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Maryland Terrapins

The Maryland Terrapins, commonly referred to as the Terps, consist of 19 men's and women's varsity intercollegiate athletic teams that represent the University of Maryland, College Park in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I competition. Maryland was a founding member of the Southern Conference in 1921, a founding member of the Atlantic Coast Conference in 1952, and a member of the Big Ten Conference since 2014.

Maryland Terrapins
UniversityUniversity of Maryland
ConferenceBig Ten Conference
NCAADivision I (FBS)
Athletic directorDamon Evans
LocationCollege Park, Maryland
Varsity teams20
Football stadiumSECU Stadium
Basketball arenaXFINITY Center
Baseball stadiumBob "Turtle" Smith Stadium
Soccer stadiumLudwig Field
Lacrosse stadiumSECU Stadium
Other venuesJones-Hill House
MascotTestudo
NicknameTerps
Fight song"Fight, Fight, Fight for Maryland!", "Maryland Victory Song"
ColorsRed, white, gold, and black[1]
       
Websiteumterps.com
Big Ten logo in Maryland's colors

The nickname was coined in 1932 by Harry C. "Curley" Byrd, then the school's football coach and later the school's president. Previously, Maryland teams were known as the "Old Liners"—a reference to the state's nickname, "The Old Line State". However, the school newspaper, The Diamondback, wanted a better nickname. Byrd thought "Terrapins" was a good choice because of the diamondback terrapins endemic to the Chesapeake Bay region. Byrd's hometown of Crisfield was famous for the number of terrapins along its shores.[2] The school mascot is an anthropomorphic turtle named "Testudo". The official team colors are red, white, black, and gold, derived from the Maryland state flag.[3] It is the only NCAA school to have four official school colors.[4] On July 1, 2014, the Terrapins became members of the Big Ten Conference following 62 years of membership in the Atlantic Coast Conference.[5] The university currently sponsors varsity athletic teams in 20 men's and women's sports, which compete at the NCAA Division I level.

History edit

The University of Maryland, College Park was established in 1856 as Maryland Agricultural College. Baseball and football were played on the campus as early as the Civil War era.[6] It was renamed Maryland State College in 1916, and in 1920, merged with the state's professional schools in Baltimore to become the University of Maryland. Between 1921 and 1953, the university was a member of the Southern Conference.

Longstanding tensions within the Southern Conference culminated in 1951, when it passed a ban on participation in bowl games midway through the football season. At the end of the regular season, both Maryland and Clemson were invited and accepted invitations to postseason bowl games. The Southern Conference sanctioned the two schools with a one-year probation in which they could not schedule any football games against conference opponents.[7] On May 8, 1953, Maryland became a founding member of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) when it and six other schools voted to split from the Southern Conference.[8][9]

As a result of a committee's recommendation to cut athletics costs, funding for eight teams was eliminated on November 21, 2011, a move supported by University President Wallace Loh. However, the president also showed support for a "Save the Programs Campaign", which gave the teams a chance to raise eight years of total program costs by June 30, 2012. The affected teams were men's cross country, indoor track, and outdoor track, men's swimming and diving, men's tennis, women's acrobatics and tumbling, women's swimming and diving, and women's water polo. On July 1, 2012, the university officially cut seven of those teams. The men's outdoor track team raised $888,000 of a target amount of $940,000, which was deemed sufficient to avoid elimination.[10]

On November 19, 2012, the University of Maryland's Board of Regents voted to withdraw from the ACC to join the Big Ten Conference effective July 1, 2014.[11]

Sports sponsored edit

Men's sports Women's sports
Baseball Basketball
Basketball Cross country
Football Field hockey
Golf Golf
Lacrosse Gymnastics
Soccer Lacrosse
Track & field Soccer
Wrestling Softball
Tennis
Track & field
Volleyball
† – Track and field includes both indoor and outdoor.

The University of Maryland currently offers 20 varsity teams: 8 men's and 12 women's.

Baseball edit

  • NCAA Tournament Regional Champions: 2014, 2015
  • NCAA Tournament Appearances: 1965, 1970, 1971, 2014, 2015, 2017
  • Conference Champions: 1936, 1965, 1970, 1971, 2022
  • Conference Tournament Champions: 2023

Men's basketball edit

Burton Shipley was Maryland's first and longest serving basketball coach, but his lengthy tenure from 1923 to 1947 was described as "remarkably quiet".[12] At that time, the sport was not widely popular in the mid-Atlantic region and football and boxing were much better drawing spectator sports on the Maryland campus. To capitalize on the popularity, basketball games at Ritchie Coliseum were held as doubleheaders with boxing matches for 26 years.[13] Bud Millikan became head coach in 1950 and soon led Maryland to consistent respectability[clarification needed] within the Southern Conference.[14] Defensive point guard Gene Shue averaged 22 points per game and his scoring record stood for two decades.[15] In 1955, the small Ritchie Coliseum was replaced by [clarification needed]; games were moved to the larger Cole Field House, centrally located on campus, and when Maryland became a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC), the fanbase rapidly expanded.[16] Millikan's tenure culminated in 1958 when Maryland won its first Atlantic Coast Conference tournament championship and advanced to the Elite Eight in the NCAA tournament.

In 1969, Lefty Driesell was hired by the University of Maryland. Drisell led the Terrapins to eight NCAA Tournament appearances, a National Invitation Tournament championship, two Atlantic Coast Conference regular-season championships, and one Atlantic Coast Conference tournament championship.[17] Maryland also attained a No. 2 Associated Press ranking during four consecutive seasons from 1972 to 1976.[17]

Driesell coached the Maryland Terrapins from 1969 to 1986. During his tenure, he successfully recruited numerous exceptional players, including Tom McMillen, Len Elmore, John Lucas, Albert King, Buck Williams, and Len Bias.[18]

At Maryland, Driesell began the now nationwide tradition of Midnight Madness. According to longstanding NCAA rules, college basketball teams were not permitted to begin practices until October 15. Driesell traditionally began the first practice with a requirement that his players run one mile in six minutes, but found that the players were too fatigued to practice effectively immediately afterwards. At 12:03 a.m. on October 15, 1971, Driesell held a one-mile run at the track around Byrd Stadium, where a crowd of 1,000 fans had gathered after learning of the unorthodox practice session. The event soon became a tradition to build excitement for the basketball team's upcoming season.[19] Midnight Madness has been adopted by many national programs such as UNC, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan State and Duke.[20][21][22][23]

In 1972, Maryland defeated Niagara, 100–69, to secure the National Invitation Tournament championship. Driesell said that the season attained the three goals he had set for the program at the time of his hiring: "national prominence", "national ranking", and "a national championship".[24]

In the 1974 ACC men's basketball tournament, Maryland was defeated by North Carolina State University in overtime, 103–100. Many consider it to be one of the greatest college basketball games of all time.[25][26][27][28] North Carolina State University eventually went on to win the 1974 National Championship. Maryland finished No. 4 in the final Associated Press poll that season, prompting the NCAA to make a landmark decision in 1975. The NCAA tournament committee expanded the field from 32 to 48 teams, which opened the door for more than one team from a conference.[29]

In 1984, Driesell led the team to the school's second ACC Tournament Championship.[30] In December 1985, the university gave Driesell a ten-year contract extension. Earlier that same year, Driesell was made an Honorary M Club member. He ended his career at Maryland with a 348–159 overall record. His winning percentage of .686 is the best ever for a Maryland coach.

Gary Williams became head coach in 1989, bringing Maryland back to national prominence following difficult years. By March 2010, Williams was the fifth-winningest active coach in the country and the third-winningest coach all-time in the ACC (behind only Dean Smith and Mike Krzyzewski). In 2002, Williams led the Terrapins to the program's first national championship, defeating Indiana, 64–52. Williams retired in May 2011 and Mark Turgeon was hired from Texas A&M to be his successor.

  • NCAA National Champions: 2002
  • NCAA Final Fours: 2001, 2002
  • NCAA Tournament appearances: 1958, 1973, 1975, 1980, 1981, 1983 - 1986, 1994 - 2004, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2019, 2021
  • Conference Champions: 1932, 1975, 1980, 1995, 2002, 2010, 2020
  • Conference Tournament Champions: 1931, 1958, 1984, 2004

Women's basketball edit

Maryland Terrapins women's basketball has become one of the most celebrated sports on campus, due to significant success in the Brenda Frese era. After experiencing a period of national prominence under head coach, Chris Weller in the 1980s, including a pair of trips to the Final Four in 1982 and 1989, the Maryland Terrapins reached their full potential in 2006, winning the NCAA National Championship. In the ACC, Maryland was regularly a threat to win regular season and conference tournament championships, doing so on five and ten occasions, respectively. Since joining the Big Ten in the 2014–2015 season, Maryland has featured in every Big Ten tournament Championship game (as of 2021), winning five titles, and has won six of seven regular season championships.

