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MARYLAND BASKETBALL

1986-87

Date

Dec. 27 29 31

Jan. 3

5

8

10

14

17

19

21

24

28

Feb. 1

2

4

7

10 14 16 18 22 25 27 Mar. 1 6-7-8

1986-87 Schedule

.

Opponent

Site

Time

Winthrop

Home

8 PM

Fairleigh Dickinson

Home

8 PM

Notre Dame

Home

7 PM

N.C. State

Away

7 PM

Towson

Home

8 PM

North Carolina

Away

9 PM

Virginia

Home

4 PM

Duke

Home

8 PM

Clemson

Away

4 PM

Buc knell

Home

8 PM

West Virginia

Home

8 PM

Old Dominion

Away

7:30 PM

James Madison

Away

7:30 PM

Georgia Tech

Away

3 PM

Wake Forest

Away

8 PM

Clemson

Home

8 PM

Duke

Away

4 PM

Georgia Tech

Home

9 PM

North Carolina

Home

4 PM

Central Florida

Home

8 PM

Maryland-Baltimore County

Home

8 PM

Wake Forest

Home

4 PM

N.C. State

Home

8 PM

Maryland-Eastern Shore

Home

8 PM

Virginia

Away

3 PM

ACC Tournament

Landover, Maryland

1986-87 BASKETBALL GUIDE

Table of Contents

Section I: Administration and Coaching Staff 5

Assistant Coaches 10

Athletic Department Biographies 11

Athletic Director Charles F. Sturtz 7

Chancellor John B. Slaughter 6

Cole Field House 15

Conference Directory 16

Head Coach Bob Wade 8

President John S. Toll 6

Support Staff 14

Section II: The 1986-87 Season 17

Composite ACC Schedule 31

Comprehensive Stats Returning Players 30

Dickerson, David 22

Holland, Pat 29

Hood, Steve 25

Johnson, John 23

Karver, Mark 25

Kasoff, Mitch 26

Lewis, Derrick 20

McCoy, Teyon 26

Nared, Greg 24

Nevin, Phil 27

Opponent Capsules 32

Powell, Ivan 27

Preview of 1986-87 18

Results vs. 1986-87 Opponents 38

Reyes, Andre 28

Worstell, Tom 29

Section III: The 1985-86 Season 51

ACC Standings and Statistics 58

Final Statistics, 1985-86 54

Game-by-Game Scoring 56

Game Highs Individual and Team 57

Game Leaders and Results 54

Maryland Hoopourri: Past and Present 60

Points Per Possession 58

Season in Review 52

Stat Key 55

Team Breakdowns 55

Section IV: Achievements, Awards and Records 62

All-ACC Selections 63

All-America Profiles 64

All-Time Leaders 66

Award Winners 68

Close Games 64

Cole Field House Records 78

Lettermen All-Time 80

Maryland Graduates as Division I Head Coaches 79

Maryland Invitational Tournament 70

NBA Draft History 83

NBA Players Active 84

Olympians 84

Postseason History 67

Records Ail-Time 73

Year-by-Year Leaders 72

Year-by-Year Scores 74

General Information

University of Maryland College Park, Md. 20740

Founded: 1807

Enrollment: 30,556 full-time undergraduates

President: Dr. John S. Toll

Chancellor: Dr. John B. Slaughter

Athletic Director: Charles Sturtz/(301) 454-4705

Conference: Atlantic Coast

Years in ACC: 33

Nickname: Terrapins (Terps)

Colors: Red, White, Black and Gold

Arena: Cole Field House (14,500)

Faculty Chairman, Athletics: Dr. Betty F. Smith

Sports Information Director: John W. (Jack) Zane

Sports Information Phone: (301) 454 2123/454 2700

Sports Information Address: P.O. Box 295, College Park,

Md. 20740 (Room 1145) Ticket Office: (301) 454-2121/(800) 492-0704 in state Athletic Department Physician: Dr. Stanford Lavine Athletic Department Trainer: J.J. Bush

Basketball Coach: Bob Wade

Assistants: Ron Bradley, Oliver Purnell, Jeff Adkins

Wade's Record at Maryland: First season

Basketball Office Phones: (301) 454 -2126

1985-86 Record: 19-14/6th in ACC

All-time Record: 893-673 (.570)

Overall ACC Regular-Season Record: 226-215 (.512)

ACC Championships: Two

Top 10 in Polls: Nine

20-victory Seasons since ACC Inception: 12

Winning Seasons since ACC Inception: 25

Most Victories, Season: 27 in 1971-72

Most Consecutive Victories: 14, 1959 to 1960

Most Losses, Season: 21 in 1941

Most Consecutive Losses: 22, 1940 to 1941

NCAA Tournament Appearances: Nine

NCAA Tournament Record: 12-9

All-ACC Selections: 40

had never seen play, led the first Terp squad comprised entirely of Millikan recruits, a group that included Bob Kessler, John Sandbower, Ralph Greco, Tom Young and Ronnie Brooks. In becoming an Ail- American and Maryland's high-visibility basketball star, Shue scored 1,397 points in three seasons, a school record that stood until McMillen surpassed the total 20 years later. After a 10-year NBA career that included two All-Pro selections, Shue enjoyed a successful NBA coaching career in Baltimore, Philadelphia, San Diego and Washington.

Millikan followed up the national ranking with four straight winning seasons. His Terps achieved the pinnacle of success in 1957-58, when they captured the school's first ACC Tournament Championship with victories over Virginia, Duke and North Carolina. Advancing to the NCAA Tour- nament, the Terps defeated Boston College in the first round of the East Regional, then lost to powerful Temple in the Regional semifinals. Maryland rebounded to defeat Manhattan in the consolation game, cap- ping their best season to date (22-7) with a No. 6 ranking in the final national poll. Members of one of Maryland's finest teams ever included Al Bunge, Charles McNeil, Nick Davis and John Nacincik, all of whom were later NBA draft picks.

An inconsistent stretch ensued. Millikan's Terps fell to 10-13 in 1958-59, rebounded for a pair of winning seasons, then suffered through three straight losing campaigns before going 18-8 in 1964-65. Millikan got one more winning season (14-11 in 1965-66) before stepping down after the 1966-67 season. Frank Fellows, a member of Mil- likan's first team at Maryland, succeeded him, but lasted only two seasons, as athletic director Jim Kehoe oversaw a transfusion to the program and hired Charles "Lefty" Driesell in the spring of 1969.

Terp coach Bud Millikan (with ball) won 241 games in 17 seasons at Maryland and captured the first ACC Tournament Championship in 1958. Here, he poses with his 1966-67 starring lineup, including Joe Harrington (3rd from left), the current George Mason coach, and current Ohio State mentor Gary Williams (far-right).

Flamboyant and outspoken, Driesell had led Davidson College to six 20-victory seasons and four Top 10 rankings since 1960. And in rebuilding the Terps through a pair of mediocre seasons amid intense fanfare, an unparalleled brand of enthu- siasm swarmed Maryland Basketball. In 1972, Driesell's Terps flourished, going 27-5 with McMillen and Elmore and capturing the National Invitational Tournament championship. Crowds of 3,000 became sellouts in the 14,500-seat Cole Field House as Driesell established Maryland as a national power. An era had been conceived.

The 1972 NIT crown ignited a 15-year period of excellence. Driesell led Maryland to 321 victories (23.0 wins per season) 10 seasons of at least 20 victories and eight NCAA Tournament appearances. Six All- Americans emerged from 1972 to 1986:

McMillen, Elmore, John Lucas, Buck Williams, Albert King and Len Bias. The Terps finished in the Associated Press Top 20 eight times during the era, won an ACC Tournament Championship in 1984 and advanced to the league finals six times. In college basketball's toughest conference, the Maryland basketball program had established itself as a prominent, consistent force.

The beginning of a new era marks the 1986-87 season. The task of expanding upon the rich tradition of Maryland Basket- ball falls to Bob Wade, whose success at Baltimore-Dunbar High School is matched by few. Undoubtedly, the tradition will con- tinue to grow. From the days of primitive exhibitions and rugged scrimmages, it has done just that.

A Tradition of Success

Season

Final Season Ranking

1969-70

13 wins

1970-71

14 wins

1971-72

27 wins

1972-73

23 wins

1973-74

23 wins

1974-75

24 wins

1975-76

22 wins

1976-77

19 wins

1977-78

15 wins

1978-79

19 wins

1979-80

24 wins

1980-81

21 wins

1981-82

16 wins

1982-83

20 wins

1983-84

24 wins

1984-85

25 wins

1985-86

19 wins

Will Hetzel's Shot at Buzzer Beats Duke 52-50 Beat #2 South Carolina

*NIT Champs— Beat Niagara 100-69, ACC Finals

NCAA Tournament— Final 8, ACC Finals

NIT Invitation— ACC Finals

NCAA Tournament— Final 8 Only Team to Score

100 points in Cameron Indoor Stadium, Beat Duke 104-80, Beat N. Carolina 96-74 for Worst Defeat Ever in Carmichael Auditorium

NIT Invitation

NIT Invitation— Maryland Invitational Champs Won 3 of 4 games on "Tobacco Road"

Maryland Invitational Champs Tip-off Tournament Champs

NIT Tournament— Beat #1 Notre Dame, Beat Duke, Beat #4 N.C. State

NCAA Tournament— Final 16 ACC Finals

NCAA Tournament— Final 16 ACC finals

NIT Tournament Beat #1 Virginia in OT

NCAA Tournament— Beat National Champs— N.C. State Twice, Beat #2 North Carolina,

Beat #3 UCLA

*ACC Champs— NCAA Tournament— Final 16

NCAA Tournament— Final 16— Beat #2 Duke

NCAA Tournament— Beat #1 North Carolina Twice

11th 8th 4th 5th

11th

8th 18th

10th 18th

Administration and Coaching Staff

Dr. John S. Toll

President

As president of a major research University with five campuses and 88,400 students worldwide, John S. Toll is dedicated to strengthening excellence in teaching, research, and public service. Under his leadership, the University has developed programs of high quality, has attracted outstanding faculty and students, and has built partnerships with industry, government, schools, and other institutions.

In the past few years, milestones in the University's progress have included two Pulitzer Prizes for faculty members and important developments in medical research and treatment, in biotechnology, and in many other areas, among them:

The National Science Foundation awarded the College Park campus a $16 million grant to establish a Systems Research Center, one of six national centers of excellence in engineering.

The University's Center of Marine Biotechnology, located in Baltimore, has received a $6,695 million, five-year federal grant.

The U.S. Department of Education awarded the College of Education a $6.5 million, five-year grant to establish a Center for Research on Postsecondary Education Management and Governance.

Philanthropic support for academic programs at the Univer- sity has reached a new high of over $12 million annually.

The arts flourish at Maryland, including the highly acclaimed Handel Festival; the traveling performances of "Shakespeare

on Wheels," and the world renowned University of Maryland Piano Festival and William Kapell Competition.

John Toll graduated from Yale with highest honors and earned his advanced degrees in physics at Princeton. During his dis- tinguished career as a theoretical physicist and educator, for 12 years he chaired the physics department at the College Park campus and led it to national prominence. He then served as president of the State University of New York at Stony Brook from 1965 to 1978, when he returned to Maryland to become the University's 22nd president. An avid jogger and tennis player, Dr. Toll and his wife Deborah have two daughters.

(If you would like to learn more about the University of Maryland under the leadership of Dr. Toll, write for his 1985-86 annual report to: The University of Maryland Central Administration, Office of University Publications, 3300 Metzerott Road, Adelphi, MD 20783.)

Dr. John Brooks Slaughter

John Brooks Slaughter, the third Chancellor of the College Park Campus, is a distinguished scientist and a dedicated humanitarian as well as an able administrator. His research specialities are in the fields of electrical engineering and computer systems. His accomplishments in these fields have brought him high recog- nition. He is a Fellow in the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He holds membership in the National Academy of Engineering, was selected U.C.L.A. Engineering Alumnus of the Year (1978), received the Distinguished Service Award from the National Science Foundation (1979), and was recognized for Distinguished Service in Engineering by Kansas State University (1981).

Chancellor

Since his undergraduate days Dr. Slaughter has been active in humanitarian affairs. As chapter president of Zeta Sigma Lambda Chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., (San Diego) from 1957 to 1959 he participated in cultural, social, and educational activities directed toward the enhancement of the black community in San Diego. As president of the Board of Directors of the San Diego Urban League he was concerned with providing equal opportuni- ties in education, employment, housing, and social services.

Prior to assuming his responsibilities at the University of Maryland he served as Academic Vice President and Provost at Washington State University and as Director of the National Science Foundation. In his inauguration address to the College Park campus on May 3, 1983, he set the course for his administra- tion: "I want to see this campus continue its vigorous pursuit of academic excellence while reaching out to a more diversified student body. I want the University of Maryland at College Park to set a national standard for excellence and equality. As we pursue these goals, we must also enhance our contributions to the State. Finally, I am committed to a university that is a community, a community that takes pride in itself and touches each person involved in the campus with pride."

Charles F. Sturtz

Acting Athletic Director

In appointing vice chancellor Charles F. Sturtz as acting director of athletics on October 7, 1986, University of Maryland Chancellor John B. Slaughter established an immediate foundation of admin- istrative excellence and a commitment to the future of athletic/ academic prosperity within one of the university's more viable and visible departments.

Sturtz, 50, officially assumed the position November 2, 1986, succeeding Richard M. (Dick) Dull. He will hold all responsibilities as vice chancellor during his athletic directorship, until a perma- nent successor to Dull is appointed. A national search will be conducted by a committee to be appointed by Dr. Slaughter.

Until then, consider the department to be in extremely capable hands. A man with an extensive background in administrative and financial management, Sturtz' prowess in such affairs has received substantial acclaim. As vice chancellor in charge of administrative

affairs at Maryland, Sturtz enhanced his reputation as a top-level supervisor by successfully overseeing a budget that reached $60 million in

1986, a budget encompassing more than a dozen departments and 1,100 employees.

Quite simply, Sturtz' credentials discount the proclivity that athletic directors even those on a temporary basis must evolve from athletic backgrounds. "My task (as AD) is straightforward," he says. "It is my responsibility to examine the areas of departmental operation, and to determine with the assistance of my associates if the department is effectively managed and administered. I believe it my task to set the program on proper course, and to establish operating procedures that will keep it that way."

Sturtz' theories for administrative management are based upon a steadfast commitment to well-defined purposes, and to see that the department has a definitive mission to state-of-practice technology. In instigating the use of computers, word processors and other high-tech apparatuses within many university departments, Sturtz seeks a previously unmatched level of efficiency in administrative operations. Among other things, Sturtz hopes to use that technology to usher in a new era of Maryland Athletics. "In terms of advanced technology, we need it here," he says from his new office. "We need to dedicate ourselves to improvement. An institution that wants to be among the best in its academic disciplines must continue to make technological progression in the administrative process."

Sturtz' responsibilities since assuming the duties of vice chancellor (administrative affairs) on October 24, 1982 are as expansive as they are crucial. A nationally recognized innovator in the field of administrative management, it was his ability to define programs using creative mechanisms which has enabled the construction of new dormitories, parking, and research financing. At Sturtz' insistence, the university has taken steps toward an advanced telecommunications system, involving not only word processing and computing but a telephone system replacement project as well.

It was Sturtz' polished record as a top-level administrator and the innovative procedures he used to achieve such a status that influenced Dr. Slaughter's choice to revamp the athletic program. "We had discussed several aspects of intercollegiate athletics," he says, "and he (Slaughter) popped the question of whether I'd be interested in assuming the responsibilities of interim athletic director. While I obviously had no previous experience in the field, I was confident that I had the necessary skills and experiences to direct the department on an interim basis."

As temporary AD, Sturtz' top priorities include:

Conducting a review of the department's financial status.

Strengthening the department's managerial structure.

Facilitating a review of the academic task force recommendations.

Establishing a secure foundation for the new athletic director. "He should be able to step right in and go," Sturtz says.

Born August 26, 1936, in Bucyrus, Ohio, Charles. F. Sturtz earned a Bachelor's Degree in Political Science, Business and Economics from Wittenberg University (Springfield, OH) in 1958. In 1961, he received a Master's Degree in Public Administration from Wayne State University, and has completed the course work for his Ph.D. since arriving at Maryland in 1982.

In 1964, Sturtz accepted employment with the Michigan State Government as a budget analyst. Two years later, he became chief for educational programs. He became director of Michigan's budget division in 1970, and was elevated to assistant director of the Department of Management and Budget in 1974. A director at the age of 34, Sturtz admits he might have become a bit restless after 10 years. "I was at the top of the organization," he says, "and 1 couldn't imagine myself serving as budget director for 30 years."

Possessing an interest in public administration and a background in educational funding, Sturtz accepted employment at Wayne State as Vice President for Business and Finance in 1975. He would assume several upper-level titles and a myriad of administrative responsibilities during his seven years at WSU, including Treasurer, Senior Vice President for Administration and Finance and Executive Vice President. His financial ingenuity and foresight earned him rave reviews: Enlistment in the current "Who's Who in the East" after inclusion in "Who's Who in the Midwest" from 1980-82; selection as one of the Outstanding Young Men in America in 1971; and recognition by the Michigan State Legislature for outstanding service to the citizens of that state in 1982. "I've been very fortunate in that I've been recognized for some of the things I've accomplished," he says. "In terms of single contributions, I think the sum of my work experience has been what has received recognition."

A no-nonsense administrator who admits he "doesn't like surprises," Sturtz enjoys camping, gardening, spy and historic novels, golf and Softball in his spare time. He is married to the former Judith Flook and has five children: Michael, 25, a graduate of Western Michigan (Printing Management); Mark, 23, a graduate of Michigan State (Business Administration); Matthew, 22, a graduate of Western Michigan who plans to enter Law School next fall; Chris, 17, a student at nearby Springbrook High; and Karen, 15, also a student at Springbrook.

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Robert P. "Bob" Wade

Head Basketball Coach

To get an initial feel for the man who is Bob Wade, to acquire a sense of his steadfast drive toward success and commitment to excellence, one needn't look much further than at a list which appeared in the tournament program of the 1983-84 King Cotton Holiday Classic.

It is a docket a half-page deep in small type, with more than two dozen names of young men who played for Wade at Baltimore's Dunbar High and went on to play college basketball. A few of the fellas' names are spelled incorrectly in the program, but the point is as plain as the nose on your face: Bob Wade made basketball at Dunbar High at national happening, a link between East Baltimore's asphalt playgrounds and our nation's top universities.

On October 30, 1986, after 11 years and 272 victories at Dunbar, Wade embarked upon a new frontier. The challenge of restoring the Terrapin basketball program, the task of pushing Maryland to the forefront of athletic and academic excellence. Chancellor John B. Slaughter's announcement of Wade as the first black basketball coach in Atlantic Coast Conference history was surprising, bold and imaginative. "All the things I wanted to see in a basketball coach were embodied in Bob Wade," Slaughter said upon the announcement of Wade as the sixth head basketball coach in Maryland history. "His emphasis on academic attainment is completely in consonance with what we put into place."

Certainly, the man comes to Maryland with glimmering creden- tials. His Dunbar programs dominated Baltimore basketball, enveloping the city in a sense of pride and accomplishment and procuring its stature as one of the nation's top pools of young talent. The Poets went on a remarkable 272-24 during Wade's 11 years at Dunbar a phenomenal .919 winning percentage. Included during that tenure were five top 10 and three No. 1 national high school rankings (1983, 1984, 1985) and nine MSA A Conference championships. And his 1982-83 team, a roster blessed with standouts Reggie Williams (now at Georgetown), Tyrone Bogues (Wake Forest), Tim Dawson (George Washing- ton) and Michael Brown (Clemson), is considered by many to be the finest high school basketball team ever.

But Wade's reputation as a winner ventures much deeper than any won-lost record. It encapsules the maturation of young men, the preparation for the future and the understanding of what it takes to succeed. Dunbar players were required to spend two

hours daily in his mandatory study hall (one hour during the season), and all players were to complete their classroom obliga- tions before partaking in his dominant basketball program. An academic adviser had an office adjacent to Wade's "classroom," and was instructed to pull a student off the court if a review of schoolwork was necessary. It was the Wade Way: conscientious, disciplined, communicative. "He wants them to know they need something to fall back on," said Geraldine West, who served as Wade's academic adviser and is head of the Dunbar mathematics department. "He tells them that not everyone is going to be a pro star. Sports are a means to get a diploma."

On the court, his Dunbar teams were a poetic symphony of hoop pulchritude. They diminished the opposition with a fullcourt transition game, suffocating teams with a choking pressure defense and devastating fastbreak. Wade was not blessed with exceptional height through his years at Dunbar. Instead, he utilized athletic ability and intense discipline and that explosive, end-to-end transition to force teams into submission. "He gets a lot out of the kids," said Loyola College coach Mark Amatucci, another Baltimore high school mentor who has made the step to college basketball. "The kids believe in him because he's had winning results. He is a very disciplined, structure-type person when it comes to running a basketball team."

When it comes to running a basketball team, few have done it better. Wade sent 36 of his players on to play college basketball, and every Dunbar senior since 1978 has gone on to participate at an NCAA level. The list of Wade pupils who have gone on to achieve success at the Division I level is extensive: Ernest Graham at Maryland; Williams and David Wingate of Georgetown; Dawson at George Washington; 5-foot-3 point guard extraordinaire Bogues at Wake Forest; Reggie Lewis at Northeastern; Brown at Clemson; Herman Harried at Syracuse; Gary Graham at Nevada-Las Vegas; Steve Wallace at Missouri; Dwayne Wallace at Pittsburgh; Terry and Perry Dozier, Keith James and Derrick Lewis, all at South Carolina; and Kevin Woods at Tennessee are to name the core of the group. "My concern is for the child," says The Coach. "If he is able to receive an athletic scholarship from this program and go on to better himself in life, than I think it's worthwhile."

Wade also served as football coach and athletic director during his tenure at Dunbar. In leading the football Poets to four straight MSA championship games and two MSA titles, he further established his abilities to push young men to excellence. "Bob is the right man for any kind of job," said longtime friend, MSA rival and former boss Pete Pompey, the head football coach at Baltimore-Edmondson. "He is a man who can turn Maryland around."

But it was on the basketball court where Wade instilled national prominence. He went 12-6 in his first season, then won his first MSA A title the following year (1976-77) with a 23-1 record. Three straight MSA titles ensued, and in 1981-82, with Wingate, Williams and Bogues, Wade led Dunbar through an incredible four-year streak which included a 119-1 record, the three mythical national championships and four more MSA crowns.

Wade turned down several offers to become an assistant coach at a college program with national presence, electing instead to stay in Baltimore and at Dunbar with his wife of 20 years, Carolyn, and sons Daryl, a sophomore at the University of South Carolina, and Darion, 10. But when the chance to take the head position at Maryland arose, Wade admits he "was in a state of disbelief when they offered me the job. I'm honored and elated."

Born in Baltimore on December 9, 1944, Robert Purnell Wade grew up just a few blocks from the school where he would later assume a longtime athletic role. He attended Dunbar High, where he played football and basketball. As a sixth man in basketball, Wade played for the legendary William F. "Sugar" Cain, the man whom he later succeeded as basketball coach.

Wade went on to attend Morgan State University, where he earned his Bachelor's and Master's Degrees in Physical Education

and learned the values of communication and discipline. At Morgan State from 1963 to 1966, he concentrated on football and starred as a defensive back for the Golden Bears, who lost just four games during his four seasons. He was drafted by the NFL's Baltimore Colts in the 15th round of the 1967 Collegiate Draft and spent four years in the NFL, with the Washington Redskins, Pittsburgh Steelers and Denver Broncos. A wrist injury in 1971 cut short his playing career; Wade returned to the Baltimore area, first as a teacher at Clarksville Middle School (Howard County) for one year, then as an assistant to Pompey at Edmondson from 1972-75. In September, 1975, Wade assumed his roles at Dunbar.

"I hope the marriage between Bob Wade and Maryland will be a tremendous one," The Coach said on the day of his appointment.

If his tenure at Dunbar was the courtship, the marriage should be a long and prosperous one.

Reaction to the Hiring of Bob Wade:

"He ran a class program at Dunbar. He had discipline. The kids were disciplined. Maryland will be disciplined with a capital D."

Minnesota coach Clem Haskins

"As far as coaching, he can work right into that. The basketball end of it, I think he can click right along. The recruiting will be something he has to learn. It isn't easy."

Miami (Fla.) coach Bill Foster

"He is an excellent coach, very knowledgeable, as good as they come out of high school."

Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim

"I have always had a great deal of respect for Bob as a coach and a man. I think, provided with the proper opportunity, he will be successful. I think he's going to be."

Georgetown coach John Thompson

Q&A with Maryland Coach Bob Wade

Q. In regard to Chancellor John B. Slaughter's choice of you as Maryland's new basketball coach, much was made of the transition from the high school to college level. What facet of the transition do you see as the most difficult?

Wade: The most difficult thing for me has been learning and getting a grasp of the various departments on campus. As far as recruiting goes, I don't feel I'll be at a disadvantage. I've been through the wars with the kids I had at Dunbar. I haven't been out on the road like the others have, but I know what to expect. The only other thing might be the strategies of coaches around the ACC, but there's so much videotape available that I can't see that as a problem.

Q. What does Maryland's belated practice start and regular season mean to you and the ballclub?

Wade: Since this is my first experience at this level, the late start really doesn't have that much effect on me. As for the youngsters, I'm not sure I can really speak for them, but I know there's a sort of void in their lives because they're used to starting practice in October. As for Bob Wade, I always started in November and coached football up until then, so it doesn't make that much difference.

Q. How did your NFL background help you at Dunbar, and how will it help you here at Maryland?

Wade: It allows me to relate to the youngsters in a positive manner. I've been to the top. I've seen guys come into the NFL heralded and acclaimed, then get hurt and have nothing to fall back on. I was one of those guys, but I had a

Bob Wade Profile

FULL NAME: Robert Pumell Wade

AGE: 42

DATE OF BIRTH: December 9, 1944

BIRTHPLACE: Baltimore, Maryland

MARRIED: To the former Carolyn Edwards of Baltimore on July

16, 1966. CHILDREN: Daryl, 19, a sophomore at the University of South

Carolina; and Darion, 10. EDUCATION:

Dunbar High, Baltimore, Maryland, 1963.

Morgan State University, Baltimore, 1967. Earned Bachelor of Science degree and later achieved Master's equivalent in Physi- cal Education.

ATHLETIC EXPERIENCE:

Played football and basketball at Dunbar High.

Four-year letterman defensive back at Morgan State, 1963-66.

Drafted in the 15th round of the 1967 NFL Draft by the Baltimore Colts.

played in the NFL with Pittsburgh (1968), Washington (1969) and in the AFL with Denver (1970-71).

COACHING EXPERIENCE:

Eleven years at Dunbar High, Baltimore. Coached varsity football and basketball. Led the basketball program to a 272-24 record, three mythical national championships and nine MSA A Conference titles. From 1981 to 1985, his Dunbar basketball teams went a combined 119-1.

DUNBAR COACHING RECORD:

Year Record

1975-76 12-6

1976-77 23-1

1977-78 24-3

1978-79 23-0

1979-80 24-3

1980-81 24-3

1981-82 29-0

1982-83 31-0

1983-84 30-0

1984-85 29-1

1985-86 23-7

Totals 272-24

degree and I made the most of my opportunity. Having something like an education to fall back on is of the utmost importance. I use myself as an example to the kids. I preach to them the values of academics and speak from personal experience.

Q. What was your first reaction to being offered the Maryland coaching job?

Wade: I was shocked, elated and honored to have ever been mentioned with some of the candidates who were rumored to be considered for the job. But after the shock wore off and I realized the situation was true, I got back to my life. We have a long way to go.

Q. During your latter years at Dunbar, your on-court philoso- phies closely resembled those of Georgetown coach John Thompson: pressure defense, transition offense, an end-to-end, athletic floor game that relied on speed and quickness. Will that be possible at Maryland?

Wade: I certainly like playing basketball at an up-tempo pace, but one of the more important aspects of coaching is adjusting to the talent he has. I'm hoping that, if the transition game isn't there for us during certain points of the season, then we can be mature enough to run our halfcourt offense efficiently. Defensively, we're going to have to get after some people if we're to be OK. If we do that, we'll be competitive.

Ron Bradley

Eastern Nazarene '73

Sixth Season at Maryland

11th Season Overall

ASSISTANT COACHES

The senior member of head coach Bob Wade's assistant staff, Ron Bradley begins his sixth season at Maryland and fourth season on a full-time basis, having served as a volunteer assistant to Lefty Driesell from 1981-83. Prior to his arrival in College Park, Bradley was head coach at alma mater Eastern Nazarene, where he led the Crusaders to a 96-51 record and four NCCAA District championships.

During Bradley's tenure as a full-time assistant at Maryland, the Terps have won 68 of 102 games (66 percent) and captured an ACC Tournament Championship (1984). His extensive educational background includes a Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology/ History from Eastern Nazarene and a Master's in Physical Education from Bridgewater State (Mass.) College. Bradley is currently pursuing his Ph.D. in Sports Psychology at Maryland, a program he enrolled in shortly after accepting the Terp volunteer position in 1982.

A four-year letterman in basketball at Eastern Nazarene (1969-73), Bradley ranked among the top 15 NAIA scorers in the nation twice and was a three-time honorable mention All-America selection by AP and UPI. Playing for his father, Caroll F. Bradley, who has since returned as coach at Eastern Nazarene, Ron scored 2,649 points in 107 games (24.8 ppg) and was drafted by the ABA's New York Nets as a junior-eligible in 1972.

Bradley played for several Boston-area semipro teams from 1973-76, then accepted the head coaching position at Eastern Nazarene. His Crusaders won 20 or more games twice and captured the NCAA Regional Championship in 1979. Married to the former Denise Smith of Salisbury, the Bradleys have two children: son Brad, 8, and daughter Katlin, 2. He was born in Springfield, Massachusetts on February 9, 1951.

After 14 seasons of direct association with the basketball program at Old Dominion, Oliver Purnell begins his second season as an assistant at Maryland. Recognized as one of the top recruiters on the East Coast, Purnell played a major role in establishing ODU as one of the better programs in the Atlantic Coast region and has teamed with fellow assistant Bradley to give Maryland its second straight solid recruiting year.

A 1975 graduate of Old Dominion and a sixth-round pick of the Milwaukee Bucks in that year's NBA Draft, Purnell was a three-year starter at point guard for the Monarchs. As a senior, he captained ODU to the Division II National Championship with a 25-6 record. He scored 1,090 points during his-three seasonsand still ranks fifth on the ODU all-time assist list with 474.

Purnell joined the Monarchs' coaching staff as a graduate assistant in 1975, after earning his Bachelor's degree in Health and Physical Education. He spent two years on the ODU staff as a grad assistant, earning his Master's in Administration in 1978. He was made a full-time assistant in 1977; in 1980, he was named top assistant coach. During Purnell's 10 years at Old Dominion, the Monarchs were 196-99 and made nine postseason appearances.

Born May 9, 1953 in Berlin, Maryland, Purnell's wife, the former Vicky Wise, graduated from Maryland in 1975 with a Bachelor's degree in music and worked in the Admissions Office for two years following graduation. They have two daughters: Olivia, 3; and Linsay, 1.

Oliver Purnell

Old Dominion '75

Second Season at Maryland

12th Season Overall

Jeff Adkins

Maryland '85

Second Season at Maryland

Second Season Overall

A four-year letterman at Maryland and the Terps' all-time leader in consecutive games played with 128, Jeff Adkins begins his second season on the Maryland coaching staff. Adkins joined the staff in September 1985 as a graduate assistant to Lefty Driesell, and assumed part-time status in May 1986, when Bart Bellairs accepted a position at the University of Massachusetts.

A graduate of Maryland with a Bachelor of Science degree in Economics, Adkins was a steadying influence at guard for the Terps, who went 85-43 and qualified for three NCAA Tournaments during his tenure as a player. A seventh-round draft pick of the Chicago Bulls, Adkins had 999 points (7.8 ppg), 360 assists (2.8) and 310 rebounds (2.4) during his career. His best season was as a junior, when he started 3 1 games, shot 53.8 percent from the floor and averaged 9.5 points per game. He also averaged 9.9 points and 4.0 assists per game as a sophomore.

A native of Martinsville, Virginia, where he was born May 20, 1963, Adkins is single.

10

Dr. Betty F. Smith/Chairperson, Athletic Council Faculty Representative for Athletic Department

Dr. Smith was appointed as Chairperson of the Athletic Council by Chancellor John Slaughter on June 1, 1985, succeeding Dr. Charles A. Taff, who had held the position since 1978. Slaughter's appointment made Dr. Smith the first female to hold such a position in the Atlantic Coast Conference.

Dr. Smith came to Maryland in August,

1970, as Professor and Chairman of the

Department of Textiles and Consumer

Economics, a position she holds today. Prior to joining the

Maryland staff, she served as a member of the faculty of Cornell

University.

A native of Arkansas, Dr. Smith obtained her B.S. degree at the University of Arkansas in 1951. Six years later she received an M.S. degree from Tennessee, and was awarded her Ph.D. in Textiles from Minnesota. Dr. Smith earned a second Ph.D. in Biochemistry at Minnesota in 1965.

In 1971, Dr. Smith was elected a fellow of the Textile Institute. She belongs to many professional societies, including the American Chemical Society, Sigma Xi, the Fiber Society, and the American Economics Association. With approximately 70 publications and papers from research in Textiles to her credit, Dr. Smith is also the co-author of the book Introduction to Textiles (Smith and I. Block), published by Prentice-Hall in 1982. In 1984, Dr. Smith was named a distinguished Alumna of Southern University. Since coming to Maryland, she has served on many departments and College and University committees.

When having time to relax from her heavy load of academic responsibilities, Dr. Smith is an avid golfer.

Randy Hoffman (Maryland '74) Associate Athletic Director

Hoffman assumed his current duties as Dick Dull's top assistant in 1983, after serving as associate athletic director and director of sports marketing from March, 1982 to June, 1983. His duties as associate athletic director include the academic sup- port unit, marketing, student housing, finan- cial aid, television, and the Maryland radio network.

He received his initial Bachelor's Degree from Maryland in 1974, then obtained a second Bachelor's in Business Management in 1980. Hoffman is currently pursuing his Master's Degree in Administration; he has also served as both assistant and head golf coach and director of golf facilities.

Hoffman came to Maryland after graduating from Lewisburg (Pa.) High in 1969, where he received eight athletic letters and was captain of the football, basketball and golf teams. He lettered two years on the Maryland golf team, and presently serves as a Terrapin Club Member and on the Board of Governors for the M Club Foundation.

Robert T. Stumpff (Maryland '68) Associate Athletic Director

Bob Stumpff returned to the Terrapin athletic department in July, 1980, as asso- ciate athletic director for business affairs. He now supervises the game-day activities of Byrd Stadium and Cole Field House and is responsible for the daily operation of all athletic facilities, including security and scheduling. He also coordinates department insurance programs, personnel and payroll functions.

Stumpff came to Maryland from Lewistown, Pa., where he was on the wrestling and track teams. As an undergraduate at Maryland, he was manager of the wrestling team before receiving his degree in Transportation Administration in June, 1968. Upon graduation, he was named administrative assistant to the director of athletics, Jim Kehoe. From September, 1969 to July, 1980, Stumpff served as associate director of the Maryland Student Union. He is a 1978 graduate of the University of Kentucky's College of Business Management Institute.

Since 1970, Stumpff has been a member of the Board of Governors of the M Club and is presently an advisor to the Sigma Circle of Omicron Delta Kappa. Stumpff is also a member of the College of Athletic Business Managers Associates.

Gothard Lane (Randolph-Macon '71) Assistant Athletic Director

Gothard Lane assumed the duties of assistant athletic director for non-revenue sports in March, 1982. He also works with the football and basketball programs in handling their scheduling.

He began his career at Maryland in 1973, when he was hired by football coach Jerry Claiborne as a defensive backfield coach, a job he held for four years. From 1977 to 1982, Lane held the position of administra- tive assistant to the director of athletics, and director of recruiting.

As assistant AD, Lane holds administrative responsibility for all men's and women's non-revenue sports.

Jeff Hathaway (Maryland '81) Associate Athletic Director

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Jeff Hathaway assumed the duties of associate athletic director this spring, replacing Frank Gray, who retired after serving in many capacities at Maryland since 1943. As associate athletic director, Hath- away's duties will include monitoring a budget that reached $7 million in 1986.

Hathaway had previously served as busi- ness manager before his appointment as associate athletic director. After graduating from Maryland, he went directly to the Chicago White Sox, where he served as director of community relations. While with the White Sox, Hathaway arranged all public appearances and speaking engagements for players in 1981 and 1982. He came to Maryland as an undergraduate from DeMatha High, where he served as basketball manager and assistant trainer for coach Morgan

11

Wootten. Hathaway also acted as student trainer for two years with the Maryland basketball team, and for two years with the football team.

Already a lifetime member of the M Club, Terrapin Club and Maryland Alumni Association, Hathaway did his public relations internship with the Washington Redskins during their 1980 training camp, under the tutelage of current sports information director Joe Blair. He received his B.S. in Athletic Administration through the Individual Studies program. Hathaway is a certified emergency medical technician.

Frank Costello (Maryland '68) Strength and Conditioning Coach

Frank Costello assumed the position as assistant to the athletic director in 1981, and is in charge of the strength and conditioning program for the entire athletic department.

No stranger to Maryland, Costello was an All-America high jumper for the Terps from 1965-1968 and served as assistant track coach for six years after graduation. He was named head track coach in 1974, a position he held for seven years. He developed several world-class track stars, including world record holder Renaldo Nehemiah, the hurdler now with the NFL's San Francisco 49ers.

Costello came to Maryland as the New Jersey high jump champion and record holder in 1963, and was undefeated in ACC, IC4A and NCAA competition in 1965, winning both NCAA titles. While competing with Maryland, he also won seven titles in the Penn Relays, the Milrose Games, the Eastern European Champion- ships, the Southern Hemisphere Games and the French National Championship. He was ranked third in the world in 1966.

In addition to coaching track and field, Costello has published several articles on training techniques. He served as a conditioning consultant for the NFL's Green Bay Packers from 1977-80, and has served as high jump coach for the Olympic Development Program.

He is assisted by Scott Fanz, a former defensive tackle for the Terps from 1977-80.

William "Spider" Fry (Maryland '51) Assistant Athletic Director

"Spider" Fry moved into an administra- tive position in the athletic department in 1978 after having devoted 15 years to the athletes as Head Trainer. He now serves as Director of the Golf Facilities.

As a Maryland undergraduate he earned his letter in varsity soccer and a B.S. Degree in Physical Education. He was an assistant trainer at Maryland before taking over the Head Trainer duties at Dartmouth.

He returned to Maryland after five years at Dartmouth in March 1967.

Thomas M. Fields (Maryland '42) Executive Director Educational Foundation

Col. Tom Fields has served as executive director of the Maryland Educational Foundation since 1970, when he retired as a Colonel in the United States Marine Corps.

During the last year, the funds generated by the Educational Foundation totaled more than $2.5 million. The membership of the Terrapin Club has expanded to 3,689 with 99 lifetime members ($10,000 contribution), 147 Super Terrapins ($2,500 annual contri- bution) 592 Diamondbackers ($1,500 annual contribution) and 686 Gold Members ($750 annual contribution).

More than 50 percent of all contributors did not attend Maryland, but all are strong supporters of the university, the NCAA, and the principles of competition.

The funds provided by the foundation have enabled the Terps to develop one of the best women's athletic programs in the nation. All funds go to scholarships; the scholarship programs for the female athletes is equal to the program for men's non-revenue sports.

Fields was a track star for the Terps as an undergraduate and helped lead Maryland to one of its finest days ever at the Penn Relays, as the Terps won three Championship of America relays. During World War II, Fields served in combat on Guadalcanal, Vella Lavella, Bouganville, and Iowa Jima. He also served in Korea and Vietnam. At the time of his retirement from the Corps, Fields was Deputy Director of Information, Headquarters, Marine Corps.

John W. Zane (Maryland 60) Assistant Athletic Director Sports Information Director

Entering his 18th year as sports informa- tion director at Maryland and his 27th year in sports information, Jack Zane was accorded the highest honor in his field this summer, when he was selected to the CoSIDA Hall of Fame by past members of the Hall.

Zane returned to Maryland in August, 1969, after serving as SID at The George Washington University for six years. He received his degree in Journalism from Maryland in February, 1960, after serving as student assistant to Joe Blair for three years. He served as Blair's full-time assistant for two years after graduation. While at Maryland, Zane was the first executive sports editor of the Diamondback, SMC of Pi Kappa Alpha and a member of the Sigma Delta Chi journalism fraternity.

He served seven years as a member of the NCAA Public Relations Committee and one year as a member of the NCAA public relations/promotions committee. Zane has been a member of CoSIDA for 27 years, and was elevated to the Presidency of CoSIDA at the 1985 meeting in Boston. Zane is also a member of the Football, Basketball and Baseball Writers of America, the Maryland Chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, the Atlantic Coast Confer- ence Sportswriters and the Washington, D.C. Touchdown Club, as well as a Diamondback Member of the Terrapin Club.

A graduate of Southern (Harwood) High in Lothion, Zane is a native of Maryland and served 4'/2 years in the Navy before enrolling at Maryland. He is married to the former Judy Allen of Fayetteville, W. Va. and a graduate of The George Washington University.

12

Joseph F. Blair (Missouri '50) Assistant Sports Information Director

Joe Blair returned to Maryland in August, 1983, where he began his public relations career 33 years before. He served as sports information director at Maryland for 13 years before joining the Washington Red- skins as public relations director and head of media relations.

He has worked with the NFL Players Association, assisted at Maryland and served as a consultant for the U.S. Football League Washington Federals during his 35 years in the area.

Joe spent a total of 18 years with the Redskins, retiring after earning his Super Bowl ring in 1982, when the Redskins defeated the Miami Dolphins. He has worked with a National Championship team at Maryland (1953) and served as an assistant to the NFL at 12 Super Bowls. The "Blair Lounge" at the nearby Ledo restaurant was named after him in 1956.

In returning to Maryland three years ago, Blair rejoined Jack Zane, whom he lured to the field as a Maryland student. He served as Best Man at Zane's 1966 wedding. A product of the Missouri School of Journalism, Blair is a veteran of World War II (Air Force) and a native of Freeport, Pa.

John M. Hawkins (Towson State '86) Sports Information/Publications

The newest member of the athletic depart- ment, John Hawkins joined Maryland in June, 1986, after 3'/2 years at the Baltimore News American. In addition to his duties as assistant sports information director, Hawkins will also serve as editor and con- tributing writer to the Maryland Athletic Preview, a quarterly journal published by the Maryland athletic program.

Born in Norfolk, Va. but a resident of Baltimore for 23 years, Hawkins joined the News American in January, 1983 in a part-time capacity. He acquired full-time status in January, 1984, and temporarily abandoned pursuit of a Bachelor's Degree in Communications at Towson State. He assumed coverage of the MISL Blast and worked general assign- ment duty for the paper until September, 1985, when he was selected by the News American to cover Maryland athletics.

Hawkins' duties encompassed coverage of the Terps, Orioles and Naval Academy sports until the paper ceased publication in May, 1986. Athletic director Dick Dull immediately hired Hawkins as an assistant to Zane and regular contributor to the Athletic Preview. Earlier in 1986, Hawkins completed the requirements for his Bachelor's Degree at Towson State.

Mary L. Baldwin (Biscayne College '82) Assistant Sports Information Director

Mary came to the athletic department in August, 1984, as secretary to sports infor- mation director Jack Zane, then was named as a sports information assistant in the summer of 1985. Her duties entail handling publicity for all non-revenue sports, includ- ing women's basketball.

A native of Rockville, Md., Baldwin grad- uated from Robert E. Peary High in 1973. She received an A. A. in Recreation from

Montgomery College and a B.A. in Sports Information from

Miami's Biscayne College in 1982.

While at Biscayne, Baldwin served as secretary to the athletic director and sports information director. During her senior year, she served an internship with the Baltimore Orioles, as administra- tive secretary to the director of player development for the 1982 spring training camp in Miami.

During the two-year existence of the U.S. Football League's Washington Federals, Baldwin served as administrative assistant to the assistant general manager and player personnel director.

Baldwin also contributes to the operation of the football press box in addition to her duties as sports information director for non-revenue sports.

MARYLAND

13

BASKETBALL STAFF

Dr. Stanford A. Lavine (Maryland '50) Team Physician

Dr. Lavine, for 26 years has been the University's Team Physician and Ortho- pedic Surgeon. He has medically supervised athletes in all of the University's sports programs, which now numbers 22.

He is with the football team at all games, home and away, and attends all the home basketball games and many away games. His office is on call at all times when the trainers call for him to see an athlete. In all these years, Dr. Lavine has missed only 5 Maryland football games.

He is considered one of the nation's top Orthopedic Surgeons and is most prominent in the field of "Sports Medicine." He has an annual clinic which attracts the top Orthopedic Surgeons and athletic team doctors in the country. His reputation has brought him numerous professional athletes of all sports, men and women, for surgery and treatment.

