North Carolina
Northwestern lacrosse collapses versus North Carolina in NCAA semifinal
Lacrosse
For almost 58 minutes, Northwestern dominated the NCAA Event semifinals.
It was a recreation of dominant, eight-goal leads. It was a recreation of artful stickwork and of ripping objectives from the eight-meter arc. It was a recreation of disbelief, at occasions — in spite of everything, North Carolina had defeated the Wildcats by 11 objectives earlier this season.
Through the fourth quarter, it was a recreation of catch-up for NU: turnovers, missed pictures and misplaced draw controls.
In the long run, North Carolina owned the sport for only one minute and three seconds — but it surely was the minute that mattered most.
The No. 1 Tar Heels completed the seemingly insurmountable: They erased an eight-goal deficit, turned it right into a one-goal lead and punched its ticket to the NCAA championship recreation.
“We began turning into slightly too timid,” graduate midfielder Jill Girardi stated. “We’ve got the philosophy of going balls to the wall. That’s what we had been for the primary 45 minutes. We simply misplaced it. We went to their recreation plan. We didn’t play ours.”
NU, which held a 13-5 lead close to the tip of third quarter, finally fell by a rating of 15-14. Now, for the third straight season, the Wildcats return to Evanston winless within the NCAA semifinal.
But, Friday was NU’s most dominant efficiency within the NCAA semifinal in these three seasons. The Wildcats misplaced by a margin of eight objectives towards Syracuse in 2021 and 12 towards Maryland in 2019.
A mixture of draw management victories and UNC turnovers sparked the Wildcats’ preliminary offensive outburst within the first quarter. Simply quarter-hour in, NU led 6-0. By the tip of the third quarter, it was 13-6.
The Wildcats’ protection held sturdy, too. Senior goalkeeper Madison Doucette, who had a career-high 73% save fee towards Syracuse on Could 19, adopted up with a robust first half efficiency towards the Tar Heels. She made 5 saves within the first half and solely allowed two objectives.
Graduate defender Ally Palermo stated NU’s preliminary defensive success was a results of attempting to play fearlessly and “assault the second.” The Wildcats had been profitable at one-on-one battles, she stated, forcing North Carolina to take harder pictures.
The fourth, nevertheless, proved to be 1 / 4 of reckoning for NU.
The Wildcats slowed down on the draw, profitable 5 to the Tar Heels’ six. Their failure to capitalize on offensive possessions and the sheer quantity of turnovers additionally led them astray.
Over the primary three quarters, NU dedicated 9 turnovers. Through the fourth alone, they’d eight. The place the Wildcats had succeeded earlier additionally failed them in the long run, Palermo stated.
“In direction of the tip, they had been capitalizing on the one-on-one dodges,” Palermo stated. “We weren’t capable of slide as onerous.”
NU additionally known as its ultimate timeout with simply over two minutes remaining — and shortly misplaced the ball thereafter. That turnover was what led to North Carolina’s ultimate, profitable purpose.
Coach Kelly Amonte Hiller stated ready to take the timeout till then was “too little, too late,” and the workforce was unable to regain composure at that time. When the clock hit zero, the Wildcats emerged from the NCAA semifinal a loser but once more.
This season, forward of its match run, NU went by way of a sequence of ups and downs.
First was shedding senior attacker Izzy Scane, who scored 98 objectives in 2021 and headlined each the 2019 and 2021 NCAA semifinal groups, to an ACL harm. Then got here losses to Maryland and Rutgers simply previous to the NCAA Event.
However Palermo stated this system grew nearer following these trials and adversity.
“This group got here collectively greater than I’ve seen up to now,” Palermo stated. “All of us wished it actually dangerous. We put all of the work and energy into ourselves and {our relationships}, and that’s what bought us up to now.”
E mail: [email protected]
Twitter: @charvarnes11
Associated Tales:
— Lacrosse: No. 6 Northwestern holds off Notre Dame 17-16, extends profitable streak to 3 video games
—Lacrosse: Fall ball returns for first time since 2019
—Lacrosse: No. 6 Northwestern places away Arizona State 16-8, discovering rhythm offensively after a stagnant first quarter
North Carolina
Obituary for Ernest "Trey" Cleveland Skipper, III at Market Street Chapel
North Carolina
North Carolina man charged with 9 felonies after shooting at tree crew
YANCEY COUNTY, N.C. (WTVD) — A tree-trimming crew in North Carolina had a harrowing encounter when a man with a criminal record opened fire on them.
