MARYLAND BASKETBALL
1979-80
1979-80 MARYLAND (men) BASKETBALL
SCHEDULE
DAY
DATE
November
OPPONENT
Fri.
30
December
Maryland-Eastern Shore
Mon.
3
Penn State
Wed.
5
Georgetown
American vs. Navy
Sat.
8
Brown
Sat.
15
Catholic University
Wed.
19
Georgia Tech
Sat.
22
Bucknell
Maryl
and Invitational Tournament
Fri.
28
Miami (Ohio)
Temple vs Harvard
Sat.
29
January
Third Place Game
Championship Game
Thu.
3
Georgia Tech
Sat.
5
Wake Forest
Thu.
10
North Carolina State
Sat.
12
Pittsburgh
Wed.
16
Clemson
Sun.
20
North Carolina
Wed.
23
North Carolina State
Sat.
26
Notre Dame
Wed.
30
February
Virginia
Sat.
2
Duke
Thu.
7
North Carolina
Sat.
9
Clemson
Mon.
11
Boston University
Wed.
13
East Carolina
Sat.
16
Duke
Wed.
20
Wake Forest
Sat.
23
Virginia
Thu.
28
Atlantic
29
Coast
March
Conference
1
Tournament
TIME
8:00
LOCATION
Cole Field House
7:05
Hershey Park (Pa.)
9:00
Star Plex (D.C.)
7:00
8:00
Cole Field House
8:00
Cole Field House
8:00
Cole Field House
8:00
Cole Field House
7:00
Cole Field House
9:00
7:00
Cole Field House
9:00
8:00
Atlanta, Georgia
3:00
Winston-Salem, N.C.
9:00
Raleigh, N.C.
8:00
Cole Field House
7:00
Cole Field House
12:30
Chapel Hill, N.C.
7:00
Cole Field House
1:30
South Bend, Indiana
8:00
Charlottesville, Va.
3:00
Cole Field House
8:00
Cole Field House
3:00
Clemson, S.C.
8:00
Cole Field House
8:00
Cole Field House
3:00
Durham, N.C.
8:00
Cole Field House
1:00
Cole Field House
Greensboro, N.C.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1979-80 Roster 2
Press Information 3
Carl James 4
Coach "Lefty" Driesell 5-8
Athletic Dept. Staff 9
1979-80 Terrapins 10-33
Series Records 38
"Lefty" at Maryland 40-41
Statistical Records 46-50
"Lefty's" Coaching Philosophy 52
1978-79 Statistics 55-56
SPORTS INFORMATION OFFICE
Room 1145 Cole Field House
MAILING ADDRESS: Box 295
College Park, Maryland 20740
SPORTS INFORMATION DIRECTOR
Jack Zane (Maryland '60)
OFFICE (301) 864-4076
HOME (301) 322-3265
ASSISTANT SID
Patti Wessel Flynn (Maryland 77)
OFFICE (301) 454-2123
HOME (301) 474-8665
SECRETARY
Therese Ryan (454-2123)
STUDENT ASSISTANT
Steve Whelton (454-2123)
MARYLAND BASKETBALL 1979-80: Printed by University Printing Department — Henry Kuhn, Manager.
The Athletic Department wishes to express their sincere and grateful thanks to these University Printing Dept.
employees for their untiring work and efforts in publishing the Basketball Book.
Ray Leber, Supervisor; Bill Rolf, Supervisor; Rusty Jones and Bill Robertson, Linotype Operators; Richard
Douglas, Compositor; Ron Leonard and Joe McDonald, Photolithographers; Dick Gregory and Lee Tyson, Pressmen;
Ron Gusak, Folder Operator.
PHOTO CREDITS: Thanks to Larry Crouse, Daniel Webster, Tom Staley, and Richard Farkas.
COLOR SEPARATION: Made by Sun Crown.
THE COVER: The Basketball Team with Testudo: From Left — (Front Row) John Bilney, Dutch Morley, Greg
Manning, Taylor Baldwin (2nd Row) Mark Fothergill, Ernest Graham, Albert King, Buck Williams
(Back Row) Reggie Jackson, David Henderson, Herman Veal, Jon Robinson.
BACK COVER: Coaching Staff: From Left — Tom Abatemarco, Head Coach "Lefty" Driesell, John Kochan,
Sherman Dillard.
The University of Maryland actively subscribes to a policy of equal educational and employment oppor-
tunity. The University of Maryland is required by Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 not to
discriminate on the basis of sex in admission, treatment of students, or employment.
1
MARYLAND VARSITY BASKETBALL ROSTER
NO
NAME
POSITION
CLASS
WGT
HGT
HOMETOWN
10
Greg Manning
2nd Guard
Jr
170
6-1
Highspire, PA
15
Reggie Jackson
2nd Guard
So
210
6-4
Philadelphia, PA
21
Greg "Dutch" Morley
Lead Guard
So
170
6-2
Hyattsville, MD
22
Mark Fothergill
Power Forward
Fr
220
6-9
Somerset, KY
23
David Henderson
Center
Jr
215
6-9
Roanoke, VA
25
Ernest Graham
Forward
Jr
215
6-7
Baltimore, MD
41
Jon Robinson
Lead Guard
Fr
184
6-4
Gastonia, NC
42
Herman Veal
Quick Forward
Fr
200
6-6
Jackson, MS
50
John Bilney
Center-Forward
Sr
220
6-8
Woodcliff Lake, NJ
52
Charles "Buck" Williams
Center-Forward
So
215
6-8
Rocky Mount, NC
54
Taylor Baldwin
Center
So
225
6-10
Greenwich, CT
55
Albert King
Quick Forward
Jr
190
6-6
Brooklyn, NY
HEAD COACH: Charles G. "Lefty" Driesell (Duke 52)
ASSISTANTS: Tom Abatemarco (Dowling College '73)
John Kochan (Lehman College '72)
Sherman Dillard (James Madison '78)
TRAINER: Hugh Rodman "Rod" Martin (Morehead State '75)
TEAM PHYSICIAN: Dr. Stanford A. Lavine
FACTS ABOUT MARYLAND
LOCATION College Park, Maryland
ATHLETIC DEPT. . . Cole Field House
PRESIDENT Dr. John S. Toll
CHANCELLOR Dr. Robert L. Gluckstern
FOUNDED 1807 as College of Medicine
1812 became Univ. of Maryland
1920 merged widi Md.
Agricultural College
ENROLLMENT (Fall 1979)
11,691 Undergraduate women — full time
13,401 Uudergraduate men — full time
4,743 Undergraduates — part time
2,581 Graduate Student — full time
4,776 Graduate Student — part time
25,092 Undergraduates — full time
37,192 Total students on College Park Campus
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR Carl C. James
FACULTY CHAIRMAN ATHLETICS Dr. Charles Taff
CONFERENCE Atlantic Coast
ARENA Cole Field House (14,500)
NICKNAME Terrapins (Terps)
COLORS Red & White - Black & Gold
(The colors of the State Flag)
GAME UNIFORMS Red and White
VARSITY SPORTS (Men 13)
Baseball, Basketball, Cross-Country, Fencing, Football,
Golf, Indoor Track, Lacrosse, Soccer, Swimming,
Tennis, Track and Field, Wrestling.
(Women 10)
Basketball, Field Hockey, Cross-Country, Gymnastics,
Indoor Track, Lacrosse, Swimming, Tennis, Track and
Field, Volleyball.
HOTELS AND MOTELS
IN THE COLLEGE PARK AREA
All Motels listed are within 10 miles of Byrd Stadium
and Cole Field House, or on the Beltway.
CENTER OF
ADULT EDUCATION
University of Maryland
College Park. Md.
Tel. 301—779-5100
BETHESDA MARRIOTT HOTEL
1-495 & 1-270
Bethesda. Maryland
Tel. 301—897-9400
HAMPSHIRE MOTOR INN
7411 New Hampshire
Langley Park, Md.
Tel. 301-439-3000
ROYAL PINES MOTEL
(Best Western)
9133 Baltimore Blvd.
College Park. Md.
Tel. 301—345-4900
SHERATON-NORTHEAST
8500 Annapolis Rd.
New Carrollton. Md.
Tel. 301—459-6700
SHERATON-NORTHWES
8727 Colesville Rd.
Silver Spring. Md.
Tel. 301—589-5200
HOLIDAY INN
Capitol Beltway Motel
10000 Baltimore Blvd.
College Park, Md.
Tel. 301—345-6700
HOLIDAY INN MOTEL
9137 Baltimore Blvd.
College Park, Md.
Tel. 301—345-5000
HOWARD JOHNSON'S
Balt.-Wash. Pkwy.
Cheverly, Md.
Tel. 301—779-7700
INTERSTATE INN
OF COLLEGE PARK
8601 Baltimore Blvd.
College Park, Md.
Tel. 301—474-2939
QUALITY INN
7200 Baltimore Ave.
Tel. 301—864-5820
RAMADA INN
5910 Princess Garden Pkwy.
Lanham, Md.
Tel. 800—238-5800
LOCAL TRANSPORTATION
IN COLLEGE PARK
Yellow-Blue Bird Cab — 864-7700
Union Cab — 779-4500.
AIRPORT TRANSPORTATION
TO COLLEGE PARK
From: National Airport — Cabs, $12.00 with a 50 cent
charge for each additional person going to the
same place.
Dulles Airport — Cabs, $27.00 with a 50 cent
charge for each additional person going to the
same place.
Baltimore-Washington International — Cabs $14
or $16 on the Meter with NO additional Charge
for additional passengers.
— Airport Limousine Service: $8.00 single or
$12.00, two to five people, with drop at your
Motel.
PRESS ARRANGEMENTS
PLAYER INTERVIEWS: Contact the Sports Informa-
tion Office for player interviews at least a day in advance
and we will make every attempt to accomodate your
request. All interview requests will be passed along to
the Basketball office to assure the player keeping the
appointment once it is scheduled.
Interview requests For Coach Driesell and his stall
should be handled the same way.
HOME GAMES: A working press room is located one
flight up from the rear entrance of Cole Field House.
Electrical outlets are available there along with tele-
phones. The sports information office will have two
telecopiers but if you have a deadline to meet we would
suggest you bring a telecopier along. We will send your
copy at no charge on our machines based on deadline
requirements. There may be a problem on a late TV
game though.
PRESS ROW: Working press will be seated on the
floor level of Cole Field House on the West side of
the baskets.
UPPER PRESS: The Radio announcers and TV along
with film cameras are located in die West press box.
one flight up from the promenade level.
PHOTOGRAPHERS: All photographers on assignment
working on the floor will pick up a arm band prior to
the game and must display it at all times. Photographers
are not allowed in the bench area.
POST GAME INTERVIEWS: Maryland will follow
the ACC interview policy widi die winning locker room
open 10 minutes after the game to all press for 20
minutes. The locker room will then be cleared and the
losing team locker room will open. The winning coach
will meet the press outside the locker room 10 minutes
after the game with the losing coach following the same
procedure when his locker room opens.
WEEKLY PRESS LUNCHEONS: Every attempt will
be made to hold a weekly luncheon in Cole Field House
widi Coach Driesell. Due to the schedule and travel plans
the day of the week will vary and a schedule will be
sent out in advance. They will be scheduled to provide
you the most assistance in your coverage of the Maryland
Basketball program.
CARL JAMES
Director of Athletics
University of Maryland
Carl C. James, as Director of Athletics, is the chief
administrator of one of the most successful departments
of intercollegiate athletics in the nation. The department,
as a self-sustaining division of the University of Maryland
serves the College Park Campus as one of the few in the
nation not operating at a deficit.
He administers a program that includes 23 sports for
men and women with a staff of over 100 and a budget
of over $3 million.
James came to Maryland as a nationally known ad-
ministrator having served as the Director of Athletics at
Duke University and as the Executive Director of the
New Orleans Mid-Winter Sports Association that in-
cludes the Sugar Bowl among its many activities.
He has served 21 years as .an administrator in in-
tercollegiate athletics, and has a business background
as well as serving as District Sales Manager for Roadway
Express, as a Sales Representative with Atlantic Re-
fining Company and on special assignment with Bryan-
Cooper Oil Company.
He is a native of Raleigh, North Carolina where he
had an outstanding high school career at Needham
Broughton High playing football, basketball and track.
He earned seven varsity letters at Duke with three
in Football '49, '50 and '51 and four in Track. In 1951
he was considered one of the top linemen in the south
although handicapped by a knee injury.
James played his football at Duke under Wallace
Wade and Bill Murray and joined the staff there in 1954
as an assistant to the Athletic Director. He was also
the Blue Devils chief recruiter. All - Americans he re-
cruited included such as Mike McGee, Mike Curtis,
Tee Moorman, Art Gregory, Jay Wilkinson and Bob
Matheson.
In 1966 he joined Roadway Express, Inc. of Akron,
Ohio, as the district sales manager with his office in
Kernersville, North Carolina.
In 1969 he returned to Duke as Associate Athletic
Director and took over the department in 1972 upon
the retirement of E. M. Cameron.
He joined die Mid-Winter Sports Association in 1977
and took over at Maryland in 1978 upon the retirement
of Jim Kehoe.
He has been active in the Fellowship of Christian
Athletes, has served as Chairman of several ACC com-
mittees and on numerous NCAA Committees. He is a
/.• ••vv./.-.v.vv. •
member of the National Football Foundation Hall of
Fame.
While at Duke he was elected to membership in Om-
icron Delta Kappa honorary leadership fraternity and
was a member of Phi Delta Theta social fraternity.
He is married to the former Marjorie Anne Pettit, also
a Duke graduate. They have two daughters Susan and
Sally.
MARYLAND MEN-WOMEN DOUBLEHEADERS
Cole Field House
DAY DATE OPPONENT TIME
December
Sat. 8 Women vs Montclair State 5:30
Men vs Brown 8:00
Sat. 15 Women vs Edinboro State 5:30
Men vs Catholic University 8:00
January
Sat. 12 Women vs University of Virginia 5:30
Men vs University of Pittsburgh 8:00
Wed. 16 Women vs Clemson University 4:30
Men vs Clemson University 7:00
Wed. 23 Women vs Wake Forest TBA
Men vs North Carolina State 7:00
CHARLES G. "LEFTY" DRIESELL
Maryland Basketball Coach "Lefty" Driesell has not
only established one of the finest basketball programs in
die nation at the University of Maryland but his efforts
have contributed greatly to the increased interest in the
sport throughout the area on all levels.
When Coach Driesell accepted the challenge offered
him at College Park he immediately won over the
basketball fans with his exciting game and packed Cole
Field House.
While building a solid, winning program he has
also found time to develop several professional players,
a Rhodes Scholar, two Phi Beta Kappas, and win 199
basketball games in just 10 years at Maryland.
Only one other active coach has a better winning per-
centage than Driesell's .714 in 19 years as a major college
head coach, including nine at Davidson. He has averaged
19.9 wins a year while at Maryland and 19.7 a year
for his 19 year coaching career, with a record of 375
wins against only 150 losses.
His summer camp at Maryland continues to fuel in-
terest in the sport among the youngsters and is recognized
as one of die finest in the nation featuring the finest
basketball minds to instruct the youngsters.
Driesell has not only established Maryland Basketball
in Maryland but has his program recognized nationally.
His many achievements have come despite competing in
die toughest basketball conference in the nation over
the years.
No NCAA team has ever been more proficient at
shooting, his teams always rank among the nation's
leaders in scoring, rebounding, free dirow shooting and
winning. He has never had a team out-rebounded,
despite the lack of height on some teams. Ten of his
teams have topped the 50 percent mark in field goal
percentage. Ten of his teams have scored over 80 points
a game including die Maryland record of 89.9 in 1974-75.
Eleven of his teams have won over 20 games in a season.
He has often deviated from his basic philosophy to ad-
just to the talent on hand and this is the toughest
job any coach has. His current team will operate from
a basic 2-1-2 offense while over die years he has pre-
ferred to operate with a double post. In the past when
blessed with an abundance of talented
guards he has operated from a diree quard
offense.
"Lefty" stresses the man-to-man defense,
feeling that in order to be a well rounded
basketball player, in order for a team
to win a national championship and in
order for a team to utilize all of its
natural talent it is necessary to play the
game man-to-man.
He has contributed numerous assistant
coaches to the college ranks as head coaches
widi assistants moving on to such schools
as Virginia, Davidson, Cincinnati, Wash-
ington State, West Virginia, William &
Mary, South Carolina State, Hofstra, and
Point Park.
His Terps have excelled in International
competition with a 10-0 record against
some of the finest teams in the world, in-
cluding the USSR and Yugoslavian Na-
tional teams. Five of these teams have
visited Cole Field House while the Terps
also won the Eighth Intercontinental Cup
Games in Mexico City in 1974.
In his 10 years in College Park nearly
two million fans have visited Cole Field
House to watch the Maryland basketball team. The
Terps have averaged 12,304 per date and 183,344 a
season just to watch the regular season games.
Driesell has also hosted the NCAA finals in Cole Field
House, several NCAA Regional games and established
one of the finest Holiday tournaments in the Maryland
Invitational.
"Lefty" has always been a winner starting his coach-
ing career as a Junior Varsity Coach at Granby High
in Norfolk, Virginia, his hometown, and continued on
to become the best in his profession in the history of the
state with 57 consecutive wins at nearby Newport News
High. His ability to teach fundamentals became evident
Coach Driesell poses with former players Maurice
Howard, John Lucas, Len Elmore, and Tom McMillen
during his annual summer basketball camp.
imediately for where is there a beter test than developing
junior varsity talent. His first junior varsity team won
18 of 22 games and he then continued with the talent
he had helped develop to win 15 of 20 with the varsity
team at Granby.
After moving to Newport News High for two years he
left with not only a 57 game winning streak behind him
but a state championship and 64 wins in 70 games.
When he took over the dormant program at Davidson
College his coaching ability again became immediately
evident as with the talent on hand he recorded the best
record Davidson Basketball had achieved in five years
and in only his second year led the Wildcats to their
first winning season in 13 years. In only his third season
Davidson had recorded its first 20-victory season in 54
years of competition and had achieved national prom-
inence.
