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Maryland Terrapins men's basketball

The Maryland Terrapins men's basketball team represents the University of Maryland in National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I competition. Maryland, a founding member of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC), left the ACC in 2014 to join the Big Ten Conference. Gary Williams, who coached the Terrapins from 1989 to 2011, led the program to its greatest success, including two consecutive Final Fours in 2001 and 2002, which culminated in the 2002 NCAA National Championship. Maryland has appeared in 30 NCAA tournaments and won their conference tournament 4 times. The Terrapins have competed in 100 seasons, accumulating an overall record of 1,641–1,086 as of the 2022–23 season. Maryland is currently coached by Kevin Willard.

Maryland Terrapins
UniversityUniversity of Maryland
First season1904
All-time record1,642–1,088 (.601)
Athletic directorDamon Evans
Head coachKevin Willard (2nd season)
ConferenceBig Ten
LocationCollege Park, Maryland
ArenaXfinity Center
(Capacity: 17,950)
NicknameTerps
Student sectionThe Wall
ColorsRed, white, gold, and black[1]
       
Uniforms
Home
Away
Alternate
NCAA tournament champions
2002
NCAA tournament Final Four
2001, 2002
NCAA tournament Elite Eight
1973, 1975, 2001, 2002
NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen
1958, 1973, 1975, 1980, 1984, 1985, 1994, 1995, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2016
NCAA tournament round of 32
1985, 1986, 1988*, 1994, 1995, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2015, 2016, 2019, 2021, 2023
NCAA tournament appearances
1958, 1973, 1975, 1980, 1981, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1988*, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2019, 2021, 2023
*vacated by NCAA
Conference tournament champions
1931, 1958, 1984, 2004
Conference regular season champions
1932, 1975, 1980, 1995, 2002, 2010, 2020

The Terrapins played in what many consider to be the greatest Atlantic Coast Conference game in history — and one of the greatest college basketball games ever[2][3] — the championship of the 1974 ACC men's basketball tournament, in which they lost 103–100 in overtime to eventual national champion North Carolina State. The game was instrumental in forcing the expansion of the NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship, thus allowing for at-large bids and the inclusion of more than one team per conference. That Maryland team, with six future NBA draft picks, is considered by many to be the greatest team not to have participated in the NCAA tournament.[4]

History edit

Early years – the H. Burton Shipley era edit

Before basketball became a permanent fixture in College Park, the school—then known as Maryland Agricultural College—met with little success in its intermittent attempts to establish a basketball team. A team first appeared in 1904–05, playing only two games in an intramural/club setting. Games were played sporadically during the 1910–1911, 1912–13, 1913–1914, and the 1918–1919 seasons, going a combined 7–36. Basketball returned to stay for the 1923–24 season, when the school convinced former star quarterback H. Burton Shipley, who had been coaching at the University of Delaware, to come back to his alma mater. The Old Liners, as they were then known, joined the Southern Conference in their inaugural season. The team met with moderate success that year at 5–7 and also played its first games against future ACC rivals North Carolina and Virginia. The Old Liners had their first sustained success over the next four seasons, finishing at or above .500 in each of them and putting together an outstanding 24–9 record against Southern Conference foes. The Aggies also played their first games against what would become their two other biggest rivals in the future during that time, North Carolina State and Duke.

The school's biggest success during its formative years took place in the early 1930s, around the time it adopted its current nickname, Terrapins. After finishing second in the conference in 1930–31, Maryland won the Southern Conference tournaments, beating Louisiana State, North Carolina, Georgia, and Kentucky over five days, a feat they followed by winning the conference regular season crown the next year. The team also had its first individual star in Louis "Bosey" Berger who was named to All-America teams both seasons. It was during this stretch that the school erected a new home for its basketball teams, Ritchie Coliseum, which housed the team until Cole Field House replaced it a quarter of a century later.

Although the team would remain competitive throughout the rest of the decade, finishing as high as second in the conference regular season, it never again matched its achievements of the early part of the decade, and as the 1940s began, the school's basketball team fell on exceedingly hard times. Shipley tallied just one winning season in his last seven years before stepping down to focus on coaching the baseball team, a post he'd held for his entire tenure since returning to College Park. He was succeeded by Flucie Stewart. In what would become a long-running pattern at Maryland when a long-tenured head coach stepped down, Stewart would not last very long, putting together three losing seasons in three tries during his brief time at Maryland.

The Bud Millikan era and the ACC edit

The 1950s began with a new head coach leading the way, Bud Millikan. A disciple of legendary coach Henry Iba, Millikan's emphasis on defense and fundamentals would become hallmarks of the program over the next two decades. Maryland quickly reeled off seven straight winning seasons under Millikan. For the 1953–54 season, the team joined North Carolina, North Carolina State, Duke, Wake Forest, Virginia, Clemson, and South Carolina in leaving the SoCon for the newly formed Atlantic Coast Conference. That season was perhaps the finest the Terrapins had experienced to date, finishing with a 23–7 record and a conference mark good enough for second in the league. Maryland experienced its first games as a ranked team, spending the final nine weeks of the season ranked in the AP Top 20, peaking at No. 11 before settling for a final ranking of #20. It also featured the school's first win over a ranked team when it beat local rival George Washington, then-number 7 in the country. The team was led by its second All-American, Gene Shue, who was honored in both that season and the prior year.

After that season, the team remained the only school outside of the North Carolina "Big Four" – Duke, UNC, North Carolina State, and Wake Forest – to consistently field competitive teams. In the ACC's second year, the Terps cracked the top ten for the first time, peaking at No. 6 in January before eventually finishing the season with a disappointing one-point loss to Virginia in the ACC tournament quarterfinal round.

The Terps had another breakout season during the 1957–58 season. After a good regular season (17–6, 4th in the ACC), Maryland stunned the league by winning the ACC tournament, including wins over #6 Duke and #13 North Carolina on back to back days to capture the title as well as the league's berth in the NCAA tournament. The team routed Boston College 86–63 at Madison Square Garden with just two days of rest after the ACC tournament, advancing to the East Regionals in Charlotte. The Terps lost a tight game to Temple in the round of 16 before beating Manhattan in the consolation game to secure third place in the East.

That would be the high-water mark for the Terps under Millikan. They experienced their first losing season under the coach the next season, although they did manage to finish third in the ACC, including its first ever win over a #1 ranked team when it beat North Carolina 69–51 in Cole Field House on February 21. By 1962–63, the bottom had dropped out and the Terps finished just 3–11 in the ACC, next to last in the standings. While Millikan managed to turn the program around in the mid-1960s, finishing in a second place tie in 1964–65 and above .500 overall again the next season, the feeling in College Park was that the game had passed the coach by, and he was replaced after the following season by assistant Frank Fellows. Fellows' tenure lasted just two seasons, both of which featured only eight wins.

The Lefty Driesell era edit

In 1969, Charles "Lefty" Driesell was hired by the University of Maryland. During his introductory press conference, he made the bold statement that he wanted to make Maryland the "UCLA of the East". At that time, UCLA was the nation's dominant college basketball program. While Driesell did not elevate Maryland to UCLA's heights, he did lead 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. Maryland also attained a No. 2 Associated Press ranking during four consecutive seasons from 1972 to 1976.

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. In 1974, he signed perhaps the best college prospect of his career, future basketball Hall of Famer Moses Malone, but Malone chose instead to go to a professional basketball franchise, the Utah Stars. Malone was the first player in the modern era to proceed directly from high school into professional basketball, deciding on the day classes were scheduled to begin.

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.[5] The event soon became a tradition to build excitement for the basketball team's upcoming season.

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".

On July 12, 1973, Driesell saved the lives of at least ten children from several burning buildings. He and two other men were surf fishing around midnight in Bethany Beach, Delaware when he saw flames coming from a seashore resort. Driesell broke down a door and rescued several children from the fire that eventually destroyed four townhouses. An eyewitness, Prince George's County circuit court Judge Samuel Meloy, said, "Let's face it, Driesell was a hero. There were no injuries and it was a miracle because firemen didn't come for at least 30 minutes." Driesell said, "Don't build me up as any kind of hero. All we did was try to get the kids out. It was just lucky that we were fishing right in front of the houses."[6] For these actions, Driesell was awarded the NCAA Award of Valor.

In 1974, the No. 4 Terrapins played in what many consider one of the greatest college basketball games of all time, losing the ACC men's basketball tournament 103–100 in overtime to eventual national champion and No. 1 North Carolina State. Each team only played seven players each, and eight of those 14 went on to be NBA Draft picks, including six from Maryland. The game included 91 field goals made on 157 attempts between the teams, in spite of top-level defense being played. "We didn't score 100 points or they didn't because we were sorry defensive teams. (N.C. State) had a 7-foot-4 center" in Tommy Burleson, said Lefty Driesell. "We had (Len) Elmore, who was one of the best shot-blockers ever to play in the league."[7] After the game, the Greensboro, N.C. crowd, traditionally unfriendly to non-North Carolina ACC teams, gave both teams a standing ovation. After the loss, Maryland declined an invitation to the NIT. Maryland's team was considered by many to be the greatest team not to have participated in the NCAA tournament because, at the time, only the winner of a conference tournament would earn a bid. It was Maryland's exclusion that finally forced an expansion to allow at-large bids and more than one team per conference.

Driesell's legacy will forever be tied to one of Maryland's greatest players and one of the best college basketball players of all time, Len Bias, who played under Driesell from 1982 to 1986. As a freshman, Bias was viewed as "raw and undisciplined", but ultimately developed into an All-American player who impressed basketball fans with his amazing leaping ability, his physical stature and his ability to create plays, and was considered one of the most dynamic players in the nation. In 1984, Driesell and Bias led the team to the school's second ACC tournament Championship. In Bias's junior year, he led the ACC in scoring, was named the ACC Player of the Year, and was a consensus second-team All-American while averaging 18.9 points and 6.8 rebounds per game. His senior season was highlighted by his performance in an overtime victory against top-ranked North Carolina in which he scored 35 points, including 7 in the last 3 minutes of regulation and 4 in overtime. At the end of the year, Bias collected his second ACC Player of the Year award and was a consensus first-team All American while averaging 23.2 points and 7 rebounds per game. Scouts from various NBA teams viewed Bias as the most complete forward in the class of 1986 and was widely considered to be of equal talent to Michael Jordan, who played at North Carolina from 1981 to 1984.[8] "Over the years, you've heard a lot of people say it was that jumper that separated him from Michael Jordan — and could have potentially made him a better player than Jordan in the pros," said Keith Gatlin, who was the starting point guard on the school's 1985-1986 team and lived with Bias.[9] Together, Bias and Driesell made four straight NCAA tournaments, making the Sweet 16 in 1984 and 1985.

On June 19, 1986, Bias tragically died of a cocaine-induced heart attack shortly after being drafted by the Boston Celtics as the No. 2 overall selection. An investigation revealed that Bias was 21 credits short of the graduation requirement despite having used all his athletic eligibility. In October, a university panel found that the basketball staff had stressed athletics over academics. On October 29, Driesell resigned as head coach and took a position as an assistant athletic director. He also worked as a television analyst during college basketball games. Some members of the media widely described Driesell as a scapegoat of chancellor John B. Slaughter and the university administration.[10][11]

In 2018, Coach Driesell was finally inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.[12]

Top of the mountain: the Gary Williams era edit

The Maryland Terrapins announced Maryland alumnus Gary Williams as its next head coach on June 13, 1989. The basketball program and the Maryland athletic program as a whole were still reeling from the aftershock of the 1986 death of Maryland basketball star Len Bias and struggles under coach Bob Wade, a former high school coach from Baltimore. Williams was coming off a successful stint at Ohio State featuring one NCAA tournament appearance and two NIT appearances in three seasons. Williams played for Maryland as the starting point guard under coach Bud Millikan. He was a member of the 1966 Charlotte Invitational Tournament championship team and the 1965 Sugar Bowl Tournament championship team. He set a Maryland record for field goal percentage, going 8-for-8 from the field in an ACC game against South Carolina in 1966. (35 years later a Williams pupil, Lonny Baxter, would break that record, hitting all ten of his field goal attempts.) Williams was the Maryland team captain in 1967. He graduated in 1968 with a B.S. in marketing.

Williams coached the 1989–90 squad to a respectable 18–13 record and an NIT berth. However, in March 1990, the NCAA imposed harsh sanctions on the school for several violations, mostly dating to the Wade era. Maryland was banned from postseason play in 1991 and 1992, and was kicked off live television for 1990–91. Additionally, Maryland docked itself several scholarships over two years. With his recruiting efforts severely hamstrung, Williams found it very difficult to rebuild the program. However, with the help of Walt Williams, Maryland stayed competitive through a low point of the program's history.

After a surprise appearance in the 1994 Sweet 16, the Terrapins were a fixture in the national rankings until 2005. Maryland's teams during this era featured future NBA players such as Joe Smith, Steve Francis, Šarūnas Jasikevičius, Juan Dixon, Steve Blake, Lonny Baxter, Terence Morris, and Chris Wilcox, and a cast of supportive role players, exemplified by Byron Mouton.

In 2001, Williams led Maryland to the first Final Four in school history, losing to Duke in the semifinals despite leading by as much as 22 points in the first half and being up by 11 at half. Maryland fans largely attribute the loss to several controversial fouls that limited the Terps' defense, including a phantom fifth foul on Lonnie Baxter with 2:48 remaining. The Final Four loss to Duke was the fourth meeting between the two schools during the season, which included each team winning on the other's home court. Duke's win at Cole Field House is known as the "Gone in 54 Seconds" game, after Duke came back to win despite being down 10 points with under a minute left. The Terps got their revenge by winning on Shane Battier's senior night at Cameron Indoor Stadium before losing to Duke by two points in the ACC tournament semifinals on a tip-in shot with 1.3 seconds remaining.

On April 1, 2002, Williams led the Terrapins to their first NCAA National Championship, defeating Indiana 64–52. Maryland's historic run included wins against four straight former champions, including Kentucky in the Sweet 16, UConn in the Elite Eight, and Kansas in the Final Four. Williams was the first coach to win a national championship without a single McDonald's All American on the roster since its inception. He became the first coach to direct his alma mater to a national title since Norm Sloan accomplished the feat with North Carolina State in 1974. The 2002 team also won a school-record 32 games, as well as the school's first outright ACC title in 22 years—only the third time since 1981 that a team from North Carolina hadn't won at least a share of the title. Senior Juan Dixon was named the 2002 NCAA Final Four MVP, ACC Player of the Year, and finished his career as the school's all-time scoring leader. Steve Blake also produced what Maryland fans remember as the "Oh He Steal" game, when Blake memorably stole the ball from Duke's Jay Williams and scored just before halftime in front of a raucous home crowd. 2001-2002 was also the Terps' final season in historic Cole Field House, with Maryland going undefeated at their long-time home.

