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Ten Maryland teams earn perfect academic progress rate scores

COLLEGE PARK, MD – Ten University of Maryland athletic teams earned a perfect 1000 Academic Progress Rate (APR) score per the data released by the NCAA. The teams include: men’s lacrosse, men’s golf, women’s cross country, field hockey, women’s golf, women’s gymnastics, women’s lacrosse, softball, women’s tennis, and women’s track and field.
Ten perfect APR scores is one shy of Maryland’s record of 11 teams with perfect scores in the 2013-14 and 2018-19 academic years. The women’s cross country and women’s golf teams both earned multi-year scores of 1000, which is attained by four consecutive years of perfect single-year APR scores.

Eleven sport programs improved their multi-year scores, while an additional five maintained their multi-year scores. An impressive 12 teams boast a multi-year APR score above 980. In total, six intercollegiate sport programs at the University of Maryland improved their single-year APR scores, while an additional six programs maintained their single-year scores.

“Once again, our student-athletes performed at the highest levels in the classroom,” said Damon Evans, Barry P. Gossett Director of Athletics. “I want to congratulate our Terrapins and our Gossett Center staff on another impressive year. Our commitment to academic excellence is demonstrated by 10 programs recording perfect 1,000 APR scores and 11 teams improving their multi-year APR scores. These are achievements to be celebrated."

Men’s lacrosse has earned a perfect 1000 in three consecutive years, women’s gymnastics and softball have posted perfect scores in two consecutive years. And, women’s golf has posted a perfect 1000 APR score every year since 2015-16.

"I couldn’t be more proud of the academic accomplishments of our student-athletes, and the attention devoted to academic success by our academics staff, coaches, and administration,” said Brady Rourke, Director of the Gossett Center. “Ten teams with perfect APR scores is remarkable. It conveys the energy and focus student-athletes dedicate to academic achievement. Furthermore, the high marks reflect the time and energy GSAC staff invest to ensure student-athletes remain in good academic standing and progress toward graduation.”

The newly released multi-year APR scores are comprised of data submitted for 2018-19, 2019-20, 2020-21, 2021-22. The APR index was developed by the NCAA to provide a "real time" snapshot on a semester-by-semester basis in order to measure the eligibility and retention of student-athletes in all Division I institutions. The APR is part of a larger package of initiatives, the NCAA Academic Performance Program, which was mandated by the NCAA Board of Directors to improve the academic performance of athletic teams.

In calculating the APR, all student-athletes receiving athletics financial aid are considered "counters" and each semester receives one point for retention/graduation and one point for meeting NCAA and University of Maryland eligibility standards for competition. The maximum number of APR points a student-athlete can earn in an academic year is four (two in the fall semester and two in the spring semester). A team's APR is the total number of eligibility/retention points earned divided by the maximum number of points possible. This APR number is then multiplied by 1000. (For example, a team that receives 94 percent of all possible points would have a team APR of 940.)

BREAKING: Terps land surprise OL commitments

Maryland has landed commitments from Belle Glade (Fla.) Glades Central OTs Ja'Kavion Nonar and Keon Kindred.

Nonar, a Rivals three-star, was previously committed to Pitt and was being heavily pursued by Florida and Ole Miss. He had previously visited Maryland over the summer and Locksley was recently down in Florida to see him and Kindred. At 6-foot-7, 272-pounds, he has ideal size for the tackle position.

Kindred chose the Terps over offers from Florida Atlantic, Florida International, Tulane and Western Kentucky.

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Maryland Gonna Maryland and Tick Off the Conference HQ

From behind the (Com)Post's paywall...

Last fall, Maryland’s athletic department unveiled an ambitious plan to launch a subscription streaming platform featuring behind-the-scenes videos, interviews and film breakdowns. The school would partner with a third-party company, charge customers $8 per month and allow fans to watch this content on their televisions and other devices through streaming apps.


The problem: Despite months of planning for an idea that was hatched years ago, the Big Ten, which controls the school’s media rights, was left in the dark. And this plan, according to a letter sent from Big Ten Network President Francois McGillicuddy to Maryland Athletic Director Damon Evans, would “flagrantly violate” the assignments of rights among the school, the conference and the Big Ten Network. That forced Maryland to remove its news release published Oct. 25, 2022, and tweets about the launch.
In the Oct. 26, 2022, letter, obtained by The Washington Post through an open-records request, McGillicuddy wrote that the Big Ten Network was “stunned” to learn about Terps Plus the day the school distributed its news release, indicating that the network had no knowledge of the platform’s impending launch.