After leading Davidson to six 20-victory seasons (6
teams in the top 20) and a 27-3 record in 1969 he ac-
cepted the challenge of another building program and
moved on to College Park, Maryland.
Again "Lefty" with the talent on hand transformed
a loser into a winner. He recorded a 13-13 season in
his first year and followed with a 14-12 and then in only
his third season led the Terps to a 27-5 record and a
National Invitational Tournament Championship.
He followed that with a 23-7 record and a berth in the
NCAA Eastern Regional Finals and then a 23-5 season
with third or fourth place antional ranking depending on
which poll or publication you follow.
A berth in the NCAA Midwest Regional Finals followed
with a 24-5 record, a fifth place ranking and an Ail-
Time NCAA fecord for field goal accuracy hitting .547
percent from the field. It was his second NCAA field
goal accuracy record with the first coming at Davidson.
His 1975-76 team gave him five consecutive 20 victory
seasons at Maryland with a 22-6 record and ranked
eleventh in the nation.
His 1978-79 team just missed a 20 victory season with
a 19-11 record but advanced to the second round of the
National Invitational Tournament. The Terps during
the regular season had defeated three teams ranked among
the top five at the time in Notre Dame 67-66 while
they were the nation's top ranked team. Duke fell 70-
68 while ranked third and North Carolina State 124-
110 while ranked fourth.
Driesell has had numerous players win national
honors but certainly one of the most pleasing perform-
ances was that of Buck Williams leading the ACC in
rebounding and winning "Rookie of the Year" honors
as a freshman in 1978-79.
Even when "Lefty" is taking one of his short vacations
he is where the action is. On July 12 of 1973 while
surf fishing at Bethany Beach, Delaware around mid-
night "Lefty" was credited with helping save the lives
of at least 10 children and several adults from burning
buildings in a townhouse complex near the beach. As a
residt he was honored with the NCAA "Award of Valor"
becoming the first coach to receive the award.
"Lefty", his attractive wife Joyce and their children
Patty. Pam, Carolyn, and Charles are members of the
Colesville Presbyterian Church. "Lefty" was born on
Christmas day 1931.
LEFTY'S ATHLETIC CAREER
"Allways a winner"
1940-46 2nd through 8th grade. Manager of Football,
Basketball and Baseball teams at Granby High. Re-
ceived first letter in 4th grade. The youngest to ever
receive a letter in school history. State football cham-
pions and undefeated in both 1944 and 1945.
1946—47 9th grade — played on undefeated State Cham-
pions in Football with winning streak of 33 straight
games. Won first Oyster Bowl game 6-0 over Clifton,
New Jersey.
— played on JV Basketball team
winning 13 straight before losing last game of season
23-21.
— played on Baseball team that was
runner-up for state championship.
1947-48 10th grade — played varsity football, basketball
and baseball. Basketball team was 14-7.
1948-49 11th grade — played on basketball team that
was third in state. All-City and All-Tidewater honors.
Also played varsity baseball.
1949-50 12th grade — played varsity basketball on Vir-
ginia State Champions. All-State, All-Tournament and
Outstanding Player in State Tournament. Received
Scholarship to Duke University. Also played varsity
baseball.
1950-54 — played at Duke University. Blue Devils rank-
ed 10th in nation in 1954 and winners of Dixie Classic.
1956 — Coach and Teacher at Granby High — His JV
Football team, 5-0, was not scored on until last game
of season. His JV Basketball team was 18-4, Eastern
District Tidewater Champions and Invitational Tour-
nament champions.
1957 — His Granby High JV Football team was undefeat-
ed, 5-0-1 while his Varsity basketball team was 15-6
and City Champions.
1958-60 — His Newport News Varsity Basketball team
was 64-6, won the State Championship and ran win-
ning streak to a state record 57 games.
NINETEEN YEAR COLLEGIATE RECORD
1955-56
Granby High J.V.
Won
18
Lost
4
1956-57
Granby High
Varsity
Won
15
Lost
5
Won 375 Lost
Pet.— .714
1957-59
Newport News
Varsity
Won
64
Lost
6
1965-66 Southern
Conference
Champions
Four Year High School Record:
Won
97
Lost
15
1967-68 Southern
Conference
Champions
(included
and State
i 57-game winn
Championship
ng strea
k
1968-69 Southern
Conference
Champions
1960-61
Davidson
Won
9
Lost
14
1971-72 NIT Champ
1961-62
Davidson
Won
14
Lost
11
1962-63
Davidson
Won
20
Lost
7
:fty
DRIESELL'S NATIONALLY
RANKED TEAMS
1963-64
Davidson
Won
22
Lost
4
1964-65
David
ion
Won
24
Lost
2
1963
A.P. Poll
18th
Davidson
1965-66
David
>on
Won
21
Lost
7
1964
A.P. Poll
10th
Da
vidson
1966-67
David
ion
Won
15
Lost
12
1965
A.P. Poll
6th
Davidson
1967-68
David
ion
Won
24
Lost
5
1966
A.P. Poll
16th
Davidson
1968-69
David
on
Won
27
Lost
3
1968
A.P. Poll
8th
Davidson
1969-70
Maryl
ind
Won
13
Lost
13
1969
A.P. Poll
3rd
Da
vidson
1970-71
Maryl
ind
Won
14
Lost
12
1972
A.P. Poll
11th
Ma
ryland
1971-72
Maryl
md
Won
27
Lost
5
1973
A.P. Poll
8th
Ma
ryland
1972-73
Maryl
ind
Won
23
Lost
7
1974
A.P. Poll
4th
Ma
ryland
1973-74
Maryl
ind
Won
23
Lost
5
1975
A.P. Poll
5th
Maryland
1974-75
Maryl
ind
Won
24
Lost
5
1976
A.P. Poll
11th
Ma
ryland
1975-76
1976-77
1977-78
1978-79
Maryl
Maryl
Maryl
Maryl
ind
ind
ind
ind
Won
Won
Won
Won
22
19
15
19
Lost
Lost
Lost
Lost
6
8
13
11
COACH DRIESELL'S ALL-TIME COLLEGE COACHING
STATISTICS
Shooting
Reb
ounds
Scoring
Opp.
Opp.
YEAR
FGA
FGM
PCT
FTA
FTM
PCT AVC
AVC
AVC
AVC
w
L
1960-61
1,321
571
.432
596
407
.683 41.6
38.9
67.4
69.8
9
14
1961-62
1,411
617
.437
679
493
.726 42.7
39.4
69.1
69.8
14
11
1962-63
1,632
792
.485
641
477
.744 42.8
33.9
76.3
65.8
20
7
1963-64
1,644
894
.543
722
534
.739 45.2
34.3
89.3
70.5
22
4
1964-65
1,784
908
.509
672
484
.720 47.3
38.4
88.5
70.9
24
2
1965-66
1,713
877
.512
739
563
.762 43.2
37.4
82.8
70.8
21
7
1966-67
1,645
760
.466
709
537
.757 43.0
40.1
76.6
71.1
15
12
1967-68
1,791
885
.494
795
562
.708 46.6
37.6
80.5
68.9
24
5
1968-69
2,105
984
.467
886
645
.728 51.0
39.2
87.1
73.6
27
3
1969-70
1,709
781
.457
586
417
.712 42.5
41.6
76.1
74.7
13
13
1970-71
1,650
735
.445
715
480
.715 44.4
40.3
75.0
73.4
14
12
1971-72
1,877
929
.495
786
586
.746 43.4
32.5
76.4
65.8
27
5
1972-73
2,094
1,089
.520
606
435
.718 45.4
34.8
87.1
74.2
23
7
1973-74
1,983
1,012
.510
504
376
.746 48.9
38.1
85.7
69.0
23
5
1974-75
1,918
1,049
.547
672
509
.757 43.5
34.5
89.9
74.6
24
5
1975-76
1,854
996
.537
629
477
.758 40.2
36.6
88.2
74.3
22
6
1976-77
1,645
850
.516
566
415
.733 38.8
36.2
78.3
74.1
19
8
1977-78
1.829
935
.509
599
433
.722 42.4
37.7
82.1
79.5
15
13
1978-79
1.897
954
.503
600
430
.717 38.5
34.5
77.9
74.7
19
11
DRIESELL ERA AT MARYLAND
1969-70 13-13 Won 5 ACC games in his first year,
5-9, although Terps were only 2-12
and 4-10 the two previous years and
won total of only eight games both
years. Set Maryland atendance record
of 138,000. (14 Home Games 138,000
— average 9,900) (26 games 221,153
average 8,506)
1970-71 14-12 Won 5 ACC games and upset 3rd
ranked South Carolina in Cole Field
House. Set attendance record of 180,-
842 and average of 12,056. (15 Home
Games 180,842 — average 12,056) (26
games 273,553 — average 10,521).
1971-72 27- 5 Won National Invitational Tournament
title. Advanced to finals of ACC Tour-
nament. Started string of consecutive
NON-ACC wins with 17 against NON-
LEAGUE opponents and started string
of 14 consecutive wins with four in
NIT. Ranked 11th in AP Poll. (14
Home Games 184,323 — average 13,-
166) (32 games 352,436 — average
11,014).
1972-73 23- 7 Gained FINAL EIGHT in NCAA
Tournament. Ran streak to 31 consec-
utive wins against NON-ACC oppon-
ents before losing to Providence in the
finals of the NCAA Eastern Regionals.
Increased attendance record for fourdi
consecutive year. Won first 10 games
of season to set consecutive win record
of 14. 8th in AP Poll. (13 Home
Games 172,828 — average 13,294) (30
games 340,964 — average 11,365)
1973-74 23- 5 Ranked 4th in AP Poll. Lost to North
Carolina State 103-100 in ACC finals
in what was considered the best ever
in the league tournament. (13 Home
Games 157,357 — average 12,104)
(28 games 288,764 — average 10,313)
1974-75 24- 5 Ranked 5th in AP Poll. Set NCAA
field goal percentage record hitting
.547 for season. ACC Coach of Year.
Gained FINAL EIGHT in NCAA
Tournament. Beat Notre Dame to
reach Cliampionship game of Midwest
Regionals. Won ACC regidar season
title with 10-2 record. Won all 4
games on home courts in North Caro-
lina. Set new attendance records for
Cole Field House. (14 Home Games
187,971 — average 13,427) (29 games
314,341 — average 10,839)
1975-76 22-6 Ranked 11th in AP Poll. 5th consecu-
tive 22 plus victory season. Won first
1 1 games of season. Set Maryland free
throw shooting record with .758. (15
Home Games 186,656 — average 13,-
110) (28 games 343,785 — average
12,278)
1976-77 19-8 Second year with 10 wins in a row.
Had 11 in 1975-76. Brad Davis was
1st round pick by Los Angeles as a
Junior. Steve Sheppard 2nd round
pick by Chicago. (19 Home Games
240,254 — average 12,645) (27 games
325,547 — average 12,057)
1977-78 15-13 Beat North Carolina State 109-108 in
opening round of ACC Tournament
after losing twice during regular sea-
son. Set school record with 130 points
against East Carolina. (14 Home
Games 172,173 — average 12,298) (28
games 304,501 — average 10,875)
1978-79 19-11 Gained 2nd round of NIT. Led ACC
in attendance for eighth consecutive
year. Upset top ranked teams in na-
tion. No. 1 Notre Dame, No. 3 Duke,
No. 4 North Carolina State No. 8 North
Carolina State. Win over Notre Dame
on National TV. Buck Williams
named Rookie of Year in ACC. (18
Home Games 201,536 — average 11,-
196) (30 games 316,449 — average
10,548).
ASSISTANT COACHES
TOM ABATEMARCO
Graduate of Dowling
College in Oakdale, New
York. Played four years
at Dowling and served
one year as an assistant
coach there and one year
as assistant at New York
Tech.
Joined the staff at Iona
College (team was 2-18
the previous year) and
players he recruited led
Iona to the NCAA play-
offs. Recruits included 6-10 Jeff Ruland and 6-10 Kevin
Vesey along with 6-3 Glenn Vickers and 6-2 Kevin
Hamilton. After two years at Iona he joined the Davidson
staff where he recruited Jamie Hall, a 6-10 from Pitts-
burgh. He was on the St. Johns staff last year and the
team was a Eastern Regional Finalist in the NCAA
tournament and had two wins over Duke. He recruited
a high school all-american for St. Johns in Dave Russell
6-6 and a all New York City guard in 6-3 Kevin Wil-
liams. His wifes name is Dawn.
JOHN KOCHAN
Graduate of City Uni-
versity of New York (Leh-
man College) where he
received his B.A. and the
University of Maryland
where he received his
Masters with an emphasis
on Sport Psychology. He
Captained both the bas-
ketball and baseball teams
at Lehman college and
was the MVP in both
sports. He served as a
graduate assistant with Coach "Lefty" Driesell while at
Maryland (1972-75) and moved to Davidson College
with Maryland Assistant Dave Pritchett. When Pritchett
became ill he served as an interim head coach at David-
son and then remained there with Eddie Biedenbach. He
is a native of New York. His wife, the former Jane
Wolf, worked as an art teacher in the Prince Georges
County School System while he was at Maryland.
SHERMAN DILLARD
Graduate of James
Madison University where
he was a recipient of one
of 15 NCAA post graduate
scholarships and a Dean's
list student. Graduated
Magna Cum Laude with
a BS in Health and Phy-
sical Education. Had a
3.7 grade point average
on a 4.0 scale.
He was chosen by the
National Association of
Basketball Coaches as an All-American, a draft choice
of the Indiana Pacers in the 1978 NBA Draft and scored
over 2,0000 points in his career at James Madison.
His duties with the Terrapins will include being aca-
demic coordinator, scouting and recruiting in addition to
coaching responsibilities on the floor.
He is a graduate assistant with the Terps.
Athletic Department
STAFF
Mailing Address: Box 295
College Park, Maryland
20740
Telephone: AREA CODE (301)
ADMINISTRATION
OFFICE
Athletic Director — Carl C. James 454-4705
Assistant AD — William "Spider" Fry 454-4706
Assistant AD — Frank Gray 454-2641
Assistant AD — Christine J. Weller 454-5854
Assistant to AD — Bob Wall 454-3332
Gothard Lane 454-4067
Business Manager — Dick Dull 454-2121
Faculty Chairman — Dr. Charles A. Taff .... 454-2403
Ticket Manager — Deborah Russell 454-2121
Educational Foundation — Col. Tom Fields 454-4562
M Club — Al Heagy 454-5158
Director of Golf Course — Frank Cronin .... 454-2131
Band Director — John Wakefield 454-2501
COACHES — MEN
Baseball — Jack Jackson 454-4041
Basketball — Charles G. Driesell 454-2126
Cross Countrly — Stan Pitts 454-4816
Fencing — Mike Dowhower 454-3286
Football — Jerry Claiborne 454-2125
Golf — Randy Hoffman 454-2131
Lacrosse — Bud Beardmore 454-4328
Soccer — Jim Dietsch 454-5212
Swimming — Charles Hoffman 454-2756
Tennis — Doyle Royal 454-4136
Track — Frank Costello 454-4816
Wrestling — John McHugh 454-2652
COACHES — WOMEN
Basketball — Christine J. Weller 454-5854
Cross Country — Stan Pitts 454-6685
Field Hockey — Suzanne J. Tyler 454-3076
Gymnastics — Bob Nelligan 454-5854
Lacrosse — Suzanne J. Tyler 454-3076
Swimming — Lisa M. Papa 454-5939
Tennis — Sylvia Feldman 454-5854
Track — Stan Pitts 454-6685
Volleyball — Barbara Drum 454-3090
STAFF
Trainer — John J. Bush 454-4819
Assistant Trainers — Jim Weir 454-2758
Sandra Worth 454-5854
Rod Martin 454-2758
Equipment Manager — Ron Fulton 454-4817
Jack Gable 454-4817
Don Cressinger 454-2127
Stadium and Grounds — Lindy Kehoe 454-2822
Bud Apple 454-2825
SPORTS INFORMATION OFFICE
Director — Jack Zane 864-4076
Assistant — Patti Flynn 454-2123
Secretary — Therese Ryan 454-2123
Student Assistant — Steve Whelton 454-2123
HOME
Unlisted
434-3784
262-4590
Unlisted
474-4077
(301)
535-0852
Unlisted
277-3460
439-1118
277-5594
345-3957
277-0794
459-6692
Unlisted
Unlisted
(717)
794-2918
345-3344
779-4659
Unlisted
(301)
544-2270
Unlisted
431-1170
530-1941
445-1786
530-1553
Unlisted
(717)
794-2918
345-7469
345-7469
474-4667
384-5544
(717)
794-2918
345-8710
345-3636
431-6991
445-1258
474-7269
593-0304
384-6572
454-5122
322-3265
474-8665
10
Greg L. Manning
6-M/2, Junior, Guard
Highspire, Pennsylvania
Greg Manning came to Maryland from Steelton-High-
spire High where he won All State honors and was named
the MVP for the Western Pennsylvania all-stars.
He led Steel-High to a 29-3 record and runner-up
honors in the PIAA AAA Championship Tournament.
Enroute to the championship game he set a tournament
record with 57 points against Nanticoke hitting 14 straight
shots and 25 for 28 from the floor for the game. Even
with his 57 points he hit two free throws with 17 seconds
left to ice the 87-83 win.
He played in all 28 games for the Terps as a freshman,
starting 21 games, and in only his fourth game with the
Terps hit eight consecutive shots and 10 of 12 in the
Hersheypark Arena before a hometown crowd. He hit
23 points in that game and 25 later in the season against
Army enroute to a 12.1 scoring average as a freshman.
He played in 29 games as a sophomore with a 11.4
scoring average. Again his high game was 25 points,
this time against North Carolina State and he had 23 as
the Terps upset fifth ranked Duke 70-68. He was named
the ACC Player of the Week after the Duke game. He
suffered a fracture of the Transverse Process on the
third Lumbar Vertebrae in the Wake Forest game, did
not play against Virginia and made a brief appearance
against Clemson in the ACC tournament.