Dr. Lavine had been the team physician for the Washington Redskins since 1975. He also was the team physician for the Washington Bullets, 1973-79. Thus, his trophy mantle glitters with 5 Maryland ACC Championships rings, 2 Redskin Super Bowl rings, and one NBA Championship ring while with the Bullets.

Out of Pittsburgh's (PA) Schenley High School, he has scholar- ship offers from the University of Kentucky and West Virginia before choosing Maryland. In his first year as the Terp quarterback, he played for the legendary Clark Shaughnesy. Playing for the late Jim Tatum his junior year, he led the Terps to a 9-1 record including a 20-7 win over Missouri in in the Gator Bowl in which he threw for two touchdowns.

Following graduation from the University's Medical School, he interned in Philadelphia and Cleveland, served two years in the Air Force then began his medical practice at Washington Hospital Center. He now works out of the Center and Sibley Hospital.

John J. Bush (Florida State '69) Head Trainer

J. J. Bush joined the Maryland Training Staff in 1972 and took over the Head Trainer's duties in 1978. He has the overall responsibility for 22 varsity sports.

He came to Maryland from the U.S. Army where he served with the Airborne Rangers. He holds a Private Pilot's license and enjoys flying when he has the opportunity.

J. J. has hosted several Cramer Student Trainer Workshops at Maryland and is active in the National Athletic Trainers Associa- tion especially in the area of improving training on the high school level. In 1981 he was appointed as the District III representative to the National Association's Committee on Licensure. In 1981 he was also elected President of the Maryland Athletic Trainer Association, a group he helped organize in 1980. He and his wife Gina have a son Jordan 2'/2 years old, and he has a stepson, Brandon Cole 9.

Frank Grimaldi, Jr. Assistant Trainer

Frank Grimaldi joined the Maryland train- ing staff in time for the 1983 football season. He and his wife Mary Kay are both Northern Illinois graduates. Both also earned their Master's degrees from Northern Illinois while Mary Kay also has a M.B.A. from DePaul.

Frank was a fine athlete himself as he captained the Ridgewood High cross country and track teams winning MVP honors in track.

Frank works full time with football during the season and through all of spring practice. During the winter season, he serves as the Head Basketball Trainer.

He was born in Chicago 1/7/56 with his hometown, Norridge, Dlinois.

Managers: (L-R) Jim Spicer, Tim Burton, Troy Wainwright

Linda Van Wagenen Receptionist

Ron Ohringer Equipment

14

COLE FIELD HOUSE

A new era in Maryland Athletics began on Dec. 2, 1955, when the University of Maryland Activities Building was officially dedicated with a ceremony and basketball game vs. Virginia. It marked the third time in 32 years a new gym had been built to handle the increasing popularity of basketball. The building had a permanent seating capacity of 12,004 (plus 396 temporary seats), making it at the time of dedication second in size among arenas on the East Coast (to New York's Madison Square Garden).

Maryland's previous home courts included the Old Ritchie Coliseum (the recently demolished Annapolis Hall), and the 5,000-seat Ritchie Coliseum. Old Ritchie was built in 1923; eight years later, the new Ritchie was opened adjacent to the old Byrd Stadium along Route 1. As with the opening game at Ritchie, Maryland emerged from their first game in the Activities Building victorious a 67-55 victory over the Cavaliers.

At the dedication ceremonies, Judge William P. Cole, Jr., Chairman of the Board or Regents, handed over the keys of the building to University President Wilson Elkins, who passed them to the Student Government President. The building was originally dedicated for the use of the student body but a year later was re-dedicated in honor of Cole, who served on the Board of Regents for 25 years.

Cole Field House was erected at the cost of $3.3 million and financed with funds from a self-liquidating bond issue and a special student activity fee. It now houses the main athletic department offices and all but four intercollegiate teams. Cole has served as the site of two NCAA Basketball Finals ( 1966 and 1970) and six Eastern Regionals of the Tournament. Other events held in Cole include the NCAA Wrestling Championships in 1960, 1972 and 1978 and, this coming March, the CYO-M Club Invitation Track Meet, featuring national and international stars in basketball, gymnastics, table tennis and volleyball.

Maryland has a 309-95 record in 32 seasons at Cole, a winning percentage of .765.

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Conference Directory

Commissioner's Office

(2100 N West Cornwallis Dnve. Greensboro. N C 27408)

(Mailing Address: P O. Box 29169. Greensboro. N.C 27429 9169)

(Area Code lor all telephones listed below is 919)

Commissioner:

ROBERT C JAMES 282 1 108

Assistant Commissioners:

JOHN A. FUZAK 282 4898

MARVIN A. FRANCIS (Service Bureau Director) 288 1548

FRED E. BARAKAT (Supervisor of Basketball Officials) 288-0208

BRADLEY E FAIRCLOTH (Supervisor ol Football Officials) 288 0208

JON B LeCRONE (Non-Revenue Sports) 282 4898

Executive Associate to Commissioner

Mrs. NANCY F THOMPSON 282 1108

Assistant Service Bureau Director:

BRIAN A MORRISON 288 1548

Secretaries:

Mrs. Jean M. Patton 288- 1548

Mrs. Kathy C. Hunt 2880208

Ms Dsie I. Porter 282 4898

CLEMSON UNIVERSITY Clemson. S.C. 29631 Telephone 803/656-2101 Dr B.J. Skelton, Faculty Representative. 656-2283 (o). 654 2217 (h) Bobby Robinson. Director ol Athletics. 6562101 (o); 654-4426 (h) Len Gough, Associate Athletic Director/Promotions, 656-2101 (o). 882 7003 (h) Dwight Ramey. Associate Athletic Director Non-Revenue Sports. 656-2101 (o). 654 4441 (h) Clyde Wrenn, Assistant Athletic Director/FootbaD, 656-2101 (o)

Van Hildebrand, Assistant Athletic Director /Ticket Manager. 656-2118 (ol. 654 1391 (h) Fred Hoover, Assistant Athletic Director/FootbaD, 6562101 (o) Don Wade. Administrative Assistant. 6562101 (o); 882 0017 (h) Allison Dalton. Executive Director. IPTAY. 656-2101 (o); 8784139 (h) Robert Ricketts, Business Manager, 656-2101 (o); 646-9878 (h) Bob Bradley, Sports Information Director. 656 2101 or 65&2114 (o). 654 5419 (h) Tim Bourret. Associate Sports Information Director, 6562101/2114 (o); 654-6240 (h) Kassie Kessinger, Assistant Sports Information Director. 656-2101/2114 (ol. 654-5878 (h) Danny Ford, Football Coach, 65^2101 (o) Ctrl EUis, Basketball Coach, 656-2101 (o) Bill Wilhelm, Baseball Coach, 656-2101 (o); 654-5801 (h) l.M. Ibrahim. Soccer Coach, 656-2101 (o) Chuck Knese. Men's Tennis Coach, 65&2101 (o). 654-4887 (h) Bob Boettner, Men's & Women's Swimming Coach, 656-2101 (o). 654-6103 (h) Edd* Gnrfin, Wrestling Coach, 656-2101 (o). 654 1499 (hi Wade Williams, Mens Track/Cross Country Coach, 65&2101 (o) Larry Penley, Goll Coach. 656-2101 (o). 654-5718 (h) Annie Tnbble, Women's Basketball Coach, 656-2101/2212 (o). 64^9572 (h) Andy Johnson, Women's Tennis Coach. 6562101 (o). 654 5784 (h) Wayne Coffman. Women's Track/Cross Country. 656-2101 (o), 646-3421 (h) Lnda White. Volleyball Coach. 656-2101 (o|. 654 6299 (h)

DUKE UNIVERSITY: Durham. N.C. 27706. Telephone: 919/684-2120

Dr A. Kenneth Pye, Faculty Representative. 684 5593 (o), 489 7945 (h)

Tom Butters. Director ol Athletics, 684 2431 (o). 383- 1171 (h)

Joe ADeva, Assistant Athletic Director. 684 5360 (o): 477 7438 (h)

Lorraine Woodyard. Assistant Athletic Director, 684 5881 (o); 383 3153 (h)

John Roth, Sports Informatxin Director. 684 2633 (o). 4471 9514 (h)

Jill Mixon, Assistant Sports Information Director, 684-2633 (o)

Rudy McLawhon. Txrkel Manager 681 2583 (o), 489 7827 (h)

Steve Sloan, Football Coach. 684-2635 (o)

Mike Krzyzewski. Basketball Coach, 684 3777 (o)

Larry Smith, Baseball Coach, 684 2358 (o). 4790905 (h)

Al Buehler. Men's Track/Cross Country Coach, 684-4171 (o). 489 2128 (h)

John Rennie. Soccer Coach. 664-5180 (o), 493 1325 (hi

Bill Harvey, Wresting Coach, 684-6919 (ol, 477 8034 (h)

Rod Myers. Mens Golf Coach. 684 2817 (o). 489 1423 (h)

Tony CuDen. Lacrosse Coach. 684-4427 (o): 732 7775 (h)

Steve Strome, Men's Tennis Coach. 684 6881 (o). 383 8144 (h)

Bob Thompson. Men's & Women's Swimming Coach. 684-5945 (o). 383-5751 (h)

Debbie Leonard. Women's BasketbaD Coach. 684-5881 (o): 732 8563 (h)

Jack. SDar. Field Hockey Coach. 684 5881 (o), 732 7754 (h)

Mike Forbes. Women's Track/Cross Country Coach, 6844171 (o), 489 3024 (h)

Jon Wilson, Volleyball Coach, 684^5881 (o). 493 7018 (hi

UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA: Chapel Hill. N.C. 27514 Telephone: 919 962-«000

Dr Richard G Hiskey. Faculty Representative, 962 6193 (o). 967 4533 (hi

John Swofford. Director ol Athletics. 962 6000 (o). 929 3551 (h)

Dick Baddour. Associate Athletic Director. 962 6000 (0), 942 2522 (h)

Paul Hoolahan. Associate Athletic Director. 962 6000 (ol. 967 8326 (hi

Bob Savod. Associate Athletic Diiector Marketing & Promotions, 962 5411 (ol. 9299247 (hi

John Lotz. Assistant Athletic Director Non Revenue Sports. 962 5411 (o). 967 8565 (h)

Wilie Scrogg. Assistant Athletic Director Operation & Lacrosse Coach. 962 2261 (ol. 942 7476 (h)

Ken Brown. Director ol Ticket Operations. 962 6000 (ol; 544 1356 (h)

Rick Brewer. Sports Information Director. 962 2123, 1376 (o). 929 2721 (h)

Dave Lohse. Assistant Sports Information Director. 962 2123 1376 (o). 967 7272 (h)

Scott Jared, Assistant Sports Information Director. 962 2123 1367 (ol. 967 3519 (hi

Dick Crum. Football Coach, 966 2575 (o). 967 1712 (h)

Dean Smith. Basketball Coach. 962 1154 (ol

Mike Roberts. Baseball Coach. 962 5411 (ol; 967 8686 (hi

Anson Dorrance. Soccer Coach. 962 5411 (ol. 967 5036 (hi

Dennis Craddock. Men's/Women's Track & Cross Country Coach. 962 5411 (o)

Bill Urn. Wrestling Coach, 962 5411 (o), 942 5570 (h)

Allen Morns. Men's Tennis Coach. 962 5411 (o), 929 7707 (h)

Kittle Harrison. Women's Tennis Coach, 962 2261 (o), 493 3781 (h)

Frank Comfort. Swimming Coach, 962 6000 lol. 967 5447 (hi

Devon Brouse. Men's Goll Coach. 962 2349 (o). 544 3087 (h)

Peggy Bradley Doppes. Volleyball Coach, 962 5411 (o)

NORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVERSITY Raleigh. N.C. 27695-8501 Telephone: 919/737-2101

Dr Richard D Mochne. Faculty Representative. 737 2766 (o); 467 1552 (h)

Jrm Valvano. Athletics Director Basketball Coach, 737 2109 (ol

Frank Weedon. Senior Associate Athletic Director. 737 2560 (o); 851 5277 (h)

Nora Lynn Finch, Associate Athletic Director. 737 2101 lo). 467 2655 (h)

Kevin O'ConneD, Assistant Athletic Director. 737 3045 (o). 848 3212 (h)

Howard Hink, Assistant Athletic Director. 737 3382 (o); 799-6356 (h)

Bob Robinson. Assistant Athletic Director. 737 3315 (o); 851 4319 (h)

Ray Tanner. Assistant Athletic Director. 737 2169 (ol. 851 9757 (h)

Rx:harJ FarreD. Business Manager. 737 3475 (ol. 362 7142 (h)

Bessie Steele. Ticket Manager. 737 2106 (ol, 787 1714 (h)

Ed Seaman, Sports Information Director, 737 2102 (o); 829-9186 (hi

Mark Bocketman, Assistant Sports Inlomiatmn Director. 737 2102 (o). 467 7138 (h)

Doug Herakovich, Assistant Sports Information Director, 737 2102 (o). 851-8516 (h)

Jim Pomeranz. Director of Pubhcations. 737 3406 (o). 3624108 (h)

Dick Shendan. Football Coach, 737 2114 (ol

Kay Yow. Women's Basketball Coach, 737 2880 (o), 467 2655 (h)

George Tarantlni, Men's Soccer Coach, 737 3476 (ol

Larry Gross. Women's Soccer Coach, 737 3476 (o)

Sam Esposilo. Baseball Coach. 737 3612 (o)

Don Easterling. Swimming Coach, 737 2849 (o), 362-7256 (h)

John Candler. Diving Coach, 851 3935 (o); 8514181 (h)

RoDie Geiger. Track & Cross Country Coach, 737 3959 (ol; 833 5687 (h)

Bob Guzzo, Wrestling Coach, 737 3548 (o), 851 4602 (h)

Richard Sykes. Golf Coach, 737 3317 (ol; 365 7512 (h)

Judy Martino. Volleyball Coach, 737 3826 (o). 544-7061 (h)

Crawford Henry. Tennis Coach, 737 2493 (o)

Jim Rehbock. Head Athletic Trainer, 737 3960 (o); 8514917 (h)

UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA: Charlottesville. Va. 22903 Telephone: 804 924-301 1 3025

Dr D Alan William. Faculty Representative. 924 6415 (o). 296-1690 (h)

Dick Schultz, Director ol Athletics. 9247155 (o). 296 7895 (h)

Jim West. Associate Director ol Athletics. 924 3494 (o); 973 3841 (h)

Todd Turner, Associate Director of Athletics. 924 6000 (o); 295-2671 (h)

Keith Van Derbeek. Associate Director ol Athletics. 924-6008 (o); 973 5852 (h)

Barbara Kelly. Assistant to Director of Athletics, 924-6032 (o). 295 7824 (hi

Tom Gearhart. Assistant to Director ol Athletics, 924 3948.lo). 979-2756 (h)

Dick Mathias. Ticket Manager. 924-6001 (o), 973-6968 (h)

Rich Murray, Sports Information Director, 924 3205 (o), 978-2966 (h)

Doyle Smith, Associate Sports Information Director, 924-3205 lol. 295 0739 (h)

Steve Blake. Assistant Sports Information Director, 92^3205 (o); 295-9992 (h)

Steve Lockard, Assistant Sports Information Director, 924^3205 (o), 973-6584 (h)

Craig Homberger, Publications Editor, 924-3205 (o). 973-8437 (h)

Jim Adams. Men's Lacrosse Coach. 924-3635 (ol; 295 7802 (h)

Bruce Arena. Men's Soccer Coach, 924-3480 (o). 973 3544 (hi

Mark Bernardino. Swimming Coach, 924-3676 (ol. 977 8445 (h)

Fred Binggel, Cross Country Coach. 924-6036 (o). 977 0636 (h)

George Edwards. Wrestling Coach. 924 6201 (o). 296-3639 (h)

Joe Gieck. Head Trainer. 924 3873 (o); 293 3273 (h)

Lauren Gregg, Women's Soccer Coach

Terry Holland, Basketball Coach, 924-3405 (o)

Clem King. Goll Coach. 293 4653 (o); 296-6982 (h)

Jane Miller. Field Hockey/Women's Lacrosse Coach. 924-7863 (o), 979 7851 (h)

Homer Richards. Men's Tennis Coach, 924-6043 (o); 973-5713 (h)

Phil Rogers. Women's Tennis Coach, 924-6043 (o); 977- 1841 (h)

Debbie Ryan. Women's Basketball Coach, 9247865 (o); 295 1404 (h)

Deb Tyson. Volleyball Coach

George Welsh. FootbaD Coach. 924-3063 (o)

Dennis Womack. Baseball Coach. 924-6004 (o). 973 1842 (h)

GEORGIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY: Atlanta, Ga. 30332 Telephone 404/894-5400

Dr William M. Sangster. Faculty Representative, 894 3350 (o). 433-8180 (h)

Homer Rice, Director ol Athletics, 894 5411 (o), 252 9173 (h)

John O'Neill. Senior Associate Athletic Director/Business Manager, 894-5424 (ol; 237 4466 (h)

Jack Thompson. Associate Athletic Drector, 894 5427 (o), 977 2898 (h)

Jim Luck, Senxjr Assistant Athletic Director. 894-5473 (o), 634 0350 (h|

Jim Murphy. Assistant Athletic Director/Finance, 894-3780 (o). 427 2270 (h|

Lawton Hydnck, Assistant Athletic Director/Men's Sports. 894-5474 (o). 952 5299 (h)

Scott Zolke, Assistant Athletic Director/ Academics. 8944421 (o); 952 8693 (h)

Bill McDonald. Assistant Athletic Director/Sports Medxrine. 894 5460 (o); 9262945 (h)

Bemadelte McGlade. Assistant Athletic Director/Women's Basketball Coach. 894 5416 (o); 3551226 (h)

Mike Finn. Sports Information Director. 894-5445 (o). 93*9910 (h)

Mike Stamus, Assistant Sports Information Director, 894-5445 (o). 355- 1726 (h)

Frank Zang, Assistant Sports lnformahon Director. 894-5445 (o). 355-3254 (h)

Mary Fowler. Ticket Manager. 894 5448 (o). 981 3060 (h)

BUI Curry. FootbaD Coach, 894-5448 (o). 262 1010 (h)

Bobby Cremins, BasketbaD Coach. 894 5425 (o). 394-9015 (h)

WiDiam (Puggy) Blackmon. Goll Coach. 894 4423 (o); 921 8514 (h)

Buddy Fowlkes. Men's Track Coach. 894 5451 (o). 843 3770 (h)

Gery Groshmond. Men's Tennis Coach. 894-4401 (o). 252 3024 (h)

Lowe! Lange. Wrestling Coach, 875 9274 (o); 876-6649 (h)

Herb McAuley. Swimming Coach, 8945454 (o), 233 1853 (h)

Jim Moms, BasebaD Coach, 894-5471 (o); 8742552 (h)

Rick Davison, Women's Tennis Coach, 894-5024 (o)

Judy Sackfield, VoDeybaD Coach, 894-5453 (o), 493 7656 (h)

Dee Todd, Women's Track/Cross Countly Coach, 894 5400 (o). 996-3987 (h)

WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY: Winston-Salem, N.C. Telephone: 919/761-5000

Dr John W Sawyer. Faculty Representative. 761 5335 (o); 7250144 (h)

Dr. Gene Hooks. Director ol Athletes, 761 5616 (o); 722 1069 (h)

Dennis Haglan, Assistant Athletic Drector. 761 5753 (o), 7660159

Dorothy Casey. Women's Athletic Director, 761 5858 (o), 723-2088 (h)

Wiliam Faircloth. Assistant Athletic Director, 761-5621 (o). 724-6489 (h)

Charlie Patterson, Assistant Athletic Drector. 761 5626 (o): 7602323 (h)

John Justus. Sports Information Director, 761 5640 (o); 945 9729 (h)

Bert Woodard, Assistant Sports Information Drector. 761 5640 (o). 723 4248 (hi

Barbara Dery. Assistant Sports lnformahon Drector. 761-5640 (o). 765-0305 (h)

Rebecca Waggoner. Ticket Manager. 761-5613 (o); 761 8274 (h)

Al Groh. FootbaD Coach. 761 5631 (o); 724 5570 (h)

Bob Staak, Men's BasketbaD Coach. 761 5622 (ol

Marvin Crater. BasebaD Coach. 761 5570 (o). 7684613 (h)

Jesse Haddock, Goll Coach. 761 5619 (o), 998 2420 (h)

John Goodndge, Men's Track/Cross Country, 761 5630 (o)

Frances Goodndge, Women's Track'Cross Country, 761-5630 (o)

Ian Crookenden. Men's Tennis Coach. 761 5634 (o), 922 1210 (h)

DeDe ADen. Women's Tennis Coach, 761 5752 (o)

Walt Chyzowych, Soccer Coach. 761 5516 (o)

Joe Sanchez. Women's BasketbaD Coach. 761 5763 (o)

Barbara Bradley. Field Hockey Coach, 761 5459 (o)

Fred Wenbelboe, VoDeybaD Coaach, 7614952 (o)

16

A PREVIEW OF 1986-87

1986-87 Preview

Many college basketball programs talk of rebuilding. So often is the term used, in fact, that it has become a worn cliche, perhaps even an excuse for a particular squad's lack of returning leadership and experience. But rarely has the concept of rebuilding been more applicable than at Maryland this season, as first-year coach Bob Wade embarks on his initial college season with one of the youngest, least experienced clubs in Maryland and ACC history.

Gone, for one reason or another, are seven members of last year's 19-14 Terp roster, a team that advanced to the NCAA Tournament for the fourth straight season and the fifth time in seven years. Among the departed are the top four 1985-86 scorers, six of the top seven rebounders and six of the eight players who saw action in at least 300 minutes. Also, consider that the Terps have lost 79 percent of all scoring and 71 percent of all rebounding. Rarely, if ever, has existed a more formi- dable rebuilding task.

Wade, a man who stressed a fullcourt, fast-paced brand of basketball during his years at Dunbar (Baltimore) High, will draw from a 1986-87 team that can best be described as very young and athletically capable. Ten of the 11 definite roster members are freshmen or sophomores. Only one Terp junior forward Derrick Lewis has scored more than 200 points and grabbed more than 30 rebounds in his Division 1 college career. But in procuring its second straight group of solid recruits, Maryland and Wade can look to the future and consider those same 10 freshmen/ sophomores will form a cohesive unit in the years to come.

For now, consider the Terps wet behind the ears. "We'll have a team with good foot speed and good perimeter shooters," Wade says. "We'll also be very young and very inexperienced in regard to ACC wars, and we'll suffer from a lack of depth in the frontcourt."

Up front, the Terps will depend largely on Lewis. The 6-7 forward (7.9 ppg, 6.7 rpg in 1985-86) has 170 blocked shots in his two seasons at Maryland by far and away the most among returning ACC players (see page 59)— and is regarded as one of the conference's premier defensive players. Where Lewis plays be it power forward or center will depend on the progress of 6-11 freshman Andre Reyes. "Andre's going to be thrown into a must-play situa- tion immediately," says Wade. "Instead of allowing him to grasp the situations of college basketball, as we would have hoped, he's being thrown into a must-play situation. He's going to make a lot of mistakes, so it's important for us to help

1986-87 University of Maryland Basketball Roster

No. Name Pos.

23 Dave Dickerson F

44 Steve Hood F/G

21 John Johnson G

10 Mark Karver F # 5 Mitch Kasoff G

33 Derrick Lewis F

11 Teyon McCoy G

22 Greg Nared G

# 50 PhilNevin C

4 Ivan Powell G

45 Andre Reyes C

# 13 Pat Holland F

# 20 Tom Worstell G

# Denotes 1985-86 Redshirt

# Denotes Walk-On

Hgt. Wgt. Class Hometown/High School

6-6 200 Sophomore Olar, SC/Denmark-Olar

6-6 190 Freshman Hyattsville, MD/DeMatha

6-4 170 Sophomore Knoxville, TN/Bearden

6-7 195 Freshman Bethesda, MD/Chevy Chase

6-1 175 Freshman Pikesville, MD/Pikesville

6-7 195 Junior Temple Hills, MD/John Carroll

6-1 170 Freshman Hammond, IN/Bishop Noll

6-4 190 Sophomore Wilmington, OH/Wilmington

6-11 250 Freshman Vandergrift, PA/Kiski Area

6-4 190 Sophomore Waterbury, CT/Buckley HS/

Mattatuck JUCO

6-11 220 Freshman Manning, SC/Manning

6-8 195 Freshman University Park, MD/DeMatha

6-2 190 Junior Manassas, VA/Stonewall

Jackson

Sophomore guard John Johnson ranks second among returning Terps in minutes played and points, and had more three-point plays per minute last season than any guard in the ACC.

him learn as much as he can as he goes along. There will be times when that sup- port will occur on a very hurried basis." Red-shirt freshman Phil Nevin will provide depth.

The small forward position appears set. Freshman Steve Hood, a high school All- America with a soft shooting touch, and sophomore David Dickerson, who saw limited action last season give the Terps two potentially quality players. Freshman Mark Karver could also see some time at small forward, although his skills seem more suited to the backcourt. Dickerson ranks third among returning Maryland scorers (2.1 ppg) and showed outstanding athletic ability during brief stints last season. If Wade chooses a smaller lineup, Dickerson and Hood could be paired at forward with Lewis at center, giving the Terps a small but agile frontcourt.

The backcourt is stocked with possi- bilities but little experience. Sophomore John Johnson (6-4), Maryland's second- leading returning scorer (5.8 ppg) and rebounder (29) heads a group of freshmen/ sophomores who should only get better as the season progresses. Johnson ranks first among returning ACC guards in three- point plays last season (six) despite playing only 493 minutes, testimony to his out- standing first-step quickness and ability to

18

penetrate. Sophomore Greg Nared (6-4) saw action in only seven games in 1985-86, but could contend for considerable playing time this season because he can handle the chores at both point guard and shooting guard.

Four newcomers two freshmen recruits, one walk-on freshman and a sophomore transfer will challenge the holdovers. Ivan Powell, a 6-4 transfer from Mattatuck (Conn.) Junior College, was the only freshman named to the U.S. Juco All- America team last season and should help the Terps immediately with his outside shooting. Teyon McCoy, a 6-1 freshman, could contend for a berth at point guard, and is described by scouts as a potentially "big-time college player." Karver, 6-7, mentioned as a forward possibility, has the skills to handle both guard positions, and 6-1 walk-on Mitch Kasoff adds depth.

All told, the 1986-87 season should become an interesting learning process, one that could set the Terps and Wade up for the next few seasons. "All coaches like to have a wealth of experience," sum- marizes Wade, "but I'm going to enjoy

molding this team. This is an orientation year me getting to know the players, the players getting to know me. Whatever the outcome, I expect us to be competitive."

MARYLAND

Quick Roster Facts

Among the 11 definite members on the 1986-87 Maryland squad, 10 are either freshmen or sophomores and only one junior Derrick Lewis has scored more than 200 points and grabbed more than 30 rebounds during his Division I college career.

Gone from last season's 19-14, NCAA Tournament team is 79 percent of all scoring and 71 percent of all rebounding. Also departed are the top four scorers, six of the top seven rebounders and six of the eight players who played at least 300 minutes.

One starter (Lewis) and four lettermen (Lewis, John Johnson, David Dickerson and Greg Nared) return.

Maryland lost more lettermen (seven) than any other ACC school.

No team in the ACC lost as much point production or rebound production.

Maryland Basketball, 1 986-87 Standing, L-R: Trainer Frank Grimaldi, Manager (Equipment) Ron Ohringer, Assistant Coach Oliver Purnell, Head Coach Bob Wade, Tom Worsteil, Greg Nared, David Dickerson, John Johnson, Ivan Powell, Teyon McCoy, Mitch Kasoff, Assistant Coach Jeff Adkins, Assistant Coach Ron Bradley; Kneeling, L-R: Manager Jim Spicer, Mark Karver, Andre Reyes, Derrick Lewis, Phil Nevin, Pat Holland, Steve Hood, Manager Tim Burton, Manager Troy Wainwright.

19

A potentially dominating defensive force and one of the nation's premier shot blockers ... A completely selfless player who has seen extensive action at center in his two years at Maryland, despite his lack of bulk and smallish stature for the position . . . One of the nation's unsung heroes, a player who does the dirty work underneath while others score . . . Will need to pick up some of the scoring slack existing from the departure of Len Bias, but seems more comfortable doing his damage subtlely.

Sophomore— The only Maryland player to start all 33 games last season . . . Av- eraged 7.9 points per game on 48.5 shooting from the floor and 68.4 percent from the line . . . Grabbed 222 rebounds, second on the team, and averaged 6.7 rebounds per con- test, tied for fifth in the ACC . . . Blocked a

Player Factbox:

Full Name: Derrick Raymond Lewis Date of Birth: Aug. 1, 1966 Birthplace: Tarboro, N.C. Parents: Robert and Gertie Lewis H.S. Coach: Carroll Homes

33

DERRICK LEWIS

Junior/Forward-Center 6-7, 195

John Carroll High Temple Hills, Md.

team-high 71 shots and did an outstanding job defensively despite constantly being as- signed to the opposition's top big man . . . Finished second in the ACC in blocked shots despite covering players usually taller than he . . . Scored in double figures in 13 games, with a career high of 16 against Ohio State and Georgia Tech in Atlanta . . . Reached double figures in rebounds in 10 games with a season high of 12 against Duke (College Park) and at Clemson . . . Had seven blocks vs. North Carolina in Mary- land's stunning upset at the Smith Center and against Stanford in the Hawaii Pacific Tournament . . . Had six against Virginia in the regular season finale and against Fair- leigh Dickinson . . . Led the Terps in steals with 37 and finished second in minutes played with 1,079.

Freshman Finished second in the nation and first in the ACC in blocked shots with 99 15 more than the entire opponents' total against Maryland that season . . . Started 34 of 37 games and 34 straight, meaning Lewis has started 67 straight games without a miss . . . Averaged 6.0 points and finished seventh in the ACC with an average of 6.5 rebounds per game, shooting 46.6 percent from the floor and 62.5 percent from the line . . . Set a Terp season record with 122 personal fouls and was disqualified from five games . . . Had 10 blocked shots against Tennessee in the Great Alaska Shootout, and 10 again vs. Towson State . . . Set a personal career high with 14 rebounds against Wake Forest and had a season high 16 points against Duke in the ACC Tourna- ment . . . Was named ACC Rookie of the Week twice, and finished second in ACC Rookie of the Year balloting to Georgia Tech's Duane Ferrell many felt Lewis de- served the award.

High School— One of the most sought- after players in the country and labeled by coaches as the best defensive player in the nation . . . Was rated as the sixth best prospect in the land by the Knoxville News-

20

$*

^ i

vj

A* ! 1

Sentinel and was the lone Washington-area player named to the McDonald's 25-man dream team . . . Was selected as the Metro team's Most Valuable Player in the 11th annual McDonald's Classic at the Capital Centre . . . Was chosen to receive the Mr. Basketball Award by the Washington Touch- down Club and was honored by the Silver Hills Boys and Girls Clubs, receiving the John Wesley Davis memorial "Boy of the Year" award ... A member of the National Honor Society while at John Carroll and extremely active in school activities.

Spotlight Stat Blocked an amazing 99 shots as a freshman, placing him second to Navy's David Robinson four inches taller in the country. Perhaps even more mind- boggling is that Lewis blocked most of those 99 shots depsite serving as an under age, undersized center. Despite his seemingly fragile build and lack of upper body strength, Lewis has never missed a game while at Maryland.

Career Highs:

Points— 16 vs. Georgia Tech, 1/11/86;

vs. Ohio State, 11/30/85; vs. Duke,

ACC Quarterfinals, 3/7/85. Rebounds— 14 vs. Wake Forest,

2/24/85. Blocked Shots— 10 vs. Tennessee,

11/24/84;

vs. Towson State, 2/21/85.

. ^

**?*'

" B ft

GP

GS

FGM

FGA

Pet.

FTM

FTA

.Pet

Reb.

Asst.

Pts.

Avg.

1 Freshman

37

34

88

189

.466

45

72

.625

241

33

221

6.0

1 Sophomore 1 Totals

33

33

97

200

.485

67

98

.684

222

28

261

7.9

70

67

185

389

.480

112

170

.659

463

61

482

6.9

A talented swingman with an abundance of athletic ability . . . Can play either big guard or small forward, although talents make him more suited for forward ... An intelligent player with all the physical tools: quickness, speed, inside moves, an outside shot and good jumping ability . . .Lacks only experience in pressure situations and game minutes. . . In time, could become a produc- tive small forward; should get the chance to prove himself this season.

Freshman— Saw limited duty, playing in 15 games and 112 minutes . . . Scored 32 points and had 22 rebounds, with season highs of 9 points at Clemson and 5 rebounds against UMES . . . Most extensive day of x duty came before family and friends at Clemson, when he got season-high point total and added three rebounds, four assists and one block . . . Despite limited playing time, showed good court sense and the ability to get up and down the floor . . . Shot 44 percent from the floor (11 of 25) and 77 percent from the line (10 of 13) . . . 1985-86 average of 2.1 points per game ranks him fourth among returning scorers.

High School— A first-team All-State se- lection who was named MVP of South Carolina's annual North-South All-Star Game . . . Averaged 20 points and 12 re- bounds per game as a senior . . . Named MVP of his conference and led Olar High to the 5A Conference Championship as a junior and senior . . . Played quarterback and safety for the Olar High football team . . . Received the presigious Computer Science Award from Olar as a senior.

23

DAVID DICKERSON

Sophomore/Forward 6-6, 200 Olar High Denmark, S.C.

Career Highs;

Points— 9 vs. Clemson, 2/15/86 Rebounds-5 vs. UMES, 2/17/86 Assists— 4 vs. Clemson, 2/15/86

Player Factbox:

Full Name: David Dickerson, Jr. Date of Birth: March 29, 1967 Birthplace: Olar, S.C. Guardian: David Dickerson, Sr. H.S. Coach: Ernest Nimmons

Freshman

GP GS FGM FGA Pet. FTM FTA

15 0 11 25 .440 10 13

22

.Pet Reb. Asst. Pts. Avg.

.769 22 7 32 2.1

A prototypical No. 2 guard who saw considerable action as a freshman . . .Explo- sive offensive player who can burn op- ponents both inside and outside with his lightning quickness . . . Will be counted on heavily to pick up scoring load this season . . . Needs to work on ballhandling skills in pressure situations . . . Good rebounder for a guard and a solid defensive player.

Freshman^Played in 31 games, starting eight . . . Saw more playing time than any other freshman (493 minutes) and took advantage, averaging 5.8 points per game . . . Had the second-best points/minutes played ratio on the team a point for every 2.7 minutes played . . . Shot 50 percent (69- 138) from the field and 64.2 percent (43-67) from the line . . . Scored in double figures in nine games, with a season-high 18 against Johnny Dawkins and NCAA finalist Duke on Jan. 4 . . . Had 15 points against Wake Forest (College Park), 11 against Villanova and 12 against Notre Dame . . . Hit game- winning shot to beat Stanford in double overtime in the Hawaii-Pacific Tournament, then had 16 points in Maryland's tourna- ment championship victory over Hawaii- Pacific the next day . . . Great first step to

21

JOHN JOHNSON

Sophomore/Guard 6-4, 170 Bearden High Knoxville, Tenn.

the hoop makes his one-on-one abilities look easy . . . Has 35 assists, 29 rebounds and seven steals ... An outstanding leaper who should gain offensive consistency with in- creased playing time ... In time, could develop into one of Maryland's highest scor- ing guards ever.

High School Named Tennessee's High School Player of the Year as a senior . . . Set

Bearden High career scoring record with 2,327 points in three seasons, with high games of 46, 45 and 40 points . . . Named Mr. Basketball in Tennessee as a senior and was an honorable mention All-America. . .Aver- aged 25.4 points, 8.2 rebounds and 6.0 assists in his final season ... A first-team All-State selection twice and an All-District selection three times.

Player Factbox:

Full Name: John Henry Johnson Date of Birth: March 11, 1967 Birthplace: Chattanooga, Tenn. Guardian: Johnnie Ratliff H.S. Coach: George Pitts

Career Highs:

Points— 18 vs. Duke, 1/4/86. Rebounds 3 vs. George Mason,

11/26/85; vs. Notre Dame 2/3/86;

vs. Wake Forest, 2/26/86. Assists 5 vs. George Mason,

11/26/85.

Freshman

GP

GS

FGM

FGA

Pet.

FTM

FTA

.Pet

Reb.

Asst.

Pts.

Avg.

31

8

69

138

.500

43

67

.642

29

35

181

5.8

23

22

GREG NARED

Sophomore/Guard 6-4, 190

Wilmington High Wilmington, Ohio

A superb athlete who adds depth and ability to Maryland's guard collection . . . Can work both backcourt positions, and did in limited duty last season . . . Played spar- ingly in 1986 after missing the first portion of the season due to academic upgrading . . . One of several solid guard candidates vying for a major role in 1986-87.

Freshman Played in seven games, scor- ing six points and grabbing five rebounds in 46 minutes ... Hit 3 of 8 shots from the floor and added three assists . . . Longest stints of the season came against Duke and Clemson, when he played 14 minutes apiece . . . Made 2 of 3 shots from the field and assisted on one basket against Duke; missed both shots he attempted but had one assist against Clemson . . . Had two assists in 6 minutes against UMES . . . Had three rebounds against Randolph-Macon.

High School A four-year letterman in both basketball and football at Wilmington High . . . Outstanding quarterback who was recruited heavily by Ohio State, among others ... An All-State selection in both sports as a senior . . . Listed as a "Who's Who" among American High School Stu- dents ... A Student Council representative as a senior . . . Broke Wilmington High season assist record as a freshman, then broke the career mark as a sophomore ... A preseason All-America in football and basket- ball, making several honorable mention lists in both sports . . . Helped Wilmington to the conference championship as a junior . . . Captained the South in Ohio's annual North- South All-Star Game in basketball.

Player Factbox:

Full Name: Gregory Keith Nared Date of Birth: May 7, 1966 Birthplace: Dayton, Ohio Guardian: Audrey C. Young H.S. Coach: Norm Persin

24

44

STEVE HOOD

Freshman/Guard-Forward 6-6, 190 DeMatha High, Hyattsville, Md.

Smooth swingman who should step in at Maryland and have an immediate impact . . . Learned his basketball the right way at DeMatha under coach Morgan Wootten . . . Solid ballhandling skills and outside shooting touch allow him to play both forward and guard . . . Steady performer who gained a reputation as a big-play man at DeMatha.

High School Climbed well up most All-America lists with an outstanding senior year ... By season's end, was considered one of the top 25 players in the country . . . Some publications had him listed among the top 15 . . . Was selected to McDonald's pres- tigious Dream Team, a listing of the top 25 players in the nation . . . Averaged 21 points, 8 rebounds and 3 blocked shots per game as a senior, shooting 57 percent from the field and 83 percent from the line . . . Named MVP at highly regarded 5 Star Basketball Camp in Pittsburgh after his junior year . . . Had 17 points for the Capital All-Stars vs. the U.S. Stars in April's Capital Classic at Cole Field House . . . All-Metro choice and Player of the Year as a senior, with All-Metro, All-State and All-County honors as a junior.

Player Factbox:

Full Name: Steve Lamarr Hood Date of Birth: April 4, 1968 Birthplace: Lynchburg, Va. Parents: Robert and Barbara Hood H.S. Coach : Morgan Wootten

10

MARK KARVER

Freshman/Guard-Forward 6-7, 195

Chevy Chase High Bethesda, Md.

A candidate for playing time at either guard or forwarc Versatile player with vast range of skills; can play either pon.. guard, No. 2 guard or small forward . . . Good outside shooter who should add depth in the backcourt or contend for a position on the wing . . . Excellent ballhandler for his size . . . Heady player who anticipates well and shows surprising quickness.

High School An honorable mention All-America choice whom some scouts rated on the same level as Terp teammate Steve Hood ... An All-Metro selection by both the Washington Post and Washington Times . . . All-Montgomery County as well . . . Becomes first Montgomery County recruit to join Terps since Blair High's Brian Magid attended Maryland 10 years ago . . . Averaged 20 points, 9 rebounds and 6 assists per game, shooting 55 percent from the floor and 83 percent from the line as a senior . . . Hit 45-foot shot at the buzzer last spring to give Chevy Chase the Class AA Regional title, then led CC to overall 2A Maryland state crown . . . Late father was a standout at nearby George Washington University.

Player Factbox:

Full Name: Mark Louis Karver Date of Birth: May 3, 1968 Birthplace: Silver Spring, Md. Parent: Avorey Karver H.S. Coach: Bill Wright

25

5

MITCH KASOFF

Freshman/Guard 6-1, 175 Pikesville High Baltimore, Md.

Walk-on guard candidate . . . Standout shooter who could be used in specific situations . . . Should benefit from NCAA adoption of3-point shot . . .Outstanding shooting range. . . Solid all-around athlete who was an All-County (Baltimore) selection at quarter- back and safety and a lacrosse midfielder.

High School One of few players from Baltimore County with ability to attempt Division I basketball . . . Led state in scoring as a junior (28.7); although average dropped to 24 points per game as a senior, his shooting percentage, rebounds and assists all went up ... A first-team All-American selection by the New York Jewish Post & Opinion . . . All-Metro pick by the Baltimore Sun ... A two-time All-County selection . . . Led Pikesville High to Class A/Region IV title as a junior . . . Reigns as all-time leading scorer in Pikesville history (1,614 points) . . . High game was 46 vs. Owings Mills . . . Broke career and game scoring records held by brother Eddie, who played basketball and football at Johns Hopkins.

I

Player Factbox:

Full Name: Mitchell Andrew Kasoff Date of Birth: January 9, 1968 Birthplace: Baltimore, Md. Parents: Harvey and Helaine Kasoff H.S. Coach: Sam Norman

11

TEYONMcCOY

Freshman/Guard 6-1, 170

Bishop Noll High Hammond, Ind.

Could step in and have an immediate impact in the Terp backcourt . . . Outstanding quickness and ballhandling abilities . . . Court sense and unselfish style make him an ideal candidate as point guard . . . Gained widespread acclaim as the most complete high school player in the state of Indiana as a senior; does nothing spectacularly but most everything well and is solid fundamentally.

High School— Ranked among the 50 top players in the nation on several noted prep lists as a senior . . . Averaged 23. 1 points, 3 steals and 3 assists per game despite marginal supporting cast at Bishop Noll, setting school records for most points in a game (43) and field goals in a game (21) ... A finalist for coveted "Mr. Basketball" honors in Indiana . . . Averaged 18. 1 points per game as a junior . . . Was a four-year starter and two-time team captain at Bishop Noll . . . Participated in the McDonalds Capital Classic and Kentucky Derby Festival . . . Three-time all-conference and all- Area selection.

Player Factbox:

Full Name: Teyon Ornell McCoy Date of Birth: November 4, 1967 Birthplace: East Chicago, Ind. Parents: Odestress and Ruth McKoy H.S. Coach: Jack Gabor

m-r

26

50

PHIL NEVIN

Freshman/Center 6-11, 250 Kiski Area High Vandcrgrift, Pa.

Red-shirt freshman center who lends size and bulk to the Maryland roster . . . Hard worker who needs to work on flexibility and touch around the hoop . . . Helped last season by facing Derrick Lewis and Len Bias in practice, forcing Maryland's starters to get accustomed to taller players . . . Role this season could depend on the progression of freshman Andre Reyes.

High School A McDonald's All-America selection and an All- Metro (Pittsburgh area) choice by Street & Smith . . . Averaged 14.5 points, 11 rebounds and seven blocked shots per game as a senior . . . Led Kiski Area to the Section I title that season and was named to the Allegheny Kiski Valley first team . . . Played in the Dapper Dan Classic after his senior season, regarded as one of the nation's top high school All-Star games . . . Started at center for three straight years, as Kiski Area posted 23-6 and 23-3 records en route to the WPIAL 4A Championship when Nevin was a junior and senior, respectively . . . Averaged 13 points, 9 rebounds and 5 blocks per game throughout his school career.

Player Factbox:

Full Name: Phillip Gene Nevin Date of Birth: Jan. 13, 1967 Birthplace: Selby County, Ohio Parents: Gene and Evelyn Nevin H.S. Coach: Samuel Intreiri

4

IVAN POWELL

Sophomore/Guard

6-3, 200

Mattatuck, C.C.

Hartford, Conn.

A Junior College transfer who should immediately help the Maryland backcourt . . . Prolific shooter at Mattatuck Community College and another player who could become an offensive presence because of the newly installed three-point shot . . . The prototypical No. 2 guard; could challenge for a starting slot . . . Could be the scorer Maryland needs with the loss of forwards Len Bias, Speedy Jones and guard Jeff Baxter.

Freshman Had an outstanding season at Mattatuck was the only freshman in the nation to be named to the national JUCO All- American first team . . . Averaged 24.7 points per game and shot 60.3 percent from the floor ... Hit game-winning shot at the buzzer last season to advance Mattatuck to the national JUCO Championships.

