universityof North Carolina is firmly opposedto all forms of gambling and briberyrelated to intercollegiate athletics.

To fulfill its educational obliga-tion, the Department provides agambling education program to allits student-athletes and departmen-tal staff members. This statementand the educational program arereflections of the Department'scommitment to keeping intercolle-giate athletics free from the influ-ences of gambling and its relatedactivities.

The Department requires its staffmembers and student-athletes toadhere to NCAA, state and federallaws regarding gambling. In theinterest of fair competition and thegrowth and development of stu-dent-athletes, the Departmentstrongly urges its friends and sup-porters to refrain fromgambling/betting on contestsinvolving collegiate competitionand to abide by state and federallaws.

UNC Athletics AdministrationChancellor ..................................................................Dr. James MoeserFaculty Representative ......................................................Jack EvansDirector of Athletics ............................................................Dick BaddourSenior Associate Athletic Director..........................................Larry GalloSenior Associate A.D. (Olympic Sports) ..........................Dr. Beth MillerSenior Associate A.D. (Operations & Facilities) ..............Willie ScroggsSenior Associate A.D. (Business and Finance)................Martina BallenSenior Associate A.D. (Student-Athlete Services)..........John BlanchardAssociate A.D. (Marketing and Promotions) ................Norwood TeagueAssociate A.D. (Communications)..................................Steve KirschnerEducational Foundation President..............................John MontgomeryDirector of the Academic Support Program......................Robert MercerDirector of Sports Medicine ..................................................Dr. Tim TaftCoordinator of Athletic Training ......................................Dr. Dan HookerAssistant A.D (Football, Olympic Sports Operations) ..........Ellen CullerAssistant A.D. (Tickets, Dean E. Smith Center) ..............Clint GwaltneyDirector of Strength and Conditioning, Olympic Sports ..........Greg Gatz

Athletic Department SwitchboardsSmith Center ................................................................(919) 962-6000Carmichael Auditorium..................................................(919) 962-5411

Mailing Address: Overnight Address:P.O. Box 2126 Dean Smith CenterChapel Hill, NC 27515 Skipper Bowles Drive

Chapel Hill, NC 27514Web Address:www.TarHeelBlue.com

unc department of athletics: CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY

Student-Athlete Services at the University of North Carolina encompasses threeareas that play an integral part in the collegiate experience of every UNC student-athlete. Those three areas are Academic Development, Student-AthleteDevelopment and Leadership Development.

• ACADEMIC DEVELOPMENTThe Academic Support Program is the main service utilized in advancing UNC

student-athletes to graduation. The program assists student-athletes in exploringtheir interests and abilities, enjoying a broad educational experience, and reachingor exceeding their academic goals. “Our young people are students first and ath-letes second and that will always be the case at the University,” says UNC Directorof Athletics Dick Baddour. “That is a credit to our coaches, administrators and sup-port staff, but most of all, our student-athletes. Their accomplishments in the class-room are very impressive.”

During the 2004-05 academic year, 297 Carolina student-athletes made theACC Academic Honor Roll, which requires a cumulative GPA of at least 3.0 for

the year. In the fall of 2004, 176 student-athletes made the Dean's List, and 163 didso in the spring of 2005.

The Academic Support Program is housed primarily in the Pope AcademicSupport Center, which is equipped with study facilities, tutorial rooms, a com-

puter lab, a 128-seat auditorium, counselors' offices, and state-of-the-art video andcomputer equipment. At the center, students meet with staff to discuss course selec-tion, major and career exploration, academic progress and academic eligibility.

The Academic Support Program helps freshmen transition from high school tocollege through a variety of academic programs such as academic counseling, indi-vidual tutoring, group review sessions and supplemental instruction.

• STUDENT-ATHLETE DEVELOPMENTBuilding character in UNC stu-

dent-athletes is the main charge ofStudent-Athlete Development.