He was a honor roll student in high and on the ACC
Honor Roll at Maryland.
While at Steel-High he played in 59 games, scored
1,296 points for a 22.0 average and scored 318 points
in 10 games in the state tournament for a 31.8 tourna-
ment average.
He is a superior free throw shooter hitting streaks of
23, 16 and 15 last year and hit 11 of 12 in the North
Carolina State game.
DATE OF BIRTH — July 19, 1959 in Harrisburg
Pennsylvania.
GP
GS
FGM
FGA
FRESHMAN
28
21
123
215
SOPHOMORE
29
16
132
240
.PCT FTM FTA .PCT REB ASST PF-DSQ POINTS AVG
.572 92 108 .852 60 74 64-1 338 12.1
.550 66 77 .857 33 47 58-4 330 11.4
rrLefty' Says — "Greg has been our starting g7tard for two years and is an excellent shooter and scorer. With two
years of starting experience behind him ive look for him to have a great year. He has worked hard ii'ith the zveights
and the nautilus this fall and we look for him to be much stronger and quicker this time around."
10
Mr. & Mrs. Donald Manning
Coach Benkovic
Steelton-Highspire High
11
15
Reggie Wesly Jackson
6-4, Sophomore, Guard
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Reggie Jackson came to Maryland from Roman Cath-
olic High where he played for Speedy Morris and record-
ed a 32-4 record his senior year. He averaged 18.6 points
for his high school career with 1,861 points and a single
game record of 41 points. As a senior and the team
Captain he averaged 21.8 points a game and contributed
130 assists.
He played in all 30 games for the Terps as a fresh-
man and started 14 games as a point guard. He had
47 assists and pulled in 64 rebounds from his guard
spot.
His high game as a Terp freshman was 16 points as
he hit seven field goals and two of three free throws
against Canisius.
With Coach Driesell switching the offense to a 2-1-2
this year he has moved to the second guard spot where
he will probably share playing time with Greg Manning
giving the Terps a strong scoring threat from the position
along with excellent ball handling.
Reggie was named the MVP of the Sonny Hill League
prior to his freshman year at Maryland and returned to
Philadelphia this past summer to lead the College League
in assists rank seventh in scoring and sixth in field goal
percentage. He was also fifth in steals. He had 58
assists in his 10 games.
He was named to the All-American teams in high in-
cluding the Scholastic Coach squad and played in the
McDonald's Classic in Landover. Maryland.
He ran a 5:12 mile, fourth fastest, when the Terps
began practice this past October cutting 20 seconds off
his freshman time. He ran the fastest mile and a half on
the team with a 8:31.
DATE OF BIRTH — March 26, 1960 in Philadelphia.
GP
GS
FGM
FGA
.PCT
FTM
FTA
.PCT
FRESHMAN
30
14
55
142
.387
26
42
.619
REB ASST PF-DSQ POINTS AVG
64 47 65-0 136 4.5
"LEFTY" Says — "Reggie was our starling guard in 14 games last year and did a tremendous job. He was our start-
ing guard in our big wins over Notre Dame and Duke and we look for him to be even belter in his sophomore
year. Reggie is one of the best defensive players on our team, is strong and quick and we look for him to score more
in our offense this year. He has lost 15 pounds over the summer and it has increased his quickness."
12
Mr. & Mrs. Reginald Jackson
Coach Speedy Morris
Roman Catholic High
13
21
Greg Joseph" Dutch" Morley
6-2, Sophomore, Guard
Hyat+sville, Maryland
4«M
■f'vV *>,
^T^ E D P M E
"Dutch" Morley came to Maryland from nearby De-
Matha High where he led the Stags to an undefeated
season, 27-0 and the ranking as the NUMBER ONE team
in the nation.
He averaged seven assists a game, and took five charges
a game while serving as the playmaker for Morgan
Wooton. He was the MVP of the McDonald's Classic in
Landover while playing for the underdog local All-
Stars against the U.S. All-Stars, leading the local squad
to an 81-74 win.
His DeMatha team clinched the National title while
winning their twenty seventh game of the season in the
Cumberland tournament. The pure point guard was
the Most Valuable Senior at DeMatha where he also
served as a Baseball pitcher and received Academic
Honors all four years.
He played in all 30 games for the Terps as a freshman
and started seven games as the point guard, while leading
the team in assists with 128 and in steals with 76. He
scored his season high of 12 points in his first collegiate
game and then had 10 in the Terp upset of Duke when
the Blue Devils were the nation's fifth ranked team. He
came off the bench to play 35 minutes in the 82-81
overtime win in Raleigh and again in the Duke game to
play 32 minutes. He had 1 1 assists in the opening round
win over Clemson in the ACC Tournament. He also
had 11 assists against Biscayne, and was second in the
ACC in asists for the season.
While not shooting much he hit four of six shots in
the upset of the Nation's top ranked Notre Dame and
four of five shots along with a pair of free throws in the
upset of Duke. He hit three of three shots and six of
seven free throws in his first game with the Terps
scoring 12 points against Bucknell.
His brother Michael and cousin Patti Wessell Flynn
attended Maryland with Patti playing on the Maryland
Women's team.
DATE OF BIRTH — August 4, 1960 in Washington,
D.C.
GP
GS
FGM
FGA
.PCT
FTM
ETA
.PCT
FRESHMAN
30
7
21
63
.333
34
43
.791
REB ASST PF-DSQ POINTS AVG
54 128 60-1 76 2.5
"LEFTY" Says — "Dutch Morley is our leader and point guard and last year, as a freshman, was second in the
ACC in assists. He gained 15 pounds last summer and is stronger and more aggressive defensively. His jump shooting
has improved. If Dutch can lead our ball club and control the tempo on defense and offense, we'll be tough to
beat."
14
1 L
a; J
Mr. & Mrs. William A. Morley
Coach Morgan Wooten
DeMatha High
<
15
22
Mark David Fothergill
6-9, Freshman, Forward
Somerset, Kentucky
Mark Fothergill came to Maryland from Somerset
High where he was a three year starter, first team All-
State by both Lexington and Louisville papers and
Captained the Somerset team. He played on two District
Championship teams and a Regional Champion while
leading Somerset to a three year record of 58-26. His
teams were 22-7, 20-8 and 16-11 at Somerset while play-
ing for Coach Chuck Eckler.
As a senior in high he hit 217 of 375 field goals for
58 percent shooting, 70 of 90 free throws for 78 percent
and 504 points for the season. He pulled in 112 offensive
rebounds and 185 defensive rebounds for an average of
13.5 rebounds a game to go widi his 22.9 scoring average.
As a junior he averaged 17.7 while hiting 56 percent
of his field goals and pulling in 1 1 rebounds a game
after a 14.0 scoring average and seven rebound average
as a sophomore.
He also played four years as a first baseman on the
baseball team at Somerset.
He played in the Akron Ail-American Cage Classic,
the Kentucky East-West game and the Kentucky-Indiana
series.
His biggest dirill in high school was in defeating Dan-
ville for the 12th Regional Championship and getting
to play in the state tournament.
He played his best against the top teams in high
scoring a high of 39 points against powerful Lexington
Henry Clay and 30 points against State Champion
Lexington Lafayette.
He was the most sought after player in his high school
area since Kenny Gibbs (Vanderbilt) in the '60's. He
considered such schools as Vanderbilt, Mississippi, West
Virginia, Kentucky and Purdue before making Maryland
his choice. "I think it's a wise decision — he wanted
to play at a big school with good tradition" Eckler
said.
DATE OF BIRTH
Louisiana.
December 26, 1960 in Shreveport,
"LEFTY" Says — "Mark is a freshman from Somerset, Kentucky ivho is an excellent shooter and rebounder. We're
trying to work hard with Mark this year on his fundamentals and hopefully, he will see considerable action at the
big forward, small forward and possibly center position."
16
Mrs. Judy Fothergill - Mark - Coach Chuck Eckler, Somerset High
17
23
David Matthew Henderson
6-9, Junior, Center
Roanoke, Virginia
David Henderson came to Maryland from Roanoke's
Patrick Henry High where he averaged 12.1 points a
game and 15 rebounds a game in his senior year. He
helped Patrick Henry to gain the semi finals of the State
AAA tournament.
He Captained the basketball team at Patrick Henry and
his senior year climaxed one of the fastest improving
careers in the state.
He was a member of the National Honor Society
and High School's "Who's Who" and was a first team
All-League selection in high.
As an Engineering Major at Maryland he is on the
ACC Honor Roll.
Coach Driesell noted his improvement in his senior
year in high and was impressed by his "potential". He
has continued to improve at Maryland. He played in
11 games as a freshman in 1976-77 and did not play
in 1977-78. He scored only five points as a freshman
hitting two of the three shots he took.
He again played in 11 games last year and hit five
of his eight shots scoring 14 points but earning his
letter. He was four of five from the foul line.
He works hard in practice, is intelligent and has a
superior attitude.
He hit all three of his shots in the opening game
of the season last winter while playing seven minutes
and scoring six points in the 107-97 win over Bucknell.
DATE OF BIRTH — May 4, 1958 in Roanoke, Virginia.
GP
GS
FGM
FGA
FRESHMAN
11
0
2
3
SOPHOMORE
11
0
5
8
.PCT FTM FTA .PCT REB ASST PF-DSQ POINTS AVG
.667 1 2 .500 5 0 5-0 5 0.4
.625 4 5 .800 10 1 4-0 14 1.3
"Lefty" Says — "David Henderson is in his fourth year here at the University of Maryland and has not gotten that
much playing time, but has worked hard and this could be his year. He is a hustler, an intelligent player, and has
a great attitude. All he needs is the opportunity to get game experience and he could help our ball club a great
deal"
18
Mr. & Mrs. Jack Henderson
Coach Kepley
Patrick Henry High
19
25
Ernest Karl Graham
6-7, Junior, Forward
Baltimore, Maryland
^
Ernest Graham came to Maryland from Dunbar High
in Baltimore where he was All-State, and the Most
Valuable Player in the Baltimore City Public School
Tournament.
He led Dunbar to a 23 game undefeated regular season
only suffering a post-season loss to West Philadelphia in
Baltimore's Civic Center.
He averaged 22.3 points and 18.5 rebounds as a
Senior and played on a championship team all three years
in high, playing for Lake Clifton as a sophomore and
junior and transferring to Dunbar as a senior. Lake
Clifton won the Maryland Scholastic Association and
Baltimore City titles as did Dunbar following his transfer.
As a freshman at Maryland he scored 177 points with a
high of 20 points against North Carolina State in the
ACC Tournament and 10 rebounds against Duke in the
ACC Semi-Finals and East Carolina earlier in the season.
He shared scoring honors against Duke in Durham as
a freshman with 16 points in regular season game.
As a sophomore he started 29 of his 30 games and
attracted early season attention hitting a school record
44 points in 124-110 win over fourth ranked North
Carolina in December. He hit 18 of 26 shots from the
field and eight of 10 free throws in the game while
playing only 25 minutes. He scored in double figures
in 22 consecutive games before going into a late season
slump that saw him score only 4 points in the next
three games. He then finished strong with 83 points in
the final five games. He was named the ACC "Player of
the Week" after the North Carolina State game.
He had a team high 28 points against Notre Dame
in the upset of the Nation's top ranked team as he hit
13 of 23 from the field.
He has played guard and forward for the Terps but
moved to the big forward slot in the early practice as
Coach Driesell switched to a 2-1-2 offense.
His brother Kevin went to Gardner Webb.
DATE OF BIRTH — June 11,
Maryland.
1959 in Baltimore,
GP
GS
FGM
FGA
FRESHMAN
26
2
74
140
SOPHOMORE
30
29
222
454
.PCT FTM FTA .PCT REB ASST PF-DSQ POINTS AVG
.521 29 42 .690 80 28 53-2 177 6.4
.489 55 73 .753 86 62 87-3 499 16.6
"LEFTY" Says — "Ernest Graham is one of the best shooters I have ever coached. I would put him in the class with
Dick Snyder, John Lucas, Tom McMillen and Fred Hetzel. Ernest is also an excellent ball handler for his size
and is now close to 6'8". He can play u'ith anybody in the country when he is intent and concentrating on his game.
Sometimes he has a habit of "Drifting" a little, and once we get this under control, you will hear a lot about
Ernest Graham."
20
21
41
Jon Stuart Robinson
6-4, 184, Freshman
Gas+onia. North Carolina
Jon Robinson came to Maryland from Hunter Hess
High in Gastonia, North Carolina where he served as
Captain of the 1977 State Championship team.
He was accorded Most Valuable Player honors in
the 1977 State Tournament and All-State honors in
1978.
He played for Green Burye at Hunter Hess where he
lettered as a guard for three years. He cites winning the
State Championship in high school and signing a Grant-
in-Aid to attend Maryland as his most memorable
moments in sports.
Jon played 16 minutes against the Yugoslavian Team
on November 2 hitting two of the three shots he took.
He can play either the lead guard or second guard role
and will see considerable playing time as a redshirt
freshman this year.
With Coach Driesell switching to a 2-1-2 offense he
will primarily share the lead guard role with Dutch
Morley. He is a good shooter, plays defense and can
handle the ball He ran the mile in 5:14 and the third
fastest mile and a half on the team in 8:33.
DATE OF BIRTH — September 14, 1960 in Plainville,
Kansas.
"LEFTY" Says — "Jon Robinson is only a freshman but was on our squad last year and was "red-shirted". He is in
uiper condition and is an excellent shooter and defender. Jon could give us a lot of help although he lacks playing
experience at this time."
22
23
42
Herman Veal, Jr.
6-6, Freshman, Forward
Jackson, Mississippi
Herman Veal came to Maryland from Robert M. Calla-
way High in Jackson, Mississippi where he captained the
basketball team to a Sub-District title as a center.
He was the Most Valuable Player for Robert Callaway
and played for the Mississippi Association of Coaches
All-Star South team losing a 90-89 decision to the North
squad.
He cites his most memorable moment in sports as
playing in the AAU National Championship Tournament
in Jacksonville, Florida and scoring 30 points with 15
rebounds.
Herman is the only athlete in a family of two brothers
and seven sisters.
He is enrolled in Liberal Arts and enjoys "soft music"
as his hobby.
DATE OF BIRTH — March 16, 1961 in Jackson,
Mississippi.
"LEFTY" Says — "Herman Veal is a tremendous leaper and has a lot of potential. We plan to work hard with
him on his fundamentals this year and get him as much playing time as possible. He can play either the small forward
or big forward position and is an aggressive young man who should be an outstanding basketball player for us here
at Maryland."
24
Coach Bobby Ray
Robert M. Callaway High
25
■ 50
John Bilney
6-8, Senior, Power Forward
Woodcliff Lake, New Jersey
John Bilney came to Maryland from Pascack Hills
High where he averaged 23 points and 22 rebounds a
game. His junior year in high he set a school record
with 470 rebounds had 66 assists and 120 blocked
shots while averaging 22.4 points a game and 21.1
rebounds. He was Co-Captain of the team his senior
year.
He played in 19 Maryland games as a freshman, 25
as a sophomore with seven starts and 30 games as a
junior. He pulled in nine rebounds in 12 minutes
against Bucknell as a freshman for his career high that
he equaled is a sophomore against East Carolina. He also
scored nine points in the East Carolina game.
He scored only 58 points as a junior in 30 games but
pulled in 66 rebounds, and contributed 25 assists. He
played some fine defense for the Terps last year as he
saw much more playing time than his offensive statistics
indicate, with 14 steals and eight blocked shots.
While in high school he was a honorable mention
All-American and played in All-Star games in Phila-
delphia, Seattle, New York, the McDonald's Classic in
Landover, and Connecticut. His father played basketball
at Davis-Elkins and Rutgers.
Bilney cites his first appearance on the Cole Field
House court as a freshman playing for the varsity against
Ball State as his most memorable moment in sports. He
hit the first shot of his varsity career, hit two of three
in that game and scored five points while playing 14
minutes and also recorded his first blocked shot.
He was highly recruited in high school and made
his decision in January announcing his intentions at
that time ending the recruiting drive of many schools at
that time.
His brother Dan was All-New England as a baseball
player at the University of Massachusetts.
DATE OF BIRTH — February 25, 1958 in Holliswood,
New York.
FRESHMAN
SOPHOMORE
JUNIOR
GP GS FGM FGA
19 0 8 15
25 7 20 45
30 0 22 53
.PCT FTM FTA .PCT
.533 7 13 .538
.444 7 19 .368
.415 14 28 .500
REB ASST PF-DSQ POINTS AVG
35 5 19-0 23 1.2
58 9 44-1 47 1.9
66 25 53-1 58 1.9
"LEFTY" Says — "John Bilney is the only senior on our squad and has more experience than the majority of our
front-court people. He is a hard-nosed defensive player and an excellent passer and rebounder; and will cer-
tainly be a boost to our ball club coming off the bench."
26
Mr. & Mrs. John Bilney
Coach Simpson
Pascack Hills High
27
52
Charles Linwood "Buck" Williams
6-8, Sophomore, Center-Power Forward
Rocky Mount, North Carolina
"Buck" Williams came to Maryland from Rocky
Mount High and immediately made the fans around
the league take notice as he led the ACC in rebounding
as a freshman and captured "Rookie of the Year" honors.
He pulled in 323 rebounds in 30 games for a 10.8
average with league runner-up Mike Giminski of Duke
pulling in 275 in 30 games for a 9.2 average.
While at Rocky Mount he scored over 1,000 points
and pulled in over 1,000 rebounds. In his senior year
he averaged 21.3 points a game and pulled in 19.7 re-
bounds a game while leading Rocky Mount to the State
Championship. He Captained the basketball team for
Coach Reggie Henderson. He played football in junior
high as a defensive end.
"Buck" was a high school All-American, including
Scholastic Coach and was named the Most Valuable
Player in the State Tournament. He played with the South
team in the Mini-Olympics during the summer prior
to entering Maryland. This past summer he played with
the United States team in the International Cup compe-
tition and was the second leading scorer on the 1 1 man
squad with 62 points in five games. The team lost only
to the Russians.
