Baltimore Sun Sunday

No need to start worrying about Terps men

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and coming up there are going to be big games that we need to win, starting with Sunday. … This one hurts. It’s on our home court. It’s a really good team that we feel we could have beaten. But conference play is really long and we started off last year really well and we didn’t end very well at all.”

There was nothing wrong with a 24-9 record and a third straight trip to the Big Dance, but the Terps need to flip that script to get back to the tournament and go deeper into March.

So maybe it isn’t such a bad thing to be tested so early this season. The Terps have faced their share of adversity and have – for the most part – risen to those challenges.

They probably should not have lost to St. Bonaventur­e and they fumbled away an opportunit­y to beat Syracuse on the road, but they rebounded from a 15-point halftime deficit to avoid an upset loss to Bucknell and battled back from multiple double-digit deficits against Purdue before Jared Nickens missed a 3-pointer that would’ve tied the game with 14 seconds left.

“I think we played a really good game, honestly,” said sophomore guard Anthony Cowan Jr., who brought the Terps back at the end with a 10-second, seven-point spurt in the final minute. “I think the first half we were down a lot, but I think we really brought it in the second half. We’ve just got to play a complete game. We’ll get better. We’ll turn it around.”

Turgeon marveled at the fact that his team could be outshot so decisively by the Boilermake­rs and still be there at the end, but it wasn’t that surprising. This Maryland team has terrific young talent and something last year’s team didn’t – more scoring potential down low and a longer, more dependable bench.

“We’ve got a lot to learn,” Turgeon said Friday, and that’s not necessaril­y a bad thing if it means the Terps have as much upside as it appears.

If the Purdue game proved anything, it was that the young Terps are already tough enough mentally to keep their composure when things are going poorly. The Boilermake­rs jumped all over them in the early minutes of the game with an otherworld­ly shooting performanc­e by center Isaac Haas and guard Dakota Mathias, who combined to sink 13 out of 14 shots in the first half.

Purdue bottled up Kevin Huerter and forced the ball into the hands of freshman Darryl Morsell, who hit just three of 16 shots, and still Maryland battled back by getting 16 offensive rebounds and turning the ball over just seven times.

“It’s not big things,” Huerter said Friday. “Every game it seems like it’s just little stuff why we’re losing. Today, it seems like we won almost every category other than we didn’t shoot it as well as they did. Sometimes, it just comes down to making shots. … It’s not a big-picture thing.”

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Terps have lost three of their past four games after starting 5-0. “We’ve got a lot to learn,” coach Mark Turgeon said.
PATRICK SEMANSKY/ASSOCIATED PRESS The Terps have lost three of their past four games after starting 5-0. “We’ve got a lot to learn,” coach Mark Turgeon said.

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