Brian Ullmann, Maryland athletics’ chief strategy officer, declined to comment on if the school contacted the Big Ten to discuss the planned launch of a subscription streaming platform.
In the emailed letter, McGillicuddy cited the Big Ten Media Agreements Reference Manual and mentioned how those guidelines warn “in all bold, after the heading ‘Important,’ ” that schools cannot license ancillary programming to third parties. (Maryland announced Terps Plus as a partnership with Sport & Story, which has built subscription platforms at several other schools but none in the Big Ten.)
McGillicuddy continued to cite this manual, noting that on the internet, the Big Ten Network “owns distribution rights to all Ancillary Programming beyond distribution on the Member Institution’s official athletic website.” McGillicuddy wrote that Maryland described Terps Plus content “in almost the same words” as the manual’s examples of ancillary programming. (Video content that is not game action is considered ancillary programming.)
McGillicuddy wrote: “So when you say that Terps+ will be available to ‘Terrapin fans nationwide’ and ‘will be consumable wherever Maryland fans want to watch,’ whether on TV, internet, social media, or phone apps, what you are saying is that the University intends to disregard all of the limits on how it can distribute Ancillary Programming. And when you say that Terps+ will be the ‘exclusive’ source of that programming, what you mean is that the University intends to deprive us of our ‘right to distribute [the University’s] Ancillary Programming at no cost.’
“The University has already harmed BTN by falsely implying that BTN is an ‘[un]official content network’ for the University’s Ancillary Programming. And actually launching Terps+ would inflict far greater harm. We look forward to resolving this amicably, but we reserve all rights.” The day after the announcement of Terps Plus, McGillicuddy and Evans spoke on the phone, according to an email from McGillicuddy that included Big Ten Commissioner Kevin Warren. McGillicuddy wrote: “Given your indication of the absence of a contract with Sport & Story, and your expressed willingness to abide by our agreement with the B1G conference by not proceeding with Terps+, and removing all references to its launch, I am hopeful we can resolve this as efficiently and painlessly as possible.”
In 2020, Maryland launched Terrapin Club Plus as a perk for donors. The platform distributed ancillary programming but was housed on the school’s website and didn’t directly charge customers. Still, at the time, the Big Ten Network reminded Maryland of the media rights guidelines, according to the letter from McGillicuddy. (It is not clear with whom Michael Calderon, a BTN senior vice president, communicated about Terrapin Club Plus. Athletic department spokesman Jason Yellin did not provide any details on this exchange.) Two years later, Terps Plus crossed the line of what was permissible.
Unlike Terrapin Club Plus, Terps Plus was set to be available on over-the-top streaming apps such as Apple TV and Roku. That capability, combined with the cost for customers, could have made Terps Plus be perceived as more of a direct competitor with the Big Ten Network. And Terps Plus would have been contracted with Sport & Story, a third party that is not a Big Ten media rights holder. A Big Ten Network spokesman said in a statement that it is common for the network “to have discussions with Big Ten institutions around content and ancillary programming initiatives.”
The reference manual that McGillicuddy cited included the conference’s reasoning for why Terps Plus couldn’t go forward. A Big Ten spokesperson said in a statement that all schools received a copy of the manual in 2017, when the term of the current media rights agreement began, and schools can request additional copies or ask specific questions.
Yellin said Maryland now has a copy of the manual, but he declined to say when the school received it. Emails obtained by The Post through an open-records request show a message from Ullmann directly quoting the manual in October, the same day the Big Ten Network raised its concerns. When Maryland announced Terps Plus, the school did not yet have a contract with Sport & Story but rather a “handshake agreement,” Ullmann said, and Terps Plus had not yet launched its “e-commerce mechanism,” so no customers had paid before Maryland backtracked on its plan. The formal launch of the streaming platform was set for later in the fall.
The additional revenue from Terps Plus would have been small compared with the massive check the school receives annually from the Big Ten. In the 2021-22 fiscal year, Maryland received $48.8 million in conference distributions, according to a financial report obtained through an open-records request.
As Maryland prepared to announce Terps Plus, athletic department staffers worked to provide Sport & Story a list of email addresses of possibly interested fans. One email exchange, obtained through an open-records request, revealed a list that combined Terrapin Club members and season ticket holders for football, men’s basketball and women’s basketball included under 6,000 people. In the 2022 season, Maryland’s average attendance at home football games ranked 65th among the 131 Football Bowl Subdivision schools and 58th of the 65 schools in the Power Five conferences. Sport & Story has launched similar subscription platforms at SEC schools Arkansas, LSU, Mississippi State and South Carolina as well as at Oklahoma State of the Big 12. Sport & Story founder and executive producer Bo Mattingly said “there has not been any sort of pushback or any feeling of infringement that we’ve been made aware of” with those schools and their partner networks. Mattingly did not anticipate issues would arise with Terps Plus, and the school had confidence that stemmed from its existing Terrapin Club Plus product.
When Sport & Story launches a streaming platform at a school, it hires a videography staff — usually around three to five people per school to go with additional support from company headquarters. According to Sport & Story’s website, schools pay nothing to partner with the company but can reap some of the revenue.
Mattingly said the company had been in the “early stages of identifying candidates” for positions at Maryland before the Big Ten Network forcefully raised its concerns. Those videographers would have worked with Maryland’s existing staff to produce Terps Plus content.
The letter from the Big Ten Network quickly halted those plans. Maryland scrubbed its website and social media accounts of mentions of the announcement. And while Ullmann referenced hopes for a path forward and a Big Ten Network spokesman said in a statement the network has had “productive conversations” with Maryland, no concrete plans have been announced in the months since.

