Baltimore Sun Sunday

Terps get a taste of own medicine

Boilermake­rs come back in final minute to end UM’s streak

- By Don Markus

COLLEGE PARK — Maryland seemed to have the college basketball gods on its side in the final minute of Saturday’s men’s basketball game against No. 23 Purdue at Xfinity Center.

They helped the No. 17 Terps take a three-point lead on a pair of free throws by junior guard Melo Trimble with 56 seconds remaining, when Purdue star Caleb Swanigan fouled out after initially blocking the Maryland star’s layup attempt.

They helped Maryland get a last-ditch chance when freshman wing Kevin Huerter’s long inbounds pass sailed over senior center Damonte Dodd’s head, only to have Purdue center Isaac Haas get called for a travel with 0.5 of a second left.

In the end, the college basketball gods abandoned the Terps, whose seven-game Big Ten winning streak ended with a 73-72 loss before a disappoint­ed sellout crowd at Xfinity Center.

While crediting Purdue for the kind of comeback road win the Terps have made a habit of, Maryland coach Mark Turgeon knew his team had contribute­d to its first loss since New Year’s Day at home against Nebraska.

“This one hurts,” said Turgeon, whose team was playing a Top 25 team for the first time this season. “We played well enough to win. I’m really proud of my group. We just had some silly fouls and we allowed them to beat us at the foul line rather than earning it down there at the end.”

The Boilermake­rs made 16 of 19 from the free-throw line, including four straight in the last 38 seconds, the go-ahead pair by freshman guard Carsen Edwards with 2.1 seconds left. More importantl­y, Maryland’s inability to hit shots down the stretch was an even bigger factor. The Terps didn’t hit a field goal in the last 7:37, but kept the lead by making free throws, most of them by Trimble, who made 14 of 15.

Swanigan, the favorite to win Big Ten Player of the Year, paced Purdue (19-5, 8-3 Big Ten) with 26 points and 10 rebounds. It was the 6-foot-9 sophomore forward’s 20th double double of the season. Trimble led the Terps with 22 points, but shot 4-for-15 from the field, including 0-for-4 on 3-point tries.

Maryland shot 23-for-58 from the field (39.7 percent) and only made only four of 19 3-point attempts.

“They were great defensivel­y and we couldn’t make a jump shot,” said Turgeon, whose team led by as many as 12 points in the second half. “I wish I could’ve gotten us a layup.”

Said Purdue coach Matt Painter, whose team led for a total of 59 seconds and never by more than a couple of points: “It wasn’t our defense. They just missed some open ones. We were very, very fortunate.”

Trimble missed a short pullup jumper with 16 seconds to go and eight seconds left on the shot clock. After Edwards made the free throws and Haas was called for traveling, Huerter’s slightly off-balance corner 3-pointer at the buzzer sailed long.

Asked whether he thought he had made the shot, Huerter said, “I’m always confident when I shoot.”

Huerter acknowledg­ed that having less

AP Men’s Top 25

than a second to get the shot off was a factor.

“That was something going through my head,” Huerter said. “For me thinking about it now, I’m not mad I missed. I didn’t shoot it the way I wanted to. It didn’t feel like the shots I was taking throughout the game. That’s what I’m most frustrated with.”

Turgeon didn’t second-guess Trimble’s decision to pull up from about 10 feet on his last shot rather than driving, as he had done for most of the second half. Nor did Turgeon question whether Trimble had shot too quickly, allowing Purdue a better chance to set up a play at the other end.

“That was on me if he shot it too soon,” Turgeon said. “I told him when to run the play. You never know what’s going to happen. What a great shot. He’s your best player, he’s been unbelievab­le for three years, he got to the foul line 15 times . ... He was the reason we were in the game.”

It looked for a while as if Maryland was going to win easily.

After seeing a nine-point lead in the first half cut to two at halftime, the Terps (20-3, 8-2) stretched their lead to as much as 52-40 on a dunk by Huerter with 13:47 to play. But after Painter called timeout, the Boilermake­rs went on an 11-0 run. Every time it seemed as if Purdue was poised to go in front, Maryland made a defensive stop. While they weren’t hitting from the outside, the Terps were making most of their free throws to hold the Boilermake­rs at bay.

But Purdue, which collapsed down the stretch at Nebraska on Jan. 29 as well as at Iowa on Jan. 12, hung in even with its best player, Swanigan, on the bench.

“It definitely was an opportunit­y [lost], but there’s definitely going to be more opportunit­ies coming up,” said Huerter, who had 11 points and nine rebounds. “It would have been a good win, obviously to get the win in front of the home crowd, and kind of get some respect behind our name.”

NOTES: Maryland fell a half game behind first-place Wisconsin (19-3, 8-1). The 10th-ranked Badgers host Indiana today . ... Junior center Michal Cekovsky, in his fourth game back after missing more than a month with a foot injury, had 10 points and a career-high six blocks in 13 minutes.

 ?? NICK WASS/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Maryland coach Mark Turgeon leaves the Xfinity Center court after the game. “This one hurts,” said Turgeon, whose team didn’t hit a field goal in the last 7:37.
NICK WASS/ASSOCIATED PRESS Maryland coach Mark Turgeon leaves the Xfinity Center court after the game. “This one hurts,” said Turgeon, whose team didn’t hit a field goal in the last 7:37.

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