Through Carolina Outreach, TarHeels are involved in a variety ofprojects and organizations on cam-pus and in the community. The UNCDepartment of Athletics has part-nered with Gatorade and the UNCSchool of Public Health for a nation-al pilot program called Get Kids inAction, in which Tar Heel student-athletes visit local elementaryschools to encourage children to

exercise. The Carolina Dreams program

allows young patients at UNCChildren's Hospitals to attend TarHeel sporting events with UNC stu-dent-athletes.

Other recent activities haveincluded building a house withHabitat for Humanity, cookingmeals at Ronald McDonald Houseand cleaning up the roadwaysthrough the Adopt-a-Highway pro-gram.

Student-Athlete Developmentalso seeks to develop student-athletes on a personal level through a variety ofspeakers who address issues like nutrition, gambling, relationship communicationand substance use. Career Development helps UNC student-athletes look beyondcollege with resources such as career counseling and workshops on resume writingand interviewing skills.

• LEADERSHIP DEVELOPMENT AND THE CAROLINA LEADERSHIP ACADEMYThe primary outlet for Leadership Development is the Carolina Leadership

Academy, started at UNC in 2004. As the nation's premier leadership developmentprogram in collegiate athletics, the Carolina Leadership Academy develops, chal-

• Student-Athlete ServicesAdvancing toward graduation, Building Character and Developing leadership

Carolina CREEDAs a University of North Carolina student-athlete, I pledge to makeevery effort to abide by the Carolina CREED as a show of my commit-ment to the University, the Department of Athletics, my team andmyself.C - I will know and embrace the tradition and culture of this greatUniversity and its athletics departmentR - I will respect myself and othersE - I will pursue excellence in my academic work by striving toreach my academic potential while preparing for a career of signifi-canceE - I will excel athletically by committing myself to performanceexcellence, team success and continual improvementD - I will develop the capacity to effectively lead myself and others

CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY: student-athlete services

2005 graduates Katy Potter, Kerry Falgowski, Carey Fetting-Smith, Kelsey Keeran and Laura Douglas

Jim Bounds

The UNC field hockey team at the Habitatfor Humanity work site

Several Tar Heel players, including KatyTran (above) are involved with the GetKids in Action program.

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2005 CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE: PAGE 172005 CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE: PAGE 17

Under the direction of the UNC Olympic sports strength andconditioning staff, Tar Heel student-athletes get outstandingcoaching intended to help maximize their physical potential.The staff evaluates Carolina student-athletes in a variety ofways, including the use of specialized software for lifting andrunning video analysis, to encourage steady progress towardreaching optimum preparation for competition.

The field hockey team trains at the Olympic sports weightroom in Kenan Field House. In addition to top-of-the-linestrength equipment, the center boasts a five-lane, 25-yard rub-berized surface for teaching and performing warm-up activi-ties, acceleration drills and agility movements. Year-roundtraining produces athletes who are prepared to compete suc-cessfully and safely.

Greg Gatz is the Director of Strength and Conditioning forOlympic Sports and oversees the program along with SteveGisselman, Assistant Director of Strength and Conditioning.

• Strength and ConditioningThe Tar Heels receive excellent care from one of the coun-

try’s best sports medicine staffs. Dr. Tim Taft, Director ofSports Medicine, oversees a comprehensive programdesigned to keep student-athletes healthy and to rehabilitateany injuries quickly and successfully. Dr. Tom Brickner is thephysician who works directly with the field hockey team.

A member of the athletic training staff is present at allgames and practices to ensure that any injuries receive promptand proper care. Head certified athletic trainer DougHalverson oversees care for the field hockey team and isassisted by certified athletic training graduate students LauraConner and Zach Fox and undergraduate student trainer JaimeKent.

