12 maryland vs duke...2001marylandfootball #12 maryland vs duke saturday, october 20, 2001 • 1:00...

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2001MARYLANDfootball #12 MARYLAND vs DUKE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2001 1:00 P.M. EDT BYRD STADIUM (48,055/Natural Grass) COLLEGE PARK, MD. FOOTBALL GAME NOTES Originally Released: October 15, 2001 MARYLAND (6-0, 4-0 ACC) S1 NORTH CAROLINA* (ABC) .............. W 23-7 S8 EASTERN MICHIGAN ....................... W 50-3 S22 Wake Forest* .................................... W 27-20 S15 WEST VIRGINIA ............................... W 32-20 O6 VIRGINIA* (JP Sports) ..................... W 41-21 O11 Georgia Tech* (ESPN) ............... W (OT) 20-17 O20 DUKE* (H) (JP Sports) ........................ 1:00 p.m. O27 Florida State* ....................................... TBA N3 TROY STATE ....................................... TBA N10 CLEMSON* .......................................... TBA N17 NC State* ............................................. TBA * Atlantic Coast Conference game; (H) homecoming ALL CAPS indicates home game; all times Eastern DUKE (0-6, 0-4 ACC) S1 FLORIDA STATE* ............................. L 13-55 S8 Rice ..................................................... L 13-15 S22 NORTHWESTERN ............................ L 7-44 S29 Virginia* .............................................. L 10-31 O6 GEORGIA TECH* ............................... L 10-37 O13 WAKE FOREST* ............................... L 35-42 O20 Maryland* ............................................. 1:00 p.m. O27 VANDERBILT ....................................... 1:00 p.m. N3 NC STATE* .......................................... TBA N10 OPEN N17 North Carolina* ..................................... TBA D1 Clemson* ............................................. 1:00 p.m. * Atlantic Coast Conference game; (H) homecoming ALL CAPS indicates home game; all times Eastern SCHEDULES/RESULTS BROADCAST INFORMATION QUICK FACTS MEDIA INFORMATION THE GAME The University of Maryland football team seeks a 7-0 start and its most wins since 1985 in this weekend’s game versus the Duke University Blue Devils at Byrd Stadium. Kickoff for the game, which also marks the Terrapins’ 64th homecoming celebration, is set for 1:10 p.m. Maryland is coming off of its biggest win in over a decade as it beat then 15th-ranked Georgia Tech, 20-17, in overtime last Thursday in Atlanta. The win moved the Terrapins to 4-0 in the Atlantic Coast Conference and in the driver’s seat for the conference title with four games remaining against ACC foes. The win was the Terrapins’ first against the Yellow Jackets since 1996 and their first ever at Bobby Dodd Stadium. The Terrapins are ranked No. 12 in the Associated Press and No. 14 in the ESPN/USA Today polls. The national ranking marks the Terps’ third week in the Top 25, Maryland’s first since 1995, and its highest ranking since being ranked seventh in week one of the 1985 season. The last time the Terps finished the season in the Top 25 was 1985 when they finished 18th and went to the Cherry Bowl. Duke enters this weekend’s game having lost all six of its games in 2001. The Blue Devils are riding the longest losing streak in the ACC as -- after last weekend’s 42-35 loss to Wake Forest -- they have now lost 18 in a row. This week, the Terps are attempting to inch closer to the start of the 1978 team. In that 1978 season, the Jerry Claiborne-led Terrapins opened the season with eight straight wins and worked their way to a No. 5 ranking in the Associated Press poll. More importantly, with its win at Georgia Tech, Maryland became bowl eligible for the first time since 1995 and did so with five games remaining on the schedule. SERIES NOTES Saturday’s game marks the 45th meeting between the Terrapins and Blue Devils. The series began in 1932 and Maryland owns a 26-18 advantage in the all-time series. When looking at the all-time ledger between the two schools, a line can almost be drawn between the 1972 and 1973 seasons. From the start of the series until 1972, Duke held a 14-3 advantage in the series and at one point rattled off wins in 11 of 12 meetings. From 1973 on, Maryland has been in control of the series for the most part, winning 23 of 27. The Terps’ best run went from ‘73 to ‘88 as they won 15 in a row. Maryland is 7-3 in the last 10 versus Duke with two of the three losses to the Blue Devils coming at home. Last year, the Terrapins got 158 yards and two touchdowns out of LaMont Jordan at Wallace Wade Stadium on their way to a 20-9 victory. The last Duke victory in the series was one of the toughest in the last few years for Maryland. In 1999, the Terrapins were 5-2 and feeling good about their bowl chances when the 1-6 Blue Devils came to town. The end result was a 404-yard passing day from Spencer Romine and a 25-22 win that was the first of four consecutive losses to end the season and the end of any postseason dreams for Maryland. The last time Maryland faced Duke with a national ranking next to its name was 1995. In that game, the Terps came away with a 41-28 win. The Terrapins have, in fact, won all five times that they have played the Blue Devils as a ranked team. NEW-LOOK TERPS The Terrapins entered 2001 knowing that they would have a new look with a different helmet and uniforms, a new coaching staff and a new tailback. What they couldn’t have known was just how different this year’s team would be from those in the recent past. With its sixth win in the bag, Maryland is guaranteed its first winning season since 1995. It has also already won more games overall and in conference than it did all of last year. Should the Terps beat Duke this weekend, they will have posted five wins in the Atlantic Coast Conference for the first time since 1985. That year, Maryland went 6-0, won the ACC and beat Syracuse in the Cherry Bowl. The Terrapins’ win over Georgia Tech was their first over a ranked opponent in 34 games. The last time Maryland had beaten a ranked foe was in 1990, when it beat then No. 8 Virginia to earn a berth in the Independence Bowl, the team’s last bowl appearance. The Terps have won multiple road games in the conference for just the third time since 1987. Should they win one of their remaining two ACC road games, they would match the total of the 1985 team, the last to win three. No Maryland team has ever won four, which is still a possibility for this year’s team. Football Contact ......................................... Greg Creese Phone ................. w: (301) 314-7065; h: (301) 887-1199 e-mail ...................................... [email protected] Associate A.D./Media Relations .............. Dave Haglund Phone ................. w: (301) 314-7064; h: (301) 879-2518 e-mail ...................................... [email protected] Media Relations Fax .............................. (301) 314-9094 **for more media information, see the last page of this release 7 TV: JP Sports. Steve Martin, play-by-play; Rick “Doc” Walker, color analysis; Mike Hogewood, sidelines. Radio: Terrapin Radio Network, pregame starts at 12:20 p.m. Johnny Holliday, play-by-play; Jonathan Claiborne, color; Tim Strachan sidelines. Internet: Audio and live stats can be accessed by log- ging on to www.umterps.com. Head Coach .................. Ralph Friedgen (Maryland, ‘69) Record at Maryland (years) ................................ 6-0 (first) Career Record ........................................................ Same Offensive Coordinator ................................ Charlie Taaffe Defensive Coordinator ............................. Gary Blackney Md. All-Time vs. Duke .......................... Terps lead 26-18 ‘01 Home Record ........................................................ 4-0 ‘01 Away Record ........................................................ 2-0 GAME HOMECOMING 2001

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Page 1: 12 MARYLAND vs DUKE...2001MARYLANDfootball #12 MARYLAND vs DUKE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2001 • 1:00 P.M. EDT BYRD STADIUM (48,055/Natural Grass) COLLEGE PARK, MD. FOOTBALL GAME NOTES

2001MARYLANDfootball

#12 MARYLAND vs DUKESATURDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2001 • 1:00 P.M. EDT

BYRD STADIUM (48,055/Natural Grass)COLLEGE PARK, MD.

FOOTBALL GAME NOTES Originally Released:October 15, 2001

MARYLAND (6-0, 4-0 ACC)S1 NORTH CAROLINA* (ABC) .............. W 23-7S8 EASTERN MICHIGAN ....................... W 50-3S22 Wake Forest* .................................... W 27-20S15 WEST VIRGINIA ............................... W 32-20O6 VIRGINIA* (JP Sports) ..................... W 41-21O11 Georgia Tech* (ESPN) ............... W (OT) 20-17O20 DUKE* (H) (JP Sports) ........................ 1:00 p.m.O27 Florida State* ....................................... TBAN3 TROY STATE ....................................... TBAN10 CLEMSON* .......................................... TBAN17 NC State* ............................................. TBA* Atlantic Coast Conference game; (H) homecomingALL CAPS indicates home game; all times Eastern

DUKE (0-6, 0-4 ACC)S1 FLORIDA STATE* ............................. L 13-55S8 Rice ..................................................... L 13-15S22 NORTHWESTERN ............................ L 7-44S29 Virginia* .............................................. L 10-31O6 GEORGIA TECH* ............................... L 10-37O13 WAKE FOREST* ............................... L 35-42O20 Maryland* ............................................. 1:00 p.m.O27 VANDERBILT ....................................... 1:00 p.m.N3 NC STATE* .......................................... TBAN10 OPENN17 North Carolina* ..................................... TBAD1 Clemson* ............................................. 1:00 p.m.* Atlantic Coast Conference game; (H) homecomingALL CAPS indicates home game; all times Eastern

SCHEDULES/RESULTS

BROADCAST INFORMATION

QUICK FACTS

MEDIA INFORMATION

THE GAME• The University of Maryland football team seeks a 7-0 start and its most wins since 1985 in this weekend’s game

versus the Duke University Blue Devils at Byrd Stadium. Kickoff for the game, which also marks the Terrapins’64th homecoming celebration, is set for 1:10 p.m.

• Maryland is coming off of its biggest win in over a decade as it beat then 15th-ranked Georgia Tech, 20-17, inovertime last Thursday in Atlanta. The win moved the Terrapins to 4-0 in the Atlantic Coast Conference and inthe driver’s seat for the conference title with four games remaining against ACC foes. The win was theTerrapins’ first against the Yellow Jackets since 1996 and their first ever at Bobby Dodd Stadium.

• The Terrapins are ranked No. 12 in the Associated Press and No. 14 in the ESPN/USA Today polls. The nationalranking marks the Terps’ third week in the Top 25, Maryland’s first since 1995, and its highest ranking sincebeing ranked seventh in week one of the 1985 season. The last time the Terps finished the season in the Top25 was 1985 when they finished 18th and went to the Cherry Bowl.

• Duke enters this weekend’s game having lost all six of its games in 2001. The Blue Devils are riding the longestlosing streak in the ACC as -- after last weekend’s 42-35 loss to Wake Forest -- they have now lost 18 in a row.

• This week, the Terps are attempting to inch closer to the start of the 1978 team. In that 1978 season, the JerryClaiborne-led Terrapins opened the season with eight straight wins and worked their way to a No. 5 ranking inthe Associated Press poll. More importantly, with its win at Georgia Tech, Maryland became bowl eligible forthe first time since 1995 and did so with five games remaining on the schedule.

SERIES NOTES• Saturday’s game marks the 45th meeting between the Terrapins and Blue Devils. The series began in 1932 and

Maryland owns a 26-18 advantage in the all-time series.

• When looking at the all-time ledger between the two schools, a line can almost be drawn between the 1972 and1973 seasons. From the start of the series until 1972, Duke held a 14-3 advantage in the series and at one pointrattled off wins in 11 of 12 meetings. From 1973 on, Maryland has been in control of the series for the most part,winning 23 of 27. The Terps’ best run went from ‘73 to ‘88 as they won 15 in a row.

• Maryland is 7-3 in the last 10 versus Duke with two of the three losses to the Blue Devils coming at home. Lastyear, the Terrapins got 158 yards and two touchdowns out of LaMont Jordan at Wallace Wade Stadium on theirway to a 20-9 victory.

• The last Duke victory in the series was one of the toughest in the last few years for Maryland. In 1999, theTerrapins were 5-2 and feeling good about their bowl chances when the 1-6 Blue Devils came to town. The endresult was a 404-yard passing day from Spencer Romine and a 25-22 win that was the first of four consecutivelosses to end the season and the end of any postseason dreams for Maryland.

• The last time Maryland faced Duke with a national ranking next to its name was 1995. In that game, the Terpscame away with a 41-28 win. The Terrapins have, in fact, won all five times that they have played the BlueDevils as a ranked team.

NEW-LOOK TERPS• The Terrapins entered 2001 knowing that they would have a new look with a different helmet and uniforms, a

new coaching staff and a new tailback. What they couldn’t have known was just how different this year’s teamwould be from those in the recent past.

• With its sixth win in the bag, Maryland is guaranteed its first winning season since 1995. It has also already wonmore games overall and in conference than it did all of last year.

• Should the Terps beat Duke this weekend, they will have posted five wins in the Atlantic Coast Conference forthe first time since 1985. That year, Maryland went 6-0, won the ACC and beat Syracuse in the Cherry Bowl.

• The Terrapins’ win over Georgia Tech was their first over a ranked opponent in 34 games. The last timeMaryland had beaten a ranked foe was in 1990, when it beat then No. 8 Virginia to earn a berth in theIndependence Bowl, the team’s last bowl appearance.

• The Terps have won multiple road games in the conference for just the third time since 1987. Should they winone of their remaining two ACC road games, they would match the total of the 1985 team, the last to win three.No Maryland team has ever won four, which is still a possibility for this year’s team.

Football Contact ......................................... Greg CreesePhone ................. w: (301) 314-7065; h: (301) 887-1199e-mail ...................................... [email protected] A.D./Media Relations .............. Dave HaglundPhone ................. w: (301) 314-7064; h: (301) 879-2518e-mail ...................................... [email protected] Relations Fax .............................. (301) 314-9094**for more media information, see the last page of this release

7

TV: JP Sports. Steve Martin, play-by-play; Rick “Doc”Walker, color analysis; Mike Hogewood, sidelines.

Radio: Terrapin Radio Network, pregame starts at 12:20p.m. Johnny Holliday, play-by-play; Jonathan Claiborne,color; Tim Strachan sidelines.

Internet: Audio and live stats can be accessed by log-ging on to www.umterps.com.

Head Coach .................. Ralph Friedgen (Maryland, ‘69)Record at Maryland (years) ................................ 6-0 (first)Career Record ........................................................ SameOffensive Coordinator ................................ Charlie TaaffeDefensive Coordinator ............................. Gary BlackneyMd. All-Time vs. Duke .......................... Terps lead 26-18‘01 Home Record ........................................................ 4-0‘01 Away Record ........................................................ 2-0

GAM

E

HO

MEC

OM

ING

2001

Page 2: 12 MARYLAND vs DUKE...2001MARYLANDfootball #12 MARYLAND vs DUKE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2001 • 1:00 P.M. EDT BYRD STADIUM (48,055/Natural Grass) COLLEGE PARK, MD. FOOTBALL GAME NOTES

WWW.UM .COM

MARYLAND VS. DUKE • NOTES/BY THE NUMBERS

TERPS...by the numbers

1stMaryland’s 20-17 win at Georgia Tech was the firstin school history at Bobby Dodd Stadium.

3Maryland ranks third nationally this week inturnover margin (+2.33 per game). The Terps haverecorded 21 takeaways compared to just seventurnovers.

5100-yard rushing games in six starts for sopho-more tailback Bruce Perry. Perry is the first Terpsophomore ever to rush for 100 yards in fivestraight games and the second Terrapin ever toopen the season with five straight 100-yardperformances.

5thThe trio of Ralph Friedgen, Charlie Taaffe and GaryBlackney is the fifth most experienced group attheir respective positions (head coach, offensivecoordinator, defensive coordinator) in Division I-A.

12Punts (out of 35) by Ray Guy Award candidateBrooks Barnard that have traveled 50 yards ormore this season.

14.7Average number of points allowed this season bythe Terrapin defense, which ranks 10th nationally inscoring defense.

17Consecutive games in which senior Guilian Garyhas caught at least one pass.

17thMaryland ranks 17th nationally in run defense,giving up an average of 95 yards per game. The50 yards the Terps held Georgia Tech to were theYellow Jackets’ fewest in over four years.

32%Maryland opponents are converting just 32 percentof their third-down attempts. The Terps are third inthe ACC lead in third-down conversion defense.

78Team-leading tackle total for junior linebacker E.J.Henderson, who also leads the team in tackles forloss (16).

1985The last time Maryland was ranked as high as it isthis week (12th) was 1985 when the Terps openedthe season ranked seventh.

42,637Average home attendance this season for theTerrapins, about 8,500 more per game than theaverage home attendance last season (34,129).

UNPRECEDENTED DEBUT• Ralph Friedgen’s 6-0 start in his first year as a head coach at Maryland is the best in school history. With last

week’s win over Georgia Tech, Friedgen joined legendary Maryland coach H.C. “Curley” Byrd as the only twocoaches to open their careers as a Terp head coach with six consecutive wins. Byrd accomplished the feat in1911 (when he took the team over with two games remaining) and 1912.

• Should Maryland defeat Duke this weekend, Friedgen will become the first football coach in the 109-year historyof the University of Maryland to lead his team to victory in each of his first seven games.

• A win would also tie Friedgen with Duke’s Fred Goldsmith for the best start by a first-year head coach in ACChistory. Goldsmith started 7-0 with the 1994 Blue Devils.

THREE-FOR-ONE• With the hiring of Ralph Friedgen and Friedgen’s ensuing hires of offensive coordinator Charlie Taaffe and

defensive coordinator Gary Blackney, the Terrapins got the equivalent of three head coaches atop one coachingstaff. Though Friedgen is in his first stint as a head coach, Taaffe was most recently the head coach of theCanadian Football League’s Montreal Alouettes while Blackney spent 10 successful years (1991-2000) asBowling Green’s head coach .

• Taaffe and Blackney have been able to maintain success virtually everywhere they have been. While inMontreal, Taaffe guided the Alouettes to a combined 25-14 record (two seasons) and an appearance in the 2000Grey Cup. In 1999 and 2000, he was named the CFL’s Coach of the Year, making him only the second coachto earn such an honor in back-to-back seasons (Marv Levy the first in 1974) and the first ever to do so in his firsttwo campaigns. In addition, he is the winningest coach in The Citadel’s history.

• Blackney was able to achieve in his own right as a head coach at Bowling Green. In 10 successful seasons,Blackney won 60 games (third most in school history), was the only coach in school history to win a bowl game(his Falcons won the 1991 California Raisin Bowl and the 1992 Las Vegas Bowl) and was the only coach to winmore than 10 games in back-to-back seasons (11 in 1991; 10 in 1992).

• Though they are new to Maryland, the trio comprises one of the most experienced triumvirates in college football.With their 83 years of combined, full-time experience at the college and/or pro levels, Friedgen, Taaffe andBlackney are the fifth-most experienced trio in Division I-A. Below is a list of the company they keep:

Rk. School Yrs. Staff (Pos./Yrs. of Experience)1 Penn St. 101 J. Paterno (HC/52), F. Ganter (OC/28), T. Bradley (DC/21)2 Florida St. 8 9 B. Bowden (HC/41), J. Bowden (OC/14), M. Andrews (DC/34)3 Mississippi St. 8 6 J. Sherrill (HC/31), S. Woods (OC/13), J.L. Dunn (DC/29)4 Air Force 8 3 F. DeBerry (HC/33), C. Petersen (OC/13), R. Bell (DC/39)5 Maryland 8 2 R. Friedgen (HC/28), C. Taaffe (OC/23), G. Blackney (DC/31)Note: Totals reflect years coaching prior to the 2001 season.

MARYLAND COACHES IN YEAR ONE• In the modern era of college football at Maryland (i.e. since 1950), there have been 11 different head coaches to

take over the reigns of the Terrapin program. By and large, those coaches have not had success in thatinaugural campaign, but many have gone on to great heights as their careers in College Park progressed. Belowis a look at the 10 coaches since 1950 who preceded Ralph Friedgen:

Coach 1st Year (ACC) Overall Tenure Highlights/Notes

Tommy Mont (‘56-58) 2-7-1 (2-2-1) 11-18-1 Beat No. 14 UNC in ‘57

Tom Nugent (‘59-65) 5-5 (4-2) 36-34 Went 7-3 and beat No. 7 Syracuse in ‘61

Lou Saban (‘66) 4-6 (3-3) Same Returned to coaching pros after one year

Bob Ward (‘67-68) 0-9 (0-6) 2-17 Last Terrapin alum to serve as head coach

Roy Lester (‘69-71) 3-7 (3-3) 7-25 3-3 ACC record T3rd in the conference

Jerry Claiborne (‘72-81) 5-5 (3-2-1) 77-37-3 Three ACC titles; 2nd most wins at Md.

Bobby Ross (‘82-86) 8-4 (5-1) 39-19-1 Three ACC titles; 24-5-1 all-time in ACC

Joe Krivak (‘87-91) 4-7 (3-3) 20-34-2 1990 Independence Bowl

Mark Duffner (‘92-96) 3-8 (2-6) 20-35 6-5 season in ‘95; finished T5th in ACC

Ron Vanderlinden (‘97-00) 2-9 (1-7) 15-29 Beat UNC 45-7 to move to 5-2 in ‘99

Ralph Friedgen (‘01-) 6-0 (4-0) Same Terps bowl eligible with five games left

GETTING DEFENSIVE• More than midway through the 2001 season, the Terrapin defense has established itself as a unit to be reckoned

with. Though the personnel is not drastically different from a year ago, the results have been as GaryBlackney’s unit has used a high-pressure, blitzing style that has left opponents with virtually no choice but to tryto beat Maryland through the air. Thus far, the result has been a high volume of caused turnovers and six straightwins.

