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1984-85  Maryland  Basketball  Schedule 

Date 

Day 

Opponent 

Site 

Time 

Nov. 

12 

Mon. 

Athletes  in  Action 

College  Park,  MD 

8:00 

*  23-25  Fri. 

Great  Alaskan  Shootout 

Anchorage,  AK 

6:40  (AST) 

Sat. 

(Alabama-Birmingham), 

Sun. 

Illinois,  Tennesee, 
Oregon,  Idaho  State 
Kansas,  Maryland,  Alaska 

Dec. 

1 

Sat. 

West  Virginia 

College  Park,  MD 

8 

00 

5 

Wed. 

Cleveland  State 

College  Park,  MD 

8 

00 

8 

Sat. 

Alabama  (Tuscaloosa) 

Birmingham,  AL 

7 

30  (CST) 

11 

Tues. 

Ohio  State 

College  Park,  MD 

8 

00 

13 

Thurs. 

U.M.E.S. 

College  Park,  MD 

8 

00 

22 

Sat. 

Loyola  (Baltimore) 

Baltimore.  MD 

8 

00 

25-28 

Tu.-Fri. 

The  Rainbow  Classic 

Honolulu,  HI 

#25 

Tues. 

Maryland  vs  Iowa 
Hawaii  vs  Cornell 

6 
8 

40(HST) 
40(HST) 

26 

Wed. 

Washington  vs  Iowa  State 
Arkansas  vs  Georgia  Tech 

6 

8 

40(HST) 
40(HST) 

27 

Thurs. 

Four  Second  Round 
Games 

TBA 

28 

Fri. 

Four  Games,  with  Cham- 

pionship Final  Game 

8 

40(HST) 

Jan. 

2 

Wed. 

N.C.  State 

College  Park,  MD 

9 

00 

5 

Sat. 

Dayton 

Dayton,  OH 

8 

00 

9 

Wed. 

North  Carolina 

Chapel  Hill,  NC 

8 

00 

14 

Mon. 

Duke 

College  Park,  MD 

8 

00 

16 

Wed. 

Clemson 

College  Park,  MD 

8 

00 

19 

Sat. 

Nevada  Las  Vegas 

Las  Vegas,  NV 

3 

00(PST) 

21 

Mon. 

Holy  Cross 

College  Park,  MD 

8 

00 

26 

Sat. 

Notre  Dame 

College  Park,  MD 

1 

00 

27 

Sun. 

Villanova 

College  Park,  MD 

2 

30 

30 

Wed. 

Virginia 

College  Park,  MD 

8 

00 

Feb. 

2 

Sat. 

Georgia  Tech 

College  Park,  MD 

1 

30 

4 

Mon. 

Old  Dominion 

College  Park,  MD 

8 

00 

6 

Wed. 

Wake  Forest 

Winston-Salem,  NC 

7 

30 

9 

Sat. 

Duke 

Durham,  NC 

1 

30 

13 

Wed. 

North  Carolina 

College  Park,  MD 

9 

00 

17 

Sun. 

Clemson 

Clemson,  SC 

1 

30 

19 

Tues. 

Georgia  Tech 

Atlanta,  GA 

9 

00 

21 

Thurs. 

Towson  State 

College  Park,  MD 

8 

00 

24 

Sun. 

Wake  Forest 

College  Park,  MD 

1 

30 

27 

Wed. 

N.C.  State 

Raleigh,  NC 

7 

30 

Mar. 

3 

Sun. 

Virginia 

Charlottesville,  VA 

I 

30 

8-10 

ACC  Tournament 
Fri. -Sun. 

Atlanta,  GA 

*  Maryland 

will  open 

the  season  playing  KANSAS  in  the  opening  game 

of  the  GREAT 

ALASKAN  SHOOTOUT,  November  23,  4:00  PM,  Alaska  Time,  8:00  PM,  EST. 

#  Maryland 

will  play 

IOWA  in  the  first  game  of  the  RAINBOW  CLASSIC,  Christmas 

Day, 

at  6:40  Hawaiian  Time,  11:40,  EST. 

Maryland  A  t 
A  Glance 

Location 

College  Park,  MD  20740 

Athletic  Dept. 

Cole  Field  House 

President 

Dr.  John  S.  Toll 

Chancellor 

Dr.  John  Slaughter 

Enrollment 

29,510  Full  Time 
Undergraduates 

Athletic  Director 

Richard  M.  "Dick"  Dull 

Faculty  Chairman  — 
Athletics 

Dr.  Charles  Taff 

Conference 

Atlantic  Coast 

Basketball  Arena 

Cole  Field  House  —  14,500 

Nickname 

Terrapins,  Terps 

Colors 
Red,  White,  Black  &  Gold 

Team  Physician 

Dr.  Stanford  A.  Lavine 

Head  Basketball  Coach 

Charles  "Lefty"  Driesell 

Head  Trainer 

J.  J.  Bush 

Basketball  Trainer 

Miko  Bernardo 

Sports  Information 
Director 

Jack  Zane 

Sports  Promotion  Director 

Alex  Isherwood 

Office  Telephones 
Director  of  Athletics 

(301)     454-4705 

Basketball  Office 

(301)     454-2126 

Athletic  Ticket  Office 

(301)     454-2121 

Sports  Information  Office 

(301)     454-2123 

Sports  Promotion  Office 

(301)     454-4687 


The  Terps 
on  ACC  Television 


Day 

Date 

Opponent 

Time  (EST) 

Wed. 

Jan.  2 

North  Carolina  State  at  Cole 

9:00  P.M. 

Wed. 

9 

at  North  Carolina 

8:00  P.M. 

Sat. 

Feb.  2 

Georgia  Tech  at  Cole 

3:30  P.M. 

Sat. 

9 

at  Duke 

3:00  P.M. 

Wed. 

13 

North  Carolina  at  Cole 

9:00  P.M. 

Sun. 

17 

at  Clemson 

1:30  P.M. 

Tue. 

19 

at  Georgia  Tech 

9:00  P.M. 

Sun. 

24 

Wake  Forest  at  Cole 

1:30  P.M. 

Sun. 

Mar.  3 

at  Virginia 

1:30  P.M. 

Fri. 

8 

ACC  Tournament 

12  and  4:30  P.M. 

at  Atlanta,  Ga. 

7  and  11:00  P.M. 

9 

ACC  Tournament 

at  Atlanta,  Ga. 

1:30  and  6:00  P.M. 

10 

ACC  Championship  Game 

at  Atlanta,  Ga. 

1:00  P.M. 

The  ACC  Basketball  Telecasts  are  presented  by  the 
RAYCOM/JEFFERSON  Productions,  Charlotte,  NC. 


ON  NBC-TV  NETWORK 

Sat. 

Jan.  19 

at  Nevada/Las  Vegas 

3:00  P.M 

Sun. 

27 

Villanova  at  Cole 

2:00  P.M 

SPORTS  INFORMATION  OFFICES:  The  Sports 
Information  Offices  are  located  in  Cole  Field  House  in 
the  far  right  hand  corner  of  the  building,  room  1 145. 

MAILING  ADDRESS:  The  mailing  address  for  the 
Maryland  Office  of  Sports  Information  is: 

Sports  Information  Office 
University  of  Maryland 
P.O.  Box  295 
College  Park,  Maryland  20740 


The  University  of  Maryland  actively  subscribes  to  a  policy  of 
equal  educational  and  employment  opportunity.  The  University 
of  Maryland  is  required  by  Title  IX  of  the  Educational  Amend- 
ments of  1972  not  to  discriminate  on  the  basis  of  sex  in 
admission,  treatment  of  students,  or  employment. 


MARYLAND  BASKETBALL:  Printed  by  University  of  Maryland 

Priming  Department. 

Color  separations  by  Sun  Crown. 

Photo's  provided  by  Larry  Crouse,  University  Photos;  Matt  Wascavage, 
The  Diamondback;  Brian  Lewis;  Greensboro.  NC,  Daily  News. 
Cover  by  Larrv  Crouse.  University  Photos. 


Contents 

Athletic  Director 

Dick  Dull    2 

The  Staff 
Head  Coach 

Lefty  Driesell 3-5 

Assistant  Coaches 6 

Basketball  Staff 26 

Cole  Field  House 71 

The  Players  9-24 

Records    44-46; 

54-56 

All-Time  Scores 57-61 

Awards  50-52 

Opponents  Information    30-40 

Administration 

President  Toll    65 

Chancellor  Slaughter    65 

Athletic  Dept.  Staff  66-69 

Voice  of  the  Terps, 

Ron  Menchine  70 

Radio  Network    70 

Hotel  Directory 70 

Lefty's  Ail-Americans  and  Pros 79-80 

Terrapin  Notes    81-82 

Driesell  Era  in  College  Park   47-49 

Terp  Olympians  71 

Roster  —  Team  Picture    7 

Results.  1982-83 27-29 

Media  Information    83 

High  School  Coaches  25 


Dick  Dull  is  the  chief  administrator  of  an  extremely 
successful  Department  of  Intercollegiate  Athletics.  In  his 
three  years  as  the  Director  of  Athletics  the  department 
has  not  only  been  successful  in  intercollegiate  compe- 
tition but  has  been  financially  stable  operating  in  the 
black  all  three  years. 

Dull  spent  his  first  Christmas  as  Director  of  Athletics 
searching  the  nation  for  a  Head  Football  Coach.  His 
second  Christmas  on  the  job  was  spent  in  Hawaii  as 
Bobby  Ross  took  the  Terps  to  the  initial  Aloha  Bowl  for  a 
Christmas  Day  game  against  Washington.  He  was  able  to 
relax  while  celebrating  the  third  as  he  had  just  returned 
with  Ross  and  the  football  team  from  the  Florida  Citrus 
Bowl. 

He  has  the  responsibility  for  a  self  supporting  depart- 
ment of  the  University  with  a  six  million  dollar  budget.  In 
addition  to  supporting  22  varsity  teams  the  department  is 
responsible  for  the  operation  and  maintenance  of  an  18 
hole  golf  course  and  driving  range.  Other  facilities  the 
department  is  responsible  for  include  Cole  Field  House, 
Byrd  Stadium,  Shipley  Field,  two  football  practice  fields 
and  an  artificial  turf  all-purpose  practice  field.  In  addition 
there  are  facilities  for  Intercollegiate  Soccer  and  La- 
crosse, Women's  Field  Hockey  and  Lacrosse  and  Tennis 
courts  for  men  and  women.  The  department  has  over  90 
employees. 

In  1 983-84  the  Terrapins  won  the  ACC  Championship  in 
both  football  and  basketball  and  the  basketball  team 
landed  a  berth  in  the  NCAA  Championships  for  the 
second  consecutive  year.  The  women's  basketball  team 
made  their  third  consecutive  trip  to  the  NCAA  Champion- 
ships and  the  women's  lacrosse  team  played  in  the 
National  Championship  game. 

While  looking  ahead  to  another  successful  year  in  1984- 
85  Dull  has  resisted  attempts  by  several  major  universities 
to  lure  him  from  College  Park.  At  39  he  has  become 
recognized  as  one  of  the  top  administrators  in  inter- 
collegiate athletics. 

Dull  assumed  the  duties  of  Director  of  Athletics  on 
August  1,  1981.  He  was  appointed  by  the  Board  of 
Regents  on  June  19,1981. 


Richard  Michael  "Dick"  Dull 
Director  of  Athletics 


He  was  well  qualified  for  the  position  taking  over  a 
department  that  he  had  worked  his  way  through,  begin- 
ning as  a  student  athlete  in  1964. 

Despite  rising  prices,  especially  in  the  areas  of  equip- 
ment, medical  care,  insurance,  travel  and  scholarships 
and  competition  for  the  entertainment  dollar,  he  has 
maintained  financial  solvency. 

The  outlook  for  1983-84  is  bright.  An  aggressive 
promotional  program,  successful  fund  raising  program, 
successful  recruiting  ventures  and  exciting  competition 
against  the  best  teams  available  all  contribute  to  expec- 
tations for  another  year  of  national  rankings  and  a 
balanced  budget. 

Since  joining  the  Maryland  Athletic  Department  Dull's 
duties  have  encompassed  everything  from  coaching  on 
the  field  to  scheduling,  supervision  and  administration  of 
all  non-revenue  sports,  serving  as  liaison  with  the  Office 
of  Financial  Aid,  supervision  and  administration  of  the 
Business  Office  of  Intercollegiate  Athletics  and  he  re- 
organized the  former  Department  of  Women's  Inter- 
collegiate Athletics  into  the  Office  of  Non-Revenue 
Sports. 

Since  taking  over  as  Athletic  Director  he  has  re- 
organized the  promotions  department  and  initiated  new 
Athletic  Department  publications  designed  to  whet  the 
appetite  of  sports  fans  and  athletes  interested  in  Mary- 
land athletics. 

He  initially  came  to  Maryland  as  a  student-athlete  from 
Biglerville  High  in  Pennsylvania.  He  received  his  Bachelor 
of  Arts  as  a  Political  Science  major  in  1967  and  then 
moved  on  to  the  Maryland  School  of  Law. 

He  received  his  Doctor  of  Laws  in  1971  and  the 
experience  gained  as  an  Attorney  at  Law  for  four  years 
contributed  to  his  success  and  perseverance  throughout 
the  past  three  years. 

As  an  undergraduate  he  was  a  champion  javelin 
thrower  for  the  Maryland  Track  and  Field  team.  His  best 
competitive  throw  was  251  feet. 

He  was  Pennsylvania  High  School  Champion  in  1961, 
the  Pennsylvania  Jaycee  State  Champion  in  1963  and  the 
PI  A  A  State  runner-up  in  1963.  In  1965  he  was  the 
National  Junior  AAU  Champion. 

Among  his  many  titles  won  while  at  Maryland  are  ACC 
Champion,  Penn  Relay  Champion,  and  ACC-SEC 
Champion.  He  also  placed  eighth  in  the  National  AAU 
Championships  and  the  NCAA  Championhips. 

As  a  javelin  coach  he  produced  two  ACC  Champions 
and  an  Ail-American,  while  also  handling  the  academic 
affairs  and  administration  of  the  Track  team. 

His  Bar  memberships  include  the  Court  of  Appeals  of 
Maryland  and  the  Federal  Court  for  District  of  Mary- 
land. 

He  served  from  June  1971  to  June  1973  as  Attorney  at 
Law.  Legal  Aid  Bureau  in  Baltimore,  Maryland  and  from 
June  1973  to  January  1975  as  Attorney  at  law  with  the 
University  of  Southern  California,  National  Senior  Citi- 
zens Law  Center.  While  with  USC  he  served  for  a  period 
as  the  Acting  Director  of  the  Washington  office. 

His  hobbies  include  photography,  fishing  and  motor 
sports.  He  was  born  on  July  1,  1945. 


CHARLES  G.  "LEFTY"  DRIESELL 


"He  finally  won  it  and  no  one  deserves  it  more  than  my 
Dad,"  exclaimed  23-year-old  Pam  Driesell  after  her 
Father  had  won  his  first  ACC  championship  trophy  after 
15  tournament  tries  for  it. 

Five  times  he  coached  teams  to  the  ACC  championship 
game.  Five  times  he  lost  —  by  9  points,  then  2,  3,  1  and  1 
again.  No  coach  in  conference  history  had  ever  been  left  at 
the  altar  so  many  times.  One  of  his  defeats,  a  103-100 
overtime  loss  to  national  champion  bound  North  Carolina 
State,  even  became  known  as  the  greatest  ACC  game  ever 
played. 

Sunday,  March  10,  1984,  Greensboro  Coliseum, 

Greensboro,  NC 

ACC  CHAMPIONSHIP 

MARYLAND  —  74     DUKE  —  62  -  "AMEN!" 

With  the  ACC  Championship  trophy  proudly  displayed 
in  his  office  and  another  top  10  national  ranking  etched  in 
the  record  books,  Driesell  enters  a  milestone  of  sorts  as  he 
entertains  his  silver  anniversary  25th  year  as  a  college 
coach  this  season,  15  at  Maryland  and  9  at  Davidson.  The 


"shootout"  for  his  quest  of  a  second  straight  ACC  title 
and  seventh  NCAA  participation  with  the  Terps  begins  as 
Maryland  opens  the  season  in  the  Great  Alaskan  Shoot- 
out tournament  in  Anchorage.  Alaska,  November  23-25. 
drawing  Kansas  for  the  opening  game. 

Driesell.  this  season,  could  realize  another  monu- 
mental coaching  milestone.  If  and  when  the  Terps  win  a 
20th  game,  it  will  be  his  500th  career  victory.  His  24-year 
mark  reads  480  wins  and  only  199  losses  for  a  71% 
winning  margin.  This  is  20.0  average  wins  a  season.  His 
15-year  total  at  the  Maryland  helm  is  304  victories  and 
133  losses,  a  winning  percentage  of  70.  This  is  20.3 
average  wins  a  season.  With  the  1984-85  schedule  surely 
the  most  ambitious  in  the  61-year  history  of  Maryland 
basketball,  the  Terps  will  play  a  minimum  34  games.  The 
500th  win  is  a  goal  Lefty  and  his  team  will  be  "shooting" 
for.  His  1 5-year  record  indicates  it  could  happen  since  the 
Terps  have  won  20  or  more  games  in  9  of  the  15  years. 

Going  into  this  season,  Driesell  remains  No.  2  among 
major-college  basketball  coaches  in  winning  percentage 
.710,  with  his  480-198  24-year  record.  His  fellow  ACC 
coach.  North  Carolina's  Dean  Smith  is  ranked  No.  1. 

In  his  15  years  at  Maryland,  his  teams  have  been  invited 
to  play  in  either  the  NCAA  playoffs  or  the  NTT.  14  of 
those  15  years.  He  has  been  in  the  NCAA  championship 
tournament  nine  times  with  a  12-10  record.  His  Davidson 
teams  reached  the  East  Regional  Championship  game 
twice,  1968  and  1969.  The  Terrapins  played  in  the  1975 
Midwest  Regional  title  game. 

Six  of  nine  NCAA  tournament  losses  came  to  teams 
who  were  in  the  final  four.  His  Terps  lost  to  National 
Champion  Indiana  in  1981,  and  to  runner-up  Houston  in 

1983.  Louisville  (3rd)  and  Providence  (4th)  defeated  the 
Terps  in  1975  and  1974.  His  Davidson  teams  lost  to 
runner-up  North  Carolina  in  1968  and  again  to  the  fourth 
place  Tar  Heels  in  1969  (ironically,  a  2-point  loss  in  the 
Terps'  Cole  Field  House). 

The  1984  Terrapins  played  21  regular  season  games 
against  teams  selected  for  post-season  play  and  all  seven 
regular  season  losses  (five  in  the  ACC)  came  to  teams  in 
post-season  play. 

Maryland  had  only  one  nationally  ranked  team  in  the 
history  of  Maryland  basketball  ( 1958).  ironically  the  first 
and  last  Terrapin  ACC  championship  until  last  year.  The 
'58  team  won  20  games  and  was  ranked  6th  nationally. 
No  other  team  in  the  history  of  Maryland  basketball  since 
then  had  ever  won  20  games  or  was  nationally  ranked 
until  the  Driesell  era  came  to  the  horizon  in  1969.  Lefty 
has  had  five  teams  ranked  in  the  final  "Top  Ten":  8th  in 
1973;  4th  in  1974;  5th  in  1975;  8th  in  1980;  and  10th  in 

1984.  Two  teams  ranked  1  Ith,  1972  and  '76;  one  ranked 
18th.  1981. 

At  Davidson,  he  had  four  teams  ranked  in  the  final 
"Top  Ten":  10th,  6th.  8th,  and  3rd,  and  two  teams  ranked 
in  the  final  "Top  20":  1 6th  and  1 8th.  Davidson  had  never 
had  a  team  that  was  nationally  ranked  in  the  history  of  the 
school  and  has  not  had  a  "Top  Ten"  ranked  team  since 
Driesell  left  there  for  Maryland,  although  the  year  he  left 
(after  the  1968-69  season)  his  team  had  a  won-lost  record 
of  27-3  and  was  ranked  third  in  the  final  AP  and  UP1 
polls. 

Under  Driesell,  Maryland  has  a  16-1  record  against 


International  competition.  Driesell  and  the  Terps  have 
hosted  six  National  Teams  in  Cole  Field  House  and  have 
won  all  six  games,  including  an  overtime  decision  against 
the  Russian  National  team.  In  addition,  Maryland  repre- 
sented the  United  States  in  both  the  Eighth  Intercon- 
tinental Cup  Games  in  Mexico  in  1974  and  the  Kirin 
World  Cup  Games  in  Japan  in  1980,  winning  both 
championships. 

Lefty  has  not  had  a  losing  season  since  his  first  year  as  a 
collegiate  coach  at  Davidson,  1960-61.  In  the  next  23 
years,  he  has  had  teams  ranked  in  the  "Top  20",  14  times, 
and  the  "Top  10",  nine  times. 

He  took  over  the  Davidson  program  in  1960  and  his 
first  team  had  the  best  record  in  five  years.  His  second 
team  had  the  first  winning  season  at  Davidson  in  1 3  years 
and  his  third  recorded  the  first  20  win  season  in  54  years  of 
competition. 

When  he  arrived  in  College  Park  in  1 969,  the  Terps  had 
suffered  through  three  consecutive  losing  seasons  and  had 
only  two  20  victory  seasons  in  the  history  of  the  school, 
none  in  the  last  1 1  years. 

In  his  third  year  the  Terrapins  won  27  games  and  the 
National  Invitational  Tournament  Championship.  His 
Terps,  in  15  years,  have  recorded  nine  20  victory  seasons 
and  won  19  in  two  other  years,  for  the  20.3  average  wins 
per  season.  His  1972  team  played  32  games  with  a  27-5 
record.  His  1975  team  wa  24-5;  the  1980  team  24-7,  and 
the  1 984  team,  24-8.  No  Maryland  team  had  played  more 
than  32  games  in  a  season  (the  1972  team  27-5)  until  last 
year's  team.  Only  the  1980,  1981  teams  played  31. 

Driesell  won  his  100th  game  at  Maryland  against  North 
Carolina  105-85  in  the  semi-finals  of  the  1974  NCAA 
tournament;  his  200th  over  UMES  in  the  opening  game  of 
the  1 979-80  season  and  the  300th  over  Virginia  in  the  final 
game  of  the  1984  regular  season  with  millions  watching 
his  big  win  over  NBC-TV  national  television.  Wins  200 
and  300  came  in  Cole  Field  House  where  his  Terps  are 
188-38  including  13-2  last  year. 


His  1979-80  Terrapins  were  picked  to  finish  6th  in  the 
ACC  but  finished  1st  with  an  11-3  regular  season 
conference  record  and  an  overall  record  of  24-7.  Driesell 
was  named  the  ACC  Coach  of  the  Year  as  well  as  District 
Coach  of  the  Year.  Albert  King  gained  all-America 
honors  and  Buck  Williams  joined  the  Olympic  team.  King 
was  named  the  ACC  "Player  of  the  Year"  and  the  ACC 
Tournament  "Most  Valuable  Player. "They  then  went  on 
to  advance  to  the  semi-finals  of  the  NCAA  Eastern 
Regionals.  Greg  Manning  was  named  an  Academic  Ail- 
American  after  all-ACC  Academic  honors  for  the  third 
consecutive  year.  Manning  also  led  the  ACC  in  both  free 
throw  shooting  and  field  goal  percentage,  the  first  and 
still  only  time  any  ACC  player  has  won  both  titles 
outright. 

Driesell  has  coached  two  Rhodes  Scholars  in  Danny 
Carrell  at  Davidson  and  the  Terps'  Tom  McMillen.  Both 
studied  at  Oxford.  He  also  has  developed  three  Phi  Beta 
Kappas.  McMillen  was  a  three  time  Academic  All- 
American  and  Manning  achieved  also.  Academic  Ail- 
American  for  the  Terps. 

In  addition  to  Buck  Williams'  selection  to  the  Olympic 
team,  McMillen  and  Steve  Sheppard  were  Olympic 
performers  for  the  Terps. 

Seven  of  Driesell's  former  Terrapins  are  now  playing  in 
the  NBA  with  Brad  Davis  in  Dallas,  Len  Elmore  in  New 
York,  John  Lucas,  San  Antonio.  Buck  Williams  and 
Albert  King,  New  Jersey  Nets,  Charles  Pittman.  Phoenix 
and  McMillen.  Washington  Bullets.  Three  were  drafted 
from  last  year's  team:  center  Ben  Coleman,  2nd  round. 
Chicago  Bulls;  forwards  Herman  Veal  and  Mark 
Fothergill,  Phoenix,  6th  and  8th  rounds. 

Born  on  Christmas  Day,  1931,  Driesell  has  also  been 
honored  as  a  basketball  player.  A  three-sport  athlete  at 
Granby  High  School  in  Norfolk,  Va.,  he  was  named 
All-State  in  1950  when  his  team  won  the  Virginia  State 
Championship.  He  was  also  named  the  outstanding 
player  in  the  state  tournament  and  received  a  scholarship 
to  Duke. 

He  began  his  coaching  career  as  the  Junior  Varsity 
Coach  at  Granby  High  School  after  graduating  from 
Duke  in  1954.  He  became  Granby's  Varsity  Coach  a  year 
later  but  quickly  advanced  to  Newport  News  High  where 
his  teams  compiled  a  57-game  winning  streak  while 
winning  64  of  70  games.  His  overall  high  school  record 
included  97  wins  and  only  15  losses.  He  also  coached  the 
junior  varsity  football  team  to  two  undefeated  seasons. 

At  Duke,  Driesell  was  a  Dean's  List  student  where  he 
received  his  B.  A.  degree.  He  later  received  his  Master's  in 
Education  at  William  and  Mary  College. 

Among  the  many  recognitions  he  has  received,  one  of 
the  most  precious  has  to  be  the  NCAA  "Award  of  Valor". 
He  became  the  first  coach  to  receive  the  award  when  he 
helped  save  the  lives  of  at  least  ten  children  and  several 
adults  from  a  townhouse  fire  near  Bethany  Beach, 
Delaware  in  1973. 

He  recently  was  appointed  to  serve  on  the  ACC  Men's 
Basketball  committee. 

Driesell  and  his  wife,  Joyce,  are  the  parents  of  three 
daughters,  Patty,  Pam,  Carolyn  and  son  Chuck,  a  senior 
on  this  year's  Terrapin  basketball  team. 


DRIES  ELLS  NATIONALLY  RANKED 

TEAMS 

1963 

A.P.   Poll 

18th 

Davidson 

1973 

A.  P.   Poll 

8th 

Maryland 

1964 

A. P.   Poll 

10th 

Davidson 

1974 

A. P.   Poll 

4th 

Maryland 

1965 

A. P.   Poll 

6th 

Davidson 

1974 

A.P.   Poll 

5th 

Maryland 

1966 

A. P.   Poll 

16th 

Davidson 

1976 

A.P.   Poll 

1 1th 

Maryland 

1968 

A. P.   Poll 

8th 

Davidson 

1980 

A.P.   Poll 

8th 

Maryland 

1969 

A. P.   Poll 

3rd 

Davidson 

1981 

A.P.   Poll 

18th 

Maryland 

1972 

A.  P.   Poll 

1  1th 

Maryland 

1983 

A.P.   Poll 

11th 

Maryland 

TWENTY-FOUR  YEAR 

COLLEGIA  TE  RECORD 

Won  480 

Lost 

198 

Pet 

.  .710 

1965-66 

Southern  Conference  Champions 

1967-68 

Southern  Conference  Champions 

1968-69 

Southern  Conference  Champions 

1971-72 

NIT  Champions 

1955-56 

Granby  High  J. V. 

Won 

18 

Lost 

4 

1956-57 

Granby  High  Varsity 

Won 

15 

Lost 

5 

1957-59 

Newport  News  Varsity 

Won 

64 

Lost 

6 

Four  Year  High  School  Record: 

Won 

97 

Lost 

15 

(includes  a  57-game  winning  streak 

and  State  Championship) 

1960-61 

Davidson 

Won 

9 

Lost 

14 

1961-62 

Davidson 

Won 

14 

Lost 

11 

1962-63 

Davidson 

Won 

20 

Lost 

7 

1963-64 

Davidson 

Won 

22 

Lost 

4 

1964-65 

Davidson 

Won 

24 

Lost 

2 

1965-66 

Davidson 

Won 

21 

Lost 

7 

1966-67 

Davidson 

Won 

15 

Lost 

12 

1967-68 

Davidson 

Won 

24 

Lost 

5 

1968-69 

Davidson 

Won 

27 

Lost 

3 

1969-70 

Maryland 

Won 

13 

Lost 

13 

1970-71 

Maryland 

Won 

14 

Lost 

12 

1971-72 

Maryland 

Won 

27 

Lost 

5 

1972-73 

Maryland 

Won 

23 

Lost 

7 

1973-74 

Maryland 

Won 

23 

Lost 

5 

1974-75 

Maryland 

Won 

24 

Lost 

5 

1975-76 

Maryland 

Won 

-n 

Lost 

6 

1976-77 

Maryland 

Won 

19 

Lost 

8 

1977-78 

Maryland 

Won 

15 

Lost 

13 

1978-79 

Maryland 

Won 

19 

Lost 

11 

1979-80 

Maryland 

Won 

24 

Lost 

7 

1980-81 

Maryland 

Won 

21 

Lost 

10 

1981-82 

Maryland 

Won 

16 

Lost 

13 

1982-83 

Mars  land 

Won 

20 

Lost 

10 

1983-84 

Maryland  ACC  Ch 

amp 

ons 

Won 

24 

Lost 

8 

TWENTY-NINE  YEAR 

COACHING  RECORD 

Won  577 

Lost  213 

Pet. 

.730 

Terps  Coaching  Staff 


SHERMAN  DILLARD 

James  Madison  78 


The  senior  member  of  Coach  Driesell's  staff,  Sherman  Dillard  begins  his 
sixth  year  as  assistant  coach  for  the  Terrapins. 

Dillard  is  a  graduate  of  James  Madison  University.  Upon  graduation,  he 
was  the  recipient  of  one  of  fifteen  NCAA  post  graduate  scholarships.  He 
made  the  Dean's  list  as  he  accumulated  a  3.7  grade  point  average  on  the  4.0 
grade  point  scale.  He  graduated  Magna  Cum  Laude,  receiving  his  BS 
degree  in  Health  and  Physical  Education.  He  minored  in  Business 
Administration. 

Among  his  many  academic  honors  he  was  also  named  to  the  National 
Honorary  Fraternity  Omicron  Delta  Kappa,  symbolic  of  leadership. 

An  outstanding  player  for  the  Dukes  of  James  Madison,  Dillard  tallied 
over  2,000  points  in  his  four  year  career.  He  was  chosen  by  the  National 
Association  of  Basketball  Coaches  as  an  All-American  while  being  named 
as  Academic  All  American  three  years  in  a  row.  Dillard  was  a  sixth  round 
draft  choice  of  the  Indiana  Pacers  in  the  1978  NBA  Draft. 

A  native  of  Basset,  Virginia,  Dillard  graduated  from  John  D.  Basset 
High  School.  A  bachelor,  he  resides  in  New  Carrollton,  Maryland. 


Mel  Cartwright,  a  25  year  veteran  of  coaching  championship  high  school 
teams,  enters  his  fourth  season  with  Driesell  and  the  Terrapins.  Driesell 
"recruited"  Cartwright  from  Martinsville,  Virginia  High  School  where  he 
compiled  a  most  successful  record  in  those  25  years. 

At  Martinsville,  his  teams  provided  him  with  the  impressive  mark  of  143 
victories  and  only  a  phenomenal  22  losses.  During  that  head  coaching 
career,  his  teams  won  three  Virginia  state  titles  and  four  regional 
championships.  He  resigned  from  the  high  school  coaching  ranks  to 
become  principal  of  a  local  elementary  school  until  1977  when  he  resumed 
coaching  at  Martinsville,  this  time  as  an  assistant.  In  five  years,  Martins- 
ville amassed  89  victories  against  29  defeats,  enroute  to  three  district,  three 
regional  and  two  state  titles. 

Cartwright  is  a  1 949  graduate  of  Western  Illinois  University.  He  received 
his  Master's  degree  from  the  University  of  North  Carolina  in  Adminis- 
tration, Social  Studies  and  Physical  Education  in  1952. 

He  is  the  father  of  six  children,  three  boys  and  three  girls,  ranging  in  age 
from  20  to  30.  His  sons,  Mel,  Mark  and  Michael  all  played  basketball  for 
Martinsville  High,  with  Mel  going  on  to  play  at  Washington  and  Lee  and 
Mark  at  Virginia  Tech. 


s 


MEL  CARTWRIGHT 

Western  Illinois  '49 


For  two  years,  Ron  Bradley  worked  with  the  Terrapin  basketball  team  as 
a  volunteer  coach  while  he  studied  for  his  doctoral  degree  in  Sport 
Psychology.  Following  his  being  awarded  his  Doctor's  degree,  Driesell 
immediately  added  him  to  his  staff  as  a  full-time  assistant  last  year.  He 
came  to  College  Park  from  Eastern  Nazarene  College  in  Quincy,  Mas- 
sachusetts where  he  was  head  coach  of  the  Crusaders  for  five  years,  posting 
a  96-51  overall  record.  Ron  was  also  a  four  year  letterman  at  Eastern 
Nazarene  ( 1 968- 1972),  amassing  2,649  points  in  1 07  games.  He  was  named 
to  the  N.A.I. A.  and  N.C.A. A.  All-American  teams  and  in  1972  was  drafted 
by  the  New  York  Nets.  He  received  his  B.  A.  in  psychology  and  history  from 
Eastern  Nazarene  and  his  M.S.  in  physical  education  at  Bridgewater  (MA) 
State  College.  Ron  is  married  to  the  former  Denise  Smith  of  Salisbury, 
Maryland.  They  have  a  six-year  old  son,  Brad. 


RON  BRADLEY 

Eastern  Nazarene  '72 


f  .£  £- 


^     -i~    ^> 


1984-85  University  of  Maryland 
Basketball  Roster 


NO. 

NAME 

POS. 

HGT. 

WGT. 

CLASS 

3 

Keith  Gatlin 

Guard 

6-5 

165 

Sophomore 

10 

Jeff  Adkins 

Guard 

6-5 

IS5 

Senior 

1 1 

Charles  "Chuck" 

Driesell 

Guard 

6-2 

170 

Senior 

12 

Jeff  Baxter 

Guard 

6-1 

165 

Junior 

22 

Walter  Lancaster 

Guard 

6-4 

180 

Freshman 

24 

Adrian  Branch 

Guard   Frw 

d 

6-8 

IS5 

Senior 

31 

Bryan  Palmer 

Center 

6- 10 

205 

Sophomore 

32 

lerr\  Long 

Center  Frw 

d 

6-8 

240 

Sophomore 

33 

Derrick  Lew  is 

Forward 

6-7 

145 

Freshman 

34 

Len  Bias 

Forward 

6-8 

145 

Junior 

41 

1  om  Jones 

Forward 

6-6 

205 

Junior 

ALPHABETICAL 

NO. 

POS. 

HGT. 

WGT. 

CLASS 

Jeff 

Adkins 

10 

Guard 

6-5 

IS5 

Senioi 

Jefl 

Baxter 

12 

Guard 

6-1 

165 

Junior 

Len 

Bias 

34 

1  orward 

6-8 

145 

Junior 

Adrian  Branch 

24 

Guard   Frw 

d 

6-S 

is  5 

Senioi 

Chuck  Driesell 

1  1 

Guard 

6-2 

170 

Senior 

Keith  Gatlin 

3 

Guard 

6-5 

165 

Sophomore 

1  on 

i  Jones 

41 

Forward 

6-6 

205 

Junior 

Waller  Lancaster 

2 1 

Guard 

6-4 

180 

1  reshman 

Derrick  1  ewis 

33 

Forward 

6-7 

145 

1  reshman 

len\  Long 

32 

Center    Frw 

d 

6-8 

240 

Sophomore 

Brya 

in  Palmer 

31 

Center 

6-10 

205 

Sophomore 

HOMETOWN/HIGH   SCHOOL 

Grimesland.  \.C.    D.  H.  Conlej   IIS 
Martinsville,  VA   Martinsville 
Silver  Spring,  MD  Springbrook 
Washington,  D.C.  John  Carroll 
Lanham,  M  D  Coolidge 
Largo,  Ml)  DeMatha 
Shrewsbury,  I' \  Susquehannock 
Glen  Mien,  V  \   Hermitage 
remple  Hills,  Ml)  John  (  arroll 
Landover,  MD  Northwestern 
Oak  Hill.  \W  \  Oak  Hill 
(Cumberland.  MDi    Mlegam  CC 


HOMETOWN/HIGH  SCHOOL 

Martinsx  ille,  \  \   Martins\  ille 
Washington.  PC     John  Carroll 
Landover,  \ID  Northwestern 
I  argo,  Ml)  DeMatha 
Silvei  Spring,  Ml)  Springbrook 
Grimesland.  N.C.   D.  IF  Conlej 
Oak  Hill.  \\\  \  Oak  Hill 
(Cumberland,  MD    Mleganj  CC 
1  anham,  M  D  Coolidge 
remple  Hills.  MD  John  Carroll 
Glen  Mien.  \  \   llei milage 
Shrewsbury,  I' \  Susquehannock 


12       JEFF  BAXTER 

6-1  Junior 


Mrs.  Baxter 


Another  of  the  fine  point  guards  Driesell  has  brought 
to  Maryland  . . .  Excellent  ball  handler  and  a  fine  shooter 
...  As  a  reserve,  he  has  come  in  to  get  some  key  baskets 
...  As  a  freshman,  playing  in  all  30  games,  he  scored  103 
points,  33  assists,  and  hit  .794  from  the  foul  line  . . .  With  a 
3-point  play  during  his  first  year,  he  hit  on  6  of  15 
attempts  ...  He  had  his  high  scoring  game  against  Navy 
with  10  and  had  nine  against  Clemson  and  Georgia  Tech 
.  .  .  Last  year,  his  high  of  9  points  came  in  the  Mideast 
NCAA  Regional  game  against  West  Virginia  .  .  .  Playing 
in  2 1  games,  he  averaged  7  minutes  per  game  and  had  48 
points,  16  assists  and  5  steals  .  .  .  His  2-year  point  total  is 
151,  for  the  51  games  .  .  .  Jeff  played  in  both  years  of 
NCAA  play  against  Tennessee-Chattanooga  and  Houston 
in  1983  and  against  West  Virginia  and  Illinois  in  the  1984 
Mideast  Regional . . .  Came  to  Maryland  from  DCs  John 
Carroll  High  where  he  averaged  19  points  his  senior  year 
while  hitting  59%  of  his  field  goals  ...  He  had  a  team  high 
of  6.2  assists  per  game,  and  hit  79%  of  his  free  throws .  . . 
Jeff  played  in  two  post-season  All-Star  games,  the  Capital 
Classic  (Largo,  Maryland)  and  the  Derb\  Classic  (Louisville. 
Kentucky)  ...  He  was  an  All-Tournament  selection  in 
high  school  at  the  Capital  City  Classic  in  Richmond,  the 
Seagull  Classic  in  Atlantic  City,  and  the  MVP  of  the 
Curley  Classic  in  Baltimore  .  .  .  Jeff  has  two  sisters  and 
three  brothers. 

HIGH  SCHOOL  COACH:  Jack  Brucn 

DATE  OF  BIRTH:  September  9.  1964  in  Washington. 
DC 


GP 

GS 

FGM 

FGA 

Pet. 

FTM 

FTA 

.Pet 

Reb. 

\ssl. 

Pf-Dsq. 

Pts. 

Avg. 

FRESHMAN 

30 

— 

35 

84 

.417 

27 

34 

.794 

20 

33 

30-1 

103 

3.4 

SOPHOMORE 

TOTALS 

21 

13 

33 

.393 

22 

30 

.733 

8 

16 

11-0 

4S 

2.3 

51 

— 

48 

117 

.412 

49 

68 

.721 

28 

49 

41-1 

151 

2.9 

10    JEFF  ADKINS 

6-5  Senior 


Mr.  and  Mrs.  Adkins 


The  outstanding  senior  guard  had  started  53  consecu- 
tive games,  all  30  his  sophomore  year,  until  the  second 
Georgia  Tech  game,  the  24th  last  year  .  .  .  After  missing 
that  one  start,  he  started  the  final  three  games  of  the 
regular  season,  the  three  ACC  tournament  games  and  the 
NCAA  games  against  West  Virginia  and  Illinois  ...  As  a 
freshman,  he  started  17,  giving  him  78  starting  assign- 
ments of  91  games  over  his  three  years  .  .  .  Jeff  is 
considered  one  of  the  best  all-around  players  in  the 
conference  as  he  plays  good  defense  and  has  averaged 
nearly  10  points  a  game  all  three  years  ...  He  lends 
leadership,  on  and  off  the  court  .  .  .  Last  season  against 
Boston  College,  he  was  selected  the  games'  MVP  by  CBS- 
TV,  in  the  89-76  upset  win  Christmas  Eve  ...  He  hit  1 1  of 
16  from  the  floor,  1  of  3  foul  shots,  had  4  rebounds  and  5 
assists,  playing  32  minutes  of  the  nationally  televised 
game  .  .  .  His  career  high  scoring  was  25  points  against 
North  Carolina  his  sophomore  year  as  the  Terps  won 
106-94  .  .  .  His  regular  season  103  assists  was  2nd  on  the 
team  and  1 0th  in  the  ACC  ...  He  led  the  team  in  assists  his 
sophomore  year  with  121  ..  .  His  9  against  LaSalle  last 
year  in  the  MIT  was  his  career  high  . . .  From  the  foul  line, 
he  hit  only  67%,  but  ironically,  in  his  last  9  games, 
including  the  post  season  games,  he  hit  on  22  of  his  last  26 
.  .  .  His  4  steals  vs  Ohio  State  was  the  most  in  a  game  last 
season  . . .  His  304  point  production  was  his  high  as  he  had 
205  as  a  freshman  and  297  his  sophomore  year  ...  He  had 
52  assists  and  29  steals  as  a  freshman  and  121  assists  and 
23  steals  as  a  sophomore ...  As  a  freshman,  he  was  named 
the  outstanding  defensive  player  on  the  team  .  .  .  He  also 
won  the  outstanding  academic  award  as  he  did  last  year 
....  In  high  school,  he  scored  over  1,000  points  at 
Martinsville,  averaging  17.7  points  as  a  senior  and  5.3 
assists  ...  He  was  named  to  the  All-America  teams  of 


GP 

GS 

FGM 

FGA 

Pet. 