This happened near Murphytown in the Green Mountain area of Yancey County. According to a statement from the Yancey County Sheriff’s Office, 36-year-old Lucas Wilson Murphy shot three tree workers while they were clearing trees for a power company.
All three sustained serious injuries. They were taken to a hospital for treatment.
31-year-old Shelby Teague, whose husband Brandon Teague, 32, was part of the five-member crew, is still grappling with the incident. The couple have three children together.
“To have somebody crazy running through the woods is not a risk that you would think about,” she told ABC affiliate WLOS
She is thankful her husband wasn’t hurt, but three of his colleagues were.
“I’m trying not to be angry,” Shelby said. “We could have lost a bunch of good men.”
Authorities said during the exchange, an officer-involved shooting happened. Murphy was injured and taken to a hospital.
Murphy is charged with nine felony counts detailing that he assaulted five crew members with a long rifle with intent to kill.
Previous Criminal History
Shelby is angry Murphy was not in jail for previous charges.
Murphy’s misdemeanors, dating back to 2013, carry little to no jail time. This includes resisting public officers, driving while intoxicated and carrying a concealed weapon.
In 2021, the most serious case where he went to trial involved a charge that he shot and tried to kill his brother.
A law enforcement source who spoke anonymously told WLOS that Murphy’s brother refused to cooperate and minimized what happened.
Because of this, the jury could only find him guilty of assault.
Copyright © 2024 WTVD-TV. All Rights Reserved.
North Carolina
Amid torrential rains and flooding, 21 North Carolina river sites fail fecal bacteria testing this week
RALEIGH, N.C. (WNCN) — A group says more than 20 North Carolina river sites failed testing for fecal bacteria this week after several days of torrential rains and nearly a foot of rainfall in some spots.
Leading up to Friday, there were several days of flood warnings and nearly a foot of rain fell in some North Carolina areas — such as Sampson County with 11 inches. Other spots — such as Durham County — received more than 9 inches of rain.
Sound Rivers, a group that monitors more than 50 recreational sites along North Carolina rivers, says that heavy rain can lead to more pollution in rivers.
“Swim Guide results are in, and they definitely reflect the impact all this rain is having on our waterways,” the Sound Rivers group said on Friday.
Full rainfall totals for Central NC for a week ending Friday
Some flood warnings continued this weekend with one still active Saturday along the Tar River at Tarboro in Edgecombe County.
“Remember, more stormwater runoff means more nasty stuff gets washed into the water,” Sound Rivers wrote Friday after 21 North Carolina river sites failed their weekly testing.
In the previous Swim Guide report, just six sites failed.
In the Raleigh area, three sites along the Neuse River failed the week ending July 26, according to Sound Rivers.
Just east of Raleigh in Wake County, these canoe launch sites met water quality standards less than 60 percent of the time: Buffaloe Road, Milburnie Park and Poole Road.
Elevated levels of fecal bacteria in the water can bring an increased risk of gastrointestinal illness and skin infections for pets and humans, Sound Rivers says.
East of the Wake County area along the Neuse River, these seven sites also failed water quality testing:
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Maple Cypress boat ramp in Grifton
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Glenburnie Park
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Town of Bridgton Park
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Upper Broad Creek at Black Beard Sailing Club
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Lawson Creek Park in the New Bern area
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Slocum Creek boating access in Havelock
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Pierce Creek at the Sea Harbor Yacht Club in Oriental
Closer to the North Carolina coast, 11 sites failed the testing along the Tar and Pamlico rivers:
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Sunset Park on the Tar River in Rocky Mount
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Tar River Reservoir in Rocky Mount
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River Road boat ramp on the Tar River in Tarboro
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Town Common on the Tar River in Greenville
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Wildwood Park on the Tar River in Greenville
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Port Terminal on the Tar River in Greenville
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Yankee Hall Road boat ramp on the Tar River at Pactolus
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Mason’s Landing on the Pamlico River in Washington
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Havens Gardens on the Pamlico River in Washington
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Dinah’s Landing just off the Pamlico River at Goose Creek State Park
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Cotton Patch Landing on Blounts Creek just off the Pamlico River
Sound Rivers issues a report on various recreational areas of rivers in North Carolina after testing dozens of recreational sites each week throughout the summer.
The testing by the group includes enterococci bacteria in salt water.
Copyright 2024 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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