• Georgia Tech became the first team this season to throw for over 300 yards against the Terps (it happened fivetimes a year ago), but the tradeoff was costly for the Jackets. Tech turned the ball over six times (including threeGodsey interceptions) and was held to 50 yards rushing, 72 yards less than their previous worst effort of thisseason and fewest since being held to 28 yards by North Carolina in 1997.

Page 3: 12 MARYLAND vs DUKE...2001MARYLANDfootball #12 MARYLAND vs DUKE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2001 • 1:00 P.M. EDT BYRD STADIUM (48,055/Natural Grass) COLLEGE PARK, MD. FOOTBALL GAME NOTES

2001MARYLANDfootball

Head CoachRALPHFRIEDGEN

THE FRIEDGEN FILEPersonalFull Name: ................................................................................................... Ralph Harry FriedgenPronunciation: ................................................................................................................ FREE-junDate of Birth/Hometown .................................................................... April 4, 1947/Harrison, N.Y.Alma Mater: .............................................................................................................. Maryland, ‘69Family: Wife, Gloria; daughters, Kelley (23), Kristina (14), Katharine (12)

Coaching ExperienceMaryland2001- .......................................................................................................................... Head CoachGeorgia Tech1997-2000 ............................................ Assistant Coach - Offensive Coordinator/Offensive LineSan Diego Chargers1994-96 ........................................................................ Assistant Coach - Offensive Coordinator1992-93 ............................. Assistant Coach - Running Game Coordinator/H-Backs/Tight EndsGeorgia Tech1987-91 ................................................. Assistant Coach - Offensive Coordinator/QuarterbacksMaryland1982-86 ................................................ Assistant Coach - Offensive Coordinator/Offensive LineMurray State1981 ........................................................................................................... Assistant Head CoachWilliam & Mary1980 ............................................................................. Assistant Coach - Offensive CoordinatorThe Citadel1977-79 ........................................................................ Assistant Coach - Offensive Coordinator1973-76 .................................................................................... Assistant Coach - Defensive LineMaryland1969-72 ........................................................................................................... Graduate Assistant

Playing ExperienceMaryland ................................................................................................... Guard, lettered in 1968

MARYLAND VS. DUKE • NOTES/COACH FRIEDGEN

• Ralph Friedgen is in his first year as Maryland’s head football coach. He is 33rdman to hold the post at the university and it is his first head coaching position.

• With Maryland’s 6-0 start, Friedgen is the first coach in the modern era and thesecond ever (H.C. Byrd, 1912) to start his career at UM with six straight wins.

• Prior to his current stint in College Park, Friedgen served as Georgia Tech’soffensive coordinator for nine of the last 14 years.

• From 1998-2000, Friedgen orchestrated a Yellow Jacket offensive unit thataveraged 36.7 points and 444 yards of total offense per game while postinga cumulative record of 27-8 (.771).

• Friedgen was the offensive coordinator at Maryland under Bobby Ross whenthe Terps won three consecutive ACC titles in the mid-’80s.

• The 54-year old Friedgen owns the rare distinction of coordinating the of-fense of a collegiate national champion (Georgia Tech in 1990) and a SuperBowl participant (the San Diego Chargers in 1994).

• Friedgen and Ross coached together for a total of 20 seasons and includedstops at The Citadel, Maryland, Georgia Tech and the San Diego Chargers.

• In his first five years as a full-time coach at Maryland (1982-86), Friedgen wasinstrumental (along with QB coach Joe Krivac) for the development of future proquarterbacks Boomer Esiason, Frank Reich and Stan Gelbaugh, all of whomspent at least a decade in the National Football League.

• A 1969 graduate of Maryland who also earned his master’s degree in CollegePark, Friedgen came to the school as a 190-pound former high school quarter-back and finished his four years with a season (1968) in which he lettered as anoffensive guard and earned Academic All-ACC honors.

• Friedgen is the first Maryland alum to serve as head football coach since BobWard in 1967-68.

• A prep standout, Friedgen’s coaching roots began under the tutelage of his fa-ther, Ralph Sr., a high school coach for over 30 years in upstate New York.

• In the Virginia game, Maryland gave up 345 total yards but held the Cavaliers to just 64yards on the ground, over 70 yards below their season average coming in. The Terps werestingiest in the first half, giving up just one rushing yard to UVa.

• Against West Virginia, the Terps forced six turnovers (four interceptions and two fumbles).The four interceptions were the most by a Terrapin defense since they picked off theMountaineers four times in a 33-0 rout in 1999.

• Maryland allowed just one touchdown through the air and went more than nine consecutivequarters without allowing a touchdown before Wake Forest scored in the third quarter threeweeks ago.

• The 124 yards of offense that the Terps held Eastern Michigan to were the fewest by aMaryland opponent since 1980 when the Terps held Virginia to a sum of 90 yards. The EMUgame marked just the sixth time since 1980 that the Terrapins held an opponent under 200yards of offense. All but one of those games (Wake Forest in ‘96) came prior to 1983.

• Last season’s lowest point total allowed was Duke’s nine points, and opponents averaged25.8 points per game. This year, the Terps are holding opponents to 14.7 points per game,a total that ranks 10th in the NCAA Division I-A ranks.

• Terp opponents are averaging 2.6 yards per carry this season.

• Last year’s unit allowed an average of 440 yards per game. This year’s “D” is thus faryielding an average of 321 yards per contest and 95 per game on the ground (17th bestnationally).

PERRY FIFTH IN THE NCAA• This season began with Maryland having a situation at tailback that could best be described

as a big question mark. Sophomore Bruce Perry was joined by senior Marc Riley andfreshman Jason Crawford in a backfield that started ‘01 touted as a possible three-headedrushing attack. After six games, that three-pronged attack has been replaced by a singleback who is working his way into mention for national honors recognition.

• Perry ran 18 times for 49 yards against Georgia Tech, marking the first time this season hehas not cracked the century mark in rushing yards. He opened this season with five straight100-yard games and is currently fifth in the nation in rushing yards per game (145.0 ypg)after leading the nation the last three weeks.

• Perry’s 870 yards are second most nationally, trailing only Mewelde Moore’s (Tulane) 1,020(whose total has come in seven games, one more than Perry).

• In games one through three this year, Perry actually eclipsed the 100-yard mark by the half.

• The Philadelphia, Pa., native’s 276-yard effort against Wake Forest was the second-bestsingle game total in Maryland history and the sixth-best in Atlantic Coast Conference lore.

• The 276 yards were also the most ever against the Demon Deacons, besting the 237-yardeffort of South Carolina’s George Rogers in 1978.

• With three TDs against Eastern Michigan, Perry became just the 13th player in school historyto find the end zone three times in one game via the run.

RISING STAR• Sophomore Bruce Perry is doing his best to help Terp faithful forget about departed star and

all-time rushing leader LaMont Jordan. Below are a couple of comparisons between Perry’ssophomore campaign and Jordan’s Maryland record-setting season of 1999:

Perry ‘01 Jordan ‘99Yards per game 145.0* 148.4*Yards thru 6 games 870 708Rush TDs thru 6 games 7 12Yards Per Carry 6.2* 6.1*(*averages for Jordan is for the season; Perry through 6 games)

GARY COMING ON• Senior wideout Guilian Gary began this season with uncertainty as a week before the

Terps’ first game, he suffered a spinal injury in practice that had him airlifted from the practicefields with his football future in question. Six games into the season, the Horseheads, N.Y.,native has returned at full strength and has been one of Maryland’s offensive leaders.

• Gary has led or tied for the team lead in receiving in five of six games this season. AgainstGeorgia Tech, Gary finished with four catches for 60 yards including one on each of the finaltwo drives that ended in the Terps’ game-tying and winning field goals.

• With his four receptions against Tech, Gary has now caught at least one pass in each of thelast 17 games.

• Gary, Maryland’s leading receiver the past two seasons, entered 2001 with a chance to bothcrack the school’s top 10 for receptions and become the first Terrapin since All-American

Page 4: 12 MARYLAND vs DUKE...2001MARYLANDfootball #12 MARYLAND vs DUKE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2001 • 1:00 P.M. EDT BYRD STADIUM (48,055/Natural Grass) COLLEGE PARK, MD. FOOTBALL GAME NOTES

WWW.UM .COM

MARYLAND VS. DUKE • NOTES/RANKINGSGary Collins (1959-61) to lead the team in threeconsecutive seasons.

• With his four catches last week, Gary moved into12th on the Terp career charts with 92 receptions.He is also now 12th on the all-time yardage list with1,244, moving ahead of Mancel Johnson (‘93-96).

• In addition to his receiving skills, Gary is also oneof the top punt returners in school history. Lastseason, he became the first Terp to lead his team inpunt return yards for three straight years. He cur-rently ranks fourth on the school’s career list with518 return yards.

ON THIS DATE• The Terrapins have played 13 games in their his-

tory on October 20 and own a 7-5-1 record on thedate. The Terps’ last game on the date was a 23-20 win at Duke and their record at home on the 20this 4-1. The ledger:

Year Result Opponent1990 W, 23-20 at Duke1979 L, 17-25 at Wake Forest1973 W, 37-0 at Wake Forest1956 L, 6-34 at North Carolina1951 W, 14-7 North Carolina1945 L, 13-21 at Virginia Tech1934 W, 14-9 Virginia Tech1928 W, 13-6 Western Maryland1923 L, 9-16 Virginia Tech1917 T, 14-14 at Virginia Military1906 L, 0-29 at Mount Washington1897 W, 4-0 Eastern High1894 W, 12-0 at Washington College

HILL FUELS OFFENSIVE ATTACK• Though his numbers are not eye-popping, there is

no questioning that senior Shaun Hill is the leaderof the Terrapin offense.

• Six games in, the Parsons, Kansas, native is akey component in an offense that has helped leadto six impressive wins. With Hill under center, theTerps have committed just six turnovers (the sev-enth was a fumble by backup Latrez Harrison againstEMU).

• Hill did not have his best game against GeorgiaTech (20-of-39, 210 yds., 2 int.), but he was able tomove the Terrapin offense when it mattered most.With 1:18 left in regulation, he completed 4-of-6passes for 51 yards to move Maryland into rangefor Nick Novak’s game-tying 46-yard field goal astime expired.

• In nine games as a Maryland starter (dating back tolast year), Hill has a record of 7-2 and orchestratedthe biggest win of 2000 when he came off thebench against NC State a year ago.

FOWLER ANCHORS O-LINE• Senior honors candidate Melvin Fowler heads up

an offensive line that has become a unit to watch asthe season progresses and in the future. Fowler,who was named to this season’s “watch list” forthe Lombardi Award (recognizing the top interiorlineman in Division I-A), has now started 39 con-secutive games at center and is the lone seniorlisted on the offensive line’s two-deep heading intothe Duke game.

• Of the 10 players listed on the depth chart for theDuke game, only three (Fowler and juniors ToddWike and Matt Crawford) are not underclassmen.All told, the breakdown includes one senior, twojuniors, three sophomores and three redshirt fresh-men (Kyle Schmitt backs up at multiple spots).

• Despite its youth, the line is not without experienceas four starters (Fowler, Wike, Bryant, Crawford)return from a year ago.

• Through six games, the Maryland O-line has al-lowed just 11 sacks and has helped the Terpschurn out an average of 209.0 rushing yards pergame, 20th-best in the nation.

MAN IN THE MIDDLE• Junior E.J. Henderson is quickly becoming a player

to watch on a defense that has been nothing short ofoutstanding in 2001. The team leader in tackles in2000 with 109 (despite missing a game-and-a-halfdue to injury), Henderson has opened 2001 byleading the Terps in tackles in five of six games.

• Henderson currently leads Maryland in tackles (78)and tackles for loss (16). He is currently on pace topost 143 tackles this season.

• With 16 TFLs, Henderson has already moved intoa tie for sixth on the Maryland single season list.He now needs just nine to break the record of 24held by the legendary Randy White.

• For the second time this season, Henderson tiedhis career high for tackles with 18 against GeorgiaTech. In that contest, he also added four tackles forloss and a sack.

• In his two-plus years at Maryland, Henderson hasnotched double-digits in tackles 11 times.

• Dating back to last year, Henderson has finishedwith double-digit tackle performances in eight of thelast 10 games.

• Henderson finished seventh in the ACC in tackles ayear ago and is third among those who returned in2001. A viable All-American candidate, Hendersonhas averaged 13.3 tackles per game (133 total) inhis last 10 games dating back to last year.

THOMPSON ON BUTKUS LIST• Senior linebacker Aaron Thompson is one of 69

players (and one of five ACC players) who havebeen named to the “watch list” for the 2001 ButkusAward which recognizes Division I-A’s top line-backer.

• Thompson enters the Duke game having started all39 games of his career at Maryland.

• Through six games, Thompson is tied for the teamlead in sacks (3.0) and is second in TFLs (8).

• With four tackles for loss in the UNC game, Thomp-son moved to the top of the Maryland career list(which began being tracked in 1974) with 39. Hebroke the school record of 37 held by CharlesJohnson (1976-78) and now has 43 for his career.

• In addition, Thompson now needs just 19 TFL yardsto become the school’s all-time leader.

• With one more sack, Thompson will move into thecareer top 10 at Maryland. Should he match histotal of 6.5 sacks from a year ago, Thompsonwould move into sole possession of the numbereight spot.

RUSHING YARDSJason Crawford, TB .................. 38 vs. Eastern Michigan 2001Bernie Fiddler, FB ..................... 13 vs. Eastern Michigan 2001Latrez Harrison, QB .................. 50 vs. Eastern Michigan 2001Shaun Hill, QB ........................................... 47 vs. Virginia 2001Chad Killian, FB ............................... 16 vs. West Virginia 2001James Lynch, FB ...................... 23 vs. Eastern Michigan 2001Bruce Perry, TB ................................ 276 @ Wake Forest 2001Marc Riley, TB ............................................ 51 vs. Virginia 2001

PASS COMPLETIONSLatrez Harrison, QB ............................. 2 @ Florida State 1999Shaun Hill, QB ................................. 29 vs. Georgia Tech 2000

PASSING YARDSLatrez Harrison, QB ........................... 17 @ Florida State 1999Shaun Hill, QB ............................... 318 vs. Georgia Tech 2000

RECEPTIONSJeff Dugan, TE ........................... 5 vs. Middle Tennessee 2000Guilian Gary, WR .......................................... 6, four times 2001Scooter Monroe, WR .................... 3 @ WVU/vs.Ga. Tech 2000Eric James, TE ................................... 3 vs. Wake Forest 2000Rich Parson, WR ..................... 2 vs. Virginia/at Ga. Tech 2001Bruce Perry, TB ............................................ 8 vs. Virginia 2001Matt Murphy, TE ................................... 2 @ Wake Forest 2001Marc Riley, TB ..................................... 2 vs. Wake Forest 2000Maurice Shanks, WR .................. 2 vs. Eastern Michigan 2001Jafar Williams, WR .............................. 7 at Georgia Tech 2001Daryl Whitmer, WR ...................... 3 vs. Eastern Michigan 2001

RECEIVING YARDSJeff Dugan, TE ........................ 91 vs. Middle Tennessee 2000Guilian Gary, WR ....................................... 99 vs. Virginia 2001Scooter Monroe, WR .................. 72 vs. Western Carolina 1999Eric James, TE ................................. 42 vs. Wake Forest 2000Matt Murphy, TE ................................. 28 @ Wake Forest 2001Bruce Perry, TB .......................................... 51 vs. Virginia 2001Marc Riley, TB .................................. 26 vs. West Virginia 1999Maurice Shanks, WR ..... 17 vs. Eastern Michigan/at GT 2001Jafar Williams, WR ............................ 73 at Georgia Tech 2001Daryl Whitmer, WR .................... 69 vs. Eastern Michigan 2001

KICKOFF RETURN YARDSGuilian Gary, WR .............................. 84 @ Georgia Tech 1999Scooter Monroe, WR ......................... 48 vs. Florida State 2000Rich Parson, WR ........................................ 68 vs. Virginia 2001Bruce Perry, RB ....................................... 32 vs.UNC/EMU 2001

PUNT RETURN YARDSGuilian Gary, WR ....................... 75 vs. Western Carolina 1999

TACKLESLeroy Ambush, LB ....................... 4 vs. Eastern Michigan 2001Jamal Chance, CB ...................... 2 vs. Eastern Michigan 2001Curome Cox, CB .................................. 8 vs. Florida State 2000C.J. Feldheim, NT ................................ 5 at Georgia Tech 2001Monte Graves, LB ............................... 4 @ Georgia Tech 1999E.J. Henderson, LB ............ 18 vs. Georgia Tech & WVU ‘00/‘01Andrew Henley, LB ............................. 4 vs. West Virginia 2001Charles Hill, DT ............................................ 9 vs. Temple 2000Tony Jackson, SS ........................... 16 @ Clemson/Duke 2000Leon Joe, LB ............................................. 12 @ Clemson 2000Landon Jones, NT ....................................... 7 @ Clemson 2000Randall Jones, FS .......................... 13 vs. North Carolina 1999Reggie Lewis, LB .............................. 7 vs. North Carolina 1999Rod Littles, SS ................................. 11 @ WFU/NC State 1999Marlon Moye-Moore, LB ........................... 16 vs. Clemson 1999Tony Okanlawon, CB ................................ 12 @ NC State 1999Durrand Roundtree, DE ....................... 7 vs. Florida State 2000William Shime, NT ........................................ 2, four times 2001Scott Smith, DE .................................. 6 @ North Carolina 2000Tyrone Stewart, S .......................................... 2, five times 2001Randy Starks, DT ................................. 6 at Georgia Tech 2001Ryan Swift, LEO ...................... 3 @ UNC/vs. W. Carolina ‘98/’99Aaron Thompson, LB ............................... 17 vs. NC State 2000Mike Whaley, LEO .................................... 12 @ Clemson 2000Dennard Wilson, CB ........................... 6 @ West Virginia 2000

SINGLE-GAMEbests

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2001MARYLANDfootball

MARYLAND VS. DUKE • NOTES/ACC

THIS WEEKIN THE...

• The Baltimore native’s 17 TFLs in 1999 rank tied forthird on the Terps’ single-season charts.

BOOTIN’ BARNARD• Junior All-America candidate and Ray Guy nomi-

nee Brooks Barnard has picked up where he leftoff a year ago, ranking 11th nationally and first in theACC with a 44.5 yard punting average.

• Of Barnard’s 35 punts on the year, 10 have beendowned inside the 20 (eight inside the 20 and twoinside the 10) and 12 have been 50 yards or fur-ther.

• Barnard was one of the primary keys to the Terps’success in owning prime field position in the sea-son opener against UNC as he averaged 50.4yards on eight punts.

• Barnard finished fourth nationally a year ago in punt-ing average with a school-record 44.7-yard markand was the second-leading punter among thenation’s returnees, trailing only Minnesota’s PrestonGruening who led the nation with a 45.2-yard aver-age a year ago.

• Barnard’s 44.7-yard average last season bestedthe previous Maryland mark of 43.8, set by ScottMilanovich in 1993. For his efforts, Barnard wasnamed an honorable mention All-ACC selection aswell as an honorable mention All-American by theFootball News.

• In 2000, Barnard had a total of 13 punts that traveledfurther than 50 yards and eight punts downed in-side the 20. After six games in 2001, he hasalready had 12 go further than 50 and 10 downedinside the 20.

LOCAL TIES• Maryland has one player who calls the state of

North Carolina home as true freshman RussellBonham (OT) played at Carver High School inWinston-Salem. In addition, Terrapin inside line-backers coach Rod Sharpless is a native of Jack-sonville, N.C.

• The Blue Devils have three players from the Old-Line State, all on the defensive side of the ball. DBAlex Green is a native of nearby Hyattsville andgraduate of Northwestern High School; CB Ed Abrao-Netto is from Rockville and a grad of GeorgetownPrep; DE Charles Porter is a graduate ofLawrenceville HS in Columbia.

• Duke does not have any coaches with Marylandties, but quarterbacks coach Jim Pry was the of-fensive coordinator and offensive line coach at EastStroudsburg when Terp wide receivers coachJames Franklin was the team’s quarterback.

OPPORTUNISTIC TERPS• After forcing 14 turnovers in the last three games,

Maryland now ranks third in the nation with a +2.33turnover margin average.

• The Terps’ success has come in their ability tohang onto the ball as much as anything else. Theteam has gained 21 turnovers (seven fumbles, 14interceptions) and has lost only seven (two fumbles,five interceptions).

• Maryland’s 14 interceptions are two more than itstotal from the entire 2000 season.

IN THE ZONE• The Terps have been solid thus far in 2001 in the

red zone both offensively and defensively.

• Through five games, Maryland is 20-of-28 in thered zone with 16 touchdowns. The eight stumbleshave been four missed field goals, three loss ofdowns and an interception.