• Sports Medicine

• Academic ExcellenceThe academic achievement of UNC field hockey players meets the

same high standards as their performance on the field. For the 2004-05school year, 10 Tar Heels were named to the Atlantic Coast ConferenceAcademic Honor Roll, which requires a grade point average of 3.0 orbetter for the year. Additionally, six players were named to the Dean’sList in the fall and five in the spring.ACC Academic Honor RollRachel Dawson, Kerry Falgowski, Carey Fetting-Smith, Hilary

Hartman, Kelsey Keeran, Heather Kendell, Karen Mann, Liz Morris,Katy Tran, Naomi WeatheraldDean’s ListFall, 2004: Rachel Dawson, Kelsey Keeran, Heather Kendell, Karen

Mann, Katy Tran, Naomi WeatheraldSpring, 2005: Rachel Dawson, Carey Fetting-Smith, Kelsey Keeran,

Heather Kendell, Karen Mann

Dawson Falgowski Fetting-Smith Hartman

Keeran Kendell Mann

Morris Tran Weatherald

lenges and supports student-athletes, coaches and staff intheir continual quest tobecome world class leaders inathletics, academics and life.

The Academy consists ofthree programs:

CREED ProgramLeadership training begins

in the freshman year. All lead-ership begins with personalleadership, therefore freshmenare taught skills to effectivelylead themselves. Training con-sists of monthly meetings fea-turing keynote speakers andsmall group discussion.Upperclass student-athletesserve as peer mentors and dis-cussion leaders. Special focus

is on responsibility, accountability, making good choices, ethics and characterbuilding.

Rising Stars ProgramDesigned for a select group of "high potential" sophomores and juniors, the pro-

gram provides future leaders with insights, strategies and skills necessary tobecome effective leaders. The program includes monthly meetings, interactiveexercises and action learning experiences.

Veteran Leaders ProgramThis program is designed for team captains and veteran student-athletes. It pro-

vides advanced leadership training and support, teaches the critical skills andinsights necessary to be effective vocal leaders and provides a strong peer network.Student-athletes meet regularly to learn and reinforce leadership principles andshare successes, frustrations and lessons.

NCAA President Myles Brand (left, with UNCChancellor James Moeser) visited the NorthCarolina campus in April and delivered thekeynote address as the school celebrated theone-year anniversary of the Carolina LeadershipAcademy’s founding.

Gatz

Gisselman

Taft

Brickner

The Academic Support Center

student-athlete services: CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY

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• 21-2 Overall, 4-0 ACCDate Opponent Score Record Site Winning Goal8/28 Michigan (ACC/Big Ten Challenge) W, 3-2 1-0 Winston-Salem, N.C. Karen Mann

Karen Mann scored two goals and Kelsey Keeran one as UNC avenged a season-ending loss to Michigan in the 2003 NCAA Tournament.8/29 Iowa (ACC/Big Ten Challenge) W, 5-0 2-0 Winston-Salem, N.C. Anne Marie Janus

Mann earned ACC Player of the Week honors with her second two-goal game of the weekend and Keeran also scored two as the Tar Heels shut out the Hawkeyes.9/ 4 Iowa (Temple Invitational) W, 1-0 3-0 Philadelphia, Pa. Kelsey Keeran

In the second of back-to-back games against Iowa, Keeran scored the matchup’s only goal 10 minutes into the second half and UNC led 17-6 in shots.9/ 5 American (Temple Invitational) W, 2-0 4-0 Philadelphia, Pa. Heather Kendell

Behind goals from Heather Kendell and Anne Marie Janus, UNC won its 11th Temple Invitational title in the past 12 years.9/10 Delaware W, 5-1 5-0 Newark, Del. Kelsey Keeran

Keeran had a hat trick and Laree Beans finished with two assists as UNC stayed undefeated and won in its first meeting with the Blue Hens since 1997.9/12 Penn State W, 2-1 6-0 University Park, Pa. Laree Beans

Keeran scored a first-half goal and Beans had the game-winner 13 minutes into the second half on an assist by Katy Potter. UNC outshot its host 19-5.9/18 #7 Old Dominion W, 1-0 7-0 Chapel Hill, N.C. Naomi Weatherald