MLAX: Terps earn 4th seed in NCAA Tournament, will host Army

COLLEGE PARK, Md. -- The University of Maryland men's lacrosse team (10-5) has received the fourth overall seed in the 2023 NCAA Tournament and will face Army.

The Terps will host the Black Knights on Saturday, May 13 at 7:30 pm. Maryland's first round game will be broadcast on ESPNU and played in College Park at SECU Stadium.

Army (12-3) is an automatic qualifier into the tournament by way of winning the Patriot League Conference. Maryland holds a 20-19 advantage against Army all-time, though the two teams have not played since 2004.

Coming off an undefeated 18-0 season where they were ultimately crowned National Championships, the Terrapins are making their 45th NCAA Tournament appearance and NCAA-best 20th straight. Maryland also secured its NCAA-best 20th consecutive 10-win season earlier this year.

Head coach John Tillman sports a 28-9 all-time record in the NCAA Tournament (all at Maryland), which currently ranks sixth all-time among coaches in tournament wins. Additionally, the Terrapins' 28 NCAA wins since Tillman took over the program in 2011 is the most in the nation.

Tillman's 12 consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances is the longest-ever streak for a Maryland coach, increasing his lead over the legendary Bud Beardmore's nine-tournament streak from 1971-79.

The Terps have been to nine NCAA semifinals in ten full seasons (2011-12, 2014-18, 2021, 2022) under head coach John Tillman, including seven national title game appearances and two championships.

The winner of Maryland's first round matchup will advance to face the winner of Penn State/Princeton in the NCAA Quarterfinals.

Ticket information will be shared once available.
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MLAX: A pair of Terps named to B1G All-Tourney team

Despite the fact they didn't have the desired outcome, the Terps did have a couple of guys named to the All-tourney team in Brett Makar and freshman Braden Erksa. Full all-tourney team below. Terps were 6th in the RPI headed into the the weekend and will probably remain right around there after beating Hopkins but losing to Michigan. That should likely have them seeded in the bottom half of the bracket and hosting a 1st round game in the NCAAs.

2023 Big Ten Men’s Lacrosse All-Tournament Team*
MVP: Michael Boehm, Jr., Michigan

Garrett Degnon, Gr., Johns Hopkins
Braden Erksa, Fr., Maryland
Brett Makar, Gr., Maryland
Michael Boehm, Jr., Michigan
Bryce Clay, Gr., Michigan
Andrew Darby, Gr., Michigan
Hunter Taylor, Fr., Michigan
Jack Whitney, Jr., Michigan
Justin Wietfeldt, Jr., Michigan
Josh Zawada, Sr., Michigan
Jake Morin, Jr., Penn State

*denotes a tie for the 10th member of the All-Tournament Team

WOW

Had to DVR the LAX game because I went to a show in DC.

Couldn't wait to get home and watch us take care of this pitiful upstart.

Now I have watched it.

THAT WAS THE MOST PATHETIC MARYLAND TEAM IN RECENT, IF NOT FORVER, HISTORY.

WHAT A JOKE. GETTING CRUSHED TWICE IN A SEASON BY FMICHIGAN IN....WAIT FOR IT...WAIT FOR IT....LACROSSE..BOTH TIMES IN THE STATE OF MARYLAND.

WHAT A JOKE WE ARE THIS YEAR

Embarrassed Shame GIF



“There’s still a lot left to play for, you know, hopefully, you know, we’ll see what happens tomorrow [selection day],” Maryland graduate defenseman Brett Makar said. “10 wins. That’s, you know, a heck of a regular season with the schedule we play.”

Not #1 worthy

Not an article....an indictment

Maryland hosted….

If you read the UAA stories I posted, you saw that the Terps are involved with 2025 Canadian forward Efeosa Oliogu, who beat out Queen as the top player last weekend on the shoe circuit, according to Jacey Zembal.

Well the Terps wasted little time getting in on campus and hosting him for a unofficial visit. If you remember, I said I expected Baltimore big man Max Johnson to pick up a Terps offer based on what I was hearing from a couple of sources, but that has yet to happen.

It seems Oliogu is clearly a top front court priority target for 2025 based on his play and the fact that they have just hosted him. His two most recent offers came from Georgetown and Illinois.

A little taste of what this kid can do.

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