• Opponents have made it into Maryland’s red zonejust 14 times this season and have come awaywith five TDs and three field goals (8-of-14 overall).

• When the Terps have been in the red zone thisyear, they have scored touchdowns 57 percent ofthe time. Opponents have scored TDs 36 percentof the time against them.

COACHING CONNECTIONS• Ralph Friedgen is not the only new member of

the Terrapin coaching staff with ties to College Park,though this is his fourth stint at Maryland (playerfrom 1965-68; graduate assistant from 1969-72; of-fensive coordinator/offensive line coach from 1982-86 and the present stint).

• Inside linebackers coach Rod Sharpless playedlinebacker at Maryland from 1972-74, was an out-side linebackers coach from 1977-80 and a widereceivers coach for the Terps in ‘90 and ‘91. Defen-sive line coach Dave Sollazzo was a graduateassistant for the Terrapins in 1984 and defensiveline coach in ‘86-87.

• Sollazzo is also one of several coaches with aconnection to another institution -- The Citadel.Sollazzo played for (1974-76) and helped coach(1989-98) the Bulldogs, while Friedgen coachedthere from 1973-79, Charlie Taaffe was a headcoach there from 1987-96 and outside linebackerscoach Al Seamonson served there from 1987-99.

HOMEBOYS• On national signing day, 2001, Ralph Friedgen

said that in addition to landing some of the top re-cruits nationally, one of his goals was to make surethat all of the best players in the state of Marylandstayed in state and became Terps.

• Over the course of the past five years, the Mary-land-D.C.-Northern Virginia recruiting area has beentapped more successfully in each ensuing year. In1993, just 23 players on the Maryland roster hailedfrom either Maryland, D.C. or Northern Virginia,with six of those serving as opening-game start-ers. Since that time, however, numbers in bothcategories have risen steadily. Below is a look atthe trend:

Md./D.C./No. Va. ‘97 ‘98 ‘99 ‘00 ‘01Players on the Roster 23 34 39 46 49Opening-Day Starters 6 5 7 12 10

ANNIVERSARY OF PERFECTION• The start of this football season marked the end of

50 years since the only season of perfection at theUniversity of Maryland. The 1951 Terps went 10-0 and defeated top-ranked Tennessee, 28-13, in theSugar Bowl.

• Led by All-Americans Bob Ward and Ray Krouse,brothers Ed and Dick Modzelewski and QB JackScarbath, the Terrapins ran through the entire ‘51

2001 ACC STANDINGSACC Overall

Teams W L W L StreakMaryland 4 0 6 0 W6North Carolina 3 1 4 3 W4Clemson 2 1 4 1 W2Florida State 2 1 3 2 L1Virginia 2 2 3 3 L2Georgia Tech 1 2 4 2 L1NC State 1 2 3 2 L1Wake Forest 1 3 3 3 W1Duke 0 4 0 6 L18

RECENT ACC RESULTS

Thursday, October 11• Maryland 20, Georgia Tech 17 (OT)

Saturday, October 13• Clemson 45, NC State 37• Wake Forest 42, Duke 35• Miami (Fla.) 49, Florida State 27• North Carolina 30, Virginia 24

2001 ACC SCHEDULESaturday, October 20

• Duke at Maryland• North Carolina at Clemson• Florida State at Virginia• NC State at Georgia Tech

Saturday, October 27• Clemson at Wake Forest• Maryland at Florida State• Vanderbilt at Duke• Virginia at NC State

Saturday, November 3• Troy State at Maryland• Florida State at Clemson• NC State at Duke• North Carolina at Georgia Tech• Wake Forest at Virginia

Saturday, November 10• Clemson at Maryland• NC State at Florida State• Georgia Tech at Virginia• Wake Forest at North Carolina

Saturday, November 17• Maryland at NC State• Clemson at South Carolina• Duke at North Carolina• Georgia Tech at Wake Forest• Virginia Tech at Virginia

Saturday, November 24• Georgia at Georgia Tech• Northern Illinois at Wake Forest• Ohio at NC State

Saturday, December 1• Duke at Clemson• SMU at North Carolina• Penn State at Virginia• Georgia Tech at Florida State

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MARYLAND VS. DUKE • NOTES/IN THE RANKINGS

TERPS...in the rankings

2001 NCAA RANKINGSTEAMRushing Offense

20th ....................................................... 209.0 ypgTotal Offense

38th ....................................................... 399.5 ypgScoring Offense

25th ....................................................... 32.17 ppgPass Efficiency Defense

25th ................................................... 103.8 eff. rtg.Rushing Defense

17th .......................................................... 95.0 ypgScoring Defense

10th ......................................................... 14.7 ppgTotal Defense

30th ....................................................... 320.7 ypgNet Punting

7th ..................................................... 40.3 net avg.Kickoff Returns

31st ................................................... 22.9 net avg.Turnover Margin

3rd .......................................................... +2.3 avg.Pass Defense

78th ....................................................... 225.7 ypg

INDIVIDUALRushing

5th .................................... Bruce Perry, 145.0 ypgInterceptions

2nd ............................... Tony Okanlawon, .83 ipg23rd ................................... Tony Jackson, .50 ipg

Punting11th .............................. Brooks Barnard, 44.5 ypp

All-Purpose Yards7th .................................... Bruce Perry, 178.7 ypg

2001 ACC RANKINGSTEAMRushing Offense

2nd ....................................................... 209.0 ypgTotal Offense

3rd ........................................................ 399.5 ypgScoring Offense

4th ......................................................... 32.17 ppgPass Efficiency Defense

2nd ................................................... 103.8 eff. rtg.Rushing Defense

1st ............................................................ 95.0 ypgScoring Defense

1st ........................................................... 14.7 ppgTotal Defense

4th ......................................................... 320.7 ypgNet Punting

2nd ................................................... 40.3 net avg.Kickoff Returns

3rd .................................................... 22.9 net avg.Turnover Margin

1st ........................................................... +2.3 avg.Pass Defense

7th ......................................................... 225.7 ypg

INDIVIDUALRushing

1st .................................... Bruce Perry, 145.0 ypgInterceptions

1st ................................. Tony Okanlawon, .83 ipgT3rd ................................... Tony Jackson, .50 ipg

Punting1st ................................ Brooks Barnard, 44.5 ypp

All-Purpose Yards2nd .................................. Bruce Perry, 178.7 ypg

Receptions/Receiving Yards6th/5th ....................... Guilian Gary, 4.67/69.8 ypg

campaign allowing more than seven points onlythree times and ultimately sharing the SouthernConference championship with VMI before defeat-ing the Vols to close the season.

• In ‘51, national champions were anointed prior tothe bowl season, thus, Tennessee was thatseason’s national champ while the Terps rankedthird.

• The 1951 team will be honored at halftime of thisweekend’s game against Duke.

CONSECUTIVE STARTS• Several Terrapins currently own significant streaks

of consecutive starts. By number of starts: CMelvin Fowler - 39; OLB Aaron Thompson -39; OG Todd Wike - 27; CB Tony Okanlawon -20; and LB Mike Whaley - 17.

• Terps not listed above who have started the mostgames overall (not consecutive) include: OT MattCrawford - 26; NT Charles Hill - 21; and LB E.J.Henderson - 17.

IRON TERPS• As a team, Maryland had its strongest offseason in

recent history, literally. In preseason strength andconditioning testing this year, the Terrapins set fourteam strength records.

• This year’s Terps set team records for strengthindex, power clean, squat and bench press, im-proving on the previous all-time team highs thathad been established since such records havebeen kept (started in 1983).

• Individually, eight Terrapins set records in disci-plines at their respective positions, but none weremore impressive than DE Durrand Roundtree.

• Roundtree, a junior from Baltimore, set the all-timerecord for strength index with an incredible 844(700 is considered high), and set D-line records inthe bench (490), squat (760) and vertical jump(36.5 inches).

SCOUTING THE BLUE DEVILS• Duke enters this weekend’s game with a 0-6 record

(0-4 ACC) and in the midst of an 18-game losingstreak.

• The Blue Devils made a run last weekend at theirfirst win, scoring 28 points in the third quarter and35 in the second half, but still fell shy of WakeForest in a 42-35 defeat.

• Duke has struggled this season both offensivelyand defensively. The Blue Devils come into thegame ranked last in the ACC in half of the league’s24 team categories.

• Chris Douglas has been one of the Blue Devils’bright spots this year, rushing for an average of 78yards per game and leading the league in all-pur-pose yards with 185 yards per game.

• Quarterback D. Bryant has also been solid, pass-ing for 1,170 yards and four TDs. Bryant helpedlead the comeback charge against Wake Forestby passing for one touchdown and rushing for twoothers.

DUKE’S CARL FRANKS• Carl Franks is in his third season at the helm of the

Duke football program. Midway through 2001, heholds a 3-25 record as a Blue Devil.

• Franks came to Duke in 1999 after nine seasons atthe University of Florida where he held severaldifferent posts including assistant offensive coordi-nator and running backs coach from 1995-98.

• In his nine seasons in Gainesville, Florida went toeight bowl games and won the 1996 national cham-pionship by way of a 52-20 win over Florida Statein the Sugar Bowl.

• The current stint is Franks’ second at Duke as acoach. His first was, like the Florida job, undercoach Steve Spurrier during the most successfulrun in recent Duke history. Franks was a widereceivers/tight ends coach from 1987-89, a periodin which the Blue Devils got better each seasonand ultimately earned a co-championship in theACC in 1989 along with a berth in the All-AmericanBowl.

• A 1983 graduate of Duke, Franks was an Aca-demic All-ACC performer in 1982 and three-yearletterman who played running back and tight end.

BYRD STADIUM• Now in its 52nd year of operation, Byrd Stadium

continues to serve as the home of the Terps. Openedon September 30, 1950, and constructed for a sumof $1 milliion, Byrd was named after Dr. H.C.“Curley” Byrd, a multi-sport star at Maryland wholater became the school’s head football coach andultimately its president.

• The Terrapins are 160-99-1 within the friendly con-fines of Byrd (capacity 48,055).

TERP ALLEY• In an effort to restore some tradition on gameday in

College Park, the football staff has come up withsomething that will likely become tradition outsideof Byrd Stadium.

• For every football home game in 2001, the entirefootball team will make its first appearance at “TerpAlley.” The team will be dropped off at the circle atthe top of Field House Drive (between the footballpress box and Ludwig Field) approximately twohours before kickoff and it will be led through fansgathered along the street to the football complex bythe Maryland band and cheerleaders.

TICKET INFORMATION• Individual game tickets for Terp home games may

be purchased locally at any Ticketmaster outlet orby visiting the Maryland ticket office at Cole FieldHouse. Tickets may also be purchased online atwww.ticketmaster.com.

• For additional info or to order by phone, call (800)462-TERP.

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2001MARYLANDfootball

ACC PREDICTIONSACC Media ...................................................................... 7thAthlon ............................................................................. 7thBlue Ribbon .................................................................... 5thFootball Action ............................................................... 7thFootball News ................................................................ 7thInside Players ................................................................. 6thLindy’s ............................................................................ 7thStreet & Smith’s ............................................................. 7thThe Sporting News ........................................................ 7th

INDIVIDUAL HONORSBrooks Barnard, P

1st Team All-ACC .............................. Street & Smith’s2nd Team All-America ......................... Football Action1st Team All-ACC .............................................. Athon

Blue RibbonFootball News

Preview SportsThe Sporting News

2nd Team All-ACC ........................................... Lindy’sMatt Crawford, T

2nd Team All-ACC ........................ The Sporting News2nd Team All-ACC ........................................... Lindy’s

Melvin Fowler, C1st Team All-ACC ................................. Football News1st Team All-ACC .............................. Street & Smith’s2nd Team All-ACC ........................ The Sporting News

Tony Jackson, S2nd Team All-ACC ........................ The Sporting News

Aaron Thompson, LB2nd Team All-ACC ........................ The Sporting News19th ranked OLB in nation ........... The Sporting News

PRESEASONpicksQuotingTHE FRIDGE

MARYLAND VS. DUKE • QUOTES/EXTRAS

2001HonorsNATIONAL AWARDSBrooks Barnard ........................... Ray Guy Award Watch ListMelvin Fowler .............................. Outland Trophy Watch ListAaron Thompson ........................... Butkus Award Watch List

ACC PLAYERS OF THE WEEKBrooks Barnard ......................................... Specialist, Sept. 1E.J. Henderson ...................... Defensive Lineman, Sept. 1

Defensive Lineman, Sept. 29Shaun Hill ......................................... Offensive Back, Oct. 6Tony Jackson .............................. Defensive Back, Sept. 22Tony Okanlawon ............................. Defensive Back, Oct. 6Bruce Perry .................................. Offensive Back, Sept. 22Todd Wike ......................................... Offensive Line, Oct. 6

IN THEpollsWeek A P ESPN/USA TodayPreseason NR NR1 (8/28-9/3) NR NR2 (9/4-9/10) NR NR3 (9/11-9/17) NR RV4 (9/18-9/24) RV RV5 (9/25-10/1) RV RV6 (10/2-10/8) #25 #257 (10/9-10/15) #22 #208 (10/16-10/22) #12 #149101112key: NR = not ranked; RV = received votes, but not ranked.

The following comments were made during headcoach Ralph Friedgen’s weekly teleconference,Sunday, Oct. 14:

On Maryland rankings this week:“Like I’ve said before, the rankings don’t count now. We’llsee where we are at the end of the year, then I’ll getexcited. We’ll be the hunted now, so we just have tokeep playing.”

On the art to winning and losing:“We definitely pulled one out [vs. Georgia Tech]. I don’tthink we played as well as we want to play on offense.I think a lot of that was because of Georgia Tech, be-cause I think they did a real good job on defense. But wefound a way to win. I thought defensively we played verywell. For the most part, special teams was OK. Whenyou have that many takeaways and that good of fieldposition, you should win handily. Georgia Tech did agood job, but we didn’t play as well as we need to playoffensively.”

On team’s focus this week:“The first thing we have to get corrected are our penal-ties. We’ve had a lot of penalties in the red zone, whichyou just cannot do. We still have had too many mentalerrors and are breaking down in critical situations. Andwhen you get turnovers, you have to make that a posi-tive for you. I think one of the things that [showed] in theGeorgia Tech game is that we have a very young teamon offense and a more experienced team on defense. Ithink it’s the first time our kids have been in a veryintense high-pressure, high-profile game. I think they gotnervous and tight. Hopefully we’ll be better the next timethat happens.”

On QB Shaun Hill:“Shaun definitely did a nice job in the two-minute [of-fense at the end of regulation]. There were other thingshe missed. The thing that is real positive about Shaun isthat when things go wrong he is able to come back outof it, and that’s to his credit. It’s something we can buildon with him.”

On the team’s consistent turnover/takeaway ratio:“A lot of it is guys making plays and some of it is luck.We work at stripping the ball every day. We have adefense that is very aggressive and causes a lot ofproblems, and we get a lot of penetration. And our sec-ondary is playing very, very well. If a pass is errant, a lotof times our players end up making an interception be-

cause the ball wasn’t thrown well, whether because ofpressure or whatever. I would say the majority of ourtakeaways are a result of us playing very aggressivelyon defense.”

On freshman DL Randy Starks:“He is starting to come on right now, which is what weneed. He’s been getting better each week, and gettinghis 15-20 snaps each game. Against Georgia Tech heplayed 25 snaps and was much more productive. I thinkhe is feeling more confident about what he is doing andis maturing as a player. I hope by the end of the year heis going to be really good. C.J. Feldheim [the starter]played well, too. It’s just that we want to give Randysome work and spell C.J.”

On injury situation:“We’re beat up a little bit, but it doesn’t look like anybodyis going to be out for this game.”

On his team finding ways to win:“That has happened with most of the good teams I’vebeen a part of. That’s probably indicative of a good team,when you can win and not play your best. I think we tookit to an extreme on offense [vs. Georgia Tech]; ourpercentage of error on offense was over 17 percent,which is the first time this season we were over our 12percent goal. We have to play better offensively if we’regoing to continue to have success.”

On impressions of Duke:“I haven’t had a chance to look at them yet on tape. Wesaw them some against Georgia Tech, and we watchedsome of their game against Wake Forest, which theyalmost won. I know they have some speed receivers,and defensively they are playing with an aggressive eight-man front. A win against Duke counts the same as a winagainst Florida State in the ACC standings. That’s theway I look at it. We need all the conference wins we canget right now. We can forget about Georgia Tech andstart focusing on Duke. That has to be our primary focusthis week.”

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MARYLAND VS. DUKE • OPPONENT/SERIES INFO

SERIES HISTORY vs.DukeSeries Record:

Maryland leads 26-18-0Series at Maryland:

Maryland leads 11-5-0Series at Duke:

Maryland leads 13-9-0Neutral:

Duke leads 4-2-0First Meeting:

1932, Duke, 34-0Last Terrapin Win at Maryland:

1997 (16-10)Last Terrapin Win at Duke:

2000 (20-9)Last Blue Devil Win at Maryland:

1999 (25-22)Last Blue Devil Win at Duke:

1994 (49-16)Current Series Streak:

Maryland has won 1Maryland’s Largest Victory Margin:

43 (56-13, 1974)Duke’s Largest Victory Margin:

50 (50-0, 1941)

HOW THEY FARED ANDWHO’S NEXT

MARYLAND (6-0, 4-0 ACC)Last Week: beat #15 Georgia Tech, 20-17 (OT)

This Week: vs. Duke, 1:00 p.m.

Sept. 1 North Carolina (4-3, 3-1 ACC)Last Week: beat Virginia, 30-24This Week: at Clemson

Sept. 8 Eastern Michigan (1-5, 0-2 MAC)Last Week: lost to Ball State, 35-14This Week: Idle

Sept. 22 at Wake Forest (3-3, 1-3 ACC)Last Week: beat Duke, 42-35This Week: Idle

Sept. 29 West Virginia (2-4, 0-2 Big East)Last Week: lost to Notre Dame, 34-24This Week: Idle

Oct. 6 Virginia (3-3, 2-2 ACC)Last Week: lost to North Carolina, 30-24This Week: vs. Florida State

Oct. 11 at Georgia Tech (4-2, 1-2 ACC)Last Week: lost to Maryland, 20-17 (OT)This Week: vs. NC State

Oct. 20 Duke (0-6, 0-4 ACC)Last Week: lost to Wake Forest, 42-35This Week: at Maryland

Oct. 27 at Florida State (3-2, 2-1 ACC)Last Week: lost to Miami, 49-27This Week: at Virginia

Nov. 3 Troy State (2-3)Last Week: beat Mississippi State, 21-9This Week: Cal State Northridge

Nov. 10 Clemson (4-1, 2-1 ACC)Last Week: beat NC State, 45-37This Week: vs. North Carolina

Nov. 17 NC State (3-2, 1-2 ACC)Last Week: lost to Clemson, 45-37This Week: at Georgia Tech

TEAM COMPARISONSMaryland Category Duke209.0 ................... Rushing Offense ...................... 102.3190.5 ................... Passing Offense ...................... 199.5399.5 ...................... Total Offense ......................... 301.832.2 ...................... Scoring Offense ........................ 14.7

95.0 ..................... Rushing Defense ..................... 214.8225.7 ................... Passing Defense ..................... 227.2320.7 ...................... Total Defense ........................ 442.014.7 ..................... Scoring Defense ........................ 37.3

39-98 (40%) ...... Third Down Conv. ......... 27-89 (30%)4-7 (57%) ......... Fourth Down Conv. .......... 3-13 (23%)

18-150 ................. Sacks By-Yards ........................ 8-4511-89 ..................... Sacks Allowed ...................... 18-119

41-382 .................. Penalties-Yards ..................... 43-3474-2 .......................... Fumbles-Lost .......................... 10-6

31:30 ................ Avg. Time of Poss. ................... 26:30

DUKE STATISTICAL LEADERSRushing G Att. Net Avg. TD YPG

Chris Douglas 6 1 2 0 4 6 8 3.9 4 78.0Alex Wade 6 2 0 7 1 3.5 0 11.8Kyle Moore 6 7 4 8 6.9 0 8.0

Passing G A-C-I Pct. Yds. TD YPGD. Bryant 6 182-90-7 49.5 1170 4 195.0Adam Smith 3 9-4-1 44.4 2 7 0 9.0

Receiving G Rec. Yds. Avg. TD YPGBen Erdeljac 6 2 5 3 1 6 12.6 1 52.7Mike Hart 6 1 4 2 0 8 14.9 1 34.7

Chris Douglas 6 1 4 1 5 5 11.1 1 25.8Reggie Love 5 11 1 6 1 14.6 0 32.2Khary Sharpe 6 8 118 14.8 0 19.7

STATISTICALCOMPARISONTerps vs. Duke

TRENCHESin the

Below is a comparison -- based on the average size of eachteam’s starters -- of Maryland and Duke’s offensive and de-fensive lines:

6-4, 303 lbs. 6-3, 273 lbs.Terp O-Line Terp D-Line

Blue Devil D-Line Blue Devil O-LineVS. VS.