In the Tar Heels’ first home game of the season, Naomi Weatherald scored the game’s only goal on a penalty corner five minutes into the second half.9/19 *#10 Virginia W, 4-0 8-0 Chapel Hill, N.C. Rachel Dawson

The Tar Heels opened ACC play with the year’s fifth shutout. Rachel Dawson scored twice on penalty corners, and Keeran and Liz Morris added a goal each.9/22 Appalachian State W, 6-0 9-0 Chapel Hill, N.C. Kelsey Keeran

Five different players scored goals, including two by Keeran, as the UNC defense held the visitors without a shot or a penalty corner.9/25 *#5 Duke W, 2-1 10-0 Durham, N.C. Kelsey Keeran

After trailing 1-0 at halftime, the Tar Heels got second-half goals from Mann and Keeran to improve to 2-0 in ACC play.9/26 William & Mary W, 3-0 11-0 Chapel Hill, N.C. Rachel Dawson

Following a scoreless first half, Dawson got UNC on the board with 23 minutes remaining in the game, then Keeran scored twice for the final margin.9/28 Davidson W, 4-0 12-0 Chapel Hill, N.C. Laura Douglas

After moving up to No. 1 in the weekly poll, announced earlier in the day, UNC outshot the Wildcats 45-0 to pick up its third win in four days.10/ 2 *#2 Wake Forest W, 3-2 2OT,PS 13-0 Chapel Hill, N.C.

UNC came back from a 2-0 deficit with goals by Brooke Miller and Weatherald to send the game into OT, and Katy Tran saved two penalty strokes for the win.10/ 3 Radford W, 9-0 14-0 Chapel Hill, N.C. Brooke Miller

On Senior Day, eight different players registered goals in the team’s highest-scoring game of the season and ninth shutout of the year.10/10 #2 Wake Forest L, 4-3 OT 14-1 Winston-Salem, N.C.

Wake scored on a penalty corner with five minutes to play in the overtime period to hand Carolina its first loss. Dawson, Mann and Kerry Falgowski scored for UNC.10/16 James Madison W, 2-0 15-1 Harrisonburg, Va. Kelsey Keeran

Keeran had a first-half goal and Falgowski added another in the second half as UNC outshot the Dukes 17-4 and Tran made three saves.10/17 #16 Virginia W, 2-1 16-1 Charlottesville, Va. Kelsey Keeran

Carolina led 2-0 at halftime after goals from Keeran and Weatherald. With nine minutes left in the nonconference matchup, UVa scored on its only penalty corner.10/23 *# 4 Maryland W, 2-1 OT 17-1 College Park, Md. Laura Douglas

Laura Douglas had the gamewinner on a penalty corner 12 minutes into overtime to give UNC the regular-season conference crown. 10/30 #7 Old Dominion W, 4-1 18-1 Norfolk, Va. Kelsey Keeran

Mann scored twice and Keeran and Douglas added a goal each. ODU’s goal came with six seconds to play in the game.11/ 5 #1 Wake Forest (ACC Tournament) W, 2-1 OT 19-1 Winston-Salem, N.C. Kelsey Keeran

Falgowski scored in the second half and Keeran had the game-winner with 4:21 to play in OT as UNC advanced to the ACC final for the first time since 1997.11/ 7 #4 Maryland (ACC Tournament) W, 3-1 20-1 Winston-Salem, N.C. Kelsey Keeran

Beans, Keeran and Douglas scored as Carolina came back from a 1-0 halftime deficit to claim the program’s 15th ACC title. Keeran was named tournament MVP.11/13 #10 Richmond (NCAA Tournament) W, 3-0 21-1 Chapel Hill, N.C. Brooke Miller

Miller scored just before halftime and Douglas and Falgowski had second-half goals, both on Carey Fetting-Smith assists, as the host Tar Heels advanced.11/14 #4 Duke (NCAA Tournament) L, 2-1 21-2 Chapel Hill, N.C.