FTM 

FTA 

.Pet 

Reb. 

Asst. 

Pf-Dsq. 

Pts. 

Avg. 

FRESHMAN 

29 

17 

80 

198 

.404 

45 

64 

.703 

66 

52 

67-1 

205 

7.1 

SOPHOMORE 

30 

30 

109 

233 

.468 

57 

88 

.648 

80 

121 

94-4 

297 

9.9 

JUNIOR 
TOTALS 

32 

31 

120 

223 

.538 

64 

95 

.673 

86 

119 

80.0 

304 

9.5 

91 

78 

309 

654 

.472 

166 

247 

.675 

232 

292 

241-5 

806 

8.9 

10 


Parade  Magazine,  McDonalds  and  Adidas  ...  He  was  the 
recipient  of  the  Hertz  Number  One  award  given  to  the 
outstanding  high  school  athlete  in  each  state  ...  It  was 
presented  by  O.  J.  Simpson  in  New  York  ...  He  is  the 
youngest  of  three  children  with  a  brother  and  a  sister. 

CAREER  HIGHS: 

25  points  against  North  Carolina  as  Terps  won 

106-94  his  sophomore  year 

7  rebounds  at  Holy  Cross  as  a  sophomore  and 

against  LaSalle  and  Clemson  as  a  junior 

9  assists  against  LaSalle,  junior  year 

49   minutes   played   against    Georgia   Tech    in 

double  overtime  his  junior  year 

CAREER  TOTALS: 

91  games  played  in  with  78  starts 
806  points  scored  for  8.9  average  per  game 
232  rebounds  for  2.6  average  per  game 
292  assists  for  3.2  average  per  game 
.472  field  goal  %  with  .538%  last  year 
.675  free  throw  %  with  .673%  last  year 

HIGH  SCHOOL  COACH:   Robert  Hall 

DATE   OF  BIRTH:   May   20,    1963   in   Martinsville. 
Virginia 


MARYLAND 


A 


BASKETBALL 


u 


34    LEN  BIAS 

6-8  Junior 


Mr.  and  Mrs.  Bias 

A  genuine  candidate  for  All-Conference  and  All- 
America  honors,  as  selected  by  The  Sporting  News  pre- 
season All-America  power  forward  checklist.  Bias  caught 
the  attention  of  the  basketball  world  last  year  as  a 
sophomore  with  a  fantastic  season  climaxed  with  a 
brilliant  performance  in  the  ACC  tournament  .  .  .  He  led 
the  Terps  with  his  dominating  play  to  the  ACC  title  giving 
Driesell  his  first  championship  in  his  15  years  at  Mary- 
land .  .  .  For  his  awesome  3-game  display,  he  was  the 
unanimous  selection  as  the  "Most  Valuable  Player"  of  the 
tournament  by  the  vote  of  the  8  coaches  .  . .  He  also  was  a 
unanimous  choice  for  the  ACC  All-Tournament  team  . . . 
In  the  title  game  against  Duke  he  had  a  game  high  and  his 
career  high  of  26  points  as  he  hit  on  12  of  17  from  the  floor 
and  2  of  2  from  the  line  .. .  For  the  three  games,  he  had  56 
points  with  26  of  43  from  the  field,  four  of  six  from  the  line 
and  18  rebounds  ...  He  also  had  7  assists  and  played  all 
but  5  minutes  in  the  three  games — 115  minutes  ...  He 
totaled  15  points  in  each  win  over  N.C.  State  and  Wake 
Forest . .  .  He  had  18  points  on  6  of  9  and  6  of  6  foul  shots 
against  West  Virginia  in  the  opening  game  of  the  NCAA 
Mid-East  Regional  won  by  the  Terps,  102-77  . . .  He  hit  16 
in  the  72-70  loss  to  Illinois  in  the  second  round  of  the 
regional ...  As  a  freshman,  it  was  his  basket  at  the  buzzer 
that  put  the  Terps  into  the  second  round  of  the  1983 
NCAA  tournament  as  the  Terps  defeated  Tennessee- 
Chattanooga,  52-51  and  went  on  to  meet  Houston  in  the 
2nd  round  of  the  Mid- West  Regional ...  In  addition  to  his 
career  high  26  points  against  Duke  in  the  ACC  Champion- 
ship game,  he  scored  25  against  Duke  in  the  regular 
season,  2/ 1 1  in  Cole  and  24  against  North  Carolina  1/12 
in  Cole  and  24  also  against  Old  Dominion  at  Norfolk, 


GP 

GS 

FGM 

FGA 

Pet. 

FTM 

FTA 

.Pet 

Reb. 

Asst. 

Pf-Dsq. 

Pts. 

Avg. 

FRESHMAN 

30 

13 

86 

180 

.478 

42 

66 

.636 

125 

22 

55-1 

217 

7.2 

SOPHOMORE 
TOTALS 

32 

31 

211 

372 

.567 

66 

86 

.767 

145 

48 

81-3 

488 

15.2 

62 

44 

297 

552 

.538 

108 

152 

.711 

270 

70 

136-4 

705 

11.4 

12 


1/21  ...  He  also  had  his  career  high  10  rebounds  against 
Duke  along  with  his  25  points  .  .  .  Len  scored  in  double 
figures  in  the  last  16  games  of  the  season  ...  He  missed 
scoring  in  double  figures  in  only  four  games  of  the  32, 
giving  him  a  total  of  28  ...  He  would  have  started  all  27 
regular  games  last  year  but  for  Driesell's  long  time 
tradition  of  starting  his  seniors  in  the  final  home  game  of 
the  season  ...  He  had  started  32  straight  before  the 
Virginia  game  as  he  started  the  last  six  of  his  freshman 
year ...  He  went  on  to  start  the  three  ACC  title  games  and 
the  two  NCAA  games  .  .  .  His  398  points  scored  in  the 
regular  season  ( 14.7  avg.)  was  the  second  best  on  the  team 
and  9th  in  the  ACC  ...  His  .564%  of  field  goals,  2nd  high 
on  the  team  and  5th  best  in  the  ACC  ...  He  hit  .757%  from 
the  foul  line  and  averaged  4.3  rebounds  ...  He  played  all 
55  minutes  of  the  triple  overtime  win  at  Clemson  ...  In  the 
ACC  title  game,  he  played  39  minutes  and  50  seconds  .  .  . 
Len  was  the  fourth  leading  scorer  on  the  team  as  a 
freshman  ...  He  scored  217  points  for  a  7.2  average  and 
pulled  in  125  rebounds  ...  He  played  in  all  30  games  and 
started  13,  including  the  last  six  .  .  .  He  started  the  first 
game  of  his  college  career  in  the  season's  opener  against 
Penn  State  and  his  second  start  was  the  4th  game  vs  St. 
Joseph's  .  .  .  His  third  start  was  against  UCLA  .  .  .  His 
freshman  high  point  total  was  19  against  Georgia  Tech 
...  He  scored  in  double  figures  in  1 2  games,  including  5  of 
the  last  6  of  the  regular  season  . . .  As  a  starter  the  final  six 
games,  he  scored  71  points  and  had  42  rebounds  .  .  . 
Following  last  season,  the  team  honored  him  with  the 
"Outstanding  Player  of  the  NCAA's"  award  ...  At 
Northwestern  High,  he  averaged  19.6  points  a  game  while 
leading  the  team  to  a  20-5  record  his  senior  year  and 
runner-up  honors  in  the  state  tournament ...  He  averaged 
12.5  rebounds  and  shot  56%  from  the  floor  and  76%  from 
the  line  ...  He  played  in  the  McDonald's  Capital  Classic 
and  the  Derby  Classic  in  Louisville  . . .  He  was  named  the 
MVP  of  the  McDonald's  Capital  Classic  ...  He  is  the 
oldest  of  four  children  with  two  brothers  and  a  sister  .  .  . 
CAREER  HIGHS: 

25  points  against  Duke  in  ACC  Championship 
game  as  he  hit  on  1 2  of  1 7  field  goal  attempts  and 
both  free  throws 

12  rebounds  against  UMES  in  his  second  col- 
legiate game 

55  minutes  played  in  triple  overtime  win  at 
Clemson  last  year,  66-65 

CAREER  TOTALS: 

62  games  played  in  and  44  starts  in  two  years 

705  points  scored  for  1 1.4  average  per  game 

270  rebounds  for  4.4  average  per  game 

.538  field  goal  %  on  297  of  552  attempts  (.567  last 

year) 

.711  free  throw  %  on  108  of  152  (.767  last  year) 

70  assists  with  48  last  year 

HIGH  SCHOOL  COACH:   Bob  Wagner 

DATE  OF  BIRTH:  November   18,   1963  in  Washing- 
ton, DC 


13 


24    ADRIAN  BRANCH 

6-8  Senior 


Mr.  and  Mrs.  Branch 


Along  with  teammate  Len  Bias,  the  senior  forward 
guard  is  a  legitimate  All-Conference  and  All-America 
selection  ...  He  too  was  selected  by  The  Sporting  News 
pre-season  All-America  small  forward  checklist . . .  Much 
of  the  Terps'  success  this  season  rests  on  the  play  of 
Branch  whom  Driesell  always  has  and  still  does  consider 
as  one  of  the  best  one-on-one  players  in  the  game  of 
basketball ...  In  fact,  often  times  the  veteran  coach  calls 
Branch  the  "best"  ...  He  had  a  devastating  sophomore 
year  which  brought  him  accolades  and  the  "can't  miss" 
tag  .  . .  He  was  the  Terps'  leading  scorer  his  freshman  and 
sophomore  years  with  a  15.2  average  as  a  freshman, 
breaking  All-American  John  Lucas'  frosh  mark  of  425 
points  as  Adrian  hit  for  442  ...  He  buried  541  points  as  a 
sophomore  and  grabbed  1 50  rebounds  and  had  95  assists 
...  He  also  had  1 1  blocked  shots  and  21  steals  ...  He 
started  every  game  both  years  (58) ...  As  a  soph,  he  scored 
in  double  figures  in  26  of  his  29  games  and  last  year  he  hit 
the  "double"  in  21  of  the  28  games  in  which  he  played, 
including  the  final  1 1  games  of  the  season  ...  He  missed 
four  games  last  year . . .  Adrian  scored  his  single  game  and 
career  high  of  29  points  as  a  freshman  ...  It  was  against 
Virginia,  then  ranked  #1  in  the  nation,  the  final  regular 
season  game  ...  He  repeated  his  29  high  as  a  sophomore 
against  Clemson  .  .  .  Still  against  the  Cavaliers,  he  hit  28 
points  in  the  season  finale  as  a  soph  and  then  again  last 
season  he  scored  the  game  high  of  20  points  against  the 
Cavs  in  the  final  season  game  to  give  Driesell  his  300th 
victory  as  coach  of  the  Terrapins  .  .  .  For  his  outstanding 
performance,  he  was  named  the  CBS-TV  "Most  Valuable 
Player"  and  the  University  received  a  SI, 000  scholarship 
award  ...  In  the  conference,  he  was  chosen  as  "ACC 
Player  of  the  Week"  for  his  play  in  the  final  two  games  of 
the  season  against  N.C.  State  and  Virginia  ...  He  was  an 
All-ACC  2nd  team  selection  his  sophomore  year  and  AP 


GP 

GS 

FGM 

FGA 

Pet. 

FTM 

FTA 

.Pet 

Reb. 

Asst. 

Pf-Dsq. 

Pts. 

Avg. 

FRESHMAN 

29 

29 

164 

346 

.474 

114 

149 

.765 

125 

41 

79-4 

442 

15.2 

SOPHOMORE 

29 

29 

197 

420 

.469 

118 

165 

.715 

150 

95 

87-2 

541 

18.7 

JUNIOR 
TOTALS 

28 

25 

136 

284 

.479 

91 

121 

.752 

89 

75 

85-2 

363 

13.0 

86 

83 

497 

1050 

.473 

323 

435 

.743 

364 

211 

251-8 

1346 

15.7 

14 


honorable  mention  All-America  last  year  ...  He  was 
named  to  the  ACC  All-Tournament  second  team  last  year 
following  the  championship  victory  over  Duke ...  He  was 
the  Terps'  MVP  as  a  freshman  and  shared  the  same  honor 
with  Ben  Coleman  as  a  sophomore  .  .  .  With  his  strong 
finish  last  year,  40  points  in  the  ACC  tournament  and  21 
in  the  NCAA's,  Branch  now  has  1,346  RANKING  HIM 
8th  ON  MARYLAND'S  ALL-TIME  SCORING  LIST . . 
.  Will  Hetzel  is  7th  with  1,370  .  .  .  ALBERT  KING  HAS 
THE  ALL-TIME  HIGH  OF  2,058  POINTS  ...  The 
magic  #  to  tie  is  712  .  .  .  Adrian  was  a  high  school 
All-American  at  nearby  powerhouse  DeMatha  High  with 
a  16.6  scoring  average  and  8.2  rebounding  average  as  a 
senior  ...  He  was  named  to  the  All-American  teams  of 
Adidas,  Parade  Magazine,  McDonald's  and  Converse . . . 
He  was  selected  to  play  in  tournaments  that  have  taken 
him  across  the  country  and  to  Europe  ...  In  Mannheim, 
West  Germany,  in  the  Albert  Schweitzer  International 
Youth  Tournament,  he  led  the  scoring  including  a  31- 
point  performance  against  the  Russians  in  the  champion- 
ship game.  He  is  one  of  four  boys  with  older  brothers  Tom 
and  Phil  also  playing  at  DeMatha. 

CAREER  HIGHS: 

29  points  against  Virginia  (then  ranked  #1)  in 
final  regular  season  game  as  a  freshman,  hitting 
12  of  17  field  goals  and  5  of  6  free  throws 
29  points  against  Clemson  as  a  sophomore 
10  rebounds  against  Penn  State  and  UCLA  as  a 
sophomore 

CAREER  TOTALS: 

86  games  played  in  with  83  starts  in  3  years 

1,346  points  scored,  ranking  8th  of  Maryland's 

all-time  scoring  list .  .  .  (Will  Hetzel  is  7th  with 

1,370)  15.7  average  per  game,  3  years 

267  rebounds  for  3. 1  average  per  game 

21 1  assists  with  95  as  a  sophomore  and  75  junior 

year 

.472  field  goal  %  with  29  of  8 1  —  3  point  attempts 

as  sophomore 

.473  field  goal  %  with  .479%  last  year 

.743  free  throw  %  with  323  of  435  (.752%  junior 

year) 

HIGH  SCHOOL  COACH:     Morgan  Wootten 

DATE  OF  BIRTH:     November  17,  1963  in  Washing- 
ton, DC 


15 


11    CHUCK  DRIESELL 

6-2  Senior 


Mr.  and  Mrs.  Driesell 

One  of  the  very  few  "Father-Son"  Coach /Player 
combinations  in  all  of  collegiate  athletics  and  surely  a  rare 
coincidence  in  college  basketball.  Chuck  concludes  play- 
ing for  his  Father  "Lefty"  and  the  Terrapins  on  the  team 
that  will  defend  the  ACC  championship  they  won  for  his 
Dad  last  year,  winning  the  title  over  his  alma  mater,  Duke 
.  .  .  The  veteran  back-up  guard  used  sparingly,  hopes  to 
play  a  great  deal  more  this  season  so  that  he  can  make  a 
lasting  contribution  to  his  and  the  teams'  efforts  to  give 
his  Dad  the  500th  win  of  this,  his  25th  year  as  a  head  coach 
...  He  now  has  480  career  victories  ...  As  the  son  of  a 
basketball  coach,  the  popular  "Chuckie",  as  his  thousands 
of  delerious  fans  call  him,  was  7  years  old  when  his  Dad 
brought  him  from  Charlotte  and  Davidson  College  to 
College  Park  . . .  For  the  Terps,  he  played  in  1 2  games  his 
freshman  year,  1 7  his  second  year  and  1 5  last  year . . .  His 
3-year  scoring  total  is  69  points,  with  34  of  them  scored 
last  season ...  He  has  appeared  in  44  games ...  His  career 
high  scoring  for  a  game  is  8,  three  times  . . .  The  last  was  in 
the  1984  NCAA  Mideast  Regional  against  West  Virginia 
when  he  hit  on  all  3  shots  from  the  floor  and  was  2-2  from 
the  line  ...  In  playing  a  season  high  of  7  minutes,  he  also 
had  2  rebounds  and  an  assist . . .  These  3  field  goals  and  2 
foul  shots  for  8  points  and  an  assist  in  7  minutes  is  8  points 
and  1  assist  more  than  his  Dad  ever  got  in  the  NCAA's, 
Duke  never  being  able  to  scratch  past  NC  State  in  the 
ancient  days  when  only  the  ACC  champion  advanced  to 
the  NCAA's  ...  He  hit  8  points  against  UMES  his  soph 
year  then  against  last  year's  Johns  Hopkins  opener  .  .  . 
During  the  summer  of  '84,  he  toured  South  America  with 
the  Athletes  in  Action  ...  He  had  a  seven  point  scoring 
average  for  1 8  games.  .  .  .  The  tour  included  six  games  in 
Mexico,  five  in  Peru  and  eight  in  Brazil ...  A  Business  and 


GP 

GS 

FGM 

FGA 

Pet. 

FTM 

FTA 

.Pet 

Reb. 

Asst. 

Pf-Dsq. 

Pts. 

Avg. 

FRESHMAN 

12 

— ' 

4 

12 

.333 

6 

11 

.546 

3 

0 

7 

14 

1.2 

SOPHOMORE 

17 

— 

6 

18 

.333 

8 

14 

.571 

5 

5 

9 

21 

1.3 

JUNIOR 
TOTALS 

15 

— 

12 

26 

.462 

10 

19 

.526 

8 

5 

4 

34 

2.3 

44 

— 

22 

56 

.393 

24 

44 

.545 

16 

10 

20 

69 

1.6 

16 


Marketing  major,  Chuck  spent  last  spring  semester  as  an 
intern  with  the  Baltimore  Orioles,  assisting  and  learning 
the  operations  of  the  marketing,  promotions,  and  public 
relations  departments  .  .  .  From  nearby  Springbrook 
High,  Chuck  led  the  team  in  scoring  as  they  won  the 
County  AA  title  ...  He  had  458  points  for  a  1 7.6  scoring 
average  his  senior  year  ...  He  was  an  All-County  selec- 
tion as  he  scored  in  double  figures  in  24  of  26  games.  His 
career  high  was  29  points. 

HIGH  SCHOOL  COACH:  John  Barrett  (U  of  Maryland 
graduate  —  star  baseball  player) 

DATE  OF  BIRTH:  November  3,    1962  in  Charlotte. 
North  Carolina 


THEN' 


K'SKFTBil  I 

"FA  THER  -  SON"  NO  W 


17 


KEITH  GATLIN 

6-5  Sophomore 


Mrs.  Gatlin 


Keith  came  to  College  Park  and  into  Cole  Field  House 
with  a  reputation  and  enough  press  clippings  that  could 
be  piled  high  on  the  Terps'  basketball  court . . .  The  much 
sought  after  and  highly  recruited  point-guard  was,  after 
all,  from  the  Tar  Heel  state  of  North  Carolina  and  the 
little  community  of  Grimesland  .  .  .  Another  coup  of 
Lefty's  recruiting  genius  was  hardly  ever  so  heralded  and 
applauded  as  he  landed  the  state  of  North  Carolina's  high 
school  "Player  of  the  Year" . . .  Keith  received  rave  notices 
and  recognition  from  the  basketball  coaches,  players  and 
media  across  the  land  .  .  .  For  his  standout  play  last  year, 
he  readily  and  easily  has  been  labeled  as  a  future  "can't 
miss"  star  ...  He  already  has  been  selected  by  The 
Sporting  News  pre-season  All-America  point  guard 
checklist . . .  He  started  9  of  the  32  games . . .  His  first  start 
was  the  fifth  game  of  the  season  at  Duquesne  when 
Branch  started  at  one  of  the  forwards . . .  His  second  start 
was  in  the  MIT  against  Randolph  Macon  when  Branch 
was  out  with  a  bad  ankle  . . .  His  third  start  was  a  big  one 
since  it  was  his  first  in  an  ACC  game  ...  At  Charlottes- 
ville, 1/31  he  took  Branch's  spot  and  scored  14 points  and 
had  6  assists.  He  hit  his  season  high  in  the  next  game  at 
Georgia  Tech  with  19  points  with  8  assists . . .  Then,  still 
on  the  road  at  Greensboro  against  Wake  Forest,  he 
scored  17  and  had  6  assists  .  .  .  After  these  three  ACC 
starts,  as  Branch  returned,  he  started  the  next  game  with 
Duke  at  Cole  and  had  13  points  and  8  assists  ...  He 


GP 

GS 

FGM 

FGA 

Pet. 

FTM 

FTA 

.Pet 

Reb. 

Asst.  Pf-Dsq. 

Pts. 

Avg. 

FRESHMAN 

32 

9 

75 

154 

.487 

48 

63 

.761 

52 

148       32-0 

198 

6.2 

18 


started  the  next  game  against  Dayton,  but  played  but  13 
minutes  as  Branch  played  .  .  .  Averaging  24  minutes  a 
game,  he  led  the  team  in  assists  with  148  (4.6  per  game) 
and  scored  in  double  figures  7  times  ...  His  assist  total  led 
runnerup  Jeff  Adkinsby  29. . .  He  finished  6th  tops  in  the 
ACC  in  assists  .  .  .  Adkins  played  193  more  minutes  than 
Gatlin  . . .  Adkins  had  led  the  Terps  in  assists  the  past  two 
years  .  .  .  He  had  his  10  high  a  game  in  post  season;  10  vs 
Duke  in  the  title  game  then  Illinois  ...  He  finished  his 
rookie  year  with  .487%  from  the  floor  and  .  76 1  %  from  the 
line. . .  While  scoring  198  points  (6.2  average),  his  high  in 
snaring  rebounds  was  5  vs  Duquesne  and  at  Georgia  Tech 
...  It  was  on  NBC  national  television  from  Chapel  Hill 
that  Gatlin  put  on  a  magnificent  performance  for  the 
audience  and  received  the  Terps'  "MVP  Award"  and  the 
$  1000,  scholarship  award  given  to  the  University. . .  At  D. 
H.  Conley  High,  he  scored  a  career  1612  points  while 
hitting  56%  from  the  floor  and  92%  from  the  free  throw 
line  .  .  .  His  single  game  high  was  38  points  .  .  .  He 
averaged  6+  assists  per  game  all  4  years.  He  averaged  22 
points  as  a  junior,  then  early  his  senior  year,  October, 
announced  his  decision  to  attend  the  University  of 
Maryland  and  enroll  as  a  radio  and  television  major  .  .  . 
As  a  senior,  he  averaged  25.2  points  a  game  along  with  9.8 
per  game  rebounds  and  6.2  assists .  . .  The  team  finished 
with  a  22-4  record  ...  He  played  in  the  McDonald's 
All-Star  game  in  Atlanta  and  the  McDonald's  Capital 
Classic  at  the  Capital  Centre  in  Maryland. 

HIGH  SCHOOL  COACH:  Shelley  Marsh 

DATE  OF  BIRTH:  December  23,  1964  in  Newark,  New 
Jersey 


Welcome  Keith 


and  Terry  Lon3cf 


19 


41    TOM  "Speedy"  JONES 
6-6  Junior 


Mrs.  Inez  Jones 
Grandmother 


The  6-6,  215-pound  Jones  was  lured  by  Driesell  from 
Allegany  Community  College  (Cumberland,  Maryland) 
after  setting  scoring  and  rebounding  records  ...  At 
Allegany,  Jones  was  an  All-American  choice  on  the 
NJC AA  All-America  team  ...  He  rewrote  the  season  and 
career  scoring  records  at  Allegany  last  season  and  was 
honored  as  the  teams'  Most  Valuable  Player . . .  His  single 
season  scoring  record  was  829  points,  a  23-point  per  game 
average  . . .  His  career  scoring  title  total  was  1 302  points  as 
he  had  scored  473  points  his  first  year  at  Allegany.  Last 
year,  he  also  set  the  season  mark  for  field  goals,  313;  foul 
shots  made,  203;  and  foul  shots  attempted,  259. . .  His  513 
career  field  goals  tied  the  school  record  ...  He  also  was  the 
leading  rebounder  with  328  for  9.1  per  game. 

Nicknamed  "Speedy",  Jones  was  the  leading  scorer  and 
rebounder  on  his  Oak  Hill  ( WVA)  High  school  team  that 
was  21-5  his  senior  year  . .  .  He  averaged  22  points  and  1 1 
rebounds  his  senior  year  .  .  .  He  was  named  to  the 
Converse  All-America  team  and  was  a  first  team  selection 
on  the  West  Virginia  class  AAA  All-Star  team. 

HIGH  SCHOOL  COACH:  Jim  Lilly 

DATE  OF  BIRTH:  August  15,  1964 


20 


22    WALTER  LANCASTER 
6-4  Freshman 


Mr.  and  Mrs.  Lancaster 


An  All-Met  player  as  a  junior  at  St.  Anthony's  High 
School,  Lancaster  repeated  as  a  first  team  selection  as  a 
senior  at  Coolidge  High  School  as  he  averaged  19.4  points 
per  game  ...  As  a  junior,  he  averaged  20  points  a  game,  1 1 
rebounds  and  5  assists  .  .  .  Along  with  his  All-Metro 
recognition  his  junior  year,  he  was  an  All-Star  in  the 
Sidwell  Friends  summer  league  and  MVP  at  the  five-star 
basketball  camp  in  Pennsylvania  ...  He  played  guard 
throughout  his  high  school  career  and  started  all  four 
years  ...  He  was  a  55%  shooter  during  his  high  school 
career  ...  He  is  considered  one  of  the  top  5  shooting 
guards  in  the  country  .  .  .  Rated  the  nation's  17th  top 
prospect  by  Knoxville  News  Sentinal  ranking  .  .  .  Wally 
starred  in  this  year's  Capital  Classic  at  the  Capital  Centre 
in  Maryland  along  with  Derrick  Lewis,  also  a  Terrapin 
freshman  . . .  He  was  an  honor  student  in  high  school  and 
also  was  active  in  student  activities  ...  A  leader,  on  and 
off  the  court. 

HIGH  SCHOOL  COACH:  Frank  Williams 

DATE  OF  BIRTH:  June  14,  1966 


21 


33    DERRICK  LEWIS 
6-7  Freshman 


Mr.  and  Mrs.  Lewis 


A  premier  shot  blocker,  Lewis  has  been  labeled  as  "inch 
for  inch",  the  best  shot  blocker  in  the  country  .  .  .  Rated 
the  nation's  6th  top  prospect  by  Knoxville  News  Sentinel 
ranking  ...  As  a  junior,  he  led  his  team  with  1 7  points  a 
game,  1 1  rebounds  average,  and  6  blocked  shots  a 
game  ...  He  then  led,  as  a  senior,  the  conference  in 
scoring  with  21  points  per  game  .  .  .  Derrick  also  averaged 
15  rebounds  and  8  blocked  shots  per  game  ...  A  varsity 
starter  since  his  sophomore  year,  he  is  a  respected  all- 
round  player  and  has  been  described  as  the  "best  defensive 
forward  in  the  country"  .  .  .  One  of  the  most  highly 
recruited  players  in  the  nation,  Lewis  has  gained  numerous 
honors,  including  his  selection  for  the  second  consecutive 
year  on  the  first  team  Washington  Post  All-Metro  team; 
selection  as  the  All-Metro  MVP  and  the  recipient  of  the 
Metropolitan  area  "Mr.  Basketball  Award"  given  by  the 
Washington  Touchdown  Club  .  .  .  The  award  is  given  to 
the  athlete  who  symbolizes  in  character  and  performance 
the  ideals  of  sportsmanship  ...  He  was  the  lone  metro- 
politan area  player  named  to  the  annual  McDonald's 
All-America  25-player  dream  team  ...  He  was  selected 
the  Metro  teams'  MVP  in  this  years  11th  annual  Mc- 
Donald's classic  at  the  Capital  Centre  in  Maryland  ...  He 
maintained  a  B  academic  average  and  was  a  member  of 
John  Carroll's  National  Honor  Society  .  .  .  He  also  was 
honored  by  the  Silver  Hills  Boys  and  Girls  clubs  as  they 
selected  him  to  receive  the  1984  John  Wesley  Davis 
memorial  "Boy  of  the  Year"  award  .  .  .  Derrick  also  was 
extremely  active  in  school  activities;  a  top  student  leader. 

HIGH  SCHOOL  COACH:  Carroll  Homes 

DATE  OF  BIRTH:  August  1,  1966 


22 


32    TERRY  LONG 
6-8  Sophomore 


Mr.  and  Mrs.  Long 

A  most  unusual  recognition  came  along  to  Terry  Long 
following  the  completion  of  his  freshman  year  as  a 
forward  back-up  on  the  Terrapin  team  ...  He  was  voted 
the  teams' award  as  the  "Most  Improved  Player". . .  That 
decision  was  easy  as  Long  played  so  superbly  the  latter 
part  of  the  season  in  the  Terps'  stretch  drive  and  in  the 
ACC  tournament  ...  He  showed  his  defensive  skills  and 
strength  on  the  boards  as  he  would  spell  Herman  Veal  and 
Len  Bias  .  .  .  With  center  Ben  Coleman  gone.  Long  has 
inherited  the  assignment  as  the  center  for  Driesell  this 
season  ...  At  6-8  and  240  he  will  respond  adequately  to 
take  over  the  center  position  and  answer  the  question  for 
the  mammoth  task  working  in  close,  "Where's  the  Beef?" 
...  He  had  203  minutes  in  the  27  games  he  played, 
grabbing  52  rebounds  and  scoring  55  points  ...  He  hit  19 
of  35  shots  for  a  fine  54%. . .  He  also  had  5  blocked  shots 
and  8  steals  ...  At  Hermitage  High  in  Richmond,  he 
scored  a  school  record  1220  points  and  also  pulled  in  879 
rebounds  for  still  another  school  record  ...  He  averaged 
15  points  a  game  and  12  rebounds  a  game  as  a  senior  and 
led  his  team  to  an  18-4  season  ...  He  had  a  single  game 
high  of  38  points  and  a  school  record  27  rebounds  in  one 
game  ...  He  had  124  assists  and  299  rebounds  his  senior 
year  .  .  .  His  honors  included  All-Metro.  All-District, 
All-State,  and  All-America  ...  He  was  tabbed  as  one  of 
the  top  25  players  in  the  country  ...  He  played  in  the 
McDonald's  Capital  Classic  game  in  Maryland  .  .  . 

HIGH  SCHOOL  COACH:  Joe  Baker 

DATE  OF  BIRTH:  February  27,   1964  in  Richmond, 
Virginia 


GP 

GS 

FGM 

FGA 

Pet. 

FTM 

FTA 

.Pet 

Reb. 

Asst.  Pf-Dsq. 

Pts. 

Avg. 

FRESHMAN 

27 

19 

35 

.542 

17 

33 

.515 

52 

10       23-0 

55 

2.0 

23 


31    BRYAN  PALMER 

6-10  Sophomore 


Mr.  and  Mrs.  Palmer 


After  playing  his  freshman  year.  Palmer  was  redshirted 
last  year  .  .  .  With  a  year  of  working  with  and  practicing 
against  big  Ben  Coleman  and  following  a  rigid  weight  and 
conditioning  program,  Driesell  is  looking  to  Palmer  to 
give  the  Terps  the  necessary  strong  backup  playing  time  at 
center  ...  He  played  in  12  games  as  a  freshman  with  28 
minutes  playing  time  .  .  .  His  only  two  points  as  a 
freshman  came  on  two  free  throws  while  he  had  a  high  of 
four  rebounds  against  William  &  Mary  ...  He  also  had 
three  rebounds  against  Duquesne  .  .  .  He  came  to 
Maryland  from  Susquehannock  High  where  he  was  a 
center  averaging  20.6  points  a  game  and  hitting  68  percent 
of  his  field  goals  ...  He  was  the  MVP  in  high  at  the 
Susquehannock  ChristmasTournament .  .  .  Voted  Player 
of  the  Year  by  the  Daily  Record  ...  Hit  7 1  percent  of  his 
free  throws  and  had  a  game  high  of  40  points  in  high 
school.  .  .  On  District  III  Champions  his  senior  year  as 
Susquehannock  won  its  first  championship.  .  .  Played  in 
the  Dapper  Dan  Classic  and  was  a  member  of  the  U.S. 
team  that  played  and  defeated  Israel  in  the  Israel  Classic 
...  A  member  of  the  National  Honor  Society  while 
graduating  fourth  in  his  class  ...  He  is  enrolled  in  the 
College  of  Engineering. 

HIGH  SCHOOL  COACH:     Terry  Rynearson 

September   13,    1964  in  York, 


DATE   OF   BIRTH: 
Pennsylvania 


GP 

GS 

FGM    FGA 

Pet. 

FTM 

FTA 

.Pet 

Reb. 

Asst.  Pf-Dsq. 

Pts. 

Avg. 

FRESHMAN 

12 

4 

.000 

2 

8 

.250 

15 

1          5-0 

2 

0.2 

24 


TERPS  HIGH  SCHOOL  COACHES 


FRANK  WILLIAMS 

Coolidge 
(Wally  Lancaster) 


MORGAN  WOOTTEN 

DeMatha 
(Adrian  Branch) 


JIM  LILLY 

Oak  Hill 
("Speedy  Jones") 


CARROLL  HOMES 

John  Carroll 
(Derrick  Lewis) 


JOHN  BARRETT 

Springbrook 
(Chuck  Driesell) 


JACK  BRUEN 

John  Carroll 
(Jeff  Baxter) 


■toil.    /^L. 
BOB  WAGNER 

Northwestern 
(Len  Bias) 


it-    i  — 


TERRY  RYNEARSON 

Susquehannock 
(Bryan  Palmer) 


SHELLY  MARSH 

D.  H.  Conley 
(Keith  Gatlin) 


JOSEPH  BAKER 

Hermitage 
(Terry  Long) 


ROBERT  HALL 

Martinsville 
(Jeff  Adkins) 


25 


Basketball  Staff 


Dr.  Stanford  A.  "Stan"  Lavine 

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  not  only  perform  at  Maryland  but 
go  on  to  the  professional  ranks  and  excel. 

As  a  quarterback  on  the  1949  Maryland  team  he  established  a  Terrapin  record.  Against 
South  Carolina,  Lavine  passed  1 5  yards  to  Ed  Bolton  who  ran  77  yards  to  score.  The  92  yard 
touchdown  play  remains  the  longest  scoring  pass  and  run  in  the  Maryland  record  book. 

Dr.  Lavine  is  an  orthopedic  surgeon.  He  has  served  as  the  Team  Physician  for  the 
Washington  Redskins  the  past  16  years.  He  also  had  been  the  Bullets'  team  doctor  in  the 
1970's. 


In  keeping  with  the  University's  and  the  athletic  department's  efforts  to  stress  academic 
achievements  for  its  student/athletes  Coach  Driesell  has  brought  to  his  basketball  program 
his  first  full-time  academic  adviser  with  the  addition  of  Larry  Roper  to  his  staff. 

Roper  will  monitor  each  of  the  basketball  players  class  schedules  daily  and  maintain 
close  records  of  their  progress.  His  program  will  include  supervising,  organizing  and 
directing  study  hall  periods  and  arranging  for  tutoring  services  when  needed.  He  will  serve  as 
each  players'  individual  counselor  and  lend  the  proper  instruction  in  the  development  of 
study  skills  and  time  management  techniques. 

While  guiding  the  basketball  academic  program.  Roper  is  studying  for  his  Doctorate 
Degree  at  the  University  in  the  Department  of  College  Student  Personnel  which  major  is  Counseling  and  Personnel 
Services.  He  received  his  Bachelor  of  Arts  Degree  fron  Heidelberg  College  (OH)  in  May  1975  with  a  major  in  History.  He 
then  received  his  Master  of  Arts,  College  of  Education,  Department  of  Student  Personnel,  Bowling  Green  State 
University  (OH),  August  1976. 

After  earning  his  Master'  Degree,  Roper  has  worked  at  five  universities  as  individual,  career  and  personal  counseling 
supervisor;  administering  residence  halls  and  monitoring  scholarship  programs.  He  came  to  the  Maryland  program  from 
St.  Joseph's  University  (PA)  where  he  was  an  Associate  Dean/ Director  of  Residence  Life. 

Roper  was  born  April  26,  1953  in  Akron,  OH. 


Larry  Roper 
Academic  Adviser 


MARYLAND 


Sheila  Morgan 

Secretary 


Marian  Story 

Secretary 


Reverend  Charles  Chilton 

Team  Chaplin 


(AM* 


Tony  Cole 

Manager 


Jim  Spiro 

Manager 


Meko  Bernardo 

Trainer 


Vinny  Mayolo 

Equipment  Manager 


26 


1983-84  —  32-Game  Individual  Statistics 


GP    GS     MIN    FGM     FGA     .PCT    FTM     FTA     .PCT    REB  (Avg)       PF-DQ   ASST     BLK      STL      PTS     AVG 


Ben 

COLEMAN 

32 

32 

1094 

194 

319 

.608 

103 

144 

.715 

269(8.4) 

103-5 

53 

42 

23 

491 

15.3 

Len 

BIAS 

32 

31 

1104 

211 

372 

.567 

66 

86 

.767 

145(4.5) 

81-3 

48 

24 

13 

488 

15.2 

Adrian 

BRANCH 

28 

25 

862 

136  . 

284 

.479 

91 

121 

.752 

89 

85-2 

75 

10 

29 

363 

13.0 

Jeff 

ADKINS 

32 

31 

951 

120 

233 

.538 

64 

95 

.673 

86 

80 

119 

7 

21 

304 

9.5 

Herman 

VEAL 

32 

28 

955 

112 

202 

.554 

44 

60 

.733 

213(6.7) 

92-3 

57 

6 

25 

268 

8.4 

Keith 

GATLIN 

32 

9 

758 

75 

154 

.487 

48 

63 

.761 

52 

32 

148 

0 

20 

198 

6.2 

Mark 

FOTHERGILL 

32 

3 

353 

38 

71 

.535 

33 

39 

.846 

64 

65-2 

12 

5 

2 

109 

3.4 

Terry 

LONG 

27 

203 

19 

35 

.542 

17 

33 

.515 

52 

23 

10 

5 

8 

55 

2.0 

Jeff 

BAXTER 

21 

147 

13 

33 

.393 

22 

30 

.733 

8 

11 

16 

0 

5 

48 

2.3 

Chuck 

DRIESELL 

15 

74 

12 

26 

.462 

10 

19 

.526 

8 

4 

5 

1 

2 

34 

2.3 

Pete 

HOLBERT 

14 

1 

54 

8 

19 

.421 

5 

6 

.833 

13 

0 

4 

0 

0 

21 

1.5 

Steve 

RIVERS 

6 

20 

3 

7 

.429 

6 

6 

100 

I 

2 

1 

0 

0 

12 

2.0 

TEAM 

78 

MD  TOTALS 

32 

941 

1745 

.539 

509 

702 

.725 

1078(33.7) 

578-15 

548 

100 

148 

2391 

74.7 

OPPONENTS 

32 

889 

1922 

.462 

373 

537 

.694 

996(31.1) 

644-32 

465 

66 

170 

2151 

67.2 

DEAD  BALL  REBOUNDS:  Maryland  57     Opponents  63  MISSED  SHOTS:  Maryland  997     Opponents  1 197 

COACH  CHARLES  "LEFTY"  DRIESELL:   15  years  at  Maryland  —  Won  304  Lost  133  (winning  70  percent) 

24  years  overall  —  Won  480  Lost  198  (winning  71  percent) 
Average  of  20.3  wins  a  season  for  his  15  years  at  Maryland 

Average  of  20.0  wins  a  season  for  his  24  years  overall  (includes  9  years  at  Davidson) 
MARYLAND  IN  NCAA  TOURNAMENT—  1958,  1973,  1975,  1980,  1981,  1983,  1984 


Individual  Game  Highs  —  Scoring  and  Rebounding 


s 
m 
E 
w 

0 

in 

m 

JS 

c 

aa 
G 

08 
01 

*5d 

k 
01 

OS 

e 
0 

01 

n 

41 

> 

01 

* 

91 

5 

<J 

s 

H 

< 

> 

u. 

U 

-J 

X 

s 

CO 

Q 

Johns  Hopkins 

W(H) 

14(8) 

9(7 

13(2) 

2(3) 

12(9) 

•17(2) 

6(1) 

•13(7) 

9(3) 

DNP 

5(0) 

•8(3) 

Ohio  State 

L(N) 

20(11) 

16(5 

13(4) 

9(2) 

4(4) 

0(0) 

4(0) 

DNP 

0(0) 

DNP 

2(1) 

0(0) 

Canisus 

W(H) 

11(5) 

12(2 

6(3) 

12(2) 

4(5) 

7(5) 

•11(0) 

3(4) 

4(1) 

DNP 

5(1) 

0(0) 

Penn  State 

W(N) 

14(7) 

11(3 

14(4) 

15(2) 

8(5) 

3(0 

0(0) 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

2(0) 

DNP 

Duquesne 

W(A) 

19(11) 

16(4 

14(8) 

10(1) 

8(5) 

0(0) 

4(5) 

0(0) 

0(1) 

DNP 

5(0) 

2(0) 

U.M.E.S. 

