Baltimore Sun

Travel troubles

Nittany Lions send Terps to sixth straight road setback in Big Ten

- By Don Markus

STATE COLLEGE, PA. — Ever since the Maryland men’s basketball began its Big Ten schedule this season, road games have featured packed arenas, passionate fans and favored opponents.

With the exception of an overtime victory at Illinois in early December in the league opener, the result has been depressing­ly the same for the Terps.

There was some variance Wednesday night at the Bryce Jordan Center, where Saturday, noon TV: ESPN2 Radio: 105.7 FM, 980 AM the nation’s No. 1 wrestling team is the only one to draw sellouts for Penn State.

As Maryland did last week at No. 3 Purdue, the Terps erased most of a double-digit deficit and had a chance to put a scare into the Nittany Lions, but couldn’t quite finish the comeback.

The outcome was pretty much a repeat of several of Maryland’s road losses this season — a 74-70 defeat in which the Terps shot well enough to win and were done in, partly by fatigue.

Sophomore guard Anthony Cowan Jr. led Maryland with 15 points, but missed a driving layup with 29 seconds to go that could have cut what had been a 10-point deficit to one.

Maryland coach Mark Turgeon showed his mounting frustratin­g with a season that

is going in the wrong direction after a series of injuries that has depleted his team’s frontcourt and depth.

“My guys battled, are you serious guys? Let’s be real, my guys battled,” Turgeon said. “They got a heck of a team. They got maybe three NBA guys on that roster. My guys battled.”

Maryland (16-10, 5-8) made 13 of 22 shots in the first half and trailed by six because Penn State (17-9, 7-6) scored 12 points off turnovers and an additional nine on second-chance baskets.

For the game, the Terps shot 54.3 percent (25-for-46) and made nine of 17 on 3-pointers. But they didn’t have an answer for sophomore forward Lamar Stevens, who scored 25 points on 10-for-12 from the field.

“He made a lot of tough shots,” sophomore guard Kevin Huerter said. “He shoots better at home. We were kind of playing him as a driver, make shots overhand. There were a couple of times when we didn’t get out on him. He’s a tough matchup.”

After the win at Illinois on Dec. 3, the loss was the sixth straight in the Big Ten for the Terps on the road, where a year ago they finished 7-2. Maryland has lost four of five and six of eight games overall.

“We couldn’t really get a stop all game. They shot really well,” Huerter said. “We didn’t think we competed well in the first half on the defensive end. In the second half we were better, but still didn’t get very many stops.” Tough night for Huerter: Huerter got off to a good start against the Nittany Lions, making a couple of early free throws and then hitting back-to-back shots — a long 2-pointer and a 3-pointer on the next possession — to give Maryland an early 20-14 lead.

But Huerter didn’t do much after that, and seemed to force things a bit in the second half.

Huerter, whose last basket of the first half cut Maryland’s deficit to 37-35, didn’t score again until there was 2:41 remaining in the game and trailing by seven.

He added another basket exactly a minute later again to cut the defict to five.

While Huerter finished with a solid line — 13 points, five rebounds and thee assists — he also had four turnovers and seemed a bit sluggish at times getting to defensive rebounds and loose balls. Penn State's Josh Reaves dribbles around Maryland's Darryl Morsell during Wednesday night’s game. Maryland has lost four of its last five games.

Turgeon said that a lot had to do with the defense the Nittany Lions used on both Huerter (5-for-12 overall, 1-for-4 on 3-pointers) as well as Cowan (4-for-7 overall, 3-for-3 on 3-pointers).

“They’ve got a really good defender in Josh Reaves” Turgeon said. “He’s terrific. He’s not kind of good, he’s really good. He blew up a lot of things out there. I think you’ve got to give him a little credit and No. 5 — [Jamari] Wheeler — he’s a great defender, too. They really pressured us.” Fernando bounces back: Freshman center Bruno Fernando, who had just five points in Sunday’s win over Wisconsin and struggled at times defensivel­y against Ethan Happ, finished with 13 points and nine rebounds.

Fernando also did a solid job on Penn State center Mike Watkins, who had 17 points and 17 rebounds in his team’s 75-69 loss to the Terps on Jan. 2 at Xfinity Center. Watkins wound up with 11 points and just five rebounds.

Not only did the 6-10 Angolan show the strength inside he has demonstrat­ed when healthy this season, but he also continued to prove he has a midrange game and show a soft touch at the free-throw line (5-for-5). He also had three assists.

Turnovers were the biggest problem for Fernando. He finished with six of Maryland’s 14.

 ?? ABBY DREY/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Maryland guard Darryl Morsell, right, blocks a shot by Penn State’s Mike Watkins during Wednesday’s Big Ten matchup in State College, Pa. Morsell, a freshman from Mount Saint Joseph, scored 10 points and also had three assists for the Terps.
ABBY DREY/ASSOCIATED PRESS Maryland guard Darryl Morsell, right, blocks a shot by Penn State’s Mike Watkins during Wednesday’s Big Ten matchup in State College, Pa. Morsell, a freshman from Mount Saint Joseph, scored 10 points and also had three assists for the Terps.
 ?? ABBY DREY/ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
ABBY DREY/ASSOCIATED PRESS

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