High School— An honorable mention All-America at Buckley High in Hartford . . . Averaged 24.0 points and 9.1 rebounds per game as a senior ... An All-State selection twice . . . Shot 58.6 percent from the floor as a senior and set school records for best free-throw percentage (93.4) and season scoring (528 points) . . . Was also an All-Conference selection in baseball for three straight years as a first baseman . . . Served as President of the Black Awareness Club . . . Plays the organ, piano and drums .

Player Factbox:

Full Name: Ivan Wellesley Powell Date of Birth: Oct. 1, 1966 Birthplace: Hartford, Conn. Parents: Hubert and Edith Powell H.S. Coach : Joseph Dichaira

27

45

ANDRE REYES

Freshman/Center 6-11, 220 Manning High Manning, S.C.

A strong possibility as Maryland's big man of the future . . . Has outstanding physical tools and attitude . . . Needs to work on fluidity around the basket and shooting touch in the paint . . . Didn't rank among the top high school big men in the nation as a senior, but was recruited vigorously by several ACC and Big East powers ... In time, could become a dominant force at both ends of the court.

High School Averaged 17.4 points, 10.2 rebounds, 4.7 blocked shots and 3. 1 assists per game as a senior at Manning High . . . Named team MVP and played in South Carolina's annual North-South All-Star Game . . . Led Manning to conference championship and was an All-State, All-District and All-Con- ference selection . . . Lists Len Bias and James Worthy as his favorite hoop players . . . Chose Maryland over Georgetown, N.C. State, Clemson and Tennessee . . . Spent most of his childhood summers in New York City, where he was born.

Player Factbox:

Full Name: Andre Reyes

Date of Birth: December 7, 1968

Birthplace: Bronx, N.Y.

Parents: Justin Reyes, Bessie Hilton

H.S. Coach: Gunter Sweat

Returning Leaders

Total Points

1. Derrick Lewis (216)

2. John Johnson (181)

3. David Dickerson (32)

4. Greg Nared (6)

Total Assists

Total Rebounds

1. Derrick Lewis (222)

2. John Johnson (29)

3. David Dickerson (22)

4. Greg Nared (5)

1. John Johnson (35)

2. Derrick Lewis (28)

3. David Dickerson (7)

4. Greg Nared (3)

Field Goal Percentage

1. John Johnson (.500)

2. Derrick Lewis (.485)

3. David Dickerson (.440)

4. Greg Nared (.375)

Free Throw Percentage

1. David Dickerson (.769)

2. Derrick Lewis (.684)

3. John Johnson (.642)

4. Greg Nared (.000)

Veteran assistant coach Ron Bradley (L) instructs the 1986-87 Terps, one of the youngest squads in ACC history.

28

20

TOM WORSTELL

Junior/Guard

6-2, 190

Stonewall Jackson High

Manassas, Va.

An All-American lacrosse midfielder who impressed the basket- ball staff during walk-on tryouts in November . . . Was invited back for a two-week practice evaluation and was again impressive . . . Joined the roster permanently just before Thanksgiving, under a gentleman's agreement between Wade and lacrosse coach Dick Edell ... A superb athlete who will help the Terps in specific situations and lend depth to the backcourt.

At Maryland Named ACC Player of the Year in lacrosse in 1986, as he led the Terps to their first NCAA tournament appearance since 1983 . . . Was the only sophomore selected to the USILA's first-team All-American squad, and has already established himself as one of the finest midfielders in Maryland history . . . Led the squad in goals (22) and finished second in total points (39) . . . Followed brothers Pete (1977-81, three-time All- America) and Tim (1980-84, All- ACC) to College Park.

High School Earned MVP honors in football, basketball and lacrosse as a senior . . . Was good enough in hoops to be recruited by Virginia, among others . . . Quarterbacked Stonewall Jackson to division title as a senior and earned All- America lacrosse honors that spring.

13

PAT HOLLAND

Freshman/Forward 6-8, 195 DeMatha High

University Park, Md.

A successful walk-on candidate whose athletic ability caught Wade's eye early in the preseason . . . Despite his size, never played high school basketball at DeMatha, but did play lacrosse for the Stags . . . Lettered for two seasons at crease attack for John McCarthy, and was a member of DeMatha's Washington Area Lacrosse League champions . . . Father Charles attended Maryland.

29

Comprehensive Stats of Returning Players

Against Common Opponents

1985-86 and 1986-87

Derrick Lewis

Min.

FGM-FGA

FTM-FTA

Pts.

Reb.

Turn.

Steals

Asst.

Blk.

Fairleigh Dickinson

33

5-6

3-4

13

8

2

3

1

6

Notre Dame

24

2-5

1-2

5

0

3

1

0

1

N.C. State (2 games)

72

12-19

3-4

27

8

7

3

7

4

Towson State

21

1-2

2-2

4

3

1

0

0

2

North Carolina (3 games)

103

10-19

13-16

33

24

10

5

3

9

Virginia (2 games)

59

4-8

2-5

10

13

4

2

4

8

Duke (2 games)

67

4-9

1-3

9

19

3

1

3

2

Clemson (2 games)

61

5-17

2-3

12

17

4

1

1

4

West Virginia

37

0-4

2-3

2

8

2

1

0

1

Georgia Tech (3 games)

103

9-18

6-6

24

11

5

4

1

2

Wake Forest (2 games)

64

3-9

3-5

9

19

1

2

3

4

UMES

20

1-4

1-2

3

5

1

1

0

2

John Johnson

Min.

FGM-FGA

FTM-FTA

Pts.

Reb.

Turn.

Steals

Asst.

Blk.

Fairleigh Dickinson

16

1-5

0-1

2

1

3

0

3

0

Notre Dame

33

6-15

0-2

12

3

1

1

1

0

N.C. State (2 games)

21

2-5

1-2

5

0

2

1

1

0

Towson State

24

2-5

6-7

10

2

0

1

1

0

North Carolina (3 games)

24

1-3

2-2

4

1

1

0

0

0

Virginia (2 games)

9

2-3

1-1

5

0

1

2

0

0

Duke (2 games)

55

8-16

4-5

20

2

7

0

4

0

Clemson (1 game)

2

0-0

0-0

0

1

2

0

0

0

West Virginia

10

0-1

1-2

1

0

1

1

1

0

Georgia Tech (3 games)

26

1-2

0-2

2

2

6

0

1

0

Wake Forest (2 games)

29

7-12

1-2

15

4

0

0

2

0

UMES

22

6-9

3-6

15

2

1

0

1

0

David Dickerson

Min.

FGM-FGA

FTM-FTA

Pts.

Reb.

Turn.

Steals

Asst.

Blk.

Fairleigh Dickinson

5

0-0

0-1

0

1

0

0

0

0

Notre Dame

DID NOT PLAY

N.C. State

DID NOT PLAY

Towson State

11

2-3

2-2

6

2

0

0

1

1

North Carolina (2 games)

2

0-0

0-0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Virginia (1 game)

1

0-0

0-0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Duke (2 games)

20

0-2

2-2

2

4

1

0

0

1

Clemson (1 game)

24

3-9

3-4

9

3

3

0

4

1

West Virginia

DID NOT PLAY

Georgia Tech

DID NOT PLAY

Wake Forest (1 game)

2

0-1

0-0

0

1

0

0

0

0

UMES

16

3-3

0-0

6

5

1

1

0

1

Greg Nared

Min.

FGM-FGA

FTM-FTA

Pts.

Reb.

Turn.

Steals

Asst.

Blk.

Fairleigh Dickinson

DID NOT PLAY

NOTRE DAME

DID NOT PLAY

N. C. State

DID NOT PLAY

Towson State

DID NOT PLAY

North Carolina (1 game)

1

0-0

0-0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Virginia

DID NOT PLAY

Duke (1 game)

14

2-3

0-3

4

1

2

0

1

0

Clemson (1 game)

14

0-2

0-0

0

0

2

0

1

0

West Virginia

DID NOT PLAY

Georgia Tech

DID NOT PLAY

Wake Forest (1 game)

2

0-0

0-0

0

0

0

0

0

0

UMES

6

0-0

0-0

0

1

3

0

2

0

30

1986-87 ATLANTIC COAST CONFERENCE BASKETBALL SCHEDULE

SUNDAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

1 Hill IN

SATURDAY

21

Temple at VIRGINIA

(NIT CLASSICl

(Play continues Nov 24 29,

semi finals & dnals in

New York)

N

28

29

O

CLEMSON at IPTAY

Invitational

CLEMSON al IPTAY

V E M

DUKE ai Seaside. Classic ,

DUKE at Seaside! Class-;

Hawaii

GEORGIA TECH at

GEORGIA TECH at

Richmond Tip- Oil

Richmond Tip Oil

NORTH CAROLINA ai

NORTH CAROUNA at

Hawaii Leo

Hawaii Lao

N C STATE al Alaska

N C STATE at Alaska

Shootoui

R

Shootout

E

30

NC STATE at Alaska

Pennsylvania al GEORGIA

1

UNC Ashevilleal

6

Te*as Tech at CLEMSON

R

TECH

CLEMSON

Vanderbilt at DUKE

NORTH CAROUNA ai

East Carolina at DUKE

Miami (Fla I at NORTH

UCLA

Georgia ai GEORGIA TECH

CAROUNA

Coastal Carolina al

Slelson at NORTH

NC STATE al Western

WAKE FOREST

CAROUNA

East Tennessee al N C

Slate VMI at VIRGINIA WAKE FOREST Davidson

ICharlolle)

Carolina VIRGINIA at Investors Clastic

7

8

10

13

VIRGINIA al Investors

Davidson ai DUKE

East Tennessee al VIRGINIA

Jacksonville ai NORTH

CAROUNA DUKE AJabama (East

Rolhertotd, N J) GEORGIA TECH at LSU

14

16

17

20

CLEMSON a( Soulh

Prame View at CLEMSON

Armsnong Slate ai

GEORGIA TECH Bosion

Carolina

CLEMSON

UNC Asheville at N C STATE

College (Tokyo, Japan) Illinois al NORTH CAROUNA

D E

Bapiisi ai WAKE FOREST

VIRGINIA Arkansas IPme

BluM, Ark )

UNC Wilmington al

WAKE FOREST

C

21

GEORGIA TECH So

22

DUKE ai Miam. (Fla )

27

GEORGIA TECH ai Holiday

E

Melhodisl (Tokyo. Japan!

N CAROLINA Forman

Festival

(Charlollel

VIRGINIA at Holiday

M

Mansi ai N C STATE

Feshval

WAKE FOREST Virginia

Winth.opal MARYLAND

B E

Tech (Roanoke)

NORTH CAROUNA Kansas

Slate ,

(Kansas City)

N C STATE at Tampa

R

29

CLEMSON at TCBY Toum

30

CLEMSON at TCBY

31

Notre Dame al

2

CLEMSON at Hawaii Pacific

3

DUKE at VIRGINIA

(Utile Rock)

Tournament

MARYLAND

Tournament

GEORGIA TECH at WAKE

Appalachun at DUKE

Northwestern al DUKE

FOREST

GEORGIA TECH ai Holiday

N CAROLINA al Col ton

MARYLAND at N C

Festival

Bowl Classic

STATE

VIRGINIA ai Holiday

Loyola (Chicago) al N C

CLEMSON al Hawaii Pacific

Festival

Stale

Tournament

N CAROLINA ai Cotton

WAKE FOREST at Cable

NORTH CAROUNA al

Bowl (Dallas)

Car Classic

LaSalle

WAKE FOREST at Cable

Cat (San Francisco)

Fairleigh Dickinson at

MARYLAND

S

7

B

10

William & Mary al DUKE

N C STATE ai CLEMSON

MARYLAND a. NORTH

CLEMSON ai WAKE

Towson Stale at

St Josephs at DUKE

CAROUNA

FOREST

MARYLAND

Missouri al VIRGINIA

NORTH CAROUNA ai

Brown at VIRGINIA

Appalachian at WAKE

DUKE

Md /Eastern Shore at WAKE

FOREST

GEORGIA TECH al N C

FOREST

STATE VIRGINIA at MARYLAND

J A

12

14

IS

17 ,

Fla International al

DUKE ai MARYLAND

WAKE FOREST at NC

MARYLAND at CLEMSON

CLEMSON

NORTH CAROUNA al

STATE

WAKE FOREST al DUKE

GEORGIA TECH ai Old

VIRGINIA

Villanova al VIRGINIA

Dominion

Furman at CLEMSON

N

Lehigh ai WAKE FOREST

North Carolina A&T at

GEORGIA TECH

U A R

18

19

20

21

22

24

N C STATE al NORTH

Buc knell al MARYLAND

CLEMSON ai GEORGIA

DUKE at N C Stale

VIRGINIA at GEORGIA

DUKE at CLEMSON

CAROUNA

VIRGINIA at Jacksonville

TECH

West Virginia at

TECH

GEORGIA TECH at

MARYLAND

NORTH CAROUNA ai

NORTH CAROUNA

WAKE FOREST

WAKE FOREST al

VIRGINIA

Y

MARYLAND at Old

Dominion

25

26

28

29

31

NC STATE Kansas

Wmthrop at CLEMSON

NORTH CAROLINA ai

DUKE at GEORGIA TECH

VIRGINIA at CLEMSON

(Kansas Cily)

Cornell al DUKE

CLEMSON NC State ai VIRGINIA Richmond at WAKE

FOREST MARYLAND ai James

Madison

DUKE at WAKE FOREST

Oklahoma al N C STATE

1

2

3

4

5

7

MARYLAND ai GEORGIA

MARYLAND at Wake

Georgia Stale at GEORGIA

CLEMSON at MARYLAND

NORTH CAROLINA al

MARYLAND at DUKE

TECH

Forest

TECH

VIRGINIA al DUKE

NC STATE

WAKE FOREST at

NORTH CAROUNA at

Stetson at DUKE

WAKE FOREST al

GEORGIA TECH

Notre Dame

N C STATE at DePaul

Winlhrop

Soulh Carolina at

CLEMSON NC STATE ai Louisville

F

8

VIRGINIA ar NORTH

10

GEORGIA TECH at

CLEMSON ai NC STATE

14

CLEMSON at VIRGINIA

E B

CAROUNA

MARYLAND

WAKE FOREST at NORTH

NC STATE at GEORGIA

DUKE ai Harvard

CAROUNA

TECH

VIRGINIA Virginia Tech

NORTH CAROUNA at

(Richmond)

MARYLAND

UNC Charlotte at WAKE

R

FOREST

U

15

16

18

19

21

Marquette al NORTH

Central Florida at

WAKE FOREST at

NC STATE al DUKE

CLEMSON at NORTH

A

CAROLINA

MARYLAND

CLEMSON

CAROUNA

DUKE ai Noire Dame

GEORGIA TECH ai

GEORGIA TECH ai DUKE

R Y

VIRGINIA

Md Baltimore at

MARYLAND

East Tennessee al NORTH

CAROUNA

22

25

26

27

28

WAKE FOREST ai

GEORGIA TECH al

DUKE at NORTH

UMESai MARYLAND

CLEMSON al DUKE

MARYLAND

CLEMSON

CAROUNA

N C STATE ai WAKE

VIRGINIA ai N C STATE

NC STATE al

FOREST

GEORGIA TECH at DePaul

MARYLAND

VIRGINIA al WAKE Fi IRI SI

M

1

NORTH CAROUNA al

2

Chicago Slate alNC

6

ACC Tournament al Capital

ACC Tournament at Capital

A

GEORGIA TECH

STATE

Cenlre

MARYLAND ai VIRGINIA

(Games at 12 00 7 30

(Semifinal Games ai 1 30

7:00 9001

3 301

K

S

c

ACC Tournament al Capital

H

(Championship Game al IOC)

Winthrop College

December 27 8:00 P.M.

College Park, Maryland

Cole Field House

Sports Information Director: Sam Copeland Office Phone: (803) 329-2140 Home Phone: (803) 285-6105 Series Record: First Meeting

Location: Rock Hill, South Carolina

Nickname: Eagles

Home Court: Winthrop Coliseum (6,100)

Head Coach: Steve Vacendak (Duke '66)

Record at School: First Year

Overall Record: 5-21, 1 year

1985-86 Record: 20 9

Returning Lettermen: Ted Houpt, 6'5", 11.6; Everett Sesker, 6'9", 3.9.

Top Newcomers: Brian Brunson, 6'4"; Reggie Penny, 67"; Ken Smith, 6"5"; Sean Smith, 6'1"; Jerry Johnson, 6'6".

Lettermen Lost: Fred McKinnon, 21.1; Allen Washington, 16.3; Jon Bowman, 7.7; Jerome McKiver, 4.5.

Conference: Big South

Colors: Garnet and Gold

1986-87 Schedule

Nov. 28 at UMES

Nov. 29 METHODIST COLLEGE

Dec. 6 at Towson State

Dec. 8 GREENSBORO COLLEGE

Dec. 14 at Miami (FL)

Dec. 17 at Furman

Dec. 22 at Brooklyn College

Dec. 27 at Maryland

Dec. 30 at New Mexico

Jan. 3 at Air Force

Jan. 5 at Campbell

Jan. 8 at Baptist College

Jan. 10 at New Orleans

Jan. 12 at Augusta College

Jan. 15 BAPTIST COLLEGE

Jan. 19 at Radford

Jan. 24 CAMPBELL

Jan. 26 at Clemson

Jan. 28 RADFORD

Jan. 31 FURMAN

Feb. 5 WAKE FOREST

Feb. 9 at N.C. State

Feb. 12 at Howard

Feb. 14 AUGUSTA COLLEGE

Feb. 16 EAST CAROLINA

Feb. 18 BROOKLYN COLLEGE

Feb. 23 at Loyola (Bait.)

Fairleigh Dickinson

December 29 8:00 P.M.

College Park, Maryland

Cole Field House

Sports Information Director: Michael Elkow Office Phone: (201) 692-2244 Home Phone: (201) 855-0555 Series Record: 2-0 Maryland

Location: Rutherford, New Jersey

Nickname: Knights

Home Court: University Gym (1250)

Head Coach: Tom Green (Syracuse 71)

Record at School: 60-30, 3 years

Overall Record: 60-30, 3 years

1985-86 Record: 22-8

Returning Lettermen: Jamie Latney, 6'6", 14.1; Daman Riddick, 6'8", 13.9; Kevin Horton, 6'4", 9.5; Kevin Saulny, 5T0", 6.0; Kelvin Bigelow, 6'3", 3.6; Darrell Frazier, 6'6", 1.7; Torsten Stein, 71", 2.4; Akila Shokai, 6'8", 1.1.

Top Newcomers: Richard Moore, 6'2"; Mike Bozeman, 6'3"; Eric Odom, 6'4".

Lettermen Lost: Gary Wilson, 9.4; Lonnie Jackson, 6.3; Ron Duncan, 9.7.

Conference: ECAC Metro

Colors: Columbia Blue and Maroon

Nov. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Jan.

Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb.

29

7

8

11

12

20

23

29

2-3

10 12 17 24 28 31 5 10 12 14 16 18 23 25 28

1986-87 Schedule

MT. ST. MARY'S ST. MARY'S COLLEGE at Louisville at St. Francis (NY) MERCEY COLLEGE MONTCLAIR STATE at St. Peter's at Maryland Blue Devil Tournament (New Britain, Conn.) at Loyola

ST. FRANCIS (PA) ROBERT MORRIS at Monmouth at Wagner ST. FRANCIS (NY) MARIST MONMOUTH at Utica

MIAMI (FLA) (Meadowlands) at St. Francis (PA) at Robert Morris ST. JOHN'S (Meadowlands) at Marist WAGNER LOYOLA LONG ISLAND

Notre Dame

December 31 7:00 P.M.

College Park, Maryland

Cole Field House

THE FIGHTING

a IRISH

Sports Information Director: Roger Valdiserri Office Phone: (219) 239-7516 Home Phone: (219) 277-0695 Series Record: 8-5 Notre Dame

Location: South Bend, Indiana

Nickname: Fighting Irish

Home Court: Athletic and Convocation Center (11,345)

Head Coach: "Digger" Phelps

Record at School: 300-138, 15 years

Overall Record: 326-141, 16 years

1985-86 Record: 23 6

Returning Lettermen: Scott Hicks, 6'3", 5.4 Donald Royal, 67", 10.6; Jeff Peters, 6'4", 1.1 David Rivers, 6'0", 16.7; Gary Voce, 6'9", 2.9 Sean Connor, 67", 3.5; Mike Smith, 6'3", 1.4 Mark Stevenson, 6'5", 8.7.

Top Newcomers: Joe Frederick, 6'4"; Jamere Jackson, 6'2"; Tony Jackson, 6'6"; Scott Paddock, 6'9"; Keith Robinson, 6'9".

Lettermen Lost: Ken Barlow, 14.9; Jim Dolan, 5.3; Tim Kempton, 6.5; Joe Price, 6.2; Matt Beeuwsaert, 1.5.

Conference: Independent

Colors: Blue and Gold

1986-87 Schedule

Nov. 21 Coca-Cola NIT Classic

(Finals Nov. 29 at Madison Square Garden)

Dec. 2 INDIANA

Dec. 4 CORNELL

Dec. 6 Brigham Young

Dec. 11 EASTERN MICHIGAN

Dec. 20 VALPARAISO

Dec. 29 CENTRAL MICHIGAN

Dec. 31 at Maryland

Jan. 3 at Pennsylvania

Jan. 4 at Yale

Jan. 10 at DePaul

Jan. 12 at Creighton

Jan. 17 WEST VIRGINIA

Jan. 24 at UCLA

Jan. 27 DAYTON

Jan. 29 MARQUETTE

Feb. 1 NORTH CAROLINA

Feb. 4 LaSALLE

Feb. 6 at Vanderbilt

Feb. 8 at Kansas

Feb. 15 DUKE

Feb. 16 WAGNER

Feb. 18 at Fordam

Feb. 21 at Utah

Feb. 25 DEPAUL

Feb. 28 at Marquette

March 2 BROOKLYN COLLEGE

March 5 MIAMI (FL)

March 7 at Dayton

NC State

January 3 7:00 P.M.

Raleigh, North Carolina

Reynolds Coliseum

February 25 8:00 P.M.

College Park, Maryland

Cole Field House

Sports Information Director: Ed Seaman Office Phone: (919) 737 2102 Home Phone: (919) 829 9186 Series Record: 56-39 NC State

Location: Raleigh, North Carolina

Nickname: Wolfpack

Home Court: Reynolds Coliseum ( 12,400)

Head Coach: Jim Valvano (Rutgers '67)

Record at School: 125-70, 6 Years

Overall Record: 261 167, 15 Years

1985-86 Record: 2113

Returning Lettermen: Benny Bolton, 67", 8.7; Charles Shackleford, 6' 10", 10.3; Kelsey Weems, 61", 3.5; Vinny Del Negro, 6'5", 1.7; Kenny Poston, 6'6", 0.9; Walker Lambiotte, 6'7", 4.8; Quentin Jackson, 6'0", 1.3; Teviin Binns, 610", 3.4; Chucky Brown, 67", 3.1.

Top Newcomers: Andy Kennedy, 67"; Avie Lester, 6'9"; Brian Howard, 67"; Kenny Drummond, 510".

Lettermen Lost: Nate McMillan, 9.4; Ernie Myers, 9.3; Chris Washburn, 17.6; Panagiotis Fasoulas, 2.8.

Conference: Atlantic Coast

Colors: Red and White

1986-87 Schedule

Nov. 22 Navy (in Springfield, MA)

Nov. 28-30 Great Alaska Shootout

Dec. 3 EAST TENNESSEE STATE

Dec 6 at Western Carolina

Dec. 17 UNC-ASHEVILLE

Dec. 22 MARIST COLLEGE

Dec. 27 at Tampa

Dec. 30 LOYOLA (Chicago)

Jan. 3 MARYLAND

Jan. 7 at Clemson

Jan. 10 GEORGIA TECH

Jan. 15 WAKE FOREST

Jan. 18 at North Carolina

Jan. 21 DUKE

Jan. 25 at Kansas

Jan. 28 at Virginia

Jan. 31 OKLAHOMA

Feb. 2 at DePaul

Feb. 5 NORTH CAROLINA

Feb. 7 at Louisville

Feb. 9 WINTHROP

Feb. 11 CLEMSON

Feb. 14 at Georgia Tech

Feb. 16 BROOKLYN COLLEGE

feb. 19 at Duke

Feb. 22 VIRGINIA

Feb. 25 at Maryland

Feb. 28 at Wake Forest

Towson State

January 5 8:00 P.M.

College Park, Maryland

Cole Field House

Sports Information Director: Peter Schlehr Office Phone: (301) 321 2232 Home Phone: (301) 838-9221 Series Record: 4-0 Maryland

Location: Towson, Maryland

Nickname: Tigers

Home Court: Towson Center (5,200)

Head Coach: Terry Truax (Maryland '68)

Record at School: 25-60, (3 years)

Overall Record: 25 -60, (3 years)

1985-86 Record: 8-20

Returning Lettermen: Bill Leonard, 6'2", 13.7; Mike Fink, 6'5", 9.8; Roddy Kirk, 6'6", 6.5; Tommy Jones, 6'1", 4.6; John Bays, 67", 3.2; Ricky Byrd, 6'0", 3.0; Mike Colclough, 6'9", 17; Mike Morin, 6'8", 1.6; Marc Boyle, 67", 0.3.

Top Newcomers: Eric Kearney, 6'5"; Marty Johnson, 6'2"; Adrian Basey, 6'4".

Lettermen Lost: Steffan Bunsavage, 15.4; Greg McClinton, 10.8.

Conference: East Coast Colors: Gold, Black and White

1986-87 Schedule

Dec. 1 LIBERTY

Dec. 6 WINTHROP COLLEGE

Dec. 10 GEORGE MASON

Dec. 14 SHEPHERD COLLEGE

Dec. 20 at UMBC

Dec. 22 at Loyola

Dec. 29-30 Cotton Bowl Classic

Jan. 3 RAMAPO COLLEGE

Jan. 5 at Maryland

Jan. 7 at William & Mary

Jan. 10 UMBC

Jan. 14 at Delaware

Jan. 17 BUCKNELL

Jan. 21 at Rider

Jan. 24 at Lehigh

Jan. 28 LAFAYETTE COLLEGE

Jan. 31 HOFSTRA

Feb. 4 at Drexel

Feb. 11 at Bucknell

Feb. 14 RIDER

Feb. 16 DREXEL

Feb. 18 LEHIGH

Feb. 21 at Lafayette College

Feb. 25 at Hofstra

March 1 at Dayton

North Carolina

January 8 9:00 P.M.

Chapel Hill, North Carolina

Smith Center

February 14 4:00 P.M.

College Park, Maryland

Cole Field House

Sports Information Director: Rick Brewer Office Phone: (919) 962 -2123 Home Phone: (919) 929 2721 Series Record: 77-40 North Carolina

Location: Chapel Hill, North Carolina

Nickname: Tar Heels

Home Court: Smith Center (21,444)

Head Coach: Dean E. Smith (Kansas '53)

Record at School: 579-171 , 25 Years

Overall Record: 579 -171, 25 Years

1985-86 Record: 28-6

Returning Lettermen: Kenny Smith, 6'3", 12.0; Curtis Hunter, 6'5", 3.9; Jeff Wolf, 610", 10.0; Jeff Lebo, 6'2", 9.2; Dave Popson, 6'9", 4.0.

Top Newcomers: Pete Chilcutt, 6'8", F; Jeff Denny, 6'4", G; J.R. Reid, 6'9", F/C; Scott Williams, 6'9'/2", C.

Lettermen Lost: Brad Daugherty, 20.2; Warren Martin, 6.9; Steve Hale, 1 1 .3; James Daye, 0.3.

Conference: Atlantic Coast

Colors: Carolina Blue and White

1986-87 Schedule

Nov. 28-29 Hawaii-Lao Tournament

Dec. 1 at UCLA

Dec. 3 STETSON

Dec. 6 MIAMI (FLA.)

Dec. 13 JACKSONVILLE

Dec. 20 ILLINOIS

Dec. 22 FURMAN

Dec. 27 at Kansas State

Dec. 29-30 Cotton Bowl Classic

Jan. 3 at LaSalle

Jan. 8 MARYLAND

Jan. 10 at Duke

Jan. 14 at Virginia

Jan. 18 N.C. State

Jan. 22 at Wake Forest

Jan. 24 GEORGIA TECH

Jan. 28 at Clemson

Feb. 1 at Notre Dame

Feb. 5 at N.C. State

Feb. 8 VIRGINIA

Feb. 11 WAKE FOREST

Feb. 14 at Maryland

Feb. 15 MARQUETTE

Feb. 18 EAST TENNESSEE STATE

Feb. 21 CLEMSON

Feb. 26 DUKE

March 1 at Georgia Tech

Virginia

January 10 4:00 P.M.

College Park, Maryland

Cole Field House

March 1 3:00 P.M.

Charlottesville, Virginia

University Hall

VIRGINIA

Sports Information Director: Rich Murray Office Phone: (804)924-3205/3011 Home Phone: (804) 978-2966 Series Record: 79-45 Maryland

Location: Charlottesville, Virginia

Nickname: Cavaliers

Home Court: University Hall (8,200)

Head Coach: Terry Holland Davidson '64)

Record at School: 250 122, 12 years

Overall Record: 342 165, 17 years

1985-86 Record: 19-11

Returning Lettermen: Lance Blanks, 6'4 ", 2.4; Tom Calloway, 6'0", 7.1; Jeff Daniel, 6'9", 0.7; John Dyslin, 6'11", 0.7; John Johnson, 6'0", 5.8; Andrew Kennedy, 67", 9.2; Mel Kennedy, 6'5", 12.0; Tim Martin, 6'11", (Redshirt); Dick Morgan, 6'3", 5.9; Tom Sheehey, 6'9", 10.0; Darnck Simms, 6'3", 2.5; Tony Solomon, 5'10", 1.0.

Top Newcomers: Mark Cooke, 6'5", F; Rob Metcalf, 6'6", F/G.

Lettermen Lost: Olden Polynice, 16.1

Conference: Atlantic Coast

Colors: Orange and Blue

1986-87 Schedule

Nov. 21 Coca-Cola NIT Classic

(Finals Nov. 29 at Madison Square Garden)

Dec. 3 VM1

Dec. 6-7 Investors Classic (at Virginia)

Dec. 10 East Tennessee Classic

Dec. 20 at Arkansas

Dec. 27-29 ECAC Holiday Festival

Jan. 3 DUKE

Jan. 5 BROWN

Jan. 7 MISSOURI

Jan. 10 at Maryland

Jan. 14 NORTH CAROLINA

Jan. 17 VILLANOVA

Jan. 19 at Jacksonville

Jan. 22 at Georgia Tech

Jan. 24 WAKE FOREST

Jan. 28 N.C. State

Jan. 31 at Clemson

Feb. 4 at Duke

Feb. 8 at North Carolina

Feb. 11 at Virginia Tech

Feb. 14 CLEMSON

Feb 16 at Daytona

Feb 18 GEORGIA TECH

Feb. 22 at N.C. State

Feb. 25 at Wake Forest

March 1 MARYLAND

Duke

January 14 8:00 P.M.

College Park, Maryland

Cole Field House

February 7 4:00 P.M.

Durham, North Carolina Cameron Indoor Stadium

Sports Information Director: John Roth Office Phone: (919) 684 -2633 Home Phone: (919) 471-9514 Series Record: 65 47 Duke

Location: Durham, North Carolina

Nickname: Blue Devils

Home Court: Cameron Indoor Stadium (8,564)

Nickname: Blue Devils

Head Coach: Mike Krzyzewski (Army '69)

Record at School: 122-68, 6 years

Overall Record: 195-127, 11 years

1985-86 Record: 37 3

Returning Lettermen: Tommy Amaker, 6'0", 6.4; Danny Ferry, 6' 10", 5.9; Billy King, 6'6", 4.0; Kevin Strickland, 6'5", 2. 1; Martin Nessley, 7'2", 1.7; Quin Snyder, 6'2", 2.3; John Smith, 67", 1.9.

Top Newcomers: Alaa Abdelnaby, 6T0", C; Phil Henderson, 6'4", G; Robert Brickley, 6'5", F.

Lettermen Lost: Johnny Dawkins, Mark Alane, David Henderson, Jay Bilas, Weldon Williams.

Conference: Atlantic Coast

Colors: Royal Blue and White

1986-87 Schedule

Nov. 28-29 Seaside Classic (Laie, Hawaii)

Dec. 3 EAST CAROLINA

Dec. 6 VANDERBILT

Dec. 8 DAVIDSON

Dec. 13 Alabama (East Rutherford, NJ)

Dec. 22 at Miami (FL)

Dec. 29 APPALACHIAN STATE

Dec. 30 NORTHWESTERN

Jan 3 at Virginia

Jan. 5 WILLIAM & MARY

Jan. 7 ST. JOSEPH'S

Jan. 10 NORTH CAROLINA

Jan. 14 at Maryland

Jan. 17 WAKE FOREST

Jan. 21 at N.C. State

Jan. 24 at Clemson

Jan. 26 CORNELL

Jan. 29 at Georgia Tech

Jan. 31 at Wake Foest

Feb. 2 STETSON

Feb. 4 VIRGINIA

Feb. 7 MARYLAND

Feb. 10 at Harvard

Feb. 15 at Notre Dame

Feb. 19 N.C. STATE

Feb. 21 GEORGIA TECH

Feb. 26 at North Carolina

Feb. 28 CLEMSON

Clemson

January 17 4:00 P.M.

Clemson, South Carolina

Littlejohn Coliseum

February 4 8:00 P.M.

College Park, Maryland

Cole Field House

Sports Information Director: Bob Bradley Office Phone: (803)656-2101/2114 Home Phone: (803) 654-5419 Series Record: 60-28 Maryland

Location: Clemson, South, Carolina

Nickname: Tigers

Home Court: Littlejohn Coliseum

(10,820) Head Coach: Cliff Ellis

(Florida State '68) Record at School: 35-28, 2 years Overall Record: 206 112,11 years 1985-86 Record: 19-15 Returning Lettermen: Michael Best, 6'4", 6.3;

Horace Grant, 6'10", 16.4; Anthony Jenkins,

67", 5.6; Grayson Marshall, 6'2", 8.3; Larry

Middleton, 6'3", 11.4; Jerry Pryor, 67", 6.5;

Michael Tait, 6'2", 2.5. Top Newcomers: Michael Brown, 6'4", G;

Ricky Jones, 67", F; Tim Kincaid, 6'3", G;

Elden Campbell, 6'10", C; Sean Tyson, 67", F. Lettermen Lost: Glenn Corbit, 9.9; Jeff Hol-

stein, 0.9; Glen McCants, 9.2; Chris Michael,

5.3. Conference: Atlantic Coast Colors: Purple and Orange

1986-87 Schedule

Nov. 29 IPTAY Tournament (at Clemson)

Dec. 3 UNC-ASHEVILLE

Dec. 6 TEXAS TECH

Dec. 14 at South Carolina

Dec. 16 PRAIRIE VIEW A&M

Dec. 17 ARMSTRONG STATE

Dec. 29 TCBY Yogurt Classic

Jan. 2 Hawaii-Pacific Tournament

Jan. 7 N.C. STATE

Jan. 10 at Wake Forest

Jan. 12 FLORIDA INTERNATIONAL

Jan. 14 FURMAN

Jan. 17 MARYLAND

Jan. 20 at Georgia Tech

Jan. 24 DUKE

Jan. 26 WINTHROP

Jan. 28 NORTH CAROLINA

Jan. 31 VIRGINIA

Feb. 4 at Maryland

Feb. 7 SOUTH CAROLINA

Feb. 11 at N.C. State

Feb. 14 at Virginia

Feb. 18 WAKE FOREST

Feb. 21 at North Carolina

Feb. 25 GEORGIA TECH

Feb. 28 at Duke

Bucknell

January 19 8:00 P.M.

College Park, Maryland

Cole Field House

' BISOX

Sports Information Director: Brad

Tufts Office Phone: (717) 5241227 Home Phone: (717) 524-9230 Series Record: 4-0 Maryland

Location: Lewisburg, Pennsylvania Nickname: Bisons

Home Court: Davis Gymnasium (2,100) Head Coach: Charlie Woollum (William & Mary '62)

Record at School: 170 133, 11 years

Overall Record: 170 133, 11 years

1985-86 Record: 17 12

Returning Lettermen: Ted Aceto, 60", 7.0; Mark Allsteadt, 6'5", 12.5; Mark Atkinson, 6'4", 12.0; Steve Beecy, 6'6", 5.3; Mike Butts, 6'9", 9.3; Bo Heiden, 67", 2.4; Steve Schrader, 67", 9.8; Chris Seneca, 5'11", 11.0

Top Newcomers: Mike Joseph, 5' 11", G; Greg Leggett, 6'6", F.

Lettermen Lost: Kevin Blackwell, 3.8; Mark Lezanic, 4.1.

Conference: East Coast

Colors: Orange and Blue

1986-87 Schedule

Dec.

5

Youngstown State Tournament

Dec

8

SUSQUEHANNA

Dec.

12

LEBANON VALLEY

Dec.

22

at George Mason

Dec.

28-29

Utica College Classic

Jan.

3

MARIST

Jan.

5

LYCOMING

Jan.

10

DREXEL

Jan.

13

ST. FRANCIS (N.Y.)

Jan.

15

at Rider

Jan.

17

at Towson State

Jan.

19

at Maryland

Jan.

21

DELAWARE

Jan.

24

at Drexel

Jan.

28

at Hofstra

Jan.

31

LAFAYETTE

Feb.

4

at Lehigh

Feb.

11

TOWSON STATE

Feb.

14

at Delaware

Feb.

16

RIDER

Feb.

21

HOFSTRA

Feb.

25

at Lafayette

Feb.

28

LEHIGH

West Virginia

January 21 8:00 P.M.

College Park, Maryland

Cole Field House

yc

Sports Information Director: Joe Boczek Office Phone: (304) 293-2821 Home Phone: (304) 296-2085 Series Record: 18-12 West Virginia

Location: Morgantown, West Virginia

Nickname: Mountaineers

Home Court: West Virginia University Coliseum (14,000)

Head Coach: Gale Catlett (West Virginia '63)

Record at School: 166-80, 8 years

Overall Record: 292 124, 14 years

1985-86 Record: 22 11

Returning Lettermen: Herbie Brooks, 6'2", 2.4; Darrell Pinckney, 6'9", 5.6; Darryl Prue, 67", 7.8; Eric Semisch, 6'8", 2.9; Wayne Year- wood, 67", 8.9.

Top Newcomers: Steve Berger, 5T1"; Chris Brooks, 6'6"; John Miller, 6'5"; Brett Vincent, 5T0".

Lettermen Lost: Dale Blaney, 17.0; Holman Harley, 15.2; Renardo Brown, 9.1; Vernon Odom, 5.9.

Conference: Atlantic 10

Colors: Old Gold and Blue

1986-87 Schedule

Nov.

29

GEORGE MASON

Dec.

3

JAMES MADISON

Dec.

6

ST. BONAVENTURE

Dec.

8

at St. Josseph's

Dec.

10

VIRGINIA TECH

Dec.

13

at Pittsburgh ,

Dec.

22

at Rutgers

Dec.

27

MARSHALL

Dec.

30

at Fresno State

Jan.

4

DUQUESNE

Jan.

8

at Rhode Islend

Jan.

10

at Massachusetts

Jan.

14

at George Washington

Jan.

17

at Notre Dame

Jan.

19

MASSACHUSETTS

Jan.

21

at Maryland

Jan.

24

RHODE ISLAND

Jan.

28

PENN STATE

Jan.

31

at Duquesne

Feb.

3

ALABAMA-BIRMINGHAM

Feb.

5

at St. Bonaventure

Feb.

7

at Penn State

Feb.

12

GEORGE WASHINGTON

Feb.

14

TEMPLE

Feb.

19

RUTGERS

Feb.

22

ST. JOSEPH'S

Feb.

24

at Temple

Old Dominion

January 24 7:30 P.M.

Norfolk, Virginia

The Scope

Sports Information Director: Carol Hudson,

Jr. Office Phone: (804) 440 3372 Home Phone: (804) 625 2061 Series Record: 3-0 Maryland

Location: Norfolk, Virginia

Nickname: Monarchs

Home Court: The Scope ( 10,258)

Head Coach: Tom Young (Maryland '58)

Record at School: 23-8, one year

Overall Record: 457 249, 26 years

1985-86 Record: 23 8

Returning Lettermen: Fred Smith, 5-11, 8.5; Garrick Davis, 6-8, 4.9; Bernard Royster, 6-5, 3.0; Steve Trax, 6-6, 2.3.

Top Newcomers: Anthony Carver, 6-7, F; Kirk Eady, 6-4, G; David Grissom, 6-8, F; Gerald Lofton, 6-8, F (Jr.); Howard Morgan, 6-9, C; Mark Siciliano, 6-3, G.

Lettermen Lost: Kenny Gattison, 17.4; Keith Thomas, 14.1; Ronnie Wade, 7.7; Clarence Hanley, 6.8; Sylvester Charles, 3.7.

Conference: Sun Belt

Colors: Columbia Blue and White

35

1986-87 Schedule

Nov.

29

VIRGINIA TECH

Dec.

4

MIDDLE TENNESSEE STATE

Dec.

6

WILLIAM & MARY

Dec.

14

at James Madison

DEc.

17

LONG ISLAND

Dec.

20

at DePaul

Dec.

22

RICHMOND

Dec.

27

Runnin' Rebel Classic (Las Vegas)

Jan.

3

at South Florida

Jan.

5

at Alabama-Birmingham

Jan.

8

VIRGINIA COMMONWEALTH

Jan.

10

at UNC-Charlotte

Jan.

12

GEORGIA TECH

Jan.

14

at Missouri

Jan.

17

at Jacksonville

Jan.

19

SOUTH ALABAMA

Jan.

24

MARYLAND

Jan.

28

at William & Mary

Jan.

31

ALABAMA-BIRMINGHAM

Feb.

3

at Western Kentucky

Feb.

7

SOUTH FLORIDA

Feb.

9

at South Alabama

Feb.

12

WESTERN KENTUCKY

Feb.

14

at Virginia Commonwealth

Feb.

16

UNC-CHARLOTTE

Feb.

21

at Jacksonville

James Madison

January 28 7:30 P.M.

Harrisonburg, Virginia

JMU Convocation Center

Sports Information Director: Gary Michael Office Phone: (703) 568-6154 Home Phone: (703) 337-7310 Series Record: First Meeting

Location: Harrisonburg, Virginia

Nickname: Dukes

Home Court: JMU Convocation Center (7,612)

Head Coach: John Thurston (Seton Hall 70)

Record at School: 5-23, 1 year

Overall Record: 44 62, 4 years

1985-86 Record: 5-23

Returning Lettermen: Thorn Brand, 611 ', 1.6; Eric Brent, 6'3'/z", 14.3; Robert Griffin, 6'2", 8. 1; Ken Halleck, 6T\ 2.6; Anthony Inge, 6'3", 2.6; Chad Keller, 6'8", 2.5; David Monroe, 6'6 ", 9.6; John Newman, 6'5'<2", 1 1.8; Ken Schwartz, 6'6", 3.3; Kevin Sutton, 511". 0.7.

Top Newcomers: Benny Gordon, 5'11", G; Ralph Glenn, 6'5", F; Claude Ferdinand, 6'5", F.

Lettermen Lost: Todd Banks, 10.2; Eric Esch, 2.1.

Conference: Colonial Athletic Association

Colors: Purple and Gold

1986-87 Schedule

Nov. 28 ST. PAUL'S

Dec. 1 VIRGINIA MILITARY

Dec. 3 at West Virginia

Dec. 6 at Virginia Tech

Dec. 14 OLD DOMINION

Dec. 20 NORTH CAROLINA-

ASHEVILLE

Dec. 22 at Radford

Dec. 29 30 Richmond Times-Dispatch

Invitational

Jan. 3 at George Mason

Jan. 7 COASTAL CAROLINA

Jan. 10 NAVY

Jan. 12 AMERICAN

Jan. 15 CENTRAL CONN. STATE

Jan. 17 at William & Mary

Jan. 19 at Richmond

Jan. 24 UNC-WILMINGTON

Jan. 26 EAST CAROLINA

Jan. 28 MARYLAND

Jan. 31 GEORGE MASON

Feb. 5 at Navy

Feb. 9 at American

Feb. 14 WILLIAM & MARY

Feb. 16 RICHMOND

Feb. 18 at Virginia Commonwealth

Feb. 21 at UNC-Wilmington

Feb. 23 at East Carolina

Georgia Tech

February 1 3:00 P.M.

Atlanta, Georgia

Alexander Memorial Coliseum

February 10 9:00 P.M.

College Park, Maryland

Cole Field House

Sports Information Director: Mike Finn Office Phone: (404) 894-5445 Home Phone: (404) 938-9910 Series Record: 1111

Location: Atlanta, Georgia

Nickname: Yellow Jackets, Rambling Wreck

Home Court: Alexander Memorial Coliseum (10,000)

Head Coach: Bobby Cremins (South Carolina 70)

Record at School: 95-57, 5 years

Overall Record: 195 127, 11 years

1985-86 Record: 27-7

Returning Lettermen: Bruce Dalrymple, 6'4", 10.8; Duane Ferrell, 6'6", 12.1; Antoine Ford, 7'0", 1.6; Tom Hammonds, 6'8", 12.1; John Martinson, 6'1", 0.1; Craig Neal, 6'5", 5.6; Willie Reese, 6'9", 0.9; Anthony Sherrod, 6'6", 1.1.