W(H) 

18(7) 

12(5 

9(5) 

9(4) 

12(12) 

12(7) 

0(1) 

8(9)* 

8(2) 

4(0) 

4(2) 

•8(2) 

Boston  College 

W(H) 

12(7) 

•19(7 

11(4) 

23(4) 

11(11) 

4(4) 

0(2) 

0(1) 

0(2) 

0(1) 

5(0) 

4(0) 

Randolph-Macon 

W(H) 

15(8) 

12(3 

DNP 

12(1) 

2(7) 

5(3) 

8(2) 

0(0) 

DNP 

4(0) 

0(1) 

0(0) 

LaSalle 

W(H) 

19(11) 

18(6 

16(3) 

20(7)* 

13(11) 

6(6) 

2(0) 

2(1) 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

N.C.  State 

W(A) 

9(5) 

6(2 

9(4) 

9(5) 

18(6) 

0(0) 

8(3) 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

William  &  Mary 

W(H) 

10(5) 

6(4 

12(3) 

6(1) 

8(5) 

2(0) 

4(1) 

0(3) 

0(0) 

2(0) 

6(1) 

2(0) 

North  Carolina 

L(H) 

8(7) 

•24(4 

19(4) 

4(2) 

5(8) 

2(3) 

0(0) 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

Duke 

W(A) 

12(4) 

17(4 

14(3) 

14(5) 

12(10) 

5(1) 

7(1) 

0(1) 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

Clemson 

W(H) 

21(18)* 

15(4 

22(3) 

8(0) 

8(5) 

0(2) 

5(2) 

4(0) 

0(0) 

2(0) 

0(0) 

0(0) 

Old  Dominion 

W(A) 

10(7) 

•24(5 

4(1) 

10(1) 

15(10) 

4(5) 

0(1) 

0(1) 

0(1) 

0(0) 

0(0) 

2(1) 

Notre  Dame 

L(A) 

12(6) 

7(1 

5(2) 

10(5) 

5(5) 

2(4) 

6(0) 

0(1) 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

Virginia 

W(A) 

12(7) 

14(7 

DNP 

15(2) 

8(5) 

4(1) 

•14(4) 

0(1) 

DNP 

DNP 

0(1) 

DNP 

Georgia  Tech 

L(A)  2  OT 

17(13) 

13(4 

DNP 

8(5) 

8(5) 

2(4) 

•19(5) 

2(1) 

DNP 

DNP 

1(0) 

DNP 

Wake  Forest 

L(A)  2  OT 

19(12) 

18(7 

DNP 

19(2) 

6(3) 

4(0) 

17(1) 

4(3) 

0(0) 

DNP 

0(1) 

0(0) 

Duke 

L(H) 

26(13) 

•25(10 

4(1) 

10(2) 

2(5) 

4(3) 

13(0) 

0(0) 

DNP 

DNP 

0(0) 

DNP 

Dayton 

W(H) 

26(9) 

15(4 

9(1) 

3(3) 

2(4) 

4(0) 

2(1) 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

0(0) 

DNP 

Clemson 

W(A)  3  OT 

21(10) 

10(3 

11(5) 

9(7)* 

10(5) 

5(1) 

0(1) 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

North  Carolina 

L(A) 

11(8) 

18(2 

15(1) 

3(1) 

4(3) 

2(1) 

4(4) 

6(6) 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

Georgia  Tech 

W(H) 

18(12) 

18(2 

17(1) 

8(3) 

15(5) 

3(2) 

0(0) 

0(0) 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

Wake  Forest 

W(H) 

26(4) 

16(7 

17(5) 

16(4) 

3(3) 

0(0) 

8(3) 

4(5) 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

N.C.  State 

W(H) 

10(10) 

10(2 

18(6) 

4(2) 

11(7) 

0(0) 

6(0) 

2(0) 

0(0) 

DNP 

2(0) 

0(0) 

Virginia 

W(H) 

2(6) 

17(2 

20(2) 

10(1) 

11(9) 

8(6) 

6(3) 

0(0) 

0(0) 

DNP 

0(0) 

0(0) 

N.C.  State 

W(N) 

18(8) 

15(7 

12(1) 

5(2) 

4(10) 

2(0) 

13(2) 

0(2) 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

Wake  Forest 

W(N) 

16(6) 

15(7 

16(5) 

6(3) 

6(7) 

0(1) 

6(1) 

1(2) 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

DNP 

Duke 

W(N) 

14(9) 

•26(4 

12(3) 

7(3) 

5(4) 

0(0) 

8(3) 

2(2) 

0(0) 

DNP 

0(0) 

0(0) 

West  Virginia 

W(N) 

19(6) 

18(3 

12(2) 

4(0) 

18(11) 

2(0 

10(2) 

2(2) 

0(3) 

DNP 

9(0) 

8(21 

Illinois 

UN) 

12(9) 

16(8 

19(3) 

2(1) 

10(9) 

0(1) 

7(3) 

2(0) 

DNP 

DNP 

2(0) 

DNP 

27 


Indicates  Careei  High 


MD. 

OPPONENT 

SITE 

ATT. 

108 

Johns  Hopkins 

65 

(H) 

8,000 

68 

Ohio  State 

72 

(N) 

6,438 

77 

Canisius 

55 

(H) 

7,750 

67 

Penn  State 

58 

(N) 

3,425 

78 

Duquesne 

67 

(A) 

3,873 

104 

U.M.E.S. 

69 

(H) 

6.100 

89 

Boston  College 

76 

(H) 

12,125 

58 

Randolph-Macon 

52 

(H) 

7,125 

96 

LaSalle 

83 

(H) 

8,725 

59 

N.C.  State 

55 

(A) 

12,400 

58 

William  &  Mary 

44 

(H) 

12,750 

62 

North  Carolina 

74 

(H) 

14,500 

81 

Duke 

75 

(A) 

8,564 

85 

Clemson 

72 

(H) 

13,050 

69 

Old  Dominion 

58 

(A) 

10,258 

47 

Notre  Dame 

52 

(A) 

11,345 

67 

Virginia 

66 

(A) 

9,000 

70 

Georgia  Tech  (2ot) 

71 

(A) 

7.012 

87 

Wake  Forest  (2ot) 

90 

(A) 

13,279 

84 

Duke 

89 

(H) 

14,500 

61 

Dayton 

59 

(H) 

8,515 

66 

Clemson  (3ot) 

65 

(A) 

7,000 

63 

North  Carolina 

78 

(A) 

10,000 

79 

Georgia  Tech 

74 

(H) 

14,350 

90 

Wake  Forest 

79 

(H) 

14,000 

63 

N.C.  State 

50 

(H) 

14,200 

74 

Virginia 

65 

(H) 

14.470 

69 

N.C.  State* 

63 

(N) 

16,662 

66 

Wake  Forest* 

64 

(N) 

16,662 

74 

Duke* 

62 

(N) 

16,662 

102 

West  Virginia* 

77 

(N) 

7,276 

70 

lllinois## 

72 

(N) 

23,525 

TOPSCORER(S) 

17  Fothergill,  14  Coleman 
20  Coleman,  16  Bias 

14  Adkins,  12  Bias 

15  Adkins,  14  Coleman,  Branch 

19  Coleman,  16  Bias 

18  Coleman 

23  Adkins,  19  Bias 

15  Coleman,  12  Bias,  Adkins 

20  Adkins,  19  Coleman 

18  Veal 

12  Branch,  10  Coleman 

24  Bias,  19  Branch 

17  Bias,  14  Branch,  Adkins 
22  Branch,  21  Coleman 

24  Bias,  15  Veal 

12  Coleman,  10  Adkins 

15  Adkins,  14  Bias,  Gatlin 

19  Gatlin,  17  Coleman 

19  Adkins,  Coleman 
26  Coleman,  25  Bias 
26  Coleman,  15  Bias 

21  Coleman,  11  Branch 

18  Bias,  15  Branch 

18  Bias,  Coleman,  17  Branch 
26  Coleman,  17  Branch, 

16  Bias,  Adkins 

18  Branch,  11  Veal,  10  Bias. 
10  Coleman 

20  Branch,  17  Bias 

18  Coleman,  15  Bias 

16  Coleman,  16  Branch,  15  Bias 
26  Bias,  14  Coleman 

19  Coleman,  18  Veal,  Bias 
19  Branch.  16  Bias 


TOP  REBOUNDER(S) 

9  Veal,  8  Coleman 

1 1  Coleman,  5  Bias 

5  Coleman,  Veal,  Fothergill 

7  Coleman.  5  Veal 

1 1  Coleman.  8  Branch 

12  Veal,  9  Long 

1 1  Veal,  7  Coleman,  Bias 

8  Coleman,  7  Veal 

1 1  Coleman,  1 1  Veal 

6  Veal,  5  Coleman,  Adkins 

5  Veal,  Coleman 

8  Veal,  7  Coleman 

10  Veal.  5  Adkins 
18  Coleman,  5  Veal 
10  Veal,  7  Coleman 

6  Coleman.  5  Veal,  Adkins 

7  Coleman,  Bias 

13  Coleman 

12  Coleman,  7  Bias 

13  Coleman,  10  Bias 

9  Coleman 

10  Coleman,  7  Adkins 

8  Coleman,  6  Long 
12  Coleman,  5  Veal 

7  Bias,  5  Long,  Branch 

10  Coleman,  7  Veal 

9  Veal,  6  Coleman,  Fothergill 

10  Veal,  8  Coleman,  7  Bias 
7  Bias,  7  Veal 

9  Coleman 

1 1  Veal,  6  Coleman 
9  Veal,  9  Coleman 


*  ACC  Tournament,  The  Coliseum,  Greensboro,  NC 

#  NCAA  Tournament,  Mid-East  Regional,  The  Coliseum,  Birmingham,  AL 
##  NCAA  Tournament,  Mid-East  Regional,  Rupp  Arena,  Lexington,  KY 

Overall  Season  Record:     24-8         ACC  Record:     9-5  (Second  Place)         12-5  Won  ACC  Championship 
Road  Record:     Regular  Season  —  6-4         Home  Record:  13-2         Neutral  Record:     2-0 
Total  Attendance:     353,551         Home  Attendance:     170,060  (15  Games) 


28 


1983  -  84  Season  Highs 


Individual 

MOST  POINTS:     26  by  Ben  Coleman  vs  Duke,  Dayton  and  Wake  Forest 

26  by  Len  Bias  vs  Duke  in  ACC  title  game 
MOST  FIELD  GOALS:      12  by  Len  Bias  vs  Duke  in  ACC  title  game  (17  attemps) 
MOST  FIELD  GOAL  ATTEMPS:     20  by  Len  Bias  vs  Duke 

BEST  FIELD  GOAL   PERCENTAGE:      1,000  by  Ben  Coleman  vs  Duquesne  and  Wake  Forest  (8/8  each) 
MOST  FREE  THROWS:      10  by  Ben  Coleman  vs  Wake  Forest 

MOST  FREE  THROW  ATTEMPTS:  12  by  Ben  Coleman  vs  Wake  Forest  (made  10) 
BEST  FREE  THROW  PERCENTAGE:  1,000  by  Fothergill,  Veal,  Adkins,  Bias  (6  6) 
MOST  REBOUNDS:      18  by  Ben  Coleman  vs  Clemson 

MOST  STEALS:     4  by  Jeff  Adkins  vs  Ohio  State  and  Ben  Coleman  vs  Wake  Forest 
MOST  ASSISTS:      10  by  Keith  Gatlin  vs  Duke  in  ACC  title  game  vs  Illinois  in  NCAA 

Team 

MOST  POINTS:     108  vs  Johns  Hopkins 

MOST  FIELD  GOALS:     45  vs  Johns  Hopkins  (69  attempts) 

MOST  FREE  THROWS:     30  vs  West  Virginia  (36  attempts) 

MOST  FREE  THROW  ATTEMPTS:     38  vs  UMES  (made  28) 

BEST  FIELD  GOAL  PERCENTAGE:     .667  vs  Duquesne  (32  of  48)  vs  West  Virginia  (36/54) 

BEST  FREE  THROW   PERCENTAGE:     .844  vs  Georgia  Tech  (27/32) 

MOST  REBOUNDS:     59  vs  UMES 

MOST  ASSISTS:     25  vs  Johns  Hopkins  and  Clemson 

MOST  BLOCKED  SHOTS:     8  vs  LaSalle 

MOST  FOULS:     27  vs  Ohio  State 

FEWEST  FOULS:      10  vs  Dayton 

MOST  TURNOVERS:     21  vs  Duquesne,  LaSalle 

FEWEST  TURNOVERS:     6  vs  Virginia 

MOST  POINTS  BY  OPPONENT:     90  by  Wake  Forest 

FEWEST  POINTS   BY  OPPONENT:     44  by  William  &  Mary 

MOST  POINTS  IN  ONE   HALF:     59  vs  Johns  Hopkins  in  second  half 

BEST  FIELD  GOAL  PERCENTAGE   IN  ONE  HALF:     .724  vs  Duquesne  (21  of  29) 

MOST  FIELD  GOAL  ATTEMPTS:     77  vs  UMES  (made  38) 


SCORE  BY  PERIODS 
MARYLAND 

OPPONENTS 


FIRST 

SECOND 

OT 

OT 

OT 

TOTAL 

1155 

1207 

14 

10 

5 

2391 

983 

1136 

14 

14 

4 

2151 

29 


Alaska 


November  23-25 

Great  Alaskan  Shootout 

Anchorage,  Alaska 

Sullivan  Arena 

,— I   <  I  I  VI  41  AM  \ 

gHttfil 


Location:     Anchorage,  Alaska 

Nickname:     Seawolves 

Home  Court:     Sullivan  Arena 
(8,000) 

Head  Coach:     Harry  Larrabee 
(Texas  74) 

Record  at  School:     50-37,  3  years 

Overall  Record:     50-37,  3  years 

1983-84  Record:      15-13 

Returning  Lettermen:  Ron  Beach, 
6T",  10.8;  Kevin  Smith,  6'5",  8.6; 
Hans-Jurgen  Gnad,  6'9",  7.8;  Ty- 
rone Jones,  6'2",  3.6;  Luke  Dal- 
lafior,  6'7",  2.1;  John  Larsen,  6'4", 
1.3;  Mike  Schmetzer,  6'4",  RS. 

Top  Newcomers:  Marc  Lowe,  6'6"; 
Danny  White,  6'4". 

Lettermen  Lost:  Jeff  Martin,  6'5", 
21.1;  Chris  Bullock,  5'1 1 ",  8.9;  Pete 
Adams,  6'8",  8.2;  Bob  Lafferty,  6'5", 
1.8. 

Conference:     Great  Northwest 

Colors:     Green  and  Gold 


Harry  Larabee 


Sports  Information  Director:     Tim 

McDiffett 
Office  Phone:     (907)786-1295 
Home  Phone:     (907)  243-5772 
Series  Record:     0-0 


University 
of  Alabama 

November  23-25 

Great  Alaskan  Shootout 
Anchorage,  Alaska 


UAB 


Location:     Birmingham,  Alabama 

Nickname:     Blazers 

Home  Court:  Birmingham  Coliseum 
(17,000) 

Head  Coach:     Gene  Bartow 
(NE  Missouri  State  '53) 

Record  at  School:     123-63,  6  years 

Overall  Record:     405-212,  22  years 

1983-84  Record:     23-11 

Returning  Lettermen:  Steve  Mitch- 
ell, 6'1",  13.5;  Jerome  Mincy,  6'6", 
11.3;  Marvin  Ray  Johnson,  6'7", 
5.6;  Anthony  Gordon,  6'7",  5.4; 
James  Ponder,  6'1",  3.5;  Archie 
Johnson,  6'8",  3.5;  Murray  Bartow. 
5T0",  1.0;  Greg  Matta,  6'4",  0.4. 

Top  Newcomers:  Eddie  Collins,  6'9"; 
Bruce  Baker,  6'7";  Michael  Charles, 
6'4";  Reginald  Turner,  6'8";  John 
Brown,  6'4";  Tracy  Foster,  6'4"; 
Cedric  Evans,  6'9". 

Lettermen  Lost:  McKinley  Single- 
ton, 6'5",  14.6;  Luellen  Foster,  6'4", 
7.2;  Eugene  Jones,  6'5",  2.0. 

Conference:     Sun  Belt 

Colors:     Green  and  Gold 


Gene  Bartow 


Steve  Mitchell 


Sports  Information  Director:     Ken 

Letson 
Office  Phone:     (205)  934-7252 
Home  Phone:     (205)  252-3901 
Series  Record:     0-0 


Idaho 
State 


November  23-25 

Great  Alaskan  Shootout 
Anchorage,  Alaska 


Location:     Pocatello,  Idaho 

Nickname:     Bengals 

Home  Court:     ISU  Minidome 
(7,938) 

Head  Coach:     Wayne  Ballard 
(Houston  '66) 

Record  at  School:     22-37,  2  years 

Overall  Record:     22-37,  2  years 

1983-84  Record:     12-20 

Returning  Lettermen:  Donn  Holston, 
6'4",  7.2:  Ron  McCants,  6'2",  1.9; 
Doug  Moratzka,  6'6",  3.5;  Nelson 
Peterson,  6'4",  10.6;  Phil  Rohr,  6'4", 
5.6. 

Top  Newcomers:  Bruce  Gaitor,  6'5", 
F-G;  Adrian  Dorton,  67",  F;  Brett 
Oliver,  6'9",  C;  Mike  Graefe,  6'2", 
G. 

Lettermen  Lost:  Buck  Chavez,  6'5", 
11.9;  Fred  Demerson.  6'I",  3.8; 
Mike  Denkers,  67",  10.6;  Greg 
Houskeeper,  6'9",  2.3;  Tony  Mal- 
veaux,  5'l  1",  4.0;  Mike  Williams, 
6'8",  13.2. 

Conference:     Big  Sky 

Colors:     Orange  and  Black 


Wayne  Ballaed 


Nelson  Peterson 


Sports  Information  Director: 

Glenn 

Alford 

Office  Phone: 

(208) 

236-3651 

Home  Phone: 

(208) 

233-0516 

Series  Record: 

0-0 

30 


Illinois 


November  23-25 

Great  Alaskan  Shootout 
Anchorage,  Alaska 


Location:     Champaign,  Illinois 

Nickname:     Fighting  lllini 

Home  Court:     Assembly  Hall 
(16,153) 

Head  Coach:     Lou  Henson 
(New  Mexico  State  '55) 

Record  at  School:      170-100,  9  years 

Overall  Record:     410-207,  22  years 

1983-84  Record:     26-5 

Returning  Lettermen:  Efrem  Winters, 
6'9",  14.7;  Bruce  Douglas,  6'3", 
12.9;  Doug  Altenberger,  6'4",  1 1.4; 
George  Montgomery,  6'8",  9.7; 
Scott  Meents,  6'9",  5.2;  Tom  Scha- 
fer,  6'7",  2.7;  Tony  Wysinger,  5'10", 
1.9;  Anthony  Welsh,  6'9",  7.0. 

Top  Newcomers:  Ken  Norman,  6'7"; 
Jens  Kujawa,  7'0";  Olaf  Blab,  7'0"; 
Scott  Haffner,  6'4";  Glynn  Black- 
well,  6'4". 

Lettermen  Lost:  Quinn  Richardson, 
5'11",  7.7 

Conference:     Big  Ten 

Colors:     Orange  and  Blue 


Lou  Henson 


Efrem  Winters 


Sports   Information   Director: 

Bennett 
Office  Phone:     (217)333-1390 
Home  Phone:     (217)359-4784 
Series  Record:     1-0  Illinois 


Tab 


Kansas 


November  23-25 

Great  Alaskan  Shootout 
Anchorage,  Alaska 


Location:     Lawrence,  Kansas 

Nickname:     Jayhawks 

Home  Court:     Allen  Field  House 
(15,200) 

Head  Coach:     Larry  Brown 
(North  Carolina  '62) 

Record  at  School:     22-10,  1  year 

Overall  Record:     64-27,  3  years 

1983-84  Record:     22-10 

Returning  Lettermen:  MarkTurgeon, 
5T0",  4.3;  Greg  Dreiling,  7'1",  9.7; 
Tad  Boyle,  6'4",  1 .8;  Calvin  Thomp- 
son, 6'6",  11.3;  Ron  Kellogg,  6'5", 
6.1;  Cedric  Hunter,  6'0",  4.2. 

Top  Newcomers:  Danny  Manning, 
6'11";  Tyrone  Jones,  6'6";  Altonio 
Campbell,  6'0";  Milton  Newton, 
6'4";  Rodney  Hull,  6'7". 

Lettermen  Lost:  Carl  Henry,  6'5", 
16.8;  Kelly  Knight,  6'8",  1 1.4;  Brian 
Martin,  6'9",  5.1;  Tim  Banks,  6'2", 
1.2. 

Conference:     Big  Eight 

Colors:     Crimson  and  Blue 


mm     .* 

i 

, 

/ 

Larry  Brown 


Greg  Dreiling 


Sports  Information   Director: 

Vance 
Office  Phone:     (9131   S64-34I7 
Home  Phone:     (913)  S41-I247 
Series  Record:     2-0  Kansas 


Doug 


Oregon 


November  23-25 

Great  Alaskan  Shootout 
Anchorage,  Alaska 


Location:     Eugene,  Oregon 

Nickname:     Ducks 

Home  Court:     McArthur  Court 
(10,099) 

Head  Coach:     Don  Monson 
(Idaho  '55). 

Record  at  School:      16-13,  1  year 

Overall  Record:      1 1 6-54,  6  years 

1983-84  Record:      16-13 

Returning  Lettermen:  Blair  Rasmus- 
sen,  7'0",  16.6;  Greg  Trapp,  67", 
8.4;  Chris  Harper,  6'2",  1 1.2;  Mike 
Matheson,  6'7",  4.0;  Kenny  Spra- 
gue,  67",  1.7;  David  Girley.  6'0", 
1.5;  Donald  Dutton,  6'1",  3.0;  Jerry 
Adams,  6'8",  RS;  Greg  Bell,  6T\ 
RS. 

Top  Newcomers:  Anthony  Taylor, 
64";  Rick  Osborn,  6'4". 

Lettermen  Lost:  David  Brantley.  6'4", 
10.0;  Gary  Gatewood,  6'3",  8.8. 

Conference:     Pac-10 

Colors:     Green  and  Yellow 


Don  Monson 


Blair  Rasmussen 


Sports   Information   Director:     Steve 

Hellyer 
Office  Phono:     (503)  686-5488 
Home  Phone:     (503)    Ml  D-Dl  CK 
Series  Record:     0-0 


31 


Tennessee 

November  23-25 

Great  Alaskan  Shootout 
Anchorage,  Alaska 


Location:     Knoxville,  Tennessee 

Nickname:     Volunteers 

Home  Court:  Stokely  Athletics  Cen- 
ter (12,700) 

Head  Coach:     Don  DeVoe 
(Ohio  State  '64) 

Record  at  School:     121-67,  6  years 

Overall  Record:     238-137,  13  years 

1983-84  Record:     21-14 

Returning  Lettermen:  Fred  Jenkins, 
6'3",  1 0.1;  Tony  White,  6'2".  9.2: 
Rob  Jones,  6'7",  7.8;  Kevin  Woods, 
6'5",  4.7;  Kirk  Naler,  6'8",  3.1; 
Myron  Carter,  6'2",  2.0;  Anthony 
Richardson,  6'6",  2.0;  Tyrone  Har- 
per, 6'7",  1.7;  John  Snodgrass, 
6T0",  1.6;  Michael  Brooks,  6'2", 
RS,  14.1.  Jr.  year. 

Top  Newcomers:  Sam  Arterburn, 
6'6";  Ron  Hausley,  6'4";  Lionell 
Miller,  6'5";  Stacey  Thomas,  6'7"; 
Wayne  Tiller,  6'8". 

Lettermen  Lost:  Willie  Burton,  6'7", 
13.5;  Dan  Federmann,  6'10",  8.0; 
Tyrone  Beaman,  5'1 1",  6.8. 

Conference:     Southeastern 

Colors:     Orange  and  White 


Don  DeVoe 


Fred  Jenkins 


Sports  Information  Director: 

wood  Harris 
Office  Phone:     (615)974-1215 
Home  Phone:     (615)  584-3347 
Series  Record:     2-1  Tennessee 


Hay- 


West 
Virginia 


December  1  8:00  P.M. 

College  Park,  Maryland 

Cole  Field  House 


Location:     Morgantown,  West  Va. 

Nickname:     Mountaineers 

Home  Court:  West  Virginia  Col- 
iseum (14,000) 

Head  Coach:     Gale  Catlett 
(West  Virginia  '63) 

Record  at  School:     1 24-60.  6  years 

Overall  Record:     250-104.  12  years 

1983-84  Record:     20-12 

Returning  Lettermen:  Lester  Rowe, 
6'5",  15.6;  Dale  Blaney,  6'4",  12.3; 
JJ  Crawl,  6'1".  8.0:  Vernon  Odom, 
6'2",  9.5;  Darrell  Pinckney,  6'9", 
2.4;  Lee  Weary.  6'2",  0.5;  Bernard 
Wolf,  6'9",  0.7;  Eric  Semisch,  6'8", 
1.3. 

Top  Newcomers:  Herbie  Brooks,  6'2"; 
Aundrae  Davis,  6'5";  Wade  Smith, 
6'10";  Wayne  Yearwood.  6'7". 

Lettermen  Lost:  Tim  Kearney,  6'1 1", 
7.6;  Mike  King.  6'5",  8.8. 

Conference:     Atlantic  10 

Colors:     Blue  and  Gold 


Gale  Catlett 


Lester  Rowe 


Sports  Information   Director:     Joe 

Boczek 
Office  Phone:     (304)293-2821 
Home  Phone:     (304)  598-3450 
Series  Record:      18-10  West  Virginia 


Cleveland 
State 

December  5  8:00  P.M. 

College  Park,  Maryland 

Cole  Field  House 


VIKinGfi 


Location:     Cleveland,  Ohio 

Nickname:     Vikings 

Home  Court:     Woodling  Gym 
(3000) 

Head  Coach:     Kevin  Mackey 
(St.  Anselm  '67) 

Record  at  School:     14-16.  1  year 

Overall  Record:      14-16,  1  year 

1983-84  Record:      14-16 

Returning  Lettermen:  Clinton 
Ransey,  6'4",  13.4;  Vince  Richards. 
6'2",  10.7;  Eric  Mudd,  67".  7.5; 
Shawn  Hood,  5'8",  5.2;  Steve  Cor- 
bin,  6'l",  6.7;  Eddie  Bryant.  5'10". 
5.8;  Stan  Pittman,  6'2".  1.2. 

Top  Newcomers:  Tyrone  Kingwood, 
6'2",  g;  Eugene  Miles,  6'9".  c;  Clin- 
ton Smith,  6'6".  g/f. 

Lettermen  Lost:  Dave  Youdath,  6'8", 
13.7;  Lionel  King.  6'5".  4.4;  Tom 
Bragg.  6'4".  3.2;  Bill  Evans.  6'5". 
2.7;  Derrick  Howell,  6'8",  2.3;  Ker- 
mit  Sharp,  6'1",  2.1;  Rick  Rader, 
5'11".  0.0. 

Conference:     AMCU-8 

Colors:     Forest  Green  and  White 


Kevin  Mackey 


Clinton  Ransey 


Sports  Information  Director:     Merle 

Levin 
Office  Phone:     (216)687-4818 
Home  Phone:     (216)423-0293 
Series  Record:     0-0 


32 


A  labama 

December  8  7:30  P.M. 

Birmingham  Coliseum 

(17,000) 
Birmingham,  Alabama 


Location:     University.  Alabama 

Nickname:     Crimson  Tide 

Home  Court:     Memorial  Coliseum 
(15,043) 

Head  Coach:     Wimp  Sanderson 
(Florence  State  '59) 

Record  at  School:     80-42,  5  years 

Overall  Record:     80-42,  5  years 

1983-84  Record:     18-12 

Returning  Lettermen:  Bobby  Lee 
Hurt,  6'9",  15.6;  Buck  Johnson, 
67",  17.0;  Darrell  Neal.  6'8",  7.1; 
Terry  Corner,  6'2",  5.8;  Craig  Dud- 
ley, 6'4",  2.9;  Mark  Farmer,  6'11", 
0.7;  Jim  Farmer.  6'3",  1.8. 

Top  Newcomers:  Mark  Gottfried, 
6'1";  Jimmy  Smith,  6'4";  Derrick 
McKey,  6'9";  Paul  Stewart,  6'6". 

Lettermen  Lost:  Terry  Williams. 
6'10",  14.3;  Eric  Richardson,  6'3", 
10.3;  Rex  Jones,  6'3",  1.4. 

Conference:     Southeastern 

Colors:     Crimson  and  White 


c 


■~- 


**JL 


Wimp  Sanderson  Bobby  Lee  Hurt 


Sports  Information  Director:     Wayne 

Alcheson 
Office  Phone:     (205)348-6084 
Home  Phone:     (205)556-8610 
Series  Record:      1-0  Maryland 


Ohio 
State 


December  8  8:00  P.M. 

College  Park,  Maryland 

Cole  Field  House 


Location:     Columbus,  Ohio 

Nickname:     Buckeyes 

Home  Court:     St.  John  Arena 
(13,591) 

Head  Coach:     Eldon  Miller 
(Wittenberg  '61) 

Record  at  School:     137-94.  8  years 

Overall  Record:     365-217,  22  years 

1983-84  Record:      15-14 

Returning  Lettermen:  Troy  Taylor, 
G,  6'0",  14.0;  Ronnie  Stokes,  G, 
5'11",  12.0;  Clarence  McGee,  F, 
6'7",  4.3;  Keith  Wesson,  C,  6'9",  4.2; 
Curtis  Wilson,  G,  6-1,  1.2;  Dennis 
Hopson,  F,  6'5".  5.3;  Dave  Jones, 
G.  6'2".  6.5. 

Top  Newcomers:  Brad  Sellers,  C,  7'1" 
(transfer  from  Wisconsin);  John 
Anderson,  C,  6'9";  Scott  Anderson, 
G,  6'4";  Joe  Dumas,  F,  6T0";  Kip 
Lomax,  G,  6'2". 

Lettermen  Lost:  Tony  Campbell, 
67",  18.6. 

Conference:     Big  Ten 

Colors:     Scarlet  and  Gray 


Eldon  Miller 


Troy  Taylor 


Sports  Information  Director:     Marvin 

Homan 
Office  Phone:     (614)422-6862 
Home  Phone:     (614)885-5622 
Series  Record:     2-1  Ohio  State 


Loyola  College 
Baltimore 

December  22  8:00  P.M. 

Baltimore  Civic  Center 

Baltimore,  Maryland 


Location:     Baltimore,  MD 

Nickname:     Greyhounds 

Home  Court:     Emil  G.  Reitz  Arena 
(3000) 

Head  Coach:     Mark  Amatucci 
(Juniata,  74) 

Record  at  School:     20-36,  2  years 

Overall  Record:     20-36,  2  years 

1983-84  Record:     16-12 

Returning  Lettermen:  Maurice 
Hicks,  5'9",  16.1;  Tom  Gormley, 
6'1",  13.5;  David  Gately,  6'3",  12.7; 
Tommy  Lee,  6'5".  8.4;  Aubrey 
Reveley.  6'3",  7.8;  Kevin  Carter, 
6'5",  5.1. 

Top  Newcomers:  Glenn  Rogers,  67"; 
Brad  Meyers,  67";  Vernon  Hill. 
6'4";  James  Tubman,  5'9". 

Lettermen  Lost:  David  Urban,  6'5", 
8.1;  Steve  Rossiter,  6'6",  5.2. 

Conference:     ECAC  Metro 

Colors:     Green  and  White 


a  a 


l 


Mark  Anatucci  Maurice  Hicks 


Sports  Information  Director:     Joseph 

Qutnlan,  Jr. 
Office  Phone:     (301)  323-1010 
Home  Phone:     (3011  433-0309 
Scries  Record:      1-4  1  OVOla 


33 


Arkansas 


December  25-28 

Rainbow  Classic 
Honolulu,  Hawaii 


Location:     Fayetteville.  Arkansas 

Nickname:     Razorbacks 

Home  Court:     Barnhill  Arena 
(9000) 

Head  Coach:     Eddie  Sutton 
(Oklahoma  State  '58) 

Record  at  School:     238-62,  10  years 

Overall  Record:     320-1 12,  15  years 

1983-84  Record:     25-7 

Returning  Lettermen:  Joe  Kleine. 
6' 11",  16.7;  Charles  Balentine,  6'6", 
7.7;  Scott  Rose,  5'10",  2.7;  Mike 
Ratcliff,  6'4",  2.0;  Keenan  DeBose. 
6 '5",  1.8;  Jay  Crane,  6'8'/2",  1.2;  Eric 
Poerschke,  6'7".  0.7. 

Top  Newcomers:  Andrew  Lang, 
6'11";  Kenny  Hutchinson,  6'3"; 
William  Mills,  6'7";  Allie  Freeman. 
6'2";  Stephan  Moore,  t'iVi"- 

Lettermen  Lost:  Alvin  Robertson, 
6'4",  15.5;  LeRoy  Sutton,  6'6",  8.4; 
Ricky  Norton,  6'2",  8.6;  Darryl  Bed- 
ford, 6'8",  2.1;  Robert  Kitchen,  6'4", 
1.7;  Robert  Brannon,  6'7".  1.1; 
Jimmy  Dykes,  6'0",  0.0. 

Conference:     Southwest 

Colors:     Cardinal  and  White 


Eddie  Sutton 


Joe  Kleine 


Sports  Information   Director: 

Schaeffer 
Office  Phone:     (501)  575-2751 
Home  Phone:     (501)  521-7393 
Series  Record:     0-0 


Rick 


Cornell 


December  25-28 

Rainbow  Classic 
Honolulu,  Hawaii 


Location:     Ithaca,  New  York 

Nickname:     Big  Red 

Home  Court:     Barton  Hall 
(5500) 

Head  Coach:     Tom  Miller 
(U.S.  Military  Academy  70) 

Record  at  School:     43-61,  4  years 

Overall  Record:     43-61,  4  years 

1983-84  Record:     16-10 

Returning  Lettermen:  Ken  Bantum. 
6'7",  14.2;  Drew  Martin,  6'4",  10.6; 
Len  Palmer,  6'5",  4.8;  John  Bajusz, 
6T",  10.7;  Sam  Givens,  6'2",  2.3; 
Eric  King,  6'4",  0.7;  Fred  Hedengren, 
6'8",  0.1;  Derek  Williams, 
5T1",  2.4. 

Top  Newcomers:  Wolfgang  Florin. 
6'6";  Greg  Gilda,  6'8";  Mike  Millane. 
6'5";  James  Paul,  6'5". 

Lettermen  Lost:  Brad  Bomba,  6'7", 
10.5;  Andy  Loder,  6'4",  1.6. 

Conference:     Ivy  League 

Colors:     Carnelian  Red  and  White 


Tom  Miller 


Ken  Bantum 


Sports   Information   Director:     Dave 

Wohlhueter 
Office  Phone:     (607)  256-3752 
Home  Phone:     (607)  273-5891 
Series  Record:     0-0 


Georgia 
Tech 


Dec.  25-28       Rainbow  Classic 

Honolulu,  Hawaii 

February  2  9:00  P.M. 

College  Park,  Maryland 

Cole  Field  House 

Feb.   19,  3:30  P.M.,  Atlanta, 

GA 
Alexander  Memorial  Coliseum 


L_] 

Location:     Atlanta,  Georgia 

Nickname:  Rambling  Wreck  Yellow 
Jackets 

Home  Court:     Alexander  Memorial 
Coliseum  (8000) 

Head  Coach:     Bobby  Cremins 
(South  Carolina  70) 

Record  at  School:     41-42,  3  years 

Overall  Record:     141-1 12,  9  years 

1983-84  Record:     18-11 

Returning  Lettermen:  Bruce  Dalrymple. 
6'3",  13.6;  Yvon  Joseph.  6' 11",  11.9; 
Jack  Mansell.  67".  1. 1;  Craig  Neal. 
6'4",  5.4;  Scott  Petway,  6'6",  4.1; 
Mark  Price,  6'0",  15.6;  John  Salley, 
6'1 1",  1 1.8;  Ron  Williams,  6'0",  0.4. 

Top  Newcomers:  Bud  Adams,  67"; 
Duane  Ferrell.  6'6";  Antoine  Ford, 
7'0";  John  Martinson,  6'1";  Willie 
Reese,  6'10". 

Lettermen  Lost:  Anthony  Byrd,  6'2", 
4.6;  Greg  Wilson,  6'8".  0.9. 

Conference:     Atlantic  Coast 

Colors:     Old  Gold  and  White 


Mark  Price 


Sports   Information   Director:     Mike 

Finn 
Office  Phone:     (404)  894-5445 
Home  Phone:     (404)938-9910 
Series  Record:     1 1-5  Maryland 


34 


Hawaii 


December  25-28 

Rainbow  Classic 
Honolulu,  Hawaii 


Location:     Honolulu,  Hawaii 

Nickname:     Rainbows 

Home  Court:  Neil  S.  Blaisdell  Center 
(7.575) 

Head  Coach:     Larry  Little 
(Illinois  State  "62) 

Record  at  School:     93-125.  8  years 

Overall  Record:      193-158,  13  years 

1983-84  Record:     6-10 

Returning  Lettermen:  Ray  Arthur. 
6'8".  7.0:  William  Colston.  5'11". 
4.4:  Michael  Hutcherson,  6'2",  0.3; 
Sam  Johnson,  6'4".  4. 1 :  Andre  Morgan. 
6'4",  8.9:  Bill  Mosier.  6'8".  1.2. 

Top  Newcomers:  Joe  Cowan.  6'10"; 
Anthony  Jones.  6'6":  George  Kohelem. 
6'4";  Kenny  Walker.  6'4". 

Lettermen  Lost:  Larry  Connors.  6'7". 
2.6;  Dan  Hale.  6'5".  4.2:  Rogue 
Harris.  11",  4.5:  Greg  Hicks,  6'5", 
1 2.6;  Jack  Miller.  67".  1 5.4;  Crosetti 
Speight.  6'3".  7.9. 

Conference:     Western  Athletic 

Colors:     Green  and  White 


Larry  Little 


Ray  Arthor 


Sports  Information  Director:     Ed  Inouye 
Office  Phone:     (808)948-7523 
Series  Record:     0-0 


Iowa 


December  25-28 

Rainbow  Classic 
Honolulu,  Hawaii 


Location:     Iowa  City.  Iowa 

Nickname:     Hawkeyes 

Home  Court:  Carver-Haw  keye  Arena 
(15,450) 

Head  Coach:     George  Raveling 
(Villanova  '60) 

Record  at  School:     13-15,  1  year 

Overall  Record:      180-151.  12  years 

1983-84  Record:     13-15 

Returning  Lettermen:  Andre  Banks, 
6'4",  4.5;  Todd  Berkenpas,  6'2".  3.9; 
Bryan  Boyle.  6'7",  2.0;  Ken  Fullard, 
5'10",  0.8;  Brad  Lohaus.  7'0".  6.8; 
Michael  Payne,  6'11",  9.3:  Dave 
Snedeker,  6'8",  0.7;  Greg  Stokes, 
6'10",  14.9. 

Top  Newcomers:  Al  Lorenzen,  6'8"; 
Clarence  Jones,  6'7";  Jeff  Moe,  6'3"; 
Gerry  Wright,  6'8"  (transfer  from 
USC):  Michael  Morgan,  6'4";  Michael 
Reaves,  6'2". 

Lettermen  Lost:  Steve  Carfino,  6'2", 
11.7;  Craig  Anderson.  67".  4. 1 ;  Waymond 
King.  6'0",  0.4. 

Conference:     Big  Ten 

Colors:     Old  Gold  and  Black 


George  Raveling  Greg  Stokes 


Sports  Information  Director:     George 

Wine 
Office  Phone:     (319)353-3038 
Home  Phone:     (319)337-3933 
Series  Record:     0-0 


Iowa 
State 


December  25-28 

The  Rainbow  Classic 
Honolulu,  Hawaii 


Location:     Ames.  Iowa 

Nickname:     Cyclones 

Home  Court:     James  H.  Hilton  Col- 
iseum (14.020) 

Head  Coach:     Johnny  Orr 
(Beloit  "49) 

Record  at  School:     48-63.  4  years 

Overall  Record:     296-209,  19  years 

1983-84  Record:     16-13 

Returning  Lettermen:  Barry  Stevens, 
6'5",  22.2;  Jeff  Hornacek,6'3".  10.0; 
David  Moss.  6'8",  7.3;  Ron  Virgil, 
6'4",  4.5;  Sam  Hill,  6'8".  2.1;  Brad 
Dudek,  2.1;  Ray  Harris.  6'6".  1.3; 
Wes  Wallace,  6'2".  0.9;  Tom  Peter- 
son, 6'5",  0.4. 

Top  Newcomers:  Jeff  Grayer,  6'5"; 
Eli  Parker.  6'4";  Gary  Thompkins. 
6'3". 

Lettermen  Lost:  Ron  Harris,  6'3". 
10.9;  Terrence  Allen.  6'0".  11.0; 
David  Rauker.  6'5",  0.0;  John  Cul- 
bertson.  6'9",  2.3. 

Conference:     Big  Eight 

Colors:     Cardinal  and  Gold 


Johnny  Orr 


Barry  Stevens 


Sports   Information   Director:     Kirk 

Hendrix 
Office  Phone:     (515)294-3372 
Home  Phone:     (515)   292-6771 
Series  Record:     0-0 


35 


Washington 

December  25-28 

Rainbow  Classic 
Honolulu,  Hawaii 


Location:     Seattle,  Washington 

Nickname:     Huskies 

Home  Court:  Hec  Edmundson 
Pavilion 

Head  Coach:     Marv  Harshman 
(Pacific  Lutheran  '42) 

Record  at  School:     222-136,  13  years 

Overall  Record:     620-438,  39  years 

1983-84  Record:     24-7 

Returning  Lettermen:  Detlef  Schrempf, 
6'9!/2",  16.8;  Christian  Welp,  TO", 
10.6;  Paul  Fortier,  6'9",  9.1;  Shag 
Williams,  6'3W,6A;  Reggie  Rogers, 
67",  4.9;  Clay  Damon,  6'3'/2",  3.3; 
Gary  Gardner,  6'3",  2.1;  Flosi  Si- 
gurdsson,  7'0",  0.9;  Kevin  Vadato, 
6'5",  0.4. 

Top  Newcomers:  Steve  Evenson,  6'7"; 
J.D.  Taylor,  6'5";  Troy  Morrell, 
6'2";  David  Wilson,  6'2". 