In 2004, having slipped to 7–9 in the ACC (the team's first sub-.500 conference record in more than a decade), the Terps upset the tournament's top three seeds to win its first ACC tournament title since 1984. In knocking off No. 15 Wake Forest (3 seed), No. 17 NC State (2), and No. 5 Duke (1), tournament MVP John Gilchrist dazzled. Gilchrist scored 16 points against a Chris Paul-led Wake Forest team, led a 21-point comeback against NC State by scoring 23 of his 30 points after halftime, and poured in another 26 points in a memorable 95–87 overtime victory over Duke in the final. Maryland's championship ended Duke's streak of five straight ACC championships.

In the 2004–05 season, Maryland failed to make the NCAA tournament for the first time since the 1993–1994 season, which was then the longest streak in the ACC. This began a relatively mediocre stretch for Maryland, where they failed to make the tournament three out of the next five years. Maryland's best team in these years was 2006–07, when the team finished 25–9 (10–7 ACC) and ranked No. 18 in the final AP poll. Led by the once highly touted senior class of D. J. Strawberry, Mike Jones, Ekene Ibekwe, and Will Bowers, along with precocious freshman Greivis Vasquez, the Terps beat a Stephen Curry-led Davidson squad in the first round of the NCAA tournament before narrowly missing the Sweet 16 when they fell to Butler 59–62, which shot 12-26 (46%) from 3. The 06-07 squad memorably beat Duke twice and won what many fans consider one of the loudest games at the then-named Comcast Center when they beat No. 5 North Carolina.

The 2009–10 Terrapins brought the swagger (and the shimmy) back to College Park when they won a share of the regular-season conference title with Duke. Senior Greivis Vasquez won ACC Player of the Year and consensus second team All American honors as he climbed to No. 2 all time in points and assists at Maryland, while Williams earned his second ACC Coach of the Year award. The season's highlights included Cliff Tucker's buzzer beating three pointer to defeat Georgia Tech at home (after Coach Williams called a timeout that unintentionally nullified what would have been a game-winning three by Vasquez) and a win over eventual national champion Duke on Vasquez's senior night. The Terrapins earned a 4 seed in the Midwest Regional of the NCAA tournament, where they handily beat Houston 89–77 in the first round. In the second round Maryland faced a tough 5th seeded Michigan State, coached by Tom Izzo and led on the court by Kalin Lucas and future NBA star Draymond Green. Behind Vasquez's 26 points, Maryland stormed back from 17 points down in the second half to take the lead in the final seconds before MSU's Korie Lucious hit a heartbreaking buzzer beater to sink the Terrapins 85–83. The loss especially hurt after the top seed in the region, Kansas, lost to 9 seed Northern Iowa, which opened a clear path to the Final Four. The 2009–2010 team was to be the last great Gary Williams team. The following season a group of promising freshmen and veteran holdovers from the 2009–2010 team failed to replicate the success of the prior season and the Terrapins struggled to a 19–14 mark, failing to make the post-season altogether for the first time since 1993.

On May 5, 2011, Gary Williams announced his decision to retire from coaching basketball. He remains involved with the Maryland athletic department as Assistant Athletic Director and Special Assistant to the athletic director. Gary Williams will always be treasured and remembered for saving his alma mater from the doldrums of the post-Bias era years and eventually building Maryland into a national champion. In honor of his legendary career, Maryland named its hardwood at the Xfinity Center "Gary Williams Court". In 2014, Coach Williams was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.

B1G new world – the Mark Turgeon era edit

Mark Turgeon had built a very respectable mid major program at Wichita State but ended with a disappointing year before beginning a successful spell in College Station with the Aggies in 2007.

Prior to his last year at Texas A&M, Turgeon had negotiated a contract extension and salary increase. On May 9, 2011, at 8pm, Turgeon met with his coaching staff and players to inform them that half an hour earlier he accepted the head coach position at the University of Maryland. He had visited the campus earlier that day and left with an offer. When asked about his decision at an Aggie Athletics press conference, he said "Maryland's got a great basketball tradition. [Texas A&M and Maryland are] real similar. It's a gut feeling." In their meeting earlier that night he told the Aggie players "it was the hardest decision [he] ever had to make... because of [them]." Turgeon said that fan attendance at A&M did not factor into his decision.

Since his arrival, Maryland students have adopted the phrase 'Fear the Turgeon,' a play on the school's motto, 'Fear the Turtle.' Some students, known as the "Turgeonites", have created a fan club for the coach and dress like him on game days.

The last ACC years: 2011–2014 edit

Turgeon inherited an average roster featuring hardworking forward James Padgett, the well rounded Sean Mosley, sophomore point guard Pe'Shon Howard, and volume scorer Terrell Stoglin. Turgeon and his staff secured 4 star Baltimore freshman Nick Faust and the Ukrainian big man Alex Len. Turgeon captured his first win as the University of Maryland Head Coach on November 13, 2011, by defeating UNC Wilmington at the Comcast Center 71–62. Maryland struggled throughout the season and finished with a 17–15 overall record and a 6–10 mark in the ACC.

The 2012–13 team was a young team. Veteran Sean Mosley graduated and leading scorer Terrell Stoglin left the program. In the first example of what would become a Mark Turgeon staple, he cobbled together a roster with transfers and freshman and led the Terrapins to 25 wins and the NIT Semifinals. Alex Len became a breakout star averaging 11.9 points, 7.8 rebounds and 2.1 blocks per game, eventually being drafted 5th overall by the Phoenix Suns following the season. Xavier transfer Dez Wells would become a star in his three years in College Park. He led the team in scoring with 13.1 a game.

Following Alex Len's decision to leave for the NBA, the Terps struggled through what would be their final ACC season falling back to a 17–15 record. In their final ACC regular season game, the Terrapins defeated the 5th ranked Virginia Cavaliers 75–69 in OT at the Comcast Center.

Recent success 2014–present edit

In November 2012 ESPN reported that the University of Maryland, a charter member of the ACC, was in "serious negotiations" to join the Big Ten. Yahoo! Sports confirmed the news, and added that Big East Conference member Rutgers University was also in advanced talks to join the Big Ten.

These reports noted that the Big Ten's then-current first-tier media rights deal was set to expire in 2017, and the conference was preparing for negotiations on a new deal. Both potential new members offered access to large new media markets for the conference. The ESPN report stated that Maryland was somewhat torn over the possible move from the ACC to the Big Ten. Two key players for Maryland in the negotiations, president Wallace Loh and athletic director Kevin Anderson, did not have ACC ties, and Loh was a former provost of Big Ten member Iowa. However, the chancellor of the University System of Maryland (USM) that ultimately oversees the school, Brit Kirwan, had been on the College Park campus for 30 years and, according to ESPN, had a strong affinity for the ACC. In addition, one of the Maryland regents told ESPN that Under Armour founder and major Maryland athletic booster Kevin Plank was "100 percent" behind a Big Ten move, and was heavily lobbying regents. On November 19, the Maryland regents voted to accept the Big Ten's offer, and the Big Ten presidents unanimously approved Maryland's entry later that day. The Terrapins officially joined in July 2014.

The athletic department was not in a strong financial position at the time. In July 2012, Maryland dropped seven varsity teams due to a deficit reported by The Washington Post as $4 million. In addition, the ACC voted earlier in 2012 to increase its exit fee to $50 million; the only two members to vote against the increase were Maryland and Florida State. Sources at Maryland believed that the school would be able to negotiate the buyout downward.

The 2014–15 Terrapins were led by senior star Dez Wells and freshman sensation Melo Trimble. Maryland won their first Big Ten basketball game in a 68–66 double overtime thriller at Michigan State. Maryland finished their first Big Ten season with a 14–4 record, finishing second. Turgeon was named Big Ten Coach of the Year. Maryland was selected as a 4 seed in the NCAA tournament. In the First Round Maryland defeated #13 Valparaiso 65–62. In the second round the Terps faced fifth seeded West Virginia and lost 69–59 after Melo Trimble got knocked out of the game with a concussion. Trimble was named a second-team All American by The Sporting News, and both he and Wells were named first team Big Ten.

The 2015–16 Terrapins entered the season with high expectations. Blue chip recruit Diamond Stone and transfers Robert Carter and Rasheed Sulaimon paired up with Melo Trimble and Jake Layman to create a formidable starting 5 for the Terps. The Terrapins were 11–1 entering conference play, featuring wins over Georgetown and UConn and a memorable, competitive 89–81 loss against eventual national runner-up North Carolina at the Dean Smith Center in the ACC/B1G challenge. Maryland got out to a 10–2 record in the Big Ten before losing 4 of the last 6 to finish 3rd in the conference with a 12–6 record. The Terps handled Nebraska 97–86 in the Big Ten tournament quarterfinals in Indianapolis. In the semifinal game the Terps were narrowly defeated by the Michigan State Spartans 64–61. For the NCAA tournament the Terrapins were selected as the No. 5 seed in the South region. They survived the South Dakota State Jackrabbits 79–74 in the first round. In the second round they defeated a Hawaii team hot off of an upset of the 4 seeded California Golden Bears 73–60. In the Sweet 16 they were ousted by a superior Kansas Jayhawks team 79–63. Altogether the 2015–2016 team is regarded as a disappointment given their preseason ranking and the fact that they only reached the Sweet 16. However they put Maryland back on the map nationally and showed that the program was going to be a force in the Big Ten.

The 2016–2017 squad entered the season with many questions. 1st team all Big-Ten point guard Melo Trimble was the only remaining starter, and only 3 other players received significant play time. Lack of depth allowed a freshman trio of Anthony Cowan Jr, Kevin Huerter, and Justin Jackson to start in almost every game. The team finished with a 24–9 season with a conference record of 12–6, finishing 3rd in the Big Ten. The team had many memorable close-fought games including the season finale against Michigan State, when Melo Trimble nailed a game winning 3 with under a second remaining. The team was deemed a 6 seed in the NCAA tournament, getting knocked out in the 1st round to 11 seed Xavier.

2017–2018 saw the Terps without star point guard Melo Trimble but saw Anthony Cowan Jr, Kevin Huerter, and Justin Jackson returning for their sophomore seasons. Despite this and the emergence of star freshman power forward Bruno Fernando the terps struggled to an overall record of 19–13 and 8–10 in what was considered a weak Big Ten. The season featured many close road losses that followed a pattern.[13] This season resulted in the Terps completely missing the postseason for the first time since the 2013–2014 season.

The 2018–2019 season team entered the season with high anticipation locally thanks to returning stars Cowan and Fernando, as well as the addition of the 7th ranked recruiting class in country starring consensus 5-star Jalen "Stix" Smith.[14][15] Despite a young team, the Terps outperformed national expectations and maintained a top-25 ranking for the entire 2nd half of the season. Maryland finished the 2018-2019 campaign at 22–10 (13–7 in the Big Ten), garnering a #6 seed in the NCAA tournament. The Terps survived a close battle with Dylan Windler led Belmont before losing on the last possession of the game against LSU.[16]

2019–2020 will forever be remembered by the college basketball world as the year the NCAA tournament and most conference tournaments were cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. For the Terps, the cancelled postseason hit especially hard with Turgeon assembling his strongest team at Maryland, which finished 24–7 and 14–6 in the Big Ten. Led by first-team All Big Ten selections Anthony Cowan Jr. and Jalen "Stix" Smith, the Terps won a three-way share of the Big Ten regular season conference title,along with Wisconsin and Michigan State the men's program's first conference title since 2010 and its first title in the Big Ten. The Terps were ranked in the AP top ten for 22 weeks during the season, being ranked as high as No. 3 in early December and ending the season at No. 12. The season was highlighted by an emphatic 21-point win over a Marquette team led by first team All-American Marcus Howard to win the Orlando Invitational, as well as dramatic road wins against Indiana, Illinois, Michigan State, and Minnesota, which memorably ended on Darryl Morsell's deep, buzzer beating three. Indicative of the program's reemergence on the national stage, for just the second time in program history ESPN's College Gameday returned to College Park in late February for a showdown against pre-season No. 1 Michigan State. Although the Terps lost the game (their only home loss of the season), and struggled mightily in a road loss three days later at Rutgers, they rebounded in their next and final home game against Michigan to capture their share of the conference championship and cut down the nets on Cowan Jr.'s senior night. Although Maryland fans will always wonder how far the team could have gone in March, the season will be remembered fondly for the championship and Cowan Jr.'s outstanding senior season, which saw him climb to No. 7 all time in program history in points, No. 5 in assists, and included several clutch performances in wins over Illinois and MSU. The season will also be remembered for the national emergence of Smith, who was selected to multiple All-American teams and picked 10th in the 2020 NBA Draft.

The program entered the 2020–2021 season with low expectations, primarily due to the departures of stalwarts Anthony Cowan Jr. and Jalen Smith, as well as three transfers in Ricky Lindo Jr., Serrell Smith Jr., and Joshua Tomaic. Jalen Smith's early entry into the 2020 NBA draft was a particular issue for the team, as there were no developed big men in line to take his minutes, a glaring weakness in the Big Ten Conference. Picked to finish 10th in the Big Ten Media Poll, Turgeon had to rely on a core of four returning players, Eric Ayala, Darryl Morsell, Aaron Wiggins, and Donta Scott. Turgeon shored up his roster by securing incoming transfers Jairus Hamilton and Galin Smith. The team finished 17–14 and 9–11 in the Big Ten, good enough for an 8th-place finish in the conference. The Terps won 5 of their last 7 conference games, rising from 4–9 to finish 9–11, and defeated Michigan State 68–57 in the first round of the Big Ten tournament. This late season rally was enough to earn a bid to the 2021 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament as a 10 seed. Matched against the 7th-seeded 2020–21 UConn Huskies men's basketball team, the team won their first-round game 63–54. They advanced to face 2 seed Alabama, who made 16 three pointers in a 96–77 rout. Aaron Wiggins' performance was a bright spot, as he finished with 27 points. Eric Ayala and Aaron Wiggins received Honorable Mentions for the All-Big Ten teams, and Darryl Morsell won Defensive Player of the Year. On April 7, the University of Maryland announced Mark Turgeon's contract had been extended through the 2025–26 season.[17] On December 3, 2021, Maryland and Turgeon agreed to mutually part ways. Danny Manning was named interim head coach. On March 21, 2022, Maryland hired Kevin Willard to be its tenth head coach in program history.[18] Willard quickly went to the portal for the upcoming season picking up highly touted transfer prospect Jahmir Young from Charlotte.[19] With Young leading the team, Maryland went 20-11, including winning the Hall of Fame Tip-Off tournament.[20] Entering the tournament as an 8-seed, Maryland defeated 9-seeded West Virginia in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. In the second round of the tournament, they faced #1 overall seeded Alabama. They ultimately fell to the Tide 73-51, ending Kevin Willard's first season with an official record of 22-13.[21]

Coaching staff edit

Position Name
Head Coach: Kevin Willard
Associate Head Coach: David Cox
Assistant Coach: Mike Jones
Assistant Coach: Greg Manning Jr.
Director of Basketball Operations: Chuck Butler
Director of Basketball Performance: Kyle Tarp

All-time head coaches edit

Facilities edit

Xfinity Center (2002–present) edit

The Xfinity Center, which opened in the Fall of 2002, is the current home of the Maryland Terrapins men's and women's basketball programs. The building also features facilities for the wrestling and volleyball programs. The 17,950-seat state of the art on-campus facility is referred to as "The House that Gary Built" or "Comcastle", in reference to the arena's original name of Comcast Center, used from 2002 to July 2014. Xfinity Center provides one of the best home court advantages in the nation. This is largely due to the layout of the 4,000 seat student section which consists of the first ten rows surrounding the court in addition to the west wall of the arena, simply known as "the Wall", which was constructed at a 35-degree incline. Several former ACC opponents referred to the arena as the toughest place to play in the ACC.