UNC led 1-0 on a Dawson penalty corner goal 10 minutes in, but Duke scored on a penalty stroke and a field goal to eliminate Carolina from NCAA play

Notes:* – Game designated as an Atlantic Coast Conference contest# – Rankings at game time, according the NFHCA coaches poll. Rankingsnot available for games before Sept. 18.

Record W L PctAll Games 21 2 .913ACC 4 0 1.000Home 8 1 .889Away 8 1 .889Neutral 5 0 1.000Ahead at the Half 11 0 1.000Behind at the Half 5 1 .833Tied at the Half 5 1 .833Overtime Games 3 1 .750

• Scoring by Period1 2 OT OT Tot

North Carolina 27 42 2 1 72Opponents 11 6 1 0 18

• 2004 Honors and AwardsAll-America: Rachel Dawson, Kelsey KeeranAll-South Region: Rachel Dawson, Kelsey Keeran, Katy Tran (firstteam); Laura Douglas, Kerry Falgowski, Carey Fetting-Smith, KatyPotter (second team)South Region Coach of the Year: Karen SheltonACC Defensive Player of the Year: Rachel DawsonAll-Atlantic Coast Conference: Rachel Dawson, Kelsey Keeran,Katy Potter, Katy TranACC Coach of the Year: Karen SheltonAll-ACC Tournament: Kelsey Keeran (MVP), Rachel Dawson, KatyTran, Naomi WeatheraldNFHCA National Academic Squad: Rachel Dawson, KerryFalgowski, Heather Kendell, Katy Tr a nAthletic Director’s Scholar-Athlete Award: Kerry FalgowskiTeam Captains: Kerry Falgowski, Carey Fetting-Smith

CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY: 2004 season review

2004 statistics: CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY

2005 CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE: PAGE 192005 CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE: PAGE 19

North Carolina GP/GS Sh G A Pts DSv GWG GP/GS Sh G A Pts DSv GWGKelsey Keeran 22/22 60 19 1 39 0 9 81/79 154 48 17 113 0 15Laura Douglas 23/23 60 7 13 27 0 2 80/78 168 24 42 90 1 4Karen Mann 17/15 36 11 2 24 0 1 56/25 69 19 4 42 0 3Rachel Dawson 23/23 79 7 8 22 0 2 45/45 191 26 9 61 0 4Brooke Miller 22/17 18 4 11 19 0 2 44/38 31 6 17 29 0 2Kerry Falgowski 23/23 45 6 3 15 0 0 86/78 145 38 9 85 0 6Laree Beans 23/6 20 3 4 10 0 1 45/26 50 10 9 29 0 3Carey Fetting-Smith 21/21 41 2 6 10 0 0 80/79 151 12 18 42 2 1Anne Marie Janus 14/6 21 4 1 9 0 1 14/6 21 4 1 9 0 1Naomi Weatherald 23/22 14 4 0 8 0 1 65/64 59 5 1 11 3 1Heather Kendell 22/19 13 1 2 4 0 1 22/19 13 1 2 4 0 1Katy Potter 23/23 6 0 4 4 1 0 81/64 51 13 18 44 1 5Alli Tanner 18/0 6 1 1 3 0 0 18/0 6 1 1 3 0 0Liz Morris 16/0 4 1 0 2 0 0 16/0 4 1 0 2 0 0Laura Lembke 12/0 13 1 0 2 0 0 12/0 13 1 0 2 0 0Ashley Judge 20/9 1 0 1 1 0 0 42/30 2 0 1 1 0 0Katy Tran 23/23 0 0 0 0 0 0 49/45 0 0 0 0 0 0Jesse Gey 20/0 11 0 0 0 0 0 20/0 11 0 0 0 0 0Xan Funk 12/1 0 0 0 0 0 0 12/1 0 0 0 0 0 0Marie Bounds 8/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8/0 0 0 0 0 0 0