Lettermen  Lost:  Alvin  Vaughn,  5'1 1", 
7.6;  Dave  Koehler,  6'0",  1.7;  Tim 
Kuyper,  6'7",  3.7;  Pete  Shimer,  6'2", 
0.2. 

Conference :     Pacific- 1 0 

Colors:     Purple  and  Gold 


Marv  Harshman  Detlef  Schrempf 

Sports    Information    Director:     Mike 

Wilson 
Office  Phone:     (206)  543-6441 
Home  Phone:     (206)  746-5347 
Series  Record:     0-0 


TV.  C. 
State 


January  2  9:00  P.M. 

College  Park,  Maryland 

Cole  Field  House 

February  27  7:30  P.M. 

Raleigh,  North  Carolina 

Reynolds  Coliseum 


Location:     Raleigh,  North  Carolina 

Nickname:     Wolfpack 

Home  Court:     Reynolds  Coliseum 
(12,400) 

Head  Coach:     Jim  Valvano 
(Rutgers  '67) 

Record  at  School:     81-47,  4  Years 

Overall  Record:     2 1 7- 1 44,  9  Years 

1983-84  Record:     19-14 

Returning  Lettermen:  Spud  Webb, 
57",  9.8;  George  McClain,  6'0",  1 .7; 
Bennie  Bolton,  67",  3.1;  Terry 
Gannon.  6'1",  11.4;  Ernie  Myers, 
6'5",  9.5;  Russell  Pierre.  6'8",  7.9; 
Mike  Warren,  67",  0.9;  Lorenzo 
Charles,  67',  18.0;  Cozell  McQueen, 
6' 11",  7.4. 

Top  Newcomers:  Vincent  Del  Negro, 
6'3";  Quentin  Jackson,  6'1";  Nate 
McMillan,  6'5";  John  Thompson, 
67". 

Lettermen  Lost:  Alvin  Battle,  67", 
0.0;  Rodney  Butts,  67",  1.3;  Walt 
Densmore,  67",  0.2;  Tommy  Di- 
Nardo,  6'6",  0.0;  Harold  Thomp- 
son, 6'6",  1.6. 

Conference:  Atlantic  Coast  Con- 
ference 

Colors:     Red  and  White 


Jim  Valvano 


Lorenzo  Charles 


Sports   Information   Director:     Ed 

Seaman 
Office  Phone:     (919)   737-2102 
Home  Phone:     (919)  829-9186 
Series  Record:     54-36  N.C.  State 


Dayton 


January  5,  1985  8:00  P.M. 

Dayton,  Ohio 


DAYTON \  ^ 


Location:     Dayton,  Ohio 

Nickname:     Flyers 

Home  Court:  U  of  Dayton  Arena 
(13,455) 

Head  Coach:     Don  Donoher 
(Dayton  '54) 

Record  at  School:     363-202,  20  years 

Overall  Record:     363-202,  20  years 

1983-84  Record:     21-11 

Returning  Lettermen:  Ed  Young,  6'7", 
13.4;  Sedric  Toney.  6'2",  11.6; 
Damon  Goodwin,  6'6",  10.1;  Larry 
Schellenberg,  6'3",  6.6;  Dan  Christie, 
6'1",  3.6;  Jeff  Zern,  6'9",  2.0;  Ted 
Harris,  6'1",  2.0;  Don  Hughes,  6'9", 
0.8;  Anthony  Grant,  6'5",  0.8;  Rory 
Dahlinghaus,  6'8",  0.7;  Jeff  Tressler, 
6'11",  0.8;  Jim  Shields,  6'8",  0.4. 

Top  Newcomers:  Eric  Matthews,  6'3"; 
Steve  Smith,  6'5";  Dave  Colbert, 
6'8"-RS. 

Lettermen  Lost:  Roosevelt  Chapman, 
6'5",  21.8. 

Conference:     Independent 

Colors:     Red  and  Blue 


Don  Donoher  Ed  Young 


Sports  Information   Director: 

Hauschild 
Office  Phone:     (513)  229-4421 
Home  Phone:     (513)  293-8441 
Series  Record:     2-0  Maryland 


Doug 


36 


North 
Carolina 

January  9  8:00  P.M. 

Chapel  Hill,  North  Carolina 

Carmichael  Auditorium 

February  13  9:00  P.M. 

College  Park,  Maryland 

Cole  Field  House 


Location:     Chapel  Hill,  North 
Carolina 

Nickname:     Tar  Heels 

Home  Court:  Carmichael  Auditorium 
(10,000) 

Head  Coach:     Dean  Smith 
(Kansas  '53) 

Record  at  School:     524-156,  23  Years 

Overall  Record:     524-156,  23  Years 

1983-84  Record:     28-3 

Returning  Lettermen:  Buzz  Peterson, 
6'4",  3.7;  Timo  Makkonen,  6'11", 
0.3;  Brad  Daugherty,  6'11",  10.5; 
Steve  Hal,  6'3",  5.2;  Cliff  Morris, 
6'3",  0.5;  Dave  Popson,  6'9",  1.9; 
Kenny  Smith,  6'2",  9.1;  Joe  Wolf, 
6'10",  3.4. 

Top  Newcomers:  Matt  Brust,  6'5"; 
Ranzino  Smith,  6'0". 

Lettermen  Lost:  Sam  Perkins,  6'10", 
17.6;  Matt  Doherty,  6'8",  9.8;  Michael 
Jordon,  6'5",  19.6;  Cecil  Exum6'6", 
2.3. 

Conference:     Atlantic  Coast 

Colors:     Carolina  Blue  &  White 


Dean  Smith 


Brad   Daugherty 


Sports  Information  Director:     Rick 

Brewer 
Office  Phone:     (919)962-2123 
Home  Phone:     (919)  929-2721 
Series  Record:     77-33  North  Carolina 


Duke 


January  14  8:00  P.M. 

College  Park,  Maryland 

Cole  Field  House 

February  9  3:00  P.M. 

Durham,  North  Carolina 
Cameron  Indoor  Stadium 


Location:     Durham,  North  Carolina 

Nickname:     Blue  Devils 

Home  Court:     Cameron  Indoor 
Stadium  (8,564) 

Head  Coach:     Mike  Krzyzewski 
(Army  '69) 

Record  at  School:     62-57,  4  years 

Overall  Record:     135-1 16,  9  years 

1983-84  Record:     24-10 

Returning  Lettermen:  Mark  Alarie, 
6'8",  17.5;  Tommy  Amaker,  6'0", 
7.5;  Todd  Anderson,  6'9",  0.5;  Jay 
Bilas,  6'8",  8. 1;  Jay  Bryan,  6'8",  0.6; 
Vince  Crump,  6'6",  0.1;  Johnny 
Dawkins,  6'2",  19.4;  David  Hender- 
son, 6'5",  13.5;  Dan  Meagher,  6'7", 
7.9;  Martin  Nessley,  7'2",  1 .4;  Weldon 
Williams,  6'6",  0.0. 

Top  Newcomers:  Billy  King,  6'6"; 
Kevin  Strickland,  6'5". 

Lettermen  Lost:  Richard  Ford,  5'10". 
0.2;  Doug  McNeelt,  6'5",  2.4. 

Conference:     Atlantic  Coast 

Colors:     Royal  Blue  and  White 


Mike  Krzyzewski  Johnny  Dawkins 


Sports  Information   Director: 

Mickle 
Office  Phone:     (919)684-2633 
Home  Phone:     (919)489-5275 
Series  Record:     61-46  Duke 


Tom 


Clemson 

January  16  8:00  P.M. 

College  Park,  Maryland 

Cole  Field  House 

February  17  1:30  P.M. 

Clemson,  South  Carolina 

Littlejohn  Coliseum 

Location:     Clemson,  South,  Carolina 

Nickname:     Tigers 

Home  Court:     Littlejohn  Coliseum 
(10,790) 

Head  Coach:     Cliff  Ellis 
(Florida  State '68) 

Record  at  School:     First  Year 

Overall  Record:     171-84,  9  years 

1983-84  Record:  22-8  at  South  Ala- 
bama 

Returning  Lettermen:  Vincent  Hamil- 
ton, 6'4",  Anthony  Jenkins,  6'7", 
10.1;  Chris  Michael,  6'5",  7.5;  Ray- 
mond Jones,  6'8",  7.0;  Horace  Grant, 
6'9",  5.7;  Warren  Wallace,  6'2",  2.9; 
Glen  McCants,  6'9",  1.8. 

Top  Newcomers:  Harvey  Grant,  6'9"; 
Glenn  Corbit,  6'6";  Anthony  Black- 
man,  6'3". 

Lettermen  Lost:  Murray  Jarman.  6'6", 
15.0;  Marc  Campbell,  6'2",  7. 1 ;  Mike 
Eppley,  6'2",  3.2;  Clarke  Bynum, 
6'7",  1.7;  David  Shaffer,  67",  5.3. 

Conference:     Atlantic  Coast 

Colors:     Purple  and  Orange 


*\y3(\ 


Vincent   Hamilton 


Sports   Information 

Director: 

Boh 

Bradley 

Office  Phone: 

(803) 

656-2101   2 

114 

Home  Phone: 

(803) 

654-5419 

Series  Record: 

58-26  Maryland 

37 


Nevada 
Las  Vegas 

January  19  3:00  P.M. 

Las  Vegas,  Nevada 


Location:     Las  Vegas,  Nevada 

Nickname:     Running  Rebels 

Home  Court:  Thomas  &  Mack  Center 
(18,500) 

Head  Coach:     Jerry  Tarkanian 
(Fresno  State  '55) 

Record  at  School:     259-72,  1 1  years 

Overall  Record:     593-1 18,  23  years 

1983-84  Record:     29-6 

Returning  Lettermen:  Richie  Adams, 
6'9",  12.7;  Fred  Banks,  6'2",  4.9;  Ed 
Catchings,  6'8",  1 2.3;  Ricky  Collier, 
6'5",  2.8;  John  Flowers,  6'10".  7.1; 
Spoon  James,  6'6",  1 1.5. 

Top  Newcomers:  Leon  Symanski, 
6'8";  Chris  Fancher,  6'0". 

Lettermen  Lost:  Danny  Tarkanian, 
6'2",  7.3;  Jeff  Collins.  6'2",  11.2; 
Paul  Brozovich,  6 '  1 0 ",  4.4;  Eric 
Booker,  6'4",  9.9. 

Conference:  Pacific  Coast  Athletic 
Association 

Colors:     Scarlet  and  Gray 


.    / 


Jerry  Tarkanian  Richie  Adams 


Sports  Information  Director:     Joyce 

Aschenbrenner 
Office  Phone:     (702)  739-3207 
Home  Phone:     (702)  739-9628 
Series  Record:     1-1 


Holy  Cross 

January  21  8:00  P.M. 

College  Park,  Maryland 

Cole  Field  House 


Location:     Worcester.  Massachusetts 

Nickname:     Crusaders 

Home  Court:     Hart  Center  (4,000) 
Centrum  (12,000) 

Head  Coach:     George  Blaney 
(Holy  Cross  '61) 

Record  at  School:     203-140.  12  years 

Overall  Record:     267-189,  17  years 

1983-84  Record:     12-18 

Returning  Lettermen:  Dennis  Ahern, 
6'6",  1.7;  Walter  Coates,  6'8",  2.4; 
Dave  Hohman,  6'6",  2.0;  Myles 
Maguire,  6'11",  0.6;  Brian  Reale. 
6'4",  6.7;  Jim  Runcie,  6'2".  10.1; 
Larry  Westbrook,  6'1",  8.9. 

Top  Newcomers:  Paul  Durkee,  6'7"; 
Jim  McCaffrey,  6'1";  Doug  McCrory, 
6'4";  Bill  Meyer,  6'7". 

Lettermen  Lost:  Pat  Elzie,  6'8",  20.4; 
Ernie  Floyd,  6'9",  15.6;  Champ 
Godbolt,  6'4",  12.6;  Richie  Guerin, 
6'2",  0.6;  Darren  Maloney,  6'7",  6.4. 

Conference:     MA  AC 

Colors:     Royal  Purple  and  White 


o 


George  Blaney 


I  II  w 

Dave  Hohman 


Sports  Information  Director:     Gregg 

Burke 
Office  Phone:     (617)  793-2583 
Home  Phone:     (617)  832-6616 
Series  Record:     3-0  Maryland 


Notre  Dame 

January  26  1:00  P.M. 

College  Park,  Maryland 

Cole  Field  House 


THE  FIGHTING 

IRISH 


Location:     South  Bend,  Indiana 

Nickname:     Fighting  Irish 

Home  Court:  Athletic  and  Convoca- 
tion Center  (11,345) 

Head  Coach:  Richard  "Digger" 
Phelps  (Rider '63) 

Record  at  School:     256-123,  13  years 

Overall  Record:     282-126,  14  years 

1983-84  Record:     21-12 

Returning  Lettermen:  JoJo  Buchanan, 
6'2",  3.1;  Dan  Duff,  6'0",  3.3;  Scott 
Hicks,  63",  4.8;  Joseph  Price,  6'5", 
5.8:  Joe  Howard,  5'9".  5.5:  John 
Bowen.  6'8".  1.1;  Jim  Dolan,  6'8", 
7.3;  Donald  Royal,  6'7",  3.4;  Barry 
Spencer,  6'7".  0.8;  Ken  Barlow. 
6' 10",  9.0;  Tim  Kempton,  6'9",  10.3. 

Top  Newcomers:  Matt  Beeuwsaert, 
6'6";  David  Rivers,  6'0";  Drazen 
Petrovic.  6'4";  Gary  Voce,  6'9";  Jeff 
Peters.  6'4". 

Lettermen  Lost:  Tom  Sulby,  6'4", 
18.7;  Cecil  Rucker,  6'8".  1.4. 

Conference:     Independent 

Colors:     Blue  and  Gold 


Richard  "Digger" 
Phelps 


Ken  Barlow 


Sports  Information  Director:     Roger 

O.  Valdiserri 
Office  Phone:     (219)239-7516 
Home  Phone:     (219)  277-0695 
Series  Record:     6-5  Notre  Dame 


38 


Villanova 

January  27  2:30  P.M. 

College  Park,  Maryland 

Cole  Field  House 


Location:     Villanova,  Pennsylvania 

Nickname:     Wildcats 

Home  Court:     Villanova  Arena 
(3,200) 

Head  Coach:  Roland  "Rollie" 
Massimino  (Vermont  '56) 

Record  at  School:     203-127,  1 1  years 

Overall  Record:     237-143,  13  years 

1983-84  Record:     19-12 

Returning  Lettermen:  Ed  Pinckney, 
6'9'/2",  15.4;  Dwayne  McClain,  6'6", 
13.1;  Harold  Pressley,  67",  12.6; 
Gary  McLain,  6'0",  7.4;  Dwight 
Wilbur,  6'2",  5.7;  Harold  Jensen, 
6'4",  2.7;  Chuck  Everson,  7'0",  1.9; 
Connally  Brown,  b'lVi",  1.2;  Brian 
Harrington,  6'0",  0.3;  Massimino, 
5'10",  0.1;  Steve  Pinone,  6'4",  0.1. 
Roland  "R.C." 

Top  Newcomers:  Veltra  Dawson,  6'1"; 
Mark  Plansky,  6'6". 

Lettermen  Lost:  Frank  Dobbs,  10.3; 
Michael  Enright,  0.5. 

Conference:     Big  East 

Colors:     Blue  and  White 


Roland  "Rollie" 
Massimino 


Ed  Pinckney 


Sports  Information   Director: 

Miller 
Office  Phone:     (215)  645-4121 
Home  Phone:     (215)622-5056 
Series  Record:     0-0 


Craig 


Virginia 


January  30  8:00  P.M. 

College  Park,  Maryland 

Cole  Field  House 

March  3  1:30  P.M. 

Charlottesville,  Virginia 

University  Hall 


VIRGINIA 


Location:     Charlottesville,  Virginia 

Nickname:     Cavaliers,  Wahoos 

Home  Court:     University  Hall 
(9,000) 

Head  Coach:     Terry  Holland 
(Davidson  '64) 

Record  at  School:     214-95,  10  years 

Overall  Record:     306-138,  15  years 

1983-84  Record:     21-12 

Returning  Lettermen:  Kenny  Johnson, 
6'0",  1.0;  Dan  Merrifield,  6'6",  3.0; 
Jim  Miller,  6'8",  10.8;  Tim  Mullen, 
6'5",  4.0;  Olden  Polynice,  6'1 1 ",  7.7; 
Tom  Sheehey,  6'9",  7.3;  Anthony 
Solomon,  5'10",  0.8. 

Top  Newcomers:  Tom  Calloway,  6'0"; 
John  Duslin.  6'1 1 ";  John  Johnson, 
5'11";  Mel  Kennedy,  6'5";  Tim 
Martin,  6'1 1";  DarrickSimms,6'3". 

Lettermen  Lost:  Rick  Carlisle,  6'5", 
11.1;  Kenton  Edelin,  6'8",  4.4;  Ricky 
Stokes,  5'10",  6.4;  Othell  Wilson, 
6'0".  13.8. 

Conference:     Atlantic  Coast 

Colors:     Orange  and  Blue 


Terry  Holland  Jim  Miller 


Sports  Information   Director: 

Murray 
Office  Phone:     (804)924-3011 
Home  Phone:     (804)  978-2966 
Series  Record:     76-43  Maryland 


Rich 


Old 
Dominion 

February  4  8:00  P.M. 

College  Park,  Maryland 

Cole  Field  House 


Location:     Norfolk.  Virginia 

Nickname:     Monarchs,  Big  Blue 

Home  Court:     Norfolk  Scope 
(10,258) 

Head  Coach:     Paul  Webb 
(William  &  Mary '51) 

Record  at  School:     177-87,  9  years 

Overall  Record:     492-245,  28  years 

1983-84  Record:     19-12 

Returning  Lettermen:  Matt  White, 
6'2",  0.4;  Charlie  Smith,  6'3",  1 1.8; 
Ronnie  Wade,  6'6",  5.4;  Keith 
Thomas,  6'3",  13.8;  Mark  Davis, 
6'5",  14.2;  Horace  Lambert,  6'8", 
5.3;  Fred  Facka,  6'5".  0.7;  Kenny 
Gattison,  6'8",  1 1 . 1 ;  Clarence  Hanley. 
6'10",  9.2. 

Top  Newcomers:  Frank  Smith,  6'0"; 
Sylvester  Charles,  6'7";  Steve  Trax. 
6'6";  Darryl  Tolson,  6'5";  Garrick 
Davis,  6'8";  Steve  Seaman,  6'6". 

Lettermen  Lost:     None 

Conference:     Sun  Belt 

Colors:     Columbia  Blue  and  White 


Paul  Webb 


Mark  Davis 


Sporls    Information    Director:      Carol 

Hudson 
Office  Phone:     (804)  440-3372 
Home  Phone:     (804)625-2061 
Series  Record:     2-0  Maryland 


39 


Wake 
Forest 

February  6  7:30  P.M. 

Memorial  Coliseum 

Winston-Salem,  North  Carolina 

February  24  1:30  P.M. 

College  Park,  Maryland 

Cole  Field  House 


Location:  Winston-Salem.  North 
Carolina 

Nickname:     Demon  Deacons 

Home  Court:     Memorial  Coliseum 
(8,100) 

Head  Coach:     Carl  Tacy 
(Davis  &  Elkins  "56) 

Record  at  School:     207-135.  12  years 

Overall  Record:     230-139.  13  years 

1983-84  Record:     23-9 

Returning  Lettermen:  Tyrone  Bogues, 
5'3",  1.2;  Delaney  Rudd,  6'2",  13.3; 
Kenny  Green,  6'6",  17.8;  Chuck 
Kepley,  6'4",  2.9;  Lee  Garber.  6'5". 
6.2;  Mark  Cline,  67",  7.2;  Mike 
Hillman.  6'9",  1.0;  Craig  Wessel, 
7'0",  1.5. 

Top  Newcomers:  Jeff  McGill,  6'2"; 
Hartmut  Ortmann,  6'8";  Charlie 
Thomas,  67";  Todd  May,  6'8". 

Lettermen  Lost:  John  Toms,  6'6", 
3.6;  Scott  Davis,  6'2",  2.4;  Danny- 
Young,  6'3",  9.6;  Anthony  Teachey. 
6'9",  13.1. 

Conference:     Atlantic  Coast 

Colors:     Old  Gold  and  Black 


Carl  Tacy 


Kenny  Green 


Sports  Information  Director:     John 

Justus 
Office  Phone:     (919)  761-5640 
Home  Phone:     (919)723-5650 
Series  Record:     35-34  Maryland 


Tow  son 
State 

February  21  8:00  P.M. 

College  Park,  Maryland 

Cole  Field  House 


TICERS 


Location:     Towson,  Maryland 

Nickname:     Tigers 

Home  Court:     Towson  Center 
(5.200) 

Head  Coach:     Terry  Truax 
(Maryland  '68) 

Record  at  School:      10-19,  1  year 

Overall  Record:      10-19.  1  year 

1983-84  Record:     10-19 

Returning  Lettermen:  Bill  Leonard, 
6'2"  G,  1 1.6;  Steffan  Bunsavage, 
6'8",  F,  1 2.4;  Glenn  Dieter,  67",  C, 
6.9;  Greg  McClinton.  6'9".  C,  4.0; 
Ken  Gorham,  6'3".  G,  3.5;  Roddy 
Kirk,  6'6",  F,  5.5;  Eliezar  Gordan, 
6'3",  G,  3.0;  Eran  Grumberg,  6'3", 
G.  0.0. 

Top  Newcomers:  John  Jennings,  6'6" 
F;  Butch  Evans,  6'3",  G:  Kemp 
Banks,  6'6",  F;  Gary  Mullen.  6'6", 
F;  Mike  Fink,  6'5",  G. 

Lettermen  Lost:  Tom  Speicher  6'5", 
F.  5.5;  Rica  Page,  6'0",  G,  7,3. 

Conference:     East  Coast 

Colors:     Gold,  Black  and  White 


Terry  Truax 


Bill  Leonard 


Sports   Information   Director: 

Schlehr 
Office  Phone:     (301)  321-2232 
Home  Phone:     (301)  838-9221 
Series  Record:     2-0  Maryland 


Peter 


40 


W  L 

Alabama    I  0 

American  University  _ 3  I 

Appalachian  State _ 2  0 

University  of  Arizona I  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     2  0 

Boston  University    2  0 

Brown     '. 3  0 

Bucknell     4  0 

Buffalo    4  0 

Canisius 7  0 

Catholic     11  6 

Cincinnati 1  1 

Citadel    1  0 

City  College  of  New  York     1  1 

Clemson     -. _ 58  26 

Columbia  2  0 

Connect icul   0  1 

Creighton  I  0 

Davidson    6  3 

Dayton   2  0 

Delaware __ 2  0 

DePaul    I  0 

DePauw     2  0 

Dickinson 1  0 

Duke  46  61 

Duquesne 6  0 

East  Carolina    5  0 

Eastern  Kentucky    1  0 

East  Tennessee      _ 1  0 

Evansville 1  0 

Farleigh  Dickinson _ 1  0 

Florida    0  1 

Fordham    6  2 

Fort  Belvoir 0  1 

Gallaudet    6  1 

George  Mason 1  0 

Georgetown ._ 34  2? 

George  Washington    .. . _. 30  22 

Georgia 1  4 

Georgia  Tech    _ 11  5 

Hampden-Sydney    _. 2  2 

Hofstra   1  0 

Holy  Cross    3  0 

Houston 1  1 

Illinois     0  I 

Indiana 1  I 

Jacksonville 1  0 

Johns  Hopkins 19  5 

Kansas    0  2 

Kansas  State     1  0 

Kent  State      1  0 

Kentuck\    3  4 

Kentucky  Wesleyan     1  0 

Kings  Point   0  1 

Lafayette    2  0 

LaSalle   1  0 

Lehigh     1  0 

LIU      7  0 

LSU     2  0 

Louisville   0  4 

Loyola  (Md.)    I  4 

Loyola  (Louisiana)      I  0 

Maine     1  0 

Marine  Corps  Institute I  I 

Marshall     2  2 

Maryland  Eastern  Shore    5  0 

Memphis  Slate     0  2 

Miami  (Fla.)      3  3 


W 

Miami  (Ohio)    2 

Michigan    | 

Michigan  State     \ 

Minnesota     j 

Mississippi     fj 

Mississippi  Aggies  o 

Mississippi  Stale o 

Montana  State      ] 

Navy    '.'.'.'.'.'.'.  29 

Nevada  Las  Vegas i 

New  Mexico  A&M      Q 

New  York  University i 

Niagara _ i 

North  Carolina-Charlotte     1 

North  Carolina     33 

North  Carolina  State 36 

Northwestern    0 

Notre  Dame 5 

Ohio  Stale     1 

Ohio  University    1 

Ohio  Wesleyan     0 

Oklahoma  State  l 

Old  Dominion 2 

Pennsylvania     I 

Penn  State     8 

Pittsburgh 3 

Princeton   3 

Providence     0 

Quant ico  Marines 2 

Randolph  Macon     3 

Rhode  Island    2 

Rhode  Island  State     0 

Richmond 23 

Rutgers   2 

St.  Francis(Pa.)  I 

St.  John's  (Md.)  9 

St.  John's  (N.Y.) I 

St.  Joseph's   3 

St.  Peters    1 

San  Francisco  I 

Santa  Clara    1 

Seton  Hall      2 

South  Carolina     29 

Southern  California    I 

Southern  Illinois 0 

Stevens  Institute 4 

Syracuse     5 

Tampa     2 

Temple    1 

Ten nessee  _ 1 

Tennessee  Chattanooga      _ 2 

Texas  El  Paso 1 

Texas  Tech 1 

Towson 2 

Tulsa  I 

UCLA     I 

U.S.  Merchant  Marine I 

Vanderbilt      1 

Virginia 76 

Virginia  Military  Institute     40 

Virginia  Tech    22 

Wake  Forest 35 

Wagner   I 

Washington  &  Lee 26 

Washington  College    13 

West  Virginia    10 

Western  Kentuck>   2 

Western  Maryland 12 

Wichita  ..... I 

William  &  Mary 20 

Wisco  ns  i  n 0 

Wyoming    I 

Xavier     I 

Yale     I 


L 

I 

2 
I 

0 
1 
I 
2 

0 

26 
I 
I 

0 
0 
0 
77 
54 
I 

6 
2 
0 
1 

0 
0 
II 
6 
I 

3 
I 
2 
I 

0 
I 

14 
2 
0 
3 
I 
I 

0 
0 
0 
I 

23 
0 
I 
I 

0 
0 
I 

2 
0 
1 

0 
0 
0 


0 
43 
10 
4 
33 
0 

24 
4 
18 
0 
0 
0 
8 
2 
0 
0 
0 


Ail-Time  High  Scoring  Games 


130 

Easl  Carolina 

129 

Canisius 

127 

East  Carolina 

127 

Brown 

124 

N.C.  State 

122 

Boston  University 

117 

George  Washington 

115 

Miami  (Ohio) 

114 

Marshal) 

113 

Catholic 

112 

Fordham 

III 

Miami  (Fla.) 

III 

Long  Island  Univ. 

110 

Virginia 

106 

1977-78 

103 

1978-79 

84 

1975-76 

82 

1972-73 

110 

1978-79 

82 

1975-76 

96 

1971-72 

76 

1979-80 

89 

1980-81 

79 

1979-80 

73 

1973-74 

77 

1970-71 

88 

1975-76 

75 

1973-74 

109 

N.C.  State 

108 

1977-78 

109 

Buffalo 

70 

1970-71 

109 

Farleigh  Dickinson 

83 

1980-81 

108 

Johns  Hopkins 

65 

1983-84 

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 

106 

North  Carolina 

94 

1982-83 

104 

UMES 

69 

I9S3-S4 

102 

West  Virginia  (NCAA) 

77 

1983-84 

101 

Duke 

90 

1982-83 

41 


34 


Maryland  Coaches'  Record 


TEAMS  COACHED  BY  H.  BURTON  SHIPLEY: 
ALL  GAMES        CONF.  GAMES 


1923-24 
1924-25 
1025-26 
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 


Won 

4 
11 
14 
10 
14 

7 
16 
14 
16 
11 
11 

8 
13 


Lost 
6 

4 
2 
9 


5 
4 
3 
8 
7 

10 
5 


Won 

1 

3 
7 
6 
8 
2 
9 


7 
6 
4 
4 


Lost 

2 
1 
1 

4 
1 
5 
5 
I 

2 
3 
1 

3 
3 


1947-48 
1948-49 
1949-50 


27 


48 


22 


27 


TEAMS  COACHED  BY  BUD  MILLIKAN: 


ALL  GAMES 

CONF.  GAMES 

Won 

Lost 

Won 

Lo 

1950-51 

16 

11 

11 

8 

1951-52 

13 

9 

9 

5 

1952-53 

15 

8 

12 

3 

1953-54 

23 

7 

7 

2 

1954-55 

17 

7 

10 

4 

1955-56 

14 

10 

7 

7 

1956-57 

16 

10 

9 

5 

1957-58 

22 

7 

9 

5 

1958-59 

10 

13 

7 

7 

1959-60 

15 

8 

9 

5 

1960-61 

14 

12 

6 

8 

1961-62 

8 

17 

3 

11 

1962-63 

8 

13 

4 

10 

1963-64 

9 

17 

5 

9 

1964-65 
1965-66 
1966-67 


18 

8 

10 

4 

14 

11 

7 

7 

11 

14 

5 

9 

243 


182 


130 


109 


TEAMS  COACHED  BY  FRANK  FELLOWS: 
ALL  GAMES        CONF.  GAMES 


Won 

Lost 

Won 

Lost 

1967-68 

8 

16 

4 

10 

1968-69 

8 

18 

2 

12 

16 


34 


22 


TEAMS  COACHED  BY  "LEFTY"  DRIESELL 
ALL  GAMES        CONF.  GAMES 


9 

10 

4 

8 

1969-70 

14 

8 

6 

4 

1970-71 

13 

8 

8 

3 

1971-72 

13 

8 

7 

4 

1972-73 

1 

21 

0 

1 

1973-74 

7 

15 

3 

8 

1974-75 

8 

8 

5 

5 

1975-76 

4 

13 

2 

1 

1976-77 

2 

13 

2 

5 

1977-78 

9 

11 

5 

4 

1978-79 

14 

9 

9 

4 

1979-80 

243 

199 

124 

91 

1980-81 
1981-82 

CHED  BY    FLUCIE"  STEWART: 
ALL  GAMES        CONF.  GAMES 

1982-83 
1983-84 

Won 

Lost 

Won 

Lost 

11 

13 

9 

7 

9 

17 

8 

7 

7 

18 

5 

13 

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 

11 

7 

7 

24 

7 

11 

3 

21 

10 

8 

6 

16 

13 

5 

9 

20 

10 

8 

6 

24 

8 

12 

5 

304 


133 


112 


87 


44 


Coach  DrieselVs  Post  Season 
Tournament  Records 


Year 


Scores 


1969-70 

First  Round  ACC 

1970-71 

First  Round  ACC 

1971-72 

First  Round  ACC 
Semi-Finals  ACC 
ACC  Finals 

First  Round  NIT 
Second  Round  NIT 
Semi-Finals  NIT 
NIT  Finals 

1972-73 

First  Round  ACC 
Semi-Finals  ACC 
ACC  Finals 

First  Round  East  Regional 

of  NCAA 
Eastern  Regional  Final 

1973-74 

First  Round  ACC 
Semi-Finals  ACC 
ACC  Finals 

1974-75 

Bye  in  ACC  First  Round 
ACC  Semi-Finals 

First  Round  NCAA  Playoffs 
First  Round  Mid-West  Regional 

NCAA  Playoff 
Mid-West  Regional  Final,  NCAA 

1975-76 

First  Round  ACC 
Semi-Finals  ACC 

1976-77 

First  Round  ACC 

1977-78 

First  Round  ACC 
Semi-Finals  ACC 

1978-79 


1979-80 


1980-81 


1981-82 


1982-83 


1983-84 


First  Round  ACC 
Semi-Finals  ACC 
First  Round  NIT 
Second  Round  NIT 

First  Round  ACC 
Semi-Finals  ACC 
ACC  Finals 

First  Round  East  NCAA  Playoffs 
First  Round  East  Regional 
NCAA 

First  Round  ACC 

Semi-Finals  ACC 

ACC  Finals 

First  Round  Mid-East  NCAA 

Second  Round  Mid-East  NCAA 

First  Round  ACC 
First  Round  NIT 
Second  Round  NIT 

First  Round  ACC 

First  Round  Mid-West  NCAA 

Second  Round  Mid-West  NCAA 

First  Round  ACC 

Semi-Finals  ACC 

ACC  Finals 

First  Round  Mid-East  NCAA 

Second  Round  Mid-East  NCAA 


Md. 

57 

N.C.  State  67 

Md. 

63 

South  Carolina  71 

Md. 
Md. 
Md. 

54 
62 
64 

Clemson  52 

Virginia  57 
UNC73 

Md. 
Md. 
Md. 
Md. 

67 

71 

91 

100 

St.  Joseph's  55 
Syracuse  65 
Jacksonville  77 
Niagara  69 

Md. 
Md. 
Md. 

77 
73 
74 

Clemson  61 
Wake  Forest  65 
N.C.  State  76 

Md. 

91 

Syracuse  75 

Md. 

89 

Providence  103 

Md. 
Md. 
Md. 

85 
105 
100 

Duke  66 
UNC85 
N.C.  State  103 

Md. 

85 

N.C.  State  87 

Md. 

Md. 

83 
83 

Creighton  79 
Notre  Dame  71 

Md. 

82 

Louisville  96 

Md. 
Md. 

80 
65 

Duke  78 
Virginia  73 

Md. 

72 

N.C.  State  82 

Md. 
Md. 

109 
69 

N.C.  State  108 
Duke  81 

Md. 
Md. 
Md. 
Md. 

75 
79 
67 

72 

Clemson  67 
North  Carolina  102 
Rhode  Island  65 
Ohio  State  79 

Md. 
Md. 

Md. 
Md. 
Md. 

51 
91 

72 
86 
68 

Georgia  Tech  49 
Clemson  85 
Duke  73 
Tennessee  75 
Georgetown  74 

Md. 
Md. 
Md. 
Md. 
Md. 

56 
85 
60 
81 
64 

Duke  53 
Virginia  62 
North  Carolina  61 
Tennessee-Chattanooga 
Indiana  99 

69 

Md. 
Md. 
Md. 

28 
66 
69 

N.C.  State  40 
Richmond  50 
Georgia  83 

Md. 
Md. 
Md. 

58 
50 
50 

Georgia  Tech  64  (OT) 
Tennessee-Chattanooga 
Houston  60 

51 

Md. 
Md. 
Md. 
Md. 
Md. 

69 
66 
74 
102 
70 

N.C.  State  63 
Wake  Forest  64 
Duke  62 

West  Virginia  77 
Illinois  72 

45 


Statistical  Leaders  Coached  by  Driesell 


Career  Scoring 

2058  King  —  Maryland 

2032  F.  Hetzel  —  Davidson 

2015  Lucas  —  Maryland 

1807  McMillen  —  Maryland 

1693  Snyder  —  Davidson 

1607  Graham  —  Maryland 

1561  Manning  —  Maryland 

1346  Branch  —  Maryland 

1344  Knowles —  Davidson 

1338  Jarman  —  Davidson 

1235  O'Brien  —  Maryland 

1219  Sheppard  —  Maryland 

1 198  Gibson  —  Maryland 

1191  Maloy  —  Davidson 

1161  Howard  —  Maryland 

1 153  B.  Williams  —  Maryland 

1067  Holland  —  Davidson 

1026  B.  Davis  —  Maryland 

1017  Holland  —  Davidson 

1017  Elmore  —  Maryland 

1013  Huckel  —  Davidson 

1007  Boston  —  Maryland 

Season  Scoring 

753  Snyder  —  Davidson 

739  Maloy  —  Davidson 

709  F.  Hetzel  —  Davidson 

689  F.  Hetzel  —  Davidson 

674  King  —  Maryland 

667  McMillen  —  Maryland 

634  W.  Hetzel  —  Maryland 

616  McMillen  —  Maryland 

564  Lucas  —  Maryland 

559  King  —  Maryland 

557  Lucas  —  Maryland 

542  Knowles  —  Davidson 

541  Branch  —  Maryland 

536  Jarman  —  Davidson 

525  Snyder  —  Davidson 

524  McMillen  —  Maryland 

499  Graham  —  Maryland 

498  O'Brien  —  Maryland 

496  Knowles  —  Davidson 

494  Sheppard  —  Maryland 

491  Coleman  —  Maryland 

488  Bias  —  Maryland 

483  Graham  —  Maryland 

482  B.  Williams  —  Maryland 

471  Manning  —  Maryland 

469  Lucas  —  Maryland 

469  Kroll  —  Davidson 

454  Huckel  —  Davidson 

454  Coleman  —  Maryland 

452  Maloy  —  Davidson 

Single  Game  Scoring 

53  F.  Hetzel  —  Davidson 

46  F.  Hetzel  —  Davidson 

46  Snyder  —  Davidson 

44  Graham  —  Maryland 

41  F.  Hetzel  —  Davidson 

40  Snyder  —  Davidson 

39  Holland  —  Davidson 

39  Jarman  —  Davidson 

39  Snyder  —  Davidson 

39  Knowles  —  Davidson 

38  King  —  Maryland 

38  Snyder  (2)  —  Davidson 

38  White  —  Maryland 

38  O'Brien  —  Maryland 

35  F.  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  King  —  Maryland 

32  Maloy  —  Davidson 

32  McMillen  (3)  —  Maryland 

31  Graham  —  Maryland 

31  F.  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 

Career  Rebounding 

1094  F.  Hetzel  —  Davidson 

1053  Elmore  —  Maryland 

928  B.  Williams  —  Maryland 

895  Gibson  —  Maryland 

859  McMillen  —  Maryland 

804  Knowles  —  Davidson 

768  Maloy  —  Davidson 

758  Jarman  —  Davidson 

715  King  —  Maryland 

648  Snyder  —  Davidson 

630  Holland  —  Davidson 

629  Boston  —  Maryland 

585  Roy  —  Maryland 

582  Sheppard  —  Maryland 

Season  Rebounding 

429  Maloy  —  Davidson 

412  Elmore  —  Maryland 

384  F.  Hetzel  —  Davidson 

363  B.  Williams  —  Maryland 

359  F.  Hetzel  —  Davidson 

351  F.  Hetzel  —  Davidson 

351  Elmore  —  Maryland 

339  Maloy  —  Davidson 

323  Knowles  —  Davidson 

323  B.  Williams  —  Maryland 

321  Roy  —  Maryland 

306  McMillen  —  Maryland 

290  Elmore  —  Maryland 

287  Cook  —  Davidson 

284  McMillen  —  Maryland 

281  Jarman  —  Davidson 

276  Knowles  —  Davidson 

269  Coleman  —  Maryland 

Single  Game  Rebounding 

27  F.  Hetzel  —  Davidson 

26  Elmore  —  Maryland 

25  F.  Hetzel  —  Davidson 

24  Elmore  (2)  —  Maryland 

23  Knowles  —  Davidson 

23  Maloy  —  Davidson 

22  B.  Williams  (2)  —  Maryland 

22  Markee  —  Davidson 

22  Snyder  —  Davidson 

21  F.  Hetzel  —  Davidson 

21  Elmore  (2)  —  Maryland 

21  Maloy  —  Davidson 

21  M.  Davis  —  Maryland 

20  Knowles  —  Davidson 

20  Elmore  (2)  —  Maryland 

20  Roy  —  Maryland 

Career  Assists 

514  Lucas  —  Maryland 

460  Morley  —  Maryland 

431  B.  Davis  —  Maryland 

346  Graham  —  Maryland 

304  King  —  Maryland 

292  Adkins  —  Maryland 

271  Manning  —  Maryland 

244  Moser  —  Davidson 


241     Bodell  —  Maryland 
219     Howard  —  Maryland 
215     O'Brien  —  Maryland 

Career  Scoring  Average 

25.7     F.  Hetzel  —  Davidson 
21.2     Snyder  —  Davidson 
20.5     McMillen  —  Maryland 
20.2     Maloy  —  Davidson 

Season  Assists 

178  Lucas  —  Maryland 

165  B.  Davis  —  Maryland 

159  Lucas  —  Maryland 

136  Graham  —  Maryland 

135  Wiles  —  Maryland 

134  B.  Davis  —  Maryland 

132  B.  Davis  —  Maryland 

Single  Game  Assists 

12  Morley  (2)  —  Maryland 

12  Lucas  (2)  —  Maryland 

12  Porac  —  Maryland 

1 1  Morley  (3)  —  Maryland 

1 1  B.  Davis  —  Maryland 

10  Morley  (3)  —  Maryland 

10  Wiles  —  Maryland 

10  Lucas  —  Maryland 

10  B.  Davis  (2)  —  Maryland 

10  Gatlin  (2)  —  Maryland 

Career  Field  Goal  .Pet 

.615  B.  Williams  —  Maryland 

.583  Manning  —  Maryland 

.576  Boston  —  Maryland 

.556  Snyder  —  Davidson 

.555  McMillen  —  Maryland 

.554  F.  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 

.515  King  —  Maryland 

Team  Free  Throw  .Pet 

.762  Davidson  1965-66 

.758  Maryland  1975-76 

.757  Maryland  1974-75 

.757  Davidson  1966-67 

.751  Maryland  1981-82 

.746  Maryland  1973-74 

.746  Maryland  1971-72 

Season  Field  Goal  .Pet 

.647  B.  Williams  —  Maryland 

.643  Manning  —  Maryland 

.631  Holland  —  Davidson 

.611  Pittman  —  Maryland 

.608  Coleman  —  Maryland 

.606  B.  Williams  —  Maryland 

.606  Roy  —  Maryland 

.598  Bodell  —  Maryland 

.598  Gibson  —  Maryland 

.597  Boston  —  Maryland 

.587  Gibson  —  Maryland 

.585  McMillen  —  Maryland 

.583  B.  Williams  —  Maryland 

.580  B.  Davis  —  Maryland 

.580  Boston  —  Maryland 

.579  F.  Hetzel  —  Davidson 

.572  Howard  —  Maryland 

.571  Coleman  —  Maryland 

.567  Sheppard  —  Maryland 

.566  Maloy  —  Davidson 


.563  Snyder  —  Davidson 

.558  Manning  —  Maryland 

.556  Knowles  —  Davidson 

.555  Snyder  —  Davidson 

.555  O'Brien  —  Maryland 

.554  Gibson  —  Maryland 

.553  King  —  Maryland 

.553  Youngdale  —  Davidson 

.553  Howard  —  Maryland 

.552  Morley  —  Maryland 

.551  Gibson  —  Maryland 

.550  Manning  —  Maryland 

Season  Free  Throw  .Pet 

.908  Manning  —  Maryland 

.871  Youngdale  —  Davidson 

.863  Hunter  —  Maryland 

.857  Manning  —  Maryland 

.852  Manning  —  Maryland 

.846  Fothergill  —  Maryland 

.844  O'Brien  —  Maryland 

.843  Moser  —  Davidson 

.839  Tillman  —  Maryland 

.837  Kroll  —  Davidson 

.836  Lucas  —  Davidson 

.833  Snyder  —  Davidson 

.833  Moser  —  Davidson 

.830  Evans  —  Davidson 

.829  O.  Brown  —  Maryland 

.828  Howard  —  Maryland 

.821  Manning  —  Maryland 

.821  King  —  Maryland 

.820  B.  Davis  —  Maryland 

.817  McMillen  —  Maryland 

.812  King  —  Maryland 

.806  Snyder  —  Davidson 

.803  F.  Hetzel  —  Davidson 

.800  McMillen  —  Maryland 


Career  Free  Throw  .Pet 

.858 

Manning  —  Maryland 

.849 

Kroll  —  Davidson 

.825 

Moser  —  Davidson 

.816 

Beerman  —  Davidson 

.814 

Evans  —  Davidson 

.807 

Snyder  —  Davidson 

.803 

O'Brien  —  Maryland 

.799 

McMillen  —  Maryland 

.799 

Fothergill  —  Maryland 

.791 

Morley  —  Maryland 

.789 

F.  Hetzel  —  Davidson 

.778 

Lucas  —  Maryland 

.777 

Youngdale  —  Davidson 

.775 

King  —  Maryland 

.764 

Howard  —  Maryland 

Team  Field  Goal  .Pet 

.551 

Maryland  1979-80  2nd 

in  Nation 

.547 

Maryland  1974-75 

NCAA  Record 

.543 

Davidson  1963-64 

NCAA  Record 

.539 

Maryland  1983-84  5th 

in  Nation 

.537 

Maryland  1975-76  Led 

Nation 

.532 

Maryland  1980-81 

.520 

Maryland  1972-73  2nd 

in  Nation 

.516 

Maryland  1976-77 

.512 

Davidson  1965-66  2nd 

in  Nation 

.510 

Maryland  1973-74  7th 

in  Nation 

.509 

Davidson  1964-65  2nd 

in  Nation 

.509 

Maryland  1977-78 

46 


The  Driesell  Era 


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  a  total  of  only  eight  games  both 
years.  Set  Maryland  attendance  rec- 
ord 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  2nd 
ranked  South  Carolina  in  Cole  Field 
House.  Set  attendance  record  of 
180,842  an  average  of  12,056.  (15 
Home  Games  180,842  —  average 
1 2,056)  (26  games  273,553  —  average 
10,521). 


