Baltimore Sun Sunday

Freshman quarterbac­k guides Terps in romp

Hill impressive as UM scores its most points since 1954

- By Don Markus

COLLEGE PARK – Given the attention Maryland and freshman quarterbac­k Kasim Hill received after a season-opening win at then-No. 23 Texas last week, the expectatio­ns were certainly raised and the scrutiny on the Terps significan­tly greater in the team’s home opener against Towson.

Neither Hill nor the Terps disappoint­ed Saturday at Maryland Stadium.

Despite some shaky moments on defense, the Terps scored their most points since 1954 in a 63-17 victory over the Tigers and have now scored over 50 points in each of their first two games for the first time in school history.

Hill, who took over when sophomore Tyrrell Pigrome suffered a season-ending torn ACL against the Longhorns, picked up where he left off in Austin by completing his first eight passes. He completed 13 of 16 passes overall for 163 yards and two touchdowns — both to junior wide receiver D.J. Moore.

“I thought Kasim did a great job taking the team down the field on that first drive and making good decisions with the ball,” said second-year coach DJ Durkin, whose Terps scored on their first three possession­s to build a 21-0 lead. “We wanted to come out and get some good throws in with him, and he certainly did that.”

Hill also showed an ability to run out of the pocket, finishing with 41 rushing yards on five carries. If anything, the big-play abilities of Hill and some of his teammates limited the freshman’s snaps, as did the fact that Durkin replaced him late in the third quarter with sophomore Max Bortenschl­ager.

After his first drive took seven plays, with Hill finding Moore for a 9-yard touchdown, TV: Radio: the second drive took just four plays with him hitting Moore for a 34-yard score. The third drive lasted just one play, with junior running back Ty Johnson going 74 yards for a touchdown. Johnson also scored on a 46-yard run in the third quarter to finish with 124 rushing yards on five carries.

“There are some dudes on that team that are fun to watch,” Towson coach Rob Ambrose said. “They aren’t good football players; they are exceptiona­l football players. I think I’ve got some good football players that are going to build themselves into exceptiona­l players, but they’re already built.”

Redshirt freshman quarterbac­k Ryan Stover is one of them for Towson (1-1). Making his first start after replacing injured redshirt junior Morgan Mahalak, Stover completed 21 of 36 passes for 210 yards, two touchdowns and two intercepti­ons.

Asked to assess Stover’s performanc­e, Ambrose said, “Not bad. Try being a redshirt freshman and going to play a team that’s probably going to be ranked in the Top 25 pretty soon. He did some really, really good stuff today. He did some bonehead stuff today. But he did some really, really good stuff. We’re feeling a little bit better [about quarterbac­k].”

As explosive as Maryland’s offense was for most of the game, especially a running game that accounted for 367 yards and six touchdowns on 36 carries, its defense didn’t play with the same consistenc­y or ferocity that it showed at Texas.

At one point in the second quarter, after Stover and the Tigers went on an 11-play, 81-yard scoring drive, Durkin brought his defensive players together to chew them out. Maryland played better defensivel­y in the second half, limiting Towson to 27 yards rushing, but gave up a 59-yard touchdown pass from Stover to freshman receiver Rodney Dorsey of Frederick.

“I did get on the defense a couple of times,” Durkin said. “There are times when our communicat­ion wasn’t where it needs to be and there’s a lack of focus a little. We went up 21-0, we were playing a certain way and then we lost our urgency to do what we need to do. If you don’t have urgency in communicat­ion, technique and where your eyes are, you can’t effectivel­y play defense.”

Redshirt senior defensive end Andrew Isaacs, who started at Maryland as a tight end, helped spur the defense in the second half by getting in on two of the team’s four sacks. Isaacs said the message at halftime from Durkin and defensive coordinato­r Andy Buh was clear.

“Just playing harder,” Isaacs said. “We played hard in the beginning, but we eased up a little bit. The message in the locker room was making sure we kept putting the pressure on them, playing hard and imposing ourselves and that’s what we did.”

Any chance of Towson putting together a comeback and potential upset ended when Maryland junior safety Darnell Savage Jr. — after being called for pass interferen­ce two plays earlier — picked off Stover and raced 75 yards for a touchdown to increase his team’s lead to 28-7 late in the first half.

“Especially as a [defensive back], really anyone, anytime you get a chance to make a turnover on defense, I think the first thing that comes to your mind, you want to go score,” Savage said. “Obviously, offense scores touchdowns, that’s what they do. I think a defensive touchdown can swing a lot of momentum in a game.”

Maryland (2-0), which won its first four games in Durkin’s first season before the harsh reality of playing in the Big Ten East led to a 6-7 overall record, will carry a lot of momentum into a rare early bye week. First quarter MAR: D.Moore 9 pass from Hill (Darmstadte­r kick), 12:20 MAR: D.Moore 34 pass from Hill (Darmstadte­r kick), 8:32 MAR: T.Johnson 74 run (Darmstadte­r kick), 6:08 Second quarter TWN: J.Allen 10 pass from Stover (O’Neill kick), 14:54 MAR: Savage 75 intercepti­on return (Darmstadte­r kick), 5:46 Third quarter MAR: T.Johnson 46 run (Darmstadte­r kick), 12:29 MAR: Funk 25 run (Darmstadte­r kick), 8:26 MAR: D.Moore 21 run (Darmstadte­r kick), 4:34 Fourth quarter MAR: Bortenschl­ager 1 run (Darmstadte­r kick), 13:26 TWN: Dorsey 59 pass from Stover (O’Neill kick), 10:41 MAR: Leake 61 run (Darmstadte­r kick), 8:46 TWN: FG O’Neill 49, :28 A: 37,105. Rushing: Towson, Stover 13-52, Simpson 12-25, Platt 5-10, Young 5-10, Dorsey 1-2. Maryland, T.Johnson 5-124, Leake 4-78, Hill 5-41, Harrison 8-33, Funk 3-32, Bortenschl­ager 9-29, D.Moore 1-21, R.Brand 1-9. Passing: Towson, Stover 21-36-2-210. Maryland, Bortenschl­ager 1-2-0-4, Hill 13-16-0-163. Receiving: Towson, Simpson 7-53, Dorsey 3-56, Greenwood 3-36, J.Allen 2-24, B.Richardson 2-5, Scroggins 1-13, Green 1-12, Leatherbur­y 1-7, Kilgore 1-4. Maryland, D.Moore 7-97, Jacobs 5-60, Veii 1-6, Turner 1-4. Missed field goals: None

 ?? KARL MERTON FERRON/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Terps running back Javon Leake separates from Towson cornerback Tyron McDade on his way to a touchdown as head coach DJ Durkin and the bench erupt in celebratio­n during Maryland’s home-opening vicory.
KARL MERTON FERRON/BALTIMORE SUN Terps running back Javon Leake separates from Towson cornerback Tyron McDade on his way to a touchdown as head coach DJ Durkin and the bench erupt in celebratio­n during Maryland’s home-opening vicory.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States