  • NCAA National Champions: 2006
  • NCAA/AIAW Final Fours: 1978, 1982, 1989, 2006, 2014, 2015
  • NCAA/AIAW Tournament Appearances: 1978 - 1984, 1986, 1988 - 1993, 1997, 2001, 2004 - 2009, 2011 - 2019, 2021
  • Conference Champions: 1979, 1982, 1988, 1989, 2009, 2015 - 2017, 2019–2021
  • Conference Tournament Champions: 1978, 1979, 1981 - 1983, 1986, 1988, 1989, 2009, 2012, 2015 - 2017, 2020, 2021

Field hockey edit

The Maryland Terrapins field hockey team is among the most accomplished field hockey programs in the country,[31] and have won a total of eight NCAA national championships and 16 conference championships (10 in the ACC and 6 in the Big Ten).[32]

  • NCAA National Champions: 1987, 1993, 1999, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2010, 2011
  • NCAA Final Fours: 1987, 1991, 1993, 1995, 1999 - 2001, 2003 - 2006, 2008 - 2013, 2017, 2018, 2021, 2022
  • NCAA Tournament Appearances: 1978 - 1984, 1986, 1988 - 1993, 1997, 2001, 2004 - 2019, 2021, 2022
  • Conference Champions: 1992, 1998 - 2000, 2001, 2005, 2008 - 2010, 2013 - 2016, 2018, 2019, 2022

Football edit

 
The Maryland football team takes the field prior to a game in 2021

An unofficial football team composed of Maryland Agricultural College students played games against local high schools in 1890 and 1891. The following year, the school lent its support, which marked the official establishment of the Maryland football program in 1892. The football team has continued to the present day with the exception of a brief hiatus in 1895. In 1894, former Maryland coach and player William W. Skinner spearheaded the formation of the Maryland Intercollegiate Football Association, which served to award the state football championship.[33] Maryland hired D. John Markey as its first paid football coach in 1902.[34] H. C. "Curley" Byrd, who eventually served as the university president from 1936 to 1953,[35] began his playing career on the team in 1905.[36] In 1911, Byrd was appointed as the head football coach, and he served in that position through 1934. During his tenure, Byrd was instrumental in growing support of the program, and in 1915 successfully requisitioned funding for the school's first stadium.[37] In his position as university president, he was also responsible for building the school's current football facility, Maryland Stadium.

In 1945, Paul "Bear" Bryant began his long and distinguished career as a head football coach at the University of Maryland.[38] The following year, he was replaced by Jim Tatum, a pioneer of the split T. Maryland football achieved its greatest success under Tatum, who compiled a 73–15–4 record without a single losing season, and to date, he remains the winningest Maryland coach of the modern era.[39] NCAA recognized selectors awarded Maryland the national football championship in 1951 and 1953.[40] During Tatum's tenure from 1946 to 1955, Maryland also secured one Southern Conference championship and two Atlantic Coast Conference championships.[39] In 1962, Darryl Hill transferred to Maryland from the United States Naval Academy, making the school the first team in the Atlantic Coast Conference with a black player.[41] Jerry Claiborne became head coach in 1972, and led Maryland to three consecutive ACC championships from 1974 to 1976. The Terrapins finished the 1976 regular season with an undefeated 11–0 record, but lost to Houston in the Cotton Bowl Classic, which ended national championship speculation.[42] Bobby Ross replaced Claiborne in 1982, and he repeated the feat of three consecutive ACC championships from 1983 to 1985. In 1984, Maryland quarterback Frank Reich led the Terrapins to the then greatest halftime comeback against the defending national champions, Miami.[43] After a long bowl game drought, Ralph Friedgen was hired as head coach in 2001, and in his first season, led Maryland to the ACC championship and its first Bowl Championship Series game appearance.[44]

The football program has secured two NCAA-recognized national championships, nine ACC championships, two Southern Conference championships, eleven consensus All-America honors, and twenty-four bowl game appearances. Maryland possesses the third-most ACC championships with nine, which places them behind Clemson (13) and Florida State (12). Many former Terrapins players and coaches have gone on to careers in professional football including 15 first-round NFL Draft picks.[39]

  • National Champions: 1951, 1953
  • Undefeated Regular Seasons: 1893, 1951, 1953, 1955, 1976
  • Conference Champions: 1937, 1951, 1953, 1955, 1974 - 1976, 1983 - 1985, 2001
  • Bowl Appearances: 1947, 1949, 1951, 1953, 1955, 1973 - 1978, 1980, 1982 - 1985, 1990, 2001 - 2003, 2006 - 2008, 2010, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2021

Men's lacrosse edit

The Terrapins men's lacrosse team is one of the most tradition-rich in all of collegiate lacrosse, having advanced to 14 NCAA Championship games since its inception in 1971, winning the title in 1973, 1975, and 2017. The Terrapins' lacrosse tradition traces back even further with eight Wingate Memorial Trophies between 1936 and 1970. As members of the Atlantic Coast Conference, the school won a record league-record 25 championships. Since joining the Big Ten Conference in 2014, Maryland has won five Big Ten championships and three Big Ten tournament championships.

  • National Champions: 1928, 1936–37, 1939–40, 1955–56, 1959, 1967, 1973, 1975, 2017, 2022
  • NCAA Finals: 1971, 1973–76, 1979, 1995, 1997–98, 2011–12, 2015–17, 2021–22
  • NCAA Final Fours: 1971–79, 1983, 1987, 1989, 1991, 1995, 1997–98, 2003, 2005–06, 2011–12, 2014–2018, 2021–22
  • NCAA Tournament Appearances: 1971–76, 1978–79, 1981–83, 1986–87, 1989, 1991–98, 2000–01, 2003–19, 2021–22
  • Conference Champions: 1957–61, 1963, 1965–68, 1972–74, 1976–80, 1985, 1987, 1989, 1998, 2001, 2003–04, 2009, 2013–18, 2021–22
  • Conference Tournament Champions: 1998, 2004–05, 2011, 2016–17, 2021–22

Women's lacrosse edit

The Maryland Terrapins women's lacrosse team has won 15 national championships, the most of any program in the nation.[45] The team has produced the National Player of the Year/Tewaaraton Award winner eight times, more than any other collegiate program.[46] The Terrapins have also made the most NCAA tournament appearances, won the most tournament games, and made the most NCAA championship game appearances of any program.[47]

  • National Champions: 1981, 1986, 1992, 1995–2001, 2010, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2019
  • NCAA Final Fours: 1984–1986, 1990–2001, 2003, 2009–2019
  • NCAA Tournament Appearances: 1983–1987, 1990–2019, 2021
  • Conference Champions: 1997, 1999, 2001, 2003, 2007–2011, 2013–2019
  • Conference Tournament Champions: 1997, 1999–2001, 2003, 2009–2014, 2016–18

Men's soccer edit

The Maryland Terrapins men's soccer team has won four NCAA Division I College Cup national championships, most recently in 2018.[48] Under the guidance of head coach Sasho Cirovski, the soccer team has reached nine Final Fours and won three College Cups since 1997. The soccer team has developed a large, devoted fan base among students and the local community. The attendance record at Ludwig Field was set in 2015 when 8,449 fans saw Maryland win over top-ranked UCLA in extra time.[49] The annual total attendance increased dramatically from 12,710 in 1995 to 35,631 in 2008.[50]

  • NCAA National Champions: 1968, 2005, 2008, 2018
  • NCAA College Cups: 1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1969, 1998, 2002 - 2005, 2008, 2012, 2013, 2018
  • NCAA Tournament Appearances: 1959 - 1964, 1967 - 1971, 1973, 1976, 1986, 1994 - 1999, 2001 - 2020
  • Conference Champions: 1949 - 1951, 1953 - 1968, 1971, 2012 - 2014, 2016, 2022
  • Conference Tournament Champions: 1996, 2002, 2008, 2010, 2012 - 2016

Softball edit

The Terrapins softball team began play in 1995. The team has made four NCAA Tournament appearances in 1999, 2010, 2011, and 2012. The current head coach is Julie Wright.

Wrestling edit

Prior to joining the Big Ten in 2014, the Terrapins wrestling team won more ACC team championships than any other school in the conference, winning their 24th ACC title in 2012. The 2012 ACC championship is the Terps' fourth in the past five years. Maryland has finished in the top 20 at the NCAA Championships each year since the 2010 season and produced multiple all Americans since 2009, a school record. Two-time NCAA champion and two-time Olympian Kerry McCoy was head coach for eleven years until 2019. The XFINITY Center is the arena for the Terrapin Wrestling team.[51]

Maryland has had over 200 ACC Champions, 2 NCAA National Champions, and 18 NCAA All-Americans. In 2010 Hudson Taylor became Maryland's first three-time all American with his fourth-place finish at 197 pounds. Spencer Myers became Maryland's first freshman in 2011 when he earned all American status with his sixth-place finish at heavyweight. The first wrestling team started in 1940 competed in the Southern Conference, with Paul McNeil becoming the Terps' first champion that same year at 175 pounds.[52] In 2014, Jimmy Sheptock had one of the greatest runs in Maryland wrestling history, with a 32–1 record, ACC Championship, and the first Maryland wrestler to obtain a number one seed at the NCAA Championships, where he was runner-up to Ed Ruth.