Top Newcomers: Michael Christian, 6'3", G; James Munlyn,6'll", C; Brian Oliver, 6'4", G.

Lettermen Lost: Mark Price, 17.4; John Salley, 13.1; Jack Mansell, 1.2.

Conference: Atlantic Coast

Colors: Old Gold and White

1986-87 Schedule

Nov. 28-29 Central Fidelity Classic

Dec. 1 PENN

Dec. 3 GEORGIA*

Dec. 14 at LSU

Dec. 20 Boston College**

Dec. 21 Southern Methodist**

Dec. 27 Holiday Festival Classic

Dec. 29 Holiday Classic Finals

Jan. 3 at Wake Forest

Jan. 10 at N.C. State

Jan. 12 at Old Dominion

Jan. 14 NORTH CAROLINA A&T

Jan. 20 CLEMSON

Jan. 22 VIRGINIA*

Jan. 24 at North Carolina

Jan. 29 DUKE

Feb. 1 MARYLAND

Feb. 3 GEORGIA STATE

Feb. 7 WAKE FOREST

Feb. 10 at Maryland

Feb. 14 N.C. STATE

Feb. 18 at Virginia

Feb. 21 at Duke

Feb. 22 at DePaul

Feb. 25 at Clemson

March 1 NORTH CAROLINA*

*— at the Omni, Atlanta

** in Tokyo, Japan

Wake Forest

February 2 8:00 P.M.

Greensboro, North Carolina

Greensboro Coliseum

February 22 4:00 P.M.

College Park, Maryland

Cole Field House

Sports Information Director: John Justus Office Phone: (919) 761-5640 Home Phone: (919) 945-9729 Series Record: 38-34 Maryland

Location: Winston-Salem, North Carolina

Nickname: Demon Deacons

Home Court: Memorial Coliseum (8,100)

Head Coach: Bob Staak (Connecticut 71)

Record at School: 8-21, 1 year

Overall Record: 96 107, 7 years

1985-86 Record: 8 21

Returning Lettermen: Rod Watson, 6'2", 12.8; Mark Cline, 67", 12.4; Tyrone Bogues, 5'3", 11.3; Arthur Larkins, 6'4", 5.4; Cal Boyd, 6'1", 3.8; Alan Dickens, 6'8", 2.0.

Top Newcomers: Tony Black, 6'4", G; Sam Ivy, 67", F; Greg Keith, 611", C; Antonio Johnson, 6'4", G; Ralph Kitley, 6'10", F/C.

Lettermen Lost: Charlie Thomas, 10.4; Dennis Calvert, 2.2.

Conference: Atlantic Coast

Colors: Old Gold and Black

36

1986-87 Schedule

Dec. 1 COASTAL CAROLINA

Dec. 3 DAVIDSON (at Charlotte)

Dec. 17 BAPTIST

Dec. 20 UNC-WILMINGTON

Dec. 22 at Virginia Tech

Dec. 29-30 Cable Car Classic

Jan. 3 GEORGIA TECH

Jan. 7 APPALACHIAN

Jan. 10 CLEMSON*

Jan. 12 LEHIGH

Jan. 15 at N.C. State

Jan. 17 at Duke

Jan. 22 NORTH CAROLINA*

Jan. 24 at Virginia

Jan. 28 RICHMOND

Jan. 31 DUKE*

Jan. 2 MARYLAND

Feb. 5 at Winthrop

Feb. 7 at Georgia Tech

Feb. 11 at North Carolina

Feb. 14 UNC CHARLOTTE

Feb. 18 at Clemson

Feb. 22 at Maryland

Feb. 25 VIRGINIA*

Feb. 28 N.C. STATE*

* at Greensboro

Central Florida

February 16 8:00 P.M.

College Park, Maryland

Cole Field House

Sports Information Director: Bob Cefalo Office Phone: (305) 275-2464 Home Phone: (305) 273-4291 Series Record: First Meeting

Location: Orlando, Florida

Nickname: Knights

Home Court: Central Florida Gymnasium (2800)

Head Coach: Phil Carter (Jacksonville U. '73)

Record at School: 6-22, 1 year

Overall Record: 40-68, 4 years

1985-86 Record: 6-22

Returning Lettermen: Pat Crocklin, 11.7 Tony Marini, 10.5; Faronte Roberson, 10.2 Cummings Jacobs, 9.3; George Beaton, 7.2 Chris Wallen, 6.7; John Marini, 0.8.

Top Newcomers: Spam Haithcock, 6'6", F; EdselBester, 6'0", G.

Lettermen Lost: Sam Alexander, 10.8.

Conference: Independent

Colors: Black and Gold

Nov.

28

Nov.

29

Dec.

6

Dec.

10

Dec.

13

Dec.

17

Dec.

19

Dec.

20

Dec.

29-30

Jan.

5

Jan.

8

Jan.

10

Jan.

12

Jan.

15

Jan.

21

Jan.

24

Jan.

26

Jan.

29

Feb.

3

Feb.

10

Feb.

14

Feb.

16

Feb.

21

Feb.

25

Feb.

28

Mar.

2

1986-87 Schedule

AMI Classic (Miami, Fla.)

AMI Championship/Consolation

at Georgia

at Florida

at Hartford

RIDER

UCF Invitational

UCF Championship/Consolation

Red Lobster Classic

WESTERN ILLINOIS

CENTRAL CONN. STATE

DELAWARE STATE

MARYLAND-EASTERN SHORE

ARMSTRONG STATE

ROLLINS COLLEGE

at South Florida

at Florida State

at Bethune-Cookman

at Armstrong State

FLAGLER COLLEGE

GEORGIA SOUTHERN

at Maryland

FLORIDA TECH

BETHUNE-COOKMAN

FLORIDA INTERNATIONAL

at Howard

UMBC

February 18 8:00 P.M.

College Park, Maryland

Cole Field House

Sports Information Director: Steve Levy Office Phone: (301) 455-2197 Home Phone: (301) 655-0250 Series Record: First Meeting

Location: Baltimore, Maryland

Nickname: Retrievers

Home Court: UMBC Fieldhouse (4,024)

Head Coach: Jeff Bzdelik (Illinois-Chicago 76)

Record at School: First year

Overall Record: First year as Head Coach

1985-86 Record: 5-23

Returning Lettermen: Marty Stevenson, 6'3", 1 1.9; Conrad Eaddy, 6'6", 7.8; Joe Hardy, 6'4", 7.0; Terry Brooks, 6T", 6.3; Bob Richardson, 6T", 3.1.

Top Newcomers: Jeff Reynolds, 6'5", F; Larry Simmons, 6T", G; Reggie Truitt, 6'4", G/F; Duane Faust, 6'5", F; Terrance Lanham, 6'7", F.

Lettermen Lost: Breck Robinson, 15.8; Chris Strong, 0.6.

Conference: Independent

Colors: Old Gold and Black

1986-87 Schedule

Nov.

28

at Northwestern

Nov.

29

at Northern Iowa

Dec.

2

NORTHERN ARIZONA

Dec.

5

Long Island*

Dec.

6

St. Francis (N.Y.)*

Dec.

8

at The Citadel

Dec.

10

at Howard

Dec.

12

at Morgan State

Dec.

20

TOWSON STATE

Dec.

29

at Delaware

Jan.

8

at George Mason

Jan.

10

at Towson State

Jan.

14

WESTCHESTER COLLEGE

Jan.

17

CENTRAL CONNECTICUT STATE

Jan.

19

MORGAN STATE

Jan.

22

BROOKLYN COLLEGE

Jan.

26

at Utica College

Jan.

28

at Coppin State

Feb.

2

UTICA COLLEGE

Feb.

5

HOWARD UNIVERSITY

Feb.

9

MT. ST. MARY'S

Feb.

11

at Navy

Feb.

18

at Maryland

Feb.

25

at American University

Feb.

28

at Brooklyn College

March

3

at UMES

UMES

February 27 8:00 P.M.

College Park, Maryland

Cole Field House

Sports Information Director: Craig Cotton Office Phone: (301) 651-2200 Home Phone: (301)548-1365 Series Record: 7-0 Maryland

Location: Princess Anne, Maryland

Nickname: Hawks

Home Court: Tawes Gymnasium (3,500)

Head Coach: Steve Williams (Florida 74)

Record at School: First year

Overall Record: First year

1985-86 Record: 5 24

Returning Lettermen: Derek Robinson, 6'8", 10.4; Marvin Blye, 6'5", 14.0; Allen White, 67", 4.5; Leon Graham, 6'4", 4.4; Mike Robinson, 6'6", 2.7; Eric Torain, 6'0", 2.0; Brion Spriggs, 6'5", 4.1; Larry Stokes, 6'8", 2.0.

Top Newcomers: Mike Mays, 6'0", G; Roose- velt Arnold, 5'9", G; Demetrius Jones, 6'4", G/F.

Lettermen Lost: Donnell Boney, 15.0; Altonio Bateman, 3.6; Jamie Harris, 0.0.

Conference: Mid-Eastern

Colors: Maroon and Gray

37

Nov.

28

Dec.

2

Dec.

5-6

Dec.

8

Dec.

15

Dec.

20

Jan.

5

Jan.

10

Jan.

12

Jan.

14

Jan.

16

Jan.

19

Jan.

24

Jan.

27

Jan.

31

Feb.

2

Feb.

4

Feb.

7

Feb.

9

Feb.

12

Feb.

17

Feb.

19

Feb.

21

Feb.

25

Feb.

27

March

3

1986-87 Schedule

WINTHROP COLLEGE

SALISBURY STATE

Marist Tournament

BETHUNE-COOKMAN

at Radford

at Cleveland State

at Wake Forest

at Bethune-Cookman

at Central Florida

at Miami (Fla.)

at Florida International

at Delaware State

MORGAN STATE

HOWARD UNIVERSITY

SOUTH CAROLINA STATE

at North Carolina A&T

at Coppin State

NORTH CAROLINA A&T

at South Carolina State

at Morgan State

at Howard University

BOWIE STATE

DELAWARE STATE

COPPIN STATE

at Maryland

UMBC

ALL-TIME RECORDS VS. 1985-86 OPPONENTS

Bucknell University

Bradley Tufts, Public Relations Director

Lewisburg, Pennsylvania 17837

717-524-1227

Charles R. Woollum, Head Basketball Coach

Season

Location

Score

Series

1976-77

Home

106-72

1-0

1977-78

Home

95-62

2-0

1978-79

Home

107-97

3-0

1979-80

Home

95-73

4-0

1986-87

Home

Clemson University

Bob Bradley, Sports Information Director

Box 31

Clemson, South Carolina, 29633

803-656-2101 Cliff Ellis, Head Basketball Coach

Season

Location

Score

Series

1938-39

Home

45-35

1-0

1938-39

S.C. Tourn

27-39

1-1

1939-40

Home

53-26

2-1

1939-40

Away

30-48

2-2

1940-41

Home

34-48

2-3

194748

Home

49-42

3-3

1947-48

Away

63-61

4-3

1948-49

Home

74-50

5-3

1948-49

Away

49-68

5-4

1949-50

Home

55-60

5-5

1949-50

Away

68-70

5-6

1950-51

Away

44-50

5-7

1950-51

Home

54-50

6-7

1950-51

S.C. Tourn

50-48

7-7

1953-54

Away

81-41

8-7

1953-54

Home

75-54

9-7

1953-54

ACC Tourn

75-59

10-7

1954-55

Away

71-63

11-7

1954-55

Home

68-66

12-7

1955-56

Away

71-63

13-7

1955-56

Home

81-69

14-7

1956-57

Away

59-52

15-7

1956-57

Home

74-65

16-7

1957-58

Away

66-73

16-8

1957-58

Home

72-54

17-8

1958-59

Away

46-55

17-9

1958-59

Home

77-58

18-9

1959-60

Home

70-55

19-9

1959-60

Away

67-59

20-9

1960-61

Away

59-76

20-10

1960-61

Home

82-80

21-10

1960-61

ACC Tourn

91-75

22-10

1961-62

Away

61-73

22-11

1961-62

Home

68-75

22-12

1962-63

Away

60-62

22-13

1962-63

Home

69-67

23-13

1963-64

Home

56-48

24-13

1963-64

Away

68-83

24-14

1963-64

ACC Tourn

67-81

24-15

1964-65

Away

67-65

25-15

1964-65

Home

88-71

26-15

1964-65

ACC Tourn

61-50

27-15

1965-66

Away

66-71

27-16

1965-66

Home

69-81

27-17

1966-67

Home

68-48

28-17

1966-67

Away

61-65

28-18

1967-68

Away

93-94

28 19

1967-68

Home

81-68

29-19

1968-69

Home

83-78

30-19

1968-69

Away

84-83

31-19

1969-70

Away

75-63

32-19

1969-70

Home

103-85

33-19

1970-71

Home

56-52

34-19

1970-71

Away

45-51

34-20

197172

Away

61-63

34-21

1971-72

Home

67-57

35-21

1971-72

ACC Tourn

54-52

36-21

1972-73

Away

79-75

37-21

1972-73

Home

69-66

38-21

1972-73

ACC Tourn

77-61

39-21

1973-74

Home

89-60

40-21

1973-74

Away

56-54

41-21

1974-75

Away

82-83

41-22

1974-75

Home

70-64

42-22

1975-76

Home

77-82

42-23

1975-76

Away

98-89

43-23

1976-77

Away

71-93

43-24

1976-77

Home

84-78

44-24

1977-78

Home

90-75

45-24

1977-78

Away

80-75

46-24

1978-79

Away

77-63

47-24

1978-79

Home

77-69

48-24

1978-79

ACC Tourn

75-67

49-24

1979-80

Home

84-83

50-24

1979-80

Away

81-90

50-25

1979-80

ACC Tourn

91-85

51-25

1980-81

Away

68-62

52-25

1980-81

Home

72-70

53-25

1981-82

Home

62-57

54-25

1981-82

Away

66-75

54-26

1982-83

Away

80-61

55-26

1982-83

Home

92-88

56-26

1982-83

Home

85-72

57-26

1982-83

Away

66-65

58-26

1984-85

Home

94-84

59-26

1984-85

Away

64-71

59-27

1985-86

Home

78-68

60-27

1985-86

Away

60-70

60-28

Duke University

John Roth, Sports Information Director

Cameron Indoor Stadium

Durham, North Carolina 27706

919-684-2633

Mike Krzyzewski, Head Basketball Coach

Season

Location

Score

Series

1925-26

Home

41-20

1-0

1929-30

Home

27-28

1-1

1929-30

Away

24-39

1-2

1930-31

Home

32-24

2-2

1931-32

Away

20-18

3-2

1932-33

Home

30-28

4-2

1933-34

Home

37-33

5-2

1934-35

Home

39-48

5-3

1935-36

Home

38-34

6-3

1935-36

S.C. Tourn

47-35

7-3

1936-37

Away

31-34

7-4

1936-37

Away

30-34

7-5

1937-38

Home

40-35

8-5

1937-38

Away

34-44

8-6

1937-38

S.C. Tourn

32-35

8-7

1938-39

Home

37-34

9-7

1938-39

Away

60-44

10-7

1939-40

Home

32-30

11-7

1939-40

Away

37-48

11-8

1939-40

S.C. Tourn

32-44

11-9

1940-41

Home

26-40

11-10

1940-41

Away

17-43

11-11

1941-42

Away

33-37

1112

1941-42

Home

46-64

11-13

1942-43

Home

43-46

11-14

1944-45

Away

24-51

11-15

1944-45

S.C. Tourn

49-76

11-16

1945-46

Away

25-59

11-17

1945-46

Home

43-38

12-17

1946-47

Home

38-40

12-18

1947-48

Away

42-53

1219

1949-50

Away

46-58

12-20

1949-50

Home

67-57

13-20

1950-51

Home

40-49

13-21

1951-52

Away

51-56

13-22

1951-52

S.C. Tourn

48-51

13-23

1952-53

S.C. Tourn

74-65

14-23

1953-54

Home

61-68

14-24

1954-55

Home

49-47

15-24

1954-55

Away

61-68

15-25

1955-56

Away

62-76

15-26

1955-56

Home

70-82

15-27

1955-56

ACC Tourn

69-94

15-28

1956-57

Home

62-51

16-28

1956-57

Away

60-72

16-29

1957-58

Home

74-49

17-29

1957-58

Away

59-68

17-30

1957-58

ACC Tourn

71-65

18-30

1958-59

Home

64-31

19-30

1958-59

Away

69-78

19-31

1959-60

Away

56-48

20-31

1959-60

Home

71-61

21-31

1960-61

Away

62-70

21-32

1960-61

Home

76-71

22 32

1961-62

Away

68-84

22-33

1961-62

Home

53-79

22-34

1961-62

ACC Tourn

58-71

22-35

1962-63

Away

56-92

22-36

1962-63

Home

70-76

22-37

1963-64

Home

72-104

22-38

1963-64

Away

63-84

22-39

1964-65

Away

64-82

22-40

1964-65

Home

85-82

23-40

1965-66

Away

61-76

23-41

1965-66

Home

69-74

24-41

1966-67

Home

69-72

24-42

1966-67

Away

58-81

24-43

1967-68

Home

52-84

24-44

1967-68

Away

64-85

24-45

1968-69

Away

85-96

24-46

1968-69

Home

83-93

24-47

1969-70

Home

52-50

25-47

1969-70

Away

76-87

25-48

1970-71

Away

88-79

26-48

1970-71

Home

67-70

26-49

1971-72

Home

77-58

27-49

1971-72

Away

59-68

27-50

1972-73

Away

81-85

27-51

1972-73

Home

96-68

28-51

1973-74

Home

104-83

29-51

1973-74

Away

64-61

30-51

1973-74

ACC Tourn

85-66

31-51

1974-75

Home

83-77

32-51

1974-75

Away

104-80

33-51

1975-76

Home

102-91

34-51

1975-76

Away

67-69

34-52

1975-76

ACC Tourn

80-78

35-52

1976-77

Away

65-64

36-52

1976-77

Home

85-72

37-52

1977-78

Home

78-88

37-53

1977-78

Away

70-81

37-54

1977-78

ACC Tourn

69-81

37-55

1978-79

Away

78-87

37-56

1978-79

Home

70-68

38-56

1979-80

Home

101-82

39-56

1979-80

Away

61-66

39-57

1979-80

ACC Tourn

72-73

39-58

1980-81

Home

94-79

40-58

1980-81

Away

54-55

40-59

1980-81

ACC Tourn

56-53

41-59

1981-82

Away

40-36

42-59

1981-82

Home

77-60

43-59

1982-83

Home

67-86

43-60

1982-83

Away

101-90

44-60

1983-84

Away

81-75

45-60

1983-84

Home

84-89

45-61

1983-84

ACC Tourn

74-62

46-61

1984-85

Home

78-76

47-61

1984-85

Away

62-70

47-62

1984-85

ACC Tourn

73-86

47-63

1985-86

Home

75-81

47-64

1985-86

Away

68-80

47-65

Fairleigh Dickinson University

Mike Elkow, Sports Information Director

1000 River Road

Teaneck, New Jersey 07666

201-692-2245

Tom Green, Head Basketball Coach

Season

Location

Score

Series

1980-81

Home

106-83

1-0

1985-86

Home

74-51

2-0

Georgia Tech

Mike Finn, Sports Information Director

Georgia Tech Athletic Association

Atlanta, Georgia 30332

404-894-5445

Bobby Cremins, Head Basketball Coach

Season

Location

Score

Series

1972-73

Home

90-55

1-0

1974-75

Home

105-67

2-0

1975-76

Home

93-65

3-0

1977-78

Home

65-63

4-0

1979-80

Home

70-60

5-0

1979-80

Away

83-73

6-0

1979-80

ACC Tourn

52-49

7-0

1980-81

Away

66-55

8-0

1980-81

Home

72-64

9-0

1981-82

Home

43-45

9-1

1981-82

Away

63-64

9-2

1982-83

Home

77-68

10-2

1982-83

Away

60-70

10-3

1982-83

ACC Tourn

58-64

10-4

1983-84

Away

70-71

10-5

1983-84

Home

79-74

11-5

1984-85

Neutral

69-70

11-6

1984-85

Home

60-72

11-7

1984-85

Away

43-48

11-8

1985-86

Away

67-68

11-9

1985-86

Home

70-77

11-10

1985-86

ACC Tourn

62-64

11-11

38

All-Time Records vs. 1985-86 Opponents

North Carolina State University

Ed Seaman, Sports Inform

ation Director

Box 8501

Case Athletics Center

Raleigh, North Carolina

27695-8501

919-7372102

Jim

Valvano, Head Basketball Coach

Season

Location

Score

Series

1924-25

S.C. Tourn

16-30

0-1

1926-27

Away

23-38

0-2

1927-28

NA

3624

1-2

1929-30

Home

26-28

1-3

1929-30

Away

21-19

2-3

1936-37

Away

33-35

2-4

1936-37

Home

41-35

3-4

1936-37

S.C. Tourn

35-42

3-5

1938-39

Away

40-46

3-6

1938-39

S.C. Tourn

53-29

4-6

1939-40

Away

43-36

5-6

1943-44

S.C. Tourn

23-42

5-7

1944-45

Away

32-46

5-8

1944-45

Home

42-57

5-9

1945-46

Away

47-39

69

1945-46

Home

37-33

7-9

1945-46

S.C. Tourn

27-54

7-10

1946-47

S.C. Tourn

43-55

7-11

1950-51

S.C. Tourn

45-54

7-12

1954-55

Home

68-64

8-12

1954-55

Away

58-78

8-13

1955-56

Home

64-73

8-14

1955-56

Away

71-62

9-14

1956-57

Home

7966

10-14

1956-57

Away

56-49

11-14

1957-58

Home

48-57

11-15

195758

Away

64-69

11-16

1958-59

Home

53 55

11-17

1958-59

Away

37-53

11-18

1959-60

Home

63 53

12-18

1959-60

Away

46-48

12-19

1959-60

ACC Tourn

58-74

12-20

1960-61

Away

67-75

12-21

1960-61

Home

75-57

13-21

1960-61

Away

66-83

13-22

1961-62

Home

68-73

13-23

1961-62

Away

61-68

13-24

1962-63

Home

74-76

13-25

1962-63

Away

59-79

13-26

1963-64

Home

72-62

14-26

1963-64

Away

65 66

14-27

1964-65

Home

62-63

14-28

1964-65

Away

67-73

14-29

1964-65

ACC Tourn

67-76

14-30

1965-66

Home

59-48

15-30

1965-66

Away

58-60

15-31

1966-67

Away

54-38

16-31

1966-67

Home

60-55

17-31

1967-68

Home

62-75

17-32

1967-68

Away

52-68

17-33

1967-68

ACC Tourn

54-63

17-34

1968-69

Away

69-85

17-35

1968-69

Home

81-86

1736

1969-70

Away

5791

17-37

1969-70

Home

54-64

17-38

1969-70

ACC Tourn

57-67

17-39

1970-71

Home

81-83

1740

1970-71

Away

61-71

17-41

1971-72

Home

83-70

18-41

1971-72

Away

66-65

19-41

1972-73

Home

85-87

19-42

1972-73

Away

78-89

19-43

1972-73

ACC Tourn

74-76

19-44

1973-74

Away

74-80

19-45

1973-74

Home

80-86

19-46

1973-74

ACC Tourn

100-103

19-47

1974-75

Home

103-85

20-47

1974-75

Away

98-97

21-47

1974-75

ACC Tourn

85-87

21-48

1975-76

Away

87-69

22-48

1975-76

Home

102-84

23 48

1976-77

Home

87-80

24-48

1976-77

Away

75-73

25-48

1976-77

ACC Tourn

72-82

25-49

1977-78

Away

82-88

25-50

1977-78

Home

73-80

25-51

1977-78

ACC Tourn

109-108

26-51

1978-79

Home

124-110

27-51

1978-79

Away

82-81

28-51

1979-80

Away

62-67

28-52

1979 80

Home

66-62

29-52

1980-81

Home

82-75

30-52

1980-81

Away

76-72

31-52

1981-82 1981-82 1981-82 1982-83 1982-83 1983-84 1983-84 1983-84 1984-85 1984-85 1985-86 1985-86

Away

Home ACC Tourn

Home

Away

Away

Home ACC Tourn

Home

Away

Home

Away

53-74 38-52 28-40 86-81 67-58 59-55 63-50 69 63 58-56 71-70 55-67 67-66

31-53 31-54 31-55 32-55 33-55 34-55 35-55 36-55 37-55 38-55 3856 39-56

Old Dominion University

Carol Hudson, Sports Information Director

H & PE Building

Norfolk, Virginia 23508

804-440-3375

Tom Young, Head Basketball Coach

Season

Location

Score

Series

1982-83

Home

87-67

1-0

1983-84

Away

69-58

2-0

1984-85

Home

87-75

3-0

Towson State University

Pete Schlehr, Sports Information Director

Towson, Maryland 21204

301-321-2758

Terry Truax, Head Basketball Coach

Season

1981-82 1982-83 1984-85 1985-86

Location

Home Home Home Home

Score

75-59 66-56 91-38 9158

Series

1-0 2-0 30 4-0

University of Maryland Eastern Shore

Craig Cotton, Sports Information Director

Princess Anne, Maryland 21853

301-651-2200, Extension 605

Season

1979-80 1980-81 1981-82 1982-83 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86

Location

Home Home Home Home Home Home Home

Score

82-58 81-65 76-64 91-70 104-69 87-48 91-44

Series

1-0 2-0 3-0 4-0 5-0 6-0 7-0

University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill

Rick Brewer, Sports Information Director Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27514

919-962-5411 Dean Smith, Head Basketball Coach

Season

1923-24 1924-25 1925-26 1926-27 1926-27 1926-27 1928-29 1929-30 1929-30 1930-31 1930-31 1931-32 1931-32 1932-33 1933-34 1934-35 1935-36

Location

NA Home Home Home Home Away Home Home Away Home S.C. Tourn Home Away Home Home Home Home

Score

20-26 16-21 23-22 28-23 23-32 23- 19 22-28 36-24 2219 33-31 19-17 26-25 26-32 42-29 24-28 3139 32-44

Series

0-1 0-2 1-2 2-2 2-3 3-3 3-4 4-4 5-4 6-4 7-4 8-4 8-5 9-5 9-6 9-7 9-8

1936-37 1936-37 1937-38 1938-39 1938-39 1940-41 1940-41 1941-42 1942-43 1942-43 1944-45 1945-46 1945-46 1946-47 1946-47 1947-48 1947-48 1948-49 1948-49 1948-49 1949-50 1949-50 1950-51 1950-51 1951-52 1951-52 1952-53 1952-53 1954-55 1954-55 1955-56 1955-56 1956-57 1956-57 1957-58 1957-58 1957-58 1958-59 1958-59 1959-60 1959-60 1960-61 1960-61 1960-61 1961-62 1961-62 1962-63 1962-63 1963-64 1963-64 1964-65 1964-65 1965-66 1965-66 1965-66 1966-67 1966-67 1967-68 1967-68 1968-69 1968-69 1969-70 1969-70 1970-71 1970-71 1971-72 1971-72 1971-72 1972-73 1972-73 1973-74 1973-74 1973-74 1974-75 1974-75 1975-76 1975-76 1976-77 1976-77 1977-78 1977-78 1978-79 1978-79 1978-79 1979-80 1979-80 1980-81 1980-81 1980-81 1981-82 1981-82 1982-83 1982-83 1983-84 1983-84

Away

Home

Away

Home

Away

Home

Away

Home

Home

Away

Away

Away

Home

Away

Home

Away

Home

Away

Home S.C. Tourn

Away

Home

Away

Home

Away

Home

Away

Home

Away

Home

Home

Away

Away

Home

Home

Away ACC Tourn

Away

Home

Home

Away

Away

Home

Away

Home

Away

Home

Away

Away

Home

Home

Away

Away

Home ACC Tourn

Away

Home

Home

Away

Away

Home

Home

Away

Away

Home

Away

Home ACC Tourn

Home

Away

Away

Home ACC Tourn

Home

Away

Away

Home

Home

Away

Away

Home

Home

Away ACC Tourn

Away

Home

Away

Home ACC Tourn

Home

Away

Away

Home

Home

Away

24-41

35-44

24-42

34-32

66-41

36-55

29-44

30-34

47-40

40-31

28-53

28-64

31-33

42-58

61-57

4670

47-51

47-55

42 66

6179

53-55

5669

6759

56-55

47-51

71-51

49-59

68-66

70-60

63-61

62-68

55-64

61-70

61-65

74-61

59-66

86-74

57-64

69-51

66-75

64-81

57-81

52-58

56-53

79-62

6770

56-78

68-82

88-97

74-64

76-68

91-80

52-67

76-66

70-77

77-85

78-79

67-73

60-83

87-107

86-88

69-77

83-90

70-105

76-100

72-92

79-77

64-73

94-88

85-95

73-82

91-80

105-85 66-69 96-74 93-95 69-81 68-71 70-97 71-85 64-66 53-54 67-76 79-102 92-86 70-69 66-75 63-76 60-61 50-66 56-59 71-72

106-94 62-74 63-78

9-9 9-10 9-11 10-11 11-11 11-12 11-13 11-14 12-14 1314 1315 13-16 13-17 13-18 14-18 14-19 14-20 14-21 14-22 14-23 14-24 14-25 1525 16-25 16-26 17-26 17-27 18-27 19-27 20-27 20-28 20-29 20-30 20-31 21-31 21-32 22-32 22-33 23-33 23-34 23-35 23-36 23-37 23-38 24-38 24-39 24-40 24-41 24-42 25-42 26-42 27-42 27-43 28-43 28-44 28-45 28-46 28-47 28-48 28-49 28-50 28-51 28-52 28-53 28-54 28-55 29-55 2956 30-56 30-57 30-58 31-58 32-58 32-59 33-59 33-60 33-61 34-61 34-62 34-63 34-64 34-65 34-66 34-67 35-67 36-67 36-68 36-69 36-70 37-70 37-71 37-72 38-72 38-73 38-74

39

All-Time Records vs. 1985-86 Opponents

1984 85

Away

74-75

38-75

1984-85

Home

54-60

38-76

1985-86

Home

67-71

38-77

1985-86

Away

77-72

39-77

1985-86

ACC Tourn

85-75

40-77

University of Notre Dame

Roger Valdiserri, Sports Information Director

Notre Dame, Indiana 46556

219-239-7516

Richard Phelps, Head Basketball Coach

Season

Location

Score

Series

1974-75

Home

90-82

1-0

1974-75

NCAA

83-71

2-0

1975-76

Away

69-63

3-0

1976-77

Home

79-80

3-1

1977-78

Away

54-69

3-2

1978-79

Home

61-66

3-3

1979-80

Away

63-64

3-4

1980-81

Home

70-73

3-5

1981-82

Away

51-55

3-6

1982-83

Home

68-67

4-6

1983-84

Away

47-52

4-7

1984-85

Home

77-65

5-7

1985-86

Away

62-69

5-8

University of Virginia

Rich Murray, Sports Information Director

P.O. Box 3785

University Hall

Che:: .'..'•'.::.- '•'' l:i :.: _'_' 1l<

804-924-3011

Terry Holland, Head Basketball Coach

Season

Location

Score

Series

1923-24

NA

13-26

0-1

1924-25

Home

24-18

1-1

1924-25

Away

36-25

2-1

1925-26

Away

28-34

2-2

1925-26

Home

30-21

3-2

1926-27

Away

17-22

3-3

1926-27

Home

29-28

4-3

1927-28

Home

26-20

5-3

1927-28

Away

12-34

5-4

1928-29

Away

30-22

6-4

1928-29

Home

22-25

6-5

1929-30

Home

54-20

7-5

1929-30

Home

51-29

8-5

1930-31

Away

31-34

8-6

1930-31

Home

34-21

9-6

1931-32

Away

36-31

10-6

1931-32

Home

46-18

11-6

1932-33

Away

19-26

11-7

1932-33

Home

37-28

12-7

1933-34

Away

43-20

13-7

1933-34

Home

28-25

14-7

1934-35

Home

44-24

15-7

1934-35

Away

33-32

16-7

1935-36

Home

40-34

17-7

1936-37

Home

37-23

18-7

1937-38

Away

39-23

19-7

1938-39

Home

31-21

20-7

1940-41

Away

18-47

20-8

1941-42

Away

35-34

21-8

1941-42

Home

36-26

22-8

1942-43

Home

53-49

23-8

1942-43

Away

56-42

24-8

1943-44

Away

20-52

24-9

1943-44

Home

26-49

24-10

1944-45

Away

26-57

24-11

1944-45

Home

33-61

24-12

1945-46

Away

45-48

24-13

1945-46

Home

37-36

25-13

1947-48

Away

44-64

25-14

1947-48

Home

56-68

25-15

1948-49

Home

47-53

25-16

1948-49

Away

43-79

25-17

1949-50

Away

56-66

25-18

1949-50

Home

70-52

26-18

1950-51

Home

59-57

27-18

1950-51

Away

46-43

2818

1951-52

Away

59-42

29-18

1951-52

Home

63-53

30-18

1952-53

Home

71-61

31-18

1952-53

Away

59-56

32-18

1953-54

Home

70-64

33-18

1953-54

Away

70-56

34-18

1954-55

Away

72-69

35-18

1954-55

Home

78-65

36-18

1954-55

ACC Tourn

67-68

36-19

1955-56

Home

67-55

37-19

1955-56

Away

60-73

37-20

1956-57

Away

67-63

38-20

1956-57

Away

43-39

39-20

1956-57

Home

84-64

40-20

1956-57

ACC Tourn

71-68

41-20

1957-58

Away

87-66

42-20

1957-58

Home

69-56

43-20

1957-58

ACC Tourn

70-66

44-20

1958-59

Home

63-56

45-20

1958-59

Away

50-62

45-21

1958-59

ACC Tourn

65-66

45-22

1959-60

Home

70-62

46-22

1959-60

Away

44-43

47-22

1960-61

Away

57-52

48-22

1960-61

Home

77-62

49-22

1961-62

Away

91-70

50-22

1961-62

Home

68-72

50-23

1962-63

Away

67-61

5123

1962-63

Home

69-71

51-24

1963-64

Home

68-58

52-24

1963-64

Away

73-79

52-25

1964-65

Away

59-61

52-26

1964-65

Home

52-47

53-26

1965-66

Home

62-65

53-27

1965-66

Away

71-64

54-27

1966-67

Away

85-65

55-27

1966-67

Home

87-76

56-27

1967-68

Home

85-76

57-27

1967-68

Away

68-70

57-28

1968-69

Home

77-78

57-29

1968-69

Away

78-84

57-30

1969-70

Away

69-71

57-31

1969-70

Home

79-71

58-31

1970-71

Away

63-78

58-32

1970-71

Home

89-84

59-32

1971-72

Away

57-78

59-33

1971-72

Home

45-42

60-33

1971-72

ACC Tourn

62-57

61-33

1972-73

Home

93-74

62-33

1972-73

Away

92-81

63-33

1973-74

Away

88-81

64-33

1973-74

Home

110-75

65-33

1974-75

Home

86-79

66-33

1974-75

Away

70-51

67-33

1975-76

Away

69-66

68-33

1975-76

Home

81-73

69-33

1975-76

ACC Tourn

65-73

69-34

1976-77

Home

82-67

70-34

1976-77

Away

68-77

70-35

1977-78

Away

64-66

70-36

1977-78

Home

70-79

70-37

1978-79

Home

63-69

70-38

1978-79

Away

72-75

70-39

1979-80

Away

63-61

71-39

1979-80

Home

82-71

72-39

1980-81

Home

64-66

72-40

1980-81

Away

63-74

72-41

1980-81

ACC Tourn

85-62

73-41

1981-82

Away

40-45

73-42

1981-82

Home

47-46

74-42

1982-83

Home

64-83

74-43

1982-83

Away

81-83

74-44

1983-84

Away

67-66

75-44

1983-84

Home

74-65

76-44

1984-85

Home

71-58

77-44

1984-85

Away

60-55

78-44

1985-86

Away

49-70

78-45

1985-86

Home

87-72

79-45

1961-62

Away

78-81

7-14

1962-63

Home

74-85

7-15

1962-63

Away

54-75

7-16

1962-63

ACC Tourn

41-80

7-17

1963-64

Away

91-82

8-17

1963-64

Home

77-79

8-18

1964-65

Home

82-64

9-18

1964-65

Away

93-85

10-18

1965-66

Home

87-66

11-18

1965-66

Away

86-78

12-18

1966-67

Home

59-68

12-19

1966-67

Away

64-78

12-20

1967-68

Away

60-73

12-21

1967-68

Home

87-74

13-21

1968-69

Away

87-95

13-22

1968-69

Away

71-93

13-23

1969-70

Home

87-104

13-24

1969-70

Away

96-88

14-24

1970-71

Home

72-71

15-24

1970-71

Away

66-72

15-25

1971-72

Away

49-46

16-25

1971-72

Home

64-56

17-25

1972-73

Home

105-76

18-25

1972-73

Away

60-62

18-26

1972-73

ACC Tourn

73-65

19-26

1973-74

Away

72-59

20-26

1973-74

Home

77-68

21-26

1974-75

Away

99-78

22-26

1974-75

Home

8973

23-26

1975-76

Away

93-96

23-27

1975-76

Home

105-91

24-27

1976-77

Home

85-86

24-28

1976-77

Away

81-80

25-28

1977-78

Away

75-84

25-29

1977-78

Home

91-89

26-29

1978-79

Home

60-66

26-30

1978-79

Away

54-53

27-30

1979-80

Away

84-76

28-30

1979-80

Home

83-77

29-30

1980-81

Away

60-67

29-31

1980-81

Home

94-80

30-31

1981-82

Home

61-56

31-31

1981-82

Away

42-48

31-32

1982-83

Away

66-79

31-33

1982-83

Home

83-75

32-33

1983-84

Away

87-90

32-34

1983-84

Home

90-79

33-34

1983-84

ACC Tourn

66-64

34-34

1984-85

Away

64-62

35-34

1984-85

Home

69-66

36-34

1985-86

Home

77-55

37-34

1985-86

Away

59-48

38-34

West Virginia University

Joe Boczek, Sports Information Director

Box 877

Morgantown, West Virginia 26507

304-2932821

Gale Catlett, Head Basketball Coach

Season

Location

Score

Series

1925-26

Home

25-15

1-0

1933-34

Away

24-26

1-1

Vaki

» Forest University

1934-35 1935-36

Home Away

2939 26-51

1-2 1-3

John Justus, Sports Information Director

P.O. Box 7265

Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27109

919-761-5640

Bob Staak, Head Basketball Coach

1941-42 1941-42 1945-46 1946-47 1950-51 1951-52

Away Home Home Away Home Away

36-63 27-41 33-35 43-81 64-70 36-39

1-4 1-5 1-6 1-7 1-8 1-9

Season

Location

Score

Series

1952-53

Home

52-45

2-9

1952-53

S.C. Toum

59-61

0-1

1953-54

Away

71-87

210

195354

Away

54-71

0-2

1963 64

Home

74-72

3-10

1953-54

Home

74-53

1-2

1963-64

Away

67-91

3-11

1953-54

ACC Tourn

56-64

1-3

1964-65

Home

73-80

312

1954-55

Home

58-62

1-4

1964-65

Away

86-78

4-12

1954-55

Away

71-75

1-5

1965-66

Away

74-76

413

1955-56

Home

61-51

2-5

1965-66

Home

107-92

5-13

1955-56

Away

60-76

2-6

1966-67

Away

82-81

6-13

1956-57

Home

5953

3-6

1966-67

Home

58-61

6-14

1956-57

Away

58-62

3-7

1967-68

Home

79-75

7-14

1957-58

Home

72-58

4-7

1967-68

Away

66-83

7-15

1957-58

Away

74-67

5-7

1968-69

Away

65-86

716

1958-59

Home

68-65

6-7

1968-69

Home

91-84

8-16

1958-59

Away

53-56

6-8

1969-70

Home

83-76

9-16

1959-60

Home

47-54

6-9

1969-70

Away

78-83

9-17

1959-60

Away

64-65

6-10

1970-71

Home

81-83

9-18

1960-61

Home

60-72

611

1983-84

NCAA

102-77

10-18

1960-61

Away

69-78

612

1984-85

Home

56-47

11-18

1960-61

ACC Tourn

76-98

6-13

1985-86

Away

42-41

12-18

1961-62

Home

79-62

7-13

40

Two-year starter Derrick Lewis returns as one of the ACC's premier defensive players: His 170 career blocked shots are by far and away the most of any returning ACC player. Look for Lewis, a 6.9 career scorer, to assume a more prominent role in the Terp offense this season.

Two versions of the Maryland mascot: A profile of Testudo (above) from his permanent spot in front ofMcKeldin Library; and the tempestuous Terp, drumming up some basketball excitement.

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The University of Maryland Chapel, at sunset (below) and on a clear winter's day.

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With several strong performances last season, sophomore guard John Johnson figures to play a key role in head coach Bob Wade's 1986-87 plans.

Right: The Rossborough Inn, built around the turn of the 19th century, became the state of Maryland's agricultural experiment station in 1887. Below: The Flowered M near the main entrance to the campus, shot during a rare season when the red and white flowers bloomed in perfect harmony.

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Nearly 3 million spectators have flocked Cole Field House to see Maryland Basketball since 1 970. During that time, the Terps have averaged more than 13,000 in per-game attendance the highest such average in the ACC.

Forward David Dickerson's ath- letic ability was clearly evident despite limited playing time in 1985-86. One of four returnees from last season, the sophomore should get a chance to exhibit his talents on a full-time basis in 1986-87.

An aerial view of the Maryland campus, featuring Cole Field House and Byrd Stadium. Cole officially opened its doors in December, 1 955; the Terp football team played its first game at Byrd in September, 1950.

RECORDS AGAINST ALL OPPONENTS

University of Alabama 3-0

University of Alaska Anchorage 1-0

American University 3-1

Applachian State University 2-0

Arizona State University 1-0

University of Arizona 0-1

Bainbridge Naval Station 0-2

Ball State University 1-0

Baltimore University 2-1

Biscayne 1-0

Boston College 3-0

Boston University 2-0

Buc knell University 4-0

Brown University 3-0 University of California Los Angeles 1-3

Canius College 7-0

Carroll Institute 01

Catholic University of America 13-9

University of Central Florida 0-0

University of Cincinnati 1-1

The Citadel 2-0

City College of New York 1-1

Clemson University 60-28

Cleveland State University 1-0

Columbia University 2-0

University of Connecticut 0-1

Creighton University 1-0

Davidson College 6-3

University of Dayton 2-1

University of Delaware 2-2

DePaul University 1-0

DePauw University 2-0

Dickinson College 1-0

Duke University 47-65

Duquesne University 6-0

East Carolina University 5-0

Eastern Kentucky University 1-0

East Tennessee State University 1-0

University of Evansville 1-0

Fairleigh Dickinson University 2-0

University of Florida 0-1

Fordham University 7-1

Fort Belvoir 0-1

Galludet College 7-6

George Mason University 2-0

Georgetown University 34-25

George Washington University 31-25

University of Georgia 2-4

Georgia Tech 11-11

Hampden-Sydney College 2-2

University of Hawaii 1-0

Hawaii Pacific College 1-0

Hofstra University 1-0

Holy Cross College 4-0

University of Houston 1-1

University of Illinois 0-1

Indiana University 0-4

University of Iowa 1-0

Jacksonville University 1-0

James Madison 0-0

Johns Hopkins 19-5

University of Kansas 0-3

Kansas State University 10

Kent State University 1-0

University of Kentucky 3-4

Kentucky Wesleyan College 1-0

Kings Point 0-1

Lafayette College 2-0

LaSalle University 1-0

Leigh University 10

Long Island University 7-0

Louisiana State University 2-0

University of Louisville 0-4

Loyola College Maryland 3-5

Loyola College Louisiana 1-0

University of Maine 1-0

Manhattan College 1-0

Marine Corps Institute 1-1

Marshall University 2-2

Maryland Baltimore County 0-0

Maryland Eastern Shore 7-0

Memphis State 0-2

University of Miami 3-3

Miami University 3-1

University of Michigan 1-2

Michigan State University 0-1

University of Minnesota 2-0

University of Mississippi 0-1

Mississippi Aggies 0-1

Missippi State University 0-2

Montana State University 1-0

Mt. St. Joseph's 1-2

University of Nevada Las Vegas 1-4

New Mexico A&M 0-1

New York University 0-2 State University of New York Buffalo 4-0

Niagara University 1-0

Univ. of North Carolina Charlotte 1-0 Univ. of North Carolina Chapel Hill 38-79

North Carolina State University 39-56

North Eastern University 1-0

Northwestern University 0-1

University of Notre Dame 5-8

Ohio State University 2-3

Ohio University 1-0

Ohio Wesleyan University 0-1

Oklahoma State University 1-0

Old Dominion University 3-0

Penn Military Academy 0-2

Penn State University 8-6

University of Pennsylvania 1-12

Pepperdine University 1-0

University of Pittsburgh 3-1

Princeton University 3-3

Providence College 0-1

Quantico Marines 1-2

Randolph-Macon College 4-1

University of Rhode Island 2-0

Rhode Island State 0-1

University of Richmond 26-14

Rutgers University 2-2 St. Francis College of Pennsylvania 1-0

St. John's College Maryland 9-5 St. John's University 1-1

St. Joseph's University 3-1 St. Peter's College 1-0

University of San Francisco 1-0

Santa Clara University 1-0

Seton Hall University 2-1

University of South Carolina 29-23 University of Southern California 1-0

University of Southern Illinois 0-1 Stanford University 1-0

Staunton Military Academy 0-1

Stevens Institute of Technology 4-1

Syracuse University 5-0

University of Tampa 2-0

Temple University 1-2 University of Tennessee Chattanooga 2-0

University of Tennessee Knoxville 2-2

University of Texas El Paso 0-1

Texas Tech University 1-0

Towson State University 4-0

The University of Tulsa 1-0

Vanderbilt University 1-0

Villanova University 1-2

U.S. Air Force Academy 2-0

U.S. Merchant Marine Academy 1-2

U.S. Military Academy 3-8

U.S. Naval Academy 30-27

University of Virginia 79-45

Virginia Military Institute 41-10

Virginia Tech 21-4

Wagner College 1-0

Wake Forest University 38-34

Washington College 13-4

Washington and Lee University 27-26

Washington Y.M.C.A. 0-1

Western Kentucky University 2-0

Western Maryland College 12-0

West Virginia University 12-18

Wichita State University 1-0

College of William and Mary 21-8

Winthrop College 0-0

University of Wisconsin 0-2

Woodrow General Hospital 1-1

University of Wyoming 1-0

Xavier University 1-0

Yale University 1-0

50

A Review of 1985-86

51

A REVIEW OF 1985-86

His sophomore season had just been cashiered in the second round of the NCAA Tournament's West Regional by Nevada- Las Vegas, some five months and 3,200 miles from when and where it had started. And now, just as the disappointment seemed to be setting in, Maryland forward/center Derrick Lewis looked up from the floor of Locker Room No. 4 in the Long Beach Arena and managed a meager smile.