He was cited three times as the ACC "Rookie of the
Week" enroute to the "Rookie of the Year" Honors.
Contributing to his selections were 15 rebounds in the
67-66 upset of Notre Dame, the Nation's top ranked team,
on National Television, his 13 rebounds against then
fourth ranked North Carolina State and 23 rebounds
along with 26 points in the Perm State and Biscayne
games.
He had 19 points against North Carolina to go
with 14 rebounds in his highest scoring game while
his top rebounding game came in Las Vegas when he
pulled in 22 against the Nevada-Las Vegas team. He
also had 17 points in that game.
While playing center in the November 2 game against
the Yugoslavian National Team he scored a game high
27 points and pulled in a game high 16 rebounds de-
spite facing a 6-11 opponent.
He was a power forward in the early pre-season
sessions but with the departure of Larry Gibson may
wind up at center this winter, and is certain to excell
at either position.
He ran the mile faster than any basketball Terrapin
ever had for Coach Driesell turning in a 4:59 as a
freshman. This past October he topped that with a 4:53.
DATE OF BIRTH — March 8, 1960 in Rocky Mount,
North Carolina.
GP
GS
FGM
FGA
.PCT
FTM
FTA
.PCT
30
30
120
206
.583
60
109
.550
REB(AVG) ASST PF-DSQ POINTS AVG
323(10.8) 18 77-2 300 10.0
"LEFTY" Says — "Buck Williams ivas the leading rebounder in the ACC as a freshman last year and as I told Buck,
that will make it even tougher for him to lead the ACC in rebounding this year. Horvever, Buck has worked hard
in the off-season and played extremely well in the International Cup Games. I look for Buck to be even more ag-
gressive off the backboards and to increase his 10.2 average of last year. Buck has the potential to become an
All-American if he is willing to pay the price."
28
Coach Reggie Henderson
Rocky Mount High
29
54
Taylor Baldwin
6-10, Sophomore, Center
Greenwich, Connecticut
Taylor Baldwin came to Maryland from Greenwich
High where he was All-State as a center playing for
Garland Allen. He Captained the Greenwich High
team and played with the Connecticut All-Stars in the
Akron All-American Classic and in the Bridgeport
Jewish Classic.
He set all of his high school scoring and rebounding
records. In his senior year he averaged 23.1 points a
game and 15 rebounds.
His father, now deceased, was a football and hockey
star at Harvard and was invited to the Olympics in
Hockey.
He played sparingly as a freshman but did get in 18
games. He hit his high of four points and four rebounds
in the Biscayne game as he played 13 minutes. He had
two points and three rebounds in the final game of the
season against Ohio State in the NIT.
He played nine minutes at center against the Yugoslav-
ian National Team in a physical game.
DATE OF BIRTH — March 10, 1959 in Bombay, India.
GP
GS
FGM
FGA
.PCT
FTM
FTA
.PCT
HESHMAN 18
0
6
16
.375
4
9
.444
REB ASST PF-DSQ POINTS AVG
21 3 16-1 16 0.9
"LEFTY" Says — "Taylor lost 27 pounds over the summer by doing a lot of running, agility work, and working
hard on his game. He is getting up and down the eourt quicker, and jumping better and he will have a shot at
being our starting center this year. Taylor is a competitor and if he can do a solid job for us defensively on the
boards and score inside, he may very well be our starting center this year. He has worked harder in the off-season
than just about anyone I have ever coached and I feel certain it will pay off for him."
30
Mrs. Peter Baldwin
31
55
Albert King
6-6, Junior, Quick Forward
Brooklyn, New York
Albert King came to Maryland from Fort Hamilton
High as the "Best Basketball Player in New York City"
and was proclaimed by many as the greatest high school
basketball player in the country.
He may well become the best basketball player in the
ACC this whiter after a lot of hard work and a summer
of International competition. In the November 2 game
with the Yugoslavian National Team he hit 26 points
and pulled in 11 rebounds despite playing against much
taller opposition and hit the boards as hard as anyone
can.
He scored 381 points as a freshman and 444 as a
sophomore while contributing 126 assists during the two
years and pulling in 331 rebounds.
He will play the quick forward in Coach Driesell's
switch to the 2-1-2 offense this year. Al started 26
games as a freshman and 24 last winter and was the
ACC "Player of the Week" while winning MVP honors
in the Maryland Invitational Tournament.
An exceptional team player he had a high of 30 points
as a sophomore after a high of 27 points as a freshman.
He twice scored 27 points last year, in a slow down
against St. Joseph's that the Terps won 62-56 in over-
time, and the final game of the season against Ohio
State in the NIT.
As a freshman he had 64 assists, 21 steals and 11
blocked shots to go with his scoring and rebounding
and last winter had 62 assists, 30 steals and ten blocked
shots.
He averaged 31.3 points a game for 64 games in high
school and pulled in 20.6 rebounds a game with a total
of 2,004 points and 1,284 rebounds. He was named by
Parade Magazine as one of the top three basketball
players in the nation and was a three year All-American
in high school. He was an honorable mention All-
American for the Terps last year.
He cut 24 seconds off his best mile time this past
October as he covered the mile in 5:06, second best
on the team, and the mile and a half in 8:32 just one
second behind Buck Williams the leader. King has
worked hard to prepare for his junior year and the
results are certain to be pleasing to Terrapin fans.
His brother played at Tennessee.
DATE OF BIRTH — December 17, 1959, in Brooklyn
New York.
GP
Sophomore 28
Freshman 28
GS FGM FGA .PCT FTM FTA .PCT REB(AVG) ASST PF-DSQ POINTS AVG
26 164 327 .502 53 82 .646 187 ( 6.7 64 73-3 381 13.6
24 191 387 .494 62 81 .765 144( 5.1) 62 62-2 444 15.9
"LEFTY" Says — "Albert is still only 18 years old and will not be 19 until December 17. He has matured and worked
very hard this summer and fall on his shooting and has spent many hours in the nautilus and iveight rooms during the
off season. He has increased his upper body strength tremendously. I think Albert is in the best shape of his career
and with continued work can become our next All-American here at Maryland."
32
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas King
Coach Kern
Fort Hamilton High
^ ^ J00B^
King's statistics at Fort Hamilton High Schol:
Sophomore 20 Games 528 points 26.4 avg.
Junior 22 Games 629 points 28.6 avg.
Senior 22 Games 848 points 38.6 avg.
Totals: 64 Games 2004 points 31.3 avg.
98 of 150 fouls 18 Reb. per game
104 of 140 fouls 20 Reb. per game
94 of 157 fouls 22 Reb. per game
296 of 447 fouls 1284 Reb.
20.6 Reb. per game
33
MARYLAND
PRESS COVERAGE
University of Maryland athletes receive the best press
coverage in the nation. The Terrapins are in a unique
situation located just a few miles from the nation's capi-
tal and two of the best known newspapers in the nation,
the Washington Post and the Star-News, while just a few
miles to the north they have another major metropolitan
area with the Baltimore Sunpapers and the News Ameri-
can.
In addition there are 10 other daily papers publishing
around the state and some of the finest weekly papers
in the country.
Radio 65
WMUC
Thus the Terrapins have 15 daily papers covering their
athletic activities including five major metropolitan daily
publications.
The 15 daily papers alone have a circulation of two
million with the Washington Post alone reaching nearly
700.000 homes every Sunday and the Star-News nearly
half-a-million more.
The Post, Star News and Sunpapers are also known
throughout the nation and are available on Newsstands
in every major metropolitan area in the country.
There are also 71 weekly newspapers published in the
State of Maryland with circulation running as high as
the 65,000 of the Montgomery and Prince George's
Sentinel.
The National Observer with over a half million circu-
lation is published in nearby Silver Spring, Maryland
and also follows the Terps fortunes.
ertcafl
Both Wire services staff the Terrapin games with
Regional Sports Editors Gordon Beard of Associated
Press and Don Cronin of the Washington Bureau of
United Press International.
With Washington, D.C. the News Capital of the World
every major publication and news outlet has a s;taJF in
Washington giving Maryland national coverage of all
major events.
Time Magagine, Sports Illustrated, Peoples Magazine,
the Sporting News and many other national publications
have carried major feature articles on the Terps in recent
years.
The Afro-American publishes its National Edition in
Baltimore along with local editions for Baltimore and
Washington. The Baltimore edition has a circulation of
over 32,000 with another 34.000 printed for Washington.
THE
dla^ondback *******
s\jN
34
BILLY PACKER AND DICK ENBERG DOING A MARYLAND GAME
FOR NBC-TV'S NATIONAL NETWORK FROM COLE FIELD HOUSE
35
"LEFTY'S" NBA PLAYERS
LEN ELMORE
Indiana Pacers
1st Round
>^
TOM McMILLEN
Buffalo Braves
New York Knicks
Atlanta Hawks
1st Round
MAURICE "MO" HOWARD
Cleveland Cavaliers
New Orleans Jazz
2nd Round
DICK SNYDER
(Davidson)
Cleveland Cavaliers
1st Round
36
"LEFTY'S" NBA PLAYERS
JOHN LUCAS
Houston Rockets
1st Player Picked in 1976 NBA Draft
BRAD DAVIS
Los Angeles Lakers
1st Round
STEVE SHEPPARD
Chicago Bulls
2nd Round
MOSES MALONE
Houston Rockets
1st Round
OTHER
DRIESELL
PLAYERS DRAFTED
INTO
THE NBA
Darrell Brown
Don Davidson
Jim O'Brien
Owen Brown
Fred Hetzel
Tom Roy
Bob Bodell
Jerry Kroll
Howard White
Doug Cook
Larry Gibson
Mike Malloy
Lawrence Boston
37
Barry Yates
MARYLAND BASKETBALL RECORDS AGAINST ALL OPPONENTS
W L
Alabama 1 0
American University 1 1
Appalachian State 2 0
University of Arizona 1 0
Arizona State University 1 0
Air Force 2 0
Army 3 8
Bainbridge Naval Station 0 2
Baltimore University 2 0
Biscayne 1 0
Boston College 1 0
Boston University 1 0
Brown 2 0
Bucknell 3 0
Buffalo 4 0
Canisius 4 0
Catholic 10 6
Cincinnati 1 1
Citadel 1 0
City College of New York 1 1
Clemson 49 24
Columbia 2 0
Connecticut 0 1
Creighton 1 0
Davidson 6 3
Dayton 1 0
Delaware 2 0
DePaul 1 0
DePauw 2 0
Dickinson 1 0
Duke 38 56
Duquesne 4 0
East Carolina 4 0
Eastern Kentucky 1 0
East Tennessee 1 0
Evansville 1 0
Florida 0 1
Fordham 6 2
Fort Belvoir 0 1
Gallaudet 6 1
Georgetown 34 21
George Washington 30 22
Georgia 1 3
Georgia Tech 4 0
Hampden-Sydney 2 2
Holy Cross 2 0
Houston 1 0
Indiana 1 0
Jacksonville 1 0
Johns Hopkins 18 5
Kansas 0 2
Kansas State 1 0
Kent State 1 0
Kentucky 3 4
Kentucky Wesleyan 1 0
Kings Point 0 1
Lafayette 1 0
Lehigh 1 0
LIU 6 0
LSU 2 0
Louisville 0 3
Loyola (Md.) 1 4
Loyola {Louisiana} 1 0
Maine 1 0
Marine Corps Institute 1 1
Marshall 1 2
Maryland Eastern Shore 0 0
Memphis State 0 2
Miami (Fla.) 3 3
Miami (Ohio) 1 1
W L
Michigan 1 2
Michigan State 1 1
Minnesota 2 0
Mississippi 0 1
Mississippi Aggies 0 1
Mississippi State 0 2
Montana State 1 0
Navy 27 26
Nevada/ Las Vegas 1 1
New Mexico A & M 0 1
New York University 1 0
Niagara 1 0
North Carolina - Charlotte 1 0
North Carolina 30 69
North Carolina State 28 50
Northwestern 0 1
Notre Dame 4 2
Ohio State 1 1
Ohio Wesleyan 0 1
Oklahoma State 1 0
Pennsylvania 1 11
Penn State 6 5
Pittsburgh 1 1
Princeton 3 3
Providence 0 1
Quantico Marines 2 2
Randolph Macon 2 1
Rhode Island 2 0
Rhode Island State 0 1
Richmond 22 14
Rutgers 2 2
St. Francis (Pa.) 1 0
St. John's (Md.) 9 3
St. John's (N.Y.) 1 1
St. Joseph's 2 0
San Francisco 1 0
Santa Clara 1 0
Seton Hall 2 1
South Carolina 29 23
Southern California 1 0
Southern Illinois 0 1
Stevens Institute 4 1
Syracuse 4 0
Tampa 2 0
Temple 0 1
Tennessee 0 2
Texas El Paso 0 1
Texas Tech 1 0
Tulsa 1 0
UCLA 0 2
U.S. Merchant Marine 1 2
Vanderbilt 1 0
Virginia 70 38
Virginia Military Institute 40 10
Virginia Tech 22 4
Wake Forest 27 30
Washington & Lee 26 24
Washington College 13 4
West Virginia 9 18
Western Kentucky 2 0
Western Maryland 12 0
Wichita 1 0
William & Mary 16 8
Wisconsin 0 2
Woodrow General Hospital 1 1
Wyoming 1 0
Xavier 1 0
Yale 1 0
ALL-TIME HIGH SCORING GAMES
130
East Carolina
106
1977-78
129
Canisius
103
1978-79
127
East Carolina
84
1975-76
127
Brown
82
1972-73
124
N.C. State
110
1978-79
122
Boston University
82
1975-76
117
George Washington
96
1971-72
115
Georgetown
83
1973-74
113
DePauw
49
1974-75
112
Fordham
73
1973-74
111
Miami (Fla.)
77
1970-71
111
Long Island Univ.
88
1975-76
110
Virginia
75
1973-74
109
N.C. State
108
1977-78
109
Buffalo
70
1970-71
107
George Washington
81
1965-66
107
West Virginia
92
1965-66
107
Canisius
80
1972-73
107
Bucknell
97
1978-79
106
Bucknell
72
1976-77
38
MARYLAND BASKETBALL
TEAMS COACHED BY H. BURTON SHIPLEY:
1923-24
1924-25
1925-26
1926-27
1927-28
1928-29
1929-30
1930-31
1931-32
1932-33
1933-34
1934-35
1935-36
1936-37
1937-38
1938-39
1939-40
1940-41
1941-42
1942-43
1943-44
1944-45
1945-46
1946-47
1947-48
1948-49
1949-50
1950-51
1951-52
1952-53
1953-54
1954-55
1955-56
1956-57
1957-58
1958-59
1959-60
1960-61
1961-62
1962-63
1963-64
1964-65
1965-66
1966-67
ALL GAMES
CONF.
GAMES
Won
Lost
Won
Lost
4
6
1
2
11
4
3
1
14
2
7
1
10
9
6
4
14
4
8
1
7
8
2
5
16
5
9
5
14
4
8
1
16
3
8
2
11
8
7
3
11
7
6
1
8
10
4
3
13
5
4
3
9
10
4
8
14
8
6
4
13
8
8
3
13
8
7
4
1
21
0
13
7
15
3
8
8
8
5
5
4
13
2
1
2
13
2
5
9
11
5
4
14
243
9
199
9
124
4
91
;d by
"FLUCIE'
STEWART:
11
13
9
7
9
17
8
7
7
27
18
48
5
22
13
27
HED BY BUD MILLIKAN
15
10
11
8
13
8
9
5
15
8
12
3
23
7
7
2
17
7
10
4
14
10
7
7
16
10
9
5
22
7
9
5
10
13
7
7
15
8
9
5
14
12
6
8
8
17
3
11
8
13
4
10
9
17
5
9
18
8
10
4
14
11
7
7
11
242
14
180
5
130
9
109
TEAMS COACHED BY FRANK FELLOWS:
1967-68 8 16 4 10
1968-69 8 _[8 _2 _\2_
16 34 6 22
TEAMS COACHED BY "LEFTY" DRIESELL
1969-70
1970-71
1971-72
1972-73
1973-74
1974-75
1975-76
1976-77
1977-78
1978-79
ALL GAMES
CONF
GAMES
Won
Lost
Won
Lost
13
13
5
9
14
12
5
9
27
5
8
4
23
7
7
5
23
5
9
3
24
5
10
2
22
6
7
5
19
8
7
5
15
13
3
9
19
199
11
85
7
68
7
58
39
YEAR BY YEAR RESULTS WITH *LEFTY
1969-70
13-13
5-9
Maryland
97
Buffalo
92
George Washington
67
Princeton
87
Wake Forest
68
South Carolina
54
Army
94
Fordham
94
Delaware
57
N. C. State
96
Wake Forest
83
West Virginia
44
South Carolina
75
CI em son
73
Navy
97
Maine
52
Duke
69
North Carolina
54
N. C. State
81
Georgetown
69
Virginia
83
North Carolina
76
Duke
103
Clemson
78
West Virginia
79
Virginia
57
N. C. State
1970-71
14-12
5-9
Maryland
86
Delaware
109
Buffalo
85
Lehigh
72
Wake Forest
70
South Carolina
79
Georgetown
80
Tampa
111
Miami (Fla.)
99
Richmond
81
N. C State
31
South' Carolina
56
Clemson
69
George Washington
88
Loyola (Md.)