The Maryland wrestling team was dominant in the ACC throughout the 1950s and 1960s and returned to claim two more conference titles in the late 2000s.[53] However, in its first season in the Big Ten, Maryland failed to win a Big Ten dual meet. After 13 tries, Maryland finally won its first Big Ten dual meet January 10, 2016, against Michigan State.

In April 2019, former Edinboro wrestler and Missouri assistant Alex Clemsen was named head coach. During the 2022–23 season, a 4–0 start that included an upset of Pittsburgh gave the Terrapins their first win against a ranked opponent and national ranking for the first time since 2013, when Maryland was in the ACC.

Notable non-varsity sports edit

Figure skating edit

The Maryland Figure Skating Club began at UMD in 2004 and became a club sport in 2007. The club comprises three teams: a freestyle team and two synchronized skating teams. All teams compete in and out of region through the United States Figure Skating Association.[54] The Maryland Terrapins Black are the reigning 2018 Eastern Sectional Champions in the Open Collegiate division

Skaters from across the three teams have, by invitation, performed demonstrations for a variety of publications, most recently being featured in the Washington Post: ter.ps/FigSkateWaPo.

Rugby edit

The Maryland Terrapins rugby team was founded in 1968. Maryland's best season was 1985, when Maryland played in the national championship final, losing 31–6 to Cal. (See National Collegiate Rugby Championship results.) Maryland plays in the Atlantic Coast Rugby League, a conference formed in 2011 along with other Atlantic Coast Conference schools. The Terps are led by head coach Jeff Soeken, who was a three-time All-American when he played rugby for Maryland.[55]

Maryland was the champion of the league's inaugural 2011 season, defeating North Carolina, 39–32, in the title match.[56] Maryland repeated as Atlantic Coast champion again in 2012, defeating Clemson. Maryland placed 10th in the 2012 Collegiate Rugby Championship (CRC), notching wins against Penn State and Oklahoma.[57] The CRC is the highest-profile college rugby tournament in the country, held at PPL Park in Philadelphia and broadcast live on NBC.[58] Maryland reached the semifinals of the 2012 ACI 7s tournament in Blacksburg.[59]

Traditions edit

Rivalries edit

Virginia Cavaliers Given their proximity and history in the Atlantic Coast Conference, there has been a longstanding multi-sport border rivalry with the Virginia Cavaliers. Matchups in men's basketball, football, soccer, and lacrosse have historically been the hottest matchups in the rivalry.

Several factors contribute to the intensity of the rivalry. The two states, and their eponymous flagship universities based in Charlottesville, Virginia and College Park, Maryland, respectively, share close historical and cultural ties. The schools are located in relatively close geographic proximity, separated by about 129 miles (208 km). Due in large part to this proximity, the schools aggressively compete for recruits in the Mid-Atlantic region.[60] Former Maryland coach Ralph Friedgen expressed the importance of the rivalry by stating, "It's a potential rivalry in every sport we play. They're border states. We compete for students, not just athletes."[61]

The two are both long-time members of the Atlantic Coast Conference, with Maryland becoming a founding member in 1953 and Virginia joining later in that same year. When the conference reorganized in 2005, Maryland and Virginia were placed in separate divisions, but designated as cross-divisional rivals that continue to meet annually. The intensity of the rivalry is increased by a long history in the series of comebacks, shutouts, and spoilers that prevented one team from securing a conference championship or bowl game appearance. From the 1920s until 1945, the teams competed for the Tydings Trophy, named for former politician and Maryland alum Millard Tydings who had several friends amongst the professors at Virginia. In 2003, the schools discussed reviving the trophy tradition, but it was ultimately rejected by Virginia, due to concerns over the reorganization of the ACC.[60]

Before and after their meeting in 2010, players from both schools attributed the importance of the game to the negative feelings the programs have for each other. Virginia center Anthony Mihota said "I guess it's because we don't like them very much. Something about them that gets under our skin".[62] After Maryland's victory, Terp linebacker Adrian Moten commented, "This was a big win in the rivalry. They hate us. We hate them."[63]

The high academic standing of the University of Virginia in a national publication has added to the competitiveness between the two. In 2003, University of Maryland president C.D. Mote asserted that, in academic terms, Virginia was "highly overrated these days ... U.S. News & World Report places them at the top of the pile with Berkeley, which is ridiculous." Mote further stated that students from the state of Maryland paying a higher tuition cost to attend the University of Virginia "don't know any better."[64] While the University of Virginia president, John Casteen, said such remarks can be taken out of context, Virginia board of visitors member, William H. Goodwin, responded in The Cavalier Daily, "I certainly think a college president should have more class, but you have to expect that from Maryland."[64][65]

The rivalry has cooled since the Terrapins joined the Big Ten, but the schools have still met occasionally. The two schools have met in the ACC-Big Ten Challenge in men's basketball and at Audi Field for men's soccer in 2018 and 2019. Virginia eliminated Maryland in the NCAA baseball (2015) and men's lacrosse tournaments (2019), en route to Cavalier titles, which has deepened the animosity between the two schools. The football programs are set to meet again in 2023 and 2024.

West Virginia Mountaineers Maryland has a historic football rivalry with the neighboring West Virginia Mountaineers. While this has traditionally been a non-conference rivalry, it is usually regarded as a high quality non-conference matchup early in the season. It has historically been very competitive, with the Mountaineers leading the all-time series 28–23–2.

Duke Blue Devils The nature of the rivalry between Duke and Maryland is not viewed in the same manner by the schools' respective fans. While the Duke–UNC rivalry originated from geographic proximity and shared history, Duke fans do not view Maryland as a rival.[66] However, several former Duke players have cited Maryland as the team against whom they played their most exciting games. Maryland fans traditionally see the Duke game as the biggest game of the year. Maryland fans have rioted in College Park after home games, regardless of the outcome. Famously, one fan threw a bottle and hit Carlos Boozer's mother in her head after Duke's remarkable comeback from a 10-point deficit in the final minute to beat Maryland, requiring the University of Maryland to issue a public apology. One year, most fans in the student section right behind the basket had to leave or turn their t-shirts inside-out because they had a FCC-banned explicative ("F**K DUKE") that could not be shown on television. Michael Wilbon, a sports journalist who works for ESPN, was formerly a writer for The Washington Post, and owns a home in Bethesda, Maryland, refers to the Duke–Maryland rivalry as "[o]ne of the best rivalries in one of the best basketball leagues in the country."[67][68][69][70][71][72] In 2014, the Washington Post produced a short documentary on the peak of the rivalry from 2001 and 2002 which included interviews with Coach Williams and several former players from both teams.[73]

Navy Midshipmen While the two teams have only met 21 times, Maryland and Navy are the state's only two FBS Football playing programs and have irregularly played in a matchup dubbed the Crab Bowl Classic. The Midshipmen lead the all-time football series 14–7.

Potential Big Ten Rivalries Since joining the Big Ten, there has been the potential for rivalries to develop with Penn State and Rutgers, two schools in neighboring states. While the matchup with Penn State has been traditionally one-sided in favor of the Nittany Lions and the series with Rutgers is still relatively new, either school could end up becoming a rival due to proximity.

Songs and chants edit

Victory Song The Maryland Victory Song was written in 1928 by Thornton W. Allen. It is played frequently during Terp Basketball and Football games. During Football games, it is played after every touchdown the Terps score, regardless of whether the team is winning or losing, celebrating the immediate victory of accomplishment. Ironically, the "Victory" song is played even after defeat.