"You know, not too many people remember anybody besides the ACC Champion and maybe a team that goes to the Final Four," Lewis said. "But a lot of good things came out of this season. We beat North Carolina twice, and with a couple of breaks along the way early, who knows what would have happened?"

What did happen wasn't too shabby particularly con- sidering the method at which it was accomplished. After rolling through a light, early season schedule at 9-2, the Terrapins fell about tough times losing their first six ACC games and falling to 11-10 after a loss to Notre Dame in early February.

Consensus Ail-American Len Bias became the first ACC player in nine seasons to win back-to-back conference scoring titles in 1985-86.

Their post-season hopes spelling NIT, the Terps suddenly emerged from their shell and became one of college basket- ball's best teams. They won six of their last eight conference games, then conquered the vaunted Tar Heels in the first round of the ACC Tournament.

A heartbreaking, last-second loss to Georgia Tech in the ACC semifinals foiled Maryland's upset bid. And after a rugged win over Pepperdine in the first round of the West Regional, the Terps succumbed to UNLV.

The result was a 19-14 season. Not the most successful season in a storied Terrapin basketball history, but memories of 1985-86 won't need a match to burn brightly for a while, either.

It was the year of Len Bias (23.2 points, 7.0 rebounds per game; 86.4 percent foul shooting), a consensus first-team All

America, the first Terp ever to win the ACC's Most Valuable Player Award twice, and the first player to capture back-to- back conference scoring titles since N.C. State's Kenny Carr did it nine years ago.

It was the year Lefty became Charles and then Lefty again. In a subtle, preseason announcement to the sports information department, Coach Driesell said he preferred his given name over that famous sobriquet. Word of the change exploded, gaining national attention. Charles? "I'm getting too old for Lefty," Driesel said.

Order was restored shortly after the season started, when Driesell told reporters, "I don't care what you call me, just call me."

And with Charles in Charge, the Terps pulled off college basketball's biggest regular-season upset in mid-February, when an NCAA bid still hung in the balance. Behind a superhuman performance by Bias (35 points) and positive contributions from all starters, Maryland eliminated a nine- point deficit with 2:58 left in regulation and knocked off then- No. 1 North Carolina 77-72 in overtime, slapping the Tar Heels with their first loss ever in the new arena named after Tar Heels Coach Dean Smith.

The emotional victory over the Tar Heels was only one of several marvelous performances by Bias but probably the most sensational. "If Leonard Bias ain't the Player of the World," Driesell was prompted to claim afterward, "people don't know basketball."

And there were other big late-season victories: a clutch, one-point victory at N.C. State; an awe-inspiring performance in the regular-season finale that saw the Terps hammer highly respected Virginia; and the convincing 85-75 victory over Carolina in the conference tournament.

W on-Lost Breakdown 1985-86

Overall 19-14

Home 5-7

Away 10-5

Neutral Sites 5-1

ACC Games 6-8

ACC Home Games 3-4

ACC Away Games 3-4

Non-Conference 13-6

Televised Games 8-12

Sundays 1-2

Mondays 1-1

Tuesdays 4-1

Wednesdays 2-0

Thursdays 3-1

Fridays 3-0

Saturdays 5-9

By Day 3-7

By Night 16-7

When Shooting Over 50% 11-8

When Opponents Shot Under 45% 11-5

When Leading at Halftime 13-3

Games Decided by Fewer than 10 Points 9-10

Overtime Games 2-1

When Outrebounding the Opponent 10-7

When PPP was Greater than Opponent's 17-4

When Committed Fewer Turnovers 11-7

When Derrick Lewis had at least 3 blocks 7-2

When Keith Gatlin had at least 5 assists 15-7

When Len Bias had at least 20 points 14-11

When Jeff Baxter shot higher than 50 percent 11-4

52

"A lot of people said that we were dead and it was over," Driesell said proudly after the Virginia win. "These kids never gave up. They never quit. We played one of the toughest schedules in the country, and I don't know too many teams that could have done a better job with it than we have."

Certainly, perseverence was Maryland's strongest trade- mark. After losing to Duke in Durham a game in which Bias scored a school-road record 41 points Maryland dropped to 0-6 in the conference and things looked bleak.

Bias was supporting the offensive load by himself. Driesell had tried nine different lineups. There were problems at shooting guard and center. Games with North Carolina, Georgia Tech, Virginia, N.C. State, Villanova and Notre Dame remained.

But just as things seemed to hit rock bottom after losing at Notre Dame two weeks after the Duke loss, Maryland found itself. Junior point guard Keith Gatlin (10.2 points, 6.4 assists) regained his confidence and his outside shooting touch hitting double figures in his first eight games and 1 1 of his last 12 after doing it only eight times in the first 20 games. Gatlin set the tone for the N.C. State victory by hitting four perimeter jumpers in the first three minutes.

Senior guard Jeff Baxter (9.5 points), another who struggled with his shooting early on, joined Gatlin in giving the Terps a new look on offense. In what most of the team agreed was the turning point in the season, a 78-69 victory over Clemson five days after the Notre Dame loss, Baxter and Gatlin combined for 38 points, with Baxter netting a career-high 21.

"Coach just sat us down and had a good talk with us," Baxter said after the triumph. "He told us not to worry about being pulled if our shots didn't fall, not to worry about anything and to keep taking the shots when we had them. It was the kind of thing we needed to hear at this point."

The N.C. State victory followed the Clemson win, but Bias, Baxter and freshman John Johnson (5.8) were suspended for violating team curfew rule after defeating the Wolfpack, and subsequently missed the return bout with Clemson two days later. At the time, it was thought another wrench had been thrown in the Terp NCAA reservations. The thoughts appeared bona fide when the Terps, despite 19 points from senior forward Speedy Jones (8.1 points, 4.5 rebounds), lost to the Tigers, 70-60.

At 13- 1 1, there was work to do. In Chapel Hill, it was done. "I don't know if this is the biggest thrill of my life," said Baxter, who sent the game into overtime on a 16-footer from the right side with five seconds left. "But it's up there. I can't tell you now. It's too hard to describe how I feel."

The Terps played one of their best games all season in losing to Georgia Tech, dropping them to 15-12. But victories over Wake Forest and Virginia sewed up an NCAA berth, and the tournament victory over North Carolina gave Maryland a solid fifth seeding in the West.

A chance to face Duke in the ACC Tourney finals was wiped out when Tech forward Duane Ferrell stole Gatlin's inbounds pass from midcourt with five seconds left and dribbled down for the unmolested dunk, giving the Yellow Jackets a 64-62 victory. It was an excruciating loss, but Gatlin took the pain like a man. "I've been the goat before," he said, "and I got through it then."

The Terps got six straight free throws (and 26 points) in the final 2:03 from Bias to fend off Pepperdine, 69-64, and advance

Forward Tom "Speedy" Jones led the 1985-86 Terps with a .551 field goal percentage.

to the second round against UNLV. But the dream died in Long Beach, when the Runnin' Rebels answered a 14-0 run with a 13-1 run themselves, then survived a near-miraculous effort by Bias, who scored 19 of the last 2 1 Maryland points, to win 70-64.

For seniors Bias, Baxter and Jones, it was the last time they would wear a Terp uniform. But others, like Lewis and Johnson, will be back.

"People doubted all along that we'd get into the tournament, so that was an accomplishment in itself," Baxter said. "But I really thought we were going all the way. People might think I'm crazy, but I really thought we were."

1985-86 Opponent Game Highs

Most Points Fewest Points

Most Points Fewest Points

Game

Game

Half

- Half

Highest Field Goal Pet. Highest Free Throw Pet. Most Total Rebounds

Fewest Turnovers

Most Field Goals Att. Most Field Goals Made

Most Free Throws Att. Most Free Throws Made

Most Offensive Rebounds Most Defensive Rebounds

85 by Hawaii Pacific 41 by West Virginia

49, 1st Half by Duke (A)

14, 1st Half by Randolph-Macon

.708 by Georgia Tech (H)

1,000 by North Carolina (H) 5 of 5

40 by Ohio State

40 by UNLV (H) & (NCAA)

40 by Stanford

4 by UNLV (NCAA)

71 by Hawaii Pacific 38 by Hawaii Pacific

33 by Ohio State 26 by Ohio State

21 by UNLV (H) 29 by Stanford

53

FINAL 1985-86 STATISTICS

GP GS MIN FGM FGA PCT FTM FTA .PCT REB (avg) PF-DSQ ASST BLK STLS PTS AVG

Len Bias

32

32

1185

267

491

.544

209

242

.864

224( 7.0)

90-2

33

14

27

743

23.2

Keith Gatlin

32

30

1063

143

301

.475

40

51

.784

86( 2.7)

49 1

204

5

25

326

10.2

Jeff Baxter

32

30

921

129

270

.478

45

64

.703

62

671

101

1

25

303

9.5

Tom Jones

33

9

851

119

216

.551

29

47

.617

155( 4.7)

651

36

8

18

267

8.1

Derrick Lewis

33

33

1079

97

200

.485

67

98

.684

222( 6.7)

99-2

28

71

37

261

7.9

John Johnson

31

8

493

69

138

.500

43

67

.642

29

40

35

1

7

181

5.8

Terry Long

28

21

362

35

64

.546

21

34

.618

87( 3.1)

53

16

14

8

91

3.3

Tony Massenburg

29

8

349

28

56

.500

27

48

.563

60

49-1

0

11

9

83

2.9

Dave Dickerson

15

112

11

25

.440

10

13

.769

22

20

7

4

1

32

2.1

David Gregg

15

1

106

10

17

.588

9

19

.474

11

14-1

2

6

2

29

1.9

Greg Nared

7

46

3

8

.375

0

3

.000

5

3

3

0

0

6

0.9

TEAM 67

Maryland Totals

32

911

1786

.510

500

686

.729

1030(31.2)

549-9

465

135

159

2322

70.4

Opponents

33

873

1820

.480

420

575

.730

1017(30.8)

639-16

457

78

187

2166

65.6

TEAM 80

Dead Ball Rebounds

Maryland 69

Opponents 73

Missed Shots

Maryland 1061

Opponents

1128

1985-86 Results/Game Leaders

Md

Opponent

Site

Attendance

Top Scorer

Top Rebounder

Record

84

Northeastern

72

H

10,800

Bias 23, Gatlin 20

Lewis 10

1-0

81

George Mason

80

A

4,774

Bias 3

Bias 8

2-0

66

Ohio State

78

A

13,407

Bias 23, Lewis 16

Bias 8

2-1

74

F. Dickinson

51

H

6,125

Bias 24

Lewis 8

3-1

77

William & Mary

48

H

6,240

Bias 20

Lewis 10

4-1

63

UNLV

64

(OT)

H

14,500

Bias 22

Bias 10

4-2

42

West Virginia

41

A

7,737

Bias 16

Bias 8, Lewis 8

5-2

91

Towson State

58

H

5,175

Bias 26

Massenburg 5

6-2

60

Alabama

58

H

10,932

Bias 14

Lewis 7, Jones 7

7-2

67

Stanford

65

(20T)

N

500

Bias 20

Lewis 9

8-2

92

Hawaii-Pacific

85

H

1,200

Bias 29

Bias 10

9-2

75

Duke

81

H

14,500

Bias 28, Johnson 18

Lewis 12

9-3

74

Randolph-Macon

50

H

5,100

Baxter 15

Massenburg 9

10-3

67

Georgia Tech

68

A

7,024

Bias 20

Bias 8

10-4

67

North Carolina

71

H

14,500

Bias 20

Lewis 10

10-5

49

Virginia

70

A

9,000

Bias 19

Bias 7

10-6

55

N.C. State

67

H

14,500

Bias 16, Baxter 16

Bias 9

10-7

68

Duke

80

A

8,564

Bias 41

Bias 8

10-8

77

Wake Forest

55

H

11,950

Bias 21

Lewis 9

11-8

62

Villanova

64

A

6,400

Bias 25

Lewis 11

11-9

62

Notre Dame

69

A

11,345

Bias 25

Bias 6

11-10

78

Clemson

69

H

11,825

Bias 24, Baxter 21

Bias

12-10

67

N.C. State

66

A

11,700

Bias 21

Bias 7

13-10

60 91

Clemson

70

A

8,505

Jones 19

Lewis 12

13-11

UMES

44

H

5,120

Johnson 15

Massenburg 6

14-11

77

North Carolina

72

(OT)

A

21,444

Bias 35

Lewis 10

15-11

70

Georgia Tech

77

H

14,500

Bias 30

Long 5

15-12

59

Wake Forest

48

A

8,200

Bias 16

Lewis 10

16-12

87

Virginia

72

H

14,500

Bias 22, Baxter 19

Lewis 10

17-12

85

North Carolina

75

N*

16,242

Bias 20, Baxter 21

Bias 13

18-12

62

Georgia Tech

64

N*

16,242

Bias 20

Bias 7

18-13

69

Pepperdine

64

N"

11,696

Bias 26

Lewis 11

19-13

64

UNLV

70

N"

11,690

Bias 31

Bias 12

19-14

*

\CC Tournament

**_

-NCAA Tournament

Notes: Len Bias led the 1985-86 Terp scorers in 30 of 33 games, with Speedy Jones, John Johnson and Jeff Baxter each leading the team in scoring (Baxter and Bias tied for game-high honors against N.C. State at Cole Field House) . . . Bias scored at least 20 points in 25 of the 32 games he played in; the rest of the 1985-86 roster reached the 20- point mark only three times all season twice by Baxter and once by Keith Gatlin . . . Bias and Derrick Lewis led the Terps in rebounding 15 times apiece last season (they tied for game-high honors against West Virginia), with Tony Massenburg leading three times and Terry Long once . . . Speedy Jones tied for game-high honors once (with Lewis), against Alabama ... In 13 ACC games, Bias led the Terps in scoring outright 12 times and shared game-high honors with Baxter the other time ... In those 13 conference games, Bias reached the 20-point mark 11 times.

54

G,

ame-by-Game

Team Breakdown

OPPONENT

MIN FGA FGM

% 1

FTA FTM

%

PTS

OR

DR

TR

TO

ST

CH AST BLK

PF

EFF

Northeastern

200

63

30

48

28

24

86

84

16

23

39

14

6

5

21

4

20

95

George Mason

200

62

32

52

24

17

81

91

14

17

31

16

8

3

13

3

18

76.5

Ohio State

200

56

26

46

21

14

67

66

9

19

28

16

3

2

6

1

24

34.5

Fairleigh Dickinson

200

49

30

61

22

14

64

74

13

21

34

14

3

2

18

7

22

81

William & Mary

200

54

30

56

24

17

71

77

15

23

38

17

5

1

17

8

23

81.5

UNLV

225

55

25

46

20

13

65

63

12

26

38

19

4

0

13

6

14

59.5

West Virginia

200

47

15

32

16

12

75

42

18

17

35

13

6

1

5

1

13

32

Towson State

200

55

33

60

28

25

89

91

7

20

27

5

7

0

18

4

15

105.5

Alabama

200

51

21

41

22

18

82

60

13

16

29

7

6

1

14

2

14

60

UHP Tournament

Stanford

250

66

27

41

22

13

59

67

15

15

30

10

5

3

10

9

20

54.5

Hawaii Pacific

200

55

34

62

39

24

62

92

10

24

34

6

3

3

10

2

18

96.5

Duke

200

57

31

54

18

13

72

75

14

16

30

18

2

5

11

5

20

68.5

Randolph Macon

200

55

29

53

23

16

70

74

11

20

32

12

8

0

18

8

19

81.5

Georgia Tech

200

47

25

53

21

17

81

67

9

14

23

12

6

0

10

1

22

49

North Carolina

200

61

27

44

17

13

77

67

15

18

33

13

5

0

15

3

13

61

Virginia

200

53

21

40

15

7

47

49

12

13

25

13

6

3

10

1

16

32

N. C. State

200

60

23

38

10

9

90

55

14

14

28

12

8

3

13

4

13

53.5

Duke

200

50

24

48

25

20

80

68

7

20

27

21

6

2

10

1

23

45.5

Wake Forest

200

46

34

74

12

9

75

77

5

22

27

7

1

0

24

11

10

111.5

Villanova

200

48

27

56

14

8

57

62

11

18

29

13

4

1

15

1

15

60

Notre Dame

200

51

27

53

13

8

62

62

9

11

20

13

7

2

11

3

17

51.5

Clemson

200

51

27

53

30

24

80

78

14

20

34

12

3

0

17

5

12

88

N.C. State

200

47

26

55

21

15

71

67

8

14

22

11

3

0

20

1

12

68

Clemson

200

59

26

44

10

8

80

60

13

26

39

21

3

0

10

4

23

38

UMES

200

65

41

63

17

9

53

91

12

31

43

15

8

1

22

4

13

116

North Carolina

225

53

26

49

27

25

93

77

8

23

31

16

11

0

17

9

15

86

Georgia Tech

200

60

31

52

9

8

89

70

17

13

30

9

0

1

13

3

14

65.5

Wake Forest

200

59

27

46

9

5

56

59

16

18

34

5

3

2

11

1

13

60

Virginia

200

47

31

66

35

25

71

87

11

19

30

12

5

0

20

10

16

105

ACC Tournament

North Carolina

200

59

31

53

29

23

79

85

13

20

33

18

4

1

13

2

19

72

Georgia Tech

200

46

24

52

18

14

78

62

6

20

26

11

5

0

13

4

12

63

NCAA Tournament

Pepperdine

200

50

24

48

29

21

72

69

10

25

35

14

3

0

14

2

13

67

UNLV

200

51

26

51

18

12

67

64

9

27

36

11

2

0

13

5

22

59

Totals

6700 1788

911

51

686

500

73 2322

387

643

1030

426

159

41

465

135

553

2277

Averages

54.2

27.6

20.8

15.2

70.4

31.2

14.1

69

Key To Statistical Abbreviations

GP = Games Played TO = Turnovers

MIN = Minutes Played ST = Steals

FGA = Field Goals Attempted CH = Charges

FG(M) = Field Goals Made AS(T) = Assists

FTA = Free Throws Attempted BL(K) = Blocks

FT(M) = Free Throws Made PF = Personal Fouls

% = Percentage DQ = Disqualifications

OR = Offensive Rebounds PTS = Total Points

DR = Defensive Rebounds AVG = Average

TR, REB= Total Rebounds EFF** = Efficiency Rating

*— EFFICIENCY RATING is a mathematical formulation of a player's performance based on assigning positive points (+ 1 , +2) for plusses on the court (i.e., shots made, steals, blocked shots) and negative points (—.5, —1) for minuses on the court (i.e., shots missed, turnovers, fouls committed). In general, an efficiency rating of between +15 and +18 would be considered good for a game.

Fewest Turnovers (1 Per X Minutes)

Tony Massenburg 1 per 26.8 minutes (13 total turnovers)

Tom "Speedy" Jones 1 per 26.1 minutes (32 total turnovers)

Jeff Baxter 1 per 17.0 minutes (54 total turnovers)

Keith Gatlin 1 per 15.9 minutes (69 total turnovers)

Derrick Lewis 1 per 15.8 minutes (68 total turnovers)

The berth in the 1986 NCAA Tournament marked the fourth straight year the Terps have qualified for the big one and the sixth time in seven seasons this decade. Other Maryland NCAA berths were in 1958, 1973 and 1975.

55

Game-by-G

ame

Scoring,

Rebounding

M

A

D 1

C K

G

B

J O

S S E

A

L

A

J

H

N

E

G

N

B

T

E

X

o

N

B

L

R

R

A

I

L

W

T

N

S

U

O

S

E

R

A

I

I

E

E

O

R

N

O

G

E

S

N

s

R

S

N

G

G

N

G

D

84 Northeastern

72

23(8)

20(4)

9(10)

13(2)

9(8

4(1)

2(0)

4(4)

DNP

0(0)

DNP

81 George Mason

80

33(8)

12(1)

6(7)

8(1)

10(6

10(3)

0(0)

0(0)

DNP

2(1)

DNP

66 Ohio State

78

23(8)

6(2)

16(7)

10(2)

2(5

3(0)

4(3)

DNP

0(0)

2(1)

DNP

74 Fairleigh Dickinson

51

24(6)

4(0)

13(8)

8(1)

14(5

2(1)

6(5)

2(5)

0(1)

KD

DNP

77 William & Mary

48

20(5)

10(5)

5(10)

6(1)

8(4

15(2)

0(2)

4(3)

2(1)

7(3)

DNP

63 Nevada Las Vegas (

ot) 64

22(10)

13(2)

7(8)

KD

9(9

5(0)

0(0)

6(5)

DNP

DNP

DNP

42 West Virginia

41

16(8)

8(4)

2(8)

9(3)

6(6

1(0)

0(0)

0(0)

DNP

DNP

DNP

91 Towson State

58

26(2)

8(2)

4(3)

12(2)

6(2

10(2)

14(5)

4(3)

6(2)

1(0)

DNP

60 Alabama

58

14(6)

11(2)

10(7)

4(1)

10(7

2(0)

9(6)

DNP

DNP

DNP

DNP

67 Stanford (2 ot)

65

20(2)

12(4)

6(9)

14(5)

5(2

9(1)

0(2)

0(1)

DNP

1(0)

DNP

92 Hawaii Pacific

85

29(10)

10(2)

13(4)

6(4)

9(4

16(0)

7(4)

DNP

2(2)

0(0)

0(0)

75 Duke

81

28(6)

4(2)

7(12)

12(3)

2(5

18(1)

4(1)

DNP

0(0)

DNP

DNP

74 Randolph Macon

50

14(5)

6(2)

7(1)

15(1)

13(4

9(2)

3(9)

DNP

5(3)

0(2)

2(3)

67 Georgia Tech

68

26(8)

12(2)

16(4)

0(1)

0(1

2(2)

0(0)

11(4)

DNP

DNP

DNP

67 North Carolina

71

20(8)

8(4)

11(10)

15(6)

4(0

2(0)

DNP

7(3)

DNP

DNP

DNP

49 Virginia

70

19(7)

8(2)

6(3)

8(1)

5(7

0(0)

KD

2(2)

DNP

DNP

DNP

55 North Carolina St.

67

16(9)

6(1)

12(4)

16(3)

2(4

3(0)

0(0)

0(4)

DNP

DNP

DNP

68 Duke

80

41(8)

DNP

2(7)

4(2)

3(0

2(1)

8(1)

0(0)

2(4)

2(0)

4(1)

77 Wake Forest

55

21(4)

6(2)

2(9)

14(0)

4(3

15(1)

4(1)

8(3)

0(1)

3(0)

0(0)

62 Villanova

64

25(3)

8(5)

13(11)

0(1)

2(1

11(1)

0(1)

3(5)

DNP

DNP

DNP

62 Notre Dame

69

25(6)

4(2)

5(0)

2(0)

12(5)

12(3)

2(2)

0(0)

DNP

DNP

DNP

78 Clemson

69

24(9)

17(1)

2(5)

21(2)

11(9)

0(1)

2(4)

1(2)

DNP

DNP

DNP

| 67 North Carolina St.

66

21(7)

12(2)

15(4)

5(1)

3(3

2(0)

4(1)

5(3)

DNP

DNP

DNP

60 Clemson

70

DNP

12(5)

10(12)

DNP

19(7)

DNP

2(3)

8(8)

9(3)

0(0)

0(0)

|| 91 U.M.E.S.

44

13(8)

8(3)

3(5)

10(0)

13(5)

15(2)

7(6)

6(3)

6(5)

10(3)

0(1)

77 North Carolina (ot)

72

35(6)

10(2)

10(10)

10(3)

6(6)

2(1)

2(1)

2(1)

0(0)

DNP

DNP

70 Georgia Tech

77

30(4)

12(2)

2(4)

8(3)

16(7)

0(0)

0(0)

2(5)

DNP

DNP

DNP

59 Wake Forest

48

16(7)

11(2)

7(10)

14(2)

11(7)

0(3)

0(1)

0(2)

DNP

DNP

DNP

87 Virginia

72

22(6)

18(6)

4(10)

19(2)

15(4)

5(0)

2(0)

2(1)

0(0)

0(0)

DNP

ACC 85 North Carolina

75

20(13)

18(2)

12(4)

21(1)

8(3)

0(0)

0(1)

6(6)

0(0)

0(0)

0(0)

ACC 62 Georgia Tech

64

20(7)

10(0)

6(3)

8(4)

10(5)

0(0)

DNP

8(6)

DNP

DNP

DNP

NCAA 69 Pepperdine

64

26(8)

10(7)

13(11)

8(2)

12(4)

DNP

DNP

0(3)

DNP

DNP

DNP

NCAA 64 UNLV

70

31(12)

12(4)

5(2)

2(1)

8(7)

6(1)

DNP

0(5)

0(0)

DNP

DNP

2985-86 Individual Season Highs

Field Goal Percentage

Free Throw Percentage

Tom "Speedy" Jones

.551

Len Bias

.864

Terry Long

.547

Keith Gatlin

.784

Len Bias John Johnson Tony Massenburg

.544 .500 .500

Total Points

Len Bias Keith Gatlin

743 326

Jeff Baxter Derrick Lewis John Johnson

.703 .684 .642

Total Rebounds

Len Bias Derrick Lewis

224 222

Jeff Baxter

Tom "Speedy" Jones

Derrick Lewis

303 267 261

Assists

Keith Gatlin Jeff Baxter

204 101

Tom "Speedy" Jones

155

Tom "Speedy" Jones

36

Terry Long

87

John Johnson

35

Keith Gatlin

86

Len Bias

33

56

1985-86

1985-86

Maryland Game Highs

Individual Game Highs

Most Points— Game

92 vs Hawaii Pacific

Most Points

41 by Len Bias vs Duke (A)*

Fewest Points Game

42 vs West Virginia

Most Field Goals Attempted

24 by Len Bias vs North

Most Points— Half

57, 2nd Half vs North Carolina

Carolina (A)

(ACC)

Most Field Goals Made

14 by Len Bias vs Duke (A)

Fewest Points— Half

15, 2nd Half vs west Virginia

Highest Field Goal Percent

1,000 by Derrick Lewis vs

Most Field Goals Attempted

66 vs Stanford

N.C. State (A)

Most Field Goals Made

41 vs UMES

1,000 by Tom "Speedy" Jones vs R Macon

Highest Field Goal Percent

.739 vs Wake Forest

Most Free Throws Attempted

18 by Len Bias vs George

Most Free Throws Attempted

39 vs Hawaii Pacific

Mason

Most Free Throws Made

25 vs Towson State

Most Free Throws Made

13 by Len Bias vs George

25 vs North Carolina (A)

Mason, Duke (A)

25 vs Virginia (H)

Highest Free Throw Percent

1,000 by Len Bias vs Duke (A)

Highest Free Throw Percent

.926 vs North Carolina (A)

13 of 13

25 of 27

Most Rebounds

13 by Len Bias vs North

Most Offensive Rebounds

18 vs West Virginia

Carolina (ACC)

Most Defensive Rebounds

31 vs UMES

Most Assists

12 by Keith Gatlin vs UMES

Most Total Rebounds

43 vs UMES

Most Charges Taken

3 by Jeff Baxter vs Stanford

Most Assists

24 vs Wake Forest (H)

3 by Len Bias vs Duke (H) 5 by Jeff Baxter at Hawaii

Fewest Turnovers

5 vs Towson State

Pacific Tour

5 vs Wake Forest (A)

Most Steals

4 by Jeff Baxter vs Virginia (A)

Most Steals

11 vs North Carolina

Highest Efficiency Rating

+39 by Len Bias vs Duke (A)

Most Charges Taken

5 vs Northeastern

Most Blocked Shots Fewest Personal Fouls

5 vs Duke (H)

11 vs Wake Forest (H)

10 vs Wake Forest (H)

*New Maryland Record for Most Points Scored on the Road

Highest Efficiency Rating

+ 116vsUMES

Lowest Efficiency Rating

+32 vs West Virginia

ASSIST SUMMARY 1986

+32 vs Virginia (A)

/ / BIAS 7 1% 33

JONES 2] T\ 36

REBOUND SUMMARY J 986

BAXTER 21 7% 101

LONG 9.0% 87

JONES 16 1% 155

GATLIN 8 9% 86 BAXTER 6.4% 62 MASSENBURG 6.2% 60 JOHNSON 3 0% 29 DICKERSON 23% 22 GREGG 11% 11 NARED 0.5% 5

BIAS 233% 224

LEWIS 6 0% 28 LONG 3 4% 16 DICKERSON 15% 7 NARED 06% 3 GREGG 0 4% 2 MASSENBURG 00% 0

GATLIN 43 9% 204

LEWIS 23 H. 222

During Lefty DrieseIVs 1 7 seasons at Maryland, only one team was out-rebounded on the season— the 1984-85 team. And that squad held opponents to a 45.9 shooting percentage, took 15 more free throws and blocked 97 more than the opposition.

57

POINTS PER POSSESSION

Once again this season, the University of Maryland Basketball Team used the POINTS PER POSSESSION statistic exten- sively. What is PPP? All offensive possessions result in one of three categories field goal attempts, turnovers, or free throw attempts (retaining the ball after the common foul is not considered a separate possession). By totalling the three figures, one can attain a team's total number of possessions for a single game or season. "Free Throw" possessions are ascertained by dividing the number of free throw attempts by two. Then, simply divide the number of possessions by the number of points scores and the PPP figure is obtained. As a meams of reference, the college average for PPP is 0.85.

*Here is the formula:

(1) FGA + TO = '/2FTA = Total Possessions

(2) Total Points / Total Possessions =

Points Per Possession

*The shortened formula:

Total Points / (FGA + TO + '/2FTA) = PPP

**************************

MARYLAND Season PPP = 0.91

OPPONENTS Season PPP = 0.82

**************************

Maryland PPP Highs

Wake Forest (H) 1.30

Towson State (H) 1.23

Hawaii Pacific (A) 1.14

Virginia (H) 1.14

UMES (H) 1.03

Maryland PPP Lows

West Virginia (A) .62

Virginia (A) .67

N.C. State (H) .71

Clemson (A) .71

UNLV (H) .75

Efficiency Rating

LenBias +658>/2

Keith Gatlin +387'/2

Derrick Lewis +340'/2

Tom "Speedy" Jones +287

Jeff Baxter +246'/2

Efficiency Rating (Per Min.)

Len Bias 556

Keith Gatlin 353

Tom "Speedy" Jones 343

Derrick Lewis 316

Jeff Baxter 268

ACC FINAL STATISTICS

The Atlantic Coast Conference was represented by six of its members in the 64-team NCAA basketball championship, and a seventh was selected for the National Invitation Tournament. The Duke Blue Devils, who compiled a 12-2 record during the ACC regular season and won the conference championship by beating Georgia Tech in the title game, advanced to the NCAA Championship game before dropping a three-point decision to Louisville to finish as the national runner-up. N.C. State, Georgia Tech, Maryland, North Carolina and Virginia were the others in the NCAA field. The ACC teams compiled a record of 13 wins as against six defeats. Clemson won two games before losing to Wyoming in the NIT quarterfinals. In the other Winter Sports Championships, Clemson won in swimming and North Carolina in wrestling.

Conference Games All Games

Off. Def. Off. Def.

Team Won Lost Pet. Avg. Avg. Won Lost Pet. Avg. Avg.

Duke 12 2 .857 79.4 70.6 37 3 .925 79.9 67.2

Georgia Tech 11 3 .786 71.1 65.9 27 7 .794 75.1 63.6

North Carolina 10 4 .714 80.9 75.0 28 6 .824 86.6 69.0

N.C. State 7 7 .500 64.5 65.4 21 13 .618 70.6 63.2

Virginia 7 7 .500 68.7 66.7 19 11 .633 70.4 64.9

Maryland 6 8 .429 68.3 69.0 19 14 .576 70.4 65.6

Clemson 3 11 .214 68.9 73.6 19 15 .559 74.9 67.5

Wake Forest 0 14 .000 55.2 70.6 8 21 .276 59.8 67.3

(RECORD AGAINST NON-ACC OPPOSITION: Won 115, Lost 27 - Pet. 81.0)

ACC Tournament Results

(Greensboro Coliseum) First Round: Duke 68, Wake Forest 60, Virginia 64, N.C. State 62; Georgia Tech 79, Clemson 61; Maryland 85, North Carolina 75.

Semifinals: Duke 75, Virginia 70; Georgia Tech 64, Maryland 62.

Championship: Duke 68, Georgia Tech 67.

NCAA Tournament Results

First and (EAST— Greensboro, N.C.)— Duke 85, Mississippi Valley State 78; DePaul 72, Virginia 68; Duke 89, Old Dominion 61.

Second Rounds: (SOUTHEAST— Baton Rouge La.) Georgia Tech 68, Marist 53; Georgia Tech 66, Villanova 61. (MIDWEST Minneapolis,

Minn.)— N.C. State 66, Iowa 64; N.C. State 80, Arkansas-Little Rock 66 (20T). (WEST— Ogden, Utah)— North Carolina 84,

Utah 72; North Carolina 77, Alabama-Birmingham 59. (WEST— Long Beach, Calif.)— Maryland 69, Pepperdine 64;

Nevada/Las Vegas 70, Maryland 64. Regionals: (EAST-East Rutherford, N.J.)— Duke 74, DePaul 67; Duke 71, Navy 50. (SOUTHEAST-Atlanta, Ga.)— Louisiana State 70,

Georgia Tech 64. (MIDWEST— Kansas City, Mo.)— N.C. State 70, Iowa State 66; Kansas 75, N.C. State 67. (WEST— Houston,

Texas) Louisville 94, North Carolina 79. Final Four: (Dallas, Texas) Duke 71, Kansas 67; Louisville 72, Duke 69.

58

ACC STANDINGS AND STATISTICS

Scoring

(Top 50)

Player, School FG

Len Bias, Maryland 267

Johnny Dawkins, Duke 331

Brad Daugherty, UNC 284

Chris Washburn, N.C. State 241

Mark Alarie, Duke 262

Mark Price, Ga. Tech 233

Horace Grant, Clemson 208

Olden Polynice, Va 183

David Henderson, Duke 217

John Salley, Ga. Tech 172

Rod Watson, WF 173

MarkCline, WF 141

Tom Hammonds, Ga. Tech 168

Duane Ferrel!, Ga. Tech 172

Kenny Smith, UNC 164

Mel Kennedy, Va 151

Larry Middleton, Clem 154

Steve Hale, UNC 132

Tyrone Bogues, WF 132

Bruce Dalrymple, Ga. Tech 151

Charles Shackleford, NCS 128

Keith Gatlin, Maryland 143

Joe Wolf, UNC 149

Tom Sheehey, Virginia 121

Glenn Corbit, Clem 137

Jeff Baxter, Maryland 129

Nate McMillen, NCS 127

Ernie Myers, NCS 114

Jeff Lebo, UNC 130

Glen McCants, Clem 128

Andrew Kennedy, Va 110

Bennie Bolton, NCS 114

Grayson Marshall, Clem Ill

Tom Jones, Md 119

97

82

76

76

76

Derrick Lewis, Md.

Tom Calloway, Va. .. Warren Martin, UNC

Jay Bilas, Duke

Jerry Pryor, Clem.

Tommy Amaker, Duke 101

Danny Ferry, Duke Richard Morgan, Va. ... John Johnson, Md. ...

John Johnson, Va

Craig Neal, Ga. Tech ... Anthony Jenkins, Clem. .

Arthur Larkins, WF

Kevin Madden, UNC ... Walker Lambiotte, NCS Ranzino Smith, UNC ...

91 83 69

59

67 62 48 68 67 50

FT 209

147 119 117 162 124 140 116 119 101 26 52 80 69 80 57 57 85 65 64 42 40 42 59 44 45 66 88 54 56 57 67 61 29 67 48 47 79 61 53 54 6 43 57 58 32 38 32 10 32

Pts. 743

809 687 599 686 590 556 482 553 445 372 334 416 413 408 359 365 349 329 366 298 326 340 301 318 303 320 316 313 312 277 295 283 267 261 212 119 231 213 255 236 172 181 175 192 156 134 168 144 132

Avg. 23.2

20.2

20.2

17.6

17.2

17.4

16.4

16.1

14.2

13.1

12.8

12.4

12.2

12.1

12.0

12.0

11.4

11.3

11.3

10.8

10.3

10.2

10.0

10.0

9.9

9.5

9.4

9.3

9.2

9.2

9.2

8.7

8.3

8.1

7.9

7.1

6.9

6.8

6.5

6.4

5.9

5.9

5.8

5.8

5.6

5.6

5.4

4.9

4.8

4.6

Field Goal Percentage

(Minimum 5 FGs Scored Per Game)

Player, School

Brad Daugherty, UNC .. John Salley, Ga. Tech .. Duane Ferrell, Ga. Tech

Horace Grant, Clem

Olden Polynice, Va

Chris Washburn, NCS .. Johnny Dawkins, Duke ..

Len Bias, Md

Mark Alarie, Duke

Mark Price, Ga. Tech ....

FGM

FGA

Pet.

284

438

.648

172

284

.606

172

289

.595

208

356

.584

183

320

.572

241

429

.562

331

603

.549

267

491

.544

262

490

.535

233

441

.528

Free Throw Percentage

(Mininum 2.5 FTs Scored Per Game)

Player, School

Len Bias, Md

Mark Price, Ga. Tech ....

Ernie Myers, NCS

Steve Hale, UNC

Mark Alarie, Duke

Johnny Dawkins, Duke .. David Henderson, Duke

Horace Grant, Clem

Brad Daugherty, UNC .. Chris Washburn, NCS ..

FTM

209

124 88 85 162 147 119 140 119 117

Rebounding

Player, School

Horace Grant, Clem

Brad Daugherty, UNC

Olden Polynice, Va

Len Bias, Md

Chris Washburn, NCS

John Salley, Ga. Tech

Derrick Lewis, Md

Joe Wolf, UNC

Tom Hammonds, Ga. Tech Mark Alarie, Duke

Games

34 34 30 32 34 34 33 34 34 40

Assists

Player, School

Tyrone Bogues, WF

Grayson Marshall, Clem. ...

Nate McMillen, NCS

Keith Gatlin, Md

Kenny Smith, UNC

Tommy Amaker, Duke

Steve Hale, UNC

Mark Price, Ga. Tech

Bruce Dalyrmple, Ga. Tech Jeff Lebo, UNC

Games

29 34 34 32

34 40 31 34 34 34

FTA

242

145 106 103 197 181 160 193 174 176

Rebs

357 306 240 224 229 228 222 224 219 249

No.

245 262 233 204 210 241 152 148 138 137

Pet.

.864

.855 .830 .825 .822 .812 .744 .725 .684 .664

Avg

10.5 9.0 8.0 7.0 6.7 6.7 6.7 6.6 6.4 6.2

Avg

8.4 7.7 6.9 6.4 6.2 6.0 4.9 4.4 4.1 4.0

(A Player Must Have Played in 75% Of His Team's Games To Be-Ranked)

Team Performance Chart

Off. Def. Scoring FG

Team Avg. Avg. Margin Pet.

Duke 79.9 67.2 +12.7 .513

Georgia Tech 76.1 63.5 +12.6 .546

North Carolina 86.6* 69.0 +17.6* .599*

N.C. State 70.6 63.2* +7.4 .495

Virginia 70.4 64.9 + 5.5 .501

Maryland 70.4 65.6 + 4.8 .510

Clemson 74.9 67.5 + 7.4 .475

Wake Forest 59.8 67.3 - 7.5 .455

(Asterisk Denotes Conference Leading Figure)

FT

Rebound

Pet.

Margin

.716

+5.9*

728

+2.5

738*

+4.8

.690

+2.0

692

+3.5

729

+0.4

704

+4.9

684

-7.6

59

Maryland Hoopourri:

Maryland's Billy Jones be- came the first black player in ACC history when he played for the Terps in 1965. Twenty- two years later, Bob Wade becomes the first black coach in Maryland Basket- ball— and ACC history.

Len Elmore's average of 14.7 rebounds per game in 1973-74 is a Terp record that may never be broken. That season, Elmore led the Terps in rebounding 22 times in 28 games despite 6-11 Tom McMillen and 6-8 Owen Brown in the same frontcourt and hauled in at least 20 rebounds five times.

Leading Returning Shotblockers in the ACC

Player Team

Derrick Lewis Maryland Horace Grant Clemson Antoine Ford Georgia Tech Martin Nessley Duke Dave Popson North Carolina Joe Wolf— North Carolina Charles Shackleford— N.C. State

Career Blocks

170 57 42 29 28 28 27

Maryland has won more basketball games against Virginia than any other school. The Terps have 79 lifetime victories over the Cavaliers (44 losses); the toughest op- ponent in Terrapin history has been North Carolina (38-79).

Maryland's Top Winning Percentages All Opponents

(at least 20 meetings,

lifetime)

Opponent

Won

Lost

Pet.

Virginia Tech

21

4

.840

VMI

41

10

.804

Johns Hopkins

19

5

.792

William & Mary

21

8

.724

Clemson

60

28

.682

Richmond

26

14

.650

Virginia

79

45

.639

The 1974-75 team had six players in double figures: John Lucas (19.5), Owen Brown (14.9), Steve Sheppard (14.3), Maurice Howard (13.4), Brad Davis (12.6) and Tom Roy (11.0). Four of those players— Lucas, Sheppard, Howard and Davis went on to play in the NBA.

Buck Williams ranks ninth among ACC career re- bounders who didn't spend four seasons in the con- ference. Williams pulled down 933 rebounds in 85 games at Maryland an average of 10.8 per game despite passing up his senior year of eligibility for the NBA. Projected over four full seasons, Williams would have grabbed 1,244 rebounds had he stayed the final season, which would have ranked him fifth in ACC history.

John Johnson ranks first among returning ACC guards in three- point plays during the 1985-86 season; he had six such plays despite playing just 493 minutes last season (15.9 minutes per game). Virginia's Mel Kennedy also had six, but in 30.6 minutes per game.

The top seven all-time Mary- land scorers and top four all- time Terp rebounders were coached by Lefty Driesell. Among the non-Driesell play- ers, Bob Kessler (849) is the leading rebounder, and Ail- American Gene Shue (1,397) is the leading scorer.

Gene Shue

60

Past and Present

No. 2 All-time scorer Albert King holds the Maryland record for most points in an ACC Tournament game. On February 29, 1980, King scored 38 against Clemson, leading the Terps past the Tigers 91-85 and into the ACC Championship Game.

Top Single-Game Performances ACC Tournament

Points

38 33 33 28 27 27 27 26 26 25

Player

Albert King Bob Kessler Will Hetzel Gene Shue Larry Gibson Albert King Ernest Graham Greg Manning Len Bias Gene Shue

Date

2-29-80 3- 1-56 3- 6-69 3- 4-54 3- 1-78 3- 1-80 3- 7-81 2-29-80 3-11-84 3- 5-54

Opponent

Clemson Duke

South Carolina

Clemson

N.C. State

Duke

North Carolina

Clemson

Duke

Wake Forest

Greg Manning ranks second among career ACC foul shooters, with an .858 percentage from 1977 to 1981 (minimum 100 attempts).