Xfinity Center opened for Midnight Madness on October 11, 2002, and the first official men's game was a 64–49 victory over Miami University (Ohio) on November 24, 2002. On January 25, 2012, the court was renamed in honor of Gary Williams, the men's basketball coach who had retired the previous year.

The Xfinity Center welcomed 281,057 visitors over 16 games in its first season for an average of 17,566 which ranked 5th nationally in 2003. It was the first time Maryland had finished in the top 10

 
Xfinity Center exterior

nationally in attendance since the 1976 season in which Maryland finished 4th with an average of 13,110 fans taking in games at Cole Field House. Every year from 2004 to 2010, Maryland finished between 4th and 9th nationally in attendance.

At the conclusion of the 2015–2016 season, Maryland is 205–42 (.830) all-time at Xfinity Center. Since 2003, Maryland has defeated 17 ranked opponents at Xfinity Center, including 11 top-ten teams, eight top-5 teams, and a top-ranked team (Duke University in 2003).[22]

Cole Field House (1955–2002) edit

 
Cole Field House exterior, summer 2007

Prior to 2002, the Terps spent 47 seasons—from 1955 to 2002—at Cole Field House. When college basketball was achieving its most explosive growth – from the late 1950s to the late 1970s – there was one college gymnasium on the East Coast that seated as many as 12,000 fans. Cole Field House epitomized the new big-time, main event status of college hoops, the sport of network TV and emerging legends. It was a building where history was routinely made, and fans could feel the echo of tradition and experience the electricity of top-flight college basketball. Additional seats were installed throughout the years to bring the final capacity to 14,596 (in 1993).

Cole Field House held its first East Regional finals in 1962, when NYU defeated St. John's in the final, 94–85. The Final Four was first held here in 1966 between Duke, Kentucky, Texas Western (now UTEP), and Utah. Texas Western (which started all black players) upset Kentucky's all-white team 72–65 in front of a crowd of 14,253. Future Maryland men's basketball coach Gary Williams, then a student, attended the game. Cole also hosted the Final Four in 1970 and is the nation's only on-campus arena to host multiple Final Fours.

Bud Millikan, the first Maryland coach at the venue, did not like its size saying at one point "It's like playing on a neutral court" with seats too far from the courts. In the late 1960s Lefty Driesell added a nearly 3,000 seats around the court raising the hometown decibel level.[23] Upon adding additional seating to create a more intimate atmosphere with fans right along the court, Cole would develop into one of the best home court advantages in the country. Along with Notre Dame's Joyce Athletic Center, Cole is the site of the most upsets of top ranked opponents of any venue in college basketball. 7 No. 1 ranked teams have been upset inside Cole, with Maryland pulling the upset in 6 of those 7 games and the other being Texas Western's National Championship win over Kentucky in 1966.

Cole Field House was constructed in 1955 at a cost of $3.3 million. On December 2, 1955, Maryland played its first game at Cole beating rival Virginia 67–55. In 1972 the attendance record would be set as 15,287 fans packed into Cole and watched Maryland knock off North Carolina 79–77 in overtime. The final regular season game of the 2001 season at Cole saw Maryland defeat Virginia 102–67 for the most lopsided result in the rivalry's history. In 2002, in a game known amongst Maryland fans as the "Oh, He Steal" game, the 7th #1 ranked team would fall in Cole, as Maryland handed Duke an 87–73 defeat, taking over first place in the conference.[24] Later that season Maryland would play its final game in Cole Field House, celebrating the regular season conference title with a 112–92 win over Virginia. Over 47 seasons, Maryland compiled an impressive 486–151 record at Cole Field House.

Rivalries edit

Duke edit

The Duke–Maryland basketball rivalry is a dormant college basketball rivalry between the Duke Blue Devils men's basketball team of Duke University and Maryland Terrapins men's basketball team of the University of Maryland. The basketball series has been called one of the most intense intercollegiate rivalries of modern times by some. A Harris Interactive poll of Marylanders ranked it the third best in the state behind the Commanders–Cowboys and RavensCommanders rivalries in 2003 (before the Beltway Series of the Orioles and Nationals was possible). In 2014, Maryland left the ACC for the Big Ten and regular season games between Maryland and Duke are no longer scheduled regularly.

Virginia edit

Thanks to the proximity of these two long-time ACC members, and their status as Tobacco Road outsiders, Maryland and Virginia have a long-standing rivalry that spans many decades. Traditionally, these two schools would meet in the last game of the season, and they both acted as spoilers to the other as they sought conference championships and NCAA tournament appearances. This rivalry has been dormant in recent years however, thanks to Maryland's move to the Big Ten Conference, though they did match up in the 2014 ACC-Big Ten Challenge, a 76–65 win for the Cavaliers in College Park, Maryland. The Terrapins lead the all-time series 107–76.

On November 28, 2018, the rivalry was again renewed for the ACC-Big Ten Challenge, with Virginia winning by a score of 76–71.[25]

North Carolina edit

The Maryland-North Carolina rivalry peaked in the late 1970s and early 1980s when both programs were fixtures in the AP poll and legendary coaches Lefty Driesell of Maryland and Dean Smith of the Tar Heels patrolled the sidelines. Although the rivalry cooled towards the end of the Terps ACC era, it still produced some memorable moments.[26][27] The schools reunited for an ACC-Big Ten Challenge matchup in 2015, with the Tar Heels winning the top ten battle 89–82.[28] In 2017 the rivalry was renewed off the court, as part of the wider University of North Carolina academic-athletic scandal. Maryland president Wallace Loh stated that he believed UNC basketball should receive the Death Penalty as punishment. In response UNC coach Roy Williams called Loh a "double idiot".[29]

Georgetown edit

Maryland and Georgetown have competed 49 times, the 10th most played opponent all-time for both Georgetown and Maryland. Maryland leads the all-time series 34–15. The two schools played each other every season from 1950 to 1980.[30] The schools stopped playing in 1980 because of bad blood between head coaches John Thompson and Lefty Driesell, the two resumed play for one season in 1993 before taking a 22-game scheduled hiatus. The teams met twice in unplanned games during the gap, 2001 NCAA tournament for a sweet sixteen matchup, and again in 2008 for an Old Spice Classic early season matchup. In 2015 and 2016 the rivalry was renewed for the Gavitt Tipoff Games.

Michigan State edit

Michigan State has emerged as one of Maryland's top rivals since the Terrapins moved to the Big Ten conference in 2014. The two schools have competed 16 times, including twice in the NCAA tournament in 2003 and 2010 while Maryland was still a member of the ACC.[31] Michigan State won both NCAA tournament games by two points each, including a heartbreaking loss in 2010 on a last second three pointer. The 2010 loss struck deep as it ended the stellar 4-year career of Greivis Vásquez and denied coach Williams an open path to a third Final Four.[32] Since Maryland joined the Big Ten, the two teams have produced memorable moments including Melo Trimble's buzzer beating three in his final home game in 2017 and Anthony Cowan Jr.'s three straight threes in the final minutes to close out a comeback win at MSU in 2020. MSU coach Tom Izzo earned the ire of Terp fans in 2015 after complaining that Trimble received too many favorable foul calls during his freshman year, a move that many believe led to officials not calling blatant fouls against Trimble in his sophomore and junior seasons.[33] Adding to the Terps' tourney heartbreaks against Sparty, MSU won conference tournament semi-finals against Maryland in 2015 and 2016 by a combined seven points, the latter of which ended on a non-call when Trimble was apparently fouled driving to the basket down one point with two seconds left.[34] Michigan State currently leads the all-time series 13–8 and the conference series 10–6.

Michigan edit

A rivalry has begun to brew between the Maryland Terrapins and the Michigan Wolverines.[35] Since Maryland joined the Big Ten, both teams have been contending for the conference championship, with Maryland coming out on top in 2020, and Michigan topping the table in 2021. The rivalry advanced during the 2020–2021 season. Star Michigan freshman Hunter Dickinson, who played high school basketball close to Maryland's campus, made comments that he felt "disrespected" by the Terps for having not recruited him and other DMV players harder while they were in high school.[36] In his first game against the Terps, he scored 26 points, and frequently stared down the Maryland bench and Coach Turgeon.[37] Michigan went to claim the regular season title. However, tensions boiled over in their match-up in the 2021 Big Ten Men's Basketball Championship, where head coach Juwan Howard was ejected after receiving a double technical after an altercation with Mark Turgeon and the Terrapin team.[38] Howard claimed that Turgeon "charged at him" and made derogatory comments about him and the University of Michigan Basketball scandal, but Turgeon refuted those claims, saying "I stood up for myself and my program and said 'Don't talk to me', and then [the situation] escalated.[39] The all-time series is 8–13, leaning to Michigan.[40]

Historical statistics edit

Overall
Years of basketball 102
1st season 1904–05
Head coaches (all-time) 9
All games
All-time record 1,641–1,086
20+ win seasons 31
30+ win seasons 1
ACC games
ACC W-L record 418–397
ACC titles 3
NCAA tournament
NCAA appearances 30*
NCAA W-L record 44–29*
Sweet Sixteen 14
Elite Eight 4
Final Four 2
National championships 1

*1988 tournament records vacated by NCAA due to use of ineligible player

Record against Big Ten opponents edit

Opponent Series record W-L%
Illinois 15-8 .652
Indiana 9-12 .429
Iowa 9-8 .529
Michigan 8-11 .421
Michigan State 8-16 .333
Minnesota 16-3 .842
Nebraska 12-4 .750
Northwestern 12-6 .667
Ohio State 10-11 .476
Penn State 17-15 .531
Purdue 6-9 .400
Rutgers 14-7 .667
Wisconsin 8-13 .381
Total 141-117 .547

Totals through March 31, 2024[41]

Season-by-season results edit

Post-season results edit

NCAA tournament edit

NCAA appearances 30
Overall record 44–29
National championships 1 (2002)
Final Fours 2 (2001, 2002)
Elite Eights 4 (1973, 1975, 2001, 2002)
Sweet Sixteens 14 (1958, 1973, 1975, 1980, 1984, 1985, 1994, 1995, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2016)

Complete NCAA tournament results edit

The Terrapins have appeared in the NCAA tournament 30* (29) times. Their combined record is 44–29* (43–28). They were National Champions in 2002.

Year Seed Round Opponent Results
1958 First Round
Sweet Sixteen
Regional 3rd Place Game
Boston College
Temple
Manhattan
W 86–63
L 71–67
W 59–55
1973 Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Syracuse
Providence
W 91–75
L 89–103
1975 First Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Creighton
Notre Dame
Louisville
W 83–79
W 83–71
L 82–96
1980 #2 Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#7 Tennessee
#3 Georgetown
W 86–75
L 68–74
1981 #6 First Round
Second Round
#11 Chattanooga
#3 Indiana
W 81–69
L 64–99
1983 #8 First Round
Second Round
#9 Chattanooga
#1 Houston
W 52–51
L 50–60
1984 #3 Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#11 West Virginia
#2 Illinois
W 102–77
L 70–72
1985 #5 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#12 Miami (OH)
#13 Navy
#8 Villanova
W 69–68 OT
W 64–59
L 43–46
1986 #5 First Round
Second Round
#12 Pepperdine
#4 UNLV
W 69–64
L 64–70
1988* #7 First Round
Second Round
#10 UC Santa Barbara
#2 Kentucky
W 92–82
L 81–90
1994 #10 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#7 Saint Louis
#2 Massachusetts
#3 Michigan
W 74–66
W 95–87
L 71–78
1995 #3 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#14 Gonzaga
#11 Texas
#2 Connecticut
W 87–63
W 82–68
L 89–99
1996 #7 First Round #10 Santa Clara L 79–91
1997 #5 First Round #12 College of Charleston L 66–75
1998 #4 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#13 Utah State
#5 Illinois
#1 Arizona
W 82–68
W 67–61
L 79–87
1999 #2 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#15 Valparaiso
#10 Creighton
#3 St. John's
W 82–60
W 75–63
L 62–76
2000 #3 First Round
Second Round
#14 Iona
#6 UCLA
W 74–59
L 70–105
2001 #3 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
#14 George Mason
#11 Georgia State
#10 Georgetown
#1 Stanford
#1 Duke
W 83–80
W 79–60
W 76–66
W 87–73
L 84–95
2002 #1 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship Game
#16 Siena
#8 Wisconsin
#4 Kentucky
#2 Connecticut
#1 Kansas
#5 Indiana
W 85–70
W 87–57
W 78–68
W 90–82
W 97–88
W 64–52
2003 #6 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#11 UNC Wilmington
#3 Xavier
#7 Michigan State
W 75–73
W 77–64
L 58–60
2004 #4 First Round
Second Round
#13 UTEP
#5 Syracuse
W 86–83
L 70–72
2007 #4 First Round
Second Round
#13 Davidson
#5 Butler
W 82–70
L 59–62
2009 #10 First Round
Second Round
#7 California
#2 Memphis
W 84–71
L 89–70
2010 #4 First Round
Second Round
#13 Houston
#5 Michigan State
W 89–77
L 83–85
2015 #4 First Round
Second Round
#13 Valparaiso
#5 West Virginia
W 65–62
L 59–69
2016 #5 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#12 South Dakota State
#13 Hawaii
#1 Kansas
W 79–74
W 73–60
L 63–79
2017 #6 First Round #11 Xavier L 65–76
2019 #6 First Round
Second Round
#11 Belmont
#3 LSU
W 79–77
L 67–69
2021 #10 First Round
Second Round
#7 UConn
#2 Alabama
W 63–54
L 77–96
2023 #8 First Round
Second Round
#9 West Virginia
#1 Alabama
W 67–65
L 51–73

* 1988 tournament records vacated by NCAA due to use of ineligible player

Seed History

The NCAA began seeding the tournament with the 1979 edition.