During the M-A-R-Y-L-A-N-D section of the victory song, Terrapins fans show their clenched fists, and alternate pumping them in the air, beginning with their right fist on the "M" and alternating between left and right with each letter of the MARYLAND. The motion resembles someone climbing a ladder.[74]

Alma Mater & Fight Song Other official school songs include the school's Alma Mater and Fight Song. Each of these are played at every home football game during the pregame festivities.[75]

"Hey, You Suck!" A popular saying among the students at Maryland is a simple "Hey, You Suck!" directed at opponents. Students have incorporated the phrase into Gary Glitter's popular sports anthem "Rock and Roll Part Two" (often referred to as the "Hey Song"). Sometime in the early 2000s, then-football coach Ralph Friedgen asked that the song not be played at football games. Friedgen had never liked hearing the song since his return to College Park in 2001, and added that it hurt his recruiting efforts.[76] In 2004, basketball coach Gary Williams followed Friedgen's lead and asked that the song not be played at basketball games either. While he personally liked the song, he'd come to believe that it didn't help his team win games. More importantly for Williams, he'd received a number of complaints from parents and grandparents who did not feel that the chant was appropriate.[77] However, the students have continued to sing the song without the band's support. Before each basketball game and after every touchdown at football games, the crowd sings the song a cappella. An alternative version, which grew out of the Duke-Maryland basketball rivalry, replaces the phrase "You Suck" with "Fuck Duke". Students would often use the alternate phrase during games against teams other than Duke and have continued the tradition in the Big Ten Conference, even though the school no longer plays Duke.[citation needed]

Football and basketball edit

Key Plays At football games, in addition to making noise to throw off the opposing team's offense, Terp fans will also shake their keys to signify urgency ("Key" Plays). This often happens during 3rd down plays when Maryland is on defense.[74]

Fist Pump At the beginning of each men's basketball game during his tenure, Maryland Coach Gary Williams would pump his fist to signify a good game.[74]

Midnight Madness Midnight Madness was originally started by Maryland Head Coach Lefty Driesell in 1970. Midnight Madness is held at the earliest time the Men's Basketball Team can practice, which used to be midnight on the first day of practice. Students would attend the practice and over the years it has evolved into a circus-like atmosphere, including light shows, magic shows, the mascot trampoline challenge, skits, food, beverage, and other fanfare.

Recently, Maryland and some other schools have moved the start of Midnight Madness to earlier in the day - generally around 7 o'clock - with permission of the NCAA. This is to encourage more families and fans who aren't even students to attend the event. As a result of this change, Midnight Madness has been rebranded as "Maryland Madness".[74]

Newspaper Shaking Maryland students attempt to read the newspaper as the opposing team is being introduced. They shake the paper as the visiting team is introduced.[74]

Other sport traditions edit

The Crew The Crew is a group of men's soccer fans. They generally sit behind the goal the opposing team is defending (switching sides at halftime) and berate the opposing goalie, referring to him by formal (given) name. Members of the Crew often travel to away games to continue to support their Terps. The Crew also organize activities to join the soccer environment.[74]

The "Turgeonites" The Turgeonites are a group of students who dress in a suit and tie with a gray streak through their hair emulating head men's basketball coach Mark Turgeon. They can be seen in the student section behind the Maryland bench during every home game.

Championships edit

NCAA team championships edit

The University of Maryland has won 32 NCAA team national championships, 26 while a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference.[78]

Other national team championships edit

Below are 23 national team titles that were not bestowed by the NCAA:

  • Men's
    • Football (1): 1953[79]
    • Lacrosse (9): 1928,[80] 1936, 1937, 1939, 1940, 1955, 1956, 1959, 1967
    • Rifle (4): 1947, 1949, 1953, 1954
  • Women's:
    • Cheerleading (7): 1999, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2013
    • Rifle (1): 1932
    • Lacrosse (1): 1981
  • See also:

Hall of Fame edit

Maryland Sports Radio Network edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Color | The University of Maryland Brand". Retrieved July 9, 2022.
  2. ^ "Testudo: Tale of the Top Shell". UMTerps.com. April 4, 2013. Retrieved July 13, 2018.
  3. ^ "School Colors". Maryland Terrapins. July 7, 2018. Retrieved July 13, 2018.
  4. ^ Sandys, Toni (February 10, 2008). "After Losing Black Jerseys, Terrapins Go for the Gold". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved April 24, 2020.
  5. ^ (Press release). Big Ten Conference. July 1, 2014. Archived from the original on June 26, 2016. Retrieved January 25, 2017.
  6. ^ David Ungrady, Tales from the Maryland Terrapins, 2003, pp. 3–4, Sports Publishing LLC.
  7. ^ K. Adam Powell, Border Wars: The First Fifty Years of Atlantic Coast Conference Football, p. xvi, Scarecrow Press, 2004, ISBN 0-8108-4839-2.
  8. ^ Seven Major Dixie Colleges Break Away From Bulky Southern Conference, Sarasota Herald-Tribune, May 9, 1953.
  9. ^ Seven Southern Colleges Join New Athletic League, The Hartford Courant, June 15, 1953.
  10. ^ . si.com. Archived from the original on December 25, 2012. Retrieved October 5, 2012.
  11. ^ Prewitt, Alex (November 19, 2012). "Maryland moving to Big Ten". The Washington Post. Retrieved November 19, 2012.
  12. ^ Paul McMullen, Maryland Basketball: Tales from Cole Field House, p. 2, JHU Press, 2002, ISBN 0-8018-7221-9.
  13. ^ Johnny Holliday, Stephen Moore, John Feinstein, Hoops Tales: Maryland Terrapins Men's Basketball, p. 149, Globe Pequot, 2006, ISBN 0-7627-3990-8.
  14. ^ Ungrady, p. 82.
  15. ^ Catching Up With ... former Bullet Gene Shue, The Baltimore Sun, December 3, 2009.
  16. ^ Holliday et al, p. 151.
  17. ^ a b Lefty Driesell Coaching Record, Sports Reference, retrieved June 8, 2011.
  18. ^ Milestones in Driesell's Career, The Washington Post, October 30, 1986.
  19. ^ He made midnight a time for madness; The college basketball tradition that resumes tonight began in 1971 with Maryland's Lefty Driesell, St. Petersburg Times, October 13, 2006.
  20. ^ Davis, Seth. "The story how Lefty Driesell started Midnight Madness at Maryland". SI.com. Retrieved May 23, 2017.
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External links edit