70
North Carolina
61
N. C. State
88
Duke
63
Virginia
67
Duke
76
North Carolina
56
Seton Hall
45
Clemson
81
West Virginia
66
Wake Forest
89
63
Virginia
South Carolina
77
H
71
A
75
A
104
H
101
H
69
H
71
H
58
H
91
A
88
A
76
H
55
A
63
A
57
H
68
H
50
H
77
H
64
A
71
H
71
A
90
A
87
A
85
H
83
A
71
H
67
ACC
73
H
70
H
66
H
71
H
96
A
96
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
84
H
71
ACC
1971-72 27-5 8-4
Maryland 100 Brown 83
118 George Washington 96
57 Virginia 78
79 Georgetown 46
86 Canisius 77
73 Loyola 60
102 Holy Cross 79
103 Western Kentucky 67
90 St. John's 69
83 N.C. State 70
61 Clemson 63
49 Wake Forest 46
85 Navy 60
82 Buffalo 58
72 North Carolina 92
66 N.C. state 65
77 Duke 58
85 Duquesne, 71
78 Long Island Univ. 60
79 North Carolina 77
67 Clemson 57
76 Richmond 61
59 Duke 68
64 Wake Forest 56
45 Virginia 42
54 Clemson 52
62 Virginia 57
64 North Carolina 73
67 St. Joseph's 55
71 Syracuse 65
91 Jacksonville 77
100 Niagara 69
1972-73 23-7 7-5
Maryland 127 Brown 82
82 Richmond 50
107 Canisius 80
99 Georgetown 73
88 George Washington 79
90 Georgia Tech 55
90 Syracuse 76
76 Kent State 58
79 Clemson 75
93 Virginia 74
85 N. C. State 87
76 Navy 67
105 Wake Forest 76
100 Long Island 73
94 North Carolina 88
78 N.C. State 89
81 Duke 85
83 Fordham 72
93 Buffalo 64
85 North Carolina 95
69 Clemson 66
81 Duquesne 71
96 Duke 68
60 Wake Forest 62
92 Virginia 81
77 Clemson 61
73 Wake Forest 65
74 N. C. State 76
91 Syracuse 75
89 Providence 103
H
A
A
H
H
A
A
H
H
H
A
A
A
H
A
A
H
H
A
H
H
H
A
H
H
ACC
ACC
ACC
NIT
NIT
NIT
NIT
H
A
A
A
H
H
H
H
A
H
H
A
H
H
H
A
A
A
H
A
H
A
H
A
A
ACC
ACC
ACC
NCAA
NCAA
40
MARYLAND YEAR BY YEAR
1973-74
Maryland
23-5
9-3
64
UCLA
106
Eastern Kentucky
115
Georgetown
78
San Francisco
53
Santa Clara
102
Holy Cross
58
Boston College
96
Richmond
89
Clemson
72
Wake Forest
74
N.C. State
112
Fordham
72
Navy
86
Canisius
73
North Carolina
80
N.C. State
104
Duke
88
Virginia
92
George Washington
91
North Carolina
56
Clemson
98
Duquesne
64
Duke
77
Wake Forest
110
Virginia
85
Duke
105
North Carolina
100
N.C. State
1975-76 22-6
Maryland
7-5
127
East Carolina
99
DePauw
98
Richmond
122
Boston University
93
Georgia Tech
81
Fordham
70
UNC — Charlotte
104
Seton Hall
66
Princeton
111
Long Island
82
George Washington
93
Wake Forest
87
N.C. State
87
Navy
77
Clemson
93
North Carolina (ot)
102
N.C. State
69
Notre Dame
69
Virginia
102
Duke
69
North Carolina
98
Clemson
72
Georgetown
67
Duke
105
Wake Forest
81
Virginia
80
Duke (ot)
65
Virginia
65
A
57
H
83
H
60
A
32
A
75
H
37
H
60
A
60
H
59
A
80
A
73
H
50
A
73
H
82
A
86
H
83
H
81
A
71
A
80
H
54
A
72
H
61
A
68
H
75
H
66
ACC
85
ACC
103
ACC
84
H
42
H
71
A
82
H
65
H
56
H
60
H
69
H
59
H
88
H
72
A
96
A
69
A
69
A
82
H
95
A
84
H
63
A
66
A
91
H
81
H
89
A
63
A
69
A
91
H
73
H
78
ACC
73
ACC
1974-75
2'
\-5 10-2
Maryland
106
Richmond
99
Wake Forest
99
Long Island
104
Georgetown
113
DePauw
81
George Washington
105
Georgia Tech
75
UCLA
96
Appalachian State
90
Notre Dame
83
Duke
89
Wake Forest
103
N.C. State
87
Navy
82
Clemson
66
North Carolina
98
N.C. State
86
Virginia
65
Fordham
104
Duke
96
North Carolina
70
Virginia
103
Duquesne
70
Clemson
104
East Tennessee
85
N.C. State
83
Creighton
83
Notre Dame
82
Louisville
1976-77 19-8
7-5
Maryland
79
Notre Dame (ot)
86
Ball State
49
Long Island
58
Princeton
80
East Carolina
92
DePaul
76
Appalachian St.
106
Bucknell
84
Xavier
96
Syracuse
90
Richmond
85
Wake Forest (ot)
87
N.C. State
62
Navy
71
Clemson
68
North Carolina
75
N.C. State
76
George Washington
82
Virginia
65
Duke (ot)
70
North Carolina
84
Clemson
88
Pittsburgh
85
Duke
81
Wake Forest
68
Virginia
72
N.C. State
81
H
78
A
84
H
71
A
49
H
67
A
67
H
81
H
50
H
82
H
77
H
73
H
85
H
73
A
83
A
69
H
97
A
79
H
46
A
80
A
74
A
51
A
82
A
64
H
87
H
87
ACC
79
NCAA
71
NCAA
96
NCAA
80
H
70
H
45
H
45
H
69
H
74
H
74
H
72
H
74
H
85
H
87
H
86
H
80
H
54
NEU
93
A
71
H
73
A
86
H
67
H
64
A
97
A
78
H
75
H
72
H
80
A
77
A
82
ACC
41
TERRAPIN NOTES
1977-78 1513
3-9
Maryland 95
Bucknell
78
American
91
Georgetown
89
Penn State
130
East Carolina
90
George Washington
94
Long Island
99
Army
91
Western Kentucky
65
Georgia Tech
78
Duke
75
Wake Forest
82
N.C. State
74
Air Force
90
Clemson
71
North Carolina
73
N.C. State
54
Notre Dame
64
Virginia
81
Nevada/Las Vegas
64
North Carolina
80
Clemson
86
Pittsburgh (ot)
70
Duke
91
Wake Forest
70
Virginia
109
N.C. State (3 ot)
69
Duke
1978-79 19-11
6-6
Maryland 107
Bucknell
65
Georgetown
81
Air Force
88
Nevada/ Las Vegas
69
Penn State
86
Biscayne
82
East Carolina
124
N.C. State
129
Canisius
62
St. Joseph's (ot)
83
Southern California
84
George Washington
60
Wake Forest
82
N.C. State (2ot)
84
Louisville
77
Clemson
53
North Carolina
82
Navy
61
Notre Dame
63
Virginia
78
Duke
67
North Carolina
77
Clemson
70
Duke
54
Wake Forest
72
Virginia
75
Clemson
79
North Carolina
67
Rhode Island (3ot)
72
Ohio State
62
H
65
N
87
N
80
N
106
H
101
A
64
H
77
H
78
H
63
H
88
H
84
A
88
A
73
H
75
H
85
A
80
H
69
A
66
A
68
H
66
H
75
A
89
A
81
A
89
H
79
H
108
ACC
81
ACC
97
H
68
N
68
A
94
A
61
N
60
H
71
H
110
H
103
H
56
H
79
H
72
H
66
H
81
A
99
H
63
A
54
H
62
H
66
H
69
H
87
A
76
A
69
H
68
H
53
A
75
A
67
ACC
102
ACC
65
NIT
79
NIT
Two rankings of the Winningest Major College Coaches
are produced each year, one by the NCAA Statistics
Service and one by Elmore "Scoop" Hudgins, Originator
of The Coaches Top Twenty.
Maryland's "Lefty" Driesell ranks high in both. The
NCAA lists all coaches with a minimum of five years as
a major-college head coach and Driesell is in the top
ten. In Hudgins poll Driesell ranks second among the
coaches with a minimum of 299 victories for their career.
Driesell's record is 375-150 for 19 years.
The NCAA also has Coach Driesell listed as one of
the top 20 Winningest Major College Coaches of All-
Time with a minimum of 10 years. Only one coach
ranked ahead of him is still an active head coach.
The National Association of Basketball Coaches of
the United States honored Coach "Lefty" Driesell with
"The Merit Award" at their annual banquet on March
25, 1979 in Salt Lake City the site of the NCAA Finals.
Albert King was voted the Most Valuable Player in
the 1978 Maryland Invitational Tournament by the
Working Press. King also led the voting for the All-
Tournament team with Larry Gibson second and Ernest
Graham also on the team as the Terps won the tourna-
ment for the seventh time in die eight years it has
been held.
Albert King, Ernest Graham and Greg Manning were
honored as Adantic Coast Conference Players of the
Week during die 1978-79 season. Graham for his Mary-
land Record 44 point performance against North Caro-
lina State and 18 points against Canisius. King for his
47 'points while winning MVP honors in the Maryland
Invitational Tournament. The Terps defeated St. Josephs
and Southern California to win the title. Manning for
his 23 points while hitting 10 of 14 shots from die field
in Maryland's 70-68 upset of Duke. He also had six
assists in the game.
Buck Williams was honored three times as the ACC
"Rookie of the Week" enroute to winning the league's
"Rookie of the Year" honors. Contributing to William's
selections were 15 rebounds in the 67-66 upset of Notre
Dame, the nations top ranked team, on National Tele-
vision, his 13 rebounds against then fourth ranked North
Carolina State and 23 rebounds along with 26 points
in die Penn State and Biscayne games.
42
TERP AWARD WINNERS
Alvin Aubinoe Greatest Career Contribution
Best Free Throw Shooter — Will Hetzel
Best Defensive Player — Sparky Still
Best Rebounder — Rod Horst
Most Valuable Plaver — Rod Horst
Alvin Aubinoe Greatest Career Contribution
Best Defensive Player — Sparky Still
Best Free Throw Shooter — Jim O'Brien
Best Rebounder — Barry Yates
Most Valuable Player — Barry Yates
1969-70
Will Hetzel
1970-71
Jay Flowers
Hetzel
1971-72
Avis Special Service Award — Charlie Blank
Most Valuable Player — Len Elmore & Tom McMillen
Seide::spinner Award for Outstanding Senior — Charlie Blank
Most Team Spirit — Howard White
Most Improved Player — Darrell Brown
Academic All-American — Tom McMillen
AP All-American — Tom McMillen
Alvin Aubonie 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
1972-73
Best Team Spirit — Bill Hahn
Leo G. Hershberger Rookie All-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 Career 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
43
Yates
Bodell
O'Brien
Hahn
TERP AWARD WINNERS
1973-74
Ail-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
Len Elmore (Second Team)
AP All-American — Tom McMillen, John Lucas
Fastbreakers Special Award — Charles "Lefty" Driesell
1974-75
Most Valuable Senior — Owen- Brown and Tom Roy
Alvin Aubinoe Greatest Career Contribution Award — Bill 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" Haword
All Ace Tournament — Maurice 'rMo" Howard
All Ace — Maurice "Mo" Howard 1975-76
Best Free Throw Shooter — James Tillman
Best Defensive Player — Maurice Howard
Chris Patton Outstanding Rebounder Award — Lawrence Boston
Alvin Aubinoe Greatest Career Contribution Award — John Lucas
First Team UPI and AP All-American — John Lucas
Owen Brown Most Valuable Player Award — Maurice "Mo" Howard
First Team All-ACC — John Lucas
Total Performance for Overall Excellence and Consistency — Steve
Most Assists — Brad Davis
All ACC Tournament — Brad Davis
1976-77
Elmore
Brown.
Lucas
Howard
Sheppard
Davis
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 Award — John Pavlos (Manager)
Outstanding Academic Award — Eric Shrader
Must Assists — Brad Davis
Owen Brown Most Outstanding Senior Award — Steve Sheppard
Overall Performance Award — Larry Gibson
Sheppard
44
TERRAPIN AWARD WINNERS
1977 - 78
All-ACC Tournament — Laurence Boston. Larry Gibson (2nd team)
Best Free Throw Shooter — Jo Jo Hunter
Outstanding Academics Award — Lric Shrader
Overall Performance Award — Larry Gibson
Most Assists — Greg Manning
Alvin Aubinoe Greatest Career Contribution Award — Lawrence Boston
Outstanding Defensive Player — Lawrence Boston
Chris Patton Best Rebounder Award — Larry Gibson
Owen Brown Most Outstanding Senior Award — 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 Ail-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 Award — Larry Gibson
Scoring Record for One Game — Ernest Graham
East - West All - Star Game — Larry Gibson
Aloha Classic — Larry Gibson
Gibson
Boston
Shrader
UNIVERSITY OF 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: 1 2 by Navy, 1926 (12-21 )
MOST POINTS BY BOTH TEAMS: 234 by Maryland and N.C.
State, Dec. 2978 (Md. 110-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 THROWS ATTEMPTS: 1 ag 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 FIELD GOALS: 18 by Ernest Graham ag N.C. State, Dec.
1978 (26 att.)
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 Shue ag Washington
& Lee, Feb. 1973 (16)
MOST CONSECUTIVE FREE THROWS: 14 by Jerry Greenspan ag
Minnesota, Dec. 1961
MOST CONSECUTIVE FIELD GOALS: 10 by Barry Yates ag
Miami (Fla.), Dec. 1970
BEST FREE THROW PCT.: 1.000 (ONLY 10 or more listed)
Jerry Greenspan ag Minnesota 1961 14-14
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 10-10
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
Brad Davis ag Wake Forest, Jan. 1977 7-7
Jack Clark ag South Carolina, Jan. 1964 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)
MOST POINTS AWAY FROM HOME: 40 by Gene Shue ag Wake
Forest, 1953
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: 2226 in 1972-73
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 FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE: .547 in 1974-75
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: 579 in 1951-52
FEWEST PERSONAL FOULS: 378 in 1966-67
LARGEST ATTENDANCE: 353,436 in 1971-72 (32 games)
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: 1 1 consecutive wins (1975-76)
MOST
MOST
MOST
MOST
BEST
BEST
BEST
BEST
MOST
MOST
Season — Records Individual
POINTS: 667 by Tom McMillen, 1971 72 (32 games)
FIELD GOALS: 253 by John Lucas, 1973-74 (28 games)
FREE THROWS: 197 by Tom McMillen, 1971-72 (32
games)
REBOUNDS: 412 by Len Elmore, 1973-74 (28 games)
FIELD GOAL PCT.: .621 by Rick Wise, 1965-66 (25 games,
140 att-made 87)
FREE THROW PCT.: .873 by Bob McDonald, 1960 61 (26
games, 69 of 79)
SCORING AVERAGE: 23.3 by Will Hetzel, 1968-69 (26
games 605 points)
REBOUNDING AVERAGE: 14.7 by Len Elmore, 1973-74
(28 games)
CONSECUTIVE FREE THROWS MADE: 27 by Bob
O'Brien, 1956-57
CONSECUTIVE FIELD GOALS MADE: 12 by John Lucas,
1972 73
Career Records
MOST POINTS SCORED: 2015 by John Lucas (1972-76)
BEST SCORING AVERAGE: 20.5 by Tom McMillen in 1971-74
(88 games 1 ,807 points)
MOST FIELD GOALS: 862 by John Lucas (1972 76)
MOST FREE THROWS: 409 by Tom McMillen in 1971-74 (88
games, 512 attempts)
BEST FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE: .576 by Lawrence Boston
1975-78 (438 of 760)
BEST FREE THROW PERCENTAGE: .803 by Jim O'Brien,
1970-73 (301 of 375)
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)
MOST VARSITY GAMES PLAYED IN: 112 by Maurice Howard
1972-76
MOST CONSECUTIVE GAMES PLAYED IN (VARSITY): 88 by
Bob Bodell, 1970-73
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)
46
TERP STATISTICAL LEADERS OVER THE YEARS
CAREER SCORING
SINGLE SEASON SCORING
2,015
John Lucas
1972-76)
1,807
Tom McMillen
1971-74)
1,397
Gene Shue
1951-54)
1,370
Will Hetzel
1967-70)
1,300
Jay McMillen
1964-67)
1,266
Bob Kessler
1953-56)
1,235
Jim O'Brien
1970-73)
1,219
Steve Sheppard
1974-76)
1,198
Larry Gibson
1975-79)
1,161
M. Howard
1972-76)
1,094
Gary Ward
1963-66)
1,026
Brad Davis
1974-76)
1,017
Len Elmore
1971-74)
1,016
Lee Brawley
1949-52)
1,007
Lawrence Boston
1975-78)
987
Pete Johnson
1966-69)
972
Bob O'Brien
1954-57)
935
Al Bunge
1957-60)
875
Jerry Greenspan
1960-63)
861
Nick Davis
1954-57)
860
Rod Horst
1967-70)
854
Bruce Kelleher
1958-61)
SINGLE SEASON REBOUNDING
412
Len Elmore
1973-74
351
Len Elmore
1971-72
336
Bob Kessler
1955-56
323
Buck Williams
1978-79
321
Tom Roy
1974-75
318
Will Hetzel
1968-69
306
Tom McMillen
1971-72
290
Len Elmore
1972-73
289
Al Bunge
1959 60
284
Tom McMillen
1972-73
279
Bob McDonald
1960-61
271
Gary Ward
1964-65
269
Tom McMillen
1973-74
265
Al Bunge
1957-58
263
Bob Kessler
1954-55
258
Rod Horst
1969-70
257
Larry Gibson
1978-79
253
Larry Gibson
1977-78
250
Bob Everett
1954-55
249
Lawrence Boston
1975-76
246
Steve Sheppard
1975-76
241
Al Bunge
1958-59
241
Gary Ward
1965-66
667
Tom McMillen
1971-72
654
Gene Shue
1953-54
616
Tom McMillen
1972-73
605
Will Hetzel
1968-69
564
John Lucas
1973-74
557
John Lucas
197576
524
Tom McMillen
1973-74
512
Jay McMillen
1964-65
508
Gene Shue
1952-53
499
Ernest Graham
1978-79
498
Jim O'Brien
1972 73
494
Steve Sheppard
1975-76
490
Bob Kessler
195556
487
Bob Kessler
1954-55
469
John Lucas
1974-75
469
Gary Ward
1964-65
444
Albert King
197879
431
Owen Brown
1974-75
430
Larry Gibson
1978-79
430
Gary Ward
1965-66
428
Rod Rorst
1969 70
424
John Lucas
197273
423
Lawrence Boston
1977-78
416
Steve Sheppard
1974-75
414
Will Hetzel
1969-70
401
Charles McNeil
1958-59
COLE FIELD HOUSE RECORDS
TEAM SCORING:
FIELD GOALS:
INDIVIDUAL SCORING:
FIELD GOALS:
REBOUNDS:
141 by Maryland Freshmen
vs Kings College
Dec. 13, 1969
62 by Maryland Freshmen
vs Kings College
Dec. 13, 1969
48 by Tom Baxley vs
Virginia Freshmen,
1961
48 by Tom Baxley vs
Bainbridge Prep, 1961
48 by Tom McMillen vs
Georgetown Freshmen, 1971
21 by Tom McMillen vs
Georgetown Freshmen, 1971
31 by Tom McMillen vs
West Virginia
Freshmen, 1971
47
MARYLAND INVITATIONAL TOURNAMENT
1971 - Maryland
St. John's
Harvard
Maryland
103 Western Kentucky 67
94 Harvard 88
THIRD PLACE
107 Western Kentucky 89
CHAMPIONSHIP
90 St. John's
1978 -
1972
Maryland 90 Georgia Tech
Syracuse 74 Bowling Green
THIRD PLACE
Bowling Green 102 Georgia Tech
CHAMPIONSHIP
Maryland 90 Syracuse
Duquesne
Maryland
1977 - Maryland
Georgia Tech
St. John's
Maryland
THIRD PLACE
86 Xavier
CHAMPIONSHIP
96 Syracuse
69
55
73
87
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
80
85
91 Western Kentucky 78
73 St. John's 67
THIRD PLACE
80 Western Kentucky 63
CHAMPIONSHIP
65 Georgia Tech 63
Maryland
62 St. Joseph's
57
Southern Calif.