North Carolina 23/23 448 71 57 199 1 20Opponents 23/23 163 18 13 49 11 2

• Goalkeeping StatisticsNorth Carolina GP/GS Min Sv GA GAA Sho GP/GS Min Sv GA GAA ShoMarie Bounds 8/0 138 5 1 0.51 0.0 8/0 138 5 1 0.51 0.0Katy Tran 23/23 1535 68 17 0.78 5.0 49/45 3133 156 44 0.98 14.0

North Carolina 23/23 1673 73 18 0.75 5.0Opponents 23/23 1673 188 72 3.01 0.0

• Statistics by Period

Shots Goalkeeper Saves

1 2 OT OT Total 1 2 OT OT TotalNorth Carolina 210 228 10 0 448 North Carolina 35 28 7 3 73Opponents 81 60 17 5 163 Opponents 91 94 3 0 188

Defensive Saves Penalty Corners

1 2 OT OT Total 1 2 OT OT TotalNorth Carolina 0 1 0 0 1 North Carolina 88 88 3 0 179Opponents 6 4 1 0 11 Opponents 52 47 5 1 105

Penalty Strokes

1 2 OT OT TotalNorth Carolina 1 4 0 0 5Opponents 2 0 0 0 2

PAGE 20: 2005 CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

• The Nation’s Best ConferenceAs a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference, North Carolina competes in

the country’s top field hockey league. ACC teams have won 10 NCAA titles (fourby UNC, three by Maryland and three by Wake Forest) and at least one ACC teamhas played in the national champi-onship game in 15 of the last 18years. ACC teams have made a totalof 28 final four appearances in theNCAA Tournament’s 24-year histo-r y, with three teams–UNC,Maryland and Wake Forest–reach-ing the semifinals in 2000. That featwas repeated in 2003 and 2004,when Duke, Maryland and WakeForest reached the final four. TheDemon Deacons have won the lastthree crowns, in 2002, ’03 and ’04.ACC teams occupied the top fourspots in the national poll in the finalrankings of the season.

With Boston College joining the league in 2005, six of the ACC’s 12 schoolssponsor field hockey. B.C., Duke, Maryland, North Carolina, Virginia and WakeForest play one regular-season ACC game against each of the others, with severalalso meeting in nonconference contests. All six battle for the conference crown inthe annual ACC Tournament, scheduled this year for Nov. 3, 4 and 6 in CollegePark, Md.

The Atlantic Coast Conference conducts championships in 25 sports andincludes 12 schools. Clemson, Duke, Maryland, North Carolina, NC State,Virginia and Wake Forest have been members since the league was founded in

1953. Georgia Tech joined in 1978 and Florida State in 1991. Miami and VirginiaTech joined the league in 2004 and Boston College came on board over the sum-mer.

Vs. Duke (UNC leads 60-8-1)Date W/L Score Site11/14/04 L 2-1 Chapel Hill, N.C. (3)9/25/04 W 2-1 Durham, N.C.11/7/03 L 4-3 Charlottesville, Va. (1)10/18/03 L 5-0 Durham, N.C.10/3/03 W 4-1 Chapel Hill, N.C.10/19/02 W 3-1 Chapel Hill, N.C.10/5/02 W 5-4# Durham, N.C.10/21/01 W 3-1 Durham, N.C.9/29/01 W 5-0 Chapel Hill, N.C.10/1/00 W 2-1 Durham, N.C.8/26/00 W 3-0 Chapel Hill, N.C.10/3/99 W 3-0 Durham, N.C.8/29/99 W 4-0 Chapel Hill, N.C.9/30/98 W 3-2 Durham, N.C.9/26/98 W 2-0 Chapel Hill, N.C.10/29/97 W 5-0 Chapel Hill, N.C.9/26/97 W 5-1 Durham, N.C.11/9/96 W 3-2 Durham, N.C. (1)10/30/96 W 5-0 Durham, N.C.9/25/96 W 5-2 Chapel Hill, N.C11/4/95 W 3-0 College Park, Md. (1)10/25/95 W 3-0 Chapel Hill, N.C. 9/20/95 W 3-0 Durham, N.C.10/29/94 W 3-0 Durham, N.C.9/24/94 W 6-0 Chapel Hill, N.C.10/31/93 W 2-1 Durham, N.C.9/18/93 W 1-0 Chapel Hill, N.C.11/15/92 W 3-0 Chapel Hill, N.C. (3)11/1/92 W 2-0 Chapel Hill, N.C.9/26/92 W 3-0 Durham, N.C.11/9/91 W 1-0 Chapel Hill, N.C. (1)10/30/91 W 3-1 Durham, N.C.9/18/91 W 3-0 Chapel Hill, N.C.11/4/90 W 2-1* College Park, Md. (1)10/10/90 W 3-1 Chapel Hill, N.C.10/28/89 W 3-0 Durham, N.C. (1)10/10/89 W 2-0 Durham, N.C.10/11/88 W 3-0 Chapel Hill, N.C.10/31/87 W 8-1 Chapel Hill, N.C. (1)10/13/87 W 2-0 Durham, N.C.11/1/86 W 4-0 College Park, Md. (1)10/14/86 W 6-1 Chapel Hill, N.C.11/2/85 W 6-1 Chapel Hill, N.C. (1)