Year 1980 1981 1983 1984 1985 1986 1988 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2007 2009 2010 2015 2016 2017 2019 2021 2023
Seed 2 6 8 3 5 5 7 10 3 7 5 4 2 3 3 1 6 4 4 10 4 4 5 6 6 10 8

NIT results edit

The Terrapins have appeared in the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) eight times. Their combined record is 14–7. They were NIT champions in 1972.

Year Round Opponent Result
1972 First Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Final
Saint Joseph's
Syracuse
Jacksonville
Niagara
W 67–55
W 71–65
W 91–77
W 100–69
1979 First Round
Second Round
Rhode Island
Ohio State
W 67–65
L 72–79
1982 First Round
Second Round
Richmond
Georgia
W 60–50
L 69–83
1990 First Round
Second Round
Massachusetts
Penn State
W 91–81
L 78–80
2005 First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Oral Roberts
Davidson
TCU
South Carolina
W 85–72
W 78–63
W 85–73
L 67–75
2006 First Round Manhattan L 84–87
2008 First Round
Second Round
Minnesota
Syracuse
W 68–58
L 72–88
2013 First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Niagara
Denver
Alabama
Iowa
W 86–70
W 62–52
W 58–57
L 60–71

National honors edit

Naismith College Player of the Year
1995 Joe Smith
Helms Foundation All-American
1931 Louis Berger
1932 Louis Berger
First Team All-American
1975 John Lucas
1976 John Lucas
1980 Albert King
1986 Len Bias
1995 Joe Smith
2002 Juan Dixon
Second Team All-American
1973 Tom McMillen
1974 John Lucas, Len Elmore, Tom McMillen
1981 Albert King
1985 Len Bias
1992 Walt Williams
1999 Steve Francis
2010 Greivis Vásquez
2015 Melo Trimble
Third Team All-American
1972 Tom McMillen
1994 Joe Smith
1997 Keith Booth
2001 Juan Dixon
2020 Jalen Smith
First Team All-ACC
1954 Gene Shue
1960 Al Bunge
1972 Tom McMillen
1973 Tom McMillen
1974 John Lucas
1974 Len Elmore
1975 John Lucas
1976 John Lucas
1980 Albert King*
1985 Len Bias*
1986 Len Bias*
1987 Derrick Lewis
1992 Walt Williams
1994 Joe Smith
1995 Joe Smith*
1997 Keith Booth
1999 Steve Francis, Terence Morris
2000 Juan Dixon, Lonny Baxter
2001 Juan Dixon, Lonny Baxter
2002 Juan Dixon*
2003 Steve Blake
2010 Greivis Vásquez*
2011 Jordan Williams
* ACC Player of the Year
First Team All-Big Ten
2015 Dez Wells, Melo Trimble
2017 Melo Trimble
2019 Bruno Fernando
2020 Anthony Cowan Jr., Jalen Smith
2024 Jahmir Young

[42] [43] [44]

International honors edit

Honored jerseys edit

Note: the numbers are not retired and can be worn by other players.[45]

No. Player Career Hometown
3 Juan Dixon 1999–2002 Baltimore, Maryland
6 Bosey Berger 1929–1932 Baltimore, Maryland
15 John Lucas 1973–1976 Durham, North Carolina
Johnny Rhodes 1992–1996 Washington, D.C.
21 Greivis Vásquez 2006–2010 Caracas, Venezuela
22 Keith Booth 1993–1997 Baltimore, Maryland
23 Steve Francis 1998–1999 Takoma Park, Maryland
25 Steve Blake 1999–2003 Miami Lakes, Florida
Ernie Graham 1978–1981 Baltimore, Maryland
Gene Shue 1952–1954 Baltimore, Maryland
32 Joe Smith 1993–1995 Norfolk, Virginia
34 Len Bias 1983–1986 Landover, Maryland
35 Lonny Baxter 1999–2002 Silver Spring, Maryland
41 Len Elmore 1972–1974 Springfield Gardens, New York
42 Walt Williams 1989–1992 Temple Hills, Maryland
52 Buck Williams 1979–1981 Rocky Mount, North Carolina
54 Tom McMillen 1972–1974 Mansfield, Pennsylvania
55 Albert King 1978–1981 Brooklyn, New York

NBA Draft picks edit

Year Round Pick Name Team Games in NBA
2021 2 55 Aaron Wiggins Oklahoma City Thunder 158
2020 1 10 Jalen Smith Phoenix Suns 175
2019 2 34 Bruno Fernando Philadelphia 76ers 170
2018 1 19 Kevin Huerter Atlanta Hawks 388
2018 2 43 Justin Jackson Denver Nuggets 0
2016 2 40 Diamond Stone New Orleans Pelicans 7
2016 2 47 Jake Layman Orlando Magic 243
2013 1 5 Alex Len Phoenix Suns 613
2011 2 36 Jordan Williams New Jersey Nets 43
2010 1 28 Greivis Vásquez New Orleans Hornets 401
2008 2 57 James Gist San Antonio Spurs 0
2007 2 59 D. J. Strawberry Phoenix Suns 33
2003 2 38 Steve Blake Washington Wizards 870
2002 1 8 Chris Wilcox Los Angeles Clippers 628
2002 1 17 Juan Dixon Washington Wizards 436
2002 2 44 Lonny Baxter Chicago Bulls 162
2001 2 34 Terence Morris Atlanta Hawks 139
1999 1 2 Steve Francis Vancouver Grizzlies 576
1999 2 37 Obinna Ekezie Vancouver Grizzlies 143
1999 2 38 Laron Profit Orlando Magic 135
1997 1 28 Keith Booth Chicago Bulls 45
1995 1 1 Joe Smith Golden State Warriors 1,030
1993 2 31 Evers Burns Sacramento Kings 23
1992 1 7 Walt Williams Sacramento Kings 708
1990 1 17 Jerrod Mustaf New York Knicks 179
1990 2 43 Tony Massenburg San Antonio Spurs 683
1988 3 62 Derrick Lewis Chicago Bulls 0
1986 1 2 Len Bias Boston Celtics 0 (Died 2 days after being drafted[46])
1985 2 46 Adrian Branch Chicago Bulls 130
1984 2 37 Ben Coleman Chicago Bulls 227
1982 3 61 Charles Pittman Phoenix Suns 234
1981 1 3 Buck Williams New Jersey Nets 1,307
1981 1 10 Albert King New Jersey Nets 534
1978 4 81 Lawrence Boston Washington Bullets 13
1977 1 15 Brad Davis Los Angeles Lakers 961
1977 2 30 Steve Sheppard Chicago Bulls 106
1976 1 1 John Lucas Houston Rockets 928
1976 2 32 Mo Howard Cleveland Cavaliers 32
1974 1 9 Tom McMillen Buffalo Braves 729
1974 1 13 Len Elmore Washington Bullets 658
1973 3 37 Jim O'Brien Cleveland Cavaliers 0 (58 in ABA)
1971 8 131 Barry Yates Philadelphia 76ers 24
1963 3 24 Jerry Greenspan Syracuse Nationals 25
1960 1 7 Al Bunge Philadelphia Warriors 0
1954 1 3 Gene Shue Philadelphia Warriors 699

Other notable players edit

Statistical leaders edit

Career leaders edit

Points edit

Points Name Games Career
2,269 Juan Dixon 141 1998–2002
2,171 Greivis Vasquez 136 2006–10
2,149 Len Bias 131 1982–86
2,058 Albert King 118 1977–81
2,017 Adrian Branch 123 1981–85
2,015 John Lucas 110 1972–76
1,881 Anthony Cowan Jr. 130 2016–20
1,858 Lonny Baxter 138 1998–2002
1,807 Tom McMillen 88 1971–74
1,776 Keith Booth 126 1993–97
1,743 Johnny Rhodes 122 1992–96
1,733 Terence Morris 136 1997–2001
1,704 Walt Williams 105 1988–92
1,658 Melo Trimble 104 2014–17
1,607 Ernest Graham 118 1977–81
1,573 Nik Caner-Medley 127 2002–06
1,566 Laron Profit 125 1995–99
1,561 Greg Manning 118 1977–81
1,458 Derrick Lewis 127 1984–88
1,449 Eric Ayala 125 2018–22
1,436 Jake Layman 141 2012–16
1,414 James Gist 130 2004–08

Assists edit

Assists Name Games Career
972 Steve Blake 2000–03
772 Greivis Vasquez 2006–10
649 Keith Gatlin 1984–86, 1988
590 Terrell Stokes 1996–99
584 Anthony Cowan Jr. 2016–20
514 John Lucas 1973–76
513 Eric Hayes 2006–10
483 Duane Simpkins 1993–96
469 Kevin Mclinton 1990–93
460 Dutch Morley 1979–82
437 Johnny Rhodes 1993–96
433 Brad Davis 1975–77
410 Walt Williams 1989–92
403 Melo Trimble 2014–17
371 Juan Dixon 1999–2002
364 John Gilchrist 2002–05
360 Jeff Atkins 1981–85
346 Ernie Graham 1978–81
326 Exree Hipp 1992–96
317 D. J. Strawberry 2003–07
307 Drew Nicolas 1999–2003
304 Albert King 1977–81

Rebounds edit

Rebounds Name Games Career
1,053 Len Elmore 1972–74
998 Lonny Baxter 1999–2002
948 Derrick Lewis 1985–88
928 Buck Williams 1979–81
925 Terence Morris 1998–2001
916 Keith Booth 1994–97
895 Larry Gibson 1976–79
859 Tom McMillen 1972–74
795 Al Bunge 1958–60
783 James Gist 2005–08
781 Ekene Ibekwe 2004–07
745 Len Bias 1983–86
722 Tony Massenburg 1986, 1988–90

References edit

  1. ^ "Color | The University of Maryland Brand". Retrieved July 9, 2022.
  2. ^ Steele, David (March 12, 2009). "Maryland gets another shot, thanks to 1974 ACC classic". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved April 17, 2011.
  3. ^ "ACC men's basketball tournament". ESPN. Retrieved April 17, 2011.
  4. ^ Bill Free – This Overtime Lasts 25 Years 2008-09-12 at the Wayback Machine The 1974 team left it all out on the floor. Baltimore Sun, hosted at University of Maryland Terrapins athletic site, February 20, 1999
  5. ^ Davis, Seth. "How Lefty Driesell started Midnight Madness with a midnight run in 1971". Sports Illustrated. Sports Illustrated. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
  6. ^ Angela, Angela (January 20, 2003). "Lefty the Hero". National Association of Basketball Coaches. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
  7. ^ "Classic 1974 NC State-Maryland ACC title clash hits 40-year mark". March 12, 2014.
  8. ^ "Remembering Len Bias 30 years after his death: 'He was It.' - The Washington Post". The Washington Post.
  9. ^ "Living with Len Bias". June 17, 2016.
  10. ^ Raspberry, William. "Lefty Driesell Looks Like the Scapegoat in Maryland's Face-Saving Exercise". South Florida Sun Sentinel. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
  11. ^ Kindred, Dave. "The Case For Lefty Driesell". The Athletic. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
  12. ^ Markus, Don (September 7, 2018). "After long wait, former Maryland coach Lefty Drisell finally gets his Hall of Fame moment". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
  13. ^ Kendziora, Thomas (February 13, 2018). "The Maryland basketball road loss checklist". Testudo Times.
  14. ^ "2018 Basketball Team Rankings". 247Sports. Retrieved October 5, 2019.
  15. ^ "Jalen Smith, Maryland Terrapins, Power Forward". 247Sports. Retrieved October 5, 2019.
  16. ^ Markus, Don (March 17, 2019). "Maryland gets No. 6 seed in NCAA tournament, will face Belmont-Temple winner Thursday in Jacksonville, Fla". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved March 19, 2019.
  17. ^ "Maryland Announces Contract Extension for Mark Turgeon".
  18. ^ "Maryland hires Kevin Willard: Seton Hall coach joins Terps after leading Pirates to five NCAA Tournaments". March 21, 2022.
  19. ^ "Charlotte transfer Jahmir Young commits to Maryland with focus on NBA draft". April 27, 2022.
  20. ^ "Maryland handles Miami to win Hall of Fame Tip-Off Tournament". The Washington Post.
  21. ^ "No. 8 Maryland beats No. 9 West Virginia 67-65". Bleacher Report.
  22. ^ "Men's Basketball - Schedule - Maryland Terrapins". umterps.com.
  23. ^ "Terps' Cole rebounded to be cherished hoops home". March 5, 2002.
  24. ^ icecoldfrapman (February 27, 2007). "Oh He Steal". Archived from the original on December 15, 2021 – via YouTube.
  25. ^ "No. 4 UVA guts out road win at No. 24 Maryland". Wahoos247.
  26. ^ "Terps-Heels: The End Of A Rivalry". February 4, 2014.
  27. ^ "Old ACC rivals UNC, Maryland meet amid unfamiliar circumstances".
  28. ^ "Maryland vs. North Carolina - Game Summary - December 1, 2015". ESPN.
  29. ^ Shaffer, Jonas. "North Carolina coach Roy Williams calls Maryland President Loh a 'double idiot'".
  30. ^ "Matchup Finder - College Basketball at Sports-Reference.com". College Basketball at Sports-Reference.com.
  31. ^ "Matchup Finder".
  32. ^ "Michigan State vs. Maryland - Game Recap - March 21, 2010 - ESPN".
  33. ^ "Maryland's Melo Trimble and Michigan State's Tom Izzo have had an interesting relationship". March 5, 2017.
  34. ^ "Maryland vs. Michigan State - Play-By-Play - March 12, 2016 - ESPN".
  35. ^ "A rival is born: How animosity between Maryland men's basketball and Michigan developed in just one season". March 12, 2021.
  36. ^ "Two Michigan freshmen criticize Maryland for not recruiting them".
  37. ^ "Hunter Dickinson trolls Turgeon again after Michigan beats Terps".
  38. ^ "WATCH: Michigan's Juwan Howard ejected after dust-up with Maryland's Mark Turgeon in Big Ten tournament". March 12, 2021.
  39. ^ And so that's all I did, I stood up for myself and my program and said 'Don't talk to me' and then it escalated
  40. ^ "Men's Basketball History vs University of Michigan".
  41. ^ https://www.sports-reference.com/cbb/schools/maryland/men/head-to-head.html
  42. ^ . Archived from the original on August 21, 2010. Retrieved February 23, 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  43. ^ . Archived from the original on August 29, 2008. Retrieved February 23, 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  44. ^ "NCAA All-Americans". apbr.org.
  45. ^ Honored jerseys at Umterps.com
  46. ^ "Maryland Basketball Star Len Bias Is Dead at 22". The Washington Post.