6-5, 293 lbs. 6-3, 261 lbs.

DURHAM, N.C. - LaMont Jordan’s 77-yard touchdown run onthe second play of the second half sparked Maryland to a 20-9 victory over winless Duke in Durham.

Jordan, held to 12 yards on 11 carries in the first half, addeda 28-yard touchdown with 3:11 left to play and finished with 158yards on 21 carries. It was Jordan’s 16th career 100-yard gamefor Maryland (4-4, 2-3 Atlantic Coast Conference).

Duke (0-8, 0-5) was within 10-9 with 8:22 to play after a 20-yard touchdown pass on a flea-flicker from wide receiver BenErdeljac to quarterback D. Bryant. Tailback Chris Douglas tooka handoff from Bryant, and pitched the ball to Erdeljac, whostepped back and heaved it across the field to a wide-openBryant.

Duke’s point-after attempt, however, sailed wide left andMaryland’s defense kept the Blue Devils pinned inside theirterritory the rest of the game. The Terrapin “D” played well allgame and notched a season-high eight sacks against the BlueDevils.

Duke scored the first half’s only points on a 42-yard fieldgoal by Brent Garber with 12:30 left in the second quarter.

Maryland finished with 354 yards in total offense aftermanaging just 23 yards rushing and 77 passing in the first half.

Maryland’s Calvin McCall completed 7-of-11 passes for 118yards with two interceptions. Shaun Hill entered in the secondhalf to go 3-for-3 for 64 yards and one interception.

Brian Kopka kicked two second-half field goals, includinga career-long 49-yarder midway through the third quarter.

October 28, 2000Maryland 20, Duke 9

1st 2nd 3rd 4th FinalMaryland 0 0 10 10 20Duke 0 3 0 6 9

Second Quarter DU-FG Garber 42, 12:30Third Quarter UM-Jordan 77 run (Kopka kick), 14:05 UM-FG Kopka 49, 5:26Fourth Quarter DU-Bryant 20 pass from Erdeljac (kick failed), 8:22 UM-FG Kopka 30, 5:47 UM-Jordan 28 run (Kopka kick), 3:11

UM DUFirst Downs 15 19Rushes-Yards 34-172 40-13Passing 182 253Return Yards 1 66Sacked-Yards Lost 2-20 10-62Comp-Att-Int 12-23-3 22-38-2Punts 5-35.2 5-43Fumbles-Lost 1-0 1-1Penalties-Yards 7-59 7-81Time of Possession 26:56 33:04

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING-Maryland, Jordan 21-158, McCall 8-13, Hill 3-2, Sikyala1-1, Team 1-(minus 2). Duke, Douglas 12-28, Epperson 10-20,Battier 2-10, Romine 2-(minus 14), Byrant 14-(minus 31).PASSING-Maryland, McCall 9-17-2-118, Hill 3-6-1-64. Duke, Bryant21-34-2-233, Romine 0-2-0-0, Erdeljac 1-1-0-20, Team 0-1-0-0.RECEIVING-Maryland, Hatala 3-66, Gary 3-22, Dugan 2-27, Jordan1-32, James 1-16, Kalapinski 1-10, Monroe 1-9. Duke, Hart 6-79,Erdeljac 4-47, Douglas 3-35, Epperson 3-18, Battier 2-10,Brzezinski 1-22, Bryant 1-20, Wade 1-12, Hartofilis 1-10.TACKLES-Maryland, T. Jackson 9-7--16, E.J. Henderson 11-3--14, KrisJenkins 9-3--12, Marlon Moye-Moore 7-3--10. Duke, Fowler 5-2--7,Kreider 5-0--5, Austin 4-1--5; DeLamielleure 2-2--4, Knight 2-2--4.A-20,033.

GAME 4Oct. 28, 2000

Maryland 20, Duke 9

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2001MARYLANDfootball

MARYLAND VS. DUKE • DEPTH CHART

OFFENSEWR 21 Guilian Gary 6-0 187 Sr.

25 Scooter Monroe 6-1 195 Jr.LT 74 C.J. Brooks 6-5 311 R-Fr.

75 Eric Dumas 6-6 312 So.LG 66 Todd Wike 6-3 291 Jr.

72 Kyle Schmitt 6-5 309 R-Fr.C 67 Melvin Fowler, Jr. 6-3 297 Sr.

72 Kyle Schmitt 6-5 309 R-Fr.RG 73 Lamar Bryant 6-3 301 So.

69 Reggie Kemp 6-4 332 R-Fr.RT 78 Matt Crawford 6-6 314 Jr.

79 Lou Lombardo 6-6 307 R-Fr.TE 82 Jeff Dugan 6-4 264 So.

88 Matt Murphy 6-5 255 Sr.QB 14 Shaun Hill 6-3 221 Sr.

4 Latrez Harrison 6-2 214 So.TB 1 Bruce Perry 5-9 190 So.

2 Marc Riley 6-3 218 Sr.or 9 Jason Crawford 6-2 216 Fr.FB 5 James Lynch 5-11 261 So.

31 Chad Killian 6-2 256 Jr.44 Bernie Fiddler 6-1 235 So.

WR 19 Jafar Williams 6-2 201 So.18 Maurice Shanks 6-4 184 R-Fr.

MARYLAND FOOTBALL DEPTH CHART(As of October 14, 2001)

DEFENSEDE 71 Durrand Roundtree 6-3 260 Jr.

54 Scott Smith 6-4 271 So.NT 98 Charles Hill 6-2 293 Sr.

95 William Shime 6-4 283 Jr.DT 96 C.J. Feldheim 6-3 267 So.

57 Randy Starks 6-5 305 Fr.LEO 55 Mike Whaley 6-1 242 So.

49 Jamahl Cochran 6-0 240 R-Fr.MLB 42 E.J. Henderson 6-2 243 Jr.

52 Monte Graves 6-0 247 Sr.WLB 32 Leon Joe 6-1 223 So.

51 Andrew Henley 5-11 217 So.SLB 40 Aaron Thompson 6-1 231 Sr.

24 Leroy Ambush 6-1 220 So.CB 11 Tony Okanlawon 5-11 183 Sr.

37 Jamal Chance 6-1 190 Jr.S S 27 Tony Jackson 6-1 205 Sr.

33 Rod Littles 5-11 201 Sr.FS 12 Randall Jones 6-2 217 Sr.

29 Ty Stewart 6-0 197 Jr.CB 30 Curome Cox 6-1 192 So.or 13 Dennard Wilson 5-11 182 So.

SPECIALISTSPK 46 Nick Novak 6-0 186 R-Fr.

17 Vedad Siljkovic 6-2 222 Sr.KO 17 Vedad Siljkovic 6-2 222 Sr.

46 Nick Novak 6-0 186 R-Fr.P 16 Brooks Barnard 6-2 182 Jr.

17 Vedad Siljkovic 6-2 222 Sr.PR 21 Guilian Gary 6-0 187 Sr.

27 Tony Jackson 6-1 205 Sr.

KR 22 Rich Parson 5-10 185 Fr. 1 Bruce Perry 5-9 190 So.

H 16 Brooks Barnard 6-2 192 Jr.19 Jafar Williams 6-2 201 So.

LS 47 Jon Condo 6-3 225 R-Fr.56 Jesse Kluttz 6-3 236 Fr.

Key: PK=Placekicker (FG/PAT); KO=Kickoffs; PR=Punt Returns; KR=Kick Returns; H=Holder; LS=Long Snapper

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WWW.UM .COM

MARYLAND VS. DUKE • PLAYER NOTES

97 TosinABARI • DTHard-working third-year player who returns to nose tackle after working atdefensive end a year ago … has gotten bigger every year since walking on atMaryland in 1999 … Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Did not play ... Season:Has seen action in four games ... (vs. EMU) Registered his first career tackle onan 11-yard sack ... Career: Played in two games in 2000, but did not recordany tackles ... redshirted in 1999.

Defense G-GS UT AT TT TFL Sacks FC FR PBU Int.2001 4-0 1 0 1 1-11 1-11 0 0 0 0

3 RobABIAMIRI • WRRedshirt freshman receiver with ideal size who worked his way up the depthchart … has excellent strength and strong footwork for a player his size …added 18 pounds to his frame over the course of last year ... Last Game (vs.Georgia Tech): Played, but did not have any catches ... Season: Has ap-peared in one game this season ... has been hampered by an injured foot ...Career: Redshirted in 2000.

24 LeroyAMBUSH • LBRedshirt sophomore who is part of a talented linebacking corps … a contribu-tor on special teams after playing a backup role at linebacker and seeing timeon special teams as a redshirt freshman ... Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech):Played on special teams ... Season: Has seen playing time in each game ...(vs. UVa) Had the biggest play of his career by recovering a blocked punt fora touchdown to put Maryland up 24-7 at halftime ... it was the first time thata Maryland player returned a blocked punt for a touchdown since 1992 whenJermaine Lewis scored vs. Georgia Tech ... Career: Appeared in nine gamesin 2000 and made eight tackles ... a redshirt in 1999.

Defense G-GS UT AT TT TFL Sacks FC FR PBU Int.2001 6-0 3 2 5 1-5 1-5 0 0 0 0Career 14-0 7 6 13 1-5 1-5 0 0 0 0

36 SalARAGONA • CBA walk-on who is a backup at corner … will see time as a special teamsperformer ... Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Did not play ... Season: Hasseen action in one game ... (vs. EMU) Made his first appearance as a Terrapin... recorded one tackle ... Career: Redshirted in 2000 after transferring fromSt. John’s in 1999 ... lettered as a running back for the Red Storm.

Defense G-GS UT AT TT TFL Sacks FC FR PBU Int.2001 1-0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0

16 BrooksBARNARD • PAll-America candidate who is Maryland’s leader in career (43.7), single-season (44.7 in 2000) and single-game (53.8 vs. Temple, 2000) puntingaverages … selected to the Ray Guy watch list which recognizes the country’stop punter … owns five of the top 10 single-game punting efforts in Marylandhistory …tutored by former NFL All-Pro Ray Guy, at his invitation, during thesummer ... bench presses 390 pounds ... wants to be a weatherman after hisfootball career is over ... Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Punted seven timesfor an average of 44.7 yards per kick ... saved the game with his excellentplacement of a high snap on the game-tying field goal that forced overtime... Season: Ranks 11th in the NCAA in punting (44.5) ... (vs. UVa) Totaledthree punts for an average of 35.7 yards per kick ... (vs. WVU) Totaled 10 puntsfor an average of 44.6 yards per punt ... had two punts inside the 20 and threepunts over 50 yards ... (vs. WFU) Totaled five punts for a 39.4 average ...boomed a season-best 59-yard kick ... (vs. UNC) Punted eight times for 50.4yards ... named ACC Specialist of the Week ... following his first punt (27yards) of the day, he ran off seven straight punts over 50 yards ... downed sixballs inside the 20 and two of those inside the 10 ... had a net average of 46.1in the game ... Career: Finished fourth nationally with a school-recordaverage of 44.7 yards per punt in 2000 … third-team Freshman All-Americaby The Sporting News who ranked 34th nationally with 42.1 yards per punt in1999.

Punting G-GS Punts Yds Avg LP I20 I10 Blk.2001 6-6 35 1,558 44.5 59 10 2 0Career 25-24 126 5,516 43.7 85 18 4 1

74 C.J.BROOKS • OTRedshirt frosh who was one of the true surprises of spring ball …No. 1 on thedepth chart at left tackle … a very technical blocker who, despite his youth,has a firm grasp of the offense and blocking schemes … takes pride in finish-ing his blocks ... Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Started at left tackle for thesixth straight game ... Season: Has started every game ... (vs. WFU) Played 66out of the possible 74 offensive snaps ... nominee for ACC Rookie of the Week... Career: Has started each contest (6) in which he has played.

73 LamarBRYANT • OGRedshirt sophomore who is one of four returning starters on the offensive line… listed No. 1 on the depth chart at right guard … an Iron Terp with a 702strength index and the third-highest squat by a Maryland offensive linemanever (670 lbs.) ... Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Started at right guard ...Season: Has played in six games, starting all six ... (vs. WFU) Played 68 of 74snaps ... Career: Has played in 15 games, starting 12 at right guard over thepast two seasons.

37 JamalCHANCE • CBJunior transfer from Lackawanna Junior College in Scranton, Pa. … listed atNo. 2 on the depth chart at one of the cornerback spots ... can play the run orpass equally well ... Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Finished with one solotackle ... Season: Has played in five games ... (vs. EMU) Made two tackles ...deflected a punt on special teams ... (vs. UNC) Made his debut in a Terrapinuniform ... tallied one solo tackle ... Career: Played his first two seasons atLackawanna Junior College ... a two-year starter at safety at LJC ... hasplayed in three games at Maryland.

Defense G-GS UT AT TT TFL Sacks FC FR PBU Int.2001 5-0 4 0 4 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0

49 JamahlCOCHRAN • LBPlayer who arrived at Maryland as an end but has been moved to the LEO(outside linebacker) position to better accommodate his size … an Iron Terpwith the fifth-highest strength index on the team (735) and second-highestamong linebackers … posted a 685-lb. squat ... Last Game (vs. GeorgiaTech): Played on special teams ... Season: Has played in all six games ...Career: Was redshirted in 2000.

Defense G-GS UT AT TT TFL Sacks FC FR PBU Int.2001 6-0 0 1 1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0

30 CuromeCOX • CBA strong cornerback who is listed No. 1 on the depth chart at a corner spot, butis battling a shoulder injury … excels in press coverage schemes … an IronTerp with a 330-lb. bench press, 550-lb. squat and a 36-0½-inch verticaljump... Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Did not start for the first time thisseason due to a shoulder injury ... played in the second half and was in onfour tackles ... Season: Has started each game at corner ... (vs. UVa) Tied forfourth on the team with five tackles ... four of the five stops were solo tackles... also forced a fumble and had a pass breakup ... (vs. WVU) Made four tacklesat cornerback ... all four stops were of the solo variety ... (vs. WFU) Started atcornerback and made a season-high five tackles ... (vs. UNC) Made fourtackles in a starting role ... Career: Has started 14 of 16 games at cornerbackin his career ... had picks vs. Middle Tennessee State and Wake Forest in2000.

Defense G-GS UT AT TT TFL Sacks FC FR PBU Int.2001 6-5 21 3 24 1-3 0-0 0 0 2 0Career 16-14 38 19 57 1-3 0-0 0 0 6 2

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2001MARYLANDfootball

MARYLAND VS. DUKE • PLAYER NOTES

9 JasonCRAWFORD • TBTrue freshman who has a bright future ahead of him at Maryland ... listed No.2 on the depth chart with Marc Riley behind starter Bruce Perry ... combinesan ideal package of speed, size (6-2, 216) and strength at tailback ... LastGame (vs. Georgia Tech): Did not play ... Season: Third on the team inrushing (74 yards) ... (vs. EMU) Rushed for a career-high 38 yards on eightcarries ... scored his first career touchdown from two yards out ... (vs. UNC) Sawaction late in the game ... rushed five times for 21 yards.

Rushing G-GS Att. Gain Lost Net Avg. TD LP2001 5-0 16 76 2 74 4.8 1 12

78 MattCRAWFORD • OTFourth-year junior who has recovered fully from a torn ACL in his left kneewhich forced him to miss the final two games of last year, breaking a string of20 consecutive starts … did not participate in spring drills … had not misseda start in his career prior to the injury, which happened in practice prior to theNorth Carolina game in 2000 ... listed No. 1 on depth chart at right tackle ...Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Started at right tackle ... Season: Has startedall six games at right tackle.

82 JeffDUGAN • TEA talented tight end who is a complete package in terms of physical skills …big, strong, physical tight end who has good hands and runs well after thecatch … an outstanding blocker … listed No. 1 on the depth chart ... LastGame (vs. Georgia Tech): Caught one pass for four yards ... Season: Hasstarted all six games at tight end ... (vs. UVa) Had one catch for 13 yards ... (vs.WFU) Made his first reception of the season for 10 yards ... Career: A 10-gamestarter in 2000 … finished second on the team in receptions (25) and receiv-ing yards (319) … named the Terps’ Freshman of the Year.

Receiving G-GS Rec. Yds. Avg. TD Long2001 6-6 3 27 9.0 0 13Career 17-16 28 346 12.4 1 47

75 EricDUMAS • OTSophomore lineman who saw action as a redshirt freshman and is No. 2 onthe depth chart at left tackle … was switched from defensive line to theoffensive line during fall of 1999 … an athletic player for his position withideal size and wingspan ... Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Saw time off thebench at left tackle ... Season: Reserve left tackle who has played in all sixgames ... Career: Saw action in five games in 2000, all at tackle … missedtwo games during the 2000 season after suffering a high ankle sprain of hisright foot.

96 C.J.FELDHEIM • DTFirst-year starter at defensive tackle … has added almost 30 pounds sincearriving as a true freshman last year … an Iron Terp … posted a 585-poundsquat … Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Had another solid outing on thedefensive line ... totaled a career-high five tackles including three solo stops... Season: Has played well in his first season as a starter ... (vs. UVa) Assistedon two tackles ... (vs. WVU) Had six tackles (three solo) ... notched his first sackof the season ... (vs. WFU) Made two tackles including one for loss (minusthree yards) ... (vs. EMU) Had two tackles ... also had a quarterback hurry ... (vs.UNC) Made his first career start at defensive tackle ... credited with one solotackle and had one quarterback hurry ... Career: Appeared in four of theteam’s last five games of 2000 … one of just five true freshmen to see actionfor the Terps last season.

Defense G-GS UT AT TT TFL Sacks FC FR PBU Int.2001 6-6 9 9 18 4-4 1-0 0 0 0 0Career 10-6 14 10 24 5-11 2-7 0 0 0 0

44 BernieFIDDLER • FBA physical fullback who is No. 3 on the depth chart … a solid isolation blockerwho also excels at pass-catching out of the backfield ... Last Game (vs.Georgia Tech): Appeared on special teams ... Season: Has shown goodblocking technique in a reserve role ... (vs. EMU) Rushed for 13 yards on threecarries ... the first time he has carried the ball at Maryland ... (vs. UNC) Madeseveral key blocks, especially in the second half ... had a great block onScooter Monroe’s touchdown ... Career: Redshirted his freshman season ...saw limited action last season on special teams ... has one career tackle.

Rushing G-GS Att. Gain Lost Net Avg. TD LP2001 6-0 3 13 0 13 4.3 0 6

67 MelvinFOWLER • CA fifth-year senior who is in his fourth season as the Terrapins’ starting center… rated among the top players at his position in the country … named to theLombardi watch list for the nation’s top lineman ... a quick, explosive playerwho attacks the line of scrimmage … an Iron Terp who is ranked in the topthree on the team in every strength discipline (strength index, bench, squat,clean, vertical jump and 40 time) ... Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Did anoutstanding job up front blocking ... Season: One of the main reasons whyMaryland ranks 20th in rushing yards per game (209.0) in Division I-A ... (vs.UVa) Helped lead the offense to 480 total yards ... (vs. WFU) Led the offensiveline with four “big blocks” (pancake, knockdown, cut, etc.) ... (vs. UNC) Top-grading performer on Maryland’s offensive front ... registered a team-bestseven “big blocks” ... Career: Has started all 39 games of his career at center... an honorable mention All-ACC pick in 2000 and a first team selection byCollegefootballnews.com.

21 GuilianGARY • WROne of the top receivers in the Atlantic Coast Conference … first Terp inschool history to lead the team in punt returns three consecutive seasons …can become the first Terp since All-American Gary Collins (1959-61) to leadthe team in receptions three straight seasons … Last Game (vs. GeorgiaTech): Finished the contest with four receptions for 60 yards ... did not leadthe team in receiving yards or catches for the first time this season ... Season:Leads the team in receptions (28), receiving yards (419) and touchdowncatches (3) ... has totaled 69.8 receiving yards per game ... (vs. UVa) Set acareer-high with 99 receiving yards on five catches ... hauled in a 53-yardtouchdown catch for his longest reception of his career ... with his 99 yardsreceiving on the day, he moved past Frank Wycheck into 13th place on the all-time receiving yards chart with 1,184 for his career ... (vs. WVU) Led the teamwith six catches for 81 yards ... had a key 29-yard touchdown catch at the endof the third quarter ... (vs. WFU) Led the team with five catches for 77 yards ...(vs. EMU) Tied a career-high with six receptions ... gained 76 yards on thosesix catches ... caught a beautiful over-the-shoulder 19-yard touchdown in thefirst half ... (vs. UNC) Got the start after missing time with a neck sprain duringpreseason camp ... pulled down two catches for 26 yards ... his 19-yard catchwas the second-longest of the game for the Terps ... Career: Has caught apass in 17 consecutive contests ... has appeared in 37 games over his career,starting 19 ... 12th in career receptions with 92 ... needs just five receptions tocrack the top 10 … tied for third on Maryland’s career list for punt return yards(528) … has returned 67 career punts for 528 yards ... one of just 18 Terps all-time to have over 1,000 yards receiving (1,244) ... the 1,244 career receivingyards place Gary 12th all-time in career receiving yards ... tied for sixth incareer touchdown receptions (10).