maryland, terrapins, commonly, referred, terps, consist, women, varsity, intercollegiate, athletic, teams, that, represent, university, maryland, college, park, national, collegiate, athletic, association, ncaa, division, competition, maryland, founding, membe. The Maryland Terrapins commonly referred to as the Terps consist of 19 men s and women s varsity intercollegiate athletic teams that represent the University of Maryland College Park in National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA Division I competition Maryland was a founding member of the Southern Conference in 1921 a founding member of the Atlantic Coast Conference in 1952 and a member of the Big Ten Conference since 2014 Maryland TerrapinsUniversityUniversity of MarylandConferenceBig Ten ConferenceNCAADivision I FBS Athletic directorDamon EvansLocationCollege Park MarylandVarsity teams20Football stadiumSECU StadiumBasketball arenaXFINITY CenterBaseball stadiumBob Turtle Smith StadiumSoccer stadiumLudwig FieldLacrosse stadiumSECU StadiumOther venuesJones Hill HouseMascotTestudoNicknameTerpsFight song Fight Fight Fight for Maryland Maryland Victory Song ColorsRed white gold and black 1 Websiteumterps wbr com Big Ten logo in Maryland s colors The nickname was coined in 1932 by Harry C Curley Byrd then the school s football coach and later the school s president Previously Maryland teams were known as the Old Liners a reference to the state s nickname The Old Line State However the school newspaper The Diamondback wanted a better nickname Byrd thought Terrapins was a good choice because of the diamondback terrapins endemic to the Chesapeake Bay region Byrd s hometown of Crisfield was famous for the number of terrapins along its shores 2 The school mascot is an anthropomorphic turtle named Testudo The official team colors are red white black and gold derived from the Maryland state flag 3 It is the only NCAA school to have four official school colors 4 On July 1 2014 the Terrapins became members of the Big Ten Conference following 62 years of membership in the Atlantic Coast Conference 5 The university currently sponsors varsity athletic teams in 20 men s and women s sports which compete at the NCAA Division I level Contents 1 History 2 Sports sponsored 2 1 Baseball 2 2 Men s basketball 2 3 Women s basketball 2 4 Field hockey 2 5 Football 2 6 Men s lacrosse 2 7 Women s lacrosse 2 8 Men s soccer 2 9 Softball 2 10 Wrestling 3 Notable non varsity sports 3 1 Figure skating 3 2 Rugby 4 Traditions 4 1 Rivalries 4 2 Songs and chants 4 3 Football and basketball 4 4 Other sport traditions 5 Championships 5 1 NCAA team championships 5 2 Other national team championships 6 Hall of Fame 7 Maryland Sports Radio Network 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory editThe University of Maryland College Park was established in 1856 as Maryland Agricultural College Baseball and football were played on the campus as early as the Civil War era 6 It was renamed Maryland State College in 1916 and in 1920 merged with the state s professional schools in Baltimore to become the University of Maryland Between 1921 and 1953 the university was a member of the Southern Conference Longstanding tensions within the Southern Conference culminated in 1951 when it passed a ban on participation in bowl games midway through the football season At the end of the regular season both Maryland and Clemson were invited and accepted invitations to postseason bowl games The Southern Conference sanctioned the two schools with a one year probation in which they could not schedule any football games against conference opponents 7 On May 8 1953 Maryland became a founding member of the Atlantic Coast Conference ACC when it and six other schools voted to split from the Southern Conference 8 9 As a result of a committee s recommendation to cut athletics costs funding for eight teams was eliminated on November 21 2011 a move supported by University President Wallace Loh However the president also showed support for a Save the Programs Campaign which gave the teams a chance to raise eight years of total program costs by June 30 2012 The affected teams were men s cross country indoor track and outdoor track men s swimming and diving men s tennis women s acrobatics and tumbling women s swimming and diving and women s water polo On July 1 2012 the university officially cut seven of those teams The men s outdoor track team raised 888 000 of a target amount of 940 000 which was deemed sufficient to avoid elimination 10 On November 19 2012 the University of Maryland s Board of Regents voted to withdraw from the ACC to join the Big Ten Conference effective July 1 2014 11 Sports sponsored editMen s sports Women s sports Baseball Basketball Basketball Cross country Football Field hockey Golf Golf Lacrosse Gymnastics Soccer Lacrosse Track amp field Soccer Wrestling Softball Tennis Track amp field Volleyball Track and field includes both indoor and outdoor The University of Maryland currently offers 20 varsity teams 8 men s and 12 women s Baseball edit Main article Maryland Terrapins baseball NCAA Tournament Regional Champions 2014 2015 NCAA Tournament Appearances 1965 1970 1971 2014 2015 2017 Conference Champions 1936 1965 1970 1971 2022 Conference Tournament Champions 2023 Men s basketball edit Main article Maryland Terrapins men s basketball Burton Shipley was Maryland s first and longest serving basketball coach but his lengthy tenure from 1923 to 1947 was described as remarkably quiet 12 At that time the sport was not widely popular in the mid Atlantic region and football and boxing were much better drawing spectator sports on the Maryland campus To capitalize on the popularity basketball games at Ritchie Coliseum were held as doubleheaders with boxing matches for 26 years 13 Bud Millikan became head coach in 1950 and soon led Maryland to consistent respectability clarification needed within the Southern Conference 14 Defensive point guard Gene Shue averaged 22 points per game and his scoring record stood for two decades 15 In 1955 the small Ritchie Coliseum was replaced by clarification needed games were moved to the larger Cole Field House centrally located on campus and when Maryland became a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference ACC the fanbase rapidly expanded 16 Millikan s tenure culminated in 1958 when Maryland won its first Atlantic Coast Conference tournament championship and advanced to the Elite Eight in the NCAA tournament In 1969 Lefty Driesell was hired by the University of Maryland Drisell led the Terrapins to eight NCAA Tournament appearances a National Invitation Tournament championship two Atlantic Coast Conference regular season championships and one Atlantic Coast Conference tournament championship 17 Maryland also attained a No 2 Associated Press ranking during four consecutive seasons from 1972 to 1976 17 Driesell coached the Maryland Terrapins from 1969 to 1986 During his tenure he successfully recruited numerous exceptional players including Tom McMillen Len Elmore John Lucas Albert King Buck Williams and Len Bias 18 At Maryland Driesell began the now nationwide tradition of Midnight Madness According to longstanding NCAA rules college basketball teams were not permitted to begin practices until October 15 Driesell traditionally began the first practice with a requirement that his players run one mile in six minutes but found that the players were too fatigued to practice effectively immediately afterwards At 12 03 a m on October 15 1971 Driesell held a one mile run at the track around Byrd Stadium where a crowd of 1 000 fans had gathered after learning of the unorthodox practice session The event soon became a tradition to build excitement for the basketball team s upcoming season 19 Midnight Madness has been adopted by many national programs such as UNC Kansas Kentucky Michigan State and Duke 20 21 22 23 In 1972 Maryland defeated Niagara 100 69 to secure the National Invitation Tournament championship Driesell said that the season attained the three goals he had set for the program at the time of his hiring national prominence national ranking and a national championship 24 In the 1974 ACC men s basketball tournament Maryland was defeated by North Carolina State University in overtime 103 100 Many consider it to be one of the greatest college basketball games of all time 25 26 27 28 North Carolina State University eventually went on to win the 1974 National Championship Maryland finished No 4 in the final Associated Press poll that season prompting the NCAA to make a landmark decision in 1975 The NCAA tournament committee expanded the field from 32 to 48 teams which opened the door for more than one team from a conference 29 In 1984 Driesell led the team to the school s second ACC Tournament Championship 30 In December 1985 the university gave Driesell a ten year contract extension Earlier that same year Driesell was made an Honorary M Club member He ended his career at Maryland with a 348 159 overall record His winning percentage of 686 is the best ever for a Maryland coach Gary Williams became head coach in 1989 bringing Maryland back to national prominence following difficult years By March 2010 Williams was the fifth winningest active coach in the country and the third winningest coach all time in the ACC behind only Dean Smith and Mike Krzyzewski In 2002 Williams led the Terrapins to the program s first national championship defeating Indiana 64 52 Williams retired in May 2011 and Mark Turgeon was hired from Texas A amp M to be his successor NCAA National Champions 2002 NCAA Final Fours 2001 2002 NCAA Tournament appearances 1958 1973 1975 1980 1981 1983 1986 1994 2004 2007 2009 2010 2015 2016 2017 2019 2021 Conference Champions 1932 1975 1980 1995 2002 2010 2020 Conference Tournament Champions 1931 1958 1984 2004 Women s basketball edit Main article Maryland Terrapins women s basketball Maryland Terrapins women s basketball has become one of the most celebrated sports on campus due to significant success in the Brenda Frese era After experiencing a period of national prominence under head coach Chris Weller in the 1980s including a pair of trips to the Final Four in 1982 and 1989 the Maryland Terrapins reached their full potential in 2006 winning the NCAA National Championship In the ACC Maryland was regularly a threat to win regular season and conference tournament championships doing so on five and ten occasions respectively Since joining the Big Ten in the 2014 2015 season Maryland has featured in every Big Ten tournament Championship game as of 2021 winning five titles and has