External links edit

maryland, terrapins, basketball, team, represents, university, maryland, national, collegiate, athletic, association, division, competition, maryland, founding, member, atlantic, coast, conference, left, 2014, join, conference, gary, williams, coached, terrapi. The Maryland Terrapins men s basketball team represents the University of Maryland in National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I competition Maryland a founding member of the Atlantic Coast Conference ACC left the ACC in 2014 to join the Big Ten Conference Gary Williams who coached the Terrapins from 1989 to 2011 led the program to its greatest success including two consecutive Final Fours in 2001 and 2002 which culminated in the 2002 NCAA National Championship Maryland has appeared in 30 NCAA tournaments and won their conference tournament 4 times The Terrapins have competed in 100 seasons accumulating an overall record of 1 641 1 086 as of the 2022 23 season Maryland is currently coached by Kevin Willard Maryland Terrapins2023 24 Maryland Terrapins men s basketball teamUniversityUniversity of MarylandFirst season1904All time record1 642 1 088 601 Athletic directorDamon EvansHead coachKevin Willard 2nd season ConferenceBig TenLocationCollege Park MarylandArenaXfinity Center Capacity 17 950 NicknameTerpsStudent sectionThe WallColorsRed white gold and black 1 UniformsHome Away AlternateNCAA tournament champions2002NCAA tournament Final Four2001 2002NCAA tournament Elite Eight1973 1975 2001 2002NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen1958 1973 1975 1980 1984 1985 1994 1995 1998 1999 2001 2002 2003 2016NCAA tournament round of 321985 1986 1988 1994 1995 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2007 2009 2010 2015 2016 2019 2021 2023NCAA tournament appearances1958 1973 1975 1980 1981 1983 1984 1985 1986 1988 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2007 2009 2010 2015 2016 2017 2019 2021 2023 vacated by NCAAConference tournament champions1931 1958 1984 2004Conference regular season champions1932 1975 1980 1995 2002 2010 2020 The Terrapins played in what many consider to be the greatest Atlantic Coast Conference game in history and one of the greatest college basketball games ever 2 3 the championship of the 1974 ACC men s basketball tournament in which they lost 103 100 in overtime to eventual national champion North Carolina State The game was instrumental in forcing the expansion of the NCAA Men s Division I Basketball Championship thus allowing for at large bids and the inclusion of more than one team per conference That Maryland team with six future NBA draft picks is considered by many to be the greatest team not to have participated in the NCAA tournament 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years the H Burton Shipley era 1 2 The Bud Millikan era and the ACC 1 3 The Lefty Driesell era 1 4 Top of the mountain the Gary Williams era 1 5 B1G new world the Mark Turgeon era 1 6 The last ACC years 2011 2014 1 7 Recent success 2014 present 2 Coaching staff 3 All time head coaches 4 Facilities 4 1 Xfinity Center 2002 present 4 2 Cole Field House 1955 2002 5 Rivalries 5 1 Duke 5 2 Virginia 5 3 North Carolina 5 4 Georgetown 5 5 Michigan State 5 6 Michigan 6 Historical statistics 7 Record against Big Ten opponents 8 Season by season results 9 Post season results 9 1 NCAA tournament 9 2 Complete NCAA tournament results 9 3 NIT results 10 National honors 11 International honors 12 Honored jerseys 13 NBA Draft picks 14 Other notable players 15 Statistical leaders 15 1 Career leaders 15 1 1 Points 15 1 2 Assists 15 1 3 Rebounds 16 References 17 External linksHistory editEarly years the H Burton Shipley era edit Before basketball became a permanent fixture in College Park the school then known as Maryland Agricultural College met with little success in its intermittent attempts to establish a basketball team A team first appeared in 1904 05 playing only two games in an intramural club setting Games were played sporadically during the 1910 1911 1912 13 1913 1914 and the 1918 1919 seasons going a combined 7 36 Basketball returned to stay for the 1923 24 season when the school convinced former star quarterback H Burton Shipley who had been coaching at the University of Delaware to come back to his alma mater The Old Liners as they were then known joined the Southern Conference in their inaugural season The team met with moderate success that year at 5 7 and also played its first games against future ACC rivals North Carolina and Virginia The Old Liners had their first sustained success over the next four seasons finishing at or above 500 in each of them and putting together an outstanding 24 9 record against Southern Conference foes The Aggies also played their first games against what would become their two other biggest rivals in the future during that time North Carolina State and Duke The school s biggest success during its formative years took place in the early 1930s around the time it adopted its current nickname Terrapins After finishing second in the conference in 1930 31 Maryland won the Southern Conference tournaments beating Louisiana State North Carolina Georgia and Kentucky over five days a feat they followed by winning the conference regular season crown the next year The team also had its first individual star in Louis Bosey Berger who was named to All America teams both seasons It was during this stretch that the school erected a new home for its basketball teams Ritchie Coliseum which housed the team until Cole Field House replaced it a quarter of a century later Although the team would remain competitive throughout the rest of the decade finishing as high as second in the conference regular season it never again matched its achievements of the early part of the decade and as the 1940s began the school s basketball team fell on exceedingly hard times Shipley tallied just one winning season in his last seven years before stepping down to focus on coaching the baseball team a post he d held for his entire tenure since returning to College Park He was succeeded by Flucie Stewart In what would become a long running pattern at Maryland when a long tenured head coach stepped down Stewart would not last very long putting together three losing seasons in three tries during his brief time at Maryland The Bud Millikan era and the ACC edit The 1950s began with a new head coach leading the way Bud Millikan A disciple of legendary coach Henry Iba Millikan s emphasis on defense and fundamentals would become hallmarks of the program over the next two decades Maryland quickly reeled off seven straight winning seasons under Millikan For the 1953 54 season the team joined North Carolina North Carolina State Duke Wake Forest Virginia Clemson and South Carolina in leaving the SoCon for the newly formed Atlantic Coast Conference That season was perhaps the finest the Terrapins had experienced to date finishing with a 23 7 record and a conference mark good enough for second in the league Maryland experienced its first games as a ranked team spending the final nine weeks of the season ranked in the AP Top 20 peaking at No 11 before settling for a final ranking of 20 It also featured the school s first win over a ranked team when it beat local rival George Washington then number 7 in the country The team was led by its second All American Gene Shue who was honored in both that season and the prior year After that season the team remained the only school outside of the North Carolina Big Four Duke UNC North Carolina State and Wake Forest to consistently field competitive teams In the ACC s second year the Terps cracked the top ten for the first time peaking at No 6 in January before eventually finishing the season with a disappointing one point loss to Virginia in the ACC tournament quarterfinal round The Terps had another breakout season during the 1957 58 season After a good regular season 17 6 4th in the ACC Maryland stunned the league by winning the ACC tournament including wins over 6 Duke and 13 North Carolina on back to back days to capture the title as well as the league s berth in the NCAA tournament The team routed Boston College 86 63 at Madison Square Garden with just two days of rest after the ACC tournament advancing to the East Regionals in Charlotte The Terps lost a tight game to Temple in the round of 16 before beating Manhattan in the consolation game to secure third place in the East That would be the high water mark for the Terps under Millikan They experienced their first losing season under the coach the next season although they did manage to finish third in the ACC including its first ever win over a 1 ranked team when it beat North Carolina 69 51 in Cole Field House on February 21 By 1962 63 the bottom had dropped out and the Terps finished just 3 11 in the ACC next to last in the standings While Millikan managed to turn the program around in the mid 1960s finishing in a second place tie in 1964 65 and above 500 overall again the next season the feeling in College Park was that the game had passed the coach by and he was replaced after the following season by assistant Frank Fellows Fellows tenure lasted just two seasons both of which featured only eight wins The Lefty Driesell era edit In 1969 Charles Lefty Driesell was hired by the University of Maryland During his introductory press conference he made the bold statement that he wanted to make Maryland the UCLA of the East At that time UCLA was the nation s dominant college basketball program While Driesell did not elevate Maryland to UCLA s heights he did lead 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 Maryland also attained a No 2 Associated Press ranking during four consecutive seasons from 1972 to 1976 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 In 1974 he signed perhaps the best college prospect of his career future basketball Hall of Famer Moses Malone but Malone chose instead to go to a professional basketball franchise the Utah Stars Malone was the first player in the modern era to proceed directly from high school into professional basketball deciding on the day classes were scheduled to begin 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 5 The event soon became a tradition to build excitement for the basketball team s upcoming season 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 On July 12 1973 Driesell saved the lives of at least ten children from several burning buildings He and two other men were surf fishing around midnight in Bethany Beach Delaware when he saw flames coming from a seashore resort Driesell broke down a door and rescued several children from the fire that eventually destroyed four townhouses An eyewitness Prince George s County circuit court Judge Samuel Meloy said Let s face it Driesell was a hero There were no injuries and it was a miracle because firemen didn t come for at least 30 minutes Driesell said Don t build me up as any kind of hero All we did was try to get the kids out It was just lucky that we were fishing right in front of the houses 6 For these actions Driesell was awarded the NCAA Award of Valor In 1974 the No 4 Terrapins played in what many consider one of the greatest college basketball games of all time losing the ACC men s basketball tournament 103 100 in overtime to eventual national champion and No 1 North Carolina State Each team only played seven players each and eight of those 14 went on to be NBA Draft picks including six from Maryland The game included 91 field goals made on 157 attempts between the teams in spite of top level defense being played We didn t score 100 points or they didn t because we were sorry defensive teams N C State had a 7 foot 4 center in Tommy Burleson said Lefty Driesell We had Len Elmore who was one of the best shot blockers ever to play in the league 7 After the game the Greensboro N C crowd traditionally unfriendly to non North Carolina ACC teams gave both teams a standing ovation After the loss Maryland declined an invitation to the NIT Maryland s team was considered by many to be the greatest team not to have participated in the NCAA tournament because at the time only the winner of a conference tournament would earn a bid It was Maryland s exclusion that finally forced an expansion to allow at large bids and more than one team per conference Driesell s legacy will forever be tied to one of Maryland s greatest players and one of the best college basketball players of all time Len Bias who played under Driesell from 1982 to 1986 As a freshman Bias was viewed as raw and undisciplined but ultimately developed into an All American player who impressed basketball fans with his amazing leaping ability his physical stature and his ability to create plays and was considered one of the most dynamic players in the nation In 1984 Driesell and Bias led the team to the school s second ACC tournament Championship In Bias s junior year he led the ACC in scoring was named the ACC Player of the Year and was a consensus second team All American while averaging 18 9 points and 6 8 rebounds per game His senior season was highlighted by his performance in an overtime victory against top ranked North Carolina in which he scored 35 points including 7 in the last 3 minutes of regulation and 4 in overtime At the end of the year Bias collected his second ACC Player of the Year award and was a consensus first team All American while averaging 23 2 points and 7 rebounds per game Scouts from various NBA teams viewed Bias as the most complete forward in the class of 1986 and was widely considered to be of equal talent to Michael Jordan who played at North Carolina from 1981 to 1984 8 Over the years you ve heard a lot of people say it was that jumper that separated him from Michael Jordan and could have potentially made him a better player than Jordan in the pros said Keith Gatlin who was the starting point guard on the school s 1985 1986 team and lived with Bias 9 Together Bias and Driesell made four straight NCAA tournaments making the Sweet 16 in 1984 and 1985 On June 19 1986 Bias tragically died of a cocaine induced heart attack shortly after being drafted by the Boston Celtics as the No 2 overall selection An investigation revealed that Bias was 21 credits short of the graduation requirement despite having used all his athletic eligibility In October a university panel found that the basketball staff had stressed athletics over academics On October 29 Driesell resigned as head coach and took a position as an assistant athletic director He also worked as a television analyst during college basketball games Some members of the media widely described Driesell as a scapegoat of chancellor John B Slaughter and the university administration 10 11 In 2018 Coach Driesell was finally inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame 12 Top of the mountain the Gary Williams era edit The Maryland Terrapins announced Maryland alumnus Gary Williams as its next head coach on June 13 1989 The basketball program and the Maryland athletic program as a whole were still reeling from the aftershock of the 1986 death of Maryland basketball star Len Bias and struggles under coach Bob Wade a former high school coach from Baltimore Williams was coming off a successful stint at Ohio State featuring one NCAA tournament appearance and two NIT appearances in three seasons Williams played for Maryland as the starting point guard under coach Bud Millikan He was a member of the 1966 Charlotte Invitational Tournament championship team and the 