Mike Wise
Terps Need More Work
|
Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.
|
Maryland has completely distanced itself from the lost team that inexplicably fell to Ohio and American in a 10-day span almost a month ago. Coach Gary Williams can see his team crawling its way back toward the elite of men's college basketball -- a team that might just be tournament-worthy in a month.
But there is a hitch that needs to be fixed, a fundamental problem that last night kept the Terrapins from knocking off a top-five team for the second time in eight days and might keep them from the 20 wins probably needed to get in.
Like most teams coached by Williams, they know how to play with their backs against the wall. Their stunning victory last Saturday against North Carolina in Chapel Hill is testimony. But playing with the lead, getting used to prosperity instead of the usual adversity, is a real chore right now.
"We were acting like we were the team that was down," Bambale Osby said. "I don't know why we were in such a rush. We were leading. We weren't behind."
Maryland was undone by Duke's second-half will and poise in a 93-84 loss, which had to be deflating after shooting a lights-out 62.1 percent in the first half and nearly running the Blue Devils off the floor with an assortment of dunks and drop-step layups.
Osby was manhandling Duke's Lilliputian frontline. Big, strong and imposing, with a pick-combed Afro to boot, the Maryland power forward just ran over Mike Krzyzewski's fourth-ranked team. The imposing player teammates and fans affectionately call "Boom" should have come equipped with a roll bar.
But Gerald Henderson and DeMarcus Nelson, a very NBA-ready back court, came out in the second half and led their teammates on a nice little run. Duke scored the first six points of the half and, suddenly, it was a three-point game and a grind-it-out affair the rest of the way.
Williams's only real complaint had to be his players' inability to corral a few loose balls with less than four minutes left and his team trailing by five. Duke's desire simply made it impossible for Maryland to make this a last-second affair. Other than that, they hung around with a one-loss team until the end.
"What do you want me to do?" he said, rhetorically. "Fifty-four percent [shooting] against the number [four] team in the country."
He wasn't satisfied -- how could he be after the Terrapins fell to 12-8 with 11 games to play in the ACC? But he wasn't down on his players either, especially not after they stunned the Tar Heels last week and were in a very good position to take out Duke before letting the Blue Devils back in the game.
"We're doing it," Williams said. "We've won six of our last eight games. We beat the number one team in the country and had the number [four] team in the country down nine at halftime. We just didn't get it done in the second half. We're not perfect.
"We have two days to get ready for Virginia and we're going to be ready. We have to play every game, every situation. We were that way for a long time and we want to get back to that level."