1971-72       27-5 

Won  National  Invitational  Tourna- 
ment title.  Advanced  to  finals  of 
ACC  Tournament.  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  1 1th 
in  AP  Poll.  ( 14  Home  Games  1 84,323  - 
average  1 3, 166)  (32  games  352,436  — 
average  1 1,014). 


1972-73       23-7 

Gained  FINAL  EIGHT  in  NCAA 

Tournament.  Ran  streak  to  31  con- 
secutive wins  against  NON-ACC 
opponents  before  losing  to  Provi- 
dence in  the  finals  of  the  NCAA 
Eastern  Regionals.  Increased  atten- 
dance record  for  fourth  consecutive 
year.  Won  first  10  games  of  season  to 
set  consecutive  win  record  of  14.  8th 
in  AP  Poll.  ( 1 3  Home  Games  1 72,828  - 
average  13,294)  (30 games  340,964  - 
average  1 1,365). 


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  tourna- 
ment. (13  Home  Games  157,357- 
average  1 2, 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  Championship  game  of  Mid- 
west Regionals.  Won  ACC  regular 
season  title  with  10-2  record.  Won  all 
4  games  on  home  courts  in  North 
Carolina.  Set  new  attendance  records 
for  Cole  Field  House.  (14  Home 
Games  187,971  average  13.427) 
(29 games  3  14,341       average  10.839). 


1975-76       22-6 

Ranked  I  1th  in  AP  Poll.  5th  con- 
secutive 22  plus  victory  season.  Won 
first  1 1  games  of  season.  Set  Mary- 
land free  throw  shooting  record  with 
.758.  (15  Home  Game's  186.656 
average  13.1  10)  (28  games  343,785  - 
average  12.278). 

1976-77       19-8 

Second  vear  with  10  wins  in  a  row. 
Had  II  in  1975-76.  Brad  Davis  was 
1st  round  pick  by  Los  Angeles  as  a 


47 


Junior.  Steve  Sheppard  2nd  round 
pick  by  Chicago.  (19  Home  Games 
240,254  —  average  1 2,645)  (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  the  Year 
in  ACC.  (18  Home  Games  201,536  — 
average  1 1,196)  (30  games  3 16, 449  — 
average  10,548). 


1979-80       24-7 

Picked  to  finish  6th  in  the  conference, 
the  Terps  led  the  way  with  an  11-3 
record  and  were  regular  season 
champions.  Advanced  to  the  semi- 
finals of  the  NCAA  Eastern  Region- 
al and  a  No.  8  ranking  in  both  wire 
service  polls.  In  the  final  NCAA 
Division  I  Statistics  they  finished 
second  in  the  nation  in  field  goal 
percentage  (55.1).  Coach  Driesell 
named  ACC  and  District  III  "Coach 
of  the  Year".  Albert  King  named 
Player  of  the  Year  (ACC),  M.V.P.  of 
the  ACC  Tournament,  and  1st  Team 
Ail-American  by  the  Associated 
Press.  Greg  Manning  became  the 
first  player  ever  in  the  ACC  to  cap- 
ture both  the  field  goal  and  free 
throw  percentage  titles  in  the  same 
season.  (16  Home  Games  160,815  — 
average  10,051)  (31  games  3 17,501  - 
average  10,241). 


1980-81       21-10 

Seventh  time  recording  20  or  more 
victories.  Advanced  to  the  finals  of 
the  ACC  Tournament  for  the  sixth 
time,  and  to  the  second  round  of  the 
NCAA  Tournament.   Albert   King 


became  the  Terp's  all-time  leading 
scorer,  finishing  his  career  with  2,058 
points.  Seniors  Ernest  Graham  and 
Greg  Manning  also  ended  careers 
among  top  five  in  scoring:  Graham 
4th —  1,607  and  Manning  5th  — 
1 ,56 1 .  Manning  established  new  marks 
for  career  field  goal  and  free  throw 
accuracy,  hitting  58%  of  his  shots 
from  the  floor  and  86%  of  his  foul 
shots.  Four  players  drafted  by  NBA, 
with  Buck  Williams  (Jr.)  and  Albert 
King  going  in  the  first  round.  Set  new 
attendance  records,  both  overall  and 
average:  (15  Home  Games  196,978  — 
average  1 3, 1 32)  (3 1  games  398,036  - 
average  12,840). 


1981-82       16-13 

Fourth  consecutive  post-season  tour- 
nament appearance,  advancing  to 
2nd  round  of  NIT.  Upset  No.  1 
Virginia  in  overtime  at  home,  47-46, 
on  final  day  of  regular  season.  Center 
Charles  Pittman  selected  in  3rd 
round  of  NBA  draft  by  the  Phoenix 
Suns.  (16  Home  Games  157,275  — 
average  9,830)  (29  games  286,264  - 
average  9,871). 


48 


1982-83       20-10 

Eighth  season  for  Lefty's  team  to  win 
20  or  more  games  a  season.  Had  2  big 
upset  wins  over  UCLA  and  Notre 
Dame,  both  at  Cole  Field  House,  and 
by  a  point.  Terps  and  U.  Va.  only 
teams  in  the  ACC  to  beat  eventual 
national  champion.  North  Carolina 
State  both  games.  The  Terrapins,  for 
the  fifth  consecutive  year,  went  to 
post-season  tournament.  Selected  for 
the  Mid-West  NCAA  First  Round 
Regionals,  defeating  Tennessee-Chat- 
tanooga before  losing  to  NCAA  fin- 
alist Houston  by  just  10  points. 


1983-84       24-8 

Two  historic  achievements  highlighted 
Lefty's  15th  season  as  head  coach  of 
the  Terrapins:  1.  He  won  his  first 
Atlantic  Coast  Conference  Champion- 
ship. 2.  He  claimed  his  300th  victory 
for  Maryland  in  the  final  regular 
season  game  with  the  74-65  win  over 
Virginia  in  Cole  March  4.  The  year 
also  gave  him  his  ninth  20  wins  or 
more  as  the  Terps  went  24-8.  The 
Terrapins  went  to  post-season  tour- 
nament for  the  sixth  consecutive  year 
as  they  were  selected  for  the  NCAA 
Mid-East  Regional.  Three  Terrapins 
were  drafted  by  the  NBA,  center  Ben 
Coleman  and  forwards  Herman  Veal 
and  Mark  Fothergill. 


49 


Terrapin  Award  Winners 


1969-70 

Alvin  Aubinoe  Greatest  Career  Contribution  --  Will 

Hetzel 
Best  Free  Throw  Shooter  —  Will  Hetzel 
Best  Defensive  Player  —  Sparky  Still 
Best  Rebounder  —  Rod  Horst 
Most  Valuable  Player  —  Rod  Horst 

1970-71 

Alvin   Aubinoe  Greatest   Career  Contribution   --  Jay 

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


1972-73 

Best  Team  Spirit  —  Bill  Hahn 

Leo  G.  Hershberger  Rookie  Ail-American  —  John  Lucas 

Best  Free  Throw  Shooter  —  Jim  O'Brien 

Best  Defensive  Player  —  Len  Elmore 

Best  Rebounder  —  Len  Elmore 

All-ACC  Tournament  —  Tom  McMillen,  John  Lucas. 

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

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

Bodell 
Avis  Special  Service  to  Team  Award  —  Bill  Hahn 


McMillen 


Howard 


Hahn 


1971-72 

Avis  Special  Service  Award  —  Charlie  Blank 

Most  Valuable  Player  —  Len  Elmore  &  Tom  McMillen 

Seidenspinner  Award  for  Outstanding  Senior  —  Charlie 

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

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

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


O'Brien 


1973-74 


Bodell 


Len   Elmore,   Tom   McMillen,  John 


Gibson 


Hetzel 


Yates 


All-American 

Lucas 
Best  Free  Throw  Shooter  —  Maurice  "Mo"  Howard 
Best  Rebounder  —  Len  Elmore 
Best  Defensive  Player  —  Tom  Roy 
Coaches  Award  —  Improvement  From  One  Season  To 

Next  —  Owen  Brown 
Alvin  Aubinoe  Greatest  Career  Contribution  -  -  Tom 

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

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

Lucas,  Tom  McMillen,  (First  Team);  Owen  Brown, 

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

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"  Howard 
All-ACC  Tournament  —  Maurice  "Mo"  Howard 
All-ACC  —  Maurice  "Mo"  Howard 


50 


Terrapin  Award  Winners 


1975-76 

Best  Free  Throw  Shooter  —  James  Tillman 

Best  Defensive  Player  —  Maurice  "Mo"  Howard 

Chris  Patton  Outstanding  Rebounder  -  -  Lawrence 
Boston 

Alvin  Aubinoe  Greatest  Career  Contribution  —  John 
Lucas 

First  Team  UPI  and  AP  All-American  —  John  Lucas 

Owen  Brown  Most  Valuable  Player  —  Maurice  "Mo" 
Howard 

First  Team  All-ACC  —  John  Lucas 

Total  Performance  for  Overall  Excellence  and  Con- 
sistency —  Steve  Sheppard 

Most  Assists  —  Brad  Davis 

All-ACC  Tournament  —  Brad  Davis 


1976-77 

All  ACC  —  Brad  Davis  (2nd  Team) 

Best  Free  Throw  Shooter  —  Mark  Crawford 

Outstanding  Defensive  Player  —  Lawrence  Boston 

Chris  Patton  Best  Rebounder  —  Larry  Gibson 

Alvin  Aubinoe  Greatest  Career  Contribution  —  John 

Pavlos  (Manager) 
Outstanding  Academic  —  Eric  Shrader 
Most  Assists  —  Brad  Davis 
Owen    Brown    Most   Outstanding   Senior    -  -   Steve 

Sheppard 
Overall  Performance  —  Larry  Gibson 


1978-79 

All-ACC  —  Larry  Gibson  (2nd  Team) 
All-ACC  Tournament  —  Larry  Gibson  (2nd  Team) 
ACC  Rookie-of-the-Year  —  Buck  Williams 
Honorable   Mention   All-American    -  -    Larry   Gibson, 

Albert  King 
ACC  Leading  Rebounder  —  Buck  Williams 
Best  Free  Throw  Shooter  —  Greg  Manning 
Phi  Beta  Kappa  —  Eric  Shrader 
Most  Assists  —  Dutch  Morley 
Alvin  Aubinoe  Greatest  Career  Contribution  —  Larry 

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


Lucas 


Elmore 


Sheppard 


King 


Davis 


Williams 


1977-78 

All-ACC   Tournament   -  -   Lawrence   Boston,    Larry 

Gibson  (2nd  Team) 
Best  Free  Throw  Shooter  —  Jo  Jo  Hunter 
Outstanding  Academic  —  Eric  Shrader 
Overall  Performance  —  Larry  Gibson 
Most  Assists  —  Greg  Manning 
Alvin  Aubinoe  Greatest  Career  Contribution  —  Lawrence 

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

Boston 


1979-80 

ACC  Player  of  the  Year  —  Albert  King 

Associated   Press  First  Team  All-American  --  Albert 

King 
United  Press  International  Second  Team  All-American 

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

Manning 
Everett  N.  Case  ACC  Tournament  MA. P.   --  Albert 

King 
ACC  All-Tournament  First  Team  —  Albert  King  and 

Greg  Manning 
ACC  All-Tournament  Second  Team  —  Buck  Williams 

and  Ernest  Graham 
Academic  All-ACC  First  Team  —  Greg  Manning 
ACC  Coach  of  the  Year  —  Charles  G.  Driesell 
District  111  Coach  of  the  Year  —  Charles  G.  Driesell 
1979    Maryland    Invitational    Tournament    MA. P. 

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

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

Team       Dutch  Morley 


51 


Terrapin  Award  Winners 


1979-80  (contd.) 

Owen  Brown  Most  Valuable  Player  —  Albert  King 
Alvin  Aubinoe  Greatest  Career  Contribution  —  John 

Bilney 
Most  Improved  Player  —  Taylor  Baldwin 
Most  Assists  —  Ernest  Graham 
Kirin  World  Cup  M.V.P.  —  Ernest  Graham 


Coleman 


Veal 


Fothergill 


1980-81 

The  Sporting  News  First  Team  Ail-American  —  Albert 

King 
United  Press  International  Ail-American  (Second  Team) 

—  Albert  King 

Associated  Press  All-American  (Honorable  Mention)  — 
Albert  King,  Buck  Williams  and  Greg  Manning 

Basketball  Weekly  Second  Team  All-American  —  Buck 
Williams 

Basketball  Writers  All-District  Team  —  Albert  King  and 
Buck  Williams 

All-ACC  Second  Team  —  Albert  King  and  Buck  Williams 

All-ACC  Tournament  Team  —  Albert  King  and  Buck 
Williams  (First  Team)  Ernest  Graham  (Second  Team) 

CoSIDA  District  III  All-Academic  Team  --  Greg 
Manning 

Most  Valuable  Player,  Carrier  Classic  —  Greg  Manning 

All-Tournament  Team,  Carrier  Classic  —  Greg  Man- 
ning, Albert  King,  and  Buck  Williams 

Most  Valuable  Player,  Maryland  Invitational  —  Albert 
King 

All-Tournament  Team,  Maryland  Invitational  —  Albert 
King,  Dutch  Morley,  Ernest  Graham  and  Buck 
Williams 

Voted  to  Pizza  Hut  All-Star  Game  (eight  man  east  squad) 

—  Albert  King 

Selected  for  Aloha  Classic  —  Albert  King,  Ernest  Graham 

Most  Assists  —  Ernest  Graham 

Outstanding  Free  Throw  Shooting  —  Greg  Manning 

Most  Improved  Player  —  Steve  Rivers 

Chris  Patton  Rebounding  —  Buck  Williams 

Outstanding  Defensive  Player  —  Buck  Williams 

Competitive  Spirit  and  Most  Unselfish  Contribution  — 

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

King 


1981-82 

Most  Assists  —  Dutch  Morley 

Outstanding  Free  Throw  Shooting  —  Dutch  Morley 

Most  Improved  Player  —  Charles  Pittman 

Chris  Patton  Rebounding  —  Herman  Veal 

Competitive  Spirit  and  Most  Unselfish  Contribution  — 

Herman  Veal 
Outstanding  Academic  —  Jeff  Adkins 
Owen  Brown  MVP  —  Adrian  Branch 
Outstanding  Defensive  Player  —  Jeff  Adkins 
Alvin  C.  Aubinoe  Greatest  Career  Contribution  —  Dutch 

Morley 
Basketball  Weekly  1982  Freshman  All-American  (2nd 

Team)  —  Adrian  Branch 
Basketball  Weekly  1982  Freshman  All-American  (Honor- 
able Mention)  —  Jeff  Adkins 


1982-83 

Most  Assists  —  Jeff  Adkins 

Outstanding  Free  Throw  Shooting  —  Pete  Holbert 

Most  Improved  Player  —  Len  Bias 

Chris  Patton  Rebounding  —  Ben  Coleman 

Outstanding  Defensive  Player  —  Herman  Veal 

Competitive  Spirit  and  Most  Unselfish  Contribution  — 

Herman  Veal 
Outstanding  Academic  —  Chuck  Driesell 
Owen  Brown  MVP  —  Adrian  Branch  and  Ben  Coleman 
Outstanding  Play  in  the  NCAA  Playoffs  —  Adrian 

Branch 
Chevrolet  Scholarship  —  Adrian  Branch  —  Maryland  vs 
Houston,  NCAA  Playoffs  and  Ben  Coleman  —  Mary- 
land vs  Notre  Dame 
All-ACC   Second  Team  —  Adrian  Branch  and   Ben 
Coleman 


1983-84 

Most  Assists  —  Keith  Gatlin 

Outstanding  Free  Throw  Shooting  —  Pete  Holbert 

Most  Improved  Player  —  Terry  Long 

Chris  Patton  Rebounding  —  Ben  Coleman 

Outstanding  Defensive  Player  —  Herman  Veal 

Competitive  Spirit  and  Most  Unselfish  Contribution  - 

Herman  Veal 
Outstanding  Academic  —  Jeff  Adkins 
Owen  Brown  Most  Valuable  Player  —  Ben  Coleman 
Outstanding  Plav  in  the  NCAA  Playoffs  —  Len  Bias 
Chevrolet   Scholarship   $1,000   Award    for   the   "Most 
Valuable  Player"  in  games: 
Jeff  Adkins  vs  Boston  College  —  12-24-83 
Herman  Veal  vs  Notre  Dame  —  1-28-84 
Keith  Gatlin  vs  North  Carolina  —  2-19-84 
Adrian  Branch  vs  Virginia  —  3-4-84 


52 


/ 


HAM  PS  £ 


A  v  ^   % 


Maryland  Invitational  Tournament 


1971  - 

Maryland               103 

Western  Kentuck 

■67 

1975—  Maryland               104 

Seton  Hall 

69 

1979—  Maryland               115        MiamiofOhio 

76 

St.  John's                  94 

Harvard 

88 

Princeton                 61 

Alabama 

59 

Temple                    85        Harvard 

73 

THIRD  PLACE 

THIRD  PLACE 

THIRD  PLACE 

Harvard                 107 

Western  Kentuck 

89 

Alabama                100 

Seton  Hall 

64 

MiamiofOhio        86        Harvard 

79 

CHAMPIONSHIP 

CHAMPIONSHIP 

CHAMPIONSHIP 

Maryland                90 

St.  John's 

69 

Maryland                66 

Princeton 

59 

Maryland                85        Temple 

63 

1972- 

Maryland                  90 

Georgia  Tech 

55 

1976—  Maryland                  84 

Xavier 

74 

1980—  Maryland               114        Marshall 

89 

Syracuse                  74 

Bowling  Green 

73 

Syracuse                 1 16 

Duquesne 

86 

St.  Joseph's              87         Bowling  Green 

76 

THIRD  PLACE 

THIRD  PLACE 

THIRD  PLACE 

Bowling  Green       102 

Georgia  Tech 

87 

Duquesne                86 

Xavier 

80 

Marshall                  87        Bowling  Green 

85 

CHAMPIONSHIP 

CHAMPIONSHIP 

CHAMPIONSHIP 

Maryland                90 

Syracuse 

76 

Maryland                96 

Syracuse 

85 

Maryland                74 

1973  - 

Maryland               102 

Holy  Cross 

75 

1977—  Maryland                91 

Western  Kentucky  78 

1983  —  Maryland                58        Randolph  Macon 

52 

Boston  College       94 

Michigan  State 

81 

Georgia  Tech          73 

St.  John's 

67 

LaSalle                    65        G.  Washington 

64 

THIRD  PLACE 

THIRD  PLACE 

THIRD  PLACE 

Michigan  State        97 

Holy  Cross 

85 

St.  John's                  80 

Western  Kentut 

ky  63 

G.  Washington        54         Randolph  Macon 
CHAMPIONSHIP 

47 

CHAMPIONSHIP 

CHAMPIONSHIP 

Maryland                96        LaSalle 

83 

1974- 

Maryland                58 
Maryland               105 

Boston  College 
Georgia  Tech 

37 
67 

Maryland                 65 
1978  —  Maryland                62 

Georgia  Tech 
St.  Joseph's 

63 

57 

UCLA                     78 

St.  Bonaventure 

62 

Southern  Calif.       78 

Holy  Cross 

60 

MOST  VALUABLE  PLAYER  AWARD 

THIRD  PLACE 

THIRD  PLACE 

1971  —  Len  Elmore  —  Marvland 

Georgia  Tech          70 

St.  Bonaventure 

61 

St.  Joseph's             62 

Holy  Cross 

58 

1972  —Tom  McMillen  —  Maryland 

CHAMPIONSHIP 

CHAMPIONSHIP 

1973  —  Len  Elmore  —  Marvland 

UCLA                     81 

Maryland 

75 

Maryland                83 

Southern  Calif. 

79 

1974  —  David  Meyers  —  UCLA 

1975  —  John  Lucas  —  Maryland 

1976  —  Steve  Sheppard  —  Maryland 

1977  —  Lawrence  Boston  —  Maryland 

1978  —  Albert  King  —  Marvland" 

1979  —  Albert  King  —  Marvland 

1980  —  Albert  King  —  Maryland 
1983  —  Ben  Coleman  —  Maryland 

Invitational  Tournament  Records 


1953-54 

All  American  City  Tournamen 
Owensboro,  Kentucky 

1959-60 

Blue  Grass  Tournament 
Louisville.  Kentucky 

1966-67 

Memphis  State  Invitational 
Memphis.  Tennessee 

Md. 

65 

Arizona  State 

50 

Md. 

63 

Indiana 

72 

Md. 

50 

Oklahoma  State                           49 

Md. 

66 

Evansville 

58 

Md. 

76 

Fordham 

54 

Md. 

53 

Memphis  State                             55 

Md. 

54 

Kentucky  Wesleyan 

37 

1960-61 

Dixie  Classic 

Charlotte  invitational 

1954-55 

All  American  City  Tournamen 

Raleigh,  North  Carolina 

Charlotte,  North  Carolina 

Owensboro,  Kentucky 

Md. 

57 

North  Carolina 

81 

Md. 

66 

Davidson                                      65 

Md. 

58 

Texas  Tech. 

54 

Md. 

67 

N.C.  State 

75 

Md. 

57 

Army                                                54 

Md. 

83 

Rhode  Island 

66 

Md. 

84 

Wyoming 

77 

1967-68 

Sun  Carnival  Tournament 

Md. 

78 

Cincinnati 

61 

1961-62 

Sugar  Bowl  Tournament 

El  Paso.  Texas 

1955-56 

Mid  Winter  Festival 

New  Orleans,  Louisiana 

Md. 

53 

Texas,  El  Paso                             70 

Md. 

75 

Michigan  State 

95 

Md. 

62 

Miss.  State 

64 

Md. 

72 

Southern  Illinois                          73 

Md. 

75 

St.  Francis 

66 

Md. 

64 

Louisville 

83 

1968-69 

Marshall  Invitational 

1956-57 

All  American  City  Tournamen 

1962-63 

None 

Huntington,  West  Virginia 

Owensboro.  Kentucky 

1963-64 

VPI  Invitational  Tournament 

Md. 

89 

Marshall                                       80 

Md. 

89 

Montana  State 

72 

Blacksburg,  Virginia 

Md. 

85 

Miami  (Fla.)                                 92 

Md. 

43 

New  Mexico  A&M 

45 

Md. 

59 

Tennessee 

70 

Charlotte  Invitational 

Md. 

43 

Virginia 

39 

Md. 

75 

LSU 

65 

Charlotte,  North  Carolina 

1957-58 

Sugar  Bowl  Tournament 

Evansville  Invitational 

Md. 

69 

Davidson                                      83 

New  Orleans,  Louisiana 

Md. 

54 

Arizona 

57 

Md. 

95 

Wichita                                         83 

Md. 

71 

Vanderbilt 

56 

Md. 

82 

Columbia 

76 

1973-74 

Cable  Car  Classic 

Md. 

46 

Memphis  State 

47 

1964-65 

Hurricane  Classic 

San  Francisco,  Calif. 

1958-59 

Sugar  Bowl  Tournament 

Miami,  Florida 

Md. 

78 

San  Francisco                              60 

New  Orleans.  Louisiana 

Md. 

66 

Tulsa 

59 

Md. 

53 

Santa  Clara                                  32 

Md. 

45 

Miss.  State 

56 

Md. 

73 

Miami  (Fla.) 

80 

1980-81 

Carrier  Classic 

Md. 

54 

Loyola 

50 

1965-66 

Sugar  Bowl  Tournament 
New  Orleans,  Louisiana 

Md. 

96 

Syracuse.  N.Y. 
Wagner                                         73 

Md. 

69 

Houston 

68 

Md. 

83 

Syracuse                                       73 

Md. 

77 

Dayton 

75 

Terrapins  in  NCAA   Championships 


1958- 

First  Round  -  East 

Md. 

82Louisvil!e 

96 

Madison  Square  Garden,  NY 

1980- 

Second  Round  -  East 

Md. 

86Boston  College                                63 

Greensboro,  NC 

East  Regional 

Md. 

86Tennessee 

75 

Charlotte,  NC 

East  Regional  Semi  -  Finals 

3rd  Place 

Philadelphia,  PA 

Md. 

67Temple                                             81 

Md. 

68Georgetown 

74 

Md. 

59Manhattan                                       55 

1981  - 

First  Round  -  Mideast 

1973- 

Second  Round  -  East 

Davton,  OH 

Charlotte,  NC 

Md. 

8 1  Tenn-Chattanoga 

69 

Md. 

91  Syracuse                                           75 
East  Regional  Championship  Game 

Second  Round  -  Mideast 
Dayton,  OH 

Md. 

89Providence                                      103 

Md. 

641ndiana 

99 

1975- 

First  Round  -  Midwest 
Lubbock,  TX 

1983- 

First  Round  -  Midwest 
Houston,  TX 

Second  Round  -  Midwest 

Md. 

52Tenn-Chattanooga 

51 

Las  Cruces.  NM 

Second  Round  -  Midwest 

Md. 

83Notre  Dame                                     71 

Houston,  TX 

Midwest  Regional 
Championship  Game 

Md. 
1984- 

50Houston 

First  Round-Mideast 

60 

Birmingham,  AL 

Md. 

l02West  Virginia 
Lexington.  KY 

77 

Md. 

70lllinois 

72 

54 


Single  Game  —  Team 
MOST  POINTS:     130  ag  East  Carolina.  Dec.  1977 
FEWEST  POINTS:     15agSeton  Hall.  Dec.  1941  (15-59) 
MOST  POINTS  BY  OPPONENTS:     1 10  by  N.C.  State.  Dec.  1978(110-124) 
FEWEST  POINTS  BY  OPPONENT:     12  by  Navy,  1926(12-21) 
MOST  POINTS  BY  BOTH  TEAMS:     234  by  Maryland  and  N.C.  State.  Dec. 

20.  1978  (Md.  124 -N.C.  State  110) 
FEWEST  POINTS  BY  BOTH  TEAMS:     33  by  Maryland  and  Navy,   1926 

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

1958  (52  attempts) 
FEWEST  FREE  THROWS:     Oag  Wake  Forest,  Feb.  1973.  in  Winston-Salem 
MOST  FREE  THROWS  BY  OPPONENT:     40  by  Clemson,  Jan.   1968  (53 

attempts) 
MOST  FREE  THROW  ATTEMPTS:     57   ag   North    Carolina.   Jan.    1953, 

(made  36) 
FEWEST  FREE  THROW  ATTEMPTS:     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  Caro- 
lina, 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 


MOST 
MOST 

MOST 

MOST 
MOST 

MOST 

MOST 

MOST 

BEST 


BEST 


MOST 


MOST 


Single  Game  —  Individual 
POINTS:     44  by  Ernest  Graham  ag  N.C.  State,  Dec.  1978  (18  FG-8  FT) 
FIELD  GOALS:     18  by  Ernest  Graham  ag  N.C.  State,  Dec.  1978  (26 
att.) 

FREE  THROWS:      17  bv  Tom  McMillen  ag  Canisius.  Dec.  1971  (att. 
20) 

REBOUNDS:     26  bv  Len  Elmore  ag  Wake  Forest,  Feb.  1974 
FREE  THROW  ATTEMPTS:     20  by  Tom   McMillen  ag  Canisius, 
Dec.  1971  (made  17) 

FIELD  GOAL  ATTEMPTS:     34  by  Gene  Shueag  Washington  &  Lee, 
Feb.  1953  (made  16) 

CONSECUTIVE  FREE  THROWS:     15  by  Albert  King  ag  Boston. 
Feb.  1979 

CONSECUTIVE  FIELD  GOALS:     10  by  Barry  Yates  ag  Miami 
(Fla.),  Dec.  1970 

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 

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

Buck  Williams  ag  Canisius,  Dec,  1978     8-8 

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

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

Ben  Coleman  ag  Duquesne,  Dec.  1983    8-8 

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

Charles  Pittman  ag  Lafayette.  Nov.  1981    7-7 

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

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

Buck  Williams  ag  Marshall,  Dec.  1980    6-6 

FREE  THROW  ATTEMPTS  BY  OPPONENT:     21  by  Bcrnie  Jan- 

iciki  of  Wake  Forest.  1953  ( 15);  21  by  Pete  Brennan  of  North  Carolina. 

1958(15) 

POINTS  AWAY  FROM    HOME:     40  bv  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:     2,226  in  1972-73;  2,226  in  1979-80 
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:     .551  in  1979-80 
LOWEST  FIELD  GOAL  PERCENTAGE:     .346  in  1951-52 
BEST  FREE  THROW  PERCENTAGE:     .758  (477  of  629)  1975-76 
LOWEST  FREE  THROW  PERCENTAGE:     .617  in  1952-53 
HIGHEST  AVERAGE   MARGIN  OVER  OPPONENTS:     16.7  in   1973-74 

(28  games  —  85.7  to  69.0) 
BEST  REBOUND  PERCENTAGE:     .585  in  1954-55 
BEST  REBOUND  AVERAGE:     49.1  in  1954-55 
MOST  REBOUNDS:     1388  in  1971-72 
MOST  PERSONAL  FOULS:     596  in  31  games.  1980-81 
FEWEST  PERSONAL  FOULS:     378  in  1966-67 
LARGEST  ATTENDANCE:     398.036  in  31  games,  1980-81 
LARGEST  HOME  ATTENDANCE:     240.254  (19  games)  1976-77 
LARGEST  AVERAGE  HOME  ATTENDANCE:     13,427  for    14  games  in 

1974-75 
BEST  START  IN  A  SEASON:     1 1  consecutive  wins  (1975-76) 

Season  —  Records  Individual 
MOST  POINTS:     674  by  Albert  King.  1979-80  (31  games) 
MOST  FIELD  GOALS:     275  bv  Albert  King.  1979-80(31  games) 
MOST  FREE  THROWS:     197  by  Tom  McMillen.  1971-72  (32  games) 
MOST  REBOUNDS:     412  by  Len  Elmore,  1973-74  (28  games) 
BEST  FIELD  GOAL  PCT.:     .647  by  Buck  Williams  (183-283).  1980-81 
BEST  FREE  THROW  PCT.:     .908  by  Greg  Manning,  1979-80  (31  games.  79 

of  87) 
BEST  SCORING  AVERAGE:     23.3  by  Will  Hetzel.  1968-69  (26  games  605 

points) 
BEST  REBOUNDING  AVERAGE:     14.7  by  Len  Elmore,  1973-74(28  games) 
MOST  CONSECUTIVE  FREE  THROWS   MADE:     30  by  Albert  King, 

1979-80 
MOST  CONSECUTIVE  FIELD  GOALS  MADE:     15  by  Greg  Manning 

(over  2  games)  Maryland  and  ACC  record,  1980-81 

Career  Records 
MOST  POINTS  SCORED:     2058  bv  Albert  King  (1977-81) 
BEST  SCORING  AVERAGE:     20.5  by  Tom  McMillen  in  1971-74  (88  games 

1.807  points) 
MOST  FIELD  GOALS:     862  by  Albert  King  (1977-81) 
MOST  FREE  THROWS:     409  by  Tom  McMillen  in  1971-74  (88  games,  512 

attempts) 
BEST  FIELD  GOAL  PERCENTAGE:     .615  by  Buck  Williams  (446-725)  (3 

seasons.    1978-1981);   .583   by   Greg   Manning  (623-1028)  (4  seasons. 

1977-81) 
BEST  FREE  THROW  PERCENTAGE:     .858  by  Greg  Manning  (315-367) 

(1977-81) 
MOST  REBOUNDS:     1.053  bv  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:     120   by    Dutch    Morlej 

(1978-1982) 
MOST  CONSECUTIVE  GAMES   PLAYED  IN  (VARSITY);      109   by 

Ernest  Graham  (1977-81) 
MOST  CONSECUTIVE  FIELD  GOALS:      15  b>   Greg   Manning  (over  2 

games)  Maryland  and  ACC  Record 
CAREER  GAMES  STARTED:     112  by  Albert  King  (1977-81)  (John  1  ucas 

had  107) 

All-Time  Team  Records 
MOST  CONSECUTIVE  WINS    UiAINSI    NON-ACC  OPPONENTS      'I 

(1970-73) 
MOST  CONSECUTIVE   WINS:     l4ovei  1971-72 and  1972-73 seasons 
MOST  CONSECUTIVE  20  VICTORY  SEASONS:     5  (1971-72  to  1975-76) 


55 


Regular  Season  Tournament  Records 


SOUTHERN  CONFERENCE 

ATLANTIC 

COAST  CONFERENCE 

1923-24 

1953-54 

1971-72 

Md. 

34 

VMI 

19 

Md. 

75 

Clemson 

59 

Md. 

54 

Clemson 

52 

25 

Georgia 

29 

56 

Wake  Forest 

64 

62 

Virginia 

57 

1924-25 

1954-55 

64 

North  Carolina 

73 

Md. 

27 

Alabama 

21 

Md. 

57 

Virginia 

68 

1972-73 

16 

N.C.  State 

30 

1955-56 

Md. 

77 

Clemson 

61 

1925-26 

Md. 

59 

Duke 

94 

73 

Wake  Forest 

65 

Md. 

19 

Miss.  Aggies 

22 

74 

N.C.  State 

76 

1926-27 
Md. 

22 

Georgia 

27 

1956-57 
Md. 

n 

54 

Virginia 
South  Carolina 

68 

74 

1973-74 
Md. 

85 

Duke 

66 

1927-28 

Did  not  enter 

1957-58 

105 
100 

North  Carolina 
N.C.  State 

85 
103 

1928-29 

Md. 

70 

Virginia 

66 

Md. 

35 

Mississippi 

37 

71 

Duke 

65 

1974-75 

1929-30 

36 

North  Carolina 

74 

Md. 

85 

N.C.  State 

87 

Md. 

21 

Kentucky 

26 

1958-59 

1975-76 

1930-31 

Md. 

55 

Virginia 

66 

Md. 

80 

Duke 

78 

Md. 

37 

LSU 

33 

1959-60 

65 

Virginia 

73 

19 

North  Carolina 

17 

Md. 

58 

N.C.  State 

74 

1976-77 

26 

Georgia 

25 

1960-61 

Md. 

72 

N.C.  State 

82 

29 

Kentucky 

27 

Md. 

)1 

Clemson 

75 

1977-78 

1931-32 

76 

Wake  Forest 

98 

Md. 

109 

N.C.  State 

108 

Md. 

24 

Florida 

39 

69 

Duke 

81 

1932-33 
Md. 

28 

South  Carolina 

65 

1961-62 
Md. 

58 

Duke 

71 

1978-79 
Md. 

75 

Clemson 

67 

1933-34 

1962-63 

79 

North  Carolina 

102 

Md. 

37 

Washington  &  Lee 

45 

Md. 

tl 

Wake  Forest 

80 

1934-35 

1963-64 

1979-80 

Did  not  enter 

Md. 

57 

Clemson 

81 

Md. 

51 

Georgia  Tech 

49 

1935-36 
Md. 

47 

Duke 

35 

1964-65 
Md. 

51 

Clemson 

50 

91 

72 

Clemson 
Duke 

85 
73 

32 

Washington  &  Lee 

38 

57 

N.C.  State 

76 

1980-81 

1936-37 

Md. 

56 

Duke 

53 

Md. 

35 

N.C.  State 

42 

1965-66 

85 

Virginia 

62 

1937-38 

Md. 

70 

North  Carolina 

77 

60 

North  Carolina 

61 

Md. 

45 

Citadel 

43 

1966-67 

1981-82 

32 

Duke 

35 

Md. 

54 

South  Carolina 

57 

Md. 

28 

N.C.  State 

40 

1938-39 

1967-68 

1982-83 

Md. 

47 

Richmond 

32 

Md. 

54 

N.C.  State 

63 

Md. 

58 

Georgia  Tech  (ot 

64 

1939-40 

53 

27 

N.C.  State 
Clemson 

29 
39 

1968-69 

Md. 
1969-70 

71 

South  Carolina 

92 

1983-84 
Md. 

69 
66 

N.C.  State 
Wake  Forest 

63 

64 

Md. 

43 

Washington  &  Lee 
Duke 

30 

32 

44 

Md. 

57 

N.C.  State 

67 

74 

Duke 

62 

1940-41 

Did  not  enter 

1970-71 
Md. 

53 

South  Carolina 

71 

1941-42 

Did  not  enter 

1942-43 

Did  not  enter 

1943-44 

=* 

Md. 

23 

N.C.  State 

42 

1944-45 

Md. 

49 

Duke 

76 

1945-46 

™lfe     Sl^™ 

Md. 

27 

N.C.  State 

54 

_           ^^1 

1946-47 

I    Ik     -^H 

|  K  J| 

Md. 

43 

N.C.  State 

55 

m^^ 

(■T-^^J 

1947-48 

•      4to 

Md. 

51 

Davidson 

58 

t\~~^^^M(^ 

1948-49 

>  !^^ 

Md. 

61 

North  Carolina 

79 

Wr^ 

1949-50 

Did  not  enter 

fr  Ml  jF 

111  1 

__j  ■  1  r~ 

^ 

\4 

1950-51 

■■  ^^ 

Bfer 

E^~ 

^» 

Md. 

50 
45 

Clemson 
N.C.  State 

48 
54 

-44 — 

1951-52 

A  Kf,  7 

w     ■ 

Md. 

48 

Duke 

51 

—,f 

1952-53 

y^^^^B 

1      -mk 

l 

Md. 

74 
59 

Duke 

Wake  Forest 

65 
61 

WA 

fcv 

vm 

r 

56 


ALL  -  TIME  SCORERS 


Won  1     Lost  5     1918-19 


Maryland 
27       Galiaudet 

Catholic  University 
George  Washington 
Galiaudet 
Catholic  University 
George  Washington 


7 
II 

9 
12 
20 


26 
25 
25 
33 


No  Teams  for  1919-26  through  1922-23. 


