After a poor first half, Maryland surged late to take control behind yet another strong performance by Vasquez. In spite of a no-show by Hayes, Mosley, and Tucker (combined 1-13), the Terps achieved a critical road win in the ACC and are now just 2 wins away from my goal of 10-6 in conference. Defense really seemed to be the difference tonight during a 24-7 (and 13-0) run covering the majority of the second half, as NC State managed only 21 second half points and shot 35% for the game. Once Maryland rallied to take the lead, the game was never really in doubt. In the last 10 minutes, it was quite clear that only one team on the court really had something to play for, with Maryland controlling almost every aspect of the game. Only Dennis Horner kept the Wolfpack respectable, with an impressive 19 and 10 and seemingly everywhere on the court at times.
The Terps have now weathered the storm, literally. With 3 games in 5 days as a result of the bad weather, Maryland could easily have wilted from fatigue or just the struggles of logistical difficulties. But after a tough loss to Duke, we rallied to beat UVA and NC State in must-win games to set up a very interesting end to the conference schedule. There are no more "breather" games left in the Terps' back-loaded schedule, after an impressive 8-3 start against the underbelly of the league. The Terps' best win so far is over 7-5 FSU (twice), and no other vanquished foe is better than .500 in league play.
The remaining games are GT, Clemson, @VT, Duke, and @UVA, and we really need 2 of those at a minimum. A victory in at least one of the first two games, both at home, is critical because the @VT and Duke stretch will be very tough, both opponents at the top of the current conference standings. Neither GT nor Clemson has done anything worthwhile on the road this year, and Maryland has to hope the home-court advantage at Comcast can continue that trend. The final game in Charlottesville against a fading Cavaliers team will turn into a must-win if we stagger into that game 1-3 over the previous 4. In a weak year for the ACC, the Terps don't need to give the NCAA committee any reason for doubts, with something like a 1-4 finish and a first-round loss in the ACC tournament. All we have to do is take care of business, something the Terps have done all year against lesser opposition, and continued tonight, digging deep to get a road win against one of the worst teams in the league this year.
February 17, 2010
Terps Rally, Beat Woeful Wolfpack
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According to kenpom ratings, MD is number 12 in the country and 6 ACC teams, (of which Wake is NOT included) are in the top 25. Does the ACC actually not suck as much as the rankings and everyone believes, or is kenpom's methodology crazy out of whack? (Though Sagarin pure points has MD at basically the same, number 13.)
Adam, a wise man once said "men lie women lie numbers don't."
The ACC doesn't have a world beat team, although Duke, sadly, might be close. That said the conference will get 6 or 7 teams in the tourney and 3 or 4 will go to the second weekend. So in a nutshell, the ACC is as it has always been, the best conference in college basketball.
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