78 Holy Cross
THIRD PLACE
60
St. Joseph's
62 Holy Cross
CHAMPIONSHIP
58
Maryland
83 Southern Calif.
79
TOURNAMENT ATTENDANCE
1971 -25,453 1975-24,005
1972-26,643 1976-18,500
1 973 - 26,069 1 977 - 1 5,700
1974-29,000 1978-14,899
MOST VALUABLE PLAYER AWARDS
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
Lee Williams, Executive Director of the Basketball Hall
of Fame, stands with the uniforms of the only three high
school players to be honored in the Hall of Fame. The three
belong to Tom McMillen, Tom Roy and Moses Malone, all
of whom chose Maryland as their college. John Lucas'
Maryland jersey is also displayed there now.
48
INVITATIONAL TOURNAMENT RECORDS
INDIVIDUAL GAME
MOST POINTS: 35 by Jim Fitzsimmons (Harvardl ag Western
Kentucky, 1971
MOST REBOUNDS: 21 by James Brown (Harvard ag St. John's,
1971
MOST ASSISTS: 14 by Jeff Montgomery (Bowling Green) ag
Syracuse, 1972
MOST FGA: 29 by Mel Davis (St. John's) ag Harvard, 1971
MOST FGM: 16 by Jim Fitzsimmons (Harvard) ag Western
Kentucky, 1971
BEST FG PERFORMANCE: (10 or more attempts) 10 of 11,91%
by Floyd Lewis (Harvard) ag Western Kentucky, 1971
MOST FTA: 14 by Bob Carrington (Boston College) ag Michigan
State, 1973
MOST FTM: 1 1 by Garry Whitfield (Xavier) ag Duquesne, 1976
BEST FT PERFORMANCE: (10 or more attempts) 1 1 of 1 1 , 100%
by Garry Whitfield (Xavier) ag Duquesne, 1976
INDIVIDUAL TOURNAMENT
MOST POINTS: 59 by Jim Fitzsimmons (Harvard), 1971
MOST REBOUNDS: 38 by Cornelius Cash (Bowling Green), 1972
MOST ASSISTS: 23 by Jeff Montgomery (Bowling Green), 1972
MOST FGA: 47 by Jim Fitzsimmons (Harvard), 1971
MOST FGM: 27 by Jim Fitzsimmons (Harvard), 1971
BEST FG PERFORMANCE: (10 or more attempts) 14 of 17,82%
by Tom McMillen (Maryland), 1972
MOST FTA: 16 by Malcolm Moulton (Holy Cross), 1973; by Bob
Carrington (Boston College), 1973
MOST FTM: 13 by Garry Whitfield (Xavier) 1976
BEST FT PERFORMANCE: (10 or more attempts) Garry Whitfield
(Xavier) 13 of 13, (100%) 1976
TEAM GAME
MOST POINTS: 1 16 by Syracuse ag Duquesne, 1976
LARGEST VICTORY MARGIN: 38 by Maryland ag Georgia Tech,
1974 (105-67)
MOST POINTS BY BOTH TEAMS: 202 by Syracuse (116) and
Duquesne, (86), 1976
FEWEST POINTS: 37 by Boston College, 1973
FEWEST POINTS BY BOTH TEAMS: 95 by Maryland (58) and
Boston College (37), 1973
MOST FGA: 91 by Holy Cross ag Maryland, 1973; 91 by Syracuse
ag Maryland, 1976
MOST FGM: 45 by Harvard ag Western Kentucky, 1971; by
Michigan State ag Holy Cross, 1973; by Maryland ag Holy
Cross, 1973; by Maryland ag Seton Hall, 1975
BEST FG PERFORMANCE: 43 of 67, 64% by Maryland ag Western
Kentucky, 1971
MOST FTA: 35 by Bowling Green ag Georgia Tech, 1972
MOST FTM: 28 by Bowling Green ag Georgia Tech, 1972
BEST FT PERFORMANCE: 9 of 9 by Georgia Tech ag Maryland,
1974
MOST REBOUNDS: 67 by Harvard ag Western Kentucky, 1971
MOST FOULS: 33 by Syracuse ag Duquesne, 1976
FEWEST FOULS: 12 by Maryland ag Georgia Tech, 1972; by
Maryland ag Syracuse, 1972
TEAM TOURNAMENT
MOST POINTS: 201 by Syracuse, 1976
FEWEST POINTS BY OPPONENTS: 112 by Holy Cross and Boston
College ag Maryland, 1973
MOST FGA: 177 by Syracuse, 1976
MOST FGM: 83 by Syracuse, 1976
BEST FG PERFORMANCE: 79 of 126, 62.7% by Maryland, 1972
MOST FTA: 56 by Maryland, 1971
MOST FTM: 37 by Maryland, 1971 ; by Bowling Green, 1972
BEST FT PERFORMANCE: 36 of 44, .818% by Maryland. 1975
MOST FOULS: 54 by Syracuse, 1976
FEWEST FOULS: 24 by Maryland, 1972
MOST REBOUNDS: 124 by Harvard, 1972
49
MARYLAND REGULAR SEASON TOURNAMENT RECORDS
SOUTHERN CONFERENCE
1923 24
Md. 34
25
1924 25
Md. 27
16
1925-26
Md. 19
1926 27
Md. 22
1927 28
Did not enter
1928 29
Md.
1929-30
Md.
1930 31
Md.
35
21
37
19
26
29
1931-32
Md.
1932 33
Md.
1933-34
Md.
1934-35
Did not enter
1935-36
Md
24
28
37
VMI
Georgia
Alabama
N.C. State
Miss. Aggies
Georgia
Mississippi
Kentucky
LSU
North Carolina
Georgia
Kentucky
Florida
South Carolina
Washington & Lee
47
32
1936 37
Md.
1937-38
Md.
1938-39
Md.
1939 40
Md.
45
32
47
53
27
43
32
Duke
Washington & Lee
N.C. State
Citadel
Duke
Richmond
N.C. State
Clemson
Washington & Lee
Duke
1940-41
Did not enter
1941 42
Did not enter
1942 43
Did not enter
1943-44
Md. 23
1944 45
Md. 49
1945-46
Md. 27
1946 47
Md. 43
1947-48
Md. 51
1948-49
Md. 61
1949 50
Did not enter
1950 51
Md 50 Clemson
45 N.C. State
1951 52
Md. 48 Duke
1952-53
Md. 74 Duke
59 Wake Forest
N.C. State
Duke
N.C. State
N.C. State
Davidson
North Carolina
19
29
21
30
27
37
26
33
17
25
27
39
65
45
35
38
42
43
35
32
29
39
30
44
42
76
54
55
58
79
48
54
65
61
ATLANTIC COAST CONFERENCE
1953-54
Md.
75
Clemson
56
Wake Forest
1954 55
Md.
67
Virginia
1955 56
Md.
69
Duke
1956 57
Md.
71
Virginia
64
South Carolina
1957 58
Md.
70
Virginia
71
Duke
86
North Carolina
1958 59
Md.
65
Virginia
1959 60
Md.
58
N.C. State
1960-61
Md.
91
Clemson
76
Wake Forest
1961 62
Md.
58
Duke
1962 63
Md.
41
Wake F orest
1963-64
Md.
67
Clemson
1964 65
Md.
61
Clemson
67
N.C. State
1965 66
Md.
70
North Carolina
1966 67
Md.
54
South Carolina
59
64
68
94
68
74
66
65
74
66
74
75
98
71
80
81
50
76
77
57
1967 68
Md.
54
N.C. State
63
1968 69
Md.
71
South Carolina
92
1969-70
Md.
57
N.C. State
67
1970 71
Md.
63
South Carolina
71
1971-72
Md.
54
Clemson
52
62
Virginia
57
64
North Carolina
73
1972-73
Md.
77
Clemson
61
73
Wake Forest
65
74
N.C. State
76
1973 74
Md.
85
Duke
66
105
North Carolina
85
100
N.C. State
103
1974-75
Md.
85
N.C. State
87
1975 76
Md.
80
Duke
78
65
Virginia
73
1976 77
Md.
72
N.C. State
82
1977-78
Md.
109
N.C. State
108
69
Duke
81
1978-79
Md.
75
Clemson
67
79
North Carolina
102
INVITATIONAL TOURNAMENT RECORDS
1953-54
Md.
Md.
Md.
1954-55
Md.
Md.
Md.
1955 56
Md.
Md.
1956-57
Md.
Md.
Md.
1957 58
Md.
Md.
1958 59
Md.
Md.
1959 60
Md.
Md.
1960 61
Md.
Md.
Md.
1961-62
Md.
Md.
1962 63
None
Ail-American City Tournament
Owensboro, Kentucky
65 Arizona State
66 Evansville
54 Kentucky Wesleyan
All-American City Tournament
Owensboro, Kentucky
58 Texas Tech
83 Rhode Island
78 Cincinnati
Mid Winter Festival
75 Michigan State
75 St. Francis
All-American City Tournament
Owensboro, Kentucky
89 Montana State
43 New Mexico A&M
43 Virginia
Sugar Bowl Tournament
New Orleans, Louisiana
71 Vanderbilt
46 Memphis State
Sugar Bowl Tournament
New Orleans, Louisiana
45 Miss. State
54 Loyola
Blue Grass Tournament
Louisville, Kentucky
63 Indiana
76 Fordham
Dixie Classic
Raleigh, North Carolina
57 North Carolina
67 N.C. State
84 Wyoming
Sugar Bowl Tournament
New Orleans, Louisiana
62 Miss. State
64 Louisville
ent
1963 64
50
Md.
58
Md.
37
ent
Md.
Md.
54
1964 65
66
61
Md.
Md.
95
1965 66
66
ent
Md.
Md.
72
1966-67
45
39
Md.
Md.
56
47
Md.
Md.
1967-68
56
50
Md.
Md.
1968-69
72
54
Md.
Md.
81
75
Md.
77
Md.
1973 74
64
Md.
83
Md.
VPI Invitational Tournament
Blacksburg, Virginia
59 Tennessee
75 LSU
Evansville Invitational
54 Arizona
82 Columbia
Hurricane Classic
Miami, Florida
66 Tulsa
73 Miami (Fla.)
Sugar Bowl Tournament
New Orleans, Louisiana
69 Houston
77 Dayton
Memphis State Invitational
Memphis, Tennessee
50 Oklahoma State
53 Memphis State
Charlotte Invitational
Charlotte, North Carolina
66 Davidson
57 Army
Sun Carnival Tournament
El Paso, Texas
53 Texas El Paso
72 Southern Illinois
Marshall Invitational
Huntington, West Virginia
89 Marshall
85 Miami (Fla.)
Charlotte Invitational
Charlotte, North Carolina
69 Davidson
95 Wichita
Cable Car Classic
San Francisco, Calf.
78 San Francisco
53 Santa Clara
70
65
57
76
59
80
68
75
49
55
65
54
70
73
80
92
83
83
60
32
50
STATISTICAL LEADERS COACHED BY "LEFTY" DRIESELL
Career Scoring
Career
2032
Hetzel - Davidson
1094
2015
Lucas - Maryland
1053
1807
McMillen - Maryland
895
1693
Snyder - Davidson
859
1344
Knowles - Davidson
804
1338
Jarman - Davidson
768
1235
O'Brien - Maryland
758
1219
Sheppard - Maryland
648
1198
Gibson - Maryland
630
1191
Maloy - Davidson
629
1161
Howard - Maryland
586
1067
Holland - Davidson
582
1026
Davis, B. - Maryland
1017
Holland - Davidson
Season
1017
Elmore - Maryland
429 I
1013
Huckel - Davidson
412
1007
Boston - Maryland
384
825
King - Maryland
359 "
Season Scoring
351
351
753
Snyder - Davidson
339
739
Maloy - Davidson
323
709
Hetzel - Davidson
323 \
689
Hetzel - Davidson
321
667
McMillen - Maryland
306
634
Hetzel - Maryland
290
616
McMillen - Maryland
287
564
Lucas - Maryland
284
557
Lucas - Maryland
281
542
Knowles - Davidson
276
536
Jarman - Davidson
525
Snyder - Davidson
Single
524
McMillen - Maryland
27
499
Graham - Maryland
26
498
O'Brien - Maryland
25
496
Knowles - Davidson
24
494
Sheppard - Maryland
23
469
Lucas - Maryland
23
469
Kroll - Davidson
22
454
Huckel - Davidson
22
452
Maloy - Davidson
22
Single Game Scoring
21
21
53
Hetzel - Davidson
21
46
Hetzel - Davidson
21
46
Snyder - Davidson
20
44
Graham - Maryland
20
41
Hetzel - Davidson
20
40 Snyder - Davidson
39 Holland - Davidson
39 Jarman - Davidson
39 Snyder - Davidson
39 Knowles - Davidson
38 Snyder (2) - Davidson
38 White- Maryland
38 O'Brien - Maryland
35 Hetzel - Davidson
35 Maloy - Davidson
35 McMillen - Maryland
34 Lucas (2) - Maryland
33 Knowles - Davidson
33 Maloy - Davidson
33 W. Hetzel - Maryland
33 White - Maryland
33 McMillen (2) - Maryland
32 Maloy - Davidson
32 McMillen (3) - Maryland
31 Hetzel - Davidson
31 Maloy (2) - Davidson
31 Lucas (2) - Maryland
30 King - Maryland
30 Jarman - Davidson
30 Huckel - Davidson
30 Maloy (2) - Davidson
30 Yates - Maryland
30 Lucas - Maryland
Rebounding
Hetzel - Davidson
Elmore - Maryland
Gibson - Maryland
McMillen - Maryland
Knowles - Davidson
Maloy - Davidson
Jarman - Davidson
Snyder - Davidson
Holland - Davidson
Boston - Maryland
Roy - Maryland
Sheppard - Maryland
n Rebounding
Maloy - Davidson
Elmore - Maryland
Hetzel - Davidson
Tetzel - Davidson
Hetzel - Davidson
Elmore - Maryland
Maloy - Davidson
Knowles - Davidson
Williams - Maryland
Roy - Maryland
McMillen - Maryland
Elmore - Maryland
Cook - Davidson
McMillen - Maryland
Jarman - Davidson
Knowles - Davidson
Game Rebounding
Hetzel - Davidson
Elmore - Maryland
Hetzel - Davidson
Elmore (2) - Maryland
Knowles - Davidson
Maloy - Davidson
Williams - Maryland
Markee - Davidson
Snyder - Davidson
Hetzel - Davidson
Elmore (2) - Maryland
Maloy - Davidson
Davis, M. - Maryland
Knowles - Davidson
Elmore (2) - Maryland
Roy - Maryland
Career Assists
514 Lucas - Maryland
431 Davis B. - Maryland
244 Moser - Davidson
241 Bodell - Maryland
219 Howard - Maryland
215 O'Brien - Maryland
Career Scoring Average
25.7 Hetzel - Davidson
21.2 Snyder - Davidson
20.5 McMillen - Maryland
20.2 Maloy - Davidson
Season Assists
178 Lucas - Maryland
165 Davis, B. - Maryland
159 Lucas - Maryland
135 Wiles - Maryland
134 Davis, B. - Maryland
132 Davis, B. - Maryland
Single Game Assists
12 Porac - Maryland
12 Lucas - Maryland
11 Morley (2) - Maryland
1 1 Davis, B. - Maryland
10 Wiles - Maryland
10 Lucas - Maryland
10 Davis, B. (2) - Maryland
Career Field Goal .Pet
.576 Boston - Maryland
.556 Snyder - Davidson
.555 McMillen - Maryland
.554 Hetzel - Davidson
.551 Gibson - Maryland
.547 Howard - Maryland
.541 Roy - Maryland
.531 Youngdale - Davidson
.531 Trimble - Maryland
.527 Bodell - Maryland
.525 Lucas - Maryland
.519 Holland - Davidson
.515 Knowles - Davidson
.515 Maloy - Davidson
Team Free Throw .Pet
.762 Davidson 1965-66
.758 Maryland 1975-76
.757 Maryland 1974-75
.757 Davidson 1966-67
.746 Maryland 1973-74
.746 Maryland 1971-72
Season Field Goal .Pet
.631 Holland - Davidson
.606 Roy - Maryland
.598 Bodell - Maryland
.598 Gibson - Maryland
.597 Boston - Maryland
.587 Gibson - Maryland
.585 McMillen - Maryland
.583 Williams - Maryland
.580 Davis, B. - Maryland
.580 Boston - Maryland
.579 Hetzel - Davidson
.572 Howard - Maryland
.567 Sheppard - Maryland
.566 Maloy - Davidson
.563 Snyder - Davidson
.556 Knowles - Davidson
.555 Snyder - Davidson
.555 O'Brien - Maryland
.554 Gibson - Maryland
.553 Youngdale - Maryland
.553 Howard - Maryland
.551 Gibson - Maryland
.550 Manning - Maryland
Team
.547 -
.543-
.537-
.520-
.516-
.512-
.510-
.509-
.509-
Season Free Throw .Pet
.871 Youngdale - Davidson
.863 Hunter - Maryland
.857 Manning - Maryland
.852 Manning - Maryland
.844 O'Brien - Maryland
.843 Moser - Davidson
.839 Tillman - Maryland
.837 Kroll - Davidson
.836 Lucas - Maryland
.833 Snyder - Davidson
.833 Moser - Davidson
.830 Evans - Davidson
.829 O. Brown - Maryland
.828 Howard - Maryland
.820 Davis, B. - Maryland
.81 7 McMillen - Maryland
.806 Snyder - Davidson
.803 Hetzel - Davidson
.800 McMillen - Maryland
Career Free Throw .Pet
.849 Kroll - Davidson
.825 Moser - Davidson
.816 Beerman - Davidson
.814 Evans - Davidson
.807 Snyder - Davidson
.803 O'Brien- Maryland
.799 McMillen - Maryland
.789 Hetzel - Davidson
.778 Lucas - Maryland
.777 Youngdale - Davidson
.764 Howard - Maryland
Field Goal .Pet
Maryland 1974-75 NCAA Record
Davidson 1963-64 NCAA Record
Maryland 1975-76 Led Nation
Maryland 1972-73 2nd in Nation
Maryland 1976-77
Davidson 1965-66 2nd in Nation
Maryland 1973-74 7th in Nation
Davidson 1964-65 2nd in Nation
Maryland 1977-78
51
COACH DRIESELL'S
OFFENSIVE PHILOSOPHY
LEFTY'S ALL-TIME OFFENSIVE TEAM
My offensive philosophy as a junior high school coach,
high school coach and college coach has always been the
same. We run a pro oriented offense which features a
fast break and strong inside game. We try to get the
highest percentage shot possible and never take a shot
at the basket from outside unless we have 3 or 4 people
in position to go to the offensive boards.