5-7     1-2     1923-24 

Maryland 

41  George  Washington  22 

42  Galiaudet  28 
13  Catholic  30 
20  North  Carolina  26 

13  Virginia  26 
24  Richmond  22 

14  Catholic  20 
19  George  Washington  20 
22  Washington  &  Lee  21 
12  VM1  21 


•VMI 

•Georgia 

*S.C.  Tournameni 


12-5     3-1     1924-25 

Maryland 

24  Virginia 

24  Columbia 

21  Stevens  Institute 

16  Navy 

30  Lafayette 

18  Catholic 

21  Stevens  Institute 
16  North  Carolina 

25  Galiaudet 

16  Washington  College 

24  Princeton 

22  CCNY 

38  South  Carolina 

36  Virginia 

27  Catholic 


18 
23 
17 
23 
15 
14 
17 
21 
14 
27 
38 
16 
22 
25 


27  'Alabama 
16       *N.C.  State 

•S.C.  Tournament 

14-3     7-1     1925-26 

Maryland 

40  Washington  &  Lee 

21  Navy 

30  Richmond 

30  VM1 

33  Washington  &  Lee 

19  VP1 

40  Gallaudel 

30  Washington  College 

24  Stevens  Institute 
30  VPI 

28  Virginia 

23  North  Carolina 

25  Wesi  Virginia 

41  Duke 
30  Virginia 
32  Princeton 

19       Mississippi  Aggies 

10-10     6-4     1926-27 

Maryland 


21 
30 


21 
20 
17 
13 


16 

American 

21 

A 

44 

Washington  &  Lee- 

32 

H 

25 

Michigan 

39 

A 

17 

Virginia 

22 

A 

30 

Navy 

32 

A 

18 

Washington  College 

22 

H 

34 

Georgia 

33 

H 

39 

Gallaudel 

26 

H 

27 

Stevens  Institute 

18 

H 

28 

North  Carolina 

23 

H 

23 

North  Catolina 

32 

H 

26 

Pennsylvania 

21 

A 

32 

Washington  &  Lee 

34 

A 

32 

VMI 

15 

A 

29 

Virginia 

28 

H 

23 

N.C.  Stale 

38 

A 

16 

Washington  College 

21 

A 

32 

Western  Murvland 

25 

H 

23 

North  Carolina 

19 

A 

22 

•Georgia 

•S.C.  Tournament 

27 

14-4     8-1     1927-28 


38  Washington  &  Lee 

29  VPI 

31  Washington  &  Lee 

23  VMI 

45  Gallaudel 

37  Kentucky 

20  Johns  Hopkins 

25  St.  Johns  College 

26  Virginia 

31  Stevens  Institute 
26  Navy 

26  Pennsvlvania 

36  N.C.  State 

12  Virginia 

22  Washington  College 

23  Johns  Hopkins 

30  VPI 

30  Western  Maryland 

7-9     2-5     1928-29 

Maryland 

30  William  &  Mary 

18  Pennsylvania 

20  Randolph  Macon 

30  Virginia 

20  Johns  Hopkins 

20  Si.  Johns 

22  Virginia 

22  Washington  &  Lee 

29  VPI 

18  Washington  &  Lee 

30  VMI 

22  North  Carolina 

30  Navy 

32  Western  Maryland 

19  Johns  Hopkins 


35       'Mississippi 

•S.C.  Tournament 

16-6     9-5     1929-30 


27  William  &  Marv 

27  Duke 

37  Catholic 
54  Virginia 

41  Johns  Hopkins 

43  Navy 
41  VPI 

26  N.C.  State 

25  Washington  &  Lee 

38  Western  Maryland 
36  North  Carolina 

34  VPI 

44  VMI 

21  Washington  &  Lee 

51  Virginia 

21  N.C.  Slate 

22  North  Carolina 
24  Duke 

39  Johns  Hopkins 
39  VMI 

41  St.  Johns 

21  •Kentucky 

•S.C.  Tournament 

18-4     8-1     1930-31 


Marv 
38 
38 
36 
32 
30 
33 
44 


land 
Galiaudet 
VMI 

Washington  &  Lee 
Duke 
Loyola 

Johns  Hopkins 
VMI 
VPI 

Virginia 

Washington  &  Lee 
Catholic 
North  Carolina 
Washington  College 
Virginia 

Western  Maryland 
St.  Johns 
Navy 
Johns  Hopkins 

•LSU 

•North  Carolina 
•Georgia 
•Kentucky 
•S.C.  Tournameni 
(Championsi 


22 
20 
24 
35 
30 
24 
34 
20 
19 


20 

H 

30 

A 

33 

H 

22 

A 

30 

H 

18 

H 

25 

H 

47 

H 

39 

A 

42 

A 

27 

A 

28 

H 

27 

A 

17 

H 

18 

A 

20 

H 

24 

H 

39 

A 

29 

H 

28 

H 

29 

H 

17 

H 

24 

H 

16-4     8-2     1931-32 


Maryland 

30  " 

Wisconsin 

32 

A 

27 

Loyola 

28 

H 

42 

Washington  &  Lee 

38 

A 

43 

VMI 

28 

A 

26 

Navy 

15 

H 

36 

Virginia 

31 

A 

33 

Johns  Hopkins 

26 

A 

38 

VMI 

20 

H 

51 

VPI 

16 

H 

39 

Catholic 

34 

H 

26 

North  Carolina 

25 

H 

36 

Washington  College 

16 

H 

35 

Western  Maryland 

15 

H 

46 

Virginia 

18 

H 

49 

Washington  &  Lee 

19 

H 

24 

St.  Johns 

20 

H 

26 

North  Carolina 

32 

A 

20 

Duke 

IS 

A 

38 

Johns  Hopkins 

24 

H 

24 

•Florida 

•S.C.  Tournameni 

39 

11-9     7-3     1932-33 

Mary 

land 

13  ' 

Wisconsin 

22 

H 

40 

VPI 

20 

A 

30 

Duke 

28 

H 

29 

VMI 

30 

A 

40 

Washington  &  Lee 

43 

A 

27 

Johns  Hopkins 

37 

A 

37 

VPI 

21 

H 

27 

Catholic 

29 

A 

21 

Navy 

59 

A 

19 

Virginia 

26 

A 

42 

North  Carolina 

29 

H 

36 

Georgia 

40 

H 

35 

Washington  College 

27 

H 

37 

Virginia 

28 

H 

46 

Washington  &  Lee 

28 

H 

45 

VMI 

29 

H 

34 

St.  Johns 

22 

H 

37 

Western  Maryland 

32 

H 

35 

Johns  Hopkins 

31 

H 

28 

•Soulh  Carolina 
•S.C.  Tournament 

65 

11-8     6-1     1933-34 

Mary 

land 

29 

Michigan 

25 

H 

17 

Indiana 

30 

H 

24 

West  Virginia 

26 

A 

37 

Duke 

33 

H 

29 

VPI 

24 

A 

34 

VPI 

32 

H 

32 

Johns  Hopkins 

37 

A 

43 

Virginia 

20 

A 

24 

North  Carolina 

28 

H 

33 

Catholic 

25 

H 

27 

Navy 

46 

A 

28 

Virginia 

25 

H 

33 

Richmond 

44 

H 

49 

Western  Maryland 

33 

H 

36 

VMI 

27 

H 

32 

St.  Johns 

37 

H 

44 

Washington  College 

33 

H 

32 

Johns  Hopkins 

19 

H 

37 

•Washington  &  Lee 
•S.C.  Tournameni 

45 

8-10     4-5     1934-35 

Mary 

land 

25 

Indiana 

30 

H 

50 

Ohio  Stale 

41 

H 

29 

West  Virginia 

39 

H 

35 

South  Carolina 

21 

H 

39 

VMI 

24 

H 

39 

Duke 

48 

II 

43 

Washington  College 

27 

H 

31 

North  Carolina 

39 

H 

36 

Nav) 

43 

44 

Viremia 

24 

II 

26 

Richmond 

56 

H 

29 

Catholic 

45 

29 

Washington  &  Lee 

33 

II 

33 

\  irginia 

32 

41 

Johns  Hopkins 

35 

17 

Si.  Johns 

24 

H 

52 

Johns  Hopkins 

25 

II 

24 

Georgetown 

25 

II 

14-6     3-3     1935-36 


Maryland 

44 

VMI 

29 

H 

27 

Washington  &  Lee 

30 

A 

53 

\  Ml 

32 

A 

32 

Nji  \ 

20 

\ 

28 

Richmond 

24 

H 

55 

Baltimore 

33 

H 

46 

Washington  College 

34 

H 

32 

Norlh  Carolina 

44 

H 

41 

William  ei  Marv 

39 

H 

38 

Duke 

34 

H 

40 

Virginia 

34 

H 

26 

West  Virginia 

51 

A 

54 

Washington  &  Lee 

55 

H 

40 

St.  Johns 

28 

H 

29 

Catholic 

40 

H 

56 

Washington  College 

30 

A 

45 

Johns  Hopkins 

40 

H 

47 

Georgetown 

39 

A 

47 

'Duke 

35 

32 

•Washington  &  Lee 
•S.C.  Tournament 

38 

9-11     4-8     1936-37 

Mary 

and 

40 

Richmond 

51 

A 

54 

Johns  Hopkins 

3 1 

H 

21 

Washington  &  Lee 

51 

A 

48 

VMI 

28 

A 

48 

Western  Maryland 

36 

H 

31 

Duke 

34 

A 

41 

Washington  College 

20 

H 

SI 

Virginia 

23 

H 

SS 

N.C.  Slale 

35 

A 

24 

Norlh  Carolina 

41 

A 

30 

Duke 

34 

A 

St 

Navy 

53 

A 

35 

Norlh  Carolina 

44 

H 

41 

William  &  Mary 

29 

H 

45 

VMI 

28 

H 

35 

Washington  &  Lee 

41 

H 

27 

Georgetown 

39 

H 

SI 

St.  Johns 

39 

A 

41 

N.C.  State 

35 

H 

35 

•N.C.  Stale 
•S-C.  Tournameni 

42 

LOl'IS"Bozie"BERGER 

Maryland's  First  All-America 

BaskctbaLL  Player 

1931  and  1932 

Played  Pro  Basketball 

with  Clevelend 


57 


15-9     7-4     1937-38 

Maryland 

26  Richmond 

26  Michigan 
50  Baltimore 

43  Randolph  Macon 

29  Washington  &  Lee 

42  VM1 

39  Georgetown 

40  Duke 

24  North  Carolina 

34  Duke 

42  VP1 
34  Navy 

27  NYU 

36  Washington  &  Lee 
45  William  &  Mary 

43  VMI 

49  Catholic 

43  Washington  College 

39  Virginia 
57  Dickinson 

56  Johns  Hopkins 

38  St.  Johns 

45  'Citadel 

32  'Duke 

•S.C.  Tournament 

15-9     8-3     1938-39 

Maryland 

34  Richmond 

45  Clemson 

44  Davidson 

24  Pennsylvania 

25  Army 

37  Navy 
37  Duke 

34  North  Carolina 

34  Hampden-Sydney 

31  Virginia 

60  Duke 

66  North  Carolina 

40  N.C.  State 
25  Georgetown 

39  Washington  &  Lee 
49  William  &  Mary 
48  St.  Johns 

53  VMI 

40  Catholic 

24  George  Washington 

47  Washington  College 

47  'Richmond 

53  *N.C.  Slate 

27  *Clemson 

•S.C.  Tournament 

14-9     7-4     1939-40 


Maryl, 
48 
47 
53 
34 
51 
53 
32 
35 
28 
49 
25 
43 
30 
30 
37 
49 
60 
19 
46 


43 
32 


ind 

Western  Maryland 

Randolph  Macon 

Clemson 

Pennsylvania 

Rutgers 

Rhode  Island  Stale 

Duke 

Richmond 

Georgetown 

VPI 

Washington  &  Lee 

N.C.  State 

Clemson 

South  Carolina 

Duke 

Johns  Hopkins 

VMI 

Washington  &  Lee 

Catholic 

VMI 

George  Washington 

•Washington  &  Lee 

•Duke 

•S.C.  Tournament 


Maryland 
36       Richmond 

Johns  Hopkins 

Clemson 

Pennsylvania 

Duke" 

Washington  &  Lee 

VMI 

Georgetown 

North  Carolina 

Richmond 

Duke 

North  Carolina 

Navy 

Virginia 

Washington  &  Lee 

George  Washington 

William  &  Mary 

Connecticut 

Rutgers 

VMI 

VPI 

Washington  College 


24 
34 
32 
26 
41 
30 
34 
36 
17 
17 
29 
27 
18 
15 
28 
40 
43 
45 
27 
39 
26 


31 

H 

33 

H 

32 

A 

27 

H 

31 

A 

27 

A 

57 

A 

35 

H 

43 

A 

44 

A 

35 

H 

37 

A 

42 

H 

32 

H 

38 

H 

33 

H 

33 

H 

42 

A 

23 

A 

27 

H 

30 

H 

29 

H 

43 

35 

41 

A 

35 

H 

27 

H 

36 

A 

45 

A 

47 

A 

34 

H 

32 

H 

25 

H 

21 

H 

44 

A 

41 

A 

46 

A 

39 

H 

37 

H 

57 

H 

20 

A 

35 

H 

38 

A 

37 

A 

37 

H 

32 

29 

39 

32 

H 

16 

H 

26 

H 

41 

A 

39 

A 

59 

A 

30 

H 

19 

H 

27 

A 

41 

H 

44 

H 

36 

A 

48 

A 

33 

A 

48 

A 

36 

H 

33 

A 

39 

A 

31 

H 

25 

H 

44 

H 

1-21     0-13     1940-41 


48 

H 

38 

A 

48 

H 

43 

A 

40 

H 

59 

A 

64 

A 

51 

A 

55 

H 

38 

A 

43 

A 

44 

A 

52 

A 

47 

A 

42 

H 

61 

A 

58 

H 

52 

H 

50 

H 

7-15     3-8     1941-42 


Maryland 

41 

Richmond 

34 

William  &  Mary 

36 

West  Virginia 

15 

Scion  Hall 

40 

CCNY 

48 

St.  Johns  (NY) 

35 

Virginia 

33 

Duke 

28 

Washington  College 

51 

Georgetown 

29 

George  Washington 

36 

Virginia 

41 

VMI 

44 

Washington  &  Lee 

28 

Washington  &  Lee- 

47 

Navy 

42 

William  &  Marv 

27 

West  Virginia 

32 

Army 

30 

North  Carolina 

46 

Duke 

39 

VMI 

8-8 

5-5     1942-4 

Marv 

and 

32 

Richmond 

47 

North  Carolina 

53 

Virginia 

49 

Pennsylvania 

40 

Washington  &  Lee 

34 

VMI 

43 

George  Washington 

63 

Navy 

40 

Army 

43 

Duke 

55 

Washington  &  Lee 

56 

Virginia 

40 

North  Carolina 

36 

Georgetown 

51 

William  &  Mary 

35 

VMI 

4-13     2-1     1943-44 

Maryland 


23  *N.C.  State 
•S.C.  Tournament 

2-14     2-5     1944-45 

Maryland 
26       Gallaudel 
28       North  Carolina 

24  Duke 

32  N.C.  Stale 

33  Navy 
46  VMI 

34  Marine  Corps  Inst. 
42  N.C.  State 

42       Hampden-Sydney 

26  Virginia 

27  VMI 

33  Virginia 

53       William  &  Mary 
41       Merchant  Marine 

34  Army 


49 


•Duke 

•S.C.  Tournament 


9-12     5-5     1945-46 


Mary 

61 
43 
47 
25 
47 
28 
35 
37 
45 
43 
35 


land 
Marine  Corps  Inst. 
Marshall 

Quantico  Marines 
Duke 
N.C.  State 
North  Carolina 
Navy 

N.C.  State 
Virginia 
Duke 

Hampden-Sydney 
George  Washington 
North  Carolina 
Virginia 

Merchant  Marine 
Richmond 
William  &  Mary 
West  Virginia 
Army 
Merchant  Marine 


23 

A 

39 

A 

63 

A 

59 

A 

57 

A 

64 

A 

34 

A 

37 

A 

25 

H 

42 

A 

47 

H 

26 

H 

46 

A 

52 

A 

30 

H 

61 

A 

32 

H 

41 

H 

44 

A 

34 

H 

64 

H 

36 

H 

28 

H 

40 

H 

49 

H 

51 

A 

50 

A 

35 

A 

48 

A 

54 

A 

44 

A 

46 

H 

35 

H 

42 

A 

31 

A 

46 

H 

36 

H 

36 

H 

33 

Quantico  Marines 

59 

H 

39 

Marshall 

46 

H 

20 

Bainbridge  Navy 

52 

H 

20 

Virginia 

52 

A 

43 

VMI 

36 

H 

43 

Hampden-Svdney 

51 

H 

25 

Bainbridge  Navy 

78 

A 

29 

Fort  Belvoir 

60 

H 

33 

Catholic 

31 

H 

26 

Virginia 

49 

H 

33 

Catholic 

53 

A 

34 

Richmond 

65 

A 

48 

Woodrow  Gen.  Hosp. 

26 

H 

25 

Woodrow  Gen.  Hosp. 

35 

A 

31 

VMI 

29 

A 

35 

Navy 

69 

A 

22 

Army 

85 

A 

27 

H 

53 

A 

51 

A 

46 

A 

70 

A 

28 

H 

50 

H 

57 

H 

43 

H 

57 

A 

35 

A 

61 

H 

46 

A 

54 

A 

54 

A 

50 
50 
59 
39 
64 


38 

H 

32 

H 

35 

H 

33 

H 

36 

H 

39 

H 

31 

H 

42 

A 

35 

H 

52 

A 

48 

A 

27  'N.C.  Stale 

*S.C.  Tournament 

14-10     9-4     1946-47 

Maryland 

43  West  Virginia 

49  Western  Maryland 

41  Johns  Hopkins 

62  Quantico  Marines 

42  North  Carolina 

39  Richmond 

44  George  Washington 
65  Washington  &  Lee 
57  VPI 

61  VMI 

61  North  Carolina 

27  Navy 

59  Washington  &  Lee 

55  Georgetown 

48  George  Washington 

49  Richmond 
55  VPI 

38  Duke 

47  Kings  Point 

57  Army 

52  Citadel 

53  VMI 

54  Pennsylvania 

43  'N.C.  State 
"S.C.  Tournament 

11-14     9-7     1947-48 

Maryland 

63  Western  Maryland 

52  Loyola 
59  Davidson 

64  Washington  &  Lee 

53  VMI 

64  Johns  Hopkins 

46  Norlh  Carolina 
42  Duke 

40  Georgetown 
49  Clemson 

44  Virginia 

47  Navy 

68  South  Carolina 

63  VMI 

44  Army 


36 

H 

48 

A 

58 

A 

41 

H 

43 

H 

60 

A 

49 

A 

50 

A 

57 

H 

55 

A 

50 

H 

49 

H 

63 

H 

68 

A 

42 

H 

40 

H 

73 

A 

54 

A 

40 

H 

45 

H 

80 

A 

58 

H 

63 

H 

58 

A 

70 

A 

46 

A 

53 

A 

70 

A 

53 

A 

52 

H 

42 

A 

64 

A 

51 

H 

54 

H 

48 

A 

48 

64 

Washington  &  Lee 

49 

George  Washington 

47 

North  Carolina 

56 

Virginia 

60 

Richmond 

54 

South  Carolina 

63 

Clemson 

62 

Richmond 

35 

George  Washington 

51 

•Davidson 

•S.C.  Tournament 

9-18     8-7     1948- 

Mar\ 

and 

49 

Temple 

60 

VPI 

75 

Lovola  (Baltimore) 

45 

Richmond 

47 

Virginia 

74 

Clemson 

47 

North  Carolina 

49 

Davidson 

43 

Virginia 

51 

Georgetown 

6/ 

Pennsylvania 

46 

Navy 

54 

George  Washington 

43 

Miami  (Ohio) 

48 

Miami  (Ohio) 

33 

Cincinnati 

53 

VMI 

66 

Washington  &  Lee 

79 

South  Carolina 

42 

Norlh  Carolina 

52 

Georgetown 

57 

South  Carolina 

49 

Clemson 

66 

Richmond 

42 

George  Washington 

70 

VMI 

38 

H 

65 

A 

51 

H 

68 

H 

53 

H 

53 

A 

61 

A 

64 

A 

59 

H 

58 

67 

A 

51 

H 

77 

A 

54 

H 

53 

H 

50 

H 

55 

A 

52 

A 

79 

A 

53 

A 

81 

A 

52 

A 

66 

H 

42 

A 

58 

A 

70 

A 

45 

A 

60 

A 

49 

H 

66 

H 

56 

H 

56 

A 

68 

A 

51 

A 

Gene  Shue 

All  American 

1953-54 


61       'North  Carolina 
•S.C.  Tournament 

7-18     5-13     1949-50 

Maryland 


57 

VPI 

40 

Tennessee 

56 

Virginia 

65 

Washington  &  Lee 

52 

Pennsylvania 

55 

Clemson 

62 

Navy 

71 

Ohio  Wesleyan 

53 

North  Carolina 

46 

Duke 

71 

Georgetown 

52 

William  &  Mary 

49 

Richmond 

51 

George  Washington 

56 

William  &  Mary 

65 

VMI 

56 

North  Carolina 

61 

VMI 

67 

Duke 

56 

South  Carolina 

70 

Virginia 

64 

Davidson 

67 

Richmond 

44 

South  Carolina 

68 

Clemson 

16- 

11      11-8     19 

Maryland 

59  " 

Virginia 

65 

Pennsylvania 

48 

William  &  Mary 

46 

Virginia 

52 

Washington  &  Lee 

51 

Rutgers 

67 

North  Carolina 

48 

Richmond 

47 

N  a\  v 

58 

Georgetown 

57 

VPI 

56 

North  Carolina 

57 

Davidson 

43 

South  Carolina 

44 

Clemson 

65 

Washington  &  Lee 

46 

VMI 

47 

South  Carolina 

64 

West  Virginia 

40 

Duke 

50 

William  &  Mary 

54 

Clemson 

42 

Richmond 

47 

George  Washington 

65 

VMI 

63 

A 

61 

A 

66 

A 

46 

H 

54 

A 

60 

H 

75 

A 

75 

H 

55 

A 

58 

A 

65 

A 

56 

H 

59 

A 

72 

H 

64 

A 

53 

H 

69 

H 

62 

A 

57 

H 

61 

H 

52 

H 

61 

H 

48 

H 

59 

A 

70 

A 

43 

H 

45 

H 

59 

A 

42 

A 

51 

A 

47 

H 

66 

H 

55 

H 

55 

A 

70 

A 

50 

A 

83 

A 

50       'Clemson 
45       *N.C.  Slate 

*S.C.  Tournament 


49 

H 

55 

A 

50 

H 

33 

H 

67 

A 

46 

H 

48 

54 

58 


13-9     9-5     1951-52 

23-7     7-2     1953-54 

60       South  Carolina 

68 

A 

64       Minnesota 

53       A 

62       Duke 

51 

H 

78       Georgetown 

67       A 

Man 

land 

Maryland 

68        George  Washington 

48 

A 

60       Wake  Forest 

72       H 

59  " 

Virginia 

42 

A 

53       South  Carolina 

49 

A 

66       South  Carolina 

59 

H 

57       North  Carolina 

SI       A 

71 

Washington  &  Lee 

51 

H 

81       Clemson 

41 

A 

82       Georgetown 

69 

H 

67       N.C.  State 

75       A 

52 

Pennsylvania 

53 

A 

54       Wake  Forest 

71 

A 

79       N.C.  State 

66 

H 

84       Wyoming 

77        \ 

54 

William  &  Mary 

53 

H 

69       William  &  Mary 

54 

A 

60       Duke 

72 

A 

72       South  Carolina 

58      H 

.16 

West  Virginia 

.19 

A 

71        West  Virginia 

87 

A 

84       George  Washington 

67 

H 

55       Georgetown 

47       H 

57 

VMI 

39 

A 

60        VP] 

52 

H 

61        North  Carolina 

65 

H 

62       Duke 

"0       A 

51 

Washington  &  Lee 

43 

\ 

79       South  Carolina 

48 

H 

85       Virginia 

64 

H 

52       North  Carolina 

58       H 

47 

North  Carolina 

51 

A 

65        Arizona  State 

50 

A 

56       N.C.  Slate 

49 

A 

63       Nas\ 

62       H 

48 

N'av  y 

45 

A 

66        Evansville 

58 

A 

58       Wake  Forest 

62 

A 

75       N.C  Slate 

-"        \ 

6.1 

Virginia 

53 

H 

54       Ky.  Weslcyan 

37 

A 

55       Navy 

56 

A 

56       North  Carolina 

63         \ 

55 

Georgetown 

40 

H 

72        Richmond 

64 

A 

74       Clemson 

65 

H 

69       Wake  Forest 

78       -\ 

55 

Rutgers 

61 

•\ 

70       Virginia 

64 

H 

62       Georgetown 

59 

A 

59       Clemson 

76      \ 

71 

North  Carolina 

51 

H 

75       Clemson 

54 

H 

71       Virginia 

68 

ACC 

61       South  Carolina 

64      A 

64 

VMI 

46 

II 

56       Georgetown 

58 

A 

64       South  Carolina 

74 

ACC 

66       N.C.  State 

83       A 

55 

Richmond 

45 

H 

71       Richmond 

73 

H 

76       Duke 

71       H 

66 

William  &  Mary 

71 

A 

68       George  Washington 

61 

H 

22-7     9-5     1957-58 

44       George  Washington 

63       A 

51 

Duke 

56 

A 

70       Virginia 

56 

A 

77        Virginia 

62      H 

61 

Georgetown 

71 

A 

61        Tampa 

51 

A 

Maryland 

82       Clemson 

80      H 

54 

Richmond 

50 

A 

63       Miami  (Fla.) 

57 

A 

64       George  Washington 

55 

H 

56 

George  Washington 

57 

H 

51       Washington*  Lee 

25 

A 

61        Fordham 

58 

A 

91       Clemson 

75    ACC 

71 

Davidson 

48 

II 

54        VPI 

41 

A 

7|        Kentucky 

62 

H 

76      Wake  Forest 

98   ACC 

76       Washington  &  Lee 

43 

H 

72       Wake  Forest 

58 

H 

48 

•Duke 

51 

61       Navv 

60 

A 

88       Navv 

58 

H 

8-17     3-11     1961-62 

*S.C.  Tournament 

74       Wake  Forest 

53 

H 

71       Vanderbilt 

56 

A 

15-8     12-3     1952-53 

61       Duke 

53        Georgetown 

68 
50 

H 
H 

46        Memphis  State 
72       South  Carolina 

47 
59 

A 
A 

Maryland 

65       Pcnn  Slate 

71       A 

Mary 

land 

61 

H 

57       George  Washington 
74       William*  Mary 

70 
55 

A 
H 

66       Clemson 
74       Duke 

73 
49 

A 
H 

78       Georgetown 
68       N.C.  State 

"9       H 
73       H 

71 

Virginia 

74       North  Carolina 

61 

H 

75       Minnesota 

69      H 

64 
5.1 

William  &  Mary 
Pennsylvania 

61 

70 
45 
37 
40 

H 

A 
H 
A 
A 

75       Clemson 
56       Wake  Forest 

59 
64 

ACC 
ACC 

55        Georgetown 
48       N.C.  State 

45 

57 

A 
H 

79       Wake  Forest 
91        Virginia 

62      H 
70      A 

52 
54 
58 

West  Virginia 

VMI 

Washington  *  Lee 

67       William*  Mary 
67       George  Washington 
63       North  Carolina 

62 
73' 
61 

A 
H 
H 

64       Navy 

87       Virginia 

74       Wake  Forest 

51 
66 
67 

A 
A 
A 

62       Mississippi  State 

64       Louisville 

67       George  Washington 

64        \ 
83       A 
56      A 

49 

North  Carolina 
Virginia 

Richmond 

59 
56 

60 

A 
A 
A 
H 
H 

68       Clemson 

66 

H 

72        Clemson 

54 

H 

77       South  Carolina 

86      H 

59 

6.1 

58       N.C.  State 
71       Wake  Forest 

78 
75 

A 
A 

64       N.C.  State 
69       Virginia 

69 
56 

A 
H 

83       Georgetown 
68       Duke 

70      A 
84      A 

45 
65 

Georgetown 
VPI 

54 
46 

57       Georgetown 

48 

A 

59       Duke 

59       North  Carolina 

68 
66 

A 
A 

81       George  Washington 
61       N.C.  State 

67  H 

68  A 

68 
62 

North  Carolina 
George  Washington 

66 
63 

H 
A 

67        Virginia 

68 

ACC 

56       Georgetown 

99        South  Carolina 

46 
59 

H 
H 

71        Miami  (Fla.) 
58        Navy 

68      A 

67       A 

70 

VPI 

56 

A 

17-7     10-4     1954-55 

79       North  Carolina 

62      H 

46 

Richmond 

49 

H 

70  Virginia 

71  Duke 

66 

ACC 

68       South  Carolina 

85      A 

67 

VMI 

41 

H 

Maryland 

65 

ACC 

61        Clemson 

73      A 

87 

Washington  &  Lee 

56 

II 

60       Georgetown 

43 

H 

86       North  Carolina 

74 

ACC 

53       Duke 

79      H 

79 

Wilham  &  Man, 

57 

A 

49        Duke 

47 

H 

86       Boston  College 
67       Temple 
59        Manhattan 

63  NCAA 

78       W'ake  Forest 

81      A 

48 

Georgetown 

49 

A 

58       Wake  Forest 

62 

H 

7 1  NCAA 

67       North  Carolina 

70       A 

47 

Vi\  \ 

51 

A 

72        Virginia 

69 

A 

55  NCAA 

68       Virginia 

72       H 

66 

George  Washington 

53 

II 

61        Duke 

68 

A 

68       Clemson 

75      H 

70       North  Carolina 

60 

A 

10-13     7-7     1958-59 

74 

•Duke 

65 

58       Texas  Tech 

54 

A 

58       Duke 

71    ACC 

59 

•Wake  Forest 
•S.C.  Tournament 

61 

83       Rhode  Island 

78       Cincinnati 

66 
61 

A 
A 

Maryland 
53  '    N.C,  State 

55 

H 

8-13     4-10     1962-63 

68        South  Carolina 

51 

H 

62       Northwestern 

66 

A 

Maryland 
61        Pcnn  State 

78        Virginia 

65 

H 

63        Virginia 

56 

H 

62      H 

71       Clemson 

63 

A 

56       Kentucky 

58 

A 

70       Georgetown 

56       Duke 

74       N.C.  State 

79       A 

68       South  Carolina 

52 

A 

50       Navy 

53 

H 

92       A 
76      H 

68       N.C.  State 

64 

H 

68       W'ake  Forest 

65 

H 

53       George  Washington 
60        Navy 

75 
54 

A 
A 

45       Mississippi  State 
54       Loyola 

56 
50 

A 
A 

67       Virginia 

74       Wake  Forest 

61       A 
85       H 

67       William*  Mary 

62 

A 

64       Duke 

31 

H 

68       South  Carolina 

63      H 

67       George  Washington 

73 

H 

59       South  Carolina 

41 

A 

74       George  Washington 

72      H 

63        North  Carolina 

61 

H 

46       Clemson 

55 

A 

67       Navv 

61       H 

68       Clemson 

66 

H 

61       Georgetown 

53 

H 

56       North  Carolina 

78      H 

Hv      ^*fl 

58       N.C.  State 

78 

A 

69       Duke 

78 

A 

59       N.C.  State 

79       A 

71        Wake  Forest 

75 

A 

57       North  Carolina 

64 

A 

68       George  Washington 
73       Georgetown 
68       North  Carolina 

67       A 

W     m    jH 

57       Georgetown 

48 

A 

53        Wake  Forest 

56 

A 

72       H 

V   JImP 

65       George  Washington 

66 

H 

82      A 

67        Virginia 

68 

ACC 

37        N.C.  State 

53 

A 

60       Clemson 

62      A 

14-10     7-7     1955-56 

77       Clemson 
50       Virginia 

58 

62 

H 

A 

51       South  Carolina 
54       Wake  Forest 

44        \ 
75       A 

"^aflfl 

Marvland 

69       North  Carolina 

51 

H 

69       Virginia 

71       H 

"\     *• 

67        Virginia 

52       William  &  Mary 

55 
51 

H 

H 

67       Georgetown 
75       South  Carolina 

56 
45 

A 
H 

70       Duke 

69       Clemson 

76      H 

67       H 

61       Wake  Forest 
61        Kentucky 

51 
62 

II 
II 

65        Virginia 

66 

ACC 

41       Wake  Forest 

80  ACC 

-  ^  J^B 

62       North  Carolina 
75       Michigan  State 

68 
95 

II 
H 

15-8     9-5     1959-60 

9-17     5-9     1963-64 

75       St.  Francis 

66 

H 

Maryland 

Maryland 
68       Virginia 
72       Georgetown 

76       South  Carolina 

57 

11 

64       George  Washington 

57 

A 

58      H 

r^5\y^.  l^B 

62       George  Washington 

48 

II 

70      Virginia 

62 

H 

83          \ 

71       Clemson 

6.1 

A 

59       Georgetown 

48 

H 

62        Penn  State 

11           \ 

^iSS^^^-  ^B 

59        South  Carolina 

53 

A 

47        Wake  Forest 

54 

H 

"2        \  C    State 

62      H 

J        ~~  ~~ 

64       N.C.  State 

7.1 

H 

6.1       Indiana 

72 

■\ 

74       West  Virginia 
56       Clemson 

72      H 

62       Duke 

76 

A 

76       Fordham 

54 

\ 

48      11 

55       North  Carolina 

64 

A 

10.1       Yale 

80 

H 

59      Tennessee 

•o      \ 

62       Georgetown 

57 

•\ 

85        South  Carolina 

52 

H 

75      1st 

65          \ 

80       Navy 

61 

II 

5 1       Gcorgctov.  n 

66 

A 

54       \rizona 

5'       \ 

70        Duke 

82 

H 

56       Duke 

48 

\ 

82      Columbia 

"6          \ 

67       George  Washington 

46 

A 

63        N.C.  Stale 

53 

II 

6°       South  Carolina 

->     II 

r                I 

81       Clemson 

69 

II 

51       N.ov 

50 

\ 

55       \.iu 

OS        \ 

S 

71       N  C.Statc 

62 

A 

66        North  Carolina 

75 

II 

88      North  Carolina 

■J-        \ 

I^^^^^^B 

60       Wake  Forest 

76 

\ 

64      Wake  Forest 

65 

\ 

65        \l     Mate 

66       \ 

r^^^^^H 

60       Virginia 

73 

\ 

44       Virginia 

43 

\ 

91      Wake  Form 

-.:     \ 

72       Georgetown 

61 

II 

46      N  (.    State 
70       Clemson 

48 
S5 

\ 
H 

80     George  Washington 
67      \\  esl  \  irgtnia 

76       \ 

91          \ 

69       Duke 

94 

ACC 

71        Duke 

hi 

II 

72        Duke 

104      II 

16-10     9-5     1956-57 

86      George  Washington 
64       North  Carolina 

84 

81 

II 

Wake  l  oresi 
"4       North  Carolina 

-•>      II 
64      II 

r,   ; 

,    •-" 

Maryland 
67       Virginia 

6.1 

\ 

67        Clemson 

~2       Soulh  Carolina 

59 
55 

\ 
\ 

73       Virginia 

63        Duke 

s4         \ 

^ 

62        Fordham 
59        Wake  Forest 

68 
53 

II 
II 

58         N  1      Mate 

"4 

U  I 

78      Georgetown 

6S       Clemson 

81        II 

55       Kentucky 

61       North  Carolina 

76 
70 

\ 
A 

14-12     6-8     1960-61 

64      South  Carolina 

-4         \ 

Tom  McMillen 

89       Montana  State 

72 

A 

Maryland 

67       Clemson 

SI      U  t 

1972,  73,  74 

43      New  Mexico  A  &  \l 

45 

A 

m      Pcnn  Stale 

47 

II 

43       Virginia 

39 

A 

57       Virj i 

52 

\ 

59       Clemson 

52 

A 

80      George  Washington 

OS 

II 

59 


18-8     10-4     1964-65 

11-14     5-9     1966-67 

83 
76 

North  Carolina 
Duke 

90      A 

87      A 

23-7     7-5     1972-73 

Maryland 

Maryland 

103 

Clemson 

85      H 

Maryland 

72       Penn  Stale 

71 

H 

76       Penn  State 

53 

H 

78 

West  Virginia 

83      A 

127" 

Brown 

82      H 

82       George  Washington 

80 

H 

54       N.C.  State 

38 

A 

79 

Virginia     (W) 

71      H 

82 

Richmond 

50      A 

59       Virainia 

61 

A 

63       South  Carolina 

65 

H 

107 

Canisius 

80      A 

62       N.C.  State 

63 

H 

85       Virginia 

65 

A 

57 

N.C.  Stale 

67  ACC 

99 

Georgetown 

73      A 

73       West  Virginia 

SO 

H 

50       Oklahoma  Stale 

49 

A 

88 

George  Washington 

79      H 

82       Wake  Forest 

64 

H 

53       Memphis  State 

55 

A 

14-12 

90 

Georgia  Tech 

55      H 

61       Kansas 

63 

H 

59       Wake  Forest 

68 

H 

90 

Syracuse 

76      H 

66      Tulsa 

59 

A 

66       Davidson 

65 

A 

Man 

land 

76 

Kent  Slate 

58      H 

73       Miami  (Pa.) 

80 

A 

57       Armv 

54 

A 

86 

Delaware 

73      H 

79 

Clemson 

75      A 

76       North  Carolina 

68 

H 

60       N.C.'State 

55 

H 

109 

Buffalo 

70      H 

93 

Virginia     (W) 

^4      H 

67      Clemson 

65 

A 

82       West  Virginia 

81 

A 

85 

Lehigh 

66      H 

85 

N.C.  Slate     (L) 

87      H 

75       South  Carolina 

70 

A 

69       Duke 

72 

H 

72 

Wake  Forest 

71      H 

76 

Navy 

67      A 

77       Naw 

58 

H 

68       Clemson 

48 

H 

70 

South  Carolina 

96      A 

105 

Wake  Foresi 

76      H 

93       Wake  Forest 

85 

A 

58       West  Virginia 

61 

H 

79 

Georgetown 

96      A 

100 

Long  Island 

73      H 

67       N.C  State 

73 

A 

53       South  Carolina 

80 

A 

80 

Tampa 

72      H 

94 

Nonh  Carolina 

88     H 

91       North  Carolina 

80 

A 

North  Carolina 

85 

A 

111 

Miami  (Pa.) 

77      H 

78 

N.C.  State     (L) 

89     A 

64       Duke 

82 

A 

78       George  Washington 

52 

H 

99 

Richmond 

67      H 

SI 

Duke 

85     A 

86       West  Virginia 

78 

A 

49       Georgetown 

80 

A 

SI 

N.C.  Stale     (Li 

83      H 

83 

Fordham 

72      A 

85       Georgetown 

67 

A 

87        Virginia 

76 

H 

31 

South  Carolina 

30      H 

93 

Buffalo 

64      H 

52       Virginia 

47 

H 

65        Nav  J 

66 

A 

56 

Clemson 

52      H 

85 

Nonh  Carolina 

95      A 

70       Navy 

57 

A 

58       Duke 

81 

A 

69 

George  Washington 

67      H 

69 

Clemson 

66      H 

85       Duke 

82 

H 

78       North  Carolina 

79 

H 

88 

Loyola  (Md.) 

69      A 

81 

Duquesne 

71      A 

88       Clemson 

71 

H 

61       Clemson 

65 

A 

70 

North  Carolina 

105      A 

96 

Duke 

68      H 

73       South  Carolina 

59 

H 

64       Wake  Forest 

78 

A 

61 

N.C.  State     (L) 

71       A 

60 

Wake  Foresi 

62      A 

88 

Duke 

79      A 

92 

Virginia     (W  i 

81      A 

61       Clemson 

50 

ACC 

54       South  Carolina 

57 

ACC 

63 

Virginia     (L) 

78      A 

77 

Clemson 

61    ACC 

67       N.C.  State 

76 

ACC 

67 

Duke 

70      H 

73 

Wake  Forest 

65  ACC 

8-16     4-10     1967-68 

76 

North  Carolina 

100      H 

74 

N.C.  Slate 

76   ACC 

14-11     7-7     1965-66 

Maryland 

56 

Seton  Hall 

55      A 

91 

Syracuse 

75  NCAA 

45 

Clemson 

51       A 

S9 

Providence 

103  NCAA 

Man.  land 

71       Penn  State 

76 

A 

81 

West  Virginia 

83     H 

61       Penn  State 

65 

A 

84       George  Washington 

53 

A 

66 

Wake  Forest 

72      A 

87       Wake  Forest 

66 

H 

62       N.C.  State 

75 

H 

89 

Virginia     (W) 

84      H 

23-5 

59       N.C.  State 

48 

H 

66       South  Carolina 

65 

H 

62       Kansas 

71 

A 

60       Wake  Forest 

73 

A 

63 

South  Carolina 

71    ACC 

Marvianu 
64       '""'  A 

65      A 
57      H 
83      H 

63       Kansas  State 
77       Georgetown 

74       West  Virginia 

57 
59 

76 

A 
H 
A 

53       Texas  El  Paso 
72      Southern  Illinois 
59       South  Carolina 

70 
73 
68 

A 
A 
A 

27-5     8-4     1971-72 

106 
115 

Eastern  Kentucky 
Georgetown 

69       Houston 

68 

A 

52       N.C.  State 

68 

A 

Maryland 

78 

San  Francisco 

60      A 

77       Dayton 

52       North  Carolina 

75 
67 

A 
A 

79       West  Virginia 
52       Duke 

75 
84 

H 
H 

100 

IIS 

Brow  n 

George  Washington 

83      H 
96      A 

53 
102 

Santa  Clara 
Holy  Cross 
Boston  College 
Richmond 

32      A 
75      H 
37      H 
60      A 

62      Virginia 
61       Duke 

65 

76 

H 
A 

93       Clemson 
76       Navy 

94 

72 

A 
H 

57 
79 

Virginia     (L) 
Georgetown 

78      A 
46      H 

58 
96 

58       N.C.  State 
107       George  Washington 
66       Clemson 

60 
81 

71 

A 
A 
A 

73       Miami  (Pa.) 
67       Nonh  Carolina 
64       Duke 

93 
73 
85 

A 
H 
A 

86 
73 
102 

Canisius 
Loyola 
Hoh  Cross 

77      H 
60      A 
79      A 

89 

72 
74 

Clemson 
W  ake  Forest 
N.C.  Stale     (L) 

60      H 
59      A 
80      A 

78       South  Carolina 

63 

A 

66       West  Virginia 

83 

A 

103 

Western- Kentucky 

67      H 

112 

Fordham 

73     H 

76       North  Carolina 

66 

H 

85       Virginia 

76 

H 

90 

St.  John's 

69      H 

72 

Navy 

50     A 

86      Wake  Forest 

78 

A 

87       Wake  Forest 

74 

H 

S3 

N.C.  State     (W) 

70      H 

86 

Canisius 

73     H 

74       Navj 

69 

H 

60       North  Carolina 

S3 

A 

61 

Clemson 

63      A 

73 

Nonh  Carolina 

82      A 

107       West  Virginia 
71       Virginia 
69       Duke 
56      South  Carolina 

92 
64 

74 
42 

H 
A 
H 
H 

81       Clemson 
68       Virginia 
68       Georgetown 

68 
70 
60 

H 
A 
H 

49 
85 
82 
72 

Wake  Forest 

Navj 

Buffalo 

North  Carolina 

46      A 
60      A 
58      H 
92      A 

80 
104 
88 
92 

N.C.  Slate     (L) 
Duke 

Virginia     (W) 
George  Washington 

86      H 
83      H 

SI       A 
71       A 

69       Clemson 

81 

H 

54       N.C.  State 

63 

ACC 

66 

N.C.  State     (W) 

65     A 

91 

North  Carolina 

80      H 

77 

Duke 

58      H 

56 

Clemson 

54      A 

70       North  Carolina 

77 

ACC 

8-18     2-12     1968-69 

85 

Duquesne 

71       H 

98 

Duquesne 

72      H 

78 

Long  Island  Univ. 