Receiving G-GS Rec. Yds. Avg. TD Long2001 6-6 28 419 15.0 3 53Career 37-19 92 1,244 13.5 10 53Punt Ret. G-GS Ret. Yds. Avg. TD Long2001 6-6 8 52 6.5 0 11Career 37-19 67 528 7.9 0 34

4 LatrezHARRISON • QBAthletically gifted quarterback with a strong arm who is No. 2 on the depthchart … lone issue may be honing his physical skills and becoming a moreconsistent performer ... Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Did not play ...Season: Has appeared in two games ... (vs. UVa) Entered the game in thefinal minute ...(vs. EMU) Made his first appearance of the season in the thirdquarter ... finished the game second on the team in rushing with 50 yards onseven carries ... Career: Played six games as a true freshman in 1999 ...started the final two games of ‘99 vs. Florida State and Virginia ... has 86career rushing yards ... was redshirted in 2000.

Passing G-GS Cmp. Att. Int. TD Yds. Pct.2001 2-0 1 4 0 0 9 25.0Career 8-2 6 28 3 0 39 21.4Rushing G-GS Att. Gain Lost Net Avg. TD LP2001 2-0 7 53 3 50 7.1 0 17Career 8-2 12 97 11 86 7.1 0 19

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MARYLAND VS. DUKE • PLAYER NOTES

42 E.J.HENDERSON • LBHonors candidate who is the ACC’s third-leading returning tackler from 2000… has All-American skills … moved into the starting lineup for the final twogames of his redshirt freshman season and won the position outright enteringhis redshirt sophomore year … came back strong from a midseason kneesprain to earn the team tackle title as a sophomore … Last Game (vs.Georgia Tech): Turned in an All-American performance ... tied a career-highwith 18 tackles including 13 solo stops ... scored the game’s first touchdown ona 36-yard fumble recovery ... it was the first touchdown of Henderson’s career... also had an important sack to force Georgia Tech into a field goal afterbeing inside the Terps’ 10 late in the first half ... Tech later missed that fieldgoal attempt to end the half ... it was the second straight game vs. GeorgiaTech that Henderson totaled 18 tackles and the second time this season hefinished with 18 tackles ... also led the team with four TFLs (minus 11 yards)and three quarterback hurries ... nominated for ACC Defensive Lineman ofthe Week ... Season: Leads the team in tackles (78) and tackles for loss (16) ...has been named the ACC Defensive Lineman of the week twice and is theonly defender in the conference to be a two-time winner in 2001 ... has beenthe team’s leading tackler in every game except vs. Virginia ... (vs. UVa)Finished with five tackles ... also blocked a field goal after UVa had excellentfield position off a Shaun Hill fumble ... the blocked field goal also slowedUVa’s momentum after the Cavs pulled to within 10 at 24-14 ... (vs. WVU)Tied a career-high with 18 tackles ... was awarded ACC Defensive Lineman ofthe Week for his efforts for the second time this season ... he also had 18tackles vs. Georgia Tech last season ... 14 of the 18 stops were of the solovariety ... had one sack for minus 12 yards ... (vs. WFU) Led the team with 17tackles ... registered 11 solo stops and three tackles for loss (minus nine yards)... (vs. EMU) Led the team with eight tackles... also had three tackles for loss... (vs. UNC) Led a stingy Maryland defense with 12 tackles, his fifth consecu-tive game in double figures ... named the ACC Defensive Lineman of theWeek ... recorded three stops for losses (minus 9 yards) ... Career: A 17-gamestarter who has seen action in another 10 games ... led the Terps in tackles in2000 ... has been the Terps’ starter at middle linebacker since the end of1999.

Defense G-GS UT AT TT TFL Sacks FC FR PBU Int.2001 6-5 53 25 78 16-37 2.0-18 0 1 2 0Career 27-17 144 82 286 30-88 4.5-33 1 2 7 0

51 AndrewHENLEY • LBOne of the most pleasant surprises of spring ball who has secured the No. 2spot at linebacker on the depth chart … an intelligent, coachable player whohas earned playing time on special teams and at linebacker … played justone year of organized football as a high school freshman before arriving atMaryland ... Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Totaled one tackle ... Season:Is starting to get comfortable at linebacker ... (vs. WVU) Had a season-highfour tackles ... (vs. UNC) Saw action in his first career game for the Terps ...assisted on two tackles.

Defense G-GS UT AT TT TFL Sacks FC FR PBU Int.2001 6-0 8 3 11 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0

98 CharlesHILL • NTThe most experienced returnee on Maryland’s defensive front … No. 1 on thedepth chart at nose tackle … an Iron Terp with a 400-lb. bench and 630-lb.squat … Academic All-ACC as a junior ... Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Partof a dominant defensive line that held Georgia Tech to just 50 yards rushing... finished with six tackles and one quarterback hurry ... Season: Has providedexcellent leadership and solid play on a young defensive line ... (vs. UVa)Had six tackles including one tackle for loss (minus one yard) ... (vs. WVU)Totaled five tackles including a 10-yard sack ... two of the five tackles weresolo ... (vs. WFU) Finished with seven tackles ... (vs. UNC) Registered eighttackles ... totaled two solo stops and assisted on six others ... forced twoquarterback hurries ... Career: Has started 21 games in his career and 18 inthe past three seasons (nine in 2000) … coming off a career-high 43 totaltackle effort as a junior after spending most of his freshman and sophomorecampaigns as a backup ... had a career-high nine tackles against Temple in2000.

Defense G-GS UT AT TT TFL Sacks FC FR PBU Int.2001 6-6 12 20 32 2-3 1-10 0 0 0 0Career 34-21 52 62 116 11-39 5-39 1 0 0 0

14 ShaunHILL • QBOne-year letterman quarterback who is firmly entrenched as the Terrapins’starter … an intelligent player with outstanding decision-making skills … hasgood size and accuracy … excelled in spring picking up the new offensivescheme ... Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Led the offense to a thrillingcomeback victory ... engineered the two-minute offense 51 yards with justover one minute remaining to force the game into overtime ... was 5-for-7 for51 yards passing on the game’s final drive in regulation, including a 17-yardcompletion to RIch Parson to set up the game-tying 46-yard field goal fromNick Novak ... finished the game 20-for-39 passing with 206 yards and twointerceptions ... had a solid night rushing, carrying the ball 14 times for 29yards ... Season: The leader of an offense that averages 32.2 points pergame, 25th in Division I-A ... (vs. UVa) After starting 1-for-6 with an intercep-tion, Hill finished 22-for-35 for 237 yards with two touchdowns ... for his efforts,Hill was named ACC Offensive Back of the Week ... his 53-yard touchdownpass to Guilian Gary was the longest pass of his career ... also rushed for 47yards on 16 carries and a touchdown ... it was the second three-touchdowngame of his career (NC State in 2000 the other) ... his four-yard touchdown runwas the game’s opening score ... (vs. WVU) Finished the game 13-for-32 with192 yards and a touchdown ... most importantly, engineered an offense thatdid not have any turnovers ... (vs. WFU) Led the Terps to a season-best 519yards of total offense ... had a solid day through the air, finishing 16-for-23 fora season-high 222 yards and two interceptions ... (vs. EMU) Guided an effi-cient Maryland offense that scored 50 points ... was 15-for-21 with 187 yardspassing and one touchdown in just over two quarters of play ... (vs.UNC) Leda turnover-free offense to 21 points ... was 10-for-26 for 86 yards including twotouchdowns ... finished the contest 10-for-21 after starting the game 0-for-5 ...Career: Has a career 7-2 mark as Maryland’s starting quarterback ... startedthree games in 2000, his first season as a Terp … played his freshman andsophomore seasons at Hutchinson (Kan.) Community College.

Passing G-GS Cmp. Att. Int. TD Yds. Pct.2001 6-6 96 176 5 6 1,130 54.5Career 12-9 169 302 9 12 1,908 55.9Rushing G-GS Att. Gain Lost Net Avg. TD LP2001 6-6 59 177 107 70 1.2 3 15Career 12-9 103 363 201 162 1.6 4 23

27 TonyJACKSON • SSHonors candidate and anchor of Maryland’s defensive secondary unit …versatile athlete who can play either safety position but is No. 1 on the depthchart at strong safety… smart player with a knack for getting to the ball … anIron Terp whose 555-lb. squat is the third best in school history among defen-sive backs … also played baseball for the Terps and was a 32nd-round draftchoice of the Cleveland Indians in ‘97 ... Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech):Continued to be a steady presence on the Terrapin defense ... tallied aseason-high 12 tackles ... had one TFL for minus two yards and was in on apass breakup ... Season: Third on team with 44 tackles ... (vs. UVa) Led theteam with nine tackles including five solo stops ... also deflected a pass thatsaved a touchdown ... (vs. WVU) Finished with seven tackles (four solo) and aninterception ... also defended three passes and had a fumble recovery ... hisinterception in the end zone ended WVU’s first offensive drive of the day ...(vs. WFU) Named ACC Defensive Back of the Week ... sealed the Terps’ 27-20victory with his second interception of the year (in the end zone) with less thanone minute remaining ... also had seven tackles and three passes defended... (vs. EMU) Second on the team with five tackles ... four of the five stops wereof the solo variety ... (vs. UNC) Started at strong safety and made his firstinterception of the season ... his interception ended UNC’s drive at the Mary-land 34 when the score was still 9-7 ... also made four tackles including twosolo stops ... Career: Has six interceptions in his career ... was third in tacklesin 2000 with 101 … has made 19 starts in his 35-game career.

Defense G-GS UT AT TT TFL Sacks FC FR PBU Int.2001 6-6 25 19 44 2-3 0-0 0 2 6 3Career 35-19 118 56 174 7-27 0-0 2 4 11 6

32 LeonJOE • LBRedshirt sophomore who is the starter at the weakside linebacker position …an Iron Terp who is the strongest linebacker on this year’s team and posted thesecond-highest strength index ever by a Terp linebacker (753) … had a 435-lb. bench, a 40-inch vertical jump and a 4.43 40-yard dash in the spring …Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Was part of an aggressive Maryland defense... tied for third on the team with 11 tackles ... also recorded his first careerinterception ... Season: Second on the team in tackles (50) and quarterback

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hurries (7) ... (vs. UVa) Second on the team with eight total tackles ... also hadone tackle for a loss (minus one yard) and had a pass breakup ... (vs. WVU)Totaled eight tackles including four solo stops ... forced WVU quarterbackBrad Lewis to fumble, resulting in a 52-yard fumble return for a touchdown byMike Whaley ... that play changed the game, giving the Terps a 19-13 leadafter WVU scored 10 straight points to tie the contest at 10 ... (vs. WFU) Talliedeight tackles and had one tackle for loss (minus one yard) ... (vs. EMU) Hadfive tackles and recorded his first career sack for a loss of seven yards ... (vs.UNC) In his first career start ... was impressive, as he registered 10 tackles,second most by a Terp ... had six solo stops along with two tackles for loss ...also forced two quarterback hurries ... Career: Appeared in all 11 games as aredshirt freshman in 2000, seeing his most extensive action on special teams... totaled 31 tackles on the season … had a 55-yard fumble return for atouchdown against West Virginia in 2000 … registered a career-high 12 totaltackles at No. 5 Clemson.

Defense G-GS UT AT TT TFL Sacks FC FR PBU Int.2001 6-6 23 27 50 7-16 1.0-7 1 0 2 1Career 17-6 40 48 88 7-16 1.0-7 1 1 2 1

12 RandallJONES • FSStarting free safety and former quarterback who has been a regular contribu-tor on defense the past two seasons … ran a 4.48 40-yard dash in springtesting … Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Had an outstanding game ...ended the game with a fumble recovery to clinch the Terps’ victory in over-time ... had another fumble recovery to end a Georgia Tech drive in thesecond half ... also came up with an interception, his second of the season ...totaled four tackles ... Season: Has forced two fumbles and recovered twofumbles ... (vs. UVa) Totaled four tackles from his free safety position ... (vs.WVU) Finished with six tackles, including four solo stops ... also had aninterception that he returned 30 yards to set up a Maryland touchdown ... theinterception was his first of the season and the second of his career ... (vs.WFU) Finished with a season-high seven tackles ... forced a fumble for thesecond time this year ... (vs. UNC) Started at free safety and forced a fumble... also was credited with five tackles including three solo stops ... Career: Hasstarted 16 games in his career (10 on defense, six on offense) ... career-high10 tackles came against FSU in 2000 and WVU in 2001 ... won starting QBduties as a true freshman … became the first true freshman in Marylandhistory to start a game at quarterback when he took the opening snap atClemson in 1998 ... three career interceptions.

Defense G-GS UT AT TT TFL Sacks FC FR PBU Int.2001 6-6 14 13 27 0-0 0-0 2 2 2 2Career 27-16 59 36 95 1-8 1.0-8 2 3 9 3

31 ChadKILLIAN • FBA fourth-year junior who is sharing time at fullback … the strongest back andone of the strongest players on the team pound-for-pound … has added 24pounds since the start of last year and has ideal fullback size … has goodhands and a strong work ethic ... Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Did not playafter still recovering from a stinger he suffered vs. West Virginia ... Season:Averging 5.3 yards per carry ... has played in four games ... (vs. WVU) Carriedthe ball two times for 16 yards ... started his third straight game at fullback ...Career: Saw limited action on special teams the past two seasons ... was aredshirt in 1998.

Rushing G-GS Att. Gain Lost Net Avg. TD LP2001 4-3 3 16 0 16 5.3 0 15Career 15-3 6 27 0 27 4.5 0 15

33 RodLITTLES • SSStrong, hard-hitting senior who is backing up at strong safety, where he islisted behind senior Tony Jackson … Terps’ starting nickel back ... has notmissed a game in the past three seasons … excels when playing close to theline of scrimmage … an Iron Terp whose 390-lb. bench is the best ever by adefensive back at Maryland ... Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Finished withtwo tackles and two pass breakups ... Season: Reserve safety who starts whenthe Terps are in a nickel package ... (vs. UVa) Made three tackles including ashoe-string stop on special teams that saved a big kickoff return ... (vs. WVU)Registered a season-high eight tackles and had one of four Terrapin intercep-tions ... (vs. WFU) Tallied two tackles including his first career sack ... (vs. UNC)Came off the bench to record four solo stops ... also had one tackle for a lossof three yards ... Career: Has made 13 starts in 39 appearances … has had at

least one tackle in 26 consecutive games ... career-high 11 tackles cameagainst Wake Forest in 1999.

Defense G-GS UT AT TT TFL Sacks FC FR PBU Int.2001 6-0 16 4 20 2-15 1.0-12 2 0 2 1Career 39-13 106 65 171 4-25 1.0-12 8 2 3 3

5 JamesLYNCH • FBOne-year letterman who is the co-starter at the fullback position vacated byfour-year starter Matt Kalapinski … a big, strong back with good hands … LastGame (vs. Georgia Tech): Started at fullback ... caught one pass for fouryards from Brooks Barnard on a fake field goal, falling just one yard short of afirst down ... also had a three-yard carry ... Season: Punishing runner who isalso a solid blocker ... (vs. UVa) Started his second game this season atfullback ... caught his first pass of the year for nine yards ... (vs. EMU) Rumbledfor a career-high 23 yards on five carries ... (vs. UNC) Made his first start of hisyoung career ... helped pave the way for Bruce Perry’s 116 rushing yards andMaryland’s 161 team rushing yards ... Career: Appeared in eight games as afreshman last year ... first career TD reception came against NC State in ‘00.

Rushing G-GS Att. Gain Lost Net Avg. TD LP2001 6-3 7 27 0 27 3.9 0 7Career 14-3 11 33 0 33 3.0 0 7Receiving G-GS Rec. Yds. Avg. TD Long2001 6-3 2 13 6.5 0 9Career 14-3 4 9 2.6 1 9

25 ScooterMONROE • WRAthletic, speedy receiver with good size who is No. 2 on the depth chartbehind Guilian Gary … a “big-play” type receiver with outstanding potential… also used as a kickoff returner … Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Played,but did not have any receptions ... Season: Second on the depth chart atwide receiver ... (vs. UVa) Had just one catch for 15 yards, but it came on acritical third and nine situation in the second quarter ... (vs. WVU) Hauled inone pass for 32 yards ... the 32-yard catch was the team’s longest of the gameand Monroe’s longest reception of the season ... (vs. WFU) Caught one passfor 15 yards ... the 15-yard catch was the longest for Monroe in 2001 ... (vs.UNC) Hauled in his second career touchdown reception ... his first touchdowngrab came as a freshman in 1999 ... the touchdown catch was from five yardsout and pushed the Terrapin lead out to 16-7 ... finished the contest with twograbs for 16 yards ... Career: Has played in 27 games in his career … 22receptions ... career-best game was three catches for 80 yards including a 72-yard TD on his first major college reception, against Western Carolina in ‘99... has notched three receptions on multiple occasions.

Receiving G-GS Rec. Yds. Avg. TD Long2001 6-0 5 78 15.6 1 32Career 27-10 22 337 15.3 2 72Kickoff Ret. G-GS Ret. Yds. Avg. TD LongCareer 27-10 13 193 14.5 0 27

88 MattMURPHY • TESenior who could become a factor in his final collegiate season … has goodhands and speed (4.76 40-yard dash) … is the second strongest tight end inschool history with a 674 strength index … also has a 35-inch vertical jump …listed No. 2 on the depth chart heading into the season ... Last Game (vs.Georgia Tech): Played, but did not record any receptions ... Season: Has tworeceptions on the season ... (vs. WFU) Caught two passes for 28 yards ... thetwo receptions were the first of his career ... Career: Has shifted between tightend and defensive line the past two seasons.

Receiving G-GS Rec. Yds. Avg. TD Long2001 6-0 2 28 14.0 0 21

46 NickNOVAK • PKRedshirt freshman who has won the starting placekicking duties … had aconsistent spring where he showed improved leg strength ... Last Game (vs.Georgia Tech): Had his coming out party as a kicker, finishing the game withtwo field goals and two extra points ... came up with the play of the year,kicking a career-long 46-yard field goal to force overtime at the end of regu-lation ... kept his focus on the kick after a high snap ... also connected on a 26-yard field goal in overtime that proved to be the game-winning score ...Season: Second on the team in scoring with 36 points ... (vs. UVa) Had the

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MARYLAND VS. DUKE • PLAYER NOTES

best kicking day of his career vs. his hometown team ... was 2-for-3 on fieldgoal attempts including makes from 25 and 33 yards out ... also was a perfect5-for-5 on PAT attempts ... the 33-yard field goal was the longest of his career... (vs. WFU) Made his first two field goals of his career (from 27 and 29 yards)... also connected on three PATs ... (vs. UNC) Made his first career start ...missed two long field goal attempts (47 and 50 yards) ... was a perfect 3-for-3 on PATs ... Career: Redshirted last season as a freshman.

Kicking G-GS XP-A 0-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+ Lg. Pts.2001 6-6 18-19 0-0 4-5 1-3 1-4 0-1 46 36

11TonyOKANLAWON • CBHas developed into one of the finest cover corners in the ACC in his seniorseason … an Iron Terp … Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Had perhaps thefinest game of his career ... covered the Georgia Tech receivers like a blanket... had his team-best and ACC leading fifth interception of the season ... tieda season-high with seven tackles and also forced a fumble ... recorded threepass breakups ... Season: Second in the country and first in the ACC with fiveinterceptions ... leads the team in pass breakups with 10 ... (vs. UVa) Re-corded his fourth interception of the season and had a 34-yard return on theplay ... was named ACC Defensive Back of the Week for his efforts ... alsomade three tackles and defended a team-high four passes on the afternoon ...one of the pass breakups came in the end zone on a fade pass to UVa’s BillyMcMullen ... (vs. WVU) Started at corner and finished with six tackles and aninterception ... also defended three passes ... (vs. WFU) Starter at cornerbackand was in on seven tackles ... (vs. EMU) Intercepted his second pass of theseason with an over-the-shoulder catch ... (vs. UNC) Picked off Ronald Curry(his second career interception) and was in on seven tackles ... tallied fivesolo stops ... also broke up two passes ... Career: Has appeared in 37 gamesand made 26 starts in his four-year career … has notched a career-high eighttackles three times ... six career interceptions.

Defense G-GS UT AT TT TFL Sacks FC FR PBU Int.2001 6-6 25 7 32 0-0 0-0 1 0 10 5Career 37-26 106 35 141 2-2 0-0 2 2 26 6

22 RichPARSON • WROne of four true freshmen to play so far this season ... quick receiver who wasmoved from tailback after preseason camp ... Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech):Had just two catches for 23 yards, but had the game’s most important recep-tion with his 17-yard grab that set up the game-tying field goal at the end ofregulation ... the 17-yard catch was also the longest of his young career ...also returned two kickoffs for 38 yards ... Season: Reserve wide receiver whohandles the kickoff return duties ... (vs. UVa) Caught two passes for 18 yards ...opened the game with a 26-yard kickoff return ... (vs. WVU) Caught his secondcareer pass, for 14 yards ... (vs. UNC) Made his collegiate debut ... first careerreception was for seven yards.