Our first objective is to create a fast break situation
on defense by ( 1 ) making our opponents turn the ball
over (2) getting a rebound and throwing the outlet pass
quickly (3) getting die ball in quickly after a made
basket or free throw and advancing it up the court and
getting an overload in transition. We have always been
a fast breaking, high scoring, offensive team.
If we are not successful in scoring on our "fast break
offense" after a steal, rebound or basket then we will
go to our set offense which has always been inside oriented
and in the past we have primarily run a double low
post offense. However at times we have run a stack of-
fense using three inside men as we did in 73-74 with
Tom McMillen, Len Elmore, and Owen Brown or Tom
Roy in the lineup. This year we plan to run from a 2-1-2
set.
Again it is my philosophy that the more shots that we
get in the free throw lane area die higher percentage
we will shoot and the more fouls we will force our
opponent into committing. Therefore our offense is
predicated to getting the ball to the big men inside and
as you can see we have had four legitimate All-American
pivot men in Fred Hetzel (Davidson '63), Mike Maloy
(Davidson '70) Len Elmore (Maryland '74) and Tom
McMillen (Maryland '74). However if our opponents
jam inside we must have excellent outside shooting from
our guards. Dick Snyder (Davidson '66) has been our
all time leading scorer for one season 27.8 points per
game his senior year and John Lucas (Maryland '76)
has been our all time leading scorer at guard averaging
20 points per game. Both of these men were also legiti-
mate Ail-Americans.
Our philosophy has always been that you must get
everyone involved in the offense and you must have good
movement of the ball and again get as many high per-
centage shots as we can in the free dirow lane area
either with our fast break or "set" offense.
Our offense has produced 10 teams that shot over
50% from the floor.
We feel our offense is exciting, disciplined and an
excellent preparation for it is similar to what our athletes
will play in the pros.
Fred Hetzel 6'9"
Mike Maloy 6'8"
Len Elmore 6'9"
Larry Gibson 6'9"
Dick Snyder 6'5"
Jerry Kroll 6'5"
Steve Sheppard
6'5"
Tom McMillen
6'11"
Doug Cook 6'6"
Bill Jarman 6'6"
Owen Brown 6'9"
Terry Holland 6'7"
Jim O'Brien 6'7"
John Lucas 6'4"
Dave Moser 6'1"
Howard White
6'1"
# 5 Men Brad Davis 6'3"
Mike Maloy 6'8" Davidson 70, 24.6 pts.-14.3 rebs, 2nd
team All-American, 1st Round Pro Pick, No Cut
contract.
Len Elmore 6'9" Maryland 73 14.6 pts-14.7 rebs, 2nd
team All-American. 1st Round ABA and NBA pick. No
Cut Contract.
Fred Hetzel 6'9" Davidson '65 27.3 pts-14.8 rebs, 1st team
All-American. 1st Round Pro Pick (2,032) career pts.
# 1 All-time scorer. No Cut Contract.
#4 Men
Bill Jarman 6'6" Davidson '63 21.5 pts-11.1 rebs.
Tom McMillen 6'11" Maryland 73 21.2 pts-lOrebs, 2nd
Team All-American 1st Round ABA and NBA Pro
Pick. Olympic Team.
Doug Cook 6'6" Davidson 70 All-Conference 2nd Round
NBA draft pick. No Cut Contract 14.6 pts per game-
9.6 rebs.
#3 Men
Terry Holland 67" Davidson '64 15.7 pts-10.0 rebs.
Jim O'Brien 67" Maryland 73 16.6 pts7.8 rebs, 7th Ail-
Time Maryland scorer. No Cut Contract, 1974 ABA
Champs New York Nets.
#2 Men
Dick Snyder 6'5" Davidson '66 27.8 pts-9.2 rebs. 1st
Team All-American 1st Round Pro pick, 1,662 pts
# 2 All Time Davidson scorer. No Cut Contract.
# 1 Men
John Lucas 6'4" Maryland 76 2,015 pts All-American
First Pick in NBA Draft. Ail-Time Maryland scorer.
Dave Moser 6'1" Davidson '69 All-Conference and starting
point man three years.
Howard White 6'1" Maryland 72 15.6 pts.
Brad Davis 6'3" Maryland 78 299 assists and 690 pts.
in first two years. First Round Pro Draft pick.
52
COACH DRIESELL'S
DEFENSIVE PHILOSOPHY
LEFTY'S ALL-TIME DEFENSIVE TEAM
Throughout my coaching career as a junior varsity,
high school and college coach I have always believed
very strongly that I should teach my athletes to play
hard nose man for man defense. This has always been
our style of fundamental defense and if there is one
thing that I strongly believe, it is that your team is only
as good as you are defensively. Our 1973-74 (ranked
4th in the nation) team for example held our opponents
to a field goal percentage of 39.9 percent for die year.
I think we were able to accomplish diis because we
carried out our philosophy on defense which is not to
allow our opponents any shots in the free dirow lane
area and to force them to shoot outside with pressure
on them and to do an excellent job of blocking out
and not allow any second shots.
We like to overplay our man one pass from the ball
and force our opponents out of their offensive patterns.
We do a lot of sagging and helping when we are two
passes from the ball. We have had some great defensive
centers such as Len Elmore. Mike Maloy, Fred Hetzel and
Tom Roy who have done an excellent job of blocking
shots and protecting the basket for us. We have also
had some great defensive forwards such as Dick Snyder,
who during his senior year held three opponents who
were averaging over 20 points a game to 1 point, 2
points, and 0 points.
We believe that we must dictate to the offensive man
and team and not let them do what they want to do.
However, our philosophy is that if a players man scores
a lay up on him, it is his fault and responsibility. How-
ever, if he shoots outside and we have pressure on him
and he makes the basket it is my (coaches) fault and
responsibility. We like to look at our shot charts at the
end of a ball game and see how few layups and shots
in the free throw lane area that we have allowed our
opponents. Normally, if we do not give many shots
or baskets inside we will come out on top, we also like
to force turnovers and make our opponents shoot a low
percentage from the field.
In order to have diversity we will also play a half
court trap defense that we call our "Golash" defense
and we will also play some type of zone each year for
opponents that we feel are particularly weak against
zones or for use at the end of a close ball game.
We will full court man for man and zone press in
case we fall behind and feel that we must press in order
to catch up. However, our money defense is our straight
man for man defense and our ''top ten" teams in the
past have been very tough and aggressive on defense.
Another strong reason for using a man for man defense
is because we want to prepare our athletes for professional
basketball.
Don Davidson 6'5"
Dick Snyder 6'5"
Tom McMillen 6'11'
Mo Howard 6'3"
Bob Bodell 6'4"
Len Elmore 6'9"
_ Fred Hetzel 6'9" -
Mike Maloy 6'8"
D. G. Martin 6'3"
Doug Cook 6'6"
Steve Sheppard 6'5"
Wayne Huckel 6'3"
Barry Teague 6'2"
Centers
Len Elmore 6'9" Maryland '74
Fred Hetzel 6'9" Davidson '63
Mike Maloy 6'8" Davidson '70
Tom Roy 6'9" Maryland 75
Forwards
D. G. Martin 6'3" Davidson '62
Doug Cook 6'6" Davidson "70
Don Davidson 6'5" Davidson '65
Tom McMillen 6' 11" Maryland '73
Steve Sheppard 6'5" Maryland '77
Guards
Mo Howard 6'3" Maryland '76
Bob Bodell 6'4" Maryland '72
Wayne Huckel 6'3" Davidson '70
Barry Teague 6'2" Davidson '65
53
UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND WITH COACH DRIESELL
TOURNAMENT RECORDS
YEAR
1969-70
1970-71
1971-72
1972-73
1973-74
1974-75
1975-76
1976-77
1977-78
1978-79
Lost First Round ACC
Lost First Round ACC
Won First Round ACC
Won Semi-Finals ACC
Lost ACC Finals
Won First Round NIT
Won 2nd Round NIT
Won Semi-Finals NIT
Won NIT Finals
Won First Round ACC
Won Semi-Finals Ace
Lost ACC Finals
Won First Round Eastern Regionals
of NCAA Playoffs
Lost Eastern Regional Finals
Won First Round ACC
Won Semi-Finals ACC
Lost ACC Finals
Bye in ACC First Round
Lost ACC Semi-Finals
Won First Round NCAA Playoffs
Won First Round Mid-West Regionals
of NCAA Playoffs
Lost Mid-West Regionals Final
Won First Round ACC
Lost Semi-Finals ACC
Lost First Round ACC
Won First Round ACC
Lost Semi-Finals ACC
Won First Round ACC
Lost Semi-Finals ACC
SCORES
Md.
57
Md.
63
Md.
54
Md.
62
Md.
64
Md.
67
Md.
71
Md.
91
Md.
100
Md.
77
Md.
73
Md.
74
Md. 91
Md. 89
Md.
85
Md.
105
Md.
100
Md.
85
Md.
83
Md.
83
Md.
82
Md.
80
Md.
65
Md.
72
Md.
109
Md.
69
Md.
75
Md.
79
N.C. State 67
South Carolina 71
Clemson 52
Virginia 57
UNC 73
St. Joseph's 55
Syracuse 65
Jacksonville 77
Niagara 69
Clemson 61
Wake Forest 65
N.C. State 76
Syracuse 75
Providence 103
Duke 66
UNC 85
N.C. State 103
N.C. State 87
Creighton 79
Notre Dame 71
Louisville 96
Duke 78
Virginia 73
N.C. State 82
N.C. State 108
Duke 81
Clemson 67
North Carolina 102
1965-66
1967-68
1968-69
COACH DRIESELL'S TOURNAMENT RECORDS
AT DAVIDSON
Won 1st Round Southern Conference
Won 2nd Round Southern Conference
Won Southern Conference Finals
Won 1st Round Eastern Regionals
Lost 2nd Round Eastern Regionals
Won 1st Round Southern Conference
Won 2nd Round Southern Conference
Won Southern Conference Finals
Won 1st Round Eastern Regionals
Won 2nd Round Eastern Regionals
Lost Eastern Regional Finals
Won 1st Round Southern Conference
Won 2nd Round Southern Conference
Won Southern Conference Finals
Won 1st Round Eastern Regionals
Won 2nd Round Eastern Regionals
Lost Eastern Regional Finals
Davidson
79
Citadel 61
Davidson
84
Richmond 65
Davidson
80
West Virginia 69
Davidson
95
Rhode Island 65
Davidson
78
Syracuse 94
Davidson
107
William & Mary 68
Davidson
79
Furman 63
Davidson
87
West Virginia 70
Davidson
79
St. John's 70
Davidson
61
Columbia 59
Davidson
66
North Carolina 70
Davidson
99
VMI 75
Davidson
97
Richmond 83
Davidson
102
E. Carolina 76
Davidson
75
Villanova 61
Davidson
79
St. John's 69
Davidson
85
UNC 87
54
1978-79 FINAL BASKETBALL STATISTICS
•
GP-GS
FGM-FGA
.PCT
FTM-FTA
.PCT
REB/AVG
PF-DSQ
ASST
BLKS
STEAL
POINTS
AVG
Ernest Graham
30-29
222-454
.489
55-73
.753
86
87(3)
62
7
30
499
16.6
Albert King
28-24
191-387
.494
62-81
.765
144 (5.1)
62 (2)
62
10
30
444
15.9
Larry Gibson
30-30
168-305
.551
94-118
.797
257 (8.6)
98 (4)
19
58
18
430
14.3
Greg Manning
29-16
132-240
.550
66-77
.857
33
58 (4)
47
3
11
330
11.4
Buck Williams
30-30
1 20-206
.583
60-109
.550
323 (10.8)
77 (2)
18
25
29
300
10.0
Reggie Jackson
30-14
55-142
.387
26-42
.619
64
65
47
5
16
136
4.5
Dutch Morley
30- 7
21-63
.333
34-43
.791
54
60 (1)
128
2
43
76
2.5
John Bilney
30- 0
22-53
.415
14-28
.500
66
53 (1)
25
8
14
58
1.9
Taylor Baldwin
18- 0
6-16
.375
4-9
.444
21
16(1)
3
3
2
16
0.9
Dave Henderson
11- 0
5-8
.625
4-5
.800
10
4
1
2
0
14
1.3
Eric Shrader
8- 0
3-5
.600
6-8
.750
0
2
0
0
0
12
1.5
Bob Hart
5- 0
2-2
1000
2-2
1000
1
0
0
0
0
6
1.2
Bill Bryant
7- 1
7-16
.438
3-5
.600
TEAM
11
84
7
3
3
3
17
2.4
MARYLAND
30
954-1897
.503
430-600
.717
1154 (38.5)
589 (18)
415
126
195
2338
77.9
OPPONENTS
30
912-1923
.474
416-601
.692
1036 (34.5)
576 (17)
402
99
240
2240
74.7
Dead Ball Rebounds: Maryland 52 Opponents 66 MISSED SHOTS: Maryland 1113 Opponents
WON 19 LOST 11 ATLANTIC COAST CONFERENCE: WON 7 LOST 7
1195
UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND BASKETBALL RESULTS - 1978-79 - WON 19 LOST 11
Md. 100 Athletes In Action
85
(HI
Not included in season totals - Exhibition Game
HIGH SCORERS
HIGH REBOUNDERS
Md. 107
Bucknell
97
(H)
10,216
19
Gibson
18
Graham
13
Williams
9
Gibson
65
Georgetown
68
(N)
8,100
19
King
16
Graham
9
Williams
8
Gibson
81
Air Force
68
(A)
3,300
19
Gibson
14
King
15
Williams
14
Gibson
88
Nevada Las Vegas**
94
(A)
6,376
20
Graham
17
Williams
22
Williams
12
Gibson
69
Penn State
61
(N)
5,016
16
Manning
15
Williams
9
Williams
9
Gibson
86
Biscayne
60
(H)
8,017
22
Graham
13
Manning
14
Williams
5
Gibson
82
East Carolina
71
(H)
8,635
20
Graham
19
King
14
Gibson
7
King
124
N.C. State**
110
(H)
14,500
44
Graham
25
Manning
13
Williams
13
Gibson
129
Canisius
103
(H)
6,127
24
King
23
Gibson
12
Williams
10
King
MARYLAND
INVITATIONAL TOURNAMENT
OT 62
St. Joseph's
56
(H)
5,612
27
King
13
Graham
13
Gibson
10
Williams
83
Southern Calif.