60      A 

64 

Duke 

61      A 

Maryland 

79 

North  Carolina 

77      H 

77 

Wake  Forest 

68      H 

66       Penn  Stale 
65       West  Virginia 

56 
86 

H 

\ 

67 
76 

Clemson 
Richmond 

57      H 
61       H 

110 

85 

Virginia     (W) 
Duke 

75      H 

B~       ^J 

66   ACC 

j^k ..  ^^H 

67       South  Carolina 

79 

A 

59 

Duke 

68      A 

105 

North  Carolina 

85  ACC 

^m 

63       Princeton 

72 

H 

64 

Wake  Forest 

56     H 

100 

N.C.  State 

103  ACC 

^m     ^fl 

87       Wake  Forest 

95 

A 

45 

Virginia     (W) 

42     H 

99       George  Washington 

96 

H 

54 

Clemson 

52  ACC 

^H 

89       Marshall 

80 

A 

62 

Virginia 

57  ACC 

^H 

35       Miami  (Pa.) 

92 

A 

64 

North  Carolina 

73  ACC 

^B          hB 

69       Davidson 

83 

A 

67 

St.  Joseph's 

55    NIT 

l    ^E 

95       Wichita 

83 

A 

71 

Svracuse 

65    NIT 

^^^^^H   ^B      ^^^^^% 

71       Wake  Forest 

93 

A 

91 

Jacksonville 

77    NIT 

|^*    ^^^^B     n»~  *  1 

69       N.C.  State 

85 

A 

100 

Niagara 

69    NIT 

^^^fc     **-* 

67       South  Carolina 
85       Duke 
83       Clemson 

69 
96 
78 

H 
A 
H 

^H     WM      ^jM£ 

*v 

Wfh 

77        Virginia 

78 

H 

■3                 ^^^H 

87       Nonh  Carolina 

107 

A 

^^ 

81       N.C.  Slate 

86 

H 

Wi  NV 

•M 

91        West  Virginia 

84 

H 

ly^i 

?M    m^v] 

M\V 

1   In 

83       Duke 

93 

H 

iv^ 

■  -'■ 

68       Na%> 

72 

A 

■j^"^""^  ^ 

^^r        —      I  1 

■  if            \  M              ¥ 

\\V 

■      "      / 

78        Virginia 

84 

A 

wF^           * 

i* A.      1 

\\\v 

86       North  Carolina 
84       Clemson 
83       Georgetown 

71       South  Carolina 

13-13     5-9     1969-70 

Maryland 

97        Buffalo 

88 
83 
78 

92 

H 
A 

A 

ACC 
H 

' — 
t 

J* 

f  Ws0 

VUV 

92       George  Washington 
67       Princeton 

71 
75 

A 
A 

1),    ~^ 

^ 

1    *S^ 

^^^^^Pj^^^^^^^B  ^ 

\  ■ 

87       Wake  Forest 
68       South  Carolina 

104 
101 

H 
H 

r        . 

*^m      ^| 

54      Armj 

69 

H 

m  - 

^ 

Jr         ■! 

94       Fordham 

71 

H 

flb 

m                4 

■ 

'4 

1 

94        Delaware 
57       N.C.  Stale     (L) 
96       Wake  Forest 
S3       West  Virginia 

58 
91 

88 

76 

H 
A 
A 
H 

W 

I 

%$ 

r 

^, 

44       South  Carolina 

55 

A 

^w 

_^^ mimy"^ 

75       Clemson 
73       Navj 

63 
57 

A 
H 

w 

"~^^                                  rT 

97       Maine 

68 

H 

V 

— ____^^ 5^ 

52       Duke 

69       North  Carolina 

50 
77 

H 
H 

/ 

\ 

V 

54       N.C.  State     (U 
81       Georgetown 

64 
71 

A 

H 

/,. 

Len  Elmore 

All  American 

69       Virginia     (LI 

71 

A 

John  Lucas 

1973, 1974 

All  American 
1975.  1976 

60 


24-5     10-2     1974-75 


Maryland 

106' 

Richmond 

81 

H 

99 

Wake  Forest 

78 

A 

99 

Long  Island 

84 

H 

104 

Georgetown 

71 

A 

113 

DePauw 

49 

H 

81 

George  Washington 

67 

A 

105 

Georgia  Tech 

67 

H 

75 

UCLA 

81 

H 

% 

Appalachian  State 

50 

H 

90 

Notre  Dame 

82 

H 

83 

Duke 

77 

H 

89 

Wake  Forest 

73 

H 

103 

N.C  State    (W) 

85 

H 

87 

Na\> 

73 

A 

82 

Clemson 

83 

A 

66 

North  Carolina 

69 

H 

98 

N.C.  State     (W) 

97 

A 

86 

Virginia     (W) 

79 

H 

65 

Ford  ham 

46 

A 

104 

Duke 

80 

A 

96 

North  Carolina 

74 

A 

70 

Virginia     (W) 

51 

A 

103 

Duquesne 

82 

A 

70 

Clemson 

64 

H 

104 

East  Tennessee 

87 

H 

85 

N.C.  State 

87  ACC 

83 

Creighton 

79  NCAA 

83 

Notre  Dame 

71  NCAA 

82 

Louisville 

96  NCAA 

22-6     7-5     1975-76 

Marv 

and 

127 

East  Carolina 

84 

H 

99 

DePauvv 

42 

H 

98 

Richmond 

71 

A 

122 

Boston  L'niversiiv 

82 

H 

93 

Georgia  Tech 

65 

H 

81 

Fordham 

56 

H 

70 

UNC-Charlotte 

60 

H 

104 

Seton  Hall 

69 

H 

66 

Princeton 

59 

H 

III 

Long  Island 

88 

H 

82 

George  Washington 

72 

A 

93 

Wake  Forest 

96 

A 

87 

N.C.  State    (W) 

69 

A 

87 

Navy 

69 

A 

77 

Clemson 

82 

H 

93 

North  Carolina  lot) 

95 

A 

102 

N.C.  State     I  W  I 

84 

H 

69 

Notre  Dame 

63 

A 

69 

Virginia     (W) 

66 

A 

102 

Duke 

91 

H 

69 

North  Carolina 

81 

H 

98 

Clemson 

89 

A 

72 

Georgetown 

63 

A 

67 

Duke 

69 

A 

105 

Wake  Forest 

91 

H 

81 

Virginia     (Wl 

73 

H 

80 

Duke  (oil 

78 

ACC 

65 

Virginia 

73 

ACC 

19-8     7-5     1976-77 

Maryland 

79  ' 

Notre  Dame  lot) 

80 

H 

86 

Ball  Slate 

70 

H 

49 

Long  Island 

45 

H 

58 

Princeton 

45 

H 

80 

East.Carolina 

69 

H 

92 

DePaul 

74 

H 

76 

Appalachian  St. 

74 

H 

106 

Bucknell 

72 

H 

84 

Xavier 

74 

H 

% 

Syracuse 

85 

H 

90 

Richmond 

87 

H 

S5 

Wake  Forest  loll 

86 

H 

87 

N.C    Stale     (W) 

80 

H 

62 

Navy 

54  NEL 

71 

Clemson 

93 

A 

68 

North  Carolina 

71 

H 

75 

N.C.  State     iWl 

73 

A 

76 

George  Washington 

86 

H 

82 

Virginia    (W) 

67 

H 

65 

Dukclotl 

64 

A 

70 

North  Carolina 

97 

A 

84 

Clemson 

78 

H 

88 

Pittsburgh 

75 

H 

S? 

Duke 

72 

H 

81 

Wake  Forest 

80 

A 

68 

Virginia    t  L.  i 

77 

A 

72 

N.C  State 

82 

ACC 

15-13     3-9     1977-78 

Maryland 

95 

Bucknell 

62 

H 

78 

American 

65 

N 

91 

Georgetown 

87 

N 

89 

Penn  State 

80 

N 

130 

East  Carolina 

106 

H 

90 

George  Washington 

llll 

V 

94 

Long  Mand 

64 

H 

99 

Armv 

77 

II 

91 

Western  Kenluck) 

78 

H 

65 

Georgia  Tech 

M 

H 

78 

Duke 

88 

II 

75 

Wake  Forest 

84 

A 

82 

N.C    Slate     III 

88 

A 

70 
109 


Air  Force 
Clemson 
North  Carolina 
N.C.  Stale     IL) 
Noire  Dame 
Virginia     (L) 
Ne\ada  Las  Vegas 
North  Carolina 
Clemson 
Pittsburgh  (ot) 
Duke 

Wake  Forest 
Virginia     (L) 
N.C.  Stale  (3  ot) 
Duke 


73 

H 

75 

H 

85 

A 

Sll 

H 

69 

A 

66 

A 

68 

H 

66 

H 

75 

A 

89 

A 

81 

A 

89 

H 

79 

H 

Mis 

ACC 

SI 

ACC 

19-11     6-6     1978-79 


107  Bucknell 

65  Georgetoun 

81  Air  Force 
88  Nevada  Las  Vegas 

69  Penn  State 
86  Biscay  ne 

82  East  Carolina 
124  N.C.  State     (W) 
129  Ca  nisi  us 

62  St.  Joseph's  (ot) 

83  Southern  California 

84  George  Washington 

60  Wake  Forest 
82  N.C.  State  (2  ot)     (\\ 
84  Louisville 

77  Clemson 

53  North  Carolina 
82  Navy 

61  Notre  Dame 

63  Virginia     (L) 

78  Duke 
67  North  Carolina 
77  Clemson 

70  Duke 

54  Wake  Forest 
72  Virginia  (L) 
75  Clemson 

79  North  Carolina 
67  Rhode  Island  (3  ot) 
72  Ohio  Slate 

24-7     11-3     1979-80 

Marvland 
82       L.M.E.S. 
Penn  Slate 
Georgetown 
Brown 
Catholic 
Georgia  Tech 
Bucknell 
Miami  (Ohio! 
Temple 
Georgia  Tech 
Wake  Forest 
N.C.  State     (L) 
Pittsburgh 
Clemson 
North  Carolina 
N.C.  Slate    (W) 
Notre  Dame 
vireinu     (W) 
Duke 

North  Carolina 
Clemson 
Boston 

East  Carolina 
Duke 

Wake  Forest 
\  irginia     I W  I 
Georgia  Tech  lot) 
Clemson 
Duke 
Tennessee 
Georgetown 


68 
68 

94 
61 
60 
71 
110 
103 
56 


81 
99 
63 
54 
62 
66 
69 
87 


H 


69 

68 

53      A 
75      A 
67  ACC 
102   ACC 
65    NIT 
79    NIT 


56 

71 
72 

113 
70 
95 

115 
85 
83 
84 
62 
95 
84 


63 

63 
101 
70 
81 
99 
85 
61 
83 
82 
52 
91 
72 
86 
68 


58 

H 

55 

N 

83 

N 

59 

H 

79 

H 

60 

H 

73 

H 

76 

H 

63 

H 

73 

A 

76 

A 

67 

A 

88 

H 

83 

H 

69 

90 

76 

72 

66 

" 

71 

49   ACC 

85   ACC 

73  ACC 
75  M  \  \ 

74  NC  \A 


21-10     8-6     1980-81 

Mary 


[and 

86  Navy 

95  American 

96  Wagner 
83  Syracuse 

109  Fairleigh  Dickinson 

67  LouisvTile 

82  N.C.  STATE  (OTi     iW 

66  GEORGIA  TECH 

114  Marshall 

74  St.  Joseph's 

69  William  &  Man 
66  NORTH  CAROLINA 
94  DLKE 

64  VIRGINIA     111 

65  CLEMSON    lOTl 
81  L.M.E.S. 

70  Notre  Dame 
69  Pittsburgh  (ot) 
72  GEORGIA  TECH 
60  WAKE  FOREST 
54  DLKE 
72  CLEMSON 
63  NORTH  CAROLINA 
94  WAKE  FOREST 
76  N.C.  STATE     IW) 

63  VIRGINIA     (L) 
56  DLKE 
85  VIRGINIA 
60  NORTH  CAROLINA 
81  Tenn-Challanooga 

64  Indiana 

16-13     5-9     1981-82 

Maryland 
49  "    St.  Peter's 
Lafayette 
Long  Island 
George  Mason 
Md.  (Eastern  Shore) 
Towson  Stale 
N.C.  STATE     (L) 
Ohio  University 
GEORGIA  TECH 
UCLA 

NORTH   CAROLINA 
DLKE 

VIRGINIA  IOT)     (L) 
CLEMSON 
Canisius 
Notre  Dame 
William  &  Marv 
GEORGIA  TECH 
WAKE  FOREST 
DLKE 
Hofstra 

NORTH  CAROLINA 
CLEMSON 
W  AKE  FOREST 
N.C.  STATE     (L) 
VIRGINIA  (Oil     (W) 
N.C.  Slate 
Richmond  (NIT] 
Georgia  [NIT) 


82 
87 
74 
76 
75 
53 
90 
43 
57 
50 
40 
40 
62 
91 
51 


94 
56 


42 
38 


69 


62 
65 
73 
66 


76      H 
SO       H 
72      A 
74      A 
53  ACC 
62    ACC 
61    ACC 
69  NCAA 
99  NCAA 


42  H 

58  H 
79  H 
62  H 
64  H 

59  H 
74  A 
64  H 
45  H 
90  A 
66  H 
36  A 

45  A 
57  H 
73  H 
55  A 

43  A 
64  A 
56 
60 

59  H 

59  A 

'5  \ 

48  A 

52  H 

46  H 
40  ACC 
50  A 

53  \ 


H 


20-10     8-6     1982-83 

Mary  land 

79  Penn  Slate  97 
91  Md.  (Eastern  Shore)  "0 
67  Canisius  66 
56  St.  Joseph's  64 
85  Duquesne  64 
66  Towson  56 

80  UCLA(2otl  79 
73  American  71 
56  William  &  Mary  51 
M  Virginia  |L|  83 
"I  North  Carolina  72 
6^  Duke  Sr> 
80  Clemson  M 


68 

Noire  Dame 

55 

Holv  Cross 

86 

N.C.  State     (W| 

98 

Nav. 

s" 

Old  Dominion 

" 

Georgia  Tech 

66 

Wake  Forest 

106 

North  Carolina 

92 

Clemson 

101 

Duke 

60 

Georgia  Tech 

83 

Wake  Forest 

67 

N.C.  Stale    (Wi 

81 

Virginia     iLl 

58 

Georgia  Tech  (ot) 

52 

Tenn-C'nattanooga 

50 

Houston 

67 

H 

53 

A 

-; 

H 

73 

H 

1 

H 

68 

H 

79 

A 

94 

H 

•s 

H 

90 

\ 

-i 

A 

"5 

H 

58 

A 

83 

A 

64 

ACC 

51  NCAA 

60NC  \  \ 

24-8     9-5     1983-84 
ACC  CHAMPIONS 


Marvland 

108  '    Johns  Hopkins 

68      Ohio  Slate 

77       Canisius 

67        Penn  Stale 
Duquesne 
U.M.E.S. 
Boslon  College 
Randolph- Macon 
LaSalle 
N.C.  Slate 
William  &  Marv 
North  Carolina 
Duke 
Clemson 
Old  Dominion 
Notre  Dame 
Virginia 
Georgia  Tech 
Wake  Forest 
Duke 
Dayton 
Clemson 
North  Carolina 
Georgia  Tech 
Wake  Forest 
N.C.  State 
Virginia 
N.C.  Slate 
Wake  Forest 
Duke 

West  Virginia 
Illinois 


78 
104 

89 
58 
96 
59 
58 
62 
SI 
85 
69 
47 
67 
70 
87 
84 
61 
66 
63 
79 
90 
63 


66 

74 
102 
70 


65 

H 

72 

N 

55 

H 

58 

N 

67 

A 

69 

H 

76 

H 

52 

H 

S3 

H 

55 

A 

44 

H 

74 

H 

75 

A 

72 

H 

58 

A 

52 

A 

66 

A 

71 

A 

90 

A 

89 

H 

59 

H 

65 

A 

78 

A 

74 

H 

79 

H 

50 

H 

65 

H 

63 

\CC 

64 

ACC 

62 

ACC 

77 

VJC  A  A 

72 

NCAA 

61 


A 11- Time  Statistical  Leaders 


CAREER  SCORING 


SINGLE  SEASON  SCORING 


2,058 

Albert  King 

1977-81 

2,015 

John  Lucas 

1972-76 

1,807 

Tom  McMillen 

1971-74 

1,607 

Ernest  Graham 

1977-81 

1,561 

Greg  Manning 

1977-81 

1,397 

Gene  Shue 

1951-54 

1,370 

Will  Hetzel 

1967-70 

1,346 

Adrian  Branch 

1980- 

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 

Mo  Howard 

1972-76 

1,153 

Buck  Williams 

1978-81 

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 

868 

Rod  Horst 

1967-70 

854 

Bruce  Kelleher 

1958-61 

SINGLE  SEASON  REBOUNDING 


412 

Len  Elmore 

1973-74 

363 

Buck  Williams 

1980-81 

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 

269 

Ben  Coleman 

1983-84 

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 

242 

Buck  Williams 

1979-80 

242 

Ben  Coleman 

1982-83 

241 

Al  Bunge 

1958-59 

241 

Gary  Ward 

1965-66 

674 

Albert  King 

1979-80 

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 

559 

Albert  King 

1980-81 

557 

John  Lucas 

1975-76 

541 

Adrian  Branch 

1982-83 

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 

491 

Ben  Coleman 

1983-84 

490 

Bob  Kessler 

1955-56 

488 

Len  Bias 

1983-84 

487 

Bob  Kessler 

1954-55 

483 

Ernest  Graham 

1979-80 

482 

Buck  Williams 

1980-81 

471 

Greg  Manning 

1979-80 

469 

John  Lucas 

1974-75 

469 

Gary  Ward 

1964-65 

454 

Ben  Coleman 

1982-83 

448 

Ernest  Graham 

1980-81 

444 

Albert  King 

1978-79 

442 

Adrian  Branch 

1981-82 

431 

Owen  Brown 

1974-75 

430 

Larry  Gibson 

1978-79 

430 

Gary  Ward 

1965-66 

428 

Rod  Horst 

1969-70 

424 

John  Lucas 

1972-73 

423 

Lawrence  Boston 

1977-78 

422 

Greg  Manning 

1980-81 

416 

Steve  Sheppard 

1974-75 

414 

Will  Hetzel 

1969-70 

401 

Charles  McNeil 

1958-59 

COLE  FIELD 

HOUSE 

RECORDS 

Team  Scoring: 

141 

by  Maryland  Freshmen 

vs  K 

ings  College 

Dec. 

13,  1969 

Field  Goals: 

62 

by  Maryland  Freshmen 

vs  K 

ings  College 

1961 

Individual  Scoring: 

48 

by  Tom  Baxley  vs 

Virgi 

nia  Freshmen, 

1961 

48 

by  Tom  Baxley  vs 

Bain 

bridge  Prep,  1961 

48 

by  Tom  McMillen  vs 

Georgetown  Freshmen, 

1971 

Field  Goals: 

21 

by  Tom  McMillen  vs 
Georgetown  Freshmen, 

1971 

Rebounds: 

31 

by  Tom  McMillen  vs 

West  Virginia 
Freshmen,  1971 


62 


HOME  OF  THE  TERRAPINS 


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Dr.  John  S.  Toll 


President 

John  S.  Toll  is  a  vital  force  for  excellence  in  higher 
education  in  the  State  of  Maryland  and  in  the  nation. 

In  1978,  when  he  became  the  22nd  president  of  the 
University  it  was  his  hope  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  the  nation." 

Now,  on  his  sixth  anniversary,  a  major  national  study 
has  placed  the  University  near  that  mark.  The  National 
Academy  of  Sciences  evaluation  of  graduate  education  in 
the  U.S.  shows  the  departments  of  computer  science, 
physics,  math,  art  history,  economics  and  electrical 
engineering  among  the  top  10  public  universities  in 
scholarly  quality  of  the  faculty.  Seven  other  programs 
ranked  among  the  top  20.  Of  these  the  arts  and 
humanities  programs  were  also  listed  in  the  10  most 
improved  among  public  universities. 

Growing  confidence  in  the  quality  of  the  University  has 
brought  five  gifts  of  $1,000,000  or  more  from  individuals 
and  organizations  since  Dr.  Toll  became  president,  and  a 
gift  of  $5  million  over  the  next  three  years  from  IBM. 
Membership  in  the  Presidents  Club  (donors  of  $10,000 
and  above)  has  quadrupled  to  511,  and  the  number  of 
alumni  and  friends  who  contribute  to  the  annual  fund  has 
grown  from  5,000  to  21,900. 


Exceptional  students,  too,  are  recognizing  the  Univer- 
sity's strong  academic  position.  In  six  years  there  has  been 
a  six-fold  increase  in  the  number  of  National  Merit  and 
National  Achievement  winners  coming  to  Maryland.  25 
National  Merit  winners  and  27  National  Achievement 
winners  are  attending  the  University  this  fall.  And,  at  a 
time  when  SAT  scores  of  entering  freshman  were  declin- 
ing nationally,  there  has  been  a  steady  increase  at 
Maryland. 

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. 


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


Dr.  John  Brooks  Slaughter 

Chancellor 


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

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


65 


Dr.  Charles  A.  Taff 
Chairman,  Athletic  Council 

Dr.  Charles  A.  Taff,  Professor  of  Transportation, 
College  of  Business  and  Management  is  Chairman  of  the 
Athletic  Council.  Dr.  Taff  served  as  Chairman  of  the 
Department  of  Business  Administration  from  1962  to 
1973.  He  is  the  author  of  numerous  articles  and  of  four 
books,  two  of  which  are  in  sixth  editions. 

For  1 5  years  Dr.  Taff  was  Editor  of  the  Transportation 
Journal,  a  professional  publication  that  is  published 
quarterly  and  is  currently  a  member  of  its  Editorial 
Review  Board. 

He  served  as  a  member  of  the  Joint  U.S.  Canadian  St. 
Lawrence  Seaways  Tolls  Committee  which  recom- 
mended the  fee  structure  for  the  Seaway.  He  has  served  as 
a  transportation  consultant  to  the  President's  Council  of 
Economic  Advisors  under  four  Presidents. 

Dr.  Taff  has  also  served  as  President  of  the  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference. 

Francis  A.  Gray,  Jr.  (Maryland  '43) 
Associate  Athletic  Director 

Frank  Gray  joined  the  athletic  department  as  Admin- 
istrative Director  in  1972.  He  is  primarily  responsible  for 
the  fiscal  program  of  the  department  with  an  operating 
budget  of  approximately  $5,000,000. 

A  native  of  Maryland  and  1943  graduate  of  the 
University  with  a  degree  in  Agriculture  and  Farm 
Management,  he  began  his  professional  career  with  the 
University  as  an  Assistant  County  Agricultural  Agent. 

He  entered  private  industry  in  1955  but  returned  to  the 
University  in  1960  as  Associate  Dean  of  Student  Life. 
During  his  12  years  prior  to  joining  the  Athletic  Depart- 
ment he  served  two  years  as  Acting  Dean  for  Student  Life 
and  has  served  as  Administrative  Director  for  the 
Executive  Dean  for  Student  Life,  the  Vice  President  for 
Student  Affairs  and  the  Vice  Chancellor  for  Student 
Affairs. 

Randy  Hoffman  (Maryland  '74) 
Associate  Athletic  Director 

Randy  Hoffman  was  named  an  Associate  Director  of 
Athletics  this  past  summer  after  serving  as  Assistant  AD 
and  Director  of  Sports  Marketing.  A  1974  graduate  of  the 
University  he  has  worked  with  the  golf  program  as 


assistant  coach,  head  coach  and  Director  of  Golf  Facil- 
ities. He  assumed  management  of  the  Golf  course  in  1981. 

He  received  a  Bachelor's  degree  in  Business  Management- 
Marketing  in  1980  and  is  currently  finishing  his  Master's 
program  in  Administration  at  Maryland. 

Randy  came  to  Maryland  from  Lewisburg,  Pennsyl- 
vania where  he  captained  the  football,  basketball  and  golf 
teams  and  was  an  All-Conference  quarterback.  He  is  a 
member  of  the  Terrapin  Club  and  Alumni  "M"  Club. 

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

Bob  Stumpff  returned  to  the  athletic  department  in 
July  1980  as  Assistant  Athletic  Director  for  Business 
Affairs,  responsible  for  the  daily  business  operations  of 
the  department,  to  include  the  Athletic  Ticket  Office,  all 
physical  facilities  and  all  cash  handling  operations.  He 
now  coordinates  the  game  day  operations  of  Byrd 
Stadium  and  Cole  Field  House,  is  responsible  for  the 
daily  operation  of  all  athletic  facilities  and  grounds 
administration. 

Bob  initially  came  to  the  University  as  manager  of  the 
wrestling  team.  He  received  his  degree  in  Transportation 
Administration  in  June  1968.  Upon  graduation  he  was 
named  Administrative  Assistant  to  the  AD.  From  Sep- 
tember 1969  through  July  1980  he  was  the  Associate 
Director  of  the  Maryland  Student  Union. 

He  has  been  a  member  of  the  Board  of  Governors  of  the 
M  Club  since  1 970  and  is  presently  a  faculty  advisor  to  the 
Sigma  Circle  of  Omicron  Delta  Kappa.  Bob  is  also  a 
member  of  the  College  Athletic  Business  Managers 
Association  and  the  College  Park  Board  of  Trade. 

Gothard  Lane  (Randolph  Macon  '71) 
Assistant  Athletic  Director 

Gothard  Lane  assumed  the  duties  of  Assistant  AD  for 
Non-Revenue  Sports  in  March  of  1982.  He  also  works 
with  the  football  and  basketball  programs  handling  their 
scheduling. 

He  joined  the  Maryland  football  staff  in  1973  as  a 
defensive  backfield  coach,  a  position  he  held  for  four 
years.  From  1977  until  his  appointment  as  Assistant  AD 
he  held  the  position  of  Administrative  Assistant  to  the 
Director  of  Atheltics  and  Director  of  Recruiting. 


Dr.  Charles  A.  Taff 


Frank  Gray 


Gothard  Lane 


As  Assistant  AD  he  has  the  administrative  responsi- 
bility for  all  non-revenue  sports,  men  and  women. 


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

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

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

He  returned  to  Maryland,  after  five  years  at  Dart- 
mouth, in  March  1967. 

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

Tom  Fields  has  served  as  Executive  Director  of  the 
Maryland  Educational  Foundation  since  1970  when  he 
retired  as  a  Colonel  in  the  U.S.  Marine  Corp. 

For  the  past  fiscal  year  the  funds  generated  by  the 
Educational  Foundation  totaled  $1,850,000.  The  mem- 
bership of  the  Terrapin  Club  has  expanded  to  2,500  with 
62  life  members  ($10,000  contribution),  71  Super  Ter- 
rapins ($2,500  annual  contribution),  552  Diamondbackers 
($1,200  annual  contribution)  and  533  Gold  members 
($600  annual  contribution). 

Over  one  half  of  all  contributors  did  not  attend  the 
University  of  Maryland  but  all  are  strong  supporters  of 
Intercollegiate  Athletics  and  its  principals  of  competition. 

The  funds  provided  by  the  foundation  have  enabled  the 
Terrapins  to  develop  a  Women's  program  that  has  also 
gained  national  recognition.  All  funds  go  to  scholarships 
and  the  scholarship  program  for  Women  athletes  is  on  a 
par  with  the  program  for  men's  non-revenue  sports. 

Fields  was  a  track  star  for  the  Terps  as  an  under- 
graduate and  helped  lead  the  Terps  to  one  of  their  finest 
days  ever  at  the  Penn  Relays  winning  three  Champion- 
ship of  America  relay  races.  During  World  War  II  he 
served  in  combat  on  Guadalcanal,  Vella  Lavella,  Bougan- 
ville,  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. 


Jeff  Hathaway  (Maryland  '81) 
Business  Manager  of  Athletics 

Jeff  Hathaway  returned  to  the  University  in  November 
of  1982  to  become  head  Trainer  for  the  Terrapins 
basketball  team.  He  also  served  as  an  assistant  to  Frank 
Gray,  the  Associate  Athletic  Director  for  Administrative 
Affairs.  In  May  of  '84  he  took  over  the  duties  of  Business 
Manager  of  Athletics  and  will  supervise  and  administer 
the  Athletic  Department  Ticket  sales  office. 

Following  graduation  from  Maryland  Hathaway  went 
immediately  to  the  Chicago  White  Sox  baseball  team  as 
Director  of  Community  Relations.  He  arranged  all  public 
appearances  and  speaking  engagements  of  all  the  White 
Sox  players  during  the  1981  and  1982  baseball  seasons. 
He  came  to  Maryland  from  DeMatha  High  where  he 
worked  as  basketball  manager  and  assistant  trainer  with 
Coach  Morgan  Wootten. 

He  served  two  years  as  student  trainer  with  basketball 
at  Maryland  and  two  years  with  the  Terrapin  football 
team  as  a  student. 

Jeff  did  his  public  relations  internship  with  the  Wash- 
ington Redskins  during  the  1980  training  camp  at  Dick- 
inson College  with  PR  director  Joe  F.  Blair.  He  received 
his  B.S.  in  Athletic  Administration  through  individual 
studies  program.  He  is  a  certified  emergency  medical 
technician. 


John  W.  Zane  (Maryland  '60) 
Assistant  Athletic  Director 

Jack  Zane  returned  to  Maryland  in  August  of  1969 
after  serving  as  the  Sports  Information  Director  for  The 
George  Washington  University  for  six  years. 

He  received  his  degree  in  Journalism  from  Maryland  in 
February  of  1960  after  serving  as  a  student  assistant  to 
Joe  Blair  for  three  years.  He  served  as  a  full  time  assistant 
for  two  years  after  graduation. 

While  at  Maryland  he  was  the  first  Executive  Sports 
Editor  of  the  Diamondback,  SMC  of  Pi  Kappa  Alpha 
and  a  member  of  Sigma  Delta  Chi  Journalism  fraternity. 

He  served  six  years  as  a  member  of  the  NCAA  Public 
Relations  Committee  and  is  currently  a  member  of  the 
NCAA  Public  Relations/  Promotions  Committee.  He  has 
been  a  member  of  CoSIDA  for  24  years  and  serves  as  a 
first  vice  president. 


Spider  Fry 


Tom  Fields 


Jeff  Hathaway 


67 


He  is  a  member  of  Football,  Basketball,  and  Baseball 
Writers  of  America,  the  Maryland  Chapter  of  Sigma 
Delta  Chi,  the  Atlantic  Coast  Sportswriters  and  the 
Washington  D.C.  Touchdown  Club  as  well  as  a  Dia- 
mondback  member  of  the  Terrapin  Club. 

A  graduate  of  Southern  High  at  Lothion,  he  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  and  a  graduate 
of  The  George  Washington  University. 


Joe  F.  Blair  (Missouri  '50) 

Assistant  Sports  Information  Director 

Joe  returned  to  Maryland  in  August  of  1983  where  he 
began  his  public  relations  career  in  August  of  1950.  He 
served  as  the  Sports  Information  Director  at  Maryland 
for  13  years  before  joining  the  Washington  Redskins  as 
Public  Relations  Director  and  Head  of  Media  Relations. 

He  has  worked  with  the  NFL  Players  Association, 
helped  out  at  Maryland  and  served  as  a  consultant  with 
the  Washington  Federals  during  his  33  years  in  the 
Washington  area. 

Joe  spent  a  total  of  18  years  with  the  Washington 
Redskins,  retiring  after  earning  his  Super  Bowl  ring  in 
1982  with  the  27-17  win  over  Miami  in  the  Rose  Bowl. 

During  his  years  he  says  he  has  enjoyed  working  with 
some  of  the  finest  coaches  in  the  profession,  especially 
Jim  Tatum,  Vince  Lombardi,  Joe  Gibbs  and  Jack  Pardee, 
and  one  of  the  best  General  Managers  in  the  NFL,  Bobby 
Beathard.  After  only  one  season  back  at  Maryland  he 
includes  Bobby  Ross  among  the  group. 

He  has  worked  with  a  National  Championship  team  at 
Maryland  (1953)  and  the  Super  Bowl  Champions  with  the 
Redskins.  He  worked  12  Super  Bowl  games  for  the  NFL 
office. 

The  "Blair  Lounge"  at  the  Ledo  restaurant  was  named 
for  him  in  1956. 

In  returning  to  Maryland  he  joins  Jack  Zane.  whom  he 
lured  into  the  field  as  a  Maryland  student.  He  reigned  as 
"Best  Man"  at  Zane's  wedding  in  1966. 

Joe  is  a  product  of  the  Missouri  School  of  Journalism, 
a  veteran  of  World  War  II  as  he  served  in  the  Air  Force, 
and  a  native  of  Freeport,  Pennsylvania. 


Steve  Rear  (Maryland  '83) 

Assistant  Sports  Information  Director 

Steve  Rear  originally  joined  the  Maryland  Sports 
Information  Office  as  a  student  assistant  in  September, 
1980.  He  became  a  full  time  member  of  the  staff  in 
December,  1983,  following  graduation.  He  earned  his 
Bachelor  of  Science  Degree  from  the  University's  College 
of  Journalism. 

His  main  assignments  will  be  the  men  and  women 
non-revenue  sports  but  will  assist  working  with  all  22 
sports. 

He  has  worked  with  the  media  covering  professional 
sports  as  an  undergraduate  student  intern.  He  was  a 
member  of  the  1981-82  Washington  Capitals  game  staff 
as  a  public  relations  assistant  for  pre  and  post  game  media 
requirements.  He  also  headed  the  staff  of  media  assistants 
who  worked  the  National  Hockey  League's  all-star  game 
at  the  Capital  Centre. 

For  the  past  two  years  he  assisted  with  the  media 
operations  of  the  Lacrosse  International  in  Baltimore. 

In  the  summer  of  1983  Rear  served  as  an  intern  with 
Advantage  International,  a  sports  management  corpora- 
tion in  Washington,  D.C. 


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■\-£s& 


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Joe  Blair 


68 


A- 


Steve  Rear 

Assistant  Sports  Information 


Mary  Baldwin 

Secretary,  Sports  Information 


J.  J.  Bush 

Head  Trainer 


Frank  Costello 

Strength  and  Conditioning 


/  = 


Alex  Isherwood 

Marketing  and  Promotions 


Jack  Jackson 

Assistant  Facilities 


Athletic  Department 


Mailing  Address: 


Telephone: 


STAFF 

Box  295 

College   Park.   Maryland 

20740  -  0295 

AREA  CODE  (301) 


Ron  Fulton 

Equipment  Manager 


ADMINISTRATION 

OFFICE  HOME 

Athletic  Director— Richard  "Dick"  Dull  454-4705  Unlisted 

Associate  AD— Randy  Hoffman   454-4705  Unlisted 

Associate  AD— Frank  Gray   454-2641  262-4590 

Associate  AD— Robert  Stumpff 454-6562  725-1533 

Assistant  AD— Jack  Zane  864-4076  322-3265 

Assistant  AD— Gothard  Lane 454-5854  535-0852 

Assistant  to  AD— Deborah  Russell  454-8691  262-3310 

Act.  Marketing  Dir.. — Alex  Isherwood  454-4687 

Asst.  Dir.  Operations— Jack  Jackson    454-3332  725-4832 

Faculty  Chairman  — Dr.  Charles  A.  Taff 454-57  10  277-3460 

Business  Manager — Jeff  Hathaway   454-6549 

Ticket  Manager— Eloise  Tilley 454-2121  766-3010 

Academic  Coordinator— Jim  Dietsch   454-2485  498-5474 

Academic  Coordinator— Jim  Wright  454-7421  345-4271 

Academic  Coordinator — Larry  Roper  454-2126 

Ed.  Foundation— Col.  Tom  Fields 454-4562  277-5594 

M  Club— Al  Heagy    454-5158  345-3957 

Director  of  Golf— William  "Spider"  Fry  454-2 1 3 1  434-3784 

Band  Director— L.  Richmond  Sparks 454-6803 

Strength   Conditioning— Frank  Costello 454-6685  445-1786 

COACHES  -  MEN 

Baseball— Jack  Jackson  454-4041  725-4832 

Basketball— Charles  G.  Driesell  454-2126  Unlisted 

Crosscountry — Charles  Torpey    454-4816 

Football  — Bobby  Ross 454-2125  422-4785 

Golf— Fred  Funk   : 454-2131  935-6494 

Lacrosse— Dick  Edell 454-4328  442-5585 

Soccer— Joe  Grimaldi   454-6907  946-8867 

Swimming— Charles  Hoffman   454-2756  431-1170 

Tennis— Robert  Goeltz    454-4136  977-7813 

Track— Stan  Pitts  454-4816(717)794-2918 

Wrestling— John  McHugh    454-2652  530-1553 

COACHES  -  WOMEN 

Basketball— Chris  Weller 454-5939  Unlisted 

Cross  Country— Charles  Torpey    454-4816 

Field  Hockey— Sue  Tvler 454-5970  794-9491 

Gymnastics— Bob  Nelligan   454-7422  937-9253 

Lacrosse-Sue  Tyler 454-5970  794-9491 

Swimming— Charles  Hoffman    454-2756  431-1170 

Tennis-Robert  Goeltz    454-4136  977-7813 

Track-Stan  Pitts  454-4816(717)  794-2918 

Volleyball-Barbara  Drum  454-3090  345-8710 

STAFF 

Trainer     John  J.  Bush  454-4X19  699-0039 

Assistant  Trainers-Jim  Weir  454-4819  431-6991 

Sandy  Worth   454-7418  345-4821 

Frank  Grimaldi  454-4819  577-1054 

Equipment  Managers     Ron  Fulton 454-2127 

-  Lee  Kloskey  454-2127 

—Todd  Goodman  454-4817 

Vinnj  Mayolo  454-4676 

Stadium  Grounds     Lindj  Kehoe   454-2822 

"Bunk"  Carter 454-2825 

SPORTS  INFORMATION  OFFICE 

Director    Jack  Zane      864-4076  322-3265 

\ssistant     Joe  Blair  454-2123  589-6883 

iissistant     Steve  Rear  454-2123  681-8143 

Secretan      Man  Baldwin  454-2123 


69 


Terps9  Radio  Network 

For  the  sixth  consecu-  During  his  "spare"  time,  he  roams  the  country  doing 

tive   season,   the   affable  television  commercials   for   numerous  companies  and 

and   very  busy  Johnny  products.  His  facial  and  vocal  presentations  have  become 

Holliday  will  call  the  play-  "infamous"  with  the  Datsun  commercial. 

bv-plav  for  the  defending  „   ,,.,  .       „  , 

"  V,   ,  ,     °  And  Holliday    finds    time  for  charitable  w'ork.  His 

AC C  champion  Maryland  „     ,.     _  .      ,     .    ,.       ,      . .    ,.  ,  . 

_  .       „  ,      ,       „    ,  Radio  Oneders  basketball  and  Softball  teams  have  raised 

Terrapins.  He  has  handled  ....        ,   „         ,  „.  __,,,,„ 

r     JL  ,       ,  ,,.         _,,  over  a  million  dollars  the  past  24  years.  The  basketball 

the  play  calling  of  Mary-  ,  f  . 

f.      ,    „    ,  :  team  features  a  number  of  the  Redskins.  He  also  emcees 

land  football  the  past  six  ,  ,    ,      ■    ,  ,  r         r    , 

,.     „  manv  banquets  and  charitable  events,  free  of  charge, 
years  also,  all  on  radio  63 

l/fikoi  AM,   WMAL.   This   is  TX/71  /¥  A    T        Z'^/l        /d    71 /f 

johnny  holliday  Johnny's  28th  year  as  an  W JVlj\Ld      l)3U     j\.J\l 

(Voice  of  the  Terrapins)  announcer  for  both  radio  Terns'  Radio   Network 

and  television,  his  23rd  as  a  sportscaster.  Washington     D  C 

The  popular  and  talented  Holliday's  career  was  high- 
lighted this  year  as  the  ABC  Radio  Network  chose  him  to  Baltimore WBAL       1090       AM 

do  the  Olympic  reports  for  ABC.  He  traveled  to  Insbruck         Cambridge    WCEM       1240       AM 

to  broadcast  the  Winter  Olympics,  then  spent  3  weeks  in  „. 

-     F  v  .  Chestertown WCTR       1530       AM 

Los  Angeles  doing  the  Summer  portion  of  the  Olympics 

for  ABC  Network  and  WMAL.  For  many  years,  he  has         Cumberland WTBO       1450       AM 

been  called  upon  by  the  network  to  call  many  major  Frederick WFMD        930       AM 

events   including  the   Masters  and    U.S.   Open   Golf  ,.          ,  .,,  .nv  .  ,„„  ... 

fc                                                   r  Haserstown \\  ARK  1490  AM 

championships;  title  boxing  matches;  major  league  base- 
ball, playoff  games  and  the  World  Series;  NFL  and  NBA  Havre  de  Grace  WASA  1330  AM 

♦        a     i.  f     ,u        t        i,       jwua!  WHDG     103.7       FM 

reports  and  a  lot  more  lor  the  network  and  WMAL. 