10/23/85 W 4-0 Durham, N.C.11/3/84 W 3-0 Charlottesville, Va. (1)10/24/84 W 4-0 Durham, N.C.9/18/84 W 2-0 Chapel Hill, N.C.10/26/83 W 3-1 Chapel Hill, N.C.10/15/83 W 2-1 Chapel Hill, N.C. (1)9/21/83 W 2-0 Durham, N.C.11/1/82 W 1-0# Durham, N.C.9/21/82 W 6-0 Chapel Hill, N.C.10/30/81 W 1-0 High Point, N.C. (6)10/13/81 L 3-2 Chapel Hill, N.C.9/22/81 L 2-1 Durham, N.C.10/16/80 W 1-0 Durham, N.C.11/2/79 W 3-1 Rock Hill, S.C. (6)10/16/79 W 2-1 Chapel Hill, N.C.10/27/78 W 3-1 Boone, N.C. (6)10/17/78 W 4-2 Durham, N.C.11/3/77 W 2-1* Durham, N.C. (6)10/25/77 W 1-0 Chapel Hill, N.C.10/18/76 L 2-1 Durham, N.C.10/9/75 W 5-3 Chapel Hill, N.C.10/3/74 L n/a Durham, N.C.1973 L n/a Durham, N.C.1972 W 2-0 Chapel Hill, N.C.1972 W 4-1 Durham, N.C.1971 T 1-1 Durham, N.C.Vs. Maryland (UNC leads 30-16)Date W/L Score Site11/7/04 W 3-1 Winston-Salem, N.C. (1)10/23/04 W 2-1* College Park, Md.10/25/03 L 3-2* Chapel Hill, N.C.10/26/02 W 3-2 College Park, Md.11/8/02 L 3-2* Durham, N.C. (1)10/20/01 L 1-0* Chapel Hill, N.C.11/17/00 W 4-1 Norfolk, Va. (4)10/22/00 W 1-0* College Park, Md.10/23/99 L 2-1* Chapel Hill, N.C.11/6/98 L 2-1* Charlottesville, Va. (1)10/11/98 L 5-0 College Park, Md.11/8/97 W 3-2* Chapel Hill, N.C. (1)10/27/97 W 4-3* Chapel Hill, N.C.11/10/96 W 4-0 Durham, N.C. (1)10/19/96 W 2-1 College Park, Md. 9/28/96 W 5-2 Chapel Hill, N.C.11/19/95 W 5-1 Winston-Salem (5)