79
(H)
9,287
20
King
20
Graham
11
King
8
Williams
84
George Washington
72
(H)
11,710
20
King
20
Gibson
9
Gibson
8
Williams
60
Wake Forest
66
(H)
12,344
20
King
12
Gibson
9
Williams
20T 82
N.C. State**
81
(A)
1 2,400
24
Graham
20
Gibson
8
King
7
Gibson
84
Louisville**
99
(H)
14,500
25
Gibson
18
18
Graham
Manning
10
Williams
7
King
77
Clemson
63
(A)
10,162
25
Graham
15
15
Gibson
Manning
10
Williams
7
King
53
North Carolina**
54
(H)
14,500
25
Graham
14
King
7
Williams
6
Gibson
82
Navy
62
(H)
10,218
16
Graham
14
Gibson
7
Williams
7
Gibson
67
Notre Dame**
66
(H)
14,500
28
Graham
11
Gibson
15
Williams
63
Virginia**
69
(H)
14,500
16
Graham
14
King
14
Williams
10
Gibson
78
Duke**
87
(A)
8,564
15
Manning
15
Gibson
8
Gibson
7
Williams
67
North Carolina**
76
(A)
10,000
19
Manning
12
Gibson
9
Williams
7
Gibson
77
Clemson
69
(H)
14,218
19
King
18
Manning
10
King
9
9
Williams
Gibson
70
Duke**
68
(H)
14,500
23
Manning
13
King
13
Williams
8
Gibson
54
Wake Forest
53
(A)
10,489
13
Williams
11
King
14
Williams
72
Virginia**
75
(A)
9,000
30
King
17
Graham
11
Williams
6
Gibson
ATLANTIC COAST CONFERENCE
TOURNAMENT
75
Clemson**
67
(A)
15,753
20
King
18
Graham
12
Gibson
8
Williams
79
North Carolina**
102
(A)
15,753
23
Gibson
19
Williams
14
Williams
9
Gibson
NATIONAL INVITATIONAL TOURNAMENT
30T 67
Rhode Island
65
(H)
6,223
17
Gibson
15
King
19
Gibson
16
Williams
72
Ohio State
79
(H)
11,929
27
King
20
Graham
12
Williams
6
6
King
Gibson
**Denotes Sellouts
TOTAL ATTENDANCE - COLE FIELD HOUSE:
AWAY GAMES
TOTAL
201,536 for average of 1 1,196 (18 dates)
1 1 4,9 1 3 for average of 9,576 ( 1 2 dates)
316,449 for average of 10,548 (30 dates)
55
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4 P
TERRAPIN NOTES
Driesell's Terrapins have advanced to the semi-finals
of the ACC Tournament in seven of the last eight years,
a feat equaled only by the North Carolina Tar Heels.
The Terps went on to the championship game three
times.
During those eight years, with teams recruited by
Driesell, the Terps have won nine of 17 tournament
games. Only North Carolina with 11 of 13 has won
more. Virginia has won eight of 15 and North Carolina
State eight of 14 tournament games during the same
span.
XM +
A,
*
TERRAPIN NOTES
Maryland led the ACC in home atendance once
again and with an average of 11,196 per home date
was one of only 28 teams in the nation averaging over
10.000 per game.
The Terps drew 201,536 fans to Cole Field House
and only 13 teams topped the 200,000 mark.
Since "Lefty" came to College Park the Terps have
draw 1,833,440 fans to Cole Field House. During the
ten year period the Terps have had 149 home dates
and averaged 12,304 per date. The year prior to "Lefty's"
arrival the Terps drew 66,500 for 10 dates, a average of
6,650 per game. The Terrapins have led the ACC in
total attendance for the past eight years.
TERRAPIN NOTES
"Lefty" Driesell's Terrapins played five games against
teams ranked among the top five in the nation last year,
eight games against teams ranked among the top eight,
and 10 against top 20 teams. Maryland won three of five
against the top five and split the eight games with the
top eight teams.
The Terps defeated Notre Dame the Nation's top
ranked team, 67-66 on National Television just a week
after dropping a one point decision 53-54 to the second
ranked North Carolina Tar Heels.
Maryland also topped Duke, the fifth ranked team
70-68, just two weeks after losing a nine point decision
to the Blue Devils while they were ranked third in the
nation.
The Terps opened die ACC schedule with a 124-110
win over the fourth ranked North Carolina State Wolf-
pack and came back with a 82-81 overtime win in Raleigh
while the Wolfpack were ranked eighth.
The other three losses to top ten teams were all to
North Carolina while ranked second, sixth and seventh.
In addition to the 10 games with teams ranked
among the top 20 at the time, including Nevada Las-
Vegas and Louisville, Georgetown moved into the top
20 after meeting the Terps early in the season.
One of the toughest places in collegiate basketball
to win is on the home court of the four North Carolina
schols in the ACC. Coach Driesell's Terps swept all
four games there in 1975, won three of four in 1977 and
split the four games in 1972, 1974 and 1979. During
those eight years the Terps are 14-18 in regular season
games in North Carolina and 8-7 in tournament games
in Greensboro. During the same period the Terps are
9-7 on the home courts of die Clemson Tigers and
Virginia Cavaliers for an overall ACC road record of
23-25. During the same period the Terps are 13-14
at home against the league opponents.
Buck Williams, the ACC "Rookie of the Year" in
1979 played on the United States team in the Interna-
tional Cup competition and was the second leading
scorer on the 1 1 man squad, with 62 points in five
games. He scored 16 in the win over Formosa and 15
in a overtime win over France.
Nine of the 10 returning from the 1978-79 team im-
proved their times for the mile with Albert King making
the biggest improvement knocking 24 seconds off his
previous time with a 5:06. Greg Manning with 5:10,
Reggie Jackson 5:12, Jon Robinson 5:14, Dutch Morley
and David Henderson with 5:24 all improved and turned
in times that were topped by only two men in 1978.
LEFTY AND THE TERPS
IN INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION
1971-72
1972-73
1973-74
1974-75
Maryland 60
Maryland 104
Maryland 166
Italian National Team
Chilean National Team
Iceland National Team
Eighth Intercontinental Cup Games
Mexico City, Mexico
Maryland 99 Real Madrid (Spain)
1975-76
1979-80
Maryland 89
Maryland 120
Maryland 84
Maryland 81
Maryland 100
Maryland 84
49
37
45
87
79
Chihuahua (Mexico)
Aguascalientes (Mexico) 107
(2 overtimes)
Vila Nova (Brazil) 76
Ignis Varese (Italy) 80
Russian National Team 96
(overtime)
Yugoslavia 78
The Terrapins are timed for the Mile run and a Mile
and a Half run when practice begins. Buck Williams
broke the Basketball record for die mile run as a fresh-
man with his 4:59 and topped that this past October
with a 4:53. The old record was the 5:00 turned in by
Guard Rich Porac in 1974. Tom McMillen's 5:18 had
been the best time turned in by a big man.
The Maryland Terrapins under Coach Lefty Driesell have
hosted five National teams in Cole Field House and won all
five games including an overtime decision over the Russian
National Team. In addition the Terps represented the
United States in the Eighth Intercontinental Cup Games in
Mexico in 1974 and won the Team Championship. In
International Competition the Terps are 10-0.
60
HEAD COACHES PRODUCED BY "LEFTY"
JERRY CONBOY
Point Park
DAVE PRITCHETT
Davidson
JOE HARRINGTON
Hofstra
TIM AUTRY
South Carolina State
TERRY HOLLAND
Virginia
WARREN MITCHELL
William & Mary
GALE CATLETT
Cincinnati
GEORGE RAVELING
Washington State
61
JOHN W. "JACK" ZANE
Sports Information Director
Jack Zane returned to
Maryland in August of
1969 after serving as the
Sports Information Dir-
ector for The George
Washington University for
six years.
He received his degree
in Journalism from Mary-
land in February of 1960
after serving as a student
assistant to Joe Blair for
three years. He served as
a full time assistant to
Blair for two years after
graduation.
While at Maryland he was the first Executive Sports
Editor of the Diamondback, SMC of Pi Kappa Alpha
fraternity and a member of Sigma Delta Chi Journalism
fraternity.
While at GW he served as President of the Southern
Conference SID's and on the Executive Committee of the
Southern Conference Sports "Writers Association. He
has served three terms as a Vice-President of the Atlantic
Coast Sports Writers.
He is on the Public Relations Committee of the
NCAA, has been a member of CoSIDA for 16 years, the
Football and Basketball Writers of America, the Sports
Reporters Association of Baltimore and the Maryland
Chapter of Sigma Delta Chi. He is also a member of
the Washington D.C. Touchdown Club.
A graduate of Southern High at Lothian, Zane is a
native of Maryland and served four and a half years
in the Navy before enrolling at Maryland. He is married
to the former Judy Allen of Fayetteville, West Virginia,
a graduate of The George Washington University.
PATTI WESSEL FLYNN
Assistant Sports Information Director
Patti Flyrm is a 1977
graduate of Maryland and
joined die Sports Infor-
mation staff in 1978.
She is primarily respon-
sible for die 10 sport
women's program but
works with all 23 varsity
sports.
Following graduation
she worked with the
Maryland Education-
al Foundation in the areas
of fund raising and pro-
moting die Women's pro-
gram.
She has hosted several AIAW regional tournaments and
traveled with the basketball team diroughout the nation
including the AIAW finals in California.
As an undergraduate she played for die Maryland
basketball team and graduated cum laude with a B.S.
in Marketing.
Patti came to Maryland from nearby Regina High
with her home in Adelphi. She married Tim Flynn,
also a Maryland graduate this past summer.
HUGH RODMAN "Rod" MARTIN
Head Basketball Trainer
Rod Martin (27) join-
ed the Maryland Training
Staff as Assistant to John
J. Bush and Head Basket-
ball Trainer in 1978 af-
ter serving as a graduate
assistant at the University
of Kentucky.
He also worked as a
trainer with the Indiana
Wizards, a professional
basketball team and with
the Tampa Bay Bucca-
neers of the N.F.L.
Rod is a graduate of
Morehead State University where he received his B.A.
in 1975. He earned his Masters Degree in 1977.
He is a native of Lawrenceburg, Kentucky and gradu-
ated from Anderson County High. He married Donna
Marie Figuly in July of 1978. Rod was born on March
21, 1952.
DR. STANFORD A. "Stan" LA VINE
Team Physician
Dr. Stan Lavine has
served as the Terrapin
Team physician for all
sports and has enabled
many Maryland athletes
to overcome injuries and
\ . w^ not only perform at Mary-
r •■■^L^-' Jfl land but to go on to the
professional ranks and ex-
^Mjv H \s a quarterback on the
H 1949 Maryland team he
WL I established one Terrapin
record and shared an-
other. Against South Car-
olina Lavine passed 15 yards to El Bolton who ran 77
yards to score. The 92 yard touchdown play remains die
longest scoring pass and run in die Maryland record
book.
Against George Washington, Lavine completed three
touchdown passes, a mark he shared until Mark Manges,
recovering from a separated shoulder repaired by Lavine,
threw four against Villanova in 1975.
Dr. Lavine is an orthopedic surgeon and has also
served as the Team Physician for the Bullets and Wash-
ington Redskins. He is highly respected in the field of
sports medicine and is a loyal Terrapin often catching
both the Bullets and Terrapin basketball teams in action
on the same night.
62
MARYLAND
EDUCATIONAL
FOUNDATION
Tom Fields is one of
the major reasons die
University of Maryland
Athletic Department is
one of the few Adiletic
Departments in the nation
operating in the black.
Fields, a retired Colonel
from the Marine Corps,
is the Executive Director
of the Maryland Educa-
tional Foundation, the
organization assuming re-
sponsibility for the schol-
arship aid to Maryland
athletes.
The former Maryland Track Ail-American returned
to Maryland in 1970 when the contributions to the Edu-
cational Foundation were minimal. For the fiscal year
ending June 30, 1970 the contributions were approxi-
mately $30,000.
For the past fiscal year the funds generated by the
Educational Foundation totaled over $900,000.
The membership of the Terrapin Club has expanded
accordingly from the 132 original members to 1,850.
The Club in addition to die contributions to the Educa-
tional Foundation supports the athletic program in many
other ways especially with their attendance at the events.
Over one half of the contributors are not graduates of
the University of Maryland. However all are strong
supporters of Intercollegiate Athletics and its principals
of competition.
The funds provided by the foundation have not only
enabled the University's self - sustaining program to
remain just above the break even point but has enabled
the Terrapins to develop a Women's program that has
also gained National recognition. The scholarship pro-
gram for the women athletes is on a par with the program
of the men's non-revenue sports.
The Terrapin Club membership currently includes
26 life members ($10,000 contribution) 402 Diamond-
back members (1,000 annual contribution) and 575
Gold members ($500 annual contribution) among the
1,850 contributors.
As a track star Fields helped lead the Terps to one of
their finest days ever at the Penn Relays winning three
Championship of America races. During World War II
he served in combat in Guadalcanal, Vella Lavella,
Bouganville and Iowa Jima. He also served in Korea
and Vietnam and at the time of his retirement from the
Corps he was the Deputy Director of Information, Head-
quarters, Marine Corps.
HOTSY ALPERSTEIN is the President of the Terrapin
Club with Joseph Vona and Gregory DesRoches serving
as vice presidents.
The incomparable Alperstein is a former Maryland Box-
ing Champion and also played Lacrosse and Soccer for
the Terrapins. He was recently named to the State of
Maryland Boxing Hall of Fame as a unanimous choice
with induction set for October 21.
DR. CHARLES A. TAFF
Chairman The Athletic Council
Dr. Charles A. Taff,
Professor of Transporta-
tion, College of Business
and Management replaced
Dr. John Faber as Chair-
man of the Athletic Coun-
cil in 1977. Dr. Taff
served as chairman of the
Department of Business
Administration from 1962 to 1973 and has taught at
Maryland since 1949.
He is a graduate of Iowa where he also received his
M.A. in 1941. After joining die faculty at Maryland he
earned his Ph.D. in Transportation Economics in 1952.
He has served on the athletic council for several years.
FRANCIS A. GRAY, JR.
Assistant Athletic Director
Frank Gray joined the
athletic department as
Business Manager in 1972
and now serves as an
assistant Director of Ath-
letics, responsible for the
financial structure of die
department.
He has been primarily
responsible for the handling of the budgets in die
department that operates on a $3,000,000 annual total
budget, the bids and purchases made by the department,
expense accounts and all other expenditures.
WILLIAM "SPIDER" FRY
Assistant Athletic Director
"Spider" Fry moved in-
to an administrative posi-
tion in the athletic de-
partment in 1978 after
having devoted 15 years to
the athletes as a Head
Trainer.
He served five years
as the Head Trainer at
Dartmouth College before returning to Maryland in
March of 1967.
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.
Fry became interested in training after suffering a
soccer injury that ended his athletic career at Maryland.
During his years as a trainer he has worked with all
13 mens sports, understands the scheduling problems in
each sport, the feeding and housing problems and trans-
portation difficulties.
63
DR. JOHN SAMPSON TOLL
PRESIDENT
UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND
John S. Toll, the 22nd president of the University
of Maryland, has been in office for a little more dian
one year but he has already become a vital force for
higher education in the State of Maryland.
The drive behind the Toll presidency is a pledge
that "with a determined effort from everyone concerned,
the University of Maryland can, in about a decade,
become one of the best state university systems in die
nation."
Since he became president on July 1. 1978, the Uni-
versity has developed planning documents for the Eastern
Shore and Baltimore County Campuses: has initiated
multi-campus programs which utilize die resources of
the College Park Campus and the University of Maryland
at Baltimore; is helping to develop plans through Uni-
versity College for a national television education system;
and has raised undergraduate admission standards.
More than $465,000 in grants, including a $190,000
Carnegie Foundation award, were obtained in the first
eight months of the Toll presidency to assist Dr. Toll
in developing his ''Agenda for the 80s," a plan to assure
that the University will meet future societal needs. The
Carnegie grant will fund an intensive study of die Uni-
versity's roles and missions by -a team of educational ex-
perts. The results of the study may make die University
of Maryland a model for other universities.
"The University of Maryland must adapt to new
circumstances and respond to new demands that are
being made of universities to provide increasing services
to the society," President Toll said. "This process of
reshaping the University to gain more effective use of
resources, to expand the service mission, and to increase
the excellence of the teaching and research missions is
now underway. The University intends to bring its re-
sources to bear on the social and economic development
of the State of Maryland and to develop scholarly pro-
grams and research projects that will help the state and
the nation prosper during the next decade."
Although President Toll has been in office for less
than 15 months, he is very familiar with the University
and the College Park Campus. Dr. Toll first came to
the University in 1953 as professor and chairman of
what was then a six-man physics department.
Dr. Toll received his undergraduate degree in physics
from Yale where he graduated with highest honors.
His advanced physics degrees were earned at Princeton.
An avid jogger, camper and tennis player, Dr. Toll and
his wife Deborah have two daughters.
DR. ROBERT L. CLUCKSTERN
CHANCELLOR
COLLEGE PARK CAMPUS
"The College Park Campus." Says Robert L. Gluck-
stern, Chancellor of the eighth largest campus in the
nation, "is reaffirming its commitments to research,
scholarship, and the advancement of knowledge, in-
cluding the search for solutions to social problems and
the pursuit of excellence for its own sake."
One program that emphasizes academic excellence
is the Chancellor's Scholars Program. WiUi financial
support from alumni and other friends of the University,
the Chancellor's Scholars Program seeks to attract and
retain top quality students to College Park through
the annual award of $500 renewable scholarships to
outstanding high school students.
The Distinguished Scholar-Teachers Program, estab-
lished last year, emphasizes academic excellence by
recognizing faculty members who have been particularly
successful at translating scholarship into classroom teach-
ing. Each of the six professors selected are given time
to develop an honors seminar, a graduate seminar, and
a series of public lectures in connection with dieir
areas of expertise during die coming year.
College Park's General Honors Program, now in its
fifteenth year, has come to be respected as one of the
best of its kind throughout the nation. Despite die
pressures of administration. Dr. Gluckstern contributes
by teaching a General Honors course in physics almost
every semester. He also continues to be active in research.
The accent on quality diat has characterized Dr.
Gluckstern's administration leads naturally from his
own academic background. Educated at the City College
of New York (Electrical Engineering) and MlT (Ph.D.
in Physics). Dr. Gluckstern taught at Yale University
for fourteen years. In 1964 he joined the faculty at the
University of Massachusetts at Amherst as professor and
chairman of the physics and astronomy department.
Under his leadership, die department grew from 14 to
52 faculty members and increased federal support from
$30,000 to $950,000 a year.
A member of the Terrapin Club, he is an avid fan
and works out on the racquetball courts. He frequently
reminds people that Maryland can be proud of its
athletes who have combined varsity skills widi excellent
academic records.
Dr. Gluckstern. who is 54. was born in Atlantic City,
New Jersey. He is married to die former Norma Block.
The Gluckstems have three children.
64
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University
Maryland
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