Receiving G-GS Rec. Yds. Avg. TD Long2001 6-0 6 62 10.3 0 17Kickoff Ret. G-GS Ret. Yds. Avg. TD Long2001 6-0 7 146 20.9 0 26

1 BrucePERRY • TBQuick, explosive tailback who is in his third season in the program … hasbecome one of the elite running backs in the nation … has given the Terra-pins a big-play threat in the backfield ... needs just a bit of daylight to springa big gainer ... has also shown excellent hands coming out of the backfield asa receiver ... Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Was held under 100 yards forthe first time this season, rushing for 49 yards on 18 carries ... also caught fivepasses for 29 yards ... the 49 yards rushing snapped a streak of five consecu-tive 100-yard games, the second-longest streak in Maryland history ... Sea-son: Fifth in the NCAA and first in the ACC in rushing yards per game (145.0)... also ranks among the nation’s leaders in all-purpose yards per game (7th/178.7) and scoring (66th/7.0 ppg) ... leads the team with an impressive 6.2yards per carry average and seven touchdowns ... Perry is the only sophomorein Maryland history to have five consecutive 100-yard efforts ... with his 64yards on 10 carries in the first half of the WVU game, it snapped a streak ofthree straight 100-yard outings by halftime ... (vs. UVa) Had another outstand-ing day, finishing with 143 yards on 25 carries and a touchdown ... also caughta career-high eight passes for 51 yards ... with the 143 rushing yards, Perry hasrushed for at least 100 yards in each of his first five starts ... he is only thesecond Terp ever to accomplish that feat joining Steve Atkins who had sevenstraight 100-yard efforts to open the 1978 season ... had a 45-yard run on anoption play to open the second quarter and spark the Maryland offense ... (vs.

WVU) Continued to be one of the nation’s top players with his 31-carry, 153-yard performance against WVU ... rushed for one touchdown while also catch-ing two passes for 28 yards ... his 153-yard effort has given him four straight toopen the season and makes him just the second Terrapin ever to accomplishthat feat (Steve Atkins was the other with seven straight 100-yard efforts in1978) ... (vs. WFU) Turned in the second-best rushing performance in Mary-land history with a career-high 276 yards on 30 carries ... was named ACCOffensive Back of the Week for his efforts ... the 276 yards trail only LaMontJordan’s 306 yards gained vs. Virginia in 1999 in the Maryland record book ...scored two touchdowns on the day on long runs of 80 and 50 yards ... it wasthe third straight game that Perry has gone over the century mark and in allthree games he reached the 100-yard mark before halftime (he had over 100yards in the first quarter vs. Wake Forest) ... the 80-yard scamper was the firstplay of the game for the Terps on offense and was the longest run by a Terpsince Jordan had a 90-yard run vs. Virginia in ‘99 ... his 276 yards were themost ever vs. Wake Forest, breaking the old mark by South Carolina’s GeorgeRogers, who ran for 237 yards in 1978 ... also caught three passes for 34 yards,including a career-long catch good for 22 yards ... (vs. EMU) Ran for over 100yards for the second consecutive game ... reached the century mark beforehalftime for the second straight week ... finished the game with a then career-high 133 yards on 16 carries ... scored a career-best three touchdowns ... 13thMaryland player in history to reach the end zone three times in one game ...(vs. UNC) Turned heads after his first career start ... ran for a then career-best116 yards on 21 carries (5.5 yards per carry) ... had a long run of 21 yards ...continued to get better and better as the game went on ... totaled 70 yards inthe second half at an impressive 7.8 yards per attempt ... also had a 32-yardkickoff return ... Career: Has a whopping 6.2 yards per carry average for hiscareer ... has totaled 1,065 yards rushing in just 13 games at Maryland ... sawaction in seven games as a true freshman in 1999 ... carried 30 times for 195yards.

Rushing G-GS Att. Gain Lost Net Avg. TD LP2001 6-6 141 895 25 870 6.2 7 80Career 13-6 171 1,090 25 1,065 6.2 7 80Receiving G-GS Rec. Yds. Avg. TD Long2001 6-6 19 138 7.3 0 22Career 13-6 20 147 7.4 0 22

2 MarcRILEY • TBGood-sized runner who excels in short-yardage situations … listed No. 2 onthe depth chart with Jason Crawford … has the size to play either position inthe backfield ... Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Did not play for the first timein 2001 ... Season: Second on the team in rushing with 136 yards ... (vs. UVa)Had his best game of his career with 51 yards on 10 carries ... had a career-long 26-yard scamper on a fourth and one play in the fourth quarter ... alsocaught one pass for 18 yards on a swing pass from Shaun Hill ... (vs. WVU)Rushed six times for 12 yards ... also had a three-yard touchdown for thegame’s first score ... (vs. WFU) Had 12 carries for 25 yards and a touchdown ...also had one reception for 13 yards ... (vs. EMU) Carried the ball seven timesfor 18 yards and a touchdown ... (vs. UNC) Scored his second career touch-down from one yard out to close out the scoring ... Career: Has appeared in32 games during his career with no starts … first career TD came against WakeForest last year.

Rushing G-GS Att. Gain Lost Net Avg. TD LP2001 5-0 45 148 12 136 3.0 4 26Career 32-0 65 189 17 172 2.6 5 26Receiving G-GS Rec. Yds. Avg. TD Long2001 5-0 4 45 11.2 0 18Career 32-0 7 78 11.1 0 26

71 DurrandROUNDTREE • DEA physical force who starts at defensive end … one of the strongest players,pound-for-pound, in the history of Maryland football … led defensive line-men in every strength/athleticism category (bench press, clean, squat, verti-cal jump and 40-yard dash time) … strength index of 796 is the highest of anyplayer at any position in school history … combines a 460-lb. bench press witha 710-lb. squat, a 36-inch vertical jump and a 4.68 forty time … Last Game(vs. Georgia Tech): Was a force from his defensive end position ... finishedwith one sack and four tackles ... also tallied two quarterback hurries ... Sea-son: Has started every game at defensive end ... (vs. UVa) Recovered afumble by UVa quarterback Bryson Spinner in the first quarter ... also assistedon one tackle ... (vs. WVU) Had two tackles, but still felt the effects of asprained ankle he suffered in the Wake Forest game ... (vs. WFU) Made threetackles before leaving the game with a sprained ankle ... (vs. EMU) Had one

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sack for 11 yards ... also had three quarterback hurries ... (vs. UNC) Had twotackles ... also had a sack and two quarterback hurries ... the sack was almosta safety as he downed Ronald Curry at the one ... Career: A 11-game starterat defensive end who has appeared in 22 games overall ... had a career-highseven tackles against FSU in 2000.

Defense G-GS UT AT TT TFL Sacks FC FR PBU Int.2001 6-6 6 9 15 3-23 3.0-23 0 1 0 0Career 22-11 23 19 42 6-30 3.5-28 0 1 0 0

17 VedadSILKOVIC • PK/PThird-year senior who is competing with Nick Novak for the placekicking duties… handles kickoffs and also serves as the Terps’ backup punter … excels as a“pooch” punter … born in Montenegro, Yugoslavia ... Last Game (vs. Geor-gia Tech): Had another strong performance on kickoffs, including two touch-backs ... Season: Made the team’s first field goal of the season (vs. EasternMichigan) ... (vs. UVa) Helped Maryland win the field advantage battle bykicking five touchbacks ... (vs. EMU) Made the Terps’ first field goal of theseason, from 44 yards out ... the 44-yard FG was the first of his career ... (vs.UNC) Had one touchback and also made one tackle ... Career: Appeared ineight games in 2000, with five of his 13 punts being downed inside the 20-yard line … finished with a 32.8 average (most punts were “pooch” punts) ...was successful on his one PAT try (vs. Wake) … missed from 44 yards (wideright) in his lone field goal try, vs. West Virginia.

Kicking G-GS XP-A 0-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+ Lg. Pts.2001 6-0 0-2 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-1 0-0 0 3Career 14-0 1-3 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-2 0-0 0 4Punting G-GS Punts Yds Avg LP I20 I10 Blk.2001 6-0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0Career 14-0 13 427 32.8 42 6 0 0

18 MauriceSHANKS • WRRedshirt receiver who has all the intangibles … is short only on experience …tall receiver who has the uncanny ability to change direction like a smallerplayer ... Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Caught one pass for 17 yards ... the17-yard grab was the longest of his young career ... Season: Has seen actionin six games ... (vs. EMU) Caught two passes for 17 yards ... the two catcheswere the first of his career ... also caught a two-point conversion ... Career:Was redshirted in 2000.

Receiving G-GS Rec. Yds. Avg. TD Long2001 6-0 3 34 11.3 0 17

54 ScottSMITH • DERedshirt sophomore … is the backup at defensive end … has good speed foran end (4.71) … came on strong in the second half of the 2000 season afterbeing moved from the offensive side of the ball during 2000 spring drills …has a knack for getting to the quarterback ... Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech):Did not play ... Season: Has played in four of the team’s five games ... (vs.UNC) Appeared in his sixth game at Maryland ... forced one quarterback hurry... Career: Has seen action in 10 games, starting two ... had a career-high sixstops vs. North Carolina in 2000 … had three sacks and four TFL’s in just fivegames as he missed the first six games with a back injury.

Defense G-GS UT AT TT TFL Sacks FC FR PBU Int.2001 4-0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0Career 10-2 7 6 13 4-18 3-16 0 0 0 0

57 RandySTARKS • DTImpressive true freshman who is starting to get adjusted to Division I-A football... has the size (6-4, 305) to be a force on the defensive front ... has a verybright future in College Park ... Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Had the bestgame of his career, totaling a career-high six tackles ... also finished with acareer-best 1.5 sacks and two TFLs for minus nine yards ... also forced afumble in overtime to preserve Maryland’s victory ... nominated for ACCRookie of the Week for his efforts ... Season: Has gotten better and bettereach time out ... (vs. EMU) Tallied two tackles including his first career sack ...(vs. UNC) Appeared in his first collegiate game ... recorded his first tackle inlimited playing time.

Defense G-GS UT AT TT TFL Sacks FC FR PBU Int.2001 6-0 8 3 11 4-15 2.5-14 1 0 0 0

29 TySTEWART • FSFourth-year junior defensive back who competes for playing time at the freesafety position and on special teams … missed most of spring practice with ahamstring injury but showed the ability early to grasp the new defensivescheme … an Iron Terp ... Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Finished with onetackle from his free safety spot ... Season: A pleasant surprise in the Terrapinsecondary ... (vs. UVa) Had an outstanding effort with three tackles and an 11-yard sack ... the sack was the first of his career and ended UVa’s first drive of thegame ... (vs. WFU) Had a critical pass breakup late in the fourth quarter to helpthe Terps seal the victory ... also had two tackles ... (vs. EMU) Made a beautifuldiving interception ... the interception was the first of his career ... (vs. UNC)Made the biggest play of his career when he tackled Willie Parker in the endzone for a safety ... the two-point play turned out to be the game-winningscore for the Terps.

Defense G-GS UT AT TT TFL Sacks FC FR PBU Int.2001 6-0 8 3 11 2-18 1.0-11 0 1 1 1Career 25-0 10 5 15 2-18 1.0-11 0 1 1 1

40 AaronTHOMPSON • LBHonors candidate who is on the watch list for the Butkus Award ... athletic pass-rushing force who is a team leader on defense ... a sure tackler and one of theTerps’ top defensive players … Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Had his bestgame of the year, finishing with a season-high 12 tackles ... totaled 2 TFLs forminus six yards and also was credited with half a sack ... Season: Tied for theteam lead with three sacks ... (vs. UVa) Totaled five tackles including two solostops ... also had one tackle for a loss (minus one yard) ... (vs. WVU) Cameaway with four tackles and one tackle for loss (minus one yard) ... (vs. WFU)Finished the game with a season-high 10 tackles ... six of the stops were solo... (vs. UNC) Registered 2.5 sacks on the day ... totaled six tackles ... Career:Has started all 39 games of his career at outside linebacker … 41 careertackles for loss, 13.5 career sacks … 307 career tackles … Maryland’s second-leading tackler as a freshman and sophomore, No. 5 as a junior … needs just26 total tackles to move into Maryland’s career top 10 list ... notched a career-best 6.5 sacks in 2000.

Defense G-GS UT AT TT TFL Sacks FC FR PBU Int.2001 6-6 22 18 40 8-31 3.0-24 0 0 0 0Career 39-39 202 117 319 43-185 14-105 5 2 5 0

55 MikeWHALEY • LBThird-year LB who came on as a redshirt frosh last year ... named third teamFreshman All-American by The Sporting News … listed as the starter at the“Leo” position, a hybrid linebacker/end position … has a 36-0½ inch verticaljump and a 390-lb. bench (tied for best among outside linebackers) … LastGame (vs. Georgia Tech): Tied for third on the team with a season-high 11tackles ... nine of the 11 tackles were solo stops ... had a great night rushingGeorge Godsey, finishing with one sack and two quarterback hurries ... cameaway with two TFLs for minus seven yards ... Season: Third on the team withseven TFLs ... (vs. UVa) Had three tackles ... (vs. WVU) Had an outstandinggame with six tackles and a 52-yard fumble return for a touchdown ... the 52-yard return gave the Terps the lead for good with the score tied at 13 beforethe play of the game ... also had two tackles for loss (minus five yards) ... (vs.WFU) Had a strong overall effort including seven tackles and two passesdefended ... also had a tackle for a loss ... (vs. UNC) Made five stops and hadtwo tackles for a loss ... also intercepted his first career pass ... the interceptioncame when he made a spectacular diving grab off of a tipped pass ... Career:An 11-game starter in 2000 ... ranked third on the team in TFLs (12) and sacks(5) after a fast start to the season ... has started every game of his career.

Defense G-GS UT AT TT TFL Sacks FC FR PBU Int.2001 6-6 22 11 33 7-22 2.5-15 0 1 4 1Career 17-17 63 38 101 19-98 7.5-62 0 1 5 1

43 DarrylWHITMER • WRSenior wide receiver who has made an impact in 2001 … was one of thesurprises of spring as his extra offseason work seemed to have paid off in hisplay … one of the best conditioned athletes on this year’s team ... Last Game(vs. Georgia Tech): Missed the game with a sprained MCL in his right knee ...Season: Leads the team with an 18.5 yards per catch average ... (vs. WVU)Left the game with a sprained MCL of his right knee ... (vs. WFU) Did not haveany receptions ... had a beautiful diving catch in the end zone called back ona holding penalty ... (vs. EMU) Set career highs in receptions (3) and yards

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MARYLAND vs. GEORGIA TECH • PLAYER NOTES(69) ... had a career-long 30-yard catch over the middle in the first half ... (vs.UNC) Tallied his first career reception for five yards ... Career: Has appearedin 35 games, mostly on special teams ... also plays baseball for the Terps.

Receiving G-GS Rec. Yds. Avg. TD Long2001 4-0 4 74 18.5 0 30

66 ToddWIKE • OGVersatile lineman who has started 25 straight games … listed atop the depthchart at left guard … good quickness … forms a strong veteran tandem withMelvin Fowler in the middle of the line (60 consecutive starts between them)... Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Had a strong performance despite battlingthe effects of a sprained foot ... Season: Has started each game at left guard... (vs. UVa) Had another strong effort starting at left guard, but suffered asprained right foot ... was named ACC Offensive Lineman of the Week for hisefforts ... (vs. WFU) Was one of the main reasons why Maryland had 519 yardsof total offense ... played 62 offensive plays ... (vs. UNC) Along with Fowler,anchored an offensive line that controlled the line of scrimmage ... totaled anumber of key blocks to spring Maryland’s running backs and to protect ShaunHill ... Career: Has started in 26 games and played in one other (lone non-start was in 1999 season opener).

15 CurtisWILLIAMS • FSSecond-year safety with good size and big-play potential … second on thedepth chart at free safety behind senior Randall Jones … really came on thisspring, showing both his hitting ability and a skill for breaking on the ball ...Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Played on special teams but did not recorda tackle ... Season: Saw action for the first time at Maryland vs. E. Michiganand recorded three tackles ... (vs. UVa) Made the biggest play of his careerwith a blocked punt in the second quarter to lead to a Maryland touchdown ...the blocked punt also broke the game open and gave Maryland a 24-7advantage at the half ... Career: Redshirted last season as a freshman.

Defense G-GS UT AT TT TFL Sacks FC FR PBU Int.2001 5-0 2 2 4 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0

19 JafarWILLIAMS • WRTall, athletic receiver with good speed … can also serve as an emergencylong snapper … is a starter at one of the wide receiver positions ... has thepotential to have a big year in the Friedgen offense ... Last Game (vs.Georgia Tech): Had the best game of his career ... is starting to really becomethe deep threat the Maryland offense lacks ... set career-highs in receptions(7) and receiving yards (73) ... led the team in both catagories ... also scoreda touchdown on a beautiful 11-yard reverse in the first quarter ... it was the firstrushing touchdown of his career ... Season: Second on the team with 22receptions ... (vs. UVa) Three catches for 14 yards including a touchdown ...the five-yard touchdown catch gave the Terps’ a 10-point cushion after Vir-ginia closed the gap to 24-21 ... (vs. WVU) Finished second on the team inreceptions (3) and yards (37) ... (vs. EMU) Set a career high with four recep-tions ... (vs. WFU) Second on the team with three catches for 45 yards ... (vs.UNC) Got his first career start and also scored his first career touchdown ... thescoring strike was the Terps’ first score of the season ... led the team with twocatches for 28 yards ... Career: Has seen action in 16 games with six starts.

Receiving G-GS Rec. Yds. Avg. TD Long2001 6-6 22 225 10.2 2 31Career 16-6 31 328 10.6 2 36

13 DennardWILSON • CBConfident cornerback who possesses all-around skills … runs well and hasstrong cover ability … local product who is listed No. 2 on the depth chart atcornerback behind Curome Cox ... Last Game (vs. Georgia Tech): Played hisbest game of his career ... made his second career start and totaled threetackles ... also had two pass breakups before leaving the game with legcramps ... Season: 16 tackles in four games ... (vs. UVa) Recorded his firstcareer sack in the first quarter and also forced a fumble by UVa quarterbackBryson Spinner all on the same play ... also had three tackles ... (vs. WVU)Played the most of any game this season, recording three tackles ... (vs. WFU)Made one of the biggest plays of the game with a pass breakup on fourthdown with just 2:08 remaining in the game ... finished with a season-high fourtackles ... (vs. UNC) Made two tackles ... had one solo stop ... Career: Has seenaction in 12 games, starting two ... suffered a knee injury in the Clemsongame of his true freshman season (2000) when he played in six games …career-high six stops (five solos) came at West Virginia in ‘00.