1965 Sugar Bowl Tournament championship team He set a Maryland record for field goal percentage going 8 for 8 from the field in an ACC game against South Carolina in 1966 35 years later a Williams pupil Lonny Baxter would break that record hitting all ten of his field goal attempts Williams was the Maryland team captain in 1967 He graduated in 1968 with a B S in marketing Williams coached the 1989 90 squad to a respectable 18 13 record and an NIT berth However in March 1990 the NCAA imposed harsh sanctions on the school for several violations mostly dating to the Wade era Maryland was banned from postseason play in 1991 and 1992 and was kicked off live television for 1990 91 Additionally Maryland docked itself several scholarships over two years With his recruiting efforts severely hamstrung Williams found it very difficult to rebuild the program However with the help of Walt Williams Maryland stayed competitive through a low point of the program s history After a surprise appearance in the 1994 Sweet 16 the Terrapins were a fixture in the national rankings until 2005 Maryland s teams during this era featured future NBA players such as Joe Smith Steve Francis Sarunas Jasikevicius Juan Dixon Steve Blake Lonny Baxter Terence Morris and Chris Wilcox and a cast of supportive role players exemplified by Byron Mouton In 2001 Williams led Maryland to the first Final Four in school history losing to Duke in the semifinals despite leading by as much as 22 points in the first half and being up by 11 at half Maryland fans largely attribute the loss to several controversial fouls that limited the Terps defense including a phantom fifth foul on Lonnie Baxter with 2 48 remaining The Final Four loss to Duke was the fourth meeting between the two schools during the season which included each team winning on the other s home court Duke s win at Cole Field House is known as the Gone in 54 Seconds game after Duke came back to win despite being down 10 points with under a minute left The Terps got their revenge by winning on Shane Battier s senior night at Cameron Indoor Stadium before losing to Duke by two points in the ACC tournament semifinals on a tip in shot with 1 3 seconds remaining On April 1 2002 Williams led the Terrapins to their first NCAA National Championship defeating Indiana 64 52 Maryland s historic run included wins against four straight former champions including Kentucky in the Sweet 16 UConn in the Elite Eight and Kansas in the Final Four Williams was the first coach to win a national championship without a single McDonald s All American on the roster since its inception He became the first coach to direct his alma mater to a national title since Norm Sloan accomplished the feat with North Carolina State in 1974 The 2002 team also won a school record 32 games as well as the school s first outright ACC title in 22 years only the third time since 1981 that a team from North Carolina hadn t won at least a share of the title Senior Juan Dixon was named the 2002 NCAA Final Four MVP ACC Player of the Year and finished his career as the school s all time scoring leader Steve Blake also produced what Maryland fans remember as the Oh He Steal game when Blake memorably stole the ball from Duke s Jay Williams and scored just before halftime in front of a raucous home crowd 2001 2002 was also the Terps final season in historic Cole Field House with Maryland going undefeated at their long time home In 2004 having slipped to 7 9 in the ACC the team s first sub 500 conference record in more than a decade the Terps upset the tournament s top three seeds to win its first ACC tournament title since 1984 In knocking off No 15 Wake Forest 3 seed No 17 NC State 2 and No 5 Duke 1 tournament MVP John Gilchrist dazzled Gilchrist scored 16 points against a Chris Paul led Wake Forest team led a 21 point comeback against NC State by scoring 23 of his 30 points after halftime and poured in another 26 points in a memorable 95 87 overtime victory over Duke in the final Maryland s championship ended Duke s streak of five straight ACC championships In the 2004 05 season Maryland failed to make the NCAA tournament for the first time since the 1993 1994 season which was then the longest streak in the ACC This began a relatively mediocre stretch for Maryland where they failed to make the tournament three out of the next five years Maryland s best team in these years was 2006 07 when the team finished 25 9 10 7 ACC and ranked No 18 in the final AP poll Led by the once highly touted senior class of D J Strawberry Mike Jones Ekene Ibekwe and Will Bowers along with precocious freshman Greivis Vasquez the Terps beat a Stephen Curry led Davidson squad in the first round of the NCAA tournament before narrowly missing the Sweet 16 when they fell to Butler 59 62 which shot 12 26 46 from 3 The 06 07 squad memorably beat Duke twice and won what many fans consider one of the loudest games at the then named Comcast Center when they beat No 5 North Carolina The 2009 10 Terrapins brought the swagger and the shimmy back to College Park when they won a share of the regular season conference title with Duke Senior Greivis Vasquez won ACC Player of the Year and consensus second team All American honors as he climbed to No 2 all time in points and assists at Maryland while Williams earned his second ACC Coach of the Year award The season s highlights included Cliff Tucker s buzzer beating three pointer to defeat Georgia Tech at home after Coach Williams called a timeout that unintentionally nullified what would have been a game winning three by Vasquez and a win over eventual national champion Duke on Vasquez s senior night The Terrapins earned a 4 seed in the Midwest Regional of the NCAA tournament where they handily beat Houston 89 77 in the first round In the second round Maryland faced a tough 5th seeded Michigan State coached by Tom Izzo and led on the court by Kalin Lucas and future NBA star Draymond Green Behind Vasquez s 26 points Maryland stormed back from 17 points down in the second half to take the lead in the final seconds before MSU s Korie Lucious hit a heartbreaking buzzer beater to sink the Terrapins 85 83 The loss especially hurt after the top seed in the region Kansas lost to 9 seed Northern Iowa which opened a clear path to the Final Four The 2009 2010 team was to be the last great Gary Williams team The following season a group of promising freshmen and veteran holdovers from the 2009 2010 team failed to replicate the success of the prior season and the Terrapins struggled to a 19 14 mark failing to make the post season altogether for the first time since 1993 On May 5 2011 Gary Williams announced his decision to retire from coaching basketball He remains involved with the Maryland athletic department as Assistant Athletic Director and Special Assistant to the athletic director Gary Williams will always be treasured and remembered for saving his alma mater from the doldrums of the post Bias era years and eventually building Maryland into a national champion In honor of his legendary career Maryland named its hardwood at the Xfinity Center Gary Williams Court In 2014 Coach Williams was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame B1G new world the Mark Turgeon era edit Mark Turgeon had built a very respectable mid major program at Wichita State but ended with a disappointing year before beginning a successful spell in College Station with the Aggies in 2007 Prior to his last year at Texas A amp M Turgeon had negotiated a contract extension and salary increase On May 9 2011 at 8pm Turgeon met with his coaching staff and players to inform them that half an hour earlier he accepted the head coach position at the University of Maryland He had visited the campus earlier that day and left with an offer When asked about his decision at an Aggie Athletics press conference he said Maryland s got a great basketball tradition Texas A amp M and Maryland are real similar It s a gut feeling In their meeting earlier that night he told the Aggie players it was the hardest decision he ever had to make because of them Turgeon said that fan attendance at A amp M did not factor into his decision Since his arrival Maryland students have adopted the phrase Fear the Turgeon a play on the school s motto Fear the Turtle Some students known as the Turgeonites have created a fan club for the coach and dress like him on game days The last ACC years 2011 2014 edit Turgeon inherited an average roster featuring hardworking forward James Padgett the well rounded Sean Mosley sophomore point guard Pe Shon Howard and volume scorer Terrell Stoglin Turgeon and his staff secured 4 star Baltimore freshman Nick Faust and the Ukrainian big man Alex Len Turgeon captured his first win as the University of Maryland Head Coach on November 13 2011 by defeating UNC Wilmington at the Comcast Center 71 62 Maryland struggled throughout the season and finished with a 17 15 overall record and a 6 10 mark in the ACC The 2012 13 team was a young team Veteran Sean Mosley graduated and leading scorer Terrell Stoglin left the program In the first example of what would become a Mark Turgeon staple he cobbled together a roster with transfers and freshman and led the Terrapins to 25 wins and the NIT Semifinals Alex Len became a breakout star averaging 11 9 points 7 8 rebounds and 2 1 blocks per game eventually being drafted 5th overall by the Phoenix Suns following the season Xavier transfer Dez Wells would become a star in his three years in College Park He led the team in scoring with 13 1 a game Following Alex Len s decision to leave for the NBA the Terps struggled through what would be their final ACC season falling back to a 17 15 record In their final ACC regular season game the Terrapins defeated the 5th ranked Virginia Cavaliers 75 69 in OT at the Comcast Center Recent success 2014 present edit In November 2012 ESPN reported that the University of Maryland a charter member of the ACC was in serious negotiations to join the Big Ten Yahoo Sports confirmed the news and added that Big East Conference member Rutgers University was also in advanced talks to join the Big Ten These reports noted that the Big Ten s then current first tier media rights deal was set to expire in 2017 and the conference was preparing for negotiations on a new deal Both potential new members offered access to large new media markets for the conference The ESPN report stated that Maryland was somewhat torn over the possible move from the ACC to the Big Ten Two key players for Maryland in the negotiations president Wallace Loh and athletic director Kevin Anderson did not have ACC ties and Loh was a former provost of Big Ten member Iowa However the chancellor of the University System of Maryland USM that ultimately oversees the school Brit Kirwan had been on the College Park campus for 30 years and according to ESPN had a strong affinity for the ACC In addition one of the Maryland regents told ESPN that Under Armour founder and major Maryland athletic booster Kevin Plank was 100 percent behind a Big Ten move and was heavily lobbying regents On November 19 the Maryland regents voted to accept the Big Ten s offer and the Big Ten presidents unanimously approved Maryland s entry later that day The Terrapins officially joined in July 2014 The athletic department was not in a strong financial position at the time In July 2012 Maryland dropped seven varsity teams due to a deficit reported by The Washington Post as 4 million In addition the ACC voted earlier in 2012 to increase its exit fee to 50 million the only two members to vote against the increase were Maryland and Florida State Sources at Maryland believed that the school would be able to negotiate the buyout downward The 2014 15 Terrapins were led by senior star Dez Wells and freshman sensation Melo Trimble Maryland won their first Big Ten basketball game in a 68 66 double overtime thriller at Michigan State Maryland finished their first Big Ten season with a 14 4 record finishing second Turgeon was named Big Ten Coach of the Year Maryland was selected as a 4 seed in the NCAA tournament In the First Round Maryland defeated 13 Valparaiso 65 62 In the second round the Terps faced fifth seeded West Virginia and lost 69 59 after Melo Trimble got knocked out of the game with a concussion Trimble was named a second team All American by The Sporting News and both he and Wells were named first team Big Ten The 2015 16 Terrapins entered the season with high expectations Blue chip recruit Diamond Stone and transfers Robert Carter and Rasheed Sulaimon paired up with Melo Trimble and Jake Layman to create a formidable starting 5 for the Terps The Terrapins were 11 1 entering conference play featuring wins over Georgetown and UConn and a memorable competitive 89 81 loss against eventual national runner up North Carolina at the Dean Smith Center in the ACC B1G challenge Maryland got out to a 10 2 record in the Big Ten before losing 4 of the last 6 to finish 3rd in the conference with a 12 6 record The Terps handled Nebraska 97 86 in the Big Ten tournament quarterfinals in Indianapolis In the semifinal game the Terps were narrowly defeated by the Michigan State Spartans 64 61 For the NCAA tournament the Terrapins were selected as the No 5 seed in the South region They survived the South Dakota State Jackrabbits 79 74 in the first round In the second round they defeated a Hawaii team hot off of an upset of the 4 seeded California Golden Bears 73 60 In the Sweet 16 they were ousted by a superior Kansas Jayhawks team 79 63 Altogether the 2015 2016 team is regarded as a disappointment given their preseason ranking and the fact that they only reached the Sweet 16 However they put Maryland back on the map nationally and showed that the program was going to be a force in the Big Ten The 2016 2017 squad entered the season with many questions 1st team all Big Ten point guard Melo Trimble was the only remaining starter and only 3 other players received significant play time Lack of depth allowed a freshman trio of Anthony Cowan Jr Kevin Huerter and Justin Jackson to start in almost every game The team finished with a 24 9 season with a conference record of 12 6 finishing 3rd in the Big Ten The team had many memorable close fought games including the season finale against Michigan State when Melo Trimble nailed a game winning 3 with under a second remaining The team was deemed a 6 seed in the NCAA tournament getting knocked out in the 1st round to 11 seed Xavier 2017 2018 saw the Terps without star point guard Melo Trimble but saw Anthony Cowan Jr Kevin Huerter and Justin Jackson returning for their sophomore seasons Despite this and the emergence of star freshman power forward Bruno Fernando the terps struggled to an overall record of 19 13 and 8 10 in what was considered a weak Big Ten The season featured many close road losses that followed a pattern 13 This season resulted in the Terps completely missing the postseason for the first time since the 2013 2014 season The 2018 2019 season team entered the season with high anticipation locally thanks to returning stars Cowan and Fernando as well as the addition of the 7th ranked recruiting class in country starring consensus 5 star Jalen Stix Smith 14 15 Despite a young team the Terps outperformed national expectations and maintained a top 25 ranking for the entire 2nd half of the season Maryland finished the 2018 2019 campaign at 22 10 13 7 in the Big Ten garnering a 6 seed in the NCAA tournament The Terps survived a close battle with Dylan Windler led