won six of seven regular season championships NCAA National Champions 2006 NCAA AIAW Final Fours 1978 1982 1989 2006 2014 2015 NCAA AIAW Tournament Appearances 1978 1984 1986 1988 1993 1997 2001 2004 2009 2011 2019 2021 Conference Champions 1979 1982 1988 1989 2009 2015 2017 2019 2021 Conference Tournament Champions 1978 1979 1981 1983 1986 1988 1989 2009 2012 2015 2017 2020 2021 Field hockey edit Main article Maryland Terrapins field hockey The Maryland Terrapins field hockey team is among the most accomplished field hockey programs in the country 31 and have won a total of eight NCAA national championships and 16 conference championships 10 in the ACC and 6 in the Big Ten 32 NCAA National Champions 1987 1993 1999 2005 2006 2008 2010 2011 NCAA Final Fours 1987 1991 1993 1995 1999 2001 2003 2006 2008 2013 2017 2018 2021 2022 NCAA Tournament Appearances 1978 1984 1986 1988 1993 1997 2001 2004 2019 2021 2022 Conference Champions 1992 1998 2000 2001 2005 2008 2010 2013 2016 2018 2019 2022 Football edit Main article Maryland Terrapins football nbsp The Maryland football team takes the field prior to a game in 2021 An unofficial football team composed of Maryland Agricultural College students played games against local high schools in 1890 and 1891 The following year the school lent its support which marked the official establishment of the Maryland football program in 1892 The football team has continued to the present day with the exception of a brief hiatus in 1895 In 1894 former Maryland coach and player William W Skinner spearheaded the formation of the Maryland Intercollegiate Football Association which served to award the state football championship 33 Maryland hired D John Markey as its first paid football coach in 1902 34 H C Curley Byrd who eventually served as the university president from 1936 to 1953 35 began his playing career on the team in 1905 36 In 1911 Byrd was appointed as the head football coach and he served in that position through 1934 During his tenure Byrd was instrumental in growing support of the program and in 1915 successfully requisitioned funding for the school s first stadium 37 In his position as university president he was also responsible for building the school s current football facility Maryland Stadium In 1945 Paul Bear Bryant began his long and distinguished career as a head football coach at the University of Maryland 38 The following year he was replaced by Jim Tatum a pioneer of the split T Maryland football achieved its greatest success under Tatum who compiled a 73 15 4 record without a single losing season and to date he remains the winningest Maryland coach of the modern era 39 NCAA recognized selectors awarded Maryland the national football championship in 1951 and 1953 40 During Tatum s tenure from 1946 to 1955 Maryland also secured one Southern Conference championship and two Atlantic Coast Conference championships 39 In 1962 Darryl Hill transferred to Maryland from the United States Naval Academy making the school the first team in the Atlantic Coast Conference with a black player 41 Jerry Claiborne became head coach in 1972 and led Maryland to three consecutive ACC championships from 1974 to 1976 The Terrapins finished the 1976 regular season with an undefeated 11 0 record but lost to Houston in the Cotton Bowl Classic which ended national championship speculation 42 Bobby Ross replaced Claiborne in 1982 and he repeated the feat of three consecutive ACC championships from 1983 to 1985 In 1984 Maryland quarterback Frank Reich led the Terrapins to the then greatest halftime comeback against the defending national champions Miami 43 After a long bowl game drought Ralph Friedgen was hired as head coach in 2001 and in his first season led Maryland to the ACC championship and its first Bowl Championship Series game appearance 44 The football program has secured two NCAA recognized national championships nine ACC championships two Southern Conference championships eleven consensus All America honors and twenty four bowl game appearances Maryland possesses the third most ACC championships with nine which places them behind Clemson 13 and Florida State 12 Many former Terrapins players and coaches have gone on to careers in professional football including 15 first round NFL Draft picks 39 National Champions 1951 1953 Undefeated Regular Seasons 1893 1951 1953 1955 1976 Conference Champions 1937 1951 1953 1955 1974 1976 1983 1985 2001 Bowl Appearances 1947 1949 1951 1953 1955 1973 1978 1980 1982 1985 1990 2001 2003 2006 2008 2010 2013 2014 2016 2021 Men s lacrosse edit Main article Maryland Terrapins men s lacrosse The Terrapins men s lacrosse team is one of the most tradition rich in all of collegiate lacrosse having advanced to 14 NCAA Championship games since its inception in 1971 winning the title in 1973 1975 and 2017 The Terrapins lacrosse tradition traces back even further with eight Wingate Memorial Trophies between 1936 and 1970 As members of the Atlantic Coast Conference the school won a record league record 25 championships Since joining the Big Ten Conference in 2014 Maryland has won five Big Ten championships and three Big Ten tournament championships National Champions 1928 1936 37 1939 40 1955 56 1959 1967 1973 1975 2017 2022 NCAA Finals 1971 1973 76 1979 1995 1997 98 2011 12 2015 17 2021 22 NCAA Final Fours 1971 79 1983 1987 1989 1991 1995 1997 98 2003 2005 06 2011 12 2014 2018 2021 22 NCAA Tournament Appearances 1971 76 1978 79 1981 83 1986 87 1989 1991 98 2000 01 2003 19 2021 22 Conference Champions 1957 61 1963 1965 68 1972 74 1976 80 1985 1987 1989 1998 2001 2003 04 2009 2013 18 2021 22 Conference Tournament Champions 1998 2004 05 2011 2016 17 2021 22 Women s lacrosse edit Main article Maryland Terrapins women s lacrosse The Maryland Terrapins women s lacrosse team has won 15 national championships the most of any program in the nation 45 The team has produced the National Player of the Year Tewaaraton Award winner eight times more than any other collegiate program 46 The Terrapins have also made the most NCAA tournament appearances won the most tournament games and made the most NCAA championship game appearances of any program 47 National Champions 1981 1986 1992 1995 2001 2010 2014 2015 2017 2019 NCAA Final Fours 1984 1986 1990 2001 2003 2009 2019 NCAA Tournament Appearances 1983 1987 1990 2019 2021 Conference Champions 1997 1999 2001 2003 2007 2011 2013 2019 Conference Tournament Champions 1997 1999 2001 2003 2009 2014 2016 18 Men s soccer edit Main article Maryland Terrapins men s soccer The Maryland Terrapins men s soccer team has won four NCAA Division I College Cup national championships most recently in 2018 48 Under the guidance of head coach Sasho Cirovski the soccer team has reached nine Final Fours and won three College Cups since 1997 The soccer team has developed a large devoted fan base among students and the local community The attendance record at Ludwig Field was set in 2015 when 8 449 fans saw Maryland win over top ranked UCLA in extra time 49 The annual total attendance increased dramatically from 12 710 in 1995 to 35 631 in 2008 50 NCAA National Champions 1968 2005 2008 2018 NCAA College Cups 1960 1962 1963 1968 1969 1998 2002 2005 2008 2012 2013 2018 NCAA Tournament Appearances 1959 1964 1967 1971 1973 1976 1986 1994 1999 2001 2020 Conference Champions 1949 1951 1953 1968 1971 2012 2014 2016 2022 Conference Tournament Champions 1996 2002 2008 2010 2012 2016 Softball edit Main article Maryland Terrapins softball The Terrapins softball team began play in 1995 The team has made four NCAA Tournament appearances in 1999 2010 2011 and 2012 The current head coach is Julie Wright Wrestling edit Prior to joining the Big Ten in 2014 the Terrapins wrestling team won more ACC team championships than any other school in the conference winning their 24th ACC title in 2012 The 2012 ACC championship is the Terps fourth in the past five years Maryland has finished in the top 20 at the NCAA Championships each year since the 2010 season and produced multiple all Americans since 2009 a school record Two time NCAA champion and two time Olympian Kerry McCoy was head coach for eleven years until 2019 The XFINITY Center is the arena for the Terrapin Wrestling team 51 Maryland has had over 200 ACC Champions 2 NCAA National Champions and 18 NCAA All Americans In 2010 Hudson Taylor became Maryland s first three time all American with his fourth place finish at 197 pounds Spencer Myers became Maryland s first freshman in 2011 when he earned all American status with his sixth place finish at heavyweight The first wrestling team started in 1940 competed in the Southern Conference with Paul McNeil becoming the Terps first champion that same year at 175 pounds 52 In 2014 Jimmy Sheptock had one of the greatest runs in Maryland wrestling history with a 32 1 record ACC Championship and the first Maryland wrestler to obtain a number one seed at the NCAA Championships where he was runner up to Ed Ruth The Maryland wrestling team was dominant in the ACC throughout the 1950s and 1960s and returned to claim two more conference titles in the late 2000s 53 However in its first season in the Big Ten Maryland failed to win a Big Ten dual meet After 13 tries Maryland finally won its first Big Ten dual meet January 10 2016 against Michigan State In April 2019 former Edinboro wrestler and Missouri assistant Alex Clemsen was named head coach During the 2022 23 season a 4 0 start that included an upset of Pittsburgh gave the Terrapins their first win against a ranked opponent and national ranking for the first time since 2013 when Maryland was in the ACC Notable non varsity sports editFigure skating edit The Maryland Figure Skating Club began at UMD in 2004 and became a club sport in 2007 The club comprises three teams a freestyle team and two synchronized skating teams All teams compete in and out of region through the United States Figure Skating Association 54 The Maryland Terrapins Black are the reigning 2018 Eastern Sectional Champions in the Open Collegiate divisionSkaters from across the three teams have by invitation performed demonstrations for a variety of publications most recently being featured in the Washington Post ter ps FigSkateWaPo Rugby edit The Maryland Terrapins rugby team was founded in 1968 Maryland s best season was 1985 when Maryland played in the national championship final losing 31 6 to Cal See National Collegiate Rugby Championship results Maryland plays in the Atlantic Coast Rugby League a conference formed in 2011 along with other Atlantic Coast Conference schools The Terps are led by head coach Jeff