Defense G-GS UT AT TT TFL Sacks FC FR PBU Int.2001 6-1 10 6 16 1-9 1.0-9 1 0 3 0Career 12-2 24 8 32 1-9 1.0-9 1 0 3 0

MARYLAND VS. DUKE • PLAYER NOTES

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2001MARYLANDfootball

MARYLAND VS. DUKE • STATISTICS (TEAM/OFFENSE)

2001 MARYLAND FOOTBALL STATISTICSRECORD: OVERALL HOME AWAY NEUTRALALL GAMES 6-0-0 4-0-0 2-0-0 0-0-0CONFERENCE 4-0-0 2-0-0 2-0-0 0-0-0NON-CONFERENCE 2-0-0 2-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0

DATE OPPONENT W/L SCORE ATTENDSep 01, 2001 * NORTH CAROLINA W 23-7 44080Sep 08, 2001 EASTERN MICHIGAN W 50-3 42105Sep 22, 2001 * at Wake Forest W 27-20 22372Sep 29, 2001 WEST VIRGINIA W 32-20 40166Oct 06, 2001 * VIRGINIA W 41-21 44197Oct 11, 2001 * at Georgia Tech W OT 20-17 40574* denotes conference game

TEAM STATISTICS M D OPPSCORING 193 88 Points Per Game 32.2 14.7FIRST DOWNS 133 100 Rushing 77 34 Passing 48 60 Penalty 8 6RUSHING YARDAGE 1254 570 Yards gained rushing 1418 810 Yards lost rushing 164 240 Rushing Attempts 290 219 Average Per Rush 4.3 2.6 Average Per Game 209.0 95.0 TDs Rushing 16 3PASSING YARDAGE 1143 1354 Att-Comp-Int 182-98-5 223-126-14 Average Per Pass 6.3 6.1 Average Per Catch 11.7 10.7 Average Per Game 190.5 225.7 TDs Passing 6 6TOTAL OFFENSE 2397 1924 Total Plays 472 442 Average Per Play 5.1 4.4 Average Per Game 399.5 320.7KICK RETURNS: #-YARDS 10-229 17-433PUNT RETURNS: #-YARDS 10-73 18-149INT RETURNS: #-YARDS 14-104 5-3KICK RETURN AVERAGE 22.9 25.5PUNT RETURN AVERAGE 7.3 8.3INT RETURN AVERAGE 7.4 0.6FUMBLES-LOST 4-2 14-7PENALTIES-YARDS 41-382 34-305 Average Per Game 63.7 50.8PUNTS-YARDS 35-1558 34-1277 Average Per Punt 44.5 37.6 Net punt average 40.3 35.4TIME OF POSSESSION/GAME 31:30 28:303RD-DOWN CONVERSIONS 39/98 34/106 3rd-Down Pct 40% 32%4TH-DOWN CONVERSIONS 4/7 8/19 4th-Down Pct 57% 42%SACKS BY-YARDS 18-150 11-89MISC YARDS 101 0TOUCHDOWNS SCORED 25 10FIELD GOALS-ATTEMPTS 7-14 6-8PAT-ATTEMPTS 18-21 10-10ATTENDANCE 170548 62946 Games/Avg Per Game 4/42637 2/31473

RUSHING GP Att Gain Loss Net Avg TD Long Avg/GPerry, Bruce 6 141 895 25 870 6.2 7 80 145.0Riley, Marc 5 45 148 12 136 3.0 4 26 27.2Crawford, Jason 5 16 76 2 74 4.6 1 12 14.8Hill, Shaun 6 59 177 107 70 1.2 3 15 11.7Harrison, Latrez 2 7 53 3 50 7.1 0 17 25.0Lynch, James 6 7 27 0 27 3.9 0 7 4.5Killian, Chad 4 3 16 0 16 5.3 0 15 4.0Fiddler, Bernie 6 3 13 0 13 4.3 0 6 2.2Williams, Jafar 6 2 13 0 13 6.5 1 11 2.2Whitmer, Darryl 4 1 0 5 -5 -5.0 0 0 -1.2TEAM 6 6 0 10 -10 -1.7 0 0 -1.7Total.......... 6 290 1418 164 1254 4.3 16 80 209.0Opponents...... 6 219 810 240 570 2.6 3 77 95.0

PASSING G Effic Att-Cmp-Int Pct Yds TD Lng Avg/GHill, Shaun 6 114.05 176-96-5 54.5 1130 6 53 188.3Harrison, Latrez 2 43.90 4-1-0 25.0 9 0 9 4.5Barnard, Brooks 6 133.60 1-1-0 100.0 4 0 4 0.7TEAM 6 0.00 1-0-0 0.0 0 0 0 0.0Total.......... 6 111.98 182-98-5 53.8 1143 6 53 190.5Opponents...... 6 103.83 223-126-14 56.5 1354 6 63 225.7

RECEIVING G No. Yds Avg TD Long Avg/GGary, Guilian 6 28 419 15.0 3 53 69.8Williams, Jafar 6 22 225 10.2 2 31 37.5Perry, Bruce 6 19 138 7.3 0 22 23.0Parson, Rich 6 6 62 10.3 0 17 10.3Monroe, Scooter 6 5 78 15.6 1 32 13.0Whitmer, Darryl 4 4 74 18.5 0 30 18.5Riley, Marc 5 4 45 11.2 0 18 9.0Shanks, Maurice 6 3 34 11.3 0 17 5.7Dugan, Jeff 6 3 27 9.0 0 13 4.5Murphy, Matt 6 2 28 14.0 0 21 4.7Lynch, James 6 2 13 6.5 0 9 2.2Total.......... 6 98 1143 11.7 6 53 190.5Opponents...... 6 126 1354 10.7 6 63 225.7

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MARYLAND VS. DUKE • STATISTICS (MISCELLANEOUS)

FIELD GOALS FGM-FGA Pct 01-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-99 Lg BlkNovak, Nick 6-13 46.2 0-0 4-5 1-3 1-4 0-1 46 2Siljkovic, Vedad 1-1 100.0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-1 0-0 44 0

|----------------------PATs------------------------|SCORING TD FGs Kick Rush Rcv Pass DXP Saf PointsPerry, Bruce 7 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 42Novak, Nick 0 6-13 18-19 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 36Riley, Marc 4 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 24Gary, Guilian 3 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 18Williams, Jafar 3 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 18Hill, Shaun 3 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 1-3 0 0 18Henderson, E.J. 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6Monroe, Scooter 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6Crawford, Jason 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6Ambush, Leroy 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6Whaley, Mike 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6Siljkovic, Vedad 0 1-1 0-2 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 3Stewart, Tyrone 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 1 2Shanks, Maurice 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0-0 0 0 2Barnard, Brooks 0 0-0 0-0 0-1 0 0-0 0 0 0Total.......... 25 7-14 18-21 0-1 1 1-3 0 1 193Opponents...... 10 6-8 10-10 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 88

SCORE BY QUARTERS 1st 2nd 3rd 4th OT TotalMaryland 41 62 27 60 3 193Opponents 10 20 35 23 0 88

INTERCEPTIONS No. Yds Avg TD LongOkanlawon, Tony 5 60 12.0 0 34Jackson, Tony 3 1 0.3 0 1Jones, Randall 2 31 15.5 0 30Littles, Rod 1 0 0.0 0 0Whaley, Mike 1 0 0.0 0 0Joe, Leon 1 8 8.0 0 8Stewart, Tyrone 1 4 4.0 0 4Total.......... 14 104 7.4 0 34Opponents...... 5 3 0.6 0 3

PUNTING No. Yds Avg Long TB FC I20 BlkdBarnard, Brooks 35 1558 44.5 59 4 4 10 0Total.......... 35 1558 44.5 59 4 4 10 0Opponents...... 34 1277 37.6 60 4 8 6 1

PUNT RETURNS No. Yds Avg TD LongGary, Guilian 8 52 6.5 0 11Suter, Steve 1 3 3.0 0 3Williams, C. 1 18 18.0 0 0Ambush, Leroy 0 0 0.0 1 0Total.......... 10 73 7.3 1 11Opponents...... 18 149 8.3 0 22

KICK RETURNS No. Yds Avg TD LongParson, Rich 7 146 20.9 0 26Perry, Bruce 2 64 32.0 0 32Gary, Guilian 1 19 19.0 0 19Total.......... 10 229 22.9 0 32Opponents...... 17 433 25.5 1 100

ALL PURPOSE G Rush Rec PR KOR IR Tot Avg/GPerry, Bruce 6 870 138 0 64 0 1072 178.7Gary, Guilian 6 0 419 52 19 0 490 81.7Total.......... 6 1254 1143 73 229 104 2803 467.2Opponents...... 6 570 1354 149 433 3 2509 418.2

TOTAL OFFENSE G Plays Rush Pass Total Avg/GHill, Shaun 6 235 70 1130 1200 200.0Perry, Bruce 6 141 870 0 870 145.0Total.......... 6 472 1254 1143 2397 399.5Opponents...... 6 442 570 1354 1924 320.7

Page 19: 12 MARYLAND vs DUKE...2001MARYLANDfootball #12 MARYLAND vs DUKE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2001 • 1:00 P.M. EDT BYRD STADIUM (48,055/Natural Grass) COLLEGE PARK, MD. FOOTBALL GAME NOTES

2001MARYLANDfootball

MARYLAND VS. DUKE • STATISTICS (DEFENSE)

2001 DEFENSIVE STATISTICS

|———-----------Tackles——--------------| |-Sacks-| |------—Pass Def----—| |----Fumbles-----| BlkdDEFENSIVE LEADERS GP Solo Ast Total TFL/Yds No-Yards Int-Yds BrUp QBH Rcv-Yds FF Kick Saf4 2 Henderson, E.J. 6 5 3 2 5 7 8 16-37 2.0-18 . 2 5 1-36 . 1 .3 2 Joe, Leon 6 2 3 2 7 5 0 7-16 1.0-7 1-8 1 7 . . . .2 7 Jackson, Tony 6 2 5 1 9 4 4 2-3 . 3-1 6 . 2-0 . . .4 0 Thompson, Aaron 6 2 2 1 8 4 0 8-31 3.0-24 . . 2 . . . .5 5 Whaley, Mike 6 2 2 11 3 3 7-22 2.5-15 1-0 4 5 1-52 . . .11 Okanlawon, Tony 6 2 5 7 3 2 . . 5-60 1 0 . . 1 . .9 8 Hill, Charles 6 1 2 2 0 3 2 2-3 1.0-10 . . 5 . . . .1 2 Jones, Randall 6 1 4 1 3 2 7 . . 2-31 1 . 2-13 2 . .3 0 Cox, Curome 6 2 1 3 2 4 1-3 . . 2 . . 1 . .3 3 Littles, Rod 6 1 6 4 2 0 2-15 1.0-12 1-0 2 . . 2 . .9 6 Feldheim, C.J. 6 9 9 1 8 2-4 . . . 3 . . . .1 3 Wilson, Dennard 6 1 0 6 1 6 1-9 1.0-9 . 3 . . 1 . .7 1 Roundtree, Durrand 6 6 9 1 5 3-23 3.0-23 . . 1 0 1-0 . . .5 2 Graves, Monte 6 5 7 1 2 . . . 1 . . . . .2 9 Stewart, Tyrone 6 8 3 11 2-18 1.0-11 1-4 1 . . . . 15 1 Henley, Andrew 6 8 3 11 . . . . . . . . .5 7 Starks, Randy 6 7 3 1 0 5-16 2.5-14 . . 1 . 1 . .1 5 Williams, Curtis 5 2 3 5 . . . . . . . 1 .2 4 Ambush, Leroy 6 3 2 5 1-5 1.0-5 . . . . . . .3 7 Chance, Jamal 5 4 . 4 . . . . . . . 1 .4 9 Cochran, Jamahl 6 1 1 2 . . . . . . . . .9 5 Shime, William 4 . 2 2 1-1 . . . . . . . .5 9 Smith, Maurice 5 1 1 2 . . . . . . . . .9 7 Abari, Tosin 3 1 1 2 1-11 1.0-11 . . . . . . .1 8 Shanks, Maurice 6 1 . 1 1-1 . . . . . . . .3 6 Aragona, Sal 1 1 . 1 . . . . . . . . .4 8 Swift, Ryan 2 1 . 1 . . . . . . . . .5 4 Smith, Scott 5 1 . 1 . . . . 1 . . . .5 3 Lewis, Reggie 1 . 1 1 . . . . . . . . .1 7 Siljkovic, V. 6 1 . 1 . . . . . . . . .

Total. . . . . . . . . . 6 303 198 501 62-218 18-150 14-104 3 3 3 9 7-101 8 3 1Opponents.... . . 6 273 247 520 44-145 11-89 5-3 1 6 . 2-0 4 2 .

Game-by-Game Individual BestsOpponent Solos Assists TotalNorth Carolina 8-Henderson 6-C. Hill 12-HendersonEastern Michigan 5-Henderson 4-Joe 8-Hendersonat Wake Forest 11-Henderson 6-Henderson 17-HendersonWest Virginia 14-Henderson 5-Joe 18-HendersonVirginia 5-Jackson 5-Joe 9-Jacksonat Georgia Tech 13-Henderson 6-Jackson, Joe 18-HendersonDukeat Florida StateTroy StateClemsonat NC State

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MARYLAND VS. DUKE • GAME-BY-GAME (OFFENSE/KICKING)

2001 OFFENSIVE GAME-BY-GAME STATISTICS

A-C-I, Y, TD #7 Kelley #4 Harrison #14 S. Hill Made, Missed #17 Siljkovic #46 Novak No-Avg., In 20 #16 Barnard #17 SiljkovicNo. Carolina dnp-inj dnp-cd 26-10-0, 86, 2 No. Carolina none 47ng,50ng No. Carolina 8-50.4, 6 noneE. Michigan dnp-inj 4-1-0, 9, 0 21-15-0, 187, 1 E. Michigan 44g 28ng, 40ng E. Michigan 2-46.0, 0 noneat Wake Forest dnp-inj dnp-cd 23-16-2, 222, 0 at Wake Forest none 42ng, 27g, 29g at Wake Forest 5-39.4, 0 noneWest Virginia dnp-cd dnp-cd 32-13-0, 192, 1 West Virginia none none West Virginia 10-44.6, 2 noneVirginia dnp-cd dnp-cd 35-22,1, 237, 2 Virginia none 33ng, 25g, 33g Virginia 3-35.7, 0 noneat Georgia Tech dnp-cd dnp-cd 39-20-2, 206, 0 at Georgia Tech none 32ng, 46g, 26g at Georgia Tech 7-44.7, 2 noneDuke Duke Dukeat Florida State at Florida State at Florida StateTroy State Troy State Troy StateClemson Clemson Clemsonat NC State at NC State at NC State

Rec-Yds., TD #22 Parson #25 Monroe #31 Killian #34 Suter #43 Whitmer #44 Fiddler #80 James #82 Dugan #88 MurphyNo. Carolina 1-7 2-16, 1 0-0 0-0 1-5 0-0 dnp-cd 0-0 0-0E. Michigan 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 3-69 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0at Wake Forest 0-0 1-15 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 dnp-cd 1-10 2-28West Virginia 1-14 1-32 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 dnp-cd 0-0 0-0Virginia 2-18 1-15 dnp-inj dnp-inj dnp-inj 0-0 0-0 1-13 0-0at Georgia Tech 2-23 0-0 dnp-inj dnp-inj dnp-inj 0-0 dnp-cd 1-4 0-0Dukeat Florida StateTroy StateClemsonat NC State

RUSHING

RECEIVING

FIELD GOALSPASSING PUNTING

inj - injury cd - coach’s decision

TC-Yds., TD #1 Perry #2 Riley #5 Lynch #8 Merrills #9 Crawford #14 S. Hill #20 Downs #31 Killian #44 FiddlerNo. Carolina 21-116 10-30, 1 0-0 dnp-cd 5-21 8-0 dnp-cd 0-0 0-0E. Michigan 16-133, 3 7-18, 1 5-23 dnp-cd 8-38, 1 4-8, 1 dnp-cd 1-0 3-13at Wake Forest 30-276, 2 12-25, 1 0-0 dnp-cd 1-8 6-(-7) dnp-cd 0-0 0-0West Virginia 31-153, 1 6-12, 1 0-0 dnp-cd 2-7 11-(-7), 1 dnp-cd 2-16 0-0Virginia 25-143, 1 10-51 1-1 dnp-cd 0-0 16-47, 1 dnp-cd dnp-inj 0-0at Georgia Tech 18-49 dnp-cd 1-3 dnp-cd dnp-cd 14-29 0-0 dnp-inj 0-0Dukeat Florida StateTroy StateClemsonat NC State

Rec-Yds., TD #1 Perry #2 Riley #3 Abiamiri #5 Lynch #9 Crawford #10 Roberts #18 Shanks #19 J. Williams #21 GaryNo. Carolina 1-(-4) 1-8 dnp-cd 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 2-28, 1 2-26E. Michigan 0-0 1-6 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 2-17 4-28 6-76, 1at Wake Forest 3-34 1-13 dnp-cd 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 3-45 5-77West Virginia 2-28 0-0 dnp-cd 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 3-37 6-81, 1Virginia 8-51 1-18 dnp-cd 1-9 0-0 dnp-cd 0-0 3-14, 1 5-99, 1at Georgia Tech 5-29 dnp-cd 0-0 1-4 dnp-cd dnp-cd 0-0 7-73 4-60Dukeat Florida StateTroy StateClemsonat NC State

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2001MARYLANDfootball

MARYLAND VS. DUKE • GAME-BY-GAME (DEFENSE)

2001 DEFENSIVE GAME-BY-GAME STATISTICS

Solo-Asst-Total #59 M. Smith #71 Roundtree #91 Patterson #95 Shime #96 Feldheim #97 Abari #98 Hill #99 L. Jones

Solo-Asst-Total #48 Swift #49 Cochran #51 Henley #52 Graves #53 Lewis #54 S. Smith #55 Whaley #57 Starks #58 DickersonNo. Carolina

Solo-Asst-Total #30 Cox #32 Joe #33 Littles #35 Moye-Moore #37 Chance #40 Thompson #41 Eli #42 Henderson #47 Condo

Solo-Asst-Total #6 Foxworth #11 Okanlawon #12 R. Jones #13 Wilson #15 Williams #24 Ambush #26 Custis #27 Jackson #29 StewartNo. Carolina dnp-cd 5-2-7 3-2-5 1-1-2 dnp-cd 0-0-0 dnp-inj 2-2-4 2-0-2

E. Michigan dnp-cd 1-1-2 0-1-1 1-0-1 2-1-3 3-1-4 0-0-0 4-1-5 1-1-2at Wake Forest dnp-cd 7-0-7 3-4-7 3-1-4 0-0-0 0-1-1 dnp-cd 4-3-7 1-1-2West Virginia dnp-cd 5-1-6 4-2-6 3-0-3 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 4-3-7 1-0-1Virginia dnp-cd 2-1-3 1-3-4 1-2-3 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 5-4-9 2-1-3at Georgia Tech dnp-cd 5-2-7 3-1-4 1-2-3 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 6-6-12 1-0-1Dukeat Florida StateTroy StateClemsonat NC State

dnp-inj -- did not play/injury; dnp-cd -- did not play/coach’s decision

dnp-cd 0-0-0 0-2-2 0-1-1 dnp-inj 0-0-0 4-1-5 1-0-1 dnp-cdE. Michigan 1-0-1 0-1-1 3-0-3 3-2-5 dnp-cd 1-0-1 0-1-1 1-0-1 dnp-cdat Wake Forest dnp-inj 0-0-0 1-0-1 2-1-3 dnp-cd 0-0-0 5-2-7 1-0-1 dnp-cdWest Virginia dnp-inj 1-0-1 3-1-4 0-2-2 0-0-0 0-0-0 3-3-6 1-0-1 dnp-cdVirginia dnp-inj 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 dnp-cd dnp-cd 1-2-3 0-0-0 dnp-cdat Georgia Tech 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-0-0 dnp-cd 0-0-0 9-2-11 3-3-6 dnp-cdDukeat Florida StateTroy StateClemsonat NC State

No. Carolina 0-0-0 1-1-2 dnp-cd 0-0-0 1-0-1 dnp-cd 2-6-8 dnp-injE. Michigan 0-0-0 1-2-3 dnp-cd 0-2-2 1-1-2 1-0-1 0-0-0 dnp-cdat Wake Forest 0-0-0 2-1-3 dnp-cd 0-0-0 1-1-2 0-1-1 3-4-7 dnp-cdWest Virginia 1-1-2 1-1-2 dnp-cd dnp-inj 3-3-6 0-0-0 2-3-5 0-0-0Virginia 0-0-0 0-1-1 dnp-cd dnp-cd 0-2-2 dnp-cd 2-4-6 0-0-0at Georgia Tech 0-0-0 1-3-4 dnp-cd 0-0-0 3-2-5 dnp-cd 3-3-6 dnp-cdDukeat Florida StateTroy StateClemsonat NC State

No. Carolina 4-0-4 6-4-10 4-0-4 dnp-cd 1-0-1 4-2-6 dnp-cd 8-4-12 0-0-0E. Michigan 2-0-2 1-4-5 1-0-1 dnp-cd 2-0-2 2-1-3 dnp-cd 5-3-8 0-0-0at Wake Forest 5-0-5 5-3-8 1-1-2 dnp-cd 0-0-0 6-4-10 dnp-cd 11-6-17 0-0-0West Virginia 4-0-4 3-5-8 6-2-8 dnp-cd dnp-cd 1-3-4 dnp-cd 14-4-18 0-0-0Virginia 4-1-5 3-5-8 2-1-3 dnp-cd 0-0-0 2-3-5 dnp-cd 2-3-5 0-0-0at Georgia Tech 2-2-4 5-6-11 2-0-2 0-0-0 1-0-1 7-5-12 dnp-cd 13-5-18 0-0-0Dukeat Florida StateTroy StateClemsonat NC State

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MARYLAND VS. DUKE • GAME-BY-GAME (TEAM)

2001 TEAM GAME-BY-GAME STATISTICSFIRST DOWNS RUSHING PASSING TOTAL OFF. PUNTS FUM PEN SACKS BY 3RD 4TH TIME OF

Game SCORE Tot Ru-Pa-Pe No-Yds-TD A-C-I Yds TD Pl-Yds No-Avg F/L No-Yds No-Yds DNS DNS POSS.

at MARYLAND 23 17 13-4-0 46-161-1 26-10-0 86 2 72-247 8-50.4 0-0 3-20 4-26 8-18 0-0 31:26North Carolina 7 10 4-6-0 37-118-1 26-16-3 158 0 63-276 6-35.8 0-0 5-30 3-19 4-17 1-4 28:34

at MARYLAND 50 27 18-8-1 52-280-6 25-16-0 196 1 77-476 2-46.0 2-1 5-45 5-39 9-14 0-0 31:21Eastern Michigan 3 9 2-6-1 29-24-0 30-15-2 100 0 59-124 9-29.7 0-0 5-46 0-0 5-16 0-1 28:39

MARYLAND 27 24 13-10-1 51-297-3 23-16-2 222 0 74-519 5-39.4 1-0 9-99 1-12 4-14 1-1 30:56at Wake Forest 20 18 8-10-0 46-163-1 32-17-1 216 1 78-379 5-48.8 2-1 4-30 2-16 6-19 3-5 29:04

at MARYLAND 32 23 13-9-1 52-181-3 32-13-0 192 1 84-373 10-44.6 0-0 7-80 2-22 6-18 0-2 28:17West Virginia 20 27 8-15-4 43-151-0 52-31-4 279 1 95-430 3-36.0 3-2 5-45 3-37 5-17 1-5 31:43

at MARYLAND 41 23 13-8-2 55-243-2 35-22-1 237 2 90-480 3-35.7 0-0 9-85 2-20 8-19 3-3 37:09Virginia 21 16 6-9-1 25-64-1 38-21-1 281 2 63-345 6-38.7 3-1 7-79 0-0 3-14 1-2 22:51

MARYLAND 20 19 7-9-3 34-92-1 41-21-2 210 0 75-302 7-44.7 0-0 8-53 5-32 4-15 0-1 29:51at Georgia Tech OT 17 20 6-14-0 39-50-0 45-26-3 320 2 84-370 5-42.2 6-3 8-75 3-17 11-23 2-2 30:09

at MARYLANDDuke

MARYLANDat Florida State

at MARYLANDTroy State

at MARYLANDClemson

MARYLANDat NC State

TIME OF POSSESSION1 2 3 4 Total

Maryland 44:57 49:44 41:10 53:09 189:00Opponents 45:03 40:16 48:50 36:51 171:00

THIRD DOWN CONVERSIONS1 2 3 4 OT Total

Maryland ................. 11-26 10-26 5-20 13-25 0-1 39-98Pct. ........... 42.3% 38.5% 25% 52% 0% 39.8%

Opponents ............... 8-26 7-26 8-27 11-27 0-0 34-106Pct. 30.8% 26.9% 29.6% 40.7% 0% 32.1%

FOURTH DOWN CONVERSIONS1 2 3 4 OT Total

Maryland ................. 1-2 2-3 0-0 1-2 0-0 4-7Pct. 50% 66.7% 0% 50% 0% 57.1%

Opponents ............... 0-0 3-4 2-5 3-10 0-0 8-19Pct. 0% 75% 40% 30% 0% 42.1%

TURNOVERSTakeaways - 21Giveaways - 7

Points Off TurnoversMD -- 53 (8 TD, 5 PAT)

Opp. -- 10 (1 TD, 1 PAT, 1 FG)

SPECIAL TEAMSBlocked Kicks (by Md.) -- 3

Blocked Kicks (by Opp.) -- 2

KICKOFF COVERAGEKickoffs -- Md. 36, Opp. 23

Fair Catches by -- Md. 0, Opp. 1Touchbacks by -- Md. 15, Opp. 11

Onside Attempts --Md. 0 (0 rec.), Opp. 0 (0 rec.)