Belmont before losing on the last possession of the game against LSU 16 2019 2020 will forever be remembered by the college basketball world as the year the NCAA tournament and most conference tournaments were cancelled due to the COVID 19 pandemic For the Terps the cancelled postseason hit especially hard with Turgeon assembling his strongest team at Maryland which finished 24 7 and 14 6 in the Big Ten Led by first team All Big Ten selections Anthony Cowan Jr and Jalen Stix Smith the Terps won a three way share of the Big Ten regular season conference title along with Wisconsin and Michigan State the men s program s first conference title since 2010 and its first title in the Big Ten The Terps were ranked in the AP top ten for 22 weeks during the season being ranked as high as No 3 in early December and ending the season at No 12 The season was highlighted by an emphatic 21 point win over a Marquette team led by first team All American Marcus Howard to win the Orlando Invitational as well as dramatic road wins against Indiana Illinois Michigan State and Minnesota which memorably ended on Darryl Morsell s deep buzzer beating three Indicative of the program s reemergence on the national stage for just the second time in program history ESPN s College Gameday returned to College Park in late February for a showdown against pre season No 1 Michigan State Although the Terps lost the game their only home loss of the season and struggled mightily in a road loss three days later at Rutgers they rebounded in their next and final home game against Michigan to capture their share of the conference championship and cut down the nets on Cowan Jr s senior night Although Maryland fans will always wonder how far the team could have gone in March the season will be remembered fondly for the championship and Cowan Jr s outstanding senior season which saw him climb to No 7 all time in program history in points No 5 in assists and included several clutch performances in wins over Illinois and MSU The season will also be remembered for the national emergence of Smith who was selected to multiple All American teams and picked 10th in the 2020 NBA Draft The program entered the 2020 2021 season with low expectations primarily due to the departures of stalwarts Anthony Cowan Jr and Jalen Smith as well as three transfers in Ricky Lindo Jr Serrell Smith Jr and Joshua Tomaic Jalen Smith s early entry into the 2020 NBA draft was a particular issue for the team as there were no developed big men in line to take his minutes a glaring weakness in the Big Ten Conference Picked to finish 10th in the Big Ten Media Poll Turgeon had to rely on a core of four returning players Eric Ayala Darryl Morsell Aaron Wiggins and Donta Scott Turgeon shored up his roster by securing incoming transfers Jairus Hamilton and Galin Smith The team finished 17 14 and 9 11 in the Big Ten good enough for an 8th place finish in the conference The Terps won 5 of their last 7 conference games rising from 4 9 to finish 9 11 and defeated Michigan State 68 57 in the first round of the Big Ten tournament This late season rally was enough to earn a bid to the 2021 NCAA Division I men s basketball tournament as a 10 seed Matched against the 7th seeded 2020 21 UConn Huskies men s basketball team the team won their first round game 63 54 They advanced to face 2 seed Alabama who made 16 three pointers in a 96 77 rout Aaron Wiggins performance was a bright spot as he finished with 27 points Eric Ayala and Aaron Wiggins received Honorable Mentions for the All Big Ten teams and Darryl Morsell won Defensive Player of the Year On April 7 the University of Maryland announced Mark Turgeon s contract had been extended through the 2025 26 season 17 On December 3 2021 Maryland and Turgeon agreed to mutually part ways Danny Manning was named interim head coach On March 21 2022 Maryland hired Kevin Willard to be its tenth head coach in program history 18 Willard quickly went to the portal for the upcoming season picking up highly touted transfer prospect Jahmir Young from Charlotte 19 With Young leading the team Maryland went 20 11 including winning the Hall of Fame Tip Off tournament 20 Entering the tournament as an 8 seed Maryland defeated 9 seeded West Virginia in the first round of the NCAA Tournament In the second round of the tournament they faced 1 overall seeded Alabama They ultimately fell to the Tide 73 51 ending Kevin Willard s first season with an official record of 22 13 21 Coaching staff editPosition Name Head Coach Kevin Willard Associate Head Coach David Cox Assistant Coach Mike Jones Assistant Coach Greg Manning Jr Director of Basketball Operations Chuck Butler Director of Basketball Performance Kyle TarpAll time head coaches editMain article List of Maryland Terrapins men s basketball head coachesFacilities editXfinity Center 2002 present edit The Xfinity Center which opened in the Fall of 2002 is the current home of the Maryland Terrapins men s and women s basketball programs The building also features facilities for the wrestling and volleyball programs The 17 950 seat state of the art on campus facility is referred to as The House that Gary Built or Comcastle in reference to the arena s original name of Comcast Center used from 2002 to July 2014 Xfinity Center provides one of the best home court advantages in the nation This is largely due to the layout of the 4 000 seat student section which consists of the first ten rows surrounding the court in addition to the west wall of the arena simply known as the Wall which was constructed at a 35 degree incline Several former ACC opponents referred to the arena as the toughest place to play in the ACC Xfinity Center opened for Midnight Madness on October 11 2002 and the first official men s game was a 64 49 victory over Miami University Ohio on November 24 2002 On January 25 2012 the court was renamed in honor of Gary Williams the men s basketball coach who had retired the previous year The Xfinity Center welcomed 281 057 visitors over 16 games in its first season for an average of 17 566 which ranked 5th nationally in 2003 It was the first time Maryland had finished in the top 10 nbsp Xfinity Center exteriornationally in attendance since the 1976 season in which Maryland finished 4th with an average of 13 110 fans taking in games at Cole Field House Every year from 2004 to 2010 Maryland finished between 4th and 9th nationally in attendance At the conclusion of the 2015 2016 season Maryland is 205 42 830 all time at Xfinity Center Since 2003 Maryland has defeated 17 ranked opponents at Xfinity Center including 11 top ten teams eight top 5 teams and a top ranked team Duke University in 2003 22 Cole Field House 1955 2002 edit nbsp Cole Field House exterior summer 2007 Prior to 2002 the Terps spent 47 seasons from 1955 to 2002 at Cole Field House When college basketball was achieving its most explosive growth from the late 1950s to the late 1970s there was one college gymnasium on the East Coast that seated as many as 12 000 fans Cole Field House epitomized the new big time main event status of college hoops the sport of network TV and emerging legends It was a building where history was routinely made and fans could feel the echo of tradition and experience the electricity of top flight college basketball Additional seats were installed throughout the years to bring the final capacity to 14 596 in 1993 Cole Field House held its first East Regional finals in 1962 when NYU defeated St John s in the final 94 85 The Final Four was first held here in 1966 between Duke Kentucky Texas Western now UTEP and Utah Texas Western which started all black players upset Kentucky s all white team 72 65 in front of a crowd of 14 253 Future Maryland men s basketball coach Gary Williams then a student attended the game Cole also hosted the Final Four in 1970 and is the nation s only on campus arena to host multiple Final Fours Bud Millikan the first Maryland coach at the venue did not like its size saying at one point It s like playing on a neutral court with seats too far from the courts In the late 1960s Lefty Driesell added a nearly 3 000 seats around the court raising the hometown decibel level 23 Upon adding additional seating to create a more intimate atmosphere with fans right along the court Cole would develop into one of the best home court advantages in the country Along with Notre Dame s Joyce Athletic Center Cole is the site of the most upsets of top ranked opponents of any venue in college basketball 7 No 1 ranked teams have been upset inside Cole with Maryland pulling the upset in 6 of those 7 games and the other being Texas Western s National Championship win over Kentucky in 1966 Cole Field House was constructed in 1955 at a cost of 3 3 million On December 2 1955 Maryland played its first game at Cole beating rival Virginia 67 55 In 1972 the attendance record would be set as 15 287 fans packed into Cole and watched Maryland knock off North Carolina 79 77 in overtime The final regular season game of the 2001 season at Cole saw Maryland defeat Virginia 102 67 for the most lopsided result in the rivalry s history In 2002 in a game known amongst Maryland fans as the Oh He Steal game the 7th 1 ranked team would fall in Cole as Maryland handed Duke an 87 73 defeat taking over first place in the conference 24 Later that season Maryland would play its final game in Cole Field House celebrating the regular season conference title with a 112 92 win over Virginia Over 47 seasons Maryland compiled an impressive 486 151 record at Cole Field House Rivalries editDuke edit Main article Duke Maryland men s basketball rivalry The Duke Maryland basketball rivalry is a dormant college basketball rivalry between the Duke Blue Devils men s basketball team of Duke University and Maryland Terrapins men s basketball team of the University of Maryland The basketball series has been called one of the most intense intercollegiate rivalries of modern times by some A Harris Interactive poll of Marylanders ranked it the third best in the state behind the Commanders Cowboys and Ravens Commanders rivalries in 2003 before the Beltway Series of the Orioles and Nationals was possible In 2014 Maryland left the ACC for the Big Ten and regular season games between Maryland and Duke are no longer scheduled regularly Virginia edit Thanks to the proximity of these two long time ACC members and their status as Tobacco Road outsiders Maryland and Virginia have a long standing rivalry that spans many decades Traditionally these two schools would meet in the last game of the season and they both acted as spoilers to the other as they sought conference championships and NCAA tournament appearances This rivalry has been dormant in recent years however thanks to Maryland s move to the Big Ten Conference though they did match up in the 2014 ACC Big Ten Challenge a 76 65 win for the Cavaliers in College Park Maryland The Terrapins lead the all time series 107 76 On November 28 2018 the rivalry was again renewed for the ACC Big Ten Challenge with Virginia winning by a score of 76 71 25 North Carolina edit The Maryland North Carolina rivalry peaked in the late 1970s and early 1980s when both programs were fixtures in the AP poll and legendary coaches Lefty Driesell of Maryland and Dean Smith of the Tar Heels patrolled the sidelines Although the rivalry cooled towards the end of the Terps ACC era it still produced some memorable moments 26 27 The schools reunited for an ACC Big Ten Challenge matchup in 2015 with the Tar Heels winning the top ten battle 89 82 28 In 2017 the rivalry was renewed off the court as part of the wider University of North Carolina academic athletic scandal Maryland president Wallace Loh stated that he believed UNC basketball should receive the Death Penalty as punishment In response UNC coach Roy Williams called Loh a double idiot 29 Georgetown edit Maryland and Georgetown have competed 49 times the 10th most played opponent all time for both Georgetown and Maryland Maryland leads the all time series 34 15 The two schools played each other every season from 1950 to 1980 30 The schools stopped playing in 1980 because of bad blood between head coaches John Thompson and Lefty Driesell the two resumed play for one season in 1993 before taking a 22 game scheduled hiatus The teams met twice in unplanned games during the gap 2001 NCAA tournament for a sweet sixteen matchup and again in 2008 for an Old Spice Classic early season matchup In 2015 and 2016 the rivalry was renewed for the Gavitt Tipoff Games Michigan State edit Michigan State has emerged as one of Maryland s top rivals since the Terrapins moved to the Big Ten conference in 2014 The two schools have competed 16 times including twice in the NCAA tournament in 2003 and 2010 while Maryland was still a member of the ACC 31 Michigan State won both NCAA tournament games by two points each including a heartbreaking loss in 2010 on a last second three pointer The 2010 loss struck deep as it ended the stellar 4 year career of Greivis Vasquez and denied coach Williams an open path to a third Final Four 32 Since Maryland joined the Big Ten the two teams have produced memorable moments including Melo Trimble s buzzer beating three in his final home game in 2017 and Anthony Cowan Jr s three straight threes in the final minutes to close out a comeback win at MSU in 2020 MSU coach Tom Izzo earned the ire of Terp fans in 2015 after complaining that Trimble received too many favorable foul calls during his freshman year a move that many believe led to officials not calling blatant fouls against Trimble in his sophomore and junior seasons 33 Adding to the Terps tourney heartbreaks against Sparty MSU won conference tournament semi finals against Maryland in 2015 and 2016 by a combined seven points the latter of which ended on a non call when Trimble was apparently fouled driving to the basket down one point with two seconds left 34 Michigan State currently leads the all time series 13 8 and the conference series 10 6 Michigan edit A rivalry has begun to brew between the Maryland Terrapins and the Michigan Wolverines 35 Since Maryland joined the Big Ten both teams have been contending for the conference championship with Maryland coming out on top in 2020 and Michigan topping the table in 2021 The rivalry advanced during the 2020 2021 season Star Michigan freshman Hunter Dickinson who played high school basketball close to Maryland s campus made comments that he felt disrespected by the Terps for having not recruited him and other DMV players harder while they were in high school 36 In his first game against the Terps he scored 26 points and frequently stared down the Maryland bench and Coach Turgeon 37 Michigan went to claim the regular season title However tensions boiled over in their match up in the 2021 Big Ten Men s Basketball Championship where head coach Juwan Howard was ejected after receiving a double technical after an altercation with Mark Turgeon and the Terrapin team 38 Howard claimed that Turgeon charged at him and made derogatory comments about him and the University of Michigan Basketball scandal but Turgeon refuted those claims saying I stood up for myself and my program and said Don t talk to me and then the situation escalated 39 The all time series is 8 13 leaning to Michigan 40 Historical statistics editOverall Years of basketball 102 1st season 1904 05 Head coaches all time 9 All games All time record 1 641 1 086 20 win seasons 31 30 win seasons 1 ACC games ACC W L record 418 397 ACC titles 3 NCAA tournament NCAA