Adrian Branch's av- erage of 15.2 points per game in 1982 is the highest ever recorded by a Mary- land freshman at a varsity level. But no less than seven freshmen have av- eraged in double figures since being allowed to play varsity basketball in 1973:

Player

Adrian Branch John Lucas Albert King Brad Davis Greg Manning Larry Gibson Buck Williams Jo Jo Hunter Bill Bryant Len Bias

Freshman Year

1982 1973 1978 1975 1978 1976 1979 1977 1977 1983

Average

15.2 14.2 13.6 12.6 21.1 11.8 10.0

9.9

7.8

7.2

Gene Shue, Bob Kessler and Tom McMillen are the only Terps ever to average at least 20 points per game in back-to-back seasons. McMillen, with a 20.8 average in 1971-72 and a 21.2 average in 1972-73, is the only Maryland player to accomplish the feat within the last 30 years.

Mike Davis holds the dubious honor of fouling out more games than any player in Terp history. Davis was disqualified nine times during the 1976-77 season, but his 92 fouls that year do not constitute another record Derrick Lewis' 122 in 1984-85 stand as the highwater mark.

Sophomore Jack Flynn was one of the few bright spots for the 1 944-45 Terps, a team gutted by the World War II draft. F/ynn scored 200 points and was named All-Southern Conference as Maryland struggled to a 2-14 conference record. Now the executive director of the M Club, Flynn oversees the fund- raising organization that pro- cures scholarships for athletes in all non-revenue sports.

Geographical Breakdown

of Maryland Players

Since 1970

State

Maryland

Pennsylvania

Virginia

New York

North Carolina

Washington, D.C.

New Jersey

Ohio

South Carolina

Indiana

Connecticut

Kentucky

West Virginia

Tennessee

Mississippi

Minnesota

Florida

Alabama

Illinois

California

Iowa

Players

16 12 10

7

5

4

4

3

2

2

2

2

The ACC experimented with the three-point shot once before, during the 1983 season. And when ACC games only are tabulated, Maryland's Steve Rivers led the conference in long-distance shooting percentage at .586 (17 for 29).

Team Free Throw Percentage 1982 Thru 1986

1. North Carolina (2300-3048)-.755

2. MARYLAND (2031-2820)— .720

3. Duke (2404-3351)— .717

4. Georgia Tech (1985-2794)— .710

5. Wake Forest (1724-2462)— .700

6. Virginia (2002-2870)— .698

7. North Carolina State (2038-2951)— .691

8. Clemson (1637-2386)— .686

61

Achievements, Awards and Records

62

Terps On All-ACC Teams

GeneShue First Team 1954

Bob Kessler Second Team 1955

Bob Kessler Second Team 1956

Bob O'Brien Second Team 1957

Nick Davis Second Team 1958

John Nacincik Second Team 1958

Charles McNeil Second Team 1959

AlBunge First Team 1960

Bob McDonald Second Team 1961

Jerry Greenspan Second Team 1963

Jay McMillen Second Team 1965

Gary Ward Second Team 1966

WillHetzel Second Team 1969

WillHetzel Second Team 1970

Jim O'Brien Second Team 1971

Tom McMillen First Team 1972

Len Elmore Second Team 1972

Tom McMillen First Team 1973

Len Elmore Second Team 1973

Len Elmore First Team 1974

John Lucas First Team 1974

Tom McMillen Second Team 1974

John Lucas First Team 1975

Owen Brown Second Team 1975

Brad Davis Second Team 1975

Maurice Howard Second Team 1975

John Lucas First Team 1976

Brad Davis Second Team 1977

Larry Gibson Second Team 1979

Albert King First Team 1980*

1980

1980

1981

1981

1983

1983

1984

1985*

1985

1986*

Buck Williams Second Team

Greg Manning Second Team

Buck Williams Second Team

Albert King Second Team

Ben Coleman Second Team

Adrian Branch Second Team

Ben Coleman Second Team

Len Bias First Team ...

Adrian Branch Second Team

Len Bias First Team ...

* Denotes ACC Player of the Year

Three-Time All-ACC Players:

Tom McMillen .... 1972-73-74 (Twice First-Team)

Len Elmore 1972-73-74 (Once First-Team)

John Lucas 1974-75-76 (Three Times First-Team)

Two-Time All-ACC Players:

Bob Kessler 1955-56

Will Hetzel 1969-70

Brad Davis 1975-77

Albert King 1980-81 (Once First-Team)

Buck Williams 1980-81

Len Bias 1985-86 (Twice First-Team)

Adrian Branch 1983-85

10 Largest Margins of Victory

Margin Opponent

Score

H/A

Season

+64

DePauw

113-49

H

1974-75

+57

DePauw

99-42

H

1975-76

+53

Towson State

91-38

H

1984-85

+49

Eastern Kentucky

106-57

H

1973-74

+46

Appalachian State

96-50

H

1974-75

+45

Brown

127-82

H

1972-73

+43

Johns Hopkins

108-65

H

1983-84

+40

Boston University

122-82

H

1975-76

+40

South Carolina

99-59

H

1957-58

+40

Clemson

81-41

A

1953-54

10 Largest Margins of Defeat

Margin Opponent

Score

H/A

Season

-53

Army

78-25

A

1943-44

-57

Miami (Fla.)

92-35

A

1968-69

-63

Bainbridge Navy

85-22

A

1944-45

-44

Seton Hall

59-15

A

1941-42

^9

Wake Forest

80-41

ACC Tourney

1962-63

-38

West Virginia

81-43

A

1946-47

^38

Navy

58-21

A

1932-33

^37

Navy

70-33

A

1944-45

^7

Cincinnati

70-33

A

1948-49

-37

South Carolina

65-28

Southern Conf.

1932-33

After five consecutive unsuccessful appearances in the ACC Tournament final, the 1983-84 Terps captured Maryland's first conference basketball championship in 26 years.

After not having an ACC Player of the Year from theyear the conference started (1954) through 1979, Maryland has brought home the award three times in this decade. Alber King (1980) was the first Terp ACC MVP; Len Bias won the award in 1985 and again in 1986.

63

Maryland in Close Games

Although some critics have contended that Maryland doesn't win games that go down to the wire, the numbers prove quite differently, showing that the Terps are among the nation's better ballclubs when it comes to pressure situations. The following charts/breakdowns prove that Maryland has indeed won more than their fair share of close games.

Games Decided by Three (3) Points or Fewer 1978 to 1986 (eight seasons)

Season Opponent

1978-79 N.C. State

North Carolina Duke

Wake Forest Virginia Rhode Island*

1979-80 Penn State Clemson Notre Dame North Carolina Virginia Georgia Tech* Duke

1980-81 Virginia

Notre Dame

Pittsburgh*

Duke

Clemson

Duke

North Carolina

1981-82 Georgia Tech Georgia Tech North Carolina Virginia

1982-83 Canisius UCLA* American North Carolina Notre Dame Holy Cross Virginia Tenn.-Chat.

1983-84 Virginia

Georgia Tech Wake Forest Dayton Clemson Wake Forest Illinois

1984-85 Kansas Alaska Alabama Ohio State Georgia Tech N.C. State North Carolina Duke* UNLV Villanova Wake Forest Wake Forest N.C. State Miami (Ohio) Villanova

1985-86 George Mason UNLV* West Virginia Alabama Stanford* Georgia Tech Villanova N.C. State Georgia Tech*

TOTALS: Won 38, Lost

fewer than three points.

* Overtime game.

Score H/A Category

82-81 W 54-53 L 70-68 W 54-53 W 75-72 L 67-65 W 56-55 W 84-83 W 64-63 L 70-69 W 63-61 W 52-49 W 73-72 L 66-64 L 73-70 L 69-66 W 55-54 L 72-70 W 56-53 W 61-60 L 45-43 L 64-63 L 59-56 L 47-46 W 67-66 W 80-79 W 73-71 W 72-71 L 68-67 W 55-53 W 83-81 L 52-51 W 67-66 W 71-70 L 90-87 L 61-59 W 66-65 W 66-64 W 72-70 L 58-56 L 54-52 W 59-56 W 76-73 W 70-69 L 58-56 W 75-74 L 78-76 W 78-76 L 77-74 W 64-62 W 69-66 W 71-70 W 69-68 W 46-43 L 81-80 W 64-63 L 42-41 W 60-58 W 67-65 W 68-67 L 64-62 L 67-66 W 64-62 L 25 60.3

A ACC

H ACC

H ACC

A ACC

A ACC

N NIT

N

H ACC

A

H ACC

A ACC

N ACC Tourney

N ACC Tourney

H ACC

H

A

A ACC

H ACC

N ACC Tourney

N ACC Toumey

H ACC

A ACC

A ACC

H ACC

A

H

H

A ACC

H

A -

Cum. Record

1-0

1-1

2-1

3-1

3-2

4-2

5-2

6-2

6-3

7-3

8-3

8-4

8-4

8-6

9-6

9-7 10-7 11-7 11-8 11-9 11-10 11-11 12-11 13-11 14-11 15-11 15-12 16-12 17-12 17-13

A ACC 18-13

N NCAA Toumey 19-13

A ACC 19-14

A ACC 19-15

A ACC 20-15

H 21-15

A ACC 22-15

N ACC Tourney 22-16

N NCAA Tour 23-16

N Alaska Shootout 23-17

H Alaska Shootout 24-17

A 25-17

H 26-17

N Rainbow Classic 26-18

H ACC 27-18

A ACC 27-19

H ACC 28-19

A 28-20

H 29-20

A ACC 30-20

H ACC 31-20

A ACC 32-20

N NCAA Tourney 33-20

N NCAA Tourney 33-21

A 34-21

H 34-22

A 35-22

H - 36-22

N Hawaii-Pacific 37-22

A ACC 37-23

A 37-24

A ACC 38-24

N ACC Tourney 38-25 percent of all games decided by

■\

All-America Profiles Len Bias

6-8 Forward 1982-86

Maryland's all-time leading scorer and the only player in Terp history to be named ACC Player of the Year twice . . . The conference's leading scorer in 1984-85 (18.9) and again in 1985-86 (23.2), the first player to do so since N.C. State's Kenny Carr accomplished the feat 10 seasons ago . . . Set school record for season scoring with 70 1 points as a junior, then broke the record as a senior ... A consensus All-America selection as a senior and second- and third-team All-America honors as a junior . . . Ranks ninth among all-time ACC scorers . . . Set a Maryland record for most points in a road game when he scored 41 against No. 2 Duke last January.

Career Stats.

FG Pet.

FT Pet.

Asst.

Reb.

Pis.

Avg.

Freshman

.478

.636

22

125

217

7.2

Sophomore

.567

.767

48

145

488

15.2

Junior

.530

.777

65

251

701

18.9

Senior

.544

.864

33

224

743*

23.2

Totals .537 .795

*Maryland season or career record

168

765 2149*

16.4

Louis (Bosey) Berger

6-2 Forward 1929-32

Considered one of the greatest athletes in Maryland's history . . . A two-time All-American selection, an almost impossible achievement at the time because Maryland was considered an agricultural school and had carried a rural identity . . . Chosen as a senior by Chuck Taylor as the captain of the Converse All- America team, a title befitting of who was thought to be the best all-round player in the nation . . . Led Maryland to the 1931 Southern Conference Championship, scoring a phenomenal (for then) 172 points during the season and receiving acclaim as the greatest player in Southern Conference history . . . Concentrated on his first love, baseball, after college . . . Signed with the Cleveland Indians in 1932 and played in the major leagues for six years as an infielder, batting .236 with the Indians, Chicago and Boston.

Category Breakdown 3 Points or Fewer

ACC Games 19-16

Non-Conference . 19-9

All Tournaments -. 7-6

NCAA Tournaments 2-2

ACC Tournament 3-3

NIT/Other Tourneys 2-1

Location Breakdown

Home Games 15-5

Away Games 15-13

Neutral Sites 8-7

Overtime Games

Driesell's record in overtime games in 17 seasons at Maryland ranks as one of the nation's best:

All OT Games, 17 seasons 22-9

ACC OT Games, 17 seasons 14-8

OT Games, 1978 to 1986 14-3

ACC OT Games, 1978 to 1986 7-2

64

ALL-AMERICA PROFILES

Tom McMillen

6-11 Forward 1971-74

Len Elmore

6-9 Center

1971-74

A symbol of Maryland's basketball excellence through the years and the first super recruit ever signed by Lefty Driesell ... A three-time All-ACC selection and three-time All-American . . . Maryland's all-time leading scorer until John Lucas broke his mark in 1976, and still the highest-scoring player in Maryland history for those with three years of eligibility . . . One of only three players in Terp history to average at least 20 points per game in back-to-back seasons . . . Still ranks fifth among all-time leading scorers, fourth among all-time rebounders, fourth among all-time field-goal per- centage leaders and fourth among all-time free-throw leaders making him and Bias the only players in Maryland history to rank among the Top 10 in four of the five major statistical categories . . . A three-time Academic All-American who majored in Pre-Med . . . A Rhodes Scholar who delayed his NBA career one year to attend Oxford ... A member of former President Nixon's 15-member council on physical fitness and sports . . . Most Valuable Player of the 1972 NIT, when he led the Terps in scoring every game and to the NIT Championship . . . Played in the NBA for 1 1 seasons, with the Buffalo Braves, Atlanta Hawks, New York Knicks and Washington Bullets ... As of press time, had won the Democratic Primary Election and was challenging for a seat in the United States House of Representatives.

Career Stats.

FG Pet. FT Pet. Asst.

Reb.

Pts.

Avg.

Sophomore

.549

.817

33

306

667

20.8

Junior

.585

.800

28

284

616

21.2

Senior

.530

.762

41

269

524

19.4

Totals

.555

.799

102

859 1807 20.5

Albert King

Forward 1977-81

Came to Maryland after a prolific career at Fort Hamilton High in the Bronx, N.Y., where he averaged 38.6 points and 22 rebounds per game as a senior and was considered the nation's top recruit . . . Felt the tremendous burden of pressure that accom- panied him to Maryland during his first two seasons at College Park, but still averaged 13.6 and 15.9 points and more than five rebounds per game as a freshman and sophomore . . . Assumed a greater role in the offense as a junior (1979-80) and exploded, averaging 21.7 points and 6.7 rebounds and shooting 55.3 percent from the floor . . .Finished his career at Maryland as the school's all-time leading scorer; still ranks second with 2,058 points . . . Also ranks eighth among Terp rebounders (715) and ninth among career free-throw shooters (77.5 percent) . . . Drafted in the first round of the 1981 NBA Draft ( 12th pick overall) by the New Jersey Nets . . . Older brother Bernard led the NBA in scoring the 1984-85 season and is a member of the New York Knicks.

Career Stats.

FG Pet.

FT Pet.

Asst.

Reb.

Pts.

Avg.

Freshman

.502

.646

64

187

381

13.6

Sophomore

.494

.765

62

144

444

15.9

Junior

.553

.821

86

207

674

21.7

Senior

.502

.812

92

177

559

18.0

One of the more dominating inside players in Maryland history and the all-time leading Terp rebounder for a game (26), season (412) and career (1053) ... A tremendous shot-blocker whose defensive presence helped Maryland to a 73-17 record during his three varsity seasons . . . Joined the United States All Stars (on emergency) to help America face the Russians in a three-game series and was outstanding, controlling the lane and allowing the U.S. to emerge victorious ... A second-team All- America in 1972-73 and again in 1973-74 . . . Named to All-ACC teams three times, and to conference all-tournament and squads three times . . . Named Maryland's Best Rebounder in 1972, Maryland's Top Defensive Player and Best Rebounder in 1973 and was awarded the coveted Outstanding Senior Award in 1974 . . . Drafted in the first round of the 1974 NBA Draft by the Washington Bullets, but chose to sign with the ABA's Indiana Pacers . . . Spent 10 seasons in the ABA/NBA, with Indiana, Milwaukee, New Jersey and New York . . . Retired after the 1984-85 season to enroll in the Harvard Law School— the only player in NBA history to do so.

Career Stats.

FG Pet. FT Pet. Asst.

Reb.

Pts.

Avg.

Sophomore

.462

.754

37

351

347

10.8

Junior

.469

.607

35

290

261

10.0

Senior

.525

.758

48

412*

409

14.6

Totals .488 .723

'Maryland season or career record

120

1053*

957

11.1

Gene Shue

6-2 Forward 1951-54

Rewrote the Maryland record book and was the Terps' first high-visibility basketball star . . . Had an outstanding junior season, averaging 22.1 points per game and establishing a school record with 508 points, then earned All-American honors as a senior . . . Held the Maryland career scoring record longer than any other player from 1954 until Tom McMillen broke it in 1974 . . . Also held the Maryland school record for points in a game until Al Bunge broke it in 1960 . . . All-American honors came from the Helms Foundation and Chuck Taylor's Converse All-American squad. . . Selected as Most Valuable Player of the 1953 Southern Conference Tournament . . . Set a tournament record that year when he scored 40 points in a semifinal loss to Wake Forest . . . Still ranks as Maryland's eighth all-time leading scorer . . . Had a successful career in the NBA and went on to spend 18 years as a coach with the NBA's Washington Bullets and Philadelphia 76ers.

Career Stats. FG Pet. FT Pet. Asst. Reb. Pts. Avg.

Sophomore

.375

.696

235

10.7

Junior

.469

.700

508

22.1

Senior

.506

.789

654

21.8

Totals

.515

.775

304

715

2058 17.4

Totals .465 .739 1397 18.6

Note: Assist and rebound averages were not kept when Shue began his

Maryland career; assists were not kept until 1969, and rebounds

were not tabulated and/or available for Shue.

Continued on Page 84

65

ALL-TIME LEADERS, SEASON & CAREER

Maurice Howard

Greg Manning

Tom Roy

Top 10 Single

Season Marks

Scoring

Year

Games

Points

Avg.

Will Hetzel

1968-69

26

605

23.3

Len Bias

1985-86

32

743*

23.2

Gene Shue

1952-53

23

508

22.1

Gene Shue

1953-54

30

654

21.8

Albert King

1979-80

31

674

21.7

Tom McMillen

1972-73

29

616

21.2

Tom McMillen

1971-72

32

667

20.8

Bob Kessler

1954-55

24

490

20.4

Bob Kessler

1955-56

24

487

20.3

John Lucas

1975-76

28

557

20.1

Rebounding

Year

Games

Reb.

Avg.

Len Elmore

1973-74

28

412*

14.7

Bob Kessler

1955-56

24

336

14.0

Al Bunge

1959-60

23

289

12.6

Will Hetzel

1968-69

26

318

12.2

Buck Williams

1980-81

31

363

11.7

Len Elmore

1972-73

26

290

11.2

Tom Roy

1974-75

29

321

11.1

Len Elmore

1971-72

32

351

11.0

Buck Williams

1978-79

30

323

10.8

Bob McDonald

1960-61

26

279

10.7

Assists

Year

Games Assists

Avg.

Keith Gatlin

1985-86

32

204

6.4

Keith Gatlin

1984-85

37

221*

6.0

John Lucas

1972-73

30

178

5.93

Brad Davis

1975-76

28

165

5.89

John Lucas

1973-74

28

159

5.6

Mickey Wiles

1969-70

26

135

5.2

Brad Davis

1976-77

27

132

4.9

Keith Gatlin

1983-84

32

148

4.622

Brad Davis

1974-75

29

134

4.621

Ernest Graham

1979-80

31

136

4.4

Field Goal Pet.

Year

Games

FGN

FGA*

Pet.

Buck Williams

1980-81

31

183

283

64.7

Greg Manning

1979-80

30

196

305

64.3

Charles Pittman

1981-82

24

102

167

61.1

Ben Coleman

1983-84

32

194

319

60.8

Buck Williams

1979-80

24

143

236

60.6

Tom Roy

1974-75

29

129

213

60.6

Bob Bodell

1971-72

32

70

117

59.8

Lawrence Boston

1976-77

26

150

251

59.7

Larry Gibson

1976-77

27

115

195

58.9

Tom McMillen

1972-73

29

250

427

58.5

'Minimum 100 field goal attempts

Free Throw Pet.

Year

Games

FTM

FTA*

Pet.

Greg Manning

1979-80

30

79

87

90.8

Len Bias

1985-86

32

209

242

86.4

Jo Jo Hunter

1977-78

27

57

66

86.3

Keith Gatlin

1984-85

37

50

58

86.2

Greg Manning

1978-79

29

66

77

85.7

Greg Manning

1977-78

28

92

108

85.2

Jim O'Brien

1972-73

30

92

109

84.4

Owen Brown

1974-75

29

63

76

82.9

Maurice Howard

1975-76

28

72

87

82.8

Albert King

1979-80

31

124

151

82.1

Greg Manning

1980-81

31

78

95

82.1

•Minimum 50 free throw attempts

All-Time Career Scorers

Len Bias 2,149

Albert King 2,058

Adrian Branch 2,017

John Lucas 2,015

Tom McMillen 1,807

Ernest Graham 1,607

Greg Manning 1,561

Gene Shue 1,397

Will Hetzel 1,370

Jay McMillen 1,300

All-Time Career Rebounders

Len Elmore 1,053

Buck Williams 928

Larry Gibson 895

Tom McMillen 859

Bob Kessler 849

Al Bunge 795

Len Bias 745

Albert King 715

Will Hetzel 689

Lawrence Boston 629

Career Assist Leaders

Keith Gatlin 573

John Lucas 514

Dutch Morley 460

Brad Davis 431

Jeff Adkins 360

Ernest Graham 346

Albert King 304

Greg Manning 271

Bob Bodell 241

Maurice Howard 219

Field Goal Percentage

Buck Williams 61.5

Greg Manning 58.3

Lawrence Boston 57.6

Tom McMillen 55.5

Larry Gibson 55.1

Maurice Howard 54.7

Tom Roy 54.1

Len Bias 53.6

Jap Trimble 53.1

Speedy Jones 52.8

Free Throw Percentage

Greg Manning 85.8

Jim O'Brien 80.3

Keith Gatlin 80.2

Tom McMillen 79.9

Mark Fothergill 79.9

Len Bias 79.5

Dutch Morley 79.1

John Lucas 77.8

Albert King 77.5

Maurice Howard 76.4

66

ALL-TIME POSTSEASON HISTORY

Southern Conference Tournaments (1923 to 1953): Won 13, Lost 22; one Southern Conference Tournament Championship (1931).

Atlantic Coast Conference Tournaments (1954-1968): Won 24, Lost 31; two ACC Championships (1958 and 1984).

ACC Tournament Breakdown

Year

Opponent

Score

Cum. Record

1954

Clemson

75-59

W

1-0

Wake Forest

64-56

L

1-1

1955

Virginia

68-67

L

1-2

1956

Duke

94-69

L

1-3

1957

Virginia

71-68

W

2-3

South Carolina

74-64

L

2-4

1958

Virginia

70-66

W

3-4

Duke

71-65

W

4-4

North Carolina*

86-74

w

5-4

1959

Virginia

66-65

L

5-5

1960

N.C. State

74-58

L

5-6

1961

Clemson

91-75

W

6-6

Wake Forest

98-76

L

6-7

1962

Duke

71-58

L

6-8

1963

Wake Forest

80-41

L

6-9

1964

Clemson

81-67

L

6-10

1965

Clemson

61-50

W

7-10

N.C. State

76-67

L

6-11

1966

North Carolina

77-70

L

6-12

1967

South Carolina

57-54

L

6-13

1968

N.C. State

63-54

L

6-14

1969

South Carolina

92-71

L

6-15

1970

N.C. State

67-57

L

6-16

1971

South Carolina

71-63

L

6-17

1972

Clemson

54-52

W

7-17

Virginia

62-57

W

8-17

North Carolina*

73-64

L

9-18

1973

Clemson

77-61

W

10-18

Wake Forest

73-65

W

11-18

N.C. State*

76-74

L

11-19

1974

Duke

85-66

W

12-19

North Carolina

105-83

W

13-19

N.C State*

103-100 L

13-20

1975

N.C. State

87-85

L

13-21

1976

Duke (ot)

80-78

W

14-21

Virginia

73-65

L

14-22

1977

N.C. State

82-72

L

14-23

1978

N.C. State (3 ot)

109-108 W

15-23

Duke

81-69

L

15-24

1979

Clemson

75-67

W

16-24

North Carolina

102-79

L

16-25

1980

Georgia Tech

52-49

W

17-25

Clemson

91-85

W

18-25

Duke*

73-72

L

18-26

1981

Duke

56-53

W

19-26

Virginia

85-62

W

20-26

North Carolina*

61-60

L

20-27

1982

N.C. State

40-28

L

20-28

1983

Georgia Tech (ot)

64-58

L

20-29

1984

N.C. State

69-63

W

21-29

Wake Forest

66-64

W

22-29

Duke*

74-62

W

23-29

1985

Duke

86-73

L

23-30

1986

North Carolina

85-75

W

24-30

Georgia Tech

64-62

L

24-31

ACC Tournament Breakdown

Coaches in ACC Tournament (Totals 24-31)

BudMillikan 6-13

Frank Fellows 0-2

Lefty Driesell 18-16

Breakdown by Opponent

Clemson 7-1

Duke 5-5

Georgia Tech 1-2

North Carolina 3-4

N.C. State 2-9

South Carolina 0-4

Virginia 4-3

Wake Forest 2-3

Breakdown by Round

Quarterfinals 15-18

Semifinals 7-8

Champ. Game 2-5

Breakdown by Location

Atlanta, GA 0-2

Charlotte, NC 0-3

Greensboro. NC 15-12

Landover, MD 3-2

Raleigh, NC 6-12

Considered by many as one of the greatest spectacles in sports, the ACC Tournament will move to nearby Landover j or the third time in its 34-year history. Played at Reynolds Coliseum (Raleigh) from 1954 to 1966, the tournament was held in Charlotte from J 968 to 1970 before stationing in Greensboro, where it was played through 1975. In 1976, the tournament made its first appearance m Landover, then moved back to Greensboro from 1977 to 1980. Landover was again the site in 1981; the tournament has also been played in Atlanta (1983 and 1985).

NCAA Tournaments (Nine appearances):

Won 12, Lost 9; Regional Finalist in 1973 and 1975; Final 16 in 1984 and 1985

NCAA Tournament Breakdown

Cumulative

Year

Opponent

Region/ Round

Score

Record

1958

Boston College

East quarterfinal

86-63 W

1-0

Temple

East semifinal

81-67 L

1-1

Manhattan

East third place

59-55 W

2-1

1973

Syracuse

East semifinal

91-75 W

3-1

Providence

East final

103-89 L

32

1975

Creighton

Midwest quarterfinal

83-79 W

4-2

Notre Dame

Midwest semifinal

83-71 W

5-2

Louisville

Midwest final

96-82 L

5-3

1980

Tennessee

East quarterfinal

86-75 W

6-3

Georgetown

East semifinal

74-68 L

6-4

1981

Tenn.-Chat.

Midwest quarterfinal

81-69 W

7-4

Indiana

Midwest semifinal

99-64 L

7-5

1983

Tenn.-Chat.

Midwest quarterfinal

52-51 W

8-5

Houston

Midwest semifinal

60-50 L

8-6

1984

West Virginia

Mideast quarterfinal

102-77 W

9-6

Illinois

Mideast semifinal

72-70 L

9-7

1985

Miami (Ohio)

Southeast first round

69-68 W

10-7

Navy

Southeast quarterfinal

64-59 W

11-7

Villanova

Southeast semifinal

46-43 L

11-8

1986

Pepperdine

West first round

69-64 W

12-8

Nevada-Las Vegas

West quarterfinal

70-64 L

12-9

Tom McMillen led the 1971-72 Terps in scoring during every postseason game that year. The Terps' leading scorer during the season (20.8), McMillen scored 51 points in three ACC Tournament games 16 against Clemson, 17 against Virginia and 18 against North Carolina then led the Terps to the NIT Championship by scoring 22 against St. Joseph's, 25 against Syracuse and Jacksonville and 19 (tied for high honors with Bob Bodell) against Niagara.

*ACC Tournament Championship Game

67

Postseason History (Con't.)

NCAA Tournament Breakdowns

Coaches Breakdown

in ACC Tournament by Region

BudMillikan 2-1 East.. 4-3

Lefty Driesell 10-8 Southeast 2-1

Mideast 1-1

Midwest 4-3

West 11

National Invitational Tournament (NIT two appearances): Won 5, Lost 1; Tournament Champion in 1972.

NIT

Cumulative

Year

Opponent

Score

Record

1972

St. Joseph's

67-55 W

1-0

Syracuse

71-65 W

2-0

Jacksonville

91-77 W

3-0

Niagara*

100-69 W

4-0

1979

Rhode Island

67-65 W

(3 0T)

5-0

Ohio State

79-72 L

5-1

Below: Tom McMillen with the 1972 NIT Most Valuable Player Trophy. Above: The 1957-58 Terps, Maryland's first ACC Tournament champion.

Terrapin Award Winners

1969-70

Alvin Aubinoe Greatest Career Contribution Will Hetzel Best Free Throw Shooter Will Hetzel Best Defensive Player Sparky Still Best Rebounder Rod Horst Most Valuable Player Rod Horst

1970-71

Alvin Aubinoe Greatest Career Contribution Jay

Flowers Best Defensive Player Sparky Still Best Free Throw Shooter Jim O'Brien Best Rebounder Barry Yates Most Valuable Player Barry Yates

Rod Horst

Barry Vafes

1971-72

Avis Special Service Award Charlie Blank

Most Valuable Player Len Elmore & Tom McMillen

Seidenspinner Award for Outstanding Senior Charlie

Blank Most Team Spirit Howard White Most Improved Player Darrell Brown Academic Ail-American Tom McMillen Alvin Aubinoe Greatest Career Contribution Charlie

Blank Best Free Throw Shooter Tom McMillen All-ACC Len Elmore & Tom McMillen All-NIT Tom McMillen, Len Elmore and Bob Bodell Best Defensive Player Bob Bodell All-ACC Tournament Tom McMillen, Len Elmore and Jim

O'Brien Best Rebounder Len Elmore Most Valuable Player in NIT Tom McMillen

68

TERRAPIN AWARD WINNERS

1972-73

Best Team Spirit Bill Hahn

Leo G. Hershberger Rookie Ail-American John Lucas

Best Free Throw Shooter Jim O'Brien

Best Defensive Player Len Elmore

Best Rebounder Len Elmore

All-ACC Tournament Tom McMillen, John Lucas, Jim

O'Brien Most Improved Player John Lucas All-ACC Tom McMillen, Len Elmore Alvin Aubinoe Greatest Contribution Jim O'Brien Coaches Award for Greatest Team Contribution Tom

McMillen Most Valuable Player Len Elmore Special Award (for 88 consecutive varsity games) Bob

Bodell Avis Special Service to Team Award Bill Hahn

1973-74

All-American Len Elmore, Tom McMillen, John Lucas

Best Free Throw Shooter Maurice "Mo" Howard

Best Rebounder Len Elmore

Best Defensive Player Tom Roy

Coaches Award Improvement From One Season To Next

Owen Brown Alvin Aubinoe Greatest Career Contribution Tom

McMillen Outstanding Senior Award Len Elmore All-ACC Len Elmore, John Lucas (First Team) Tom

McMillen (Second Team) All-ACC Tournament Maurice "Mo" Howard, John Lucas,

Tom McMillen, (First Team); Owen Brown, Len Elmore

(Second Team) AP All-American Tom McMillen, John Lucas Fastbreakers Special Award Charles Driesell

Brad Davis

Billy Hahn

1974-75

Most Valuable Senior Owen Brown and Tom Roy Alvin Aubinoe Greatest Career Contribution Award

Hahn ACC Coach of the Year Coach Driesell All-American UPI First Team John Lucas Best Free Throw Shooter John Lucas Best Rebounder Tom Roy

Outstanding Defensive Player Maurice "Mo" Howard All-ACC Tournament Maurice "Mo" Howard All-ACC Maurice "Mo" Howard

Bill

1975-76

Best Free Throw Shooter James Tillman

Best Defensive Player Maurice "Mo" Howard

Chris Patton Outstanding Rebounder Lawrence Boston

Alvin Aubinoe Greatest Career Contribution John Lucas

First Team UPI and AP All-American John Lucas

Owen Brown Most Valuable Player Maurice "Mo" Howard

First Team All-ACC John Lucas

Total Performance for Overall Excellence and Consistency

Steve Sheppard Most Assists Brad Davis All-ACC Tournament Brad Davis

The highest scoring team in Terp history is the 1974-75 squad, which averaged 89.9 points per game en route to a 24-5 record. That team also set what was then an NCAA record for shooting efficiency at 54. 7 percent, a mark that stood as a school record until 1979-80.

69

Terrapin Award Winners

1976-77

All ACC Brad Davis (2nd Team)

Best Free Throw Shooter Mark Crawford

Outstanding Defensive Player Lawrence Boston

Chris Patton Best Rebounder Larry Gibson

Alvin Aubinoe Greatest Career Contribution John Pavlos

(Manager) Outstanding Academic Eric Shrader Most Assists Brad Davis

Owen Brown Most Outstanding Senior Steve Sheppard Overall Performance Larry Gibson

1977-78

All-ACC Tournament Lawrence Boston, Larry Gibson (2nd

Team) Best Free Throw Shooter Jo Jo Hunter Outstanding Academic Eric Shrader Overall Performance Larry Gibson Most Assists Greg Manning Alvin Aubinoe Greatest Career Contribution Lawrence

Boston Outstanding Defensive Player Lawrence Boston Chris Patton Best Rebounder Larry Gibson Owen Brown Most Outstanding Senior Lawrence

Boston

1978-79

All-ACC Larry Gibson (2nd Team)

All-ACC Tournament Larry Gibson (2nd Team)

ACC Rookie-of-the-Year Buck Williams

Honorable Mention All-American Larry Gibson, Albert King

ACC Leading Rebounder Buck Williams

Best Free Throw Shooter Greg Manning

Phi Beta Kappa Eric Shrader

Most Assists Dutch Morley

Alvin Aubinoe Greatest Career Contribution Larry

Gibson Outstanding Defensive Player Buck Williams Owen Brown Most Outstanding Senior Larry Gibson Scoring Record for One Game Ernest Graham East-West All-Star Game Larry Gibson Aloha Classic Larry Gibson

Maryland Invitational

Tournament Records

1971

Maryland

103

Western Kentucky

67

St. John's

94

Harvard

88

Third Place

Harvard

107

Western Kentucky

89

Championship

Maryland

90

St. John's

69

1972

Maryland

90

Georgia Tech

55

Syracuse

74

Bowling Green

73

Third Place

Bowling Green

102

Georgia Tech

87

Championship

Maryland

90

Syracuse

76

1973

Maryland

102

Holy Cross

75

Boston College

94

Michigan State

81

Third Place

Michigan State

97

Holy Cross

85

Championship

Maryland

58

Boston College

37

1974

Maryland

105

Georgia Tech

67

UCLA

78

St. Bonaventure

62

Third Place

Georgia Tech

70

St. Bonaventure

61

Championship

UCLA

81

Maryland

75

1975

Maryland

104

Seton Hall

69

Princeton

61

Alabama

59

Third Place

Alabama

100

Seton Hall

64

Championship

Maryland

66

Princeton

59

1976

Maryland

84

Xavier

74

Syracuse

116

Duquesne

86

Third Place

Duquesne

86

Xavier

80

Championship

Maryland

96

Syracuse

85

1977

Maryland

91

Western Kentucky

78

Georgia Tech

73

St. John's

67

Third Place

St. John's

80

Western Kentucky

63

Championship

Maryland

65

Georgia Tech

63

1978

Maryland

62

St. Joseph's

57

Southern Calif.

78

Holy Cross

60

Third Place

St. Joseph's

62

Holy Cross

58

Championship

Maryland

83

Southern Calif.

79

1979

Maryland

115

Miami of Ohio

76

Temple

85

Harvard

73

Third Place

Miami of Ohio

86

Harvard

79

Championship

Maryland

85

Temple

63

1980

Maryland

114

Marshall

89

St. Joseph's

87

Bowling Green

76

Third Place

Marshall

87

Bowling Green

85

Championship

Maryland

74

1983

Maryland

58

Randolph Macon

52

LaSalle

65

G. Washington

64

Third Place

G. Washington

54

Randolph Macon

47

Championship

Maryland

96

LaSalle

83

MOST VALUABLE PLAYER AWARD

1971 Len Elmore -

- Maryland

1972 Tom McMillen Maryland

1973 Len Elmore -

- Maryland

1974 David Meyers

-UCLA

1975 John Lucas -

- Maryland

1976 Steve Sheppard Maryland

1977 Lawrence Boston Maryland

1978 Albert King -

- Maryland

1979 - Albert King -

- Maryland

1980 - Albert King -

- Maryland

1983 Ben Coleman

Maryland

TERRAPIN AWARD WINNERS

1979-80

ACC Player of the Year Albert King

Associated Press First Team All-American Albert King

United Press International Second Team All-American

Albert King Honorable Mention All-American Buck Williams All-ACC Second Team Buck Williams and Greg

Manning Everett N. Case ACC Tournament M.V.P. Albert King ACC All-Tournament First Team Albert King and Greg

Manning ACC All-Tournament Second Team Buck Williams and

Ernest Graham Academic All-ACC First Team Greg Manning ACC Coach of the Year Charles G. Driesell District III Coach of the Year Charles G. Driesell 1979 Maryland Invitational Tournament M.V.P. Albert

King U.S. Basketball Writers Association All-Districts First

Team Albert King Best Free Throw Shooter Greg Manning Outstanding Academic David Henderson Outstanding Defensive Player Reggie Jackson Chris Patton Best Rebounder Buck Williams Competitive Spirit and Most Unselfish Contribution to

Team Dutch Morley Owen Brown Most Valuable Player Albert King Alvin Aubinoe Greatest Career Contribution John Bilney Most Improved Player Taylor Baldwin Most Assists Ernest Graham Kirin World Cup M.V.P. Ernest Graham

1981-82

Most Assists Dutch Morley

Outstanding Free Throw Shooting Dutch Morley

Most Improved Player Charles Pittman

Chris Patton Rebounding Herman Veal

Competitive Spirit and Most Unselfish Contribution Herman Veal

Outstanding Academic Jeff Adkins

Owen Brown MVP Adrian Branch

Outstanding Defensive Player Jeff Adkins

Alvin C. Aubinoe Greatest Career Contribution Dutch Morley

Basketball Weekly 1982 Freshman All-American (2nd Team) Adrian Branch

Basketball Weekly 1982 Freshman All-American (Honor- able Mention) Jeff Adkins

1980-81

The Sporting News First Team All-American Albert King United Press International All-American (Second Team)

Albert King Associated Press All-American (Honorable Mention)

Albert King, Buck Williams and Greg Manning Basketball Weekly Second Team All-American Buck

Williams Basketball Writers All-District Team Albert King and Buck

Williams All-ACC Second Team Albert King and Buck Williams All-ACC Tournament Team Albert King and Buck Williams

(First Team) Ernest Graham (Second Team) CoSIDA District III All-Academic Team Greg Manning Most Valuable Player, Carrier Classic Greg Manning All-Tournament Team, Carrier Classic Greg Manning,

Albert King, and Buck Williams Most Valuable Player, Maryland Invitational Albert King All-Tournament Team, Maryland Invitational Albert King,

Dutch Morley, Ernest Graham and Buck Williams Voted to Pizza Hut All-Star Game (eight man east squad)

Albert King Selected for Aloha Classic Albert King, Ernest Graham Most Assists Ernest Graham

Outstanding Free Throw Shooting Greg Manning Most Improved Player Steve Rivers Chris Patton Rebounding Buck Williams Outstanding Defensive Player Buck Williams Competitive Spirit and Most Unselfish Contribution

Charles Pittman Outstanding Academic Greg Manning Owen Brown MVP Albert King and Buck Williams Alvin Aubinoe Greatest Career Contribution Albert King

1982-83

Most Assists Jeff Adkins

Outstanding Free Throw Shooting Pete Holbert

Most Improved Player Len Bias

Chris Patton Rebounding Ben Coleman

Outstanding Defensive Player Herman Veal

Competitive Spirit and Most Unselfish Contribution

Herman Veal Outstanding Academic Chuck Driesell Owen Brown MVP Adrian Branch and Ben Coleman Outstanding Play in the NCAA Playoffs Adrian Branch Chevrolet Scholarship Adrian Branch Maryland vs

Houston, NCAA Playoffs and Ben Coleman Maryland vs

Notre Dame All-ACC Second Team Adrian Branch and Ben Coleman

Greg Manning pulled an ACC first during the 1979-80 season when he became the first planer in conference history to lead the league in free throw percentage (90.8) and field goal percentage (64.3) in the same year.

71

Terrapin Award Winners

1983-84

Most Assists Keith Gatlin

Outstanding Free Throw Shooting Pete Holbert

Most Improved Player Terry Long

Chris Patton Rebounding Ben Coleman

Outstanding Defensive Player Herman Veal

Competitive Spirit and Most Unselfish Contribution

Herman Veal Outstanding Academic Jeff Adkins Owen Brown Most Valuable Player Ben Coleman Outstanding Play in the NCAA Playoffs Len Bias Chevrolet Scholarship $1,000 Award for the "Most Valuable

Player" in games:

Jeff Adkins vs Boston College 12-24-83

Herman Veal vs Notre Dame 1-28-84

Keith Gatlin vs North Carolina 2-19-84

Adrian Branch vs Virginia 3-4-84

1984-85

Most Assists Keith Gatlin

Outstanding Free Throw Shooting Keith Gatlin

Chris Patton Rebounding Len Bias

Chairman of the Boards Player with most Rebounds

Len Bias Outstanding Academic Chuck Driesell Owen Brown Most Valuable Player Len Bias ACC "Player of the Year" Len Bias District 3B "Player of Year" Len Bias Associated Press Ail-American - 2nd Team Len Bias Basketball Weekly All-American - 2nd Team Len Bias National Association of Basketball Coaches All-American

3rd Team Len Bias Outstanding Play in NCAA Games Len Bias First Team all ACC Len Bias

Most Improved Players Jeff Baxter and Tom Jones Most Charges Len Bias Highest Offensive Efficiency Rating Len Bias

1985-86

Most Assists Keith Gatlin

Outstanding Free Throw Shooting Len Bias

Chris Patton Rebounding Derrick Lewis (offensive), Len Bias

(defensive)

Outstanding Defensive Player Derrick Lewis

Competitive Spirit and Unselfish Contribution Speedy

Jones

Owen Brown Most Valuable Player Len Bias

Outstanding Academics Derrick Lewis

NABC First-Team All-America Len Bias

Associated Press First-Team All-America Len Bias

NBWA First-Team All-America Len Bias

UPI First-Team All-America Len Bias

Naismith First-Team All-America Len Bias

ACC "Player of the Year" Len Bias

District III-B Player of the Year Len Bias

Most Improved Jeff Baxter

Year-by-Year Leaders Since 1950

Scoring

Season

Player

Points

1950-51

Lee Brawley

404

1551-52

Lee Brawley

265

1952-53

Gene Shue

508

1953-54

Gene Shue

654

1954-55

Bob Kessler

487

1955-56

Bob Kessler

490

1956-57

Bob O'Brien

328

1957-58

Charles McNeil

401

1958-59

Charles McNeil

311

1959-60

Al Bunge

399

1960-61

Bob McDonald

347

1961-62

Bob McDonald

301

1962-63

Jerry Greenspan

356

1963-64

George Suder

327

1964-65

Jay McMillen

512

1965-66

Gary Ward

430

1966-67

Jay McMillen

392

1967-68

Pete Johnson

360

1968-69

Will Hetzel

605

1969-70

Rod Horst

428

1970-71

Howard White

389

1971-72

Tom McMillen

667

1972-73

Tom McMillen

616

1973-74

John Lucas

564

1974-75

John Lucas

469

1975-76

John Lucas

557

1976-77

Lawrence Boston

338

1977-78

Lawrence Boston

423

1978-79

Ernest Graham

467

1979-80

Albert King

674

1980-81

Albert King

559

1981-82

Adrian Branch

442

1982-83

Adrian Branch

541

1983-84

Ben Coleman

491

1984-85

Len Bias

701

1985-86

Len Bias

Rebounding

743

1950-51

No Records Kept

1951-52

No Records Kept

1952-53

No Records Kept

1953-54

Bob Kessler

250

1954-55

Bob Kessler

263

1955-56

Bob Kessler

336

1956-57

Jim Halleck

195

1957-58

Al Bunge

265

1958-59

Al Bunge

241

1959-60

Al Bunge

289

1960-61

Bob McDonald

279

1961-62

Jerry Greenspan

235

1962-63

Jerry Greenspan

184

1963-64

Rick Wise

185

1964-65

Gary Ward

271

1965-66

Gary Ward

241

1966-67

Jay McMillen

195

1967-68

Rich Dreschler

202

1968-69

Will Hetzel

318

1969-70

Rod Horst

258

1970-71

Barry Yates

224

1971-72

Len Elmore

351

1972-73

Len Elmore

290

1973-74

Len Elmore

412

1974-75

Tom Roy

321

1975-76

Lawrence Boston

249

1976-77

Larry Gibson

228

1977-78

Larry Gibson

253

1978-79

Buck Williams

323

1979-80

Buck Williams

242

1980-81

Buck Williams

363

1981-82

Herman Veal

213

1982-83

Ben Coleman

242

1983-84

Ben Coleman

269

1984-85

Len Bias

251

1985-86

Len Bias

224

72

MARYLAND BASKETBALL RECORDS

Single Game Team

MOST POINTS: 130 ag East Carolina, Dec. 1977

FEWEST POINTS: 15 ag Seton Hall, Dec. 1941 (15-59)

MOST POINTS BY OPPONENTS: 110 by N.C. State, Dec. 1978 (110-124)

FEWEST POINTS BY OPPONENT: 12 by Navy, 1926 (12-21)

MOST POINTS BY BOTH TEAMS: 234 by Maryland and N.C. State, Dec. 20,

1978 (Md. 124 - N.C. State 110) FEWEST POINTS BY BOTH TEAMS: 33 by Maryland and Navy, 1926 (Md.