Lexington  Park     WPTX         920       AM 

Johnny  did  the  play-by-play  for  the  Washington 

Federals  on  WMAL  theirtwo  years  ofexistence.  He  hosts         Ocean  City   WETT       1590      AM 

the  Stadium  show  from  RFK  before  every  Redskin  game.  Pocomoke  City WDMV        540       AM 

He  also  will  and  has  hosted  the  Bobbv  Ross  and  Lefty  „  ..  ,  iwc-ni-         ncn        \  m 

J  J  Salisbury    WSEn  960       AM 

Dnesell  radio  and  television  shows. 

Westminster    WTTR       1470       AM 

He  does  the  morning  sports  broadcasts  for  WMAL 
then  does  the  afternoon  ABC  Information  Radio  Net-                                          PENNSYLVANIA 
work  shows.  Chambersburg    WCBG       1590       AM 

Accommodations  for  Media 

CENTER  OF  RAMADA  INN  LOCAL 

ADULT  EDUCATION  195  North  TRANSPORTATION 

University  of  Maryland  4050  Powder  Mill  Rd.  taxi     Rlnp  RirH  Vpii™,- 

(301)779-5100      •  (301)572-7100  864-7700 

HOLIDAY  INN  RAMADA  INN 

10000  Baltimore  Blvd.  5910  Princess  Garden  Pkwy.  AIRPORTS 

(301)  345-6700  (800)  238-5800  BALTIMORE- 

HOLIDAY  INN  SHERATON-NORTHEAST  INTERNATIONAL  — 

9137  Baltimore  Blvd.  8500  Annapolis  Rd.  NATIONAI  Dill  I  FS 

(301)345-5000  (301)459-6700  Taxi'Fares  Approximate  to 

MARYLAND  INN  HOWARD  JOHNSON'S  College  Park 

Best  Western  Bait.  -  Wash.  Pkwy.  NATIONAL  AIRPORT— $14.00 

8601  Baltimore  Blvd.  (301)779-7700  SI. 00  each  additional  person 

(301)  474-2800  SHERATON-NORTHWEST  (BWI)-$21.00-S22.00 

QUALITY  INN  8727  Colesville  Rd.  SI. 00  each  additional  person 

7200  Baltimore  Blvd.  (301)589-5200  DULLES  AIRPORT— 

(301)  864"582°  MARRIOTT  HOTEL  ^^stuOeach  addiuonal  person 

ROYAL  PINES  1-495  &  1-270  S'°°  CaCh  addltlonal  Person 

Best  Western  (301)897-9400 

9133  Baltimore  Blvd. 
(301)  345-4900 

HAMPSHIRE  MOTOR  INN 
7411  New  Hampshire  Ave. 
(301)  439-3000 


70 


Cole  Field  House 


Home  of  the  Maryland  Terrapins 
Host  of  National  and  International  Sporting  Competition 


Location,  facilities,  and  a  large  sports  oriented  pop- 
ulation makes  Cole  Field  House  and  the  University  of 
Maryland  a  prime  site  for  national  and  international 
sporting  competition.  Each  year  the  fans  of  the  Wash- 
ington-Baltimore area  are  treated -to  sporting  events 
ranging  from  the  CYO-M  Club  Track  Meet,  featuring 
many  world  class  stars,  to  gymnastics,  and  from  basket- 
ball to  ping  pong. 

In  addition  to  being  the  home  of  Maryland  Terrapin 
Basketball,  Cole  Field  House  has  been  the  site  of  many 
other  basketball  games  featuring  teams  from  around  the 
United  States  and  from  around  the  world.  Twice,  Cole 
Field  House  has  been  the  site  of  the  NCAA  Basketball 
Finals.  In  1966.  Texas  Western  upset  heavily  favored 
Kentucky  72-65  in  one  of  the  most  exciting  games  ever 
played  in  the  \C  A  A  finals.  Four  years  later,  in  1 970,  Cole 
Field  House  was  again  the  site  of  the  championship  game. 
UCLA,  trying  to  win  its  sixth  national  title  in  seven  years, 
and  its  fourth  in  a  row.  defeated  Jacksonville,  80-69. 

The  1977  Eastern  Regionals  marked  the  sixth  time  that 
that  event  had  been  hosted  by  the  University  of  Mary- 
land. The  field  included  Kentucky,  North  Carolina,  Notre 
Dame  and  Virginia  Military  ( VMI).  Prior  to  that  year,  in 
an  earlier  Regional  Contest  held  in  Cole,  North  Carolina, 
using  a  20-foot  jump  shot  by  Charlie  Scott  with  two 
seconds  on  the  clock  defeated  Davidson  College,  87-85. 
Other  victorious  teams  were  Wake  Forest  in  1962  when 
the  Deacons  topped  Villanova  76-69,  Duke  the  following 
year,  led  by  Tournament  MVP  Jeff  Mullen,  defeated  St. 
Joseph's  73-59.  Princeton  in  1 965  topped  Providence  1 09- 
69  behind  a  41  point  effort  by  Bill  Bradley,  and  in  1967 
North  Carolina  defeated  Boston  College  96-80. 


International  basketball  squads  also  have  visited  Cole 
Field  House.  Teams  from  the  Soviet  Union.  Iceland. 
Israel.  Chile.  Italy.  Yugoslavia  and  Poland  have  all 
played  here.  Women's  basketball  has  also  seen  inter- 
national competition  in  Cole.  In  1976  teams  representing 
Taiwan  and  the  People's  Republic  of  China  played  on  the 
Maryland  campus.  Other  Competition  Held  in  Cole: 

Gymnastics  —  Olga  Korbut.  Nellie  Kim.  Ludmilla  Touris- 
cheva  and  other  members  of  the  Soviet  National  Team 
have  performed  in  Cole  before  packed  houses. 

Wrestling  —  Maryland  has  three  times  been  the  host  for 
the  NCAA  Wrestlina  Championships,  in  1960.  1972 
and  1978. 

Track  —  For  many  years  Cole  was  the  site  of  the  CYO-M 
Club  Invitational,  one  of  the  top  indoor  meets  of  the 
season  featuring  national  and  international  stars. 

Ping  Pong  —  In  April  of  1972  the  floor  of  Cole  Field 
House  was  used  for  a  ping  pong  match  between  a  team 
from  the  United  States  and  a  team  from  the  Peoples 
Republic  of  China.  The  match  was  the  first  sporting 
event  held  in  the  United  States  between  the  two 
nations. 

Volleyball  —  In  September  of  1975  the  National  Volley- 
ball team  from  the  Soviet  Union  visited  Cole  Field 
House  and  met  the  United  States  National  Team. 


Terrapin     Olympians 


The  ultimate  individual  reward  in  the  world  of  inter- 
collegiate athletics  is  to  be  named  an  Ail-American  and  to 
hopefully  go  on  to  represent  the  United  States  in  inter- 
national competition. 

Three  Terrapin  basketball  players  have  earned  such 
berths  on  the  prestigious  United  States  Olympic  Team, 
with  all  three  being  selected  in  the  past  three  Olympic 
years. 

Tom  McMillen,  who  ranks  as  the  number  three  career 
scorer  in  Maryland  history,  became  the  first  Terp  to 
represent  his  country.  The  three  time  Ail-American  center 
for  Coach  Driesell.  helped  the  1972  U.S.  Team,  coached 
by  Henry  Iba.  earn  a  Silver  Medal. 

A  Rhodes  Scholar  and  eight  year  veteran  of  the  N.B.  A., 
he  is  currently  playing  for  the  Washington  Bullets. 


Steve  Sheppard,  known  to  Maryland  fans  as  "Bear," 
was  selected  to  the  1976  Olympic  team.  An  integral  force 
in  leading  the  Terps  to  three  national  rankings,  he  also 
provided  that  same  force  in  helping  the  U.S.  team, 
coached  by  Dean  Smith,  in  its  triumph  of  the  Gold  Medal 
in  the  '76  Games  in  Montreal. 

Buck  Williams,  Maryland's  tenacious  power  forward 
for  three  seasons  was  the  last  Terp  honored,  when  he  was 
chosen  for  the  1980  Olympic  team.  The  team  went  on  to  a 
4-2  record  against  various  NBA  All-Star  teams  and  also 
defeated  the  Gold  Medal  winning  1976  team. 

This  first-round  draft  pick  of  the  New  Jersey  Nets,  third 
over-all,  is  Maryland's  second  all-time  leading  rebounder 
and  is  reckoned  with  in  the  N.B. A.,  after  being  named 
Rookie  of  the  Year  in  1981-82. 


71 


^^ Prince  George  s  County's  daily  newspaper ^ 

(liamoncihack  W 


The  Evening  Sun 


Black  Explosion 


MORNING  HERALD 

OmiuiHaii  Prince 

The  News 

HERALD  MAIL 

THE  TERPS  PRESS  COVERAGE 

University  of  Maryland  athletes  and  its  program  receives  the  best  press  coverage  in  the  nation.  The  Terrapins  are  in  a 
unique  situation  located  just  eight  miles  from  the  heart  of  the  nation's  capital  and  30  miles  from  the  major  metropolitan 
area  of  Baltimore. 

The  Terps  get  daily  "beat"  coverage  from  the  Washington  Post,  the  Washington  Times,  and  USA  Today  in  our 
nation's  capital.  In  Baltimore,  the  daily  attention  comes  from  the  Baltimore  News-American  and  the  Baltimore  Morning 
and  Evening  Sun. 

In  addition,  there  are  10  other  daily  papers  publishing  around  the  state  and  some  of  the  finest  weekly  papers  in  the 
country.  Thus,  the  Terrapins  have  16  daily  papers  covering  their  athletic  activities.  The  Washington  Post  has  a  daily 
circulation  of  over  800,000  and  1 . 1  million  with  the  Sunday  edition.  USA  Today  has  over  a  million  daily  circulation  and 


0st  f  ®if  t  (Bapftal 

BALTIMORE  9  ^ 


lUrtol)iu^oii   (Times 


9  lr*b*rick  9*0t 

/ASHINGTON  DC  ~ 


THE«3»*SUN 

~W~  MONTGOMERY  "M  ^^  j^^    ^ 

Journal  otyfa 

_^^  Montgomery  County's  daily  newspaper  METROMEDIA  -J 


Georges  Press 

American 


WMARTV  BALTIMORE 


65 
88 


The  Sentinel 


the  Baltimore  Morning  Sun  has  a  daily  circulation  of  over  200.000  and  over  400,000  on  Sunday.  In  all.  of  the  16  dail) 
newspapers  that  give  the  Terrapins  blanket  coverage,  some  4  million  or  more  readers  will  follow  the  Terrapin  athletic 
teams. 

Along  with  the  print  coverage,  the  Terps  get  game  coverage  from  the  seven  tele\  ision  stations  in  the  two  cities:  WRC, 
WTTG,  WJLA,andWDVM  in  Washington  and  WMAR,  WBAL,  and  WJZ  in  Baltimore  along  with  their  radio  affiliates 

as  well  as  numerous  other  radio  stations  in  DC  and  around  the  state  I  hex  ^\o  frequent  individual  interviews  with  the 
coaches  and  athletes. 

Both  wire  services  staff  the  Terrapin  games  with  Regional  Sports  Editors  Gordon  Beard  of  the  Baltimore  Bureau  of  the 

Associated  Press  and  Don  Cronin  of  the  Washington  Bureau  of  United  Press  International. 

With  Washington.  DC.  the  News  Capital  of  the  World,  every  major  publication  and  news  outlet  has  a  staff  in 
Washington  giving  Maryland  national  coverage  of  all  major  athletic  events. 


(  N 


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■■•H"VV»"*:' 


Maryland  wins 
ACC  Tourney 

Terps  hold  off 
Wake  Forest  in 

semis,  66-64 


^ ...  I  was  going  to  screw  the 
trophy  on  the  hood  of  my  car 
and  drive  around  North 
Carolina  for  a  week,  'but  I'm 
too  old.  I'm  going  home  and  go 
to  sleep...  J 

— Triumphant  Lefty  Driesell 


Terrapins  spill         CHAMPS 

Wolfpack,  69-63     Driesell,  Terps  finally  catch 

one  that  doesn't  get  away 

LEN  BIAS  PROVED  HIS  POINT 
Maryland  wins  ACC  tourney  opener 

Determined  Terps  rally        Driesell  enjoys 
to  topple  Duke  74-62  ACCs  pinnacle 

Maryland's  long-awaited  ACC  title 
was  secured  with  surprising  ease 

Drieselfs  New  Dream: 

National  Championship 


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Lefty's  Pro  Picks 


1971 
BARRY  YATES 

8th  Round 
Philadelphia  76'ers 

1973 
BOB  BODELL 

10th  Round 
Seattle  Supersonics 


JIM  O'BRIEN 

3rd  Round 
Portland  Trailblazers 

New  York  Nets 


HOWARD  WHITE 

14th  Round 
Washington  Bullets 

1974 
TOM  McMILLEN* 

1st  Round  -  9th  Pick 
Buffalo  Braves 

Atlanta  Hawks 
Washington  Bullets 


LEN  ELMORE* 

1st  Round  -  13th  Pick 
Washington  Bullets 

Milwaukee  Bucks 
New  Jersey  Nets 
New  York  Knicks 
Retired  this  fall  to  enter  Harvard  Law  School. 


1975 
OWEN  BROWN 

9th  Round 
Phoenix  Suns 

MO  HOWARD 

2nd  Round 
Cleveland  Cavaliers 

TOM  ROY 

2rd  Round 
Portland  Trailblazers 

1976 
JOHN  LUCAS* 

1st  Round-  1st  Pick 
Houston  Rockets 

Golden  State  Warriors 

Washington  Bullets 

San  Antonio  Spurs 

Houston  Rockets 

1977 
BRAD  DAVIS* 

st  Round  -  15th  Pick 
Los  Angeles  Lakers 

Dallas  Mavericks 

STEVE  SHEPPARD 

2nd  Round 
Chicago  Bulls 


1978 
LAWRENCE  BOSTON 

4th  Round 

Washington  Bullets 

1979 
LARRY  GIBSON 

3rd  Round 
Milwaukee  Bucks 

Italy 

1981 
BUCK  WILLIAMS* 

1st  Round  -  3rd  Pick 
New  Jersey  Nets 

ALBERT  KING* 

1st  Round  10th  Pick 
New  Jersey  Nets 

ERNEST  GRAHAM 

3rd  Round 
Philadelphia  76ers 

GREG  MANNING 

7th  Round 
Denver  Nuggets 

1982 
CHARLES  PITTMAN* 

3rd  Round 
Phoenix  Suns 

1984 
BEN  COLEMAN 

2nd   Round 
Chicago  Bulls 

HERMAN  VEAL 

6th  Round 

Phoenix  Suns 

MARK  FOTHERGILL 

8th  Round 
Phoenix  Suns 


*  Playing  on  I9S4-N?  NBA  team 


79 


LEFTY'S  ALL-AMERICANS 


FRED  HETZEL   —   Davidson  - 

1964-65 

LEN  ELMORE   —   Maryland  --    1973-74 

2032  Career  Points 

1017  Career  Points 

1094  Career  Rebounds 

1053  Career  Rebounds  (ALL-TIME   RECORD) 

DICK  SNYDER   —   Davidson  - 

-  1966 

JOHN   LUCAS   —   Maryland  --   1975-76 

1693  Career  Points 

2015  Career  Points 
514  Career  Assists  (ALL-TIME  RECORD) 

MIKE  MALOY   —   Davidson  - 

-  1969 

ALBERT  KING   —   Maryland  --   1980-81 

1191   Career  Points 

768  Career  Rebounds 

2058  Career  Points  (ALL-TIME  RECORD) 
715  Career  Rebounds 

TOM  McMILLEN   —   Maryland  - 

1971-72-73 

1807  Career  Points 

859  Career  Rebounds 

COACH  DRIESELL'S  ALL 

Shooting 

YEAR  FGA  FGM  PCT 

1960-61  1,321  571  .432 

1961-62  1,411  617  .437 

1962-63  1,632  792  .485 

1963-64  1,644  894  .543 

1964-65  1,784  908  .509 

1965-66  1,713  877  .512 

1966-67  1,645  760  .466 

1967-68  1,791  885  .494 

1968-69  2,105  984  .467 

1969-70  1,709  781  .457 

1970-71  1,650  735  .445 

1971-72  1,877  929  .495 

1972-73  2,094  1,089  .520 

1973-74  1,983  1,012  .510 

1974-75  1,918  1,049  .547 

1975-76  1,854  996  .537 

1976-77  1,645  850  .516 

1977-78  1,829  935  .509 

1978-79  1,897  954  .503 

1979-80  1,789  985  .551 

1980-81  1,774  943  .532 

1981-82  .1,359  651  .479 

1982-83  1,672  820  .490 

1983-84  1,745  941  .539 


-TIME  COLLEGE  COACHING  STATISTICS 


Rebounds 

Scoring 

MD 

OPP 

MD 

OPP 

TA 

FTM 

PCT 

AVG 

AVG 

AVG 

AVG 

W 

L 

596 

407 

.683 

41.6 

38.9 

67.4 

69.8 

9 

14 

679 

493 

.726 

42.7 

39.4 

69.1 

69.8 

14 

11 

641 

477 

.744 

42.8 

33.9 

76.3 

65.8 

20 

7 

722 

534 

.739 

45.2 

34.3 

89.3 

70.5 

22 

4 

672 

484 

.720 

47.3 

38.4 

88.5 

70.9 

24 

2 

739 

563 

.762 

43.2 

37.4 

82.8 

70.8 

21 

7 

709 

537 

.757 

43.0 

40.1 

76.6 

71.1 

15 

12 

795 

562 

.708 

46.6 

37.6 

80.5 

68.9 

24 

5 

886 

645 

.728 

51.0 

39.2 

87.1 

73.6 

27 

3 

586 

417 

.712 

42.5 

41.6 

76.1 

74.7 

13 

13 

715 

480 

.715 

44.4 

40.3 

75.0 

73.4 

14 

12 

786 

586 

.746 

43.4 

32.5 

76.4 

65.8 

27 

5 

606 

435 

.718 

45.4 

34.8 

87.1 

74.2 

23 

7 

504 

376 

.746 

48.9 

38.1 

85.7 

69.0 

23 

5 

672 

509 

.757 

43.5 

34.5 

89.9 

74.6 

24 

5 

629 

477 

.758 

10.2 

36.6 

88.2 

74.3 

22 

6 

566 

415 

.733 

38.8 

36.2 

78.3 

74.1 

19 

8 

599 

433 

.722 

42.4 

37.7 

82.1 

79.5 

15 

13 

600 

430 

.717 

38.5 

34.5 

77.9 

74.7 

19 

11 

706 

511 

.724 

35.1 

32.3 

80.0 

71.8 

24 

7 

649 

467 

.720 

35.3 

30.8 

75.9 

69.8 

21 

10 

634 

476 

.751 

30.2 

27.7 

61.3 

58.8 

16 

13 

724 

496 

.685 

36.6 

34.1 

74.1 

71.4 

20 

10 

702 

509 

.725 

33.7 

33.1 

74.7 

67.2 

24 

8 

80 


TERRAPIN  NOTES 


LEFTY  SETS  WINNING  WAYS  EARLY 

Maryland  has  had  only  five  basketball  coaches  in  60 
years  of  competition  and  it  took  Driesell  less  than  13  years 
to  establish  himself  as  the  winningest  coach  in  Maryland 
history.  H.  Burton  Shipley  won  243  games  in  24  years 
while  Bud  Millikan  had  242  victories  in  17  years.  Flucie 
Stewart  coached  three  years  and  Frank  Fellows,  two.  At 
the  close  of  his  13th  year  as  Terrapin  coach.  Lefty  had  260 
wins.  Now  after  15  years,  he  has  304. 

NATIONAL  RANKINGS 

In  24  years  of  coaching,  Driesell  has  guided  1 4  teams  to 
Top  20  national  rankings.  On  9  of  these  years,  they  have 
been  in  the  Top  10. 

FIELD  GOAL  %  RECORDS 

The  1983-84  Terrapins  ranked  5th  best  in  field  goal  %, 
hitting.  Other  top  finishes  in  the  nation  for  shooting 
accuracy  were  2nd  in  1974,  (.510%),  and  2nd  in  1980, 
(.551%).  They  led  the  nation  in  1976  with  a  .537%  and  set 
a  new  NCAA  record  in  1975  as  they  shot  .547%. 


IT'S  NICE  TO  PLAY  AT  HOME 

During  his  15  years  coaching  in  Cole  Field  House. 
Lefty's  record  shows  a  big  advantage  playing  at  home. 
The  Terps  have  played  210  games  and  won  188  while 
losing  only  38.  This  is  a  .832%  winning  mark. 

"SWEET  16" 

When  Maryland  advanced  to  the  second  round  of  the 
Mideast  Regional  last  season  to  play  Illinois,  in  Rupp 
Arena,  it  was  the  second  time  Lefty's  teams  had  gone  to 
the  Sweet  16.  They  advanced  there  in  1980  to  play 
Georgetown  in  the  Spectrum. 

13  POST  SEASON  TEAMS  THIS  YEAR 
—  FOR  SURE 

This  year's  schedule  highlights  13  teams  that  played  in 
the  NCAA  and  NIT  tournaments.  Terp  opponents  this 
year  from  the  NCAA  field  include  Duke,  North  Carolina. 
Virginia,  Wake  Forest,  Alabama,  Dayton,  Nevada  Las 
Vegas  and  West  Virginia.  The  other  NCAA  entrant  is 
Kansas,  the  Terps  opener  in  the  Great  Alaskan  Shootout 
over  the  Thanksgiving  holidays.  In  the  NIT  were  Georgia 
Tech,  North  Carolina  State,  Notre  Dame,  and  Ohio 
State.  Additional  possibilities  from  the  NCAA  post 
season  play  are  Alabama-Birmingham  and  Illinois  in  the 
Great  Alaskan  Shootout  and  Arkansas  in  the  Rainbow- 
Classic.  From  last  year's  NIT  participants,  Oregon  and 
Tennessee  are  in  the  Alaskan  Shootout  and  Iowa  State  in 
the  Rainbow  Classic. 


NO  TOBACCO  ROW  TEAM  FOR  TITLE  THIS  TIME 

When  the  Terps  won  the  ACC  Championship  with  the 
74-62  win  over  Duke,  it  marked  only  the  fourth  time  that 
a  school  from  outside  the  state  of  North  Carolina  had 
won  the  title.  However,  it  was  the  third  time  that  it  was 
captured  within  the  confines  of  the  state.  Maryland  had 
also  won  the  title  (the  only  one  until  last  year)  in  Raleigh. 
NC  in  1958  and  South  Carolina  won  it  in  Greensboro  in 
1971.  Virginia  won  the  championship  in  1976  in  Landover. 
MD,  the  first  time  in  the  history  of  the  ACC  that  the 
Championship  game  had  been  moved  outside  the  state  of 
North  Carolina.  It  left  Tobacco  Row  for  the  second  time 
when  it  was  played  two  years  ago  in  Atlanta.  GA. 

ALL-TIME  TERP  CAREER  SUCCESS 

Albert  King  became  Maryland's  all-time  leading  scorer 
in  1981  with  2,058  points,  passing  John  Lucas's  2,015.  All 
of  the  top  career  scorers  at  Maryland  are  Driesell  coached 
except  Washington  Bullet  Coach  Gene  Shue,  1951-54 
( 1.397),  7th,  and  Bob  Kessler,  1953-56  (1.256),  10th. 


81 


TERP  PLAYERS  PLAY  RANKED 

With  pride,  Driesell  can  impress  a  young  recruit  that 
every  high  school  player  he  has  recruited  for  the  Terps 
since  his  coming  to  Maryland  in  1969,  has  played  on  at 
least  one  nationally  ranked  team  during  their  four  year 
career.  Also,  in  his  nine  years  at  Davidson,  each  player  he 
recruited  there,  played  on  a  Top  10  team. 

THE  BIG  3  OF  ACC  TOURNAMENTS 

The  Terps  are  only  one  of  three  teams  in  the  ACC  that 
have  won  over  10  ACC  Tournament  games  in  the  past  10 
years.  Maryland  has  won  14  since  1973  while  North 
Carolina  has  won  17  and  Virginia,  10. 

OVERTIME(S) 

The  Terps  were  involved  in  three  overtime  games 
during  the  1983-84  season  —  or  rather  overtime(s).  They 
played  back-to-back  double  overtime  games  against 
Georgia  Tech,  2/4  and  Wake  Forest,  2/8,  both  away  and 
lost  both.  Then  a  triple  overtime  at  Clemson  10  days  later, 
2/18,  and  a  67-66  win.  It  was  the  Terps'  first  triple 
overtime  game  since  the  1978-79,  3-OT,  67-65  win  over 
Rhode  Island  in  the  1st  round  of  the  NIT.  The  only  other 
in  Lefty's  1 5  years  at  College  Park  was  the  1 977-78  season 
with  the  3-OT  victory  over  NC  State  in  the  1st  round  of 
the  ACC  Tournament. 

LEFTY  WAS  A  GOOD  GUY 

Now  hear  this:  Lefty  was  not  whistled  for  a  technical 
foul  during  the  entire  1983-84  season.  Clemson's  Bill 
Foster,  Duke's  Mike  Krzyzewski  and  Virginia's  Terry 
Holland  tied  for  technical  fouls  among  the  ACC  coaches 
last  year,  each  having  3  in  the  regular  season.  North 
Carolina's  Dean  Smith  and  Wake  Forest's  Carl  Tacy  had 
two  each.  Georgia  Tech's  Bobby  Cremins  had  one. 

TERPS  AND  CAVALIERS  LOOK  FORWARD  TO  IT 

Maryland  and  Virginia  have  closed  out  the  ACC 
regular  season  play  the  past  8  years,  from  the  1975-76 
season,  alternating  home-away  games.  They'll  do  it  again 
this  year  in  Charlottesville,  March  3. 

"BIG  COLE"  BRINGS  IN  THE  FANS 

Nearly  2.5  million  fans  have  come  to  Cole  Field  House 
to  watch  the  Terps  since  Driesell  took  over  15  years  ago. 
For  the  past  13  years  Maryland  has  led  the  ACC  in  total 
attendance,  over  200,000  fans  per  season  and  over  13,000 
per  game.  The  year  before  Driesell  came  to  Maryland  the 
Terps  drew  66,500  for  10  games,  an  average  of  6,650  per 
game. 

49  A  HALF 

The  49  points  scored  by  the  Terps  in  the  second  half 
against  Virginia  in  the  final  game  of  last  season  were  the 
most  scored  by  the  Terps  in  a  half  in  the  regular  season. 
Against  the  Terps,  Duke  and  Wake  Forest  scored  49, 
Duke  in  the  first  half  and  Wake  in  the  second  half,  both  at 
Cole. 


In  the  ACC  championship  game  against  Duke,  they 
scored  47  points  in  the  second  half,  20  more  than  in  the 
first  half. 

WINNING  WAYS  OUTSIDE  ACC 

Against  non-conference  opponents,  Driesell  has  an 
amazing  178-31  win  record  in  his  15  years  for  a  .852 
winning  percent. 

DRIESELL  TWICE  COACH  OF  THE  YEAR 

Driesell  has  twice  been  named  ACC  Coach  of  the  Year. 
The  first  time  came  in  1975  when  he  led  Maryland  to  a 
24-5  record  and  a  5th  place  in  the  national  rankings,  along 
with  the  1st  place  ACC  finish.  The  second  time  came  in 
1980  when  the  Terrapins  were  ranked  nationally  in  both 
AP  and  UPI  polls  with  a  24-7  record. 

7  ACTIVE  IN  THE  NBA  —  3  DRAFTED 

Seven  of  Driesell's  Terrapin  players  are  now  playing  in 
the  NBA:  John  Lucas,  San  Antonio;  Brad  Davis,  Dallas; 
Buck  Williams  and  Albert  King,  New  Jersey  Nets; 
Charles  Pittman,  Phoenix;  Len  Elmore,  New  York;  and 
Tom  McMillen,  Washington.  Elmore  just  retired  to  enter 
Harvard  Law  School. 

Drafted  this  summer  from  last  year's  team  were  center 
Ben  Coleman,  2nd  round  by  the  Chicago  Bulls  and 
Herman  Veal,  6th  round  and  Mark  Fothergill,  8th  round, 
both  by  Phoenix. 


82 


To  The  News  Media 


We  hope  the  1984-85  edition  of  Maryland  Basketball 
will  be  helpful  as  you  cover  the  Terrapins  this  winter. 
With  this  book  goes  an  invitation  to  visit  us  as  often  as 
possible.  Our  offices  are  located  in  Cole  Field  House, 
room  1 145. 

Should  you  desire  additional  information,  feature 
materials  or  photographs  please  address  your  requests  to 
the  Sports  Information  Office. 

PLAYER  INTERVIEWS:  Contact  the  Sports  Infor- 
mation Office  for  player  interviews  at  least  a  day  in 
advance  and  we  will  make  every  attempt  to  accommodate 
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  staff 
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. 

GAME  SERVICES:  Pre-game  notes  and  updated  sta- 
tistics will  be  available  prior  to  the  games.  A  running 
play-by-play  and  full  statistical  summary  sheets  are 
distributed  at  halftime  and  after  the  game.  Coaches' 
quotes  are  made  available  following  all  conference  games. 

PRESS  ROW:  Working  press  will  be  seated  on  the 
floor  level  of  Cole  Field  House  on  the  West  side. 

I'PPER  PRESS:  The  Radio  announcers  and  TV  along 
with  film  cameras  are  located  in  the  West  press  box,  one 
flight  up  from  the  promenade  level. 

PHOTOGRAPHERS:  All  photographers  on  assign- 
ment w  orking  on  the  floor  will  pick  up  an  arm  band  prior 
to  the  game  and  must  display  it  at  all  times.  Photo- 
graphers are  not  allowed  in  the  bench  area. 

POST  GAME  INTERVIEWS:  Maryland  will  follow 
the  ACC  interview  policy  with  the  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  same  procedure  when  his 
locker  room  opens. 

PRESS  PARKING:  Press  parking  is  available  on  the 
North  Side  of  Cole  Field  House  on  the  promenade  of 
Byrd  Stadium. 

WEEKLY  PRESS  LUNCHEONS:  Every  attempt 
will  be  made  to  hold  a  weekly  luncheon  in  Cole  Field 
House  with  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. 


STAFF  TELEPHONE  NUMBERS: 

JACK  ZANE  (Maryland  '60) 
Assistant  Athletic  Director 
Sports  Information  Director 
Office:  (301)  454-2123 
(301)  864-4076 
Home:  (301)  322-3265 

JOE  F.  BLAIR  (Missouri  '50) 
Assistant  Sports  Information  Director 
Home:  (301)  589-6883 

STEVE  REAR 

Assistant  Sports  Information 
Home:  (301)  439-7432 

MARY  BALDWIN 

Secretary 

BASKETBALL  OFFICE  TELEPHONE: 
(301)  454-2126 


M 


$    O 


83 


OFFICIAL  NCAA  BASKETBALL  BOX  SCORE 


Marc 

h9, 

984.  ( 

Ireei 

sboro  Col 

semi' 

NC 

MARYLAND 

ACC- 

-IstS 

nun 

i—  FINAL  BOX 

HOME 

N.C.  STATE 

No. 

FG  FGA  FT 

FTA  RI 

PF 

TP 

MIN    A    TO 

BLK 

s 

VISITORS  (Last  Name, 

First) 

34 

Bias,  Len 

f 

7      13        I 

1 

7 

2 

15 

40       4      1 

0 

0 

No. 

FG 

FGA 

FT 

FTA  REB 

PF 

IP 

MIN 

A 

TO  BLK 

S 

42 

Veal,  Herman 

f 

2        7       0 

0 

10 

3 

4 

32      2      1 

1 

2 

43    Charles,  Lorenzo 

f 

3 

6 

3 

5         8 

2 

9 

35 

0 

2        1 

1 

54 

Coleman,  Ben 

c 

8      12        2 

3 

8 

2 

18 

39       3      1 

1 

0 

32    Pierre,  Russell 
45    McQueen,  Cozell 
22    Webb.  Anthony 

f 
c 

g 

4 
6 
4 

7 
12 
16 

I 
6 
0 

2        9 
11         9 

0        2 

4 
2 
4 

9 

18 
8 

34 
39 
31 

2 
3 
5 

3        0 

0  1 

1  0 

0 
0 
0 

10 

24 

Adkins,  Jeff 
Branch,  Adrian 

g 

g 

2        5        1 
4        9       4 

2 
5 

1 

1 

4 

5 
12 

22      2     0 
29       4      0 

1 

1 

0 
0 

31    Myers,  Ernie 

g 

3 

8 

1 

2        4 

4 

7 

29 

2 

2       0 

2 

3 

Gatlin,  Keith 

3        8        7 

9 

2 

3 

13 

33       5      3 

0 

0 

24    Gannon,  Terry 

4 

7 

0 

0         I 

0 

8 

13 

1 

0       0 

0 

22 

Fothergill,  Mark 

1        I        0 

0 

0 

1 

2 

2       0     0 

0 

0 

23    Bolton,  Bennie 

0 

0 

0 

0        0 

1 

0 

2 

1 

0       0 

0 

32 

Long,  Terry 

0       0       0 

0 

2 

1 

0 

3       0      0 

0 

0 

34    Butts,  Rodney 

0 

0 

0 

0        0 

0 

0 

1 

0 

0       0 

0 

Team  Rebounds  (include! 

in  Totals) 

3 

12    McClain,  George 

0 

0 

0 

0        0 

2 

0 

2 

0 

0       0 

0 

TOTALS 

27      55      15 

20 

35 

17 

69 

200     20      6 

4 

2 

30    Thompson,  Harolc 

2 

4 

0 

0        3 

1 

4 

13 

0 

0       0 

2 

FG%:  1st  Half  16,30— 

53.3% 

2nd  Half  1 1 

25^14.0% 

Game 

49.1%    Deadball 

42    Warren,  Mike 

0 

0 

0 

0        0 

0 

0 

1 

0 

0        0 

0 

FT%:  1st  Half    2/2  — 

00.0% 

2nd  Half  13 

18— 

72.0% 

Game 

75.0%     Rebounds  1 

Team  Rebounds  (included  in  Totals 

3 

OFFICIALS:  Lenny  Wirtz.  Tom  Fraim.  John 

Cloueherv 

TOTALS 

26 

60 

11 

20       39 

20 

63 

200 

14 

8        2 

5 

Technical  Fouls:  None 

FG  %:  1st  Half  12/28 — 42.9% 

2nd  Half 

14/32—43.9% 

Game  43.3% 

Deadball 

Attendance:    16,662 

FT  %:  1st  Half   7/ 14—50.0% 

2nd  Half 

4/6 

—66.7% 

Game  55.0% 

Rebounds  3 

SCORE  BY  PERIODS 

IstH.      2ndH. 

OT 

OT 

FINAL 

N.C. 

STATE 

31             32 

63 

MARYLAND 

34            35 

69 

March  10,  1984,  Greensboro  Coliseum,  NC 

MARYLAND 

ACC — Semi-Finals 

—  FINAL  BOX 

HOME 

WAKE  FOREST 

No. 

FG  FGA  FT  FTA  REB 

PF 

TP 

MIN 

A 

TO  BLK 

S 

VISITORS  (Last  Name,  First) 

34    Bias.  Len 

f 

7      13        1        3         7 

0 

15 

36 

3 

3       0 

1 

No. 

FG  FGA  FT  FTA 

REB 

PF 

TP 

MIN 

A    TO 

BLK 

s 

42    Veal.  Herman 

f 

3        4        0       0        7 

3 

6 

26 

3 

0      0 

0 

21    Green,  Kenny 

f 

7       17        0 

0 

7 

3 

14 

38 

0      0 

1 

1 

54    Coleman,  Ben 

c 

6        9       4        5        6 

2 

16 

38 

2 

5       0 

4 

3    Toms.  Johns 

f 

1        3        0 

0 

3 

3 

2 

22 

1       0 

0 

0 

10    Adkins.  Jeff 

g 

2        4        2       4        3 

0 

6 

23 

5 

2      0 

I 

55    Teachey,  Anthony       c 

6      13        4 

4 

II 

3 

16 

38 

2       1 

0 

1 

24    Branch,  Adrian 

g 

7      11        2        3        5 

3 

16 

32 

I 

5      2 

1 

15    Rudd,  Delaney 

g 

10      17        0 

0 

2 

4 

20 

35 

6       2 

0 

4 

3    Gatlin,  Keith 

3        4       0        I         1 

I 

6 

28 

8 

I       0 

0 

20    Young,  Danny 

g 

3      13        0 

0 

2 

5 

6 

36 

9       5 

0 

2 

22    Fothergill,  Mark 

0        10       0         1 

1 

0 

6 

0 

1       0 

0 

14    Bogues,  Tyrone 

0        1        0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

5 

0      0 

0 

0 

32    Long,  Terry 

0        0        12        2 

1 

1 

11 

0 

1       0 

1 

22    Kepley.  Chuck 

0        1        0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

3 

0       1 

0 

0 

Team  Rebounds  (included  in  Totals) 

34    Garber,  Lee 

3        5        0 

0 

7 

2 

6 

21 

2       2 

0 

0 

TOTALS 

28      46      10      18       33 

11 

66 

200 

22 

18       2 

8 

53    Wessel.  Craig 
Team  Rebounds 

0       0        0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

2 

0      0 

0 

0 

FG%:  1st  Half  IS  23— 

65.2% 

2nd  Half  13:23—56.5% 

Game  60.9% 

Deadball 

(included  in  Totals) 

1 

FT%:  1st  Half    3  4  — 

75.0% 

2nd  Half    7.14— 50.0% 

Game  55.6% 

Rebounds  0 

TOTALS 

30      70        4 

4 

33 

20 

64 

200 

20     12 

1 

8 

OFFICIALS:  Lenny  Wirtz,  Tom  Fraim,  Jim  Burch 

FG%:  1st  Half  10/34- 

-29.4% 

2nd  Half  20/36 

— 

556% 

Game 

42.9% 

Deadball 

Technical  Fouls:  None 

FT  %:  1st  Half   0  0- 

-  0.0% 

2nd  Half    4,4 

-100.0 

Game  10( 

Rebounds  0 

Attendance:    16.662 

SCORE  BY  PERIODS 

1st  H.      2nd  H.        OT 

OT 

FINA 

WAKE  FOREST 

20             44 

64 

MARYLAND 

33             33 

66 

84 


OFFICIAL  NCAA  BASKETBALL  BOX  SCORE 


March  11,  1984,  Greensboro  Coliseum,  NC 

MARYLAND 

ACC-FINALS-CHAMPIONSHIP  GAME-FINAL  Bi 

HOME 

DIKE 

No. 

FG 

FGA  FT  FTA  REB 

PF 

TP 

MIN 

A 

TO 

BLK 

s 

VISITORS  (Last  Name,  First) 

34    Bias,  Len 

f 

12 

17        2        2        4 

1 

26 

39 

0 

6 

0 

0 

No. 

FG  FGA  FT  FTA  REB 

PF    TP 

MIN 

A    TO 

BLK 

s 

42    Veal.  Herman 

f 

2 

4        12        4 

1 

5 

33 

2 

2 

0 

1 

32    Alarie,  Mark                f 

4       10         1          4          7 

2      9 

36 

4      2 

0 

2 

54   Coleman.  Ben 

c 

6 

12       2        2        9 

3 

14 

38 

2 

2 

1 

1 

45    Meagher,  Dan              f 
21    Bilas,  Jay                     c 

5        9        2        2        5 

3     12 

34 

2       3 

0 

1 

10    Adkins,  Jeff 

S 

2 

2       3        3        3 

3 

7 

13 

2 

2 

1 

0 

3        4       0       0        7 

3       6 

22 

1       2 

1 

0 

24    Branch,  Adrian 

i 

4 

13       4       6        3 

4 

12 

36 

4 

2 

0 

2 

4    Amaker,  Tommy         g 

3        5        0       0        3 

2      6 

36 

3       4 

0 

0 

3    Gallin,  Keith 

2 

4         4         4          3 

0 

8 

30 

10 

1 

0 

3 

24    Dawkins.  Johnny        g 

II      23        0       0        4 

3     22 

37 

3       7 

0 

3 

22    Fothergill.  Mark 

0 

0       0       0        0 

0 

0 

1 

0 

0 

0 

0 

1 1    McNccley,  Doug 

0        0        0       0        0 

1        0 

8 

0      0 

0 

0 

32    Long.  Terrv 

1 

10       0        2 

0 

2 

7 

0 

0 

0 

1 

12    Henderson.  David 

2       9        3        4         1 

4      7 

27 

3       1 

0 

1 

1 1     Dnesell 

0 

0       0       0        0 

0 

6 

1 

0 

0 

0 

0 

Team  Rebounds  (included  in  Totals) 

12    Baxter.  Jeff 

0 

0       0       0        0 

0 

0 

1 

0 

0 

0 

0 

TOTALS 

28      60       6      10      31 

18     62 

200 

16     19 

1 

7 

13    Holberl,  Pete 

0 

0       0       0        0 

0 

0 

1 

0 

0 

0 

0 

FG%:  1st  Half  14,  27— 51.9% 

2nd  Half  14  33—42.4% 

Game  46.7% 

Deadball 

Team  Rebounds  (included  in 

Totals)                      I 

FT%:  1st  Half   2/4  —50.0% 

2nd  Half    4  6  —66.7% 

Game  60.0% 

Rebounds  2 

TOTALS 

29 

53      16      19       29 

13 

74 

200 

20 

15 

2 

8 

FG  %:  1st  Half  12  27- 

44.4% 

2nd  Half  17  16—65.4%. 

Game  54.7% 

Deadball 

FT%:  1st  Half    3  4  — 

75.0% 

2nd  Half  13   15—86.7% 

Game  84 

2% 

Rebo 

und 

1 

OFFICIALS:   Hank  Nichols. 

_enny  YVirtz.  Joe  Forte 

Technical  Fouls:  None 

Attendance:    16.662 

SCORE  BY  PERIODS 

1st  H                i  i          '    : 

OT 

FINA 

DUKE 

30            32 

62 

MARYLAND 

27            47 

74 

u  »