Out of Bounds by -- Md. 3, Opp. 1

Returns Allowed (Md.) -- 17-433 (25.5)Returns Allowed (Opp.) --10-229 (22.9)

P0UNT COVERAGEPuns -- Md. 35, Opp. 34Blocks by -- Md. 2, Opp. 0

Fair Catches by -- Md. 8, Opp. 4Touchbacks -- Md. 4, Opp. 4

Inside 20 -- Md. 10, Opp. 4Returns Allowed (Md.) -- 18-149 (8.3)

Returns Allowed (Opp.) -- 10-73 (7.3)Net Punting (Md.) -- 40.3

Net Punting (Opp.) -- 35.4

RED ZONEMd. Scores/Times in Red Zone

Scoring Percentage -- 71.4% (20-28)TD Percentage -- 57.1% (16-28)

Scores -- 16 TD, 4 FGNon-Scores -- 8 (4 missed FGA, 3 downs, 1 INT)

Opp. Scores/Times in Red ZoneScoring Percentage -- 57.1% (8-14)

TD Percentage -- 35.7% (5-14)Scores -- 5 TD, 3 FG

Non-Scores-- 6 (3 downs, 1 INT, 2 missed FG)

Page 23: 12 MARYLAND vs DUKE...2001MARYLANDfootball #12 MARYLAND vs DUKE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2001 • 1:00 P.M. EDT BYRD STADIUM (48,055/Natural Grass) COLLEGE PARK, MD. FOOTBALL GAME NOTES

2001MARYLANDfootball

MARYLAND VS. DUKE • GAME-BY-GAME (STARTERS)

2001 GAME-BY-GAME STARTERS Career Starts

GAME LEO Def. Tackle Nose Tackle Def. End WLB MLB SLB Cornerback Strong Safety Free Safety Cornerback

No. Carolina Whaley12 Feldheim1 Hill16 Roundtree6 Joe1 Henderson13 Thompson34 Okanlawon22 Jackson14 Jones10 Cox10

E. Michigan Whaley13 Feldheim2 Hill17 Roundtree7 Joe2 Henderson14 Thompson35 Okanlawon23 Jackson15 Jones11 Cox11

at Wake Forest Whaley14 Feldheim3 Hill18 Roundtree8 Joe3 Henderson15 Thompson36 Okanlawon24 Jackson16 Jones12 Cox12

West Virginia Whaley15 Feldheim4 Hill19 Roundtree9 Joe4 Henderson16 Thompson37 Okanlawon25 Jackson17 Jones13 Cox13

Virginia Whaley16 Feldheim5 Hill20 Roundtree10 Joe5 Graves1 Thompson38 Okanlawon26 Jackson18 Jones14 Cox14

at Georgia Tech Whaley17 Feldheim6 Hill21 Roundtree11 Joe6 Henderson17 Thompson39 Okanlawon27 Jackson19 Jones15 Wilson2

Duke

at Florida State

Troy State

Clemson

at NC State

GAME Wide Receiver Left Tackle Left Guard Center Right Guard Right Tackle Tight End Quarterback Tailback Fullback Wide Receiver

No. Carolina Gary15 Brooks1 Wike22 Fowler34 Bryant7 Crawford21 Dugan11 Hill4 Perry1 Lynch1 Williams1

E. Michigan Gary16 Brooks2 Wike23 Fowler35 Bryant8 Crawford22 Dugan12 Hill5 Perry2 Killian1 Williams2

at Wake Forest Gary17 Brooks3 Wike24 Fowler36 Bryant9 Crawford23 Dugan13 Hill6 Perry3 Killian2 Williams3

West Virginia Gary18 Brooks4 Wike25 Fowler37 Bryant10 Crawford24 Dugan14 Hill7 Perry4 Killian3 Williams4

Virginia Gary19 Brooks5 Wike26 Fowler38 Bryant11 Crawford25 Dugan15 Hill8 Perry5 Lynch2 Williams5

at Georgia Tech Gary20 Brooks6 Wike27 Fowler39 Bryant12 Crawford26 Dugan16 Hill9 Perry6 Lynch3 Williams6

Duke

at Florida State

Troy State

Clemson

at NC State

OFFENSE

DEFENSE

TERRAPIN PLAYING EXPERIENCE SUPERLATIVESOffense Defense

Most overall starts, career — 39, Melvin Fowler (C) 39, Aaron Thompson (SLB)27, Todd Wike (OG) 26, Tony Okanlawon (CB)26, Matt Crawford (OT)

Most overall starts, 2001 — 10 with six 9 with six

Most consecutive starts, career — 39, Melvin Fowler, Jr. (C) 39, Aaron Thompson (SLB)27, Todd Wike (OG)

Most consecutive starts, 2001 — 10 with six 9 with six

GAME Seniors Juniors Sophomores R-Freshmen True Freshmen Total

No. Carolina 8 5 9 2 0 24

E. Michigan 8 5 9 2 0 24

at Wake Forest 8 6 8 2 0 24

West Virginia 8 6 8 2 0 24

Virginia 9 4 9 2 0 24

at Georgia Tech 8 5 9 2 0 24

Duke

at Florida State

Troy State

Clemson

at NC State

CLASS STARTERS BY GAME(INCLUDES PUNTER/KICKER)

Page 24: 12 MARYLAND vs DUKE...2001MARYLANDfootball #12 MARYLAND vs DUKE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2001 • 1:00 P.M. EDT BYRD STADIUM (48,055/Natural Grass) COLLEGE PARK, MD. FOOTBALL GAME NOTES

WWW.UM .COM

MARYLAND VS. DUKE • PARTICIPATION CHART

2001 PARTICIPATION CHART

TOTAL ACTIVE PLAYERS 52 63 54 55 53 53

x – indicates played in game

S – indicates started game cd – indicates did not play/coach’s decision

inj – indicates did not play or travel due to injurydnt – indicates did not travel for reason other than injury

rs - indicates redshirting season

SENIORS UNC EMU WF WV UVA GT DU FSU TSU CLE NCS2 Marc Riley TB x x x x x cd

11 Tony Okanlawon CB S S S S S S12 Randall Jones FS S S S S S S

14 Shaun Hill QB S S S S S S17 Vedad Siljkovic PK/P x x x x x x

19 Richard Harrigan CB cd cd dnt cd cd dnt21 Guilian Gary WR S S S S S S

27 Tony Jackson SS S S S S S S33 Rod Littles SS x x x x x x

35 Marlon Moye-Moore LB cd cd dnt cd cd x40 Aaron Thompson LB S S S S S S

43 Daryl Whitmer WR x x x x inj inj48 Ryan Swift LB cd x inj inj inj x

52 Monte Graves LB x x x x S x53 Reggie Lewis LB inj cd cd x cd cd

67 Melvin Fowler C S S S S S S80 Eric James TE cd x cd cd x cd

88 Matt Murphy TE x x x x x x98 Charles Hill DT S S S S S S

Class Participation (G-GS) 14-8 16-8 14-8 15-8 14-9 14-8

JUNIORS UNC EMU WF WV UVA GT DU FSU TSU CLE NCS9 Hunter Cross QB rs rs rs rs rs rs

16 Brooks Barnard P S S S S S S20 Chris Downs TB cd cd cd cd cd x

24 Jason Bell WR cd cd dnt cd cd dnt25 Scooter Monroe WR x x x x x x

29 Ty Stewart FS x x x x x x31 Chad Killian FB x S S S inj inj

34 Madieu Williams SS rs rs rs rs rs rs37 Jamal Chance CB x x x cd x x

42 E.J. Henderson LB S S S S x S66 Todd Wike OG S S S S S S

71 Durrand Roundtree DE S S S S S S78 Matt Crawford OT S S S S S S

95 William Shime DT x x x x x xClass Participation (G-GS) 10-5 10-6 10-6 8-6 9-4 10-5

SOPHOMORES UNC EMU WF WV UVA GT DU FSU TSU CLE NCS

1 Bruce Perry TB S S S S S S4 Latrez Harrison QB cd x cd x cd cd

5 James Lynch FB S x x x S S6 Scott McBrien QB rs rs rs rs rs rs

13 Dennard Wilson CB x x x x x S19 Jafar Williams WR S S S S S S

23 Andrew Smith, Jr. CB cd cd dnt cd cd x24 Leroy Ambush LB x x x x x x

30 Curome Cox CB S S S S S x32 Leon Joe LB S S S S S S

36 Sal Aragona CB cd x cd cd cd cd44 Bernie Fiddler FB x x x x x x

51 Andrew Henley LB x x x x x x54 Scott Smith DE x x x x cd x

55 Mike Whaley LEO S S S S S S61 Ed Tyler OG cd x cd cd x cd

73 Lamar Bryant OG S S S S S S75 Eric Dumas OT x x x x x x

82 Jeff Dugan TE S S S S S S96 C.J. Feldheim DT S S S S S S

97 Tosin Abari DT cd x x x cd cd99 Landon Jones DT inj cd cd x x cd

Class Participation (G-GS) 15-9 19-8 16-8 18-8 16-9 16-9

REDSHIRT FRESHMEN UNC EMU WF WV UVA GT DU FSU TSU CLE NCS3 Rob Abiamiri WR cd x cd cd cd x

7 Chris Kelley QB inj inj inj cd cd cd10 Ike Roberts WR x x x x cd cd

15 Curtis Williams FS cd x x x x x18 Maurice Shanks WR x x x x x x

26 Raymond Custis SS inj x cd x x x34 Steve Suter WR x x x x inj inj

41 Kevin Eli DE cd cd dnt cd cd dnt46 Nick Novak PK S S S S S S

47 Jon Condo LB x x x x x x49 Jamahl Cochran LB x x x x x x

69 Reggie Kemp OG cd x cd x x cd72 Kyle Schmitt OG/C x x x x x x

74 C.J. Brooks OT S S S S S S79 Lou Lombardo OT x x x x x x

87 Ryan Flynn TE cd x cd cd cd cdClass Participation (G-GS) 9-2 14-2 10-2 12-2 10-2 10-2

TRUE FRESHMEN UNC EMU WF WV UVA GT DU FSU TSU CLE NCS

6 D. Foxworth CB cd cd cd cd cd cd8 Mario Merrills TB cd cd dnt cd cd dnt

9 Jason Crawford TB x x x x x cd11 Brian Ramey QB inj cd dnt cd cd dnt

12 Shai Warsaw QB cd cd cd cd cd dnt22 Rich Parson WR x x x x x x

38 Gerrick McPhearson CB cd cd dnt cd cd dnt45 Craig Reutepohler LB cd cd dnt cd cd dnt

56 Jesse Kluttz LS cd cd cd cd cd cd57 Randy Starks DE x x x x x x

58 Ricardo Dickerson LB cd cd cd cd cd cd59 Maurice Smith LB x x x x x x

60 Jason Holman C cd cd dnt cd cd dnt63 Raheem Lewis OG cd cd dnt cd cd dnt

64 Mike Steele OG cd cd dnt cd cd dnt65 Matt Powell OG cd cd dnt cd cd dnt

76 Tim Donovan OT cd cd dnt cd cd dnt77 Russell Bonham OT cd cd cd cd cd dnt

83 Derrick Fenner WR cd cd dnt cd cd cd84 Derek Miller TE cd cd dnt cd cd dnt

85 Aaron Smith WR cd cd dnt cd cd dnt91 Akil Patterson DT cd cd dnt cd cd dnt

92 Brandon Thomas TE cd cd dnt cd cd dntClass Participation (G-GS) 4-0 4-0 4-0 4-0 4-0 3-0

Page 25: 12 MARYLAND vs DUKE...2001MARYLANDfootball #12 MARYLAND vs DUKE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2001 • 1:00 P.M. EDT BYRD STADIUM (48,055/Natural Grass) COLLEGE PARK, MD. FOOTBALL GAME NOTES

2001MARYLANDfootball

MARYLAND VS. DUKE • GAME RECAPS

COLLEGE PARK, Md. — Maryland coach Ralph Friedgen openedhis head coaching career in grand fashion, beating confer-ence opponent North Carolina, 23-7, at Byrd Stadium.

With the win, Friedgen became the first Maryland headcoach since Tom Nugent in 1959 to win his first-ever game as aTerp. In addition, Friedgen became the first Terrapin coachever to win his ACC opener in his first year.

Shaun Hill threw two TD passes to complement a stellarperformance by the Maryland defense, and the Terrapins rolledto a 23-7 victory.

Maryland (1-0, 1-0 ACC) scored 23 straight points afterParker’s run stunned Friedgen and the crowd of 44,080.

UNC (0-2, 0-1) remained winless under first-year coachJohn Bunting. Darian Durant replaced senior QB Ronald Curryfor the second straight game, but unlike last week against Okla-homa, the redshirt freshman failed to generate any offense.

Curry went 6-for-12 for 61 yards and an interception.Durant, who entered in the third quarter, finished 10-for-14 for97 yards and two interceptions.

The Terrapins kept the Tar Heels in their own end of thefield for much of the game, thanks in part to punter BrooksBarnard, who averaged 50.4 yards on eight kicks and had sevenof his eight punts travel over 50 yards.

Parker (25 yds. on 12 carries after his initial run) wasoutdone by Maryland’s Bruce Perry, who gained 116 yards on21 attempts.

Maryland pulled away with two touchdowns in the fourthquarter. After Perry ran for 12 yards on a 3rd-and-5 from theNorth Carolina 19, Hill hit Scooter Monroe for a five-yard score.

LB Mike Whaley then intercepted Durant, setting up aone-yard run by Marc Riley with 6:35 left and launching a cel-ebration in the stadium that was a long time coming.

Stung by Parker’s early run, Maryland’s defense bouncedback on North Carolina’s next possession by forcing the TarHeels to punt from their own one. A 10-yard return by GuilianGary gave the Terrapins the ball at the North Carolina 32, set-ting up Hill’s TD pass to Williams.

September 1, 2001Maryland 23, North Carolina 7

1st 2nd 3rd 4th FinalNorth Carolina 7 0 0 0 7Maryland 7 2 0 14 23

First Quarter UNC-W. Parker 77 run, 13:12 UM-J. Williams 20 pass from S. Hill (Novak kick), 6:33Second Quarter UM-T. Stewart safety, 11:43Fourth Quarter UM-S. Monroe 5 pass from S. Hill (Novak kick), 13:19 UM-M. Riley 1 run (Novak kick), 6:35

MD UNCFirst Downs 17 10Rushes-Yards 46-161 37-118Passing 86 158Return Yards 68 95Sacked-Yards Lost 3-19 4-26Comp-Att-Int 10-26-0 16-26-3Punts 8-50.4 6-35.8Fumbles-Lost 0-0 0-0Penalties-Yards 3-20 5-30Time of Possession 31:26 28:34

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING-Maryland, Perry 21-116, Riley 10-30, J. Crawford 5-21, Hill 8-0. UNC, Parker 13-102, Curry 9-14, Moore 1-6, Williams 9-5.PASSING-Maryland, Hill 10-26-0-86. UNC, Curry 6-12-1-61, Durant 10-14-2-97.RECEIVING-Maryland, J. Williams 2-28, Gary 2-26, Monroe 2-16, Riley 1-8, Parson 1-7, Whitmer 1-5, Perry 1-(-4). UNC, Aiken 5-49, Russell, 3-31,Bailey 3-29, Allen 2-27, Borders 2-17, Parker 1-5.MISSED FIELD GOALS-Maryland, Novak 47, 50.TACKLES-Maryland, Henderson 8-4--12, Joe 6-4--10, C. Hill 2-6--8,Okanlawon 5-2--7, Thompson 4-2--6. UNC, Hood 13-2--15, Reid 9-2--11,Thornton 8-3--11.A-44,080.

GAME 1Sept. 1, 2001

Maryland 23, North Carolina 7COLLEGE PARK, Md. - Maryland continued its winning ways atthe start of 2001 as it manhandled Eastern Michigan of the Mid-American Conference, 50-3, at Byrd Stadium.

Bruce Perry ran for 133 yards and three touchdowns asMaryland recorded its most lopsided victory since a 52-0 rout ofWake Forest in 1996.

The defense limited Eastern Michigan to just 124 yards inoffense - fewest by a Maryland opponent since 1980 - in help-ing Friedgen became the first coach since Jim Tatum in 1947 towin his first two games at Maryland.

EMU produced only 69 yards and five first downs in fall-ing behind 41-0 after three quarters.

Perry scored on runs of 8, 24 and 31 yards. The sopho-more averaged 8.3 yards per carry before being pulled early inthe third quarter.

Showing no signs of a letdown after last week’s emo-tional 23-7 rout of ACC rival North Carolina, Maryland scoredon its first two possessions to take control.

First, the Terrapins moved 62 yards in 11 plays, taking a6-0 lead on Perry’s first career score. Maryland then forced apunt and proceeded to embark on another 62-yard march. Perryran for 47 yards on four carries before giving way to Marc Riley,who scored from the one.

The Eagles’ first turnover, an interception by TonyOkanlawon, set up a 19-yard touchdown pass from Hill to GuilianGary for a 19-0 lead in the second quarter. Hill salvaged thedrive with a 30-yard completion to Daryl Whitmer on a third-and-25.

Perry’s second touchdown, with 3:37 left in the half,capped a 52-yard drive in which Hill completed two passes toGary totaling 24 yards. Hill then completed two passes for 26yards before Perry raced around right end to make it 34-0 earlyin the third quarter.

September 8, 2001Maryland 50, Eastern Michigan 3

1st 2nd 3rd 4th FinalEastern Michigan 0 0 0 3 3Maryland 13 14 14 9 50

First Quarter UM-B. Perry 8 run (Barnard rush failed), 10:07 UM-M. Riley 1 run (Novak kick), 5:38Second Quarter UM-G. Gary 19 pass from S. Hill (Hill pass failed), 6:22 UM-B. Perry 24 run (Shanks pass), 3:37Third Quarter UM-B. Perry 31 run (Novak kick), 12:10 UM-S. Hill 4 run (Novak kick), 8:14Fourth Quarter UM-V. Siljkovic 44 FG, 12:43 EMU-E. Klaban 44 FG, 8:54 UM-J. Crawford 2 run (Siljkovic kick), 5:07

MD EMUFirst Downs 27 9Rushes-Yards 52-280 29-24Passing 196 100Return Yards 35 73Sacked-Yards Lost 0-0 5-39Comp-Att-Int 16-25-0 15-30-2Punts 2-46.0 9-29.7Fumbles-Lost 2-1 0-0Penalties-Yards 5-45 5-46Time of Possession 31:21 28:39

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING-Maryland, Perry 16-133, Harrison 7-50, Crawford 8-38, Lynch 5-23, Riley 7-18. EMU, Roberson 16-31, Watson 2-12.PASSING