21 - Navy 12) MOST FIELD GOALS: 55 ag Brown, Nov 1972, Canisius, Dec. 1978 FEWEST FIELD GOALS: 6 ag Seton Hall, Dec. 1941 FEWEST FIELD GOALS BY OPPONENTS: 6 by Navy, 1926 MOST FREE THROWS: 40 ag North Carolina in ACC Tournament final, 1958(52

attempts) FEWEST FREE THROWS: 0 ag Wake Forest, Feb. 1973, in Winston-Salem MOST- FREE THROWS BY OPPONENT: 40 by Clemson, Jan. 1968 (53

attempts) MOST FREE THROW ATTEMPTS: 57 ag North Carolina, Jan. 1953, (made 36) FEWEST FREE THROW ATTEMPTS: lag North Carolina, Feb. 1979 in Chapel

Hill, N.C, 1 ag Wake Forest, Feb. 1973 (a technical) in Winston-Salem, N.C. MOST FREE THROW ATTEMPTS BY OPPONENT: 51 by North Carolina,

Jan. 1964 MOST FIELD GOAL ATTEMPTS: 99 ag Canisius, Dec. 1978 (55 99) FEWEST FIELD GOAL ATTEMPTS: 18 ag South Carolina , Jan. 1971 (made 15) MOST REBOUNDS: 74 ag Penn State, Dec. 1964 MOST FOULS: 44 ag William & Mary, Feb. 1952 MOST FOULS BY OPPONENT: 37 by North Carolina, Jan. 1953 FEWEST FOULS: 7 ag Buffalo, Jan. 1972 BEST FREE THROW PERCENTAGE: (at least 10 attempts); .966 ag Duke, Feb.

1976 (28 of 29), Note, 1.000 ag Duke, Feb. 1979 (6 of 6) BEST FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE: .833 ag South Carolina, Jan. 1971 (15-18) LARGEST MARGIN OF VICTORY: 64 ag DePauw, Dec. 1974 (113-49) LARGEST DEFEAT MARGIN: 63 points by Army, 1944 (85-22) MOST POINTS IN ONE HALF: 77 ag N.C. State in second half Dec. 1978 MOST CONSECUTIVE FREE THROWS IN GAME: 28 ag Duke, Feb. 7, 1976

Single Game Individual

MOST POINTS: 44 by Ernest Graham ag N.C. State, Dec. 1978 (18 FG-8 FT) MOST POINTS IN A ROAD GAME: 41 by Len Bias vs. Duke, Jan. 1986 (14

FG-13 FT) MOST FIELD GOALS: 18 by Ernest Graham ag N.C. State, Dec. 1978 (26 alt.) MOST FREE THROWS: 17 by Tom McMillen ag Canisius, Dec. 1971 (att. 20) MOST REBOUNDS: 26 by Len Elmore ag Wake Forest, Feb 1974 MOST FREE THROW ATTEMPTS: 20 by Tom McMillen ag Canisius, Dec. 1971

(made 17) MOST FIELD GOAL ATTEMPTS: 34 by Gene Shueag Washington & Lee, Feb.

1953 (made 16) MOST CONSECUTIVE FREE THROWS: 15 by Albert King ag Boston, Feb.

1979 MOST CONSECUTIVE FIELD GOALS: 10 by Barry Yates ag Miami

(Fla.), Dec. 1970; 10 by Keith Gatlin ag Clemson, Feb. 17, 1985 BEST FREE THROW PCT.: 1.000 (ONLY 10 or more listed)

Jerry Greenspan ag Minnesota 1961 14-14

Len Bias vs. North Carolina, Feb. 1986 13-13

Lee Brawley ag North Carolina 1951 13-13

Bill Stasiulatis ag Wake Forest 1961 12-12

Lee Brawley ag North Carolina 1951 12-12

Bob Kessler ag George Washington 1956 12-12

Jerry Bechtle ag North Carolina 1960 10-10

Tom Milroy ag Penn State 1968 1010

BEST FIELD GOAL PCT.: 1.000 (ONLY more than 5 listed):

Buck Williams ag Canisius, Dec, 1978 8-8

Gary Williams ag South Carolina, Dec. 1966 8-8

Greg Manning ag Fair. Dickinson, Dec. 1980 8-8

Ben Coleman ag Duquesne, Dec. 1983 8-8

Ben Coleman ag Wake Forest, Feb. 1984 8-8

Derrick Lewis vs. N.C. State, Feb. 1986 7-7

Charles Pittman ag Lafayette, Nov. 1981 7-7

Brad Davis ag Wake Forest, Jan. 1977 7-7

Jack Clark ag South Carolina, Jan. 1964 6-6

Speedy Jones vs. Randolph Macon, Jan. 1986 6-6

Buck Williams ag Marshall, Dec. 1980 6-6

MOST FREE THROW ATTEMPTS BY OPPONENT: 21 by Bernie Janiciki of Wake Forest, 1953 (15); 21 by Pete Brennan of North Carolina, 1958 (15)

Season Records Team

MOST POINTS: 2613 in 1972 73

HIGHEST SCORING AVERAGE: 89.9 in 1974-75

HIGHEST OPPONENT SCORING AVERAGE: 84.1 in 1968-69 (2188 points in

26 games) MOST POINTS BY OPPONENTS: 2,404 in 1984-85 (37 games) MOST FIELD GOALS: 1089 in 1972-73 MOST FIELD GOAL ATTEMPTS: 2094 in 1972-73 MOST FREE THROWS MADE: 590 in 1957-58 (29 games 858 attempts) MOST FREE THROWS ATTEMPTED: 858 in 1957 58 (Made 590 in 29 games) BEST FELD GOAL PERCENTAGE: .551 in 1979-80 LOWEST FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE: .346 in 1951-52 BEST FREE THROW PERCENTAGE: .758 (477 of 629) 1975-76 LOWEST FREE THROW PERCENTAGE: .617 in 1952 53 HIGHEST AVERAGE MARGIN OVER OPPONENTS: 16.7 in 1973-74 (28

games 85.7 to 69.0) BEST REBOUND PERCENTAGE: .585 in 1954 55 BEST REBOUND AVERAGE: 49.1 in 1954-55 MOST REBOUNDS: 1388 in 1971-72 MOST PERSONAL FOULS: 639 in 37 games, 1984-85 FEWEST PERSONAL FOULS: 378 in 1966-67 LARGEST ATTENDANCE: 398,036 in 31 games, 1980-81 LARGEST HOME ATTENDANCE: 240,254 (19 games) 1976-77 LARGEST AVERAGE HOME ATTENDANCE: 13,427 for 14 games in 1974-75 BEST START IN A SEASON: 11 consecutive wins (1975-76)

Season Records individual

MOST POINTS: 743 by Len Bias, 1985 86 (32 games)

MOST FIELD GOALS: 275 by Albert King, 1979-80 (31 games)

MOST FREE THROWS: 209 by Leb Bias, 1985-86 (32 games)

MOST REBOUNDS: 412 by Len Elmore, 1973-74 (28 games)

BEST FELD GOAL PCT.: .647 by Buck Williams (183-283), 1980-81

BEST FREE THROW PCT.: .908 by Greg Manning, 1979-80(31 games, 79 of 87)

BEST SCORING AVERAGE: 23.3 by Will Hetzel, 1968-69 (26 games 605 points);

23.2 by Len Bias, 1985-86 (32 games, 743 points) BEST REBOUNDING AVERAGE: 14.7 by Len Elmore, 1973-74 (28 games) MOST CONSECUTIVE FREE THROWS MADE: 32 by Len Bias, 1985-86 MOST CONSECUTIVE FIELD GOALS MADE: 15 by Greg Manning (over 2

games) Maryland and ACC record, 1980-81

Career Records

MOST POINTS SCORED: 2149 by Len Bias (1982-86)

BEST SCORING AVERAGE: 20.5 by Tom McMillen in 1971-74 (88 games 1,807

points) MOST FIELD GOALS: 862 by Albert King (1977-81)

MOST FREE THROWS: 470 by Len Bias. 1982-86 (131 games, 591 attempts) BEST FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE: .615 by Buck Williams (446-725) (3

seasons, 1978-1981); .583 by Greg Manning (623-1028) (4 seasons, 1977-81) BEST FREE THROW PERCENTAGE: 858byGregManning(315-367)(1977-81) MOST REBOUNDS: 1,053 by Len Elmore, 1971-74 (86 games) MOST CONSECUTIVE FREE THROWS MADE: 32 by Bob O'Brien in 1955-56

(last 5 in opening game of 1956 season); 32 by Len Bias, 1985-86 MOST VARSITY GAMES PLAYED IN: 131 by Len Bias, (1982-86) MOST CONSECUTIVE GAMES PLAYED IN (VARSITY): 109 by Ernest

Graham (1977-81) MOST CONSECUTIVE FIELD GOALS: 15 by Greg Manning (over 2 games)

Maryland and ACC Record CAREER GAMES STARTED: 113 by Len Bias, (1982-86)

All-Time Team Records

MOST CONSECUTIVE WINS AGAINST NON-ACC OPPONENTS: 31

(1970-73) MOST CONSECUTIVE WINS: 14 over 1971-72 and 1972-73 seasons MOST CONSECUTIVE 20 VICTORY SEASONS: 5 (1971-72 to 1975-76)

All-time leading rebounder Len Elmore is the only Terp to grab more than 1,000 rebounds in his career. With 1,053 from 1972-74, Elmore ranks 11th on the all-time ACC list and sixth among conference players who had three years of eligibility.

73

ALL-TIME SCORES

"H. BURTON SHIPLEY 24 Seasons: 1923-24 to 1946-47 Record: 243 199 Conference: 124-91

0-2 1904-05

Capt Samuel P. Thomas Washington Y.M.C.A Carroll Institute

No Scores Available.

No Teams for 1905-06 through 1909-10

3-9 1910-11

Capt

Burl Shipley

Maryland

7

New York University

26

H

30

Gallaudet

56

A

24

Staunton Militaly Academy

58

A

17

Washington & Lee

46

A

17

Virginia Military Institute

14

A

24

Washington & Lee

29

H

14

Delaware

■a

A

27

Gallaudet

54

H

25

Georgetown

31

A

22

Mt St Joseph

2U

H

35

Catholic

30

H

19

Penn Military Academy

50

A

No Team lor 1911 through 1912 13

0-16 1913-14

Capt —Burt Shipley

Mt. St. Joseph

H

Gallaudet

A

Catholic

A

Mt. St. Joseph

A

Gallaudet

A

St John's College

A

Loyola College

A

Georgetown

A

Catholic

H

Washington & Lee

A

Virginia Military Institute

A

St. John's College

A

George Washington

H

Gallaudet

H

Baltimore City

H

Penn State College

A

Delaware College

A

No Scores Available

No Teams 1914-15 through 1916-17 AW Games in 1918-19 were Away

Won 1 Lost 5 1918-19

Maryland

27 Gallaudet

26

7 Catholic University

25

11 George Washington

25

9 Gallaudet

33

12 Catholic University

14

20 George Washington

53

No Teams lor 1919-20 through 1922-23.

5-7 1-2 1923-24

Maryland

41

George Washington

22

42

Gallaudet

28

13

Catholic

30

20

North Carolina

26

13

Virginia

26

24

Richmond

22

14

Catholic

20

19

George Washington

20

22

Washington & Lee

21

12

VMI

21

34

*VMI

19

25

•Georgia

*S.G Tournament

29

12-5 3-1 1924-25

Mary

and

24

Virginia

18

H

24

Columbia

23

A

21

Stevens Institute

17

A

16

Navy

23

A

30

Latayette

15

H

IS

Catholic

14

A

21

Stevens Institute

17

H

16

North Carolina

21

H

25

Gallaudet

14

H

16

Washington College

27

II

24

Princeton

38

A

22

CCNY

16

H

.38

South Carolina

22

H

36

Virginia

25

A

27

Catholic

17

H

27

'Alabama

21

16

•N.C. State *S.C. Tournament

30

14-3 7-1 1925-26

Maryland

40

Washington & Lee

27

H

21

Navy

12

A

30

Richmond

14

H

30

VMI

21

A

33

Washington & Lee

20

A

19

VPI

17

A

40

Gallaudet

13

H

30

Washington College

26

H

24

Stevens Institute

27

H

30

VPI

14

H

28

Virginia

34

A

23

North Carolina

22

H

25

West Virginia

15

H

41

Duke

20

H

30

Virginia

21

H

32

Princeton

26

H

21

A

34

A

15

A

28

H

38

A

21

A

25

H

19 Mississippi Aggies 22

10-10 6-4 1926-27

Maryland

16 American 21 A

44 Washington & Lee 32 H

25 Michigan 39 A

17 Virginia 22 A

30 Navy 32 A

18 Washington College 22 H 34 Georgia 33 H 39 Gallaudet 26 H

27 Stevens Institute 18 H

28 North Carolina 23 H 23 North Carolina 32 H

26 Pennsylvania 32 Washington & Lee 32 VMI

29 Virginia 23 N.C. Slate 16 Washington College 32 Western Maryland 23 North Carolina 19 A

22 'Georgia 27 *S.C. Tournament

14-4 8-1 1927-28

Maryland

38 Washington & Lee 24 H

29 VPI 20 A

31 Washington & Lee 28 A

23 VMI 9 A

45 Gallaudet 20 H 37 Kentucky 7 H

20 Johns Hopkins 22 A

25 St Johns College 22 H

26 Virginia 20 H 31 Stevens Institute 24 H 26 Navy 35 A 26 Pennsylvania 30 A 36 N.C State 24 H 12 Virginia 34 A

22 Washington College 20 H

23 Johns Hopkins 19 H

30 VPI 10 H 30 Western Maryland 29 H

7-9 2-5 1928-29

Maryland

30

William & Mary

20

H

18

Pennsylvania

30

A

20

Randolph Macon

33

H

30

Virginia

22

A

20

Johns Hopkins

30

H

20

St Johns

18

H

22

Virginia

25

H

22

Washington & Lee

47

H

29

VPI

39

A

18

Washington & Lee

42

A

30

VMI

27

A

22

North Carolina

28

H

30

Navy

27

A

32

Western Maryland

17

H

19

Johns Hopkins

18

A

35

•Mississippi

*S C Tournament

37

16-6 9-5 1929-30

Maryland

27

William & Mary

23

H

27

Duke

28

H

37

Catholic

30

H

54

Virginia

20

H

41

Johns Hopkins

24

H

43

Navy

39

A

41

VPI

29

H

26

N.C Slate

28

H

25

Washington & Lee

29

H

38

Western Maryland

17

H

36

North Carolina

24

H

34

VPI

23

A

44

VMI

25

A

21

Washington & Lee

36

A

51

Virginia

29

H

21

N.C State

19

A

22

North Carolina

19

A

24

Duke

39

A

39

Johns Hopkins

24

A

39

VMI

21

H

41

St Johns

25

H

21

•Kentucky

*S C Tournament

26

18-4 8-1 1930-31

Maryland

38

Gallaudet

27

H

38

VMI

18

A

36

Washington & Lee

21

A

32

Duke

24

H

30

Loyola

33

H

33

Johns Hopkins

20

A

44

VMI

20

H

33

VPI

16

H

31

Virginia

34

A

28

Washington & Lee

17

H

24

Catholic

21

A

33

North Carolina

31

H

32

Washington College

33

H

34

Virginia

21

H

45

Western Maryland

35

H

32

St- Johns

27

H

33

Navy

36

A

31

Johns Hopkins

22

H

37

*LSU

33

19

•North Carolina

17

26

•Georgia

25

29

•Kentucky *S.C Tournament (Champions)

27

16-4 8-2 1931-32

Maryland

30

Wisconsin

32

A

27

Loyola

28

H

42

Washington & Lee

38

A

43

VMI

28

A

26

Navy

15

H

36

Virginia

31

A

33

Johns Hopkins

26

A

38

VMI

20

H

51

VPI

16

H

39

Catholic

34

H

26

North Carolina

25

H

36

Washington College

16

H

35

Western Maryland

15

H

46

Virginia

18

H

49

Washington & Lee

19

H

24

St Johns

20

H

26

North Carolina

32

A

20

Duke

18

A

38

Johns Hopkins

24

H

24

•Florida

*S.C. Tournament

39

11-9 7-3 1932-33

Maryland

13

Wisconsin

22

H

40

VPI

20

A

30

Duke

28

H

29

VMI

30

A

40

Washington & Lee

43

A

27

Johns Hopkins

37

A

37

VPI

21

H

27

Catholic

29

A

21

Navy

59

A

19

Virginia

26

A

42

North Carolina

29

H

36

Georgia

40

H

35

Washington College

27

H

37

Virginia

28

H

46

Washington & Lee

28

H

45

VMI

29

H

34

St Johns

22

H

37

Western Maryland

32

H

35

Johns Hopkins

31

H

28

•South Carolina *S.C. Tournament

65

11-8 6-1 1933-34

Maryland

29

Michigan

25

H

17

Indiana

30

H

24

West Virginia

26

A

37

Duke

33

H

29

VPI

24

A

34

VPI

32

H

32

Johns Hopkins

37

A

43

Virginia

20

A

24

North Carolina

28

H

33

Catholic

25

H

27

Navy

46

A

28

Virginia

25

H

33

Richmond

44

H

49

Western Maryland

33

H

36

VMI

27

H

32

St Johns

37

H

44

Washington College

33

H

32

Johns Hopkins

19

H

37 "Washington & Lee 45 *S.C. Tournament

8-10 4-5 1934-35

Maryland

25 Indiana 30 H 50 Ohio Stale 41 H 29 West Virginia 39 H

35 South Carolina 21 H 39 VMI 24 H

39 Duke 48 H

43 Washington College 27 H

31 North Carolina 39 H

36 Navy 43 A

44 Virginia 24 H

26 Richmond 56 H 29 Catholic 45 A 29 Washington & Lee 33 H 33 Virginia 32 A 41 Johns Hopkins 35 A 17 St. Johns

52 Johns Hopkins 24 Georgetown

14-6 3-3 1935-36

Maryland

44 VMI

27 Washington & Lee

53 VMI 32 A

32 Navy 20 A

28 Richmond 24 H

55 Baltimore 33 H

46 Washington College 34 H 32 North Carolina 44 H 41 William & Mary 39 H

38 Duke 34 H

40 Virginia 34 H 26 West Virginia 51 A

54 Washington & Lee 55 H 40 St Johns 28 H

29 Catholic 40 H

56 Washington College 30 A

45 Johns Hopkins 40 H

47 Georgetown 39 A

24 H

25 H

29 H

30 A

47 'Duke

32 *Washmgton & Lee *S.C. Tournament

9-11 4-8 1936-37

Maryland

40 Richmond 54 Johns Hopkins 27 Washington & Lee

48 VMI

48 Western Maryland

31 Duke

41 Washington College 37 Virginia

33 N.C. State 24 North Carolina 30 Duke 37 Navy 35 North Carolina 41 William & Mary 45 VMI

35 Washington & Lee

27 Georgetown

37 St. Johns

41 N.C State

35 38

35

•N.C. State

*S C Tournament

15-9 7-4 1937-38

26

Richmond

31

H

26

Michigan

33

H

50

Baltimore

32

A

43

Randolph Macon

27

H

29

Washington & Lee

31

A

42

VMI

27

A

39

Georgetown

57

A

40

Duke

35

H

24

North Carolina

43

A

34

Duke

44

A

42

VPI

35

H

34

Navy

37

A

27

NYU

42

H

36

Washington & Lee

32

H

45

William & Mary

38

H

41

VMI

33

H

49

Catholic

33

H

43

Washington College

42

A

39

Virginia

23

A

57

Dickinson

27

H

56

Johns Hopkins

30

H

38

St Johns

29

H

45

•Citadel

43

32

•Duke

*S.C. Tournament

35

74

15-9 8-3 1938-39

Maryland

34

Richmond

41

A

45

Clemson

35

H

44

Davidson

27

H

24

Pennsylvania

36

A

25

Army

45

A

37

Navy

47

A

37

Duke

34

H

34

North Carolina

32

H

34

Hampden Sydney

25

H

31

Virginia

21

H

60

Duke

44

A

66

North Carolina

41

A

40

N.C. State

46

A

25

Georgetown

39

H

39

Washington & Lee

37

H

49

William & Mary

57

H

48

St Johns

20

A

53

VMI

35

H

40

Catholic

38

A

24

George Washington

37

A

47

Washington College

37

H

47

•Richmond

32

53

*N.C. State

29

27

*Clemson

*S.C. Tournament

39

14-9 7-4 1939-40

Maryland

48

Western Maryland

32

H

47

Randolph Macon

16

H

53

Clemson

26

H

34

Pennsylvania

41

A

51

Rutgers

39

A

53

Rhode Island State

59

A

32

Duke

30

H

35

Richmond

19

H

28

Georgetown

27

A

49

VPI

41

H

25

Washington & Lee

44

H

43

N.C State

36

A

30

Clemson

48

A

30

South Carolina

33

A

37

Duke

48

A

49

Johns Hopkins

36

H

60

VMI

33

A

19

Washington & Lee

39

A

46

Catholic

31

H

27

VMI

25

H

26

George Washington

44

H

43

•Washington & Lee

30

32

•Duke

"S.C. Tournament

44

1-21 0-13 1940-41

Maryland

36

Richmond

48

H

24

Johns Hopkins

38

A

34

Clemson

48

H

32

Pennsylvania

43

A

26

Duke

40

H

41

Washington & Lee

59

A

30

VMI

64

A

34

Georgetown

51

A

36

North Carolina

55

H

17

Richmond

38

A

17

Duke

43

A

29

North Carolina

44

A

27

Navy

52

A

18

Virginia

47

A

15

Washington & Lee

42

H

28

George Washington

61

A

40

William & Mary

58

H

43

Connecticut

52

H

45

Rutgers

50

H

27

VMI

41

H

39

VPI

48

H

26

Washington College

18

H

7-15 3-8 1941-42

Maryland

41

Richmond

23

A

34

William & Mary

39

A

36

West Virginia

63

A

15

Seton Hall

59

A

40

CCNY

57

A

48

St. Johns (NY)

64

A

35

Virginia

34

A

33

Duke

37

A

28

Washington College

25

H

51

Georgetown

42

A

29

George Washington

47

H

36

Virginia

26

H

41

VMI

46

A

44

Washington & Lee

52

A

28

Washington & Lee

30

H

47

Navy

61

A

42

William & Mary

32

H

27

West Virginia

41

H

32

Army

44

A

30

North Carolina

34

H

46

Duke

64

H

39

VMI

36

H

8-8

5-5 1942-43

Maryl 32

md

Richmond

28

H

47

North Carolina

40

H

53

Virginia

49

H

49

Pennsylvania

51

A

40

Washington & Lee

50

A

34

VMI

35

A

43

George Washington

48

A

63

Navy

54

A

40

Army

44

A

43

Duke

46

H

55

Washington & Lee

35

H

56

Virginia

42

A

40

North Carolina

31

A

36

Georgetown

46

H

51

William & Mary

36

H

35

VMI

36

H

4-13 2-1 1943-44

Maryland

33

Quantico Marines

59

H

39

Marshall

46

H

20

Bainbridge Navy

52

H

20

Virginia

52

A

43

VMI

36

H

43

Hampden Sydney

51

H

25

Bainbridge Navy

78

A

29

Fort Belvoir

60

H

33

Catholic

31

H

26

Virginia

49

H

33

Catholic

53

A

34

Richmond

65

A

48

Woodrow Gen Hosp

26

H

25

Woodrow Gen. Hosp

35

A

31

VMI

29

A

35

Navy

69

A

22

Army

85

A

23

•N C Stale

"S C Tournament

42

2-14 2-5 1944-45

Maryland

26

Gallaudet

27

H

28

North Carolina

53

A

24

Duke

51

A

32

N C Stale

46

A

33

Navy

70

A

46

VMI

28

H

34

Marine Corps Inst

50

H

42

NC State

57

H

42

Hampden Sydney

43

H

26

Virginia

57

A

27

VMI

35

A

33

Virginia

61

H

53

William & Mary

46

A

41

Merchant Marine

54

A

34

Army

54

A

49

•Duke

*S.C Tournament

76

"Flucie" STEWART 3 Seasons: 1947-48 to 1949-50 Record: 27 48 Conference: 22-27

9-12 5-5 1945-46

Maryland

61

Marine Corps Inst

43

Marshall

47

Quantico Marines

25

Duke

47

N.C State

28

North Carolina

35

Navy

37

N.C State

45

Virginia

43

Duke

35

Hampden Sydney

48 George Washington 31 North Carolina 37 Virginia 43 Merchant Marine

Richmond

William & Mary

West Virginia

Army

Merchant Marine

37 36 33 25 31

46

H

50

H

50

H

59

A

39

A

64

A

44

A

33

H

48

A

38

H

32

H

35

H

33

H

36

H

39

H

31

H

42

A

35

H

52

A

48

A

27 *N.C. Slate

*S C Tournament

14-10 9-4 1946-47

Maryland 43 West Virginia

Western Maryland

Johns Hopkins

Quantico Marines

North Carolina

Richmond

George Washington

Washington & Lee

VPI

VMI

North Carolina

Navy

Washington & Lee

Georgetown

George Washington

49 41 62 42 39 44 65 57 61 61 27 59 55 48

81 A

39 H

36 H

48 A

58 A

41 H

43 H

60 49 50

49

Richmond

68

A

55

VPI

42

H

38

Duke

40

H

47

Kings Point

73

A

57

Army

54

A

52

Citadel

40

H

53

VMI

45

H

54

Pennsylvania

80

A

43

•NC State *S.C Tournament

55

11-14 9-7 1947-48

Maryland

63

Western Maryland

58

A

52

Loyola

63

H

59

Davidson

58

H

64

Washington & Lee

70

A

53

VMI

46

A

64

Johns Hopkins

53

A

46

North Carolina

70

A

42

Duke

53

A

40

Georgetown

52

A

49

Clemson

42

H

44

Virginia

64

A

47

Navy

51

A

68

South Carolina

54

H

63

VMI

48

H

44

Army

48

A

64

Washington & Lee

38

H

49

George Washington

65

A

47

North Carolina

51

H

56

Virginia

68

H

60

Richmond

53

H

54

South Carolina

53

A

63

Clemson

61

A

62

Richmond

64

A

35

George Washington

59

H

51

•Davidson

*S C Tournament

58

9-18 8-7 1948-49

Maryland

49

Temple

67

A

60

VPI

51

H

75

Loyola (Baltimore)

77

A

45

Richmond

54

H

47

Virginia

53

H

74

Clemson

50

H

47

North Carolina

55

A

49

Davidson

52

A

43

Virginia

79

A

51

Georgetown

53

A

67

Pennsylvania

81

A

46

Navy

52

A

54

George Washington

66

H

43

Miami (Ohio)

42

A

48

Miami (Ohio)

58

A

33

Cincinnati

70

A

53

VMI

45

A

66

Washington & Lee

60

A

79

South Carolina

49

H

42

North Carolina

66

H

52

Georgetown

56

H

57

South Carolina

56

A

49

Clemson

68

A

66

Richmond

51

A

42

George Washington

61

A

70

VMI

55

H

61

'North Carolina 'S.C Tournament

79

7-18 5-13 1949-50

50 H 49 H

Maryland

57

VPI

63

A

40

Tennessee

61

A

56

Virginia

66

A

65

Washington & Lee

46

H

52

Pennsylvania

54

A

55

Clemson

60

H

62

Navy

75

A

71

Ohio Wesleyan

75

H

53

North Carolina

55

A

46

Duke

58

A

71

Georgetown

65

A

52

William & Mary

56

H

49

Richmond

59

A

51

George Washington

72

H

56

William & Mary

64

A

65

VMI

53

H

56

North Carolina

69

H

61

VMI

62

A

67

Duke

57

H

56

South Carolina

61

H

70

Virginia

52

H

64

Davidson

61

H

67

Richmond

48

H

44

South Carolina

59

A

r>8

Clemson

70

A

16-11 11-8 1950-51

Maryland

59

Virginia

57

H

65

Pennsylvania

74

A

48

William & Mary

41

H

46

Virginia

43

A

52

Washington & Lee

43

H

51

Rutgers

45

H

67

North Carolina

59

A

48

Richmond

42

A

47

Navy

51

A

58

Georgetown

47

H

57

VPI

66

H

56

North Carolina

55

H

57

Davidson

55

A

43

South Carolina

70

A

44

Clemson

50

A

65

Washington & Lee

83

A

46

VMI

41

A

47

South Carolina

37

H

64

West Virgina

70

H

40

Duke

49

H

50

William & Mary

55

A

54

Clemson

50

H

42

Richmond

33

H

47

George Washington

67

A

65

VMI

46

H

50

'Clemson

48

45

■NC State *S.C. Tournament

54

13-9 9-5 1951-52

Maryland

59

Virginia

42

A

71

Washington & Lee

51

H

52

Pennsylvania

53

A

54

William & Mary

53

H

36

West Virginia

39

A

57

VMI

39

A

51

Washington & Lee

43

A

47

North Carolina

51

A

48

Navy

45

A

63

Virginia

53

H

55

Georgetown

40

H

55

Rutgers

61

A

71

North Carolina

51

H

64

VMI

46

H

55

Richmond

45

H

66

William & Mary

71

A

51

Duke

56

A

61

Georgetown

71

A

54

Richmond

50

A

56

George Washington

57

H

71

Davidson

48

H

48

•Duke

*S.C. Tournament

51

15-8 12-3 1952-53

Mary 71

and Virginia

61

H

64

William & Mary

61

H

53

Pennsylvania

70

A

52

West Virginia

45

H

54

VMI

37

A

58

Washington & Lee

40

A

49

North Carolina

59

A

59

Virginia

56

A

63

Richmond

60

A

45

Georgetown

54

H

BUD MILUKAN 17 Seasons: 1950-51 to 1966-67 Record: 243-182 Conference: 130-109

65

VPI

46

H

68

North Carolina

66

H

62

George Washington

63

A

70

VPI

56

A

46

Richmond

49

H

67

VMI

41

H

87

Washington & Lee

56

H

79

William & Mary

57

A

48

Georgetown

49

A

47

Navy

51

A

66

George Washington

53

H

74

•Duke

65

59

•Wake Forest •S C Tournament

61

75

23-7 7-2 1953-54

Maryland

53

South Carolina

49

A

81

Clemson

41

A

54

Wake Forest

71

A

69

William & Mary

54

A

71

West Virginia

87

A

60

VP1

52

H

79

South Carolina

48

H

65

Arizona State

50

A

66

Evansville

58

A

54

Ky Wesleyan

37

A

72

Richmond

64

A

70

Virginia

64

H

75

Clemson

54

H

56

Georgetown

58

A

71

Richmond

73

H

68

George Washington

61

H

70

Virginia

56

A

61

Tampa

51

A

63

Miami (Fla.)

57

A

51

Washington & Lee

25

A

54

VPI

41

A

76

Washington & Lee

43

H

61

Navy

60

A

74

Wake Forest

53

H

61

Duke

68

H

53

Georgetown

SO

H

57

George Washington

70

A

74

William & Mary

55

H

75

Clemson

59 ACC

56

Wake Forest

64 ACC

17-

7 10-4 1954-55

Mam 60

land Georgetown

43

H

4<J

Duke

47

H

58

Wake Forest

62

H

72

Virginia

69

A

61

Duke

68

A

70

North Carolina

60

A

58

Texas Tech

54

A

83

Rhode Island

66

A

78

Cincinnati

61

A

68

South Carolina

51

H

78

Virginia

65

H

71

Clemson

63

A

68

South Carolina

52

A

68

N.C. State

64

H

53

George Washington

75

A

60

Navy

54

A

67

William & Mary

62

A

67

George Washington

73

H

63

North Carolina

61

H

68

Clemson

66

H

58

N.C. State

78

A

71

Wake Forest

75

A

57

Georgetown

48

A

67 Virginia 68 ACC

14-10 7-7 1955-56

67

Virginia

55

H

52

William & Mary

51

H

61

Wake Forest

51

H

61

Kentucky

62

H

62

North Carolina

68

H

75

Michigan State

95

H

75

St. Francis

66

H

76

South Carolina

57

H

62

George Washington

48

H

71

Clemson

63

A

59

South Carolina

53

A

64

N.C. State

73

H

62

Duke

76

A

55

North Carolina

64

A

62

Georgetown

57

A

80

Navy

61

H

70

Duke

82

H

67

George Washington

46

A

81

Clemson

69

H

71

N.C. State

62

A

60

Wake Forest

76

A

60

Virginia

73

A

72

Georgetown

61

H

22-7 9-5 1957-58

69 Duke 94 ACC

16-10 9-5 1956-57

Maryland

67

Virginia

63

A

62

Fordham

68

H

59

Wake Forest

53

H

55

Kentucky

76

A

61

North Carolina

70

A

89

Montana State

72

A

43

New Mexico A & M

45

A

43

Virginia

39

A

59

Clemson

52

A

60

South Carolina

68

A

62

Duke

51

H

68

George Washington

48

A

66

South Carolina

59

H

82

Georgetown

69

H

79

NC State

66

H

60

Duke

72

A

84

George Washington

67

H

61

North Carolina

65

H

85

Virginia

64

H

56

NC State

49

A

58

Wake Forest

62

A

55

Navy

56

A

74

Clemson

65

H

62

Georgetown

59

A

71

Virginia

68 ACC

64

South Carolina

74 ACC

Maryland

64

George Washington

55

H

61

Fordham

58

A

71

Kentucky

62

H

72

Wake Forest

58

H

88

Navy

58

H

71

Vanderbilt

56

A

46

Memphis State

47

A

72

South Carolina

59

A

66

Clemson

73

A

74

Duke

49

H

74

North Carolina

61

H

55

Georgetown

45

A

48

NC. State

57

H

64

Navy

51

A

87

Virginia

66

A

74

Wake Forest

67

A

72

Clemson

54

H

64

N.C. State

69

A

69

Virginia

56

H

59

Duke

68

A

59

North Carolina

66

A

56

Georgetown

46

H

99

South Carolina

59

H

70

Virginia

66 ACC

71

Duke

65 ACC

86

North Carolina

74

ACC

86

Boston College

63 NCAA

67

Temple

71 NCAA

59

Manhattan

55 NCAA

10-13 7-7 1958-59

Maryland

53

N.C State

55

H

62

Northwestern

66

A

63

Virginia

56

H

56

Kentucky

58

A

50

Navy

53

H

68

Wake Forest

65

H

45

Mississippi State

56

A

54

Loyola

50

A

64

Duke

31

H

59

South Carolina

41

A

46

Clemson

55

A

61

Georgetown

53

H

69

Duke

78

A

57

North Carolina

64

A

53

Wake Forest

56

A

65

George Washington

66

H

37

N.C. State

53

A

77

Clemson

58

H

50

Virginia

62

A

69

North Carolina

51

H

67

Georgetown

56

A

75

South Carolina

45

H

65 Virginia 66 ACC

15-8 9-5 1959-60

64

George Washington

57

A

70

Virginia

62

H

59

Georgetown

48

H

47

Wake Forest

54

H

63

Indiana

72

A

76

Fordham

54

A

103

Yale

80

H

85

South Carolina

52

H

51

Georgetown

66

A

56

Duke

48

A

63

N.C. State

53

H

51

Navy

50

A

66

North Carolina

75

H

64

Wake Forest

65

A

44

Virginia

43

A

46

N.C. State

48

A

70

Clemson

55

H

71

Duke

61

H

86

George Washington

84

H

64

North Carolina

81

A

67

Clemson

59

A

72

South Carolina

55

A

58

N.C. State

74 ACC

14-

12 6-8 1960-61

Maryland

64

Penn State

47

H

57

Virginia

52

A

80

George Washington

68

H

64

Minnesota

53

A

78

Georgetown

67

A

60

Wake Forest

72

H

57

North Carolina

81

A

67

N.C. Slate

75

A

84

Wyoming

77

A

72

South Carolina

58

H

55

Georgetown

47

H

62

Duke

70

A

52

North Carolina

58

H

63

Navy

62

H

75

NC State

57

A

56

North Carolina

63

A

69

Wake Forest

78

A

59

Clemson

76

A

61

South Carolina

64

A

66

NC Slate

83

A

76

Duke

71

H

44

George Washington

63

A

77

Virginia

62

H

82

Clemson

80

H

91

Clemson

75 ACC

76

Wake Forest

98 ACC

8-17 3-11 1961-62

Maryland 65 Penn State Georgetown NC State Minnesota Wake Forest Virginia

Mississippi State Louisville

George Washington South Carolina Georgetown Duke

George Washington N.C. State Miami (Fla.) Navy

North Carolina South Carolina Clemson Duke

Wake Forest North Carolina Virginia Clemson

78 68 75 79 91 62 64 67 77 83 68 81 61 71 58 79 68 61 53 78 67 68 68

279 H

73 H

69 H

62 H

70 64 83 56 86 70 84

A A A A H A A

67 H

68 A

68 67

62 H

85 A

73 A

79 H

81

70

72 H 75 H

58 Duke

8-13 4-10 1962-63

Maryland 61 Penn State 70 Georgetown 56 Duke

N.C State

Virginia

74 Wake Forest

68 South Carolina

George Washington

Navy

North Carolina 59 N.C State

George Washington

Georgetown

North Carolina

Clemson

South Carolina

Wake Forest

Virginia

Duke

Clemson

74

67

74 67 56

73

62 H 79 A 92 A 76 H 61 A 85 H

63 H 72 H 61 H 78 H

60 51 54 69 70 69

79

67 72 82 62

44 75

71 H 76 H

41 Wake Forest

9-17 5-9 1963-64

72 62 72 74 56 59 75 54 82 69

65 91 80 67 72 77 74 73 63

70 65 57 76

83 74

Maryland 68 Virginia

Georgetown

Penn State

N.C State

West Virginia

Clemson

Tennessee

LSU

Arizona

Columbia

South Carolina 55 Navy 88 North Carolina

N.C State

Wake Forest

George Washington

West Virginia

Duke

Wake Forest

North Carolina

Virginia

Duke 78 Georgetown 68 Clemson 64 South Carolina

67 Clemson

18-8 10-4 1964-65

Maryland 72 Penn State

George Washington

Virginia

N.C. Stale

West Virginia

Wake Forest

Kansas

Tulsa

Miami (Fla.)

North Carolina

Clemson

South Carolina

Navy

Wake Forest

NC State

North Carolina

Duke

West Virginia

Georgetown

Virginia

Navy

Duke

Clemson

South Carolina

58 H

83 A

91 A

62 H

72 H

48 H

73 H 68 A

104 H

79 H

64 H

79 A

84 A

81 H

82 59 62 73 82 61 66 73 76 67 75 77 93 67 91 64 86 85 52 70 85

80 H

61 A

63 H 80 H

64 H 63 H 59 A 80 A 68 H

65 70

58 H 85 A

73 BO 82 78 67

47 H 57 A

73

61 Clemson 67 NC State

50 ACC 76 ACC

FRANK FELLOWS 2 Seasons: 1967-68 to 1968-69 Record: 16-34 Conference: 6-22

14-11 7-7 1965-66

Maryland

61

Penn State

65

A

87

Wake Forest

66

H

59

N.C. State

48

H

62

Kansas

71

A

63

Kansas State

57

A

77

Georgetown

59

H

74

West Virginia

76

A

69

Houston

68

A

77

Dayton

75

A

52

North Carolina

67

A

62

Virginia

65

H

61

Duke

76

A

58

N.C. State

60

A

107

George Washington

81

A

66

Clemson

71

A

78

South Carolina

63

A

76

North Carolina

66

H

86

Wake Forest

78

A

74

Navy

69

H

107

West Virginia

92

H

71

Virginia

64

A

69

Duke

74

H

56

South Carolina

42

H

69

Clemson

81

H

70 North Carolina

11-14 5-9 1966-67

Maryland

76

Penn State

S3

H

54

N.C. State

38

A

63

South Carolina

65

H

85

Virginia

65

A

50

Oklahoma State

49

A

S3

Memphis State

55

A

59

Wake Forest

68

H

66

Davidson

65

A

57

Army

54

A

60

NC State

55

H

82

West Virginia

81

A

69

Duke

72

H

68

Clemson

48

H

58

West Virginia

61

H

53

South Carolina

80

A

77

North Carolina

85

A

78

George Washington

52

H

49

Georgetown

80

A

87

Virginia

76

H

65

Navy

66

A

58

Duke

81

A

78

North Carolina

79

H

61

Clemson

65

A

64

Wake Forest

78

A

54 South Carolina

8-16 4-10 1967-68

Maryland

71

Penn State

76

A

84

George Washington

53

A

62

NC. State

75

H

66

South Carolina

65

H

60

Wake Forest

73

A

53

Texas El Paso

70

A

72

Southern Illinois

73

A

59

South Carolina

68

A

52

N.C. State

68

A

79

West Virginia

75

H

52

Duke

84

H

93

Clemson

94

A

76

Navy

72

H

73

Miami (Fla.)

93

A

67

North Carolina

73

H

64

Duke

85

A

66

West Virginia

83

A

85

Virginia

76

H

87

Wake Forest

74

H

60

North Carolina

83

A

81

Clemson

68

H

68

Virginia

70

A

68

Georgetown

60

H

54

N.C. State

63

AC(

76

CHARLES "Lefty" DRIESELL 17 Seasons: 1969-70 to 1985 86 Record: 348 159 Conference: 126-101

8-18 2-12 1968-69

66

Penn State

56

H

65

West Virginia

86

A

67

South Carolina

79

A

63

Princeton

72

H

87

Wake Forest

95

A

99

George Washington

%

H

89

Marshall

80

A

35

Miami (Fla.)