appearances 30 NCAA W L record 44 29 Sweet Sixteen 14 Elite Eight 4 Final Four 2 National championships 1 1988 tournament records vacated by NCAA due to use of ineligible playerRecord against Big Ten opponents editOpponent Series record W L Illinois 15 8 652 Indiana 9 12 429 Iowa 9 8 529 Michigan 8 11 421 Michigan State 8 16 333 Minnesota 16 3 842 Nebraska 12 4 750 Northwestern 12 6 667 Ohio State 10 11 476 Penn State 17 15 531 Purdue 6 9 400 Rutgers 14 7 667 Wisconsin 8 13 381 Total 141 117 547 Totals through March 31 2024 41 Season by season results editSee also List of Maryland Terrapins men s basketball seasonsPost season results editNCAA tournament edit NCAA appearances 30 Overall record 44 29 National championships 1 2002 Final Fours 2 2001 2002 Elite Eights 4 1973 1975 2001 2002 Sweet Sixteens 14 1958 1973 1975 1980 1984 1985 1994 1995 1998 1999 2001 2002 2003 2016 Complete NCAA tournament results edit The Terrapins have appeared in the NCAA tournament 30 29 times Their combined record is 44 29 43 28 They were National Champions in 2002 Year Seed Round Opponent Results 1958 First RoundSweet SixteenRegional 3rd Place Game Boston CollegeTempleManhattan W 86 63L 71 67W 59 55 1973 Sweet SixteenElite Eight SyracuseProvidence W 91 75L 89 103 1975 First RoundSweet SixteenElite Eight CreightonNotre DameLouisville W 83 79W 83 71L 82 96 1980 2 Second RoundSweet Sixteen 7 Tennessee 3 Georgetown W 86 75L 68 74 1981 6 First RoundSecond Round 11 Chattanooga 3 Indiana W 81 69L 64 99 1983 8 First RoundSecond Round 9 Chattanooga 1 Houston W 52 51L 50 60 1984 3 Second RoundSweet Sixteen 11 West Virginia 2 Illinois W 102 77L 70 72 1985 5 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen 12 Miami OH 13 Navy 8 Villanova W 69 68 OTW 64 59L 43 46 1986 5 First RoundSecond Round 12 Pepperdine 4 UNLV W 69 64L 64 70 1988 7 First RoundSecond Round 10 UC Santa Barbara 2 Kentucky W 92 82L 81 90 1994 10 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen 7 Saint Louis 2 Massachusetts 3 Michigan W 74 66W 95 87L 71 78 1995 3 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen 14 Gonzaga 11 Texas 2 Connecticut W 87 63W 82 68L 89 99 1996 7 First Round 10 Santa Clara L 79 91 1997 5 First Round 12 College of Charleston L 66 75 1998 4 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen 13 Utah State 5 Illinois 1 Arizona W 82 68W 67 61L 79 87 1999 2 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen 15 Valparaiso 10 Creighton 3 St John s W 82 60W 75 63L 62 76 2000 3 First RoundSecond Round 14 Iona 6 UCLA W 74 59L 70 105 2001 3 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite EightFinal Four 14 George Mason 11 Georgia State 10 Georgetown 1 Stanford 1 Duke W 83 80W 79 60W 76 66W 87 73L 84 95 2002 1 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite EightFinal FourNational Championship Game 16 Siena 8 Wisconsin 4 Kentucky 2 Connecticut 1 Kansas 5 Indiana W 85 70W 87 57W 78 68W 90 82W 97 88W 64 52 2003 6 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen 11 UNC Wilmington 3 Xavier 7 Michigan State W 75 73W 77 64L 58 60 2004 4 First RoundSecond Round 13 UTEP 5 Syracuse W 86 83L 70 72 2007 4 First RoundSecond Round 13 Davidson 5 Butler W 82 70L 59 62 2009 10 First RoundSecond Round 7 California 2 Memphis W 84 71L 89 70 2010 4 First RoundSecond Round 13 Houston 5 Michigan State W 89 77L 83 85 2015 4 First Round Second Round 13 Valparaiso 5 West Virginia W 65 62L 59 69 2016 5 First Round Second Round Sweet Sixteen 12 South Dakota State 13 Hawaii 1 Kansas W 79 74 W 73 60 L 63 79 2017 6 First Round 11 Xavier L 65 76 2019 6 First RoundSecond Round 11 Belmont 3 LSU W 79 77L 67 69 2021 10 First RoundSecond Round 7 UConn 2 Alabama W 63 54L 77 96 2023 8 First RoundSecond Round 9 West Virginia 1 Alabama W 67 65 L 51 73 1988 tournament records vacated by NCAA due to use of ineligible playerSeed HistoryThe NCAA began seeding the tournament with the 1979 edition Year 1980 1981 1983 1984 1985 1986 1988 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2007 2009 2010 2015 2016 2017 2019 2021 2023 Seed 2 6 8 3 5 5 7 10 3 7 5 4 2 3 3 1 6 4 4 10 4 4 5 6 6 10 8 NIT results edit The Terrapins have appeared in the National Invitation Tournament NIT eight times Their combined record is 14 7 They were NIT champions in 1972 Year Round Opponent Result 1972 First RoundQuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal Saint Joseph sSyracuseJacksonvilleNiagara W 67 55W 71 65W 91 77W 100 69 1979 First RoundSecond Round Rhode IslandOhio State W 67 65L 72 79 1982 First RoundSecond Round RichmondGeorgia W 60 50L 69 83 1990 First RoundSecond Round MassachusettsPenn State W 91 81L 78 80 2005 First RoundSecond RoundQuarterfinalsSemifinals Oral RobertsDavidsonTCUSouth Carolina W 85 72W 78 63W 85 73L 67 75 2006 First Round Manhattan L 84 87 2008 First RoundSecond Round MinnesotaSyracuse W 68 58L 72 88 2013 First RoundSecond RoundQuarterfinalsSemifinals NiagaraDenverAlabamaIowa W 86 70W 62 52W 58 57L 60 71National honors editNaismith College Player of the Year 1995 Joe Smith Helms Foundation All American 1931 Louis Berger 1932 Louis Berger First Team All American 1975 John Lucas 1976 John Lucas 1980 Albert King 1986 Len Bias 1995 Joe Smith 2002 Juan Dixon Second Team All American 1973 Tom McMillen 1974 John Lucas Len Elmore Tom McMillen 1981 Albert King 1985 Len Bias 1992 Walt Williams 1999 Steve Francis 2010 Greivis Vasquez 2015 Melo Trimble Third Team All American 1972 Tom McMillen 1994 Joe Smith 1997 Keith Booth 2001 Juan Dixon 2020 Jalen Smith First Team All ACC 1954 Gene Shue 1960 Al Bunge 1972 Tom McMillen 1973 Tom McMillen 1974 John Lucas 1974 Len Elmore 1975 John Lucas 1976 John Lucas 1980 Albert King 1985 Len Bias 1986 Len Bias 1987 Derrick Lewis 1992 Walt Williams 1994 Joe Smith 1995 Joe Smith 1997 Keith Booth 1999 Steve Francis Terence Morris 2000 Juan Dixon Lonny Baxter 2001 Juan Dixon Lonny Baxter 2002 Juan Dixon 2003 Steve Blake 2010 Greivis Vasquez 2011 Jordan Williams ACC Player of the Year First Team All Big Ten 2015 Dez Wells Melo Trimble 2017 Melo Trimble 2019 Bruno Fernando 2020 Anthony Cowan Jr Jalen Smith 2024 Jahmir Young 42 43 44 International honors edit1974 FIBA Intercontinental Cup WinnersHonored jerseys editNote the numbers are not retired and can be worn by other players 45 No Player Career Hometown 3 Juan Dixon 1999 2002 Baltimore Maryland 6 Bosey Berger 1929 1932 Baltimore Maryland 15 John Lucas 1973 1976 Durham North Carolina Johnny Rhodes 1992 1996 Washington D C 21 Greivis Vasquez 2006 2010 Caracas Venezuela 22 Keith Booth 1993 1997 Baltimore Maryland 23 Steve Francis 1998 1999 Takoma Park Maryland 25 Steve Blake 1999 2003 Miami Lakes Florida Ernie Graham 1978 1981 Baltimore Maryland Gene Shue 1952 1954 Baltimore Maryland 32 Joe Smith 1993 1995 Norfolk Virginia 34 Len Bias 1983 1986 Landover Maryland 35 Lonny Baxter 1999 2002 Silver Spring Maryland 41 Len Elmore 1972 1974 Springfield Gardens New York 42 Walt Williams 1989 1992 Temple Hills Maryland 52 Buck Williams 1979 1981 Rocky Mount North Carolina 54 Tom McMillen 1972 1974 Mansfield Pennsylvania 55 Albert King 1978 1981 Brooklyn New YorkNBA Draft picks editYear Round Pick Name Team Games in NBA 2021 2 55 Aaron Wiggins Oklahoma City Thunder 158 2020 1 10 Jalen Smith Phoenix Suns 175 2019 2 34 Bruno Fernando Philadelphia 76ers 170 2018 1 19 Kevin Huerter Atlanta Hawks 388 2018 2 43 Justin Jackson Denver Nuggets 0 2016 2 40 Diamond Stone New Orleans Pelicans 7 2016 2 47 Jake Layman Orlando Magic 243 2013 1 5 Alex Len Phoenix Suns 613 2011 2 36 Jordan Williams New Jersey Nets 43 2010 1 28 Greivis Vasquez New Orleans Hornets 401 2008 2 57 James Gist San Antonio Spurs 0 2007 2 59 D J Strawberry Phoenix Suns 33 2003 2 38 Steve Blake Washington Wizards 870 2002 1 8 Chris Wilcox Los Angeles Clippers 628 2002 1 17 Juan Dixon Washington Wizards 436 2002 2 44 Lonny Baxter Chicago Bulls 162 2001 2 34 Terence Morris Atlanta Hawks 139 1999 1 2 Steve Francis Vancouver Grizzlies 576 1999 2 37 Obinna Ekezie Vancouver Grizzlies 143 1999 2 38 Laron Profit Orlando Magic 135 1997 1 28 Keith Booth Chicago Bulls 45 1995 1 1 Joe Smith Golden State Warriors 1 030 1993 2 31 Evers Burns Sacramento Kings 23 1992 1 7 Walt Williams Sacramento Kings 708 1990 1 17 Jerrod Mustaf New York Knicks 179 1990 2 43 Tony Massenburg San Antonio Spurs 683 1988 3 62 Derrick Lewis Chicago Bulls 0 1986 1 2 Len Bias Boston Celtics 0 Died 2 days after being drafted 46 1985 2 46 Adrian Branch Chicago Bulls 130 1984 2 37 Ben Coleman Chicago Bulls 227 1982 3 61 Charles Pittman Phoenix Suns 234 1981 1 3 Buck Williams New Jersey Nets 1 307 1981 1 10 Albert King New Jersey Nets 534 1978 4 81 Lawrence Boston Washington Bullets 13 1977 1 15 Brad Davis Los Angeles Lakers 961 1977 2 30 Steve Sheppard Chicago Bulls 106 1976 1 1 John Lucas Houston Rockets 928 1976 2 32 Mo Howard Cleveland Cavaliers 32 1974 1 9 Tom McMillen Buffalo Braves 729 1974 1 13 Len Elmore Washington Bullets 658 1973 3 37 Jim O Brien Cleveland Cavaliers 0 58 in ABA 1971 8 131 Barry Yates Philadelphia 76ers 24 1963 3 24 Jerry Greenspan Syracuse Nationals 25 1960 1 7 Al Bunge Philadelphia Warriors 0 1954 1 3 Gene Shue Philadelphia Warriors 699Other notable players editSarunas Jasikevicius professional basketball player and coach 2005 Israeli Basketball Premier League MVP Terence Morris NBA and Israel Basketball Premier League basketball player Melo Trimble professional basketball player in the Basketbol Super Ligi of TurkeyStatistical leaders editSee also Maryland Terrapins men s basketball statistical leaders Career leaders edit Points edit Points Name Games Career 2 269 Juan Dixon 141 1998 2002 2 171 Greivis Vasquez 136 2006 10 2 149 Len Bias 131 1982 86 2 058 Albert King 118 1977 81 2 017 Adrian Branch 123 1981 85 2 015 John Lucas 110 1972 76 1 881 Anthony Cowan Jr 130 2016 20 1 858 Lonny Baxter 138 1998 2002 1 807 Tom McMillen 88 1971 74 1 776 Keith Booth 126 1993 97 1 743 Johnny Rhodes 122 1992 96 1 733 Terence Morris 136 1997 2001 1 704 Walt Williams 105 1988 92 1 658 Melo Trimble 104 2014 17 1 607 Ernest Graham 118 1977 81 1 573 Nik Caner Medley 127 2002 06 1 566 Laron Profit 125 1995 99 1 561 Greg Manning 118 1977 81 1 458 Derrick Lewis 127 1984 88 1 449 Eric Ayala 125 2018 22 1 436 Jake Layman 141 2012 16 1 414 James Gist 130 2004 08 Assists edit Assists Name Games Career 972 Steve Blake 2000 03 772 Greivis Vasquez 2006 10 649 Keith Gatlin 1984 86 1988 590 Terrell Stokes 1996 99 584 Anthony Cowan Jr 2016 20 514 John Lucas 1973 76 513 Eric Hayes 2006 10 483 Duane Simpkins 1993 96 469 Kevin Mclinton 1990 93 460 Dutch Morley 1979 82 437 Johnny Rhodes 1993 96 433 Brad Davis 1975 77 410 Walt Williams 1989 92 403 Melo Trimble 2014 17 371 Juan Dixon 1999 2002 364 John Gilchrist 2002 05 360 Jeff Atkins 1981 85 346 Ernie Graham 1978 81 326 Exree Hipp 1992 96 317 D J Strawberry 2003 07 307 Drew Nicolas 1999 2003 304 Albert King 1977 81 Rebounds edit Rebounds Name Games Career 1 053 Len Elmore 1972 74 998 Lonny Baxter 1999 2002 948 Derrick Lewis 1985 88 928 Buck Williams 1979 81 925 Terence Morris 1998 2001 916 Keith Booth 1994 97 895 Larry Gibson 1976 79 859 Tom McMillen 1972 74 795 Al Bunge 1958 60 783 James Gist 2005 08 781 Ekene Ibekwe 2004 07 745 Len Bias 1983 86 722 Tony Massenburg 1986 1988 90References edit Color The University of Maryland Brand Retrieved July 9 2022 Steele David March 12 2009 Maryland gets another shot thanks to 1974 ACC classic The Baltimore Sun Retrieved April 17 2011 ACC men s basketball tournament ESPN Retrieved April 17 2011 Bill Free This Overtime Lasts 25 Years Archived 2008 09 12 at the Wayback Machine The 1974 team left it all out on the floor Baltimore Sun hosted at University of Maryland Terrapins athletic site February 20 1999 Davis Seth How Lefty Driesell started Midnight Madness with a midnight run in 1971 Sports Illustrated Sports Illustrated Retrieved May 20 2020 Angela Angela January 20 2003 Lefty the Hero National Association of Basketball Coaches Retrieved May 20 2020 Classic 1974 NC State Maryland ACC title clash hits 40 year mark March 12 2014 Remembering Len Bias 30 years after his death He was It The Washington Post The Washington Post Living with Len Bias June 17 2016 Raspberry William Lefty Driesell Looks Like the Scapegoat in Maryland s Face Saving Exercise South Florida Sun Sentinel Retrieved May 20 2020 Kindred Dave The Case For Lefty Driesell The Athletic Retrieved May 20 2020 Markus Don September 7 2018 After long wait former Maryland coach Lefty Drisell finally gets his Hall of Fame moment The Baltimore Sun Retrieved May 20 2020 Kendziora Thomas February 13 2018 The Maryland basketball road loss checklist Testudo Times 2018 Basketball Team Rankings 247Sports Retrieved October 5 2019 Jalen Smith Maryland Terrapins Power Forward 247Sports Retrieved October 5 2019 Markus Don March 17 2019 Maryland gets No 6 seed in NCAA tournament will face Belmont Temple winner Thursday in Jacksonville Fla The Baltimore Sun Retrieved March 19 2019 Maryland Announces Contract Extension for Mark Turgeon Maryland hires Kevin Willard Seton Hall coach joins Terps after leading Pirates to five NCAA Tournaments March 21 2022 Charlotte transfer Jahmir Young commits to Maryland with focus on NBA draft April 27 2022 Maryland handles Miami to win Hall of Fame Tip Off Tournament The Washington Post No 8 Maryland beats No 9 West Virginia 67 65 Bleacher Report Men s Basketball Schedule Maryland Terrapins umterps com Terps Cole rebounded to be cherished hoops home March 5 2002 icecoldfrapman February 27 2007 Oh He Steal Archived from the original on December 15 2021 via YouTube No 4 UVA guts out road win at No 24 Maryland Wahoos247 Terps Heels The End Of A Rivalry February 4 2014 Old ACC rivals UNC Maryland meet amid unfamiliar circumstances Maryland vs North Carolina Game Summary December 1 2015 ESPN Shaffer Jonas North Carolina coach Roy Williams calls Maryland President Loh a double idiot Matchup Finder College Basketball at Sports Reference com College Basketball at Sports Reference com Matchup Finder Michigan State vs Maryland Game Recap March 21 2010 ESPN Maryland s Melo Trimble and Michigan State s Tom Izzo have had an interesting relationship March 5 2017 Maryland vs Michigan State Play By Play March 12 2016 ESPN A rival is born How animosity between Maryland men s basketball and Michigan developed in just one season March 12 2021 Two Michigan freshmen criticize Maryland for not recruiting them Hunter Dickinson trolls Turgeon again after Michigan beats Terps WATCH Michigan s Juwan Howard ejected after dust up with Maryland s Mark Turgeon in Big Ten tournament March 12 2021 And so that s all I did I stood up for myself and my program and said Don t talk to me and then it escalated Men s Basketball History vs University of Michigan https www sports reference com cbb schools maryland men head to head html Archived copy Archived from the original on August 21 2010 Retrieved February 23 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Archived copy Archived from the original on August 29 2008 Retrieved February 23 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link NCAA All Americans apbr org Honored jerseys at Umterps com Maryland Basketball Star Len Bias Is Dead at 22 The Washington Post External links editOfficial website nbsp Maryland Men s Basketball collection at the University of Maryland Libraries Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Maryland Terrapins men 27s basketball amp oldid 1216609210, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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