Soeken who was a three time All American when he played rugby for Maryland 55 Maryland was the champion of the league s inaugural 2011 season defeating North Carolina 39 32 in the title match 56 Maryland repeated as Atlantic Coast champion again in 2012 defeating Clemson Maryland placed 10th in the 2012 Collegiate Rugby Championship CRC notching wins against Penn State and Oklahoma 57 The CRC is the highest profile college rugby tournament in the country held at PPL Park in Philadelphia and broadcast live on NBC 58 Maryland reached the semifinals of the 2012 ACI 7s tournament in Blacksburg 59 Traditions editRivalries edit Virginia Cavaliers Given their proximity and history in the Atlantic Coast Conference there has been a longstanding multi sport border rivalry with the Virginia Cavaliers Matchups in men s basketball football soccer and lacrosse have historically been the hottest matchups in the rivalry Several factors contribute to the intensity of the rivalry The two states and their eponymous flagship universities based in Charlottesville Virginia and College Park Maryland respectively share close historical and cultural ties The schools are located in relatively close geographic proximity separated by about 129 miles 208 km Due in large part to this proximity the schools aggressively compete for recruits in the Mid Atlantic region 60 Former Maryland coach Ralph Friedgen expressed the importance of the rivalry by stating It s a potential rivalry in every sport we play They re border states We compete for students not just athletes 61 The two are both long time members of the Atlantic Coast Conference with Maryland becoming a founding member in 1953 and Virginia joining later in that same year When the conference reorganized in 2005 Maryland and Virginia were placed in separate divisions but designated as cross divisional rivals that continue to meet annually The intensity of the rivalry is increased by a long history in the series of comebacks shutouts and spoilers that prevented one team from securing a conference championship or bowl game appearance From the 1920s until 1945 the teams competed for the Tydings Trophy named for former politician and Maryland alum Millard Tydings who had several friends amongst the professors at Virginia In 2003 the schools discussed reviving the trophy tradition but it was ultimately rejected by Virginia due to concerns over the reorganization of the ACC 60 Before and after their meeting in 2010 players from both schools attributed the importance of the game to the negative feelings the programs have for each other Virginia center Anthony Mihota said I guess it s because we don t like them very much Something about them that gets under our skin 62 After Maryland s victory Terp linebacker Adrian Moten commented This was a big win in the rivalry They hate us We hate them 63 The high academic standing of the University of Virginia in a national publication has added to the competitiveness between the two In 2003 University of Maryland president C D Mote asserted that in academic terms Virginia was highly overrated these days U S News amp World Report places them at the top of the pile with Berkeley which is ridiculous Mote further stated that students from the state of Maryland paying a higher tuition cost to attend the University of Virginia don t know any better 64 While the University of Virginia president John Casteen said such remarks can be taken out of context Virginia board of visitors member William H Goodwin responded in The Cavalier Daily I certainly think a college president should have more class but you have to expect that from Maryland 64 65 The rivalry has cooled since the Terrapins joined the Big Ten but the schools have still met occasionally The two schools have met in the ACC Big Ten Challenge in men s basketball and at Audi Field for men s soccer in 2018 and 2019 Virginia eliminated Maryland in the NCAA baseball 2015 and men s lacrosse tournaments 2019 en route to Cavalier titles which has deepened the animosity between the two schools The football programs are set to meet again in 2023 and 2024 West Virginia Mountaineers Maryland has a historic football rivalry with the neighboring West Virginia Mountaineers While this has traditionally been a non conference rivalry it is usually regarded as a high quality non conference matchup early in the season It has historically been very competitive with the Mountaineers leading the all time series 28 23 2 Duke Blue Devils The nature of the rivalry between Duke and Maryland is not viewed in the same manner by the schools respective fans While the Duke UNC rivalry originated from geographic proximity and shared history Duke fans do not view Maryland as a rival 66 However several former Duke players have cited Maryland as the team against whom they played their most exciting games Maryland fans traditionally see the Duke game as the biggest game of the year Maryland fans have rioted in College Park after home games regardless of the outcome Famously one fan threw a bottle and hit Carlos Boozer s mother in her head after Duke s remarkable comeback from a 10 point deficit in the final minute to beat Maryland requiring the University of Maryland to issue a public apology One year most fans in the student section right behind the basket had to leave or turn their t shirts inside out because they had a FCC banned explicative F K DUKE that could not be shown on television Michael Wilbon a sports journalist who works for ESPN was formerly a writer for The Washington Post and owns a home in Bethesda Maryland refers to the Duke Maryland rivalry as o ne of the best rivalries in one of the best basketball leagues in the country 67 68 69 70 71 72 In 2014 the Washington Post produced a short documentary on the peak of the rivalry from 2001 and 2002 which included interviews with Coach Williams and several former players from both teams 73 Navy Midshipmen While the two teams have only met 21 times Maryland and Navy are the state s only two FBS Football playing programs and have irregularly played in a matchup dubbed the Crab Bowl Classic The Midshipmen lead the all time football series 14 7 Potential Big Ten Rivalries Since joining the Big Ten there has been the potential for rivalries to develop with Penn State and Rutgers two schools in neighboring states While the matchup with Penn State has been traditionally one sided in favor of the Nittany Lions and the series with Rutgers is still relatively new either school could end up becoming a rival due to proximity See also College rivalry United States and Category Maryland Terrapins rivalries Songs and chants edit Victory Song The Maryland Victory Song was written in 1928 by Thornton W Allen It is played frequently during Terp Basketball and Football games During Football games it is played after every touchdown the Terps score regardless of whether the team is winning or losing celebrating the immediate victory of accomplishment Ironically the Victory song is played even after defeat During the M A R Y L A N D section of the victory song Terrapins fans show their clenched fists and alternate pumping them in the air beginning with their right fist on the M and alternating between left and right with each letter of the MARYLAND The motion resembles someone climbing a ladder 74 Alma Mater amp Fight Song Other official school songs include the school s Alma Mater and Fight Song Each of these are played at every home football game during the pregame festivities 75 Hey You Suck A popular saying among the students at Maryland is a simple Hey You Suck directed at opponents Students have incorporated the phrase into Gary Glitter s popular sports anthem Rock and Roll Part Two often referred to as the Hey Song Sometime in the early 2000s then football coach Ralph Friedgen asked that the song not be played at football games Friedgen had never liked hearing the song since his return to College Park in 2001 and added that it hurt his recruiting efforts 76 In 2004 basketball coach Gary Williams followed Friedgen s lead and asked that the song not be played at basketball games either While he personally liked the song he d come to believe that it didn t help his team win games More importantly for Williams he d received a number of complaints from parents and grandparents who did not feel that the chant was appropriate 77 However the students have continued to sing the song without the band s support Before each basketball game and after every touchdown at football games the crowd sings the song a cappella An alternative version which grew out of the Duke Maryland basketball rivalry replaces the phrase You Suck with Fuck Duke Students would often use the alternate phrase during games against teams other than Duke and have continued the tradition in the Big Ten Conference even though the school no longer plays Duke citation needed Football and basketball edit Key Plays At football games in addition to making noise to throw off the opposing team s offense Terp fans will also shake their keys to signify urgency Key Plays This often happens during 3rd down plays when Maryland is on defense 74 Fist Pump At the beginning of each men s basketball game during his tenure Maryland Coach Gary Williams would pump his fist to signify a good game 74 Midnight Madness Midnight Madness was originally started by Maryland Head Coach Lefty Driesell in 1970 Midnight Madness is held at the earliest time the Men s Basketball Team can practice which used to be midnight on the first day of practice Students would attend the practice and over the years it has evolved into a circus like atmosphere including light shows magic shows the mascot trampoline challenge skits food beverage and other fanfare Recently Maryland and some other schools have moved the start of Midnight Madness to earlier in the day generally around 7 o clock with permission of the NCAA This is to encourage more families and fans who aren t even students to attend the event As a result of this change Midnight Madness has been rebranded as Maryland Madness 74 Newspaper Shaking Maryland students attempt to read the newspaper as the opposing team is being introduced They shake the paper as the visiting team is introduced 74 Other sport traditions edit The Crew The Crew is a group of men s soccer fans They generally sit behind the goal the opposing team is defending switching sides at halftime and berate the opposing goalie referring to him by formal given name Members of the Crew often travel to away games to continue to support their Terps The Crew also organize activities to join the soccer environment 