92

A

69

Davidson

83

A

95

Wichita

83

A

71

Wake Forest

93

A

69

N.C. State

85

A

67

South Carolina

69

H

85

Duke

%

A

83

Clemson

78

H

77

Virginia

78

H

87

North Carolina

107

A

81

N C Stale

86

H

91

West Virginia

84

H

83

Duke

93

H

68

Navy

72

A

78

Virginia

84

A

86

North Carolina

88

H

84

Clemson

83

A

83

Georgetown

78

A

71 South Carolina

13-13 5-9 1969-70

Maryland 97 Buffalo

George Washington

Princeton

Wake Forest

South Carolina

Army

Fordham

Delaware

N.C. State % Wake Forest 83 West Virginia

South Carolina

Clemson

Navy

Maine

Duke

North Carolina

N.C. State

Georgetown

Virginia

North Carolina

Duke

Clemson

West Virginia

104 H

101 H

69 H

71 H

58 H

91 A

88 A

76 H

55 63

57 H

68 H

50 H

77 H

79 Virginia 57 N.C State

64 71 71 90 87 85 83 71

14-12 5-9 1970-71

Maryland 86 Delaware Buffalo Lehigh Wake Forest South Carolina Georgetown Tampa Miami (Fla.) Richmond N.C. State South Carolina Clemson

George Washington Loyola (Md.) North Carolina N C. State Duke Virginia Duke

North Carolina Seton Hall Clemson West Virginia Wake Forest Virginia

109 85 72 70 79 80

111 99 81 31 56 69 88 70 61 88 63 67 76 56 45 81 66 89

73

H

70

H

66

H

71

H

96

A

%

A

72

H

77

H

67

H

83

H

30 H

52 H

67 H

69 A

105

A

71

A

79

A

78

A

70

H

100

H

55

A

51

A

83

H

72

A

63 South Carolina

27-5 8-4 1971-72

Maryland

100

Brown

83

H

118

George Washington

96

A

57

Virginia (L)

78

A

79

Georgetown

46

H

86

Canisius

77

H

73

Loyola

60

A

102

Holy Cross

79

A

103

Western Kentucky

67

H

90

St. John's

69

H

83

N.C. State

70

H

61

Clemson

63

A

49

Wake Forest

46

A

85

Navy

60

A

82

Buffalo

58

H

72

North Carolina

92

A

66

N.C- State

65

A

77

Duke

58

H

85

Duquesne

71

H

78

Long Island Univ

60

A

79

North Carolina

77

H

67

Clemson

57

H

76

Richmond

61

H

59

Duke

68

A

64

Wake Forest

56

H

45

Virginia

42

H

54

Clemson

52 ACC

62

Virginia

57

ACC

64

North Carolina

73 ACC

67

St Joseph's

55

NIT

71

Syracuse

65

NIT

91

Jacksonville

77

Nrr

100

Niagara

69

NIT

23-

7 7-5 1972-73

Mary 127

and Brown

82

H

82

Richmond

50

A

107

Canisius

80

A

99

Georgetown

73

A

88

George Washington

79

H

90

Georgia Tech

55

H

90

Syracuse

76

H

76

Kent State

58

H

79

Clemson

75

A

93

Virginia

74

H

85

N.C State

87

H

76

Navy

67

A

105

Wake Forest

76

H

100

Long Island

73

H

94

North Carolina

88

H

78

N.C. State

89

A

81

Duke

85

A

83

Fordham

72

A

93

Buffalo

64

H

85

North Carolina

95

A

69

Clemson

66

H

81

Duquesne

71

A

%

Duke

68

H

60

Wake Forest

62

A

92

Virginia

81

A

77

Clemson

61

ACC

73

Wake Forest

65 ACC

74

N.C. State

76 ACC

91

Syracuse

75 NCAA

89

Providence

103 NCAA

23-5 9-3 1973-74

Maryland

64

UCLA

65

A

106

Eastern Kentucky

57

H

115

Georgetown

83

H

78

San Francisco

60

A

53

Santa Clara

32

A

102

Holy Cross

75

H

58

Boston College

37

H

96

Richmond

60

A

89

Clemson

60

H

72

Wake Forest

59

A

74

N.C. State

80

A

112

Fordham

73

H

72

Navy

50

A

86

Canisius

73

H

73

North Carolina

82

A

80

N.C. State

86

H

104

Duke

83

H

88

Virginia

81

A

92

George Washington

71

A

91

North Carolina

80

H

56

Clemson

54

A

98

Duquesne

72

H

64

Duke

61

A

77

Wake Forest

68

H

110

Virginia

75

H

85

Duke

66 ACC

105

North Carolina

85 ACC

100

N.C State

103

ACC

24-

5 10-2 1974-75

Maryland

106

Richmond

81

H

99

Wake Forest

78

A

99

Long Island

S4

H

LM

Georgetown

71

A

113

DePauw

49

H

81

George Washington

67

A

105

Georgia Tech

67

H

75

UCLA

81

H

96

Appalachian State

50

H

90

Notre Dame

82

H

83

Duke

77

H

89

Wake Forest

73

H

103

N C State

85

H

87

Navy

73

A

82

Clemson

83

A

66

North Carolina

69

H

98

N.C. State

97

A

86

Virginia

79

H

65

Fordham

46

A

104

Duke

80

A

%

North Carolina

74

A

70

Virginia

51

A

103

Duquesne

82

A

70

Clemson

64

H

104

East Tennessee

87

H

85

N.C. State

87

°iCC

83

Creighton

79 NCAA

83

Notre Dame

71 NCAA

22

Louisville

96NCAA

22-

6 7-5 1975-76

Maryland

127

East Carolina

84

H

99

DePauw

42

H

98

Richmond

71

A

122

Boston University

82

H

93

Georgia Tech

65

H

81

Fordham

56

H

70

UNC Charlotte

60

H

104

Seton Hall

69

H

66

Princeton

59

H

111

Long Island

88

H

82

George Washington

72

A

93

Wake Forest

%

A

87

NC Slate

69

A

87

Navy

69

A

77

Clemson

82

H

93

North Carolina (ot)

95

A

102

NC State

84

H

69

Notre Dame

63

A

69

Virginia

66

A

102

Duke

91

H

69

North Carolina

81

H

98

Clemson

89

A

72

Georgetown

63

A

67

Duke

69

A

105

Wake Forest

91

H

81

Virginia

73

H

80

Duke (ot)

78 ACC

65

Virginia

73

ACC

19-8 7-5 1976-77

Maryland

79

Notre Dame (ot)

80

H

86

Ball State

70

H

49

Long Island

45

H

58

Princeton

45

H

80

East Carolina

69

H

92

DePaul

74

H

76

Appalachian St

74

H

106

Bucknell

72

H

84

Xavier

74

H

%

Syracuse

85

H

90

Richmond

87

H

85

Wake Forest (ot)

86

H

87

N.C. State

80

H

62

Navy

54 NEU

71

Clemson

93

A

68

North Carolina

71

H

75

N.C State

73

A

76

George Washington

86

H

82

Virginia

67

H

65

Duke (ot)

64

A

70

North Carolina

97

A

84

Clemson

78

H

88

Pittsburgh

75

H

85

Duke

72

H

81

Wake Forest

80

A

68

Virginia

77

A

72

N.C State

82 ACC

15-13 3-9 1977-78

Maryland

95

Bucknell

62

H

78

Amencan

65

N

91

Georgetown

87

N

89

Penn State

80

N

130

East Carolina

106

H

90

George Washington

101

A

94

Long Island

64

H

99

Army

77

H

91

Western Kentucky

78

H

65

Georgia Tech

63

H

78

Duke

88

H

75

Wake Forest

84

A

82

N.C. State

88

A

74

Air Force

73

H

90

Clemson

75

H

71

North Carolina

85

A

73

N.C. State

80

H

54

Notre Dame

69

A

64

Virginia

66

A

81

Nevada/Las Vegas

68

H

64

North Carolina

66

H

80

Clemson

75

A

86

Pittsburgh (ot)

89

A

70

Duke

81

A

91

Wake Forest

89

H

70

Virginia

79

H

109

NC State (3 ot)

108 ACC

69

Duke

81 ACC

19-11 6-6 1978-79

Maryland

107

Bucknell

97

H

65

Georgetown

68

N

81

Air Force

68

A

88

Nevada/ Las Vegas

94

A

69

Penn State

61

N

86

Biscayne

60

H

82

East Carolina

71

H

124

NC State

no

H

129

Canisius

103

H

62

St Joseph's (ot)

56

H

83

Southern California

79

H

84

George Washington

72

H

60

Wake Forest

66

H

82

N C State (2 ot)

81

A

84

Louisville

99

H

77

Clemson

63

A

53

North Carolina

54

H

82

Navy

62

H

61

Notre Dame

66

H

63

Virginia

69

H

78

Duke

87

A

67

North Carolina

76

A

77

Clemson

69

H

70

Duke

68

H

54

Wake Forest

53

A

72

Virginia

75

A

75

Clemson

67

ACC

79

North Carolina

102 ACC

67

Rhode Island (3 ot)

65

NIT

72

Ohio State

79

NIT

24-7 11-3 1979-80

Maryland

82

U.M.E.S

58

H

56

Penn State

55

N

71

Georgetown

83

N

72

Brown

59

H

113

Catholic

79

H

70

Georgia Tech

60

H

95

Bucknell

73

H

115

Miami (Ohio)

76

H

85

Temple

63

H

83

Georgia Tech

73

A

84

Wake Forest

76

A

62

N.C. State

67

A

95

Pittsburgh

88

H

84

Clemson

83

H

92

North Carolina

86

A

66

N C. State

62

H

63

Notre Dame

64

A

63

Virginia

61

A

101

Duke

82

H

70

North Carolina

69

H

81

Clemson

90

A

99

Boston

76

H

85

East Carolina

72

H

61

Duke

66

A

S3

Wake Forest

77

H

82

Virginia

71

H

52

Georgia Tech (ot)

49 ACC

91

Clemson

85 ACC

72

Duke

73

ACC

86

Tennessee

75 NCAA

68

Georgetown

74 NCAA

21-

10 8-6 1980-81

Maryland

86

Navy

64

H

95

Amencan

65

H

96

Wagner

73

A

83

Syracuse

73

A

109

Fairleigh Dickinson

83

H

67

Louisville

78

A

82

N.C State (ot)

75

H

66

Georgia Tech

55

A

114

Marshall

89

H

74

St Joseph's

57

H

69

William & Mary

64

H

66

North Carolina

75

A

94

Duke

79

H

64

Virginia

66

H

68

Clemson (ot)

62

A

81

UMES

65

H

70

Notre Dame

73

H

69

Pittsburgh (ot)

66

A

72

Georgia Tech

64

H

60

Wake Forest

67

A

54

Duke

55

A

72

Clemson

70

H

63

North Carolina

76

H

94

Wake Forest

80

H

76

NC State

72

A

63

Virginia

74

A

56

Duke

53 ACC

85

Virginia

62 ACC

60

North Carolina

61 ACC

81

Tenn-Chattanooga

69 NCAA

64

Indiana

99 NCAA

77

16-

13 5-9 1981-8

2

74 78

North Carolina Duke (ot)

75 A

76 H

Maryland

94

Clemson

84 H

49

St. Peter's

42

H

76

UNIV.

78 A

82

Lafayette

58

H

99

Holy Cross

75 H

87

Long Island

79

H

77

Notre Dame

65 H

74

George Mason

62

H

77

Villanova

74 H

76

Md. (Eastern Shore)

64

H

71

Virginia

58 H

75

Towson State

59

H

60

Georgia Tech

72 H

53

N.C. State

74

A

87

Old Dominion

75 H

90

Ohio University

64

H

64

Wake Forest

62 A

43

Georgia Tech

45

H

62

Duke

70 A

57

UCLA

90

A

54

North Carolina

60 H

50

North Carolina

66

H

64

Clemson

71 A

40

Duke

36

A

43

Georgia Tech

48 A

40

Virginia (ot)

45

A

91

Towson State

38 H

62

Clemson

57

H

69

Wake Forest

66 H

91

Canisius

73

H

71

N.C. State

70 A

51

Notre Dame

55

A

60

Virginia

55 A

50

William & Mary

43

A

73

Duke

86 ACC

63

Georgia Tech

64

A

69

Miami (OH) (ot)

68 NCAA

61

Wake Forest

56

H

64

Navy

59 NCAA

77

Duke

60

H

43

Villanova

46 NCAA

94

Hofstra

59

H

56

North Carolina

59

A

66

Clemson

75

A

19-14

1985-86

42

Wake Forest

48

A

38 47 28 66 69

N.C. State Virginia (ot) N.C State Richmond (NIT) Georgia (NIT)

52 H 46 H

40 ACC 50 A 83 A

Maryland 84 Northeastern 81 George Mason 66 Ohio State 74 F Dickinson 77 Wm & Mary

72 H 80 A 78 A 51 H 48 H

20-10 8-6 1982-83

63 42

UNLV West Virginia

64 H

41 A

Maryland

91

Towson State

58 H

79

Penn State

97

N

60

Alabama

58 H

91

Md. (Eastern Shore)

70

H

67

Stanford

65 N

67

Canisius

66

A

92

Hawaii-Pacific

85 A

56

St. Joseph's

64

H

75

Duke

81 H

85

Duquesne

64

H

74

Rand Macon

50 H

66

Towson

56

H

67

Georgia Tech

68 A

80

UCLA(2ot)

79

H

67

N Carolina

71 H

73

American

71

H

49

Virginia

70 A

56

William & Mary

51

H

55

NC State

67 H

64

Virginia

83

H

68

Duke

80 A

71

North Carolina

72

A

77

Wake Forest

55 H

67

Duke

86

H

62

Villanova

64 A

80

Clemson

61

A

62

Notre Dame

69 A

68

Notre Dame

67

H

78

Clemson

69 H

55

Holy Cross

53

A

67

N C. Slate

66 A

86

N.C. State

81

H

60

Clemson

70 A

98

Navy

73

H

91

UMES

44 H

87

Old Dominion

67

H

77

N Carolina

72 A

77

Georgia Tech

68

H

70

Georgia Tech

77 H

66

Wake Forest

79

A

59

Wake Forest

48 A

106

North Carolina

94

H

87

Virginia

72 H

92

Clemson

88

H

85

N Carolina

75 ACC

101

Duke

90

A

62

Georgia Tech

64 ACC

60

Georgia Tech

70

A

69

Pepperdine

64 NCAA

83

Wake Forest

75

H

64

UNLV

70 NCAA

67

N.C. State

58

A

81

Virginia

83

A

58

Georgia Tech (ot)

64 ACC

52

Tenn-Chattanooga

51 NCAA

50

Houston

60 NCAA

24-8 9-5 1983-84

ACC CHAMPIONS

Maryland

108

Johns Hopkins

65

H

68

Ohio State

72

N

77

Canisius

55

H

67

Penn State

58

N

78

Duquesne

67

A

104

U.M.E.S

69

H

89

Boston College

76

H

58

Randolph Macon

52

H

96

LaSalle

83

H

59

N.C. State

55

A

58

William & Mary

44

H

62

North Carolina

74

H

81

Duke

75

A

85

Clemson

72

H

69

Old Dominion

58

A

47

Notre Dame

52

A

67

Virginia

66

A

70

Georgia Tech

71

A

87

Wake Forest

90

A

84

Duke

89

H

61

Dayton

59

H

66

Clemson

65

A

63

North Carolina

78

A

79

Georgia Tech

74

H

90

Wake Forest

79

H

63

N.C. State

50

H

74

Virginia

65

H

69

N.C State

63

ACC

66

Wake Forest

64

ACC

74

Duke

62

ACC

102

West Virginia

77 NCAA

70

Illinois

,2 NCAA

25-12 8-6 1984-85

Maryland

56

Kansas

58

N

54

Alaska

52

A

72

Tennessee

49

N

56

West Virginia

47

H

95

Cleveland State

84

H

59

Alabama

56

A

76

Ohio State

73

H

87

U.M.E.S.

48

H

88

Loyola

74

A

78

Iowa (ot)

68

N

79

Hawaii

71

A

69

Georgia Tech

70

N

58

N C. State

56

H

63

Dayton

67

A

Maryland Team Stats Since 1969

FG FT Reb. Won- Season Pet. Pet. Ratio PPG PAG Ratio Lost

1969-70 45.7 71.2 + 0.9 76.1 74.7 + 1.4 13-13 1970-71 44.5 71.5 + 4.1 75.0 73.4 + 1.6 14-12 1971-72 49.5 74.6 +10.9 76.4 65.8 +10.6 27-5 1972-73 52.0 71.8 +10.6 87.1 74.2 + 6.9 23-7 1973-74 51.0 74.6 +10.7 85.7 69.0 +16.7 23-5 1974-75 54.7 75.7 + 9.0 89.9 74.6 +15.3 24-5 1975-76 53.7 75.8 + 3.6 88.2 74.3 + 7.9 22-6 1976-77 51.6 73.3 + 2.6 78.3 74.1 + 4.2 19-8 1977-78 50.9 72.2 + 4.7 82.1 79.5 + 2.6 15-13 1978-79 50.3 71.7 + 4.0 77.9 74.7 + 3.2 19-11 1979-80 55.1 72.4 + 2.8 80.0 71.8 + 8.2 24-7 1980-81 53.2 72.0 + 4.5 75.9 65.8 + 9.9 21-10 1981-82 47.9 75.1 + 2.5 61.3 58.8 + 2.5 16-13 1982-83 49.0 68.5 + 2.5 74.1 71.4 + 2.7 20-10 1983-84 53.9 72.5 + 0.6 74.7 67.2 + 7.5 24-8 1984-85 50.3 74.3 - 1.0 70.3 65.0 + 5.3 25-12 1985-86 51.0 72.9 + 0.4 70.4 65.6 + 4.8 19-14

Fc Tc Y<

■A ^^ts'

rmer head coach Frank Fellows (center) with assistants »m Davis (left), now the head coach at Iowa, and Tom >ung (right) now head coach at Old Dominion, in 1968.

Cole Field House Records

Team Scoring: 141 by Maryland Freshmen vs Kings College Dec. 13, 1969

Field Goals: 62 by Maryland Freshmen vs Kings College 1961

Individual Scoring: 48 by Tom Baxley vs

Virginia Freshmen,

1961 48 by Tom Baxley vs

Bainbridge Prep, 1961 48 by Tom McMillen vs

Georgetown Freshmen,

1971

Field Goals: 21 by Tom McMillen vs

Georgetown Freshmen, 1971

Rebounds: 31 by Tom McMillen vs West Virginia Freshmen, 1971

78

MARYLAND GRADUATES AS DIVISION I COACHES

Marty Fletcher 13 Southwestern Louisiana

Gary Williams '68 Ohio State

Billy Hahn 75 Ohio University

Terry Truax '68 Towson State

A

m.

i Mk W

w

* #■

»*

< )

8rihfc.

Joe Harrington '68 George Mason

Wayne Szoke '63 Columbia

Tom Young '58 Old Dominion

79

ALL-TIME LETTERMEN

A composite list of all-time basketball lettermen had never been compiled prior to this season. Through the efforts of research, basketball manager Tim Burton and the book, "Maryland Basketball Red, White and Amen," written by Baltimore Sun sportswriter Kent Baker, a list was formed. Because this is the initial shot at including as many names as possible, there may be some former players omitted. Any corrections or additions may be submitted to the Maryland Sports Information Department.

Acilo. Joseph. 1944 Adams. Donald, 1926 27 28 Adkms. Jell, 1982 83 84 85 Allen. John. 1929 Allen, Benjamin, 1936-37 Andorka, William, 1935 Armsworthy, Frank, 1949 50 Auslander. Brian, 1969, 1971 Avery, John, 1966 67 68

B

Baitz, Edward. 1942 43 Baker. Harmon, 1925 Balachow, David. 1945 Baldwin, Taylor. 1979-80 81 82 Barlon, Joseph. 1962 Baumann. Joseph, 1946 Baxter. Jell. 1983-84 85-86 Beamcr. Francis. 1938-39 Beatly. William, 1924 25 26 Bechlle, Gerald. 1958-59-60 Behr, Samuel. 1945 Berger, Louis. 1930 31 32 Bengoechea. Adam, 1938 39 40 Berlin. HS. 1918 19 Bias, Leonard, 1983 84 85 86 Bilney. John, 1977-78-79 80 Blank. Charles, 1970 71 72 Blumberg, Norman, 1960-61 Bodell, Robert, 1971 72 73 Boland. Samuel, N/A Bosley, Robert, 1945 Boston, Lawrence, 1976 77 78 Bowie, William, 1936-37 Boyd, Arthur, 1925 26 27 Boyle, John, 1975-76 Branch, Adrian, 1982 83 84 85 Brawley, C Lee, 1949 50 51 52 Brayton. Nell. 1964 65 66 Brenner. John. 1942 Brooks. Ronald. 1952 53 54 Brown. Darrell, 1971 72 73 Brown, Owen, 1973 74 75 Brown, William, 1946 47 48 Bryant. Bernard, 1935 Bryant, William, 1936-37 Bryant, William, 1977 78 Buckley, John, 1945 Bunge. Al, 1958-59 60 Burch, Samuel. 1943 Burger, Joseph. 1924 25 Buscher. Alton. 1932 33 34 Buscher, Bernard. 1934 35 36 Butler, Jay, 1953

Campbell, William, 1945 Cardwell. Lee, 1925-26 Carlson, Philip. 1963 64-65 Carpenter. Conrad, 1962-63 Carter. Harold, 1934 Cartwright, Mark. 1972 Chalmers. George. 1930 3132 Chalmers, Steve. 1945 Chase. Spencer. 1932 33 34 Clark. Jackie, 1964-65-66 Cohen. Morris. 1932 Cole. Kennelh. 1913 14 Coleman, Ben. 1983 84 Collins, James, 1938 Connelly, Thomas, 1951 Crawford. Mark. 1977 Crescenze, Edward, 1948 Crosthwait, Samuel, 1927 Cutler, Robert. 1958

D

Daly, Edward. 1935 Danko. Eugene. 1958 59 Davis, Brad, 1975-76-77 Davis. Michael, 1977-78 Davis. Nick. 1956-57 58 Day.S.E,. 1913 Dean, Thurston, 1927 28 29 Darstyne, R.S., 1914 DeCosmo, Michael, 1964 65 DeWitt, George, 1939 40 Dickerson. David, 1986 Dillie, Granville, 1950 Dilworth, Robert, 1953 54 55 Drescher, Richard, 1967 68 Dnesell, Charles, 1982 83 84 85 Dunlap. Howard, 1956

DuVall, Mearle. 1940, 1942 Dyer, Harold, 1934

Edwards, John, 1946 47 48-49 Eicher, Robert, 1961 62-63 Erseman, John, 1918 19 Elmore. Leonard, 1972-73-74 Englebert, Erwin, 1944 Ensor, Lionel, 1924 25-26 Evans, Warren. 1933 Evans, William, 1928 29 30 Everett. Robert. 1953 54 55

Faber, John, 1924 25 26 27 Farmer, Edward. 1983 Farrell, Shawn, 1978 Fellows, Frank, 1951, 1953 Fennell, E.O.. 1944 Ferguson, Scott, 1962-63-64 Fetters, Robert, 1941 42 Fern, Guslav, 1957 Flowers. Jay, 1970 Flynn, John, 1944 45 Fothergill, Mark, 1980, 82 83 84 Franklin. James, 1964 65 66 Franklin. William, 1965-66 Fuqua, Frank, 1955

Garrett. Ashton, 1941 Gatlin. Keith, 1984-85-86 Gaylor, Robert, 1929 30 Gibson, Lawrence. 1976 77 78 79 Gilbert. H.D.. 1919 Gilmore, Jack. 1941 Gleasner. John. 1946 Gordley, Larry. 1972 Graham. Ernest, 1978 79 80-81 Greco. Ralph. 1952 53-54 Greenspan, Gerald. 1961 62 63 Gregg. David. 1986 Groves, John, 1924 Guckeyson, Bill. 1935. 1937

H

Hanh, William. 1973 74 75 Hall. Irving, 1924 Halleck, James, 1957 58-59 Hammerlund, Robert, 1937 Hankin, Robert. 1950 Hardiman. Robert, 1955 56 57 Harrington, Joseph, 1965-66-67 Hart, Robert, 1978-79 Hathaway. Jeff, 1978-79 Headley, Coleman, 1938 Heagy, Al, 1928 29 30 Heatley, Jack, 1945 Heil, George. 1940 Heise, John, 1946 47 Henderson, David. 1977. 1979 80 Hess, Harry. 1930 31 Hetzel. Fred, 1928 29 30 Hetzel, Will, 1968 69 70 Hilden, Charles, 1944 Hisle, John, 1932 Holfecker.Thomai, 1945 Holbert, Peter, 1981-82-83-84 Horn, Hechert, 1942 Horst, Rod, 1968 6970 Housley, Samuel. N/A Howard, Maurice, 1973 74 75 76 Hughes, Harry, 1946 Huntemann, Charles, 1913 14 Hunter, Jo Jo, 1977 78

Jackson, William, 1951 Jackson, Reggie, 1979 8081 82 Jaeck, Paul. 1945 James. Robet. 1942 43 Jarmoska, George, 1941 Jelus. Paul. 1960-61 62 Johnson. Edward, 1937 38 39 Johnson, James, 1951-52 Johnson, John, 1986 Johnson. Julius. 1967-68 69 Jones, Thomas, 1985 86 Jones, William, 1966 67 68

K

Kann. R S , 1918 Kaplan, Zev, 1955 Kassel, Steve, 1979 Kebeck. Steve. 1970-71 Keene, Robert. 1946 Keller. Charles, 1935 36-37 Kelleher, Bruce. 1960-61 62 Kessler, Robert. 1954 55 56 King. Albert. 1978 79 80-81 Kinsman. James. 1943 Knepley. George, 1937 38 39 Knepley, Robert. 1942 Knode. Robert. 1919 Koffenberger. 1950 51 52 Krukar, Paul, 1958-59-60

Ladd, Robert, 1957 Lake. William, 1946 Lann, Alvin, 1948, 1950 Leuci, Victor, 1954 Levin, Julius, 1933 Levin, Morris, 1952 53 Levine. Frank, 1933 Lewis. Derrick, 1985 86 Lewis, Robert, 1964 Linkous, Fred, 1926-27-28 Long. Terry, 1984-85-86 Lucas. John, 1973-74 75-76 Luney, William, N/A

M

MacDonald. Jan, 1968 Mack, Charles, 1949 50 Madigan, George, 1928 29 30 Magid. Brian, 1976-77 Mams, George, 1951 52 53 Manning, Greg, 1978 79 80 81 Marshal, Alfred, N/A Marshall, Ted, 1960-61-62 Massenburg, Tony, 1986 May, Charles. 1930-31-32 Mays, H. W.. 1911 McCarthy, John, 1936 37 38 McCudy, Bruce, 1949 McDonald, Robert, 1959. 1961 McDonald, Leib, 1941 McGinnis, Wayne, 1957 McHale, Richard. 1971 McMillen. James, 1965 -66 67 McMillen, Thomas, 1972-73-74 McNeil, Charles. 1958-59 McWilliams, Samuel. 1963 64 Merna. James. 1956 Michelson. Sheldon. 1967-68 Miller, Thomas, 1966 Milroy, Thomas. 1968-69 70 Mobus, Paul, 1936 37 Mondorf, Pershing, 1939 40 Monl, Thomas, 1942 43. 1947 Moore, Dwight. 1953 Moore, Perry, 1956 57-58 Moran, Donald, 1951-52-53 Morgan, J.A.. 1918 Morley, Greg, 1979-80-81 82 Morris, Alan, 1972 -73 Morns, John, 1932 Morris. William, 1913 14 Mueller, Richard. 1964 Muhtz. Milton. 1937 38. 1940 Murphy. William, 1957 58 59 Murray. Robert, 1948, 1950

N

Nacincik, John, 1956-57-58 Nakannua, Jeff, 1973 Nared, Greg. 1986 Neal. John. 1971 72 Newsome, John. 1975-76 Nofsinger. Michael. 196061-62 Norris, John, 1930-31 32 Nuttle. Byron, 1943

o

O'Brien, James, 1971 72-73 O'Brien, Robert, 1955 56 57 Ochsenreiter, Eugene. 1939-40-41

Palmer. Bryan. 1983, 1985 Parker, Alvin. 1924 Patton, Chris. 1975 76 Pavlos, John. 1975-76-77 Peck. Malvin, 1944, 1947 Peebles, Irving, 1924 Pinocci, Peter. 1946 Pittman. Charles, 1981 82 Pitzer, John, 1930-31 Poling, William, 1946 Porac. Richard, 1972 73 74 Prins, Curtis. 1957

R

Radice. Julius. 1928 29-30 Raedy, Michael, 1919 Rea. William. 1938 39-40 Rivers, Steve, 1981 82 83 Robinson, Jonathan, 1980 81

Ronkin, Edward, 1930 31 32 Rooney, Patrick, 1930 Roy, Thomas, 1973 74 75

Sandbower, John. 1954 55-56 Sanders. Harvey, 1970 Schaufler, Charles. 1955 56 Scheele, Thomas, 1935 Schmidt, Francis, 1933 Schroeder. David, 1961 Schuerholz, Donald, 1942 43, 1947 Schullz. Logan, 1938 Shaffer, Richard, 1939 Shanahan, Gerry. 1960 Sheppard, Steve, 1975 76-77 Shrader, Eric. 1977 78-79 Shue, Gene. 1952 53 54 Shumate, John, 1947 Siegnst, Ronald, 1948 49 Simms, Harvey, 1939 Smallwood, Lawrence. 1928 29 Smith. Bernard, 1948 49 50 Snyder. Robert. 1933 34 Sothoron, Norwood, 1934 35 Stasiulatis, William, 1961 62 63 Steiner. Carlton, 1942 Steinman, Edward, 1964 Stevens, James, 1918 Stevens, Myron, 1925-26 27 Stieber, Fred, 1933 Still. James. 1970-71 Stobaugh, Richard, 1969 Stone. Junior, 1918 19 Strachan, John, 1951 Suder, George, 1964 Suit. Jack. 1941 Sullivan. William. 1969 Supplee, William, 1924 25 26 Sweeney, Daniel, 1963

Taylor, Richard, 1949 Thomas, Fred, 1936-37 Thurston, Robert, 1955 Tillman. James. 1976-77 Travis. Ernest, 1942-43 Trimble. Japeth, 1972, 1974 Troxell, Walter, 1924-25-26 Truax, Terry, 1967-68 Tull. J.J.. 1914 Turyn, Victor, 1946 47 Tuschak, Richard, 1944

u

Ulman, Bernard, 1941

V

Vannais, Leon. 1940 Veal, Herman, 1981-82-83-84 Vincent. J M.. 1914 Vincent, Rufus. 1932-33-34

w

Walker, George, 1933 Waller, Edward, 1947 Ward, Gary. 1964 65 66 Waters. Albert. 1935-36-37 Weber. George, 1933 Webster, David. 1954 55 Weidinger, Charles. 1940 Wemgarten. Julian, 1957 58 Wharton, James, 1941 Wheeler. Waverly, 1936-37-38 White. Joseph, 1942 White. Howard. 1971-72-73 Wiles, F Michael, 1969-70 Wiles, Peter, 1960 Williams. Charles. 1979-80-81 Williams, Gary, 1965 66 67 Wilson, Robert, 1931-32 Wilson, Robert, 1960 61 Wilson, Len, 1913 Winnemore, Augustine, 1929 Wise, Richmond, 1964 65 66 Woodward, Arthur, 1940 41 Worthington, Charles. 1969 Wright. Spencer, 1948 49

Yates. Barry. 1971 Yordy, Robert. 1945, 1949 Young, Thomas, 1953 54, 1958 Yowell. Roy. 1934

Zalesak, Emanuel. 1924 Zimmerman. James. 1935

80

Metropolitan Media

Publication Address, Phone Number, Sports Editor and

Beat Writers

The Washington Post

Frederick News-Post

1150 15th St., N.W.

200 E. Patrick St.

J Washington, D.C. 20071

Frederick, MD 21701

(202) 334-7350

(301)662-1177

Sports Editor: George Solomon

Sports Editor: Stan Goldberg

Beat Writers: Sally Jenkins,

Beat Writer: Stan Goldberg

Michael Wilbon

Hagerstown Morning Herald

Baltimore Morning Sun

100 Summit Ave.

Calvert & Centre Sts.

Hagerstown, MD 21740

Baltimore, MD 21203

(301) 733-5131

(301) 332-6123

Sports Editor: Doug Dull

Sports Editor: Marty Kaiser

Beat Writer: Doug Dull

Beat Writer: Donald Markus

Hagerstown Daily Mail

Baltimore Evening Sun

100 Summit Ave.

Calvert & Centre Sts.

Hagerstown, MD 21740

Baltimore, MD 21203

(301) 733-5131

(301) 332-6418

Sports Editor: Larry Yanos

Sports Editor: Jack Gibbons

Beat Writer: Larry Yanos

Beat Writer: Molly Dunham

Annapolis Evening Capital

The Washington Times

213 West St.

3600 New York Ave., N.E.

Annapolis, MD 21404

Washington, D.C. 20002

(301) 268-5000

(202) 656-3251

Sporfs Editor: Joe Gross

Sports Editor: Michael Keating

Beat Writer: Brett Friedlander

Beat Writer: Dave Elfin

Cumberland Times

Prince George's Journal

7-9 Mechanic St.

9426 Annapolis Rd.

Cumberland, MD 21502

Lanham, MD 20706

(301) 722-4600

(301) 459-3131

Sports Editor: Jim Day

Sports Editor: Emilio Garcia-Ruiz

Beat Writers: Pete Bielski,

Salisbury Times-Square

Chris Howland

P.O. Box 1937

Salisbury, MD 21801

The Diamondback

(301) 749-7171

3136 South Campus Dining Hall

Sports Editor: Rick Cullen

University of Maryland

College Park, MD 20742

Easton Star-Democrat

(301) 454-4325

1 Airport Drive

Sports Editor: Dave Grening

Easton, MD 21601

Beat Writers: Dave Grening,

(301) 822-1500

Bob Mosier

Montgomery Journal

Carroll County Times

5721 Randolph Rd.

201 Railroad Ave.

Rockville, MD 20852

P.O. Box 346

(301) 984-5995

Westminster, MD 21157

Beat Writers: Mark O'Hara,

(301) 848-4400

Mark Tosh

Wire Services:

Associated Press/

United Press International/

Gordon Beard

Will Dunham

222 St. Paul Place

1400 Eye St., N.W.

Baltimore, MD 21202

Washington, D.C. 20015

(301) 539-3524

(202) 898-8000

Television Channel, Affiliation, Address, Sportscasters

WRCTV (Channel 4 - NBC)

4001 Nebraska Ave., N.W. Washington, D.C. 20016 George Michael, Scott Clark

WUSA-TV (Channel 9 CBS)

4001 Brandywine St., N.W. Washington, D.C. 20008 Glenn Brenner, James Brown, Ken Meace

WJLA-TV (Channel 7 ABC)

4461 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington, D.C. 20008 Frank Herzog, Rick Schwartz

WTTG-TV

(Channel 5 Independent)

5151 Wisconsin Ave., N.W. Washington, D.C. 20016 Joe Fowler, Steve Buckhantz

WMAR-TV (Channel 2 NBC)

6400 York Rd.

Baltimore, MD 21212

Scott Garceau, John Saunders,

Jack Dawson

Radio Affiliation, Address, Broadcaster

WBAL-TV (Channel 1 1 CBS)

3800 Hooper Ave. Baltimore, MD 21211 Vince Bagli, Chris Thomas

WJZ-TV

(Channel 13 ABC)

Television Hill Baltimore, MD 21211 John Buren, Keith Mills

WBOC-TV (Channel 16 - CBS) Radio-TV Park Salisbury, MD 21801 Sports Director

ABC)

WMDT-TV (Channel 47 P.O. Box 3321 Salisbury, MD 21801 Sports Director

WRC (NBC)

4001 Nebraska Ave. Washington, D.C. 20016 Bob Gotkin

WTOP (CBS)

4646 40th St. Washington, D.C. 20015 Sports Director

WMAL (ABC)

4400 Jenifer St. Washington, D.C. 20015 Ken Beatrice

WCAO (ABC)

8001 Park Heights Ave. Baltimore, MD 21211 Bob Bartel

WBAL (CBS)

3800 Hooper Ave.

Baltimore, MD 21211

Jeff Rimer, Jim West, Stan White

WFBR (ABC)

13 E. 20th St. Baltimore, MD 21218 Sports Director

WFMD (Independent)

P.O. Box 151 Frederick, MD 21701 Steve Melewski

WMUC (Campus Radio)

Box 99 Univ. of Maryland College Park, MD 20742 Sports Director

81

Maryland Basketball Radio Network

The long lasting relationship between Maryland athletics and WMAL-AM (630) continues, as the Washington-based station will air Terp basketball games throughout the 1986-87 season. Handling the broadcasting chores will be an exper- ienced veteran and a relative newcomer: Johnny Holliday, whose on-air career enters its 30th year; and former Terp guard Greg Manning, a major cog on Maryland powers from 1977-81 and entering his second season behind the microphone.

Holliday is regarded as one of the top play-by-play men in the business. A vet- eran of 25 years as a sports broadcaster, he enters his eighth season calling the play-by-play for Maryland Basketball listeners. His outstanding career came to a fore in 1984, when ABC selected him to air reports from the Winter Olympics in Innsbruck and recalled him for similar reports from the XXIIIrd Summer Olympiad in Los Angeles. His many major assignments over the years include the World Series, the Masters and U.S. Open Golf Championships, NFL and NBA reports and title boxing matches. Holliday has also handled pregame shows for the NFL's Washington Redskins and has hosted radio and television shows of

Maryland coaches during his affiliation with Terp athletics.

A dedicated humanitarian, Holliday has helped raise more than $1 million during his 25 years in the area for various charities. He also serves as master of ceremonies and does many banquets and charitable events.

Greg Manning's debut last season as a color commentator was an exceptionally strong one. The former Terp guard is the school's all-time leader in career free throw percentage (85.8 percent), ranks second in career field goal percentage (58.3) and seventh among all-time scorers (1,561 points). During his four years as a player, the Terps posted a 79-42 record, advanced to the NCAA Tournament twice and advanced to the ACC Tourna- ment Championship game twice.

Manning is one of only a handful of players in Terp history to average double- figure point totals for four straight seasons. He is also the only player in ACC history to lead the conference in both field goal and free throw percentage, a feat he accomplished in the 1979-80 season. He averaged 13.2 points per game throughout his four-year career.

P«-?J >

US

%»** ■*» kH

» ^

Terp play-by-play man Johnny Holliday and color commentator Greg Manning with CBS hoop analyst Billy Packer.

Travel Accommodations

Airports

BALTIMORE - WASHINGTON INTERNATIONAL NATIONAL - DULLES TAXI FARES - APPROXIMATE to College Park NATIONAL AIRPORT - $15.00

$1.00 each additional person BALTIMORE - WASHINGTON INTERNATIONAL

$25.00 $1.00 each additional person DULLES AIRPORT $38.00

$1.00 each additional person

Limousine Fares to Airport

B.W.I. AIRPORT LIMOUSINE $12.00 or two to four people picked up at the same time $19.00 (441-2345).

NOTE: Listed information and prices are guidelines to assist you during your stay in College Park.

Local Transportation

TAXI - Blue Bird - Yellow 864-7700

Hotels and Motels

CENTER OF ADULT EDUCATION University of Maryland (301) 779-5100

HOLIDAY INN 10000 Baltimore Blvd. (301) 345-6700

HOLIDAY INN 9137 Baltimore Blvd. (301) 345-5000

MARYLAND INN Best Western 8601 Baltimore Blvd. (301) 474-2800

QUALITY INN 7200 Baltimore Blvd. (301) 864-5820

ROYAL PINES Best Western 9133 Baltimore Blvd. (301) 345-4900

COMFORT INN 9020 Baltimore Blvd. (301)441-8110

HAMPSHIRE MOTOR INN 7411 New Hampshire Ave. (301) 439-3000 (Langley Park)

RAMADA INN

1-95 North

4050 Powder Mill Rd.

(301) 572-7100 (Calverton)

HOWARD JOHNSON'S Balto. - Wash. Pkwy. (301) 779-7700 (Cheverly)

MARRIOTT HOTEL

1-495 & 1-270

(301) 897-9400 (Bethesda)

HILTON

6400 Ivy Lane

(301) 441-3700 (Greenbelt)

HOLIDAY INN

7200 Hanover Drive

(301) 982-7000 (Greenbelt)

INTERNATIONAL HOTEL

AT BWI P.O. Box 8741 (301) 859-3300 (Baltimore)

82

MARYLAND'S NBA DRAFT HISTORY

Player

Gene Shue Bob Kessler Nick Davis John Nacincik Charles McNeil Al Bunge Jerry Bechtle Bob McDonald Jerry Greenspan Jerry Ward Jay McMillen Barry Yates Jim O'Brien Bob Bodell Howard White Tom McMillen Len Elmore Owen Brown Tom Roy John Lucas Mo Howard Brad Davis Steve Sheppard Lawrence Boston Larry Gibson Buck Williams Albert King Ernest Graham Greg Manning Charles Pittman Ben Coleman Herman Veal Mark Fothergill Adrian Branch Jeff Adkins Len Bias

Breakdown:

Total picks 36 First-round picks 9 Second-round picks 6 Teams with most Maryland picks

1952-69— 11 1969-86 25

Year

1954 1956 1958 1960 1960 1960 1960 1961 1963 1966 1967 1971 1973 1973 1973 1974 1974 1975 1975 1976 1976 1977 1977 1978 1979 1981 1981 1981 1981 1982 1984 1984 1984 1985 1985 1986

Philadelphia 5, Phoenix and Chicago 4

Team

Philadelphia

Fort Wayne

Philadelphia

Syracuse

New York

Philadelphia

New York

St. Louis

Syracuse

Boston

Los Angeles

Philadelphia

Portland

Seattle

Washington

Buffalo

Washington

Phoenix

Portland

Houston

Cleveland

Los Angeles

Chicago

Washington

Milwaukee

New Jersey

New Jersey

Philadelphia

Denver

Phoenix

Chicago

Phoenix

Phoenix

Chicago

Chicago

Boston

Round

1st

2nd

9th

3rd

5th

1st

15th

6th

3rd

6th

9th

8th

3rd

10th

14th

1st (9th overall)

1st (13th overall)

9th

2nd

1st (1st overall)

2nd

1st (15th overall)

2nd

4th

3rd

1st (3rd overall)

1st (10th overall)

2nd

7th

3rd

2nd

6th

8th

2nd

7th

1st (2nd overall)

Charles McNeil

Jerry Greenspan Steve Sheppard

83

Terps in the NBA

Adrian Branch Los Angeles

, mmr / / Ben Coleman New Jersey

Brad Davis Dallas

Albert King New Jersey

Buck Williams New Jersey

Maryland Basketball Olympians

The ultimate individual reward in amateur athletics is to represent his or her country in international competition. And with the right timing, talent and dedication, international competition can mean participation in an Olympiad. Three Maryland basketball players have been fortunate enough to represent the United States at such a level, allowing Maryland Basketball to gain representa- tion in three of the last four Olympiads.

Tom McMillen Maryland's No. 4 career scorer and corner- stone to the highly successful Terp teams from 1973-75, McMillen represented the U.S. in 1972, when Coach Henry Iba's team earned a Silver Medal. An Oxford Scholar who spent 10 seasons in the NBA, McMillen was recently elected Congressman of Mary- land's 4th District.

Steve Sheppard Known as the "Bear" to Maryland fans for his ferocious play on three nationally ranked teams during the mid-'70s, Sheppard played for North Carolina coach Dean Smith's gold-medal winning 1976 Olympic squad. Sheppard helped the United States to a clean sweep of competition in the Montreal Games, and later played for the Chicago Bulls in the NBA.

Buck Williams Ranked second only to Len Elmore among all-time Maryland rebounders, Williams was a member of the 1980 Olympic Team. That squad, along with all other U.S. teams, did not participate in that summer's Moscow Olympics, but won four of six games against various NBA All-Star teams and defeated the 1976 gold-medal winning American team. Williams is a perennial All-Star with the New Jersey Nets of the NBA and was voted the league's Rookie of the Year after the 1981-82 season.

All-America Profiles

John Lucas

6-4 Guard 1972-76

A consensus two-time All-America (junior and senior seasons) ... A four-year starter at Maryland, where he is the only player in Terp history to be named first-team All-ACC three straight years . . . Maryland's all-time leading scorer from 1976 until 1981, when Albert King surpassed his total of 2,015 points . . . All-time school assist leader until last February, when Keith Gatlin passed his total of 514 . . . Now ranks fourth among all-time Terp scorers, second among all-time assist men and eighth in all-time free throw percentage . . . Served as point guard for Maryland during its finest seasons, leading the Terps to a No. 8 ranking in 1973, a No. 4 ranking in 1974 and No. 5 in 1975 . . . Also saw a bit of action at forward as a junior and senior, when Brad Davis played the point . . . Also a standout in tennis; Lucas won the ACC Singles Crown as a junior and senior and the Doubles Tournament as a sophomore . . . The first pick overall in the 1976 NBA Draft by the Houston Rockets . . . Spent nine NBA seasons with Houston and Washington.

Career Stats.

FG Pet. FT Pet. Asst.

Reb.

Pts.

Avg.

Charles (Buck) Williams

6-8 Center/Forward 1978-81

Earned All-America honors as a junior during the 1980-81 season, when he averaged 15.6 points, 11.7 rebounds and shot a school-record 64.7 percent from the floor . . . Associated Press Ail-American after earning honorable mention from the wire service and UPI as a sophomore . . . Ranks second to Len Elmore among career Maryland rebounders with 928 and would have placed fifth in ACC history if those three-year totals had been projected for four years . . . Ranks ninth among all-time ACC boardsmen who had three years of action . . . Ranks as Maryland all-time leader in field goal percentage, shooting a phenomenal 61.5 percent from the floor over his career . . . Led the ACC in rebounding as a freshman, finished third as a sophomore and second as a junior ... A second-team All-ACC pick twice (1980 and 1981) ... A selection on the 1980 United States Olympic team, a squad that did not participate in the Moscow Olympiad but won four of six games against various NBA All-Star teams . . . His defensive performances against Virginia's Ralph Sampson are legendary, and a major reason why the Terps registered a 25-15 mark against ACC opponents during his time at Maryland . . . Left after his junior season and applied for the NBA Draft as a hardship case . . . Was the third pick overall in the 1981 NBA Draft, and is entering his sixth season with the New Jersey Nets.

Freshman Sophomore Junior Senior

.538 .703

.511 .753

.549 .836

.511 .778

178

159

91

86

83

82

100

109

425 14.2

564 20.1

469 19.5

557 19.9

Career Stats.

FG Pet. FT Pet. Asst.

Reb.

Pts.

Avg.

Freshman

.583

.550

18

326

300

10.0

Sophomore

.606

.664

27

242

371

15.5

Junior

.647

.637

31

363

482

15.6

Totals

.518

.778

514

374 2015 18.3

Totals

.615

.623

76

928

1153 13.6

84

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: ^

Vl^a/ Numbers (Area Code 301)

Basketball Coach Bob Wade: 454-2126 Football Office: 454-2125 Athletic Director's Office: 454-4705 University Information: 454-3311 Athletic Ticket Office: 454-2121 Sports Information Office: 454-2123 Jack Zane, Director: 864-4076

Maryland Basketball 1986-87

Produced by the Maryland Sports Information

Department Written, Edited and Designed by John Hawkins Cover Photography: Larry Crouse Photographs by Larry Crouse, Brian Lewis and

Matt Wascavage Special thanks to University Printing and Tim

Burton, whose historical exploration proved

immeasurable Color separation by Sun Crown

.

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J" *

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MARYLAND