11/5/95 W 3-2* College Park, Md. (1)10/14/95 W 2-1* Chapel Hill, N.C.10/1/95 W 2-1* College Park, Md.11/6/94 W 2-0 Winston-Salem, (1)10/15/94 W 3-1 Charlottesville, Va.10/1/94 W 2-1* Chapel Hill, N.C.11/21/93 L 2-1# Piscataway, N.J. (5)11/7/93 W 2-0 Winston-Salem (1)10/9/93 L 4-1 College Park, Md.11/8/92 L 2-1# Winston-Salem (1)10/3/92 W 4-0 Chapel Hill, N.C.11/10/91 W 3-0 Chapel Hill, N.C. (1)10/6/91 L 4-0 College Park, Md.11/3/90 W 5-1 College Park, Md. (1)10/6/90 L 3-2 Chapel Hill, N.C.10/29/89 W 8-1 Durham, N.C. (1)10/7/89 W 3-0 College Park, Md.11/12/88 W 2-0 Norfolk, Va. (2)10/30/88 W 3-0 Charlottesville, Va. (1)9/25/88 W 3-0 Chapel Hill, N.C.11/22/87 L 2-1* Chapel Hill, N.C. (5)11/1/87 W 5-0 Chapel Hill, N.C. (1)10/10/87 L 2-1 College Park, Md.11/2/86 W 4-3* College Park, Md. (1)10/26/86 W 2-1 Chapel Hill, N.C.10/12/85 L 2-1 College Park, Md.10/16/83 W 1-0 Chapel Hill, N.C. (1)11/7/82 L 1-0 Norfolk, Va. (8)10/16/82 L 4-3# Charlottesville, Va. (9)Vs. Virginia (UNC leads 37-14)Date W/L Score Site10/17/04 W 2-1 Charlottesville, Va.9/19/04 W 4-0 Chapel Hill, N.C.10/12/03 W 6-0 Charlottesville, Va.9/21/03 W 5-1 Chapel Hill, N.C.10/13/02 L 1-0 Charlottesville, Va.9/22/02 W 3-1 Chapel Hill, N.C.10/25/01 W 3-0 Chapel Hill, N.C.10/13/01 W 4-1 Charlottesville, Va.11/3/00 L 2-1# College Park, Md.10/15/00 W 3-0 Charlottesville, Va.9/17/00 W 3-1 Chapel Hill, N.C.10/17/99 W 2-0 Charlottesville, Va.9/19/99 W 1-0 Chapel Hill, N.C.10/18/98 L 2-1 Charlottesville, Va.

Series Histories vs. ACC Teams and Old Dominion

ACC Goals Overall GoalsTeam W L For Opp. W L For Opp.North Carolina 4 0 11 4 21 2 72 18Maryland 2 2 13 9 17 6 78 32Duke 2 2 12 10 18 5 117 36Wake Forest 2 2 11 11 20 3 96 29Virginia 0 4 2 15 10 10 56 50

2004 ACC Tournament Results:In Winston-Salem, N.C.Nov. 4: No. 4 Wake Forest d. No. 5 Virginia 5-1Nov. 5: No. 2 Maryland d. No. 3 Duke 3-2, No. 1 UNC d. Wake Forest2-1 OTNov. 7: UNC d. Maryland 3-12004 All-ACC Team:Maeke Boreel (Wake Forest), Lauren Crandall (Wake Forest), RachelDawson (UNC), Kelly Dostal (Wake Forest), Nicole Dudek (Duke),Paula Infante (Maryland), Kelsey Keeran (UNC), Claire Laubach (WakeForest), Mia Link (Virginia), Hilary Linton (Duke), Katy Potter (UNC),Lauren Powley (Maryland), Sara Silvetti (Maryland), Katy Tran (UNC)Offensive Player of the Year: Kelly Dostal (Wake Forest)Defensive Player of the Year: Rachel Dawson (UNC)Coach of the Year: Karen Shelton (UNC)Freshman of the Year: Janneke van Leeuwen (Maryland)

UNC won its 15th ACC title in 2005

2004 ACC Summary

CAROLINA FIELD HOCKEY: the atlantic coast conference