74 The Turgeonites The Turgeonites are a group of students who dress in a suit and tie with a gray streak through their hair emulating head men s basketball coach Mark Turgeon They can be seen in the student section behind the Maryland bench during every home game Championships editNCAA team championships edit The University of Maryland has won 32 NCAA team national championships 26 while a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference 78 Men s 9 Basketball 1 2002 Lacrosse 4 1973 1975 2017 2022 Soccer 4 1968 co champions 2005 2008 2018 Women s 23 Basketball 1 2006 Field Hockey 8 1987 1993 1999 2005 2006 2008 2010 2011 Lacrosse 14 1986 1992 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2010 2014 2015 2017 2019 See also List of NCAA schools with the most NCAA Division I championships Big Ten Conference NCAA national team championships Other national team championships edit Below are 23 national team titles that were not bestowed by the NCAA Men s Football 1 1953 79 Lacrosse 9 1928 80 1936 1937 1939 1940 1955 1956 1959 1967 Rifle 4 1947 1949 1953 1954 Women s Cheerleading 7 1999 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2013 Rifle 1 1932 Lacrosse 1 1981 See also List of Big Ten Conference National ChampionshipsHall of Fame editMain article University of Maryland Athletic Hall of FameMaryland Sports Radio Network editCity Call Sign Frequency Baltimore Maryland WJZ AM 1300 AM Baltimore Maryland WJZ FM 105 7 FM Cambridge Maryland WCEM AM 1240 AM Cumberland Maryland WCMD AM 1230 AM Frederick Maryland WFMD AM 930 AM Hagerstown Maryland WARK AM 1490 AM Lexington Park Maryland WPTX AM 1690 AM Oakland Maryland WMSG AM 1050 AM Pocomoke City Maryland WGOP AM 540 AM Pocomoke City Maryland WGOP FM 100 7 FM Pocomoke City Maryland WBEY FM 97 9 FM Prince Frederick Maryland WDCJ 92 7 FM Salisbury Maryland WTGM AM 960 AM Washington D C WTEM AM 980 AMSee also edit nbsp Maryland portal List of college athletic programs in MarylandReferences edit Color The University of Maryland Brand Retrieved July 9 2022 Testudo Tale of the Top Shell UMTerps com April 4 2013 Retrieved July 13 2018 School Colors Maryland Terrapins July 7 2018 Retrieved July 13 2018 Sandys Toni February 10 2008 After Losing Black Jerseys Terrapins Go for the Gold Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved April 24 2020 University of Maryland and Rutgers University Become Official Members of Big Ten Conference Press release Big Ten Conference July 1 2014 Archived from the original on June 26 2016 Retrieved January 25 2017 David Ungrady Tales from the Maryland Terrapins 2003 pp 3 4 Sports Publishing LLC K Adam Powell Border Wars The First Fifty Years of Atlantic Coast Conference Football p xvi Scarecrow Press 2004 ISBN 0 8108 4839 2 Seven Major Dixie Colleges Break Away From Bulky Southern Conference Sarasota Herald Tribune May 9 1953 Seven Southern Colleges Join New Athletic League The Hartford Courant June 15 1953 University of Maryland cuts 7 sports teams saves men s outdoor track si com Archived from the original on December 25 2012 Retrieved October 5 2012 Prewitt Alex November 19 2012 Maryland moving to Big Ten The Washington Post Retrieved November 19 2012 Paul McMullen Maryland Basketball Tales from Cole Field House p 2 JHU Press 2002 ISBN 0 8018 7221 9 Johnny Holliday Stephen Moore John Feinstein Hoops Tales Maryland Terrapins Men s Basketball p 149 Globe Pequot 2006 ISBN 0 7627 3990 8 Ungrady p 82 Catching Up With former Bullet Gene Shue The Baltimore Sun December 3 2009 Holliday et al p 151 a b Lefty Driesell Coaching Record Sports Reference retrieved June 8 2011 Milestones in Driesell s Career The Washington Post October 30 1986 He made midnight a time for madness The college basketball tradition that resumes tonight began in 1971 with Maryland s Lefty Driesell St Petersburg Times October 13 2006 Davis Seth The story how Lefty Driesell started Midnight Madness at Maryland SI com Retrieved May 23 2017 College basketball Midnight Madness 2016 times and dates NCAA com October 20 2016 Retrieved May 23 2017 Midnight Madness MSU s Tom Izzo trades in HOF jacket for lab coat Detroit Free Press Retrieved May 23 2017 College basketball UNC Kentucky kick off seasons with Midnight Madness style events NCAA com October 14 2016 Retrieved May 23 2017 Terps attain two of their three goals set by coach Driesell The Free Lance Star March 27 1972 Classic 1974 NC State Maryland ACC title clash hits 40 year mark FOX Sports FOX Sports March 12 2014 Retrieved May 23 2017 The Greatest College Basketball Game Ever Played home earthlink net Archived from the original on May 2 2016 Retrieved May 23 2017 StateFans March 9 2009 35th Anniversary of Greatest College Game Ever Played StateFans Nation Retrieved May 23 2017 40 Years Later It Might Still Be Best College Hoops Game Played Retrieved May 23 2017 This overtime lasts 25 years tribunedigital baltimoresun Retrieved May 23 2017 Driesell Keeps Perspective Star News March 10 1984 Cavadi Wayne January 3 2020 These 5 college programs have the most field hockey championships NCAA com NCAA Retrieved April 29 2021 Staff Baltimore Sun Maryland field hockey falls to North Carolina 2 0 in NCAA title game baltimoresun com Archived from the original on February 24 2019 Retrieved February 23 2019 Ungrady pp 4 6 Ungrady p 10 Harry Clifton Byrd papers Archived June 23 2012 at Archive It University of Maryland Libraries retrieved July 4 2010 Ungrady p 15 Ungrady p 24 Football s Supercoach Time September 29 1980 a b c Year by Year Results Archived March 20 2009 at the Wayback Machine PDF 2008 Maryland Football Media Guide University of Maryland 2008 Past Division I Football Bowl Subdivision Division I FBS National Champions National Collegiate Athletic Association retrieved December 1 2008 Tom D Angelo Barriers made to be broken The Palm Beach Post October 25 2006 Cotton Bowl Foes Arrive The New York Times December 27 1976 This Day in History November 10 1984 Maryland gets a miracle in Miami Archived February 11 2010 at the Wayback Machine The History Channel retrieved September 6 2009 Terps Bowled Over by Gators Maryland s Uplifting Season Ends With Orange Bowl Defeat 56 23 The Washington Post p A01 January 3 2002 Chester Michella June 26 2020 Maryland women s lacrosse championships A complete history NCAA com NCAA Retrieved April 28 2021 The best of Maryland athletics in the 2010s The Diamondback December 31 2019 Retrieved April 28 2021 Meyer Justin January 6 2021 Who Has the Most Women s College Lacrosse Championships Lacrosse All Stars Retrieved April 28 2021 Bryant Victor Maryland wins its fourth men s soccer national championship by beating Akron 1 0 on second half penalty kick baltimoresun com Archived from the original on February 24 2019 Retrieved February 23 2019 No 6 Maryland men s soccer takes down No 1 UCLA in extra time NCAA com September 4 2015 Archived from the original on November 7 2017 Retrieved November 5 2017 Maryland Men s Soccer NCAA Tournament History Archived from the original on May 16 2011 Retrieved December 6 2010 Terrapin Wrestling Information University of Maryland Athletics Retrieved February 10 2014 Kyle John celebrates his 157 pound 2012 ACC title permanent dead link Maryland Athletics University of Maryland Official Athletic Site Wrestling Umterps com Archived from the original on March 29 2012 Retrieved April 23 2012 Maryland Figure Skating Club umd orgsync com Retrieved October 30 2017 Maryland Rugby The Atlantic Coast Rugby League 2011 All ACRL Teams announced April 21 2011 Rugby Mag Tanifum Steals the Show at CRC June 6 2012 Tanifum Steals the Show at CRC Archived from the original on September 23 2012 Retrieved June 7 2012 15 Teams Invited to 2012 CRC November 3 2011 RugbyMag com Retrieved January 16 2018 Virginia Tech Wins ACI Opener September 13 2012 RugbyMag com Archived from the original on September 24 2012 Retrieved January 16 2018 a b Eric Prisbell No Common Ground They Battle for Position in the ACC They Compete for Recruits Most of All Maryland and Virginia Fight Just to Beat Each Other The Washington Post November 13 2003 Rick Snider Maryland Virginia seeking KO punch The Washington Times November 13 2003 Kurtz Hank Jr November 12 2010 There s no love lost between Cavaliers and Terps USA Today Associated Press Retrieved November 14 2010 Prisbell Eric November 13 2010 Maryland football defeats Virginia stays alive in ACC race The Washington Post Retrieved November 14 2010 a b Doug Doughty Cavs Terrapins a textbook rivalry The Roanoke Times November 14 2003 Manese lee Angela October 27 2003 UMD President University overrated The Cavalier Daily Anya Sostek Duke Maryland rivalry means much more to Terps fans The Chronicle January 11 2000 Michael Wilbon Maryland Duke rivalry continues to be one of the best in college basketball The Washington Post March 4 2010 Saperstein Craig January 16 2002 Upon further review Duke Maryland The best rivalry for now Duke Chronicle Retrieved December 31 2018 Paul Doran Duke Maryland resume rivalry University Wire 17 January 2002 Duke Maryland rivalry means much more to Terps fans University Wire 12 January 2000 Tom Sorenson Naked truth This rivalry still has sizzle The Charlotte Observer 6 February 2003 Jay Bilas Duke Maryland needs respect ESPN Insider 11 February 2005 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Two years two titles and the peak of a rivalry YouTube a b c d e f Athletic Traditions University of Maryland Archived from the original on August 20 2010 Retrieved September 8 2010 Traditional Songs University of Maryland Archived from the original on December 4 2010 Retrieved September 8 2010 Justin Fenton September 30 2004 Maryland Sportsmanship Committee Reverses Decision The Diamondback Archived from the original on June 28 2011 Justin Fenton October 1 2004 And The Band Didn t Play On The Diamondback Archived from the original on June 28 2011 Championships summary through Jan 1 2022 PDF National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA Archived PDF from the original on March 20 2014 Retrieved February 25 2015 FBS Football NCAA com Retrieved October 30 2017 Scott Bob 1976 Lacrosse Technique and Tradition The Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 2060 X External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to University of Maryland athletics Official website nbsp Women s Athletics collection at the University of Maryland Libraries Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Maryland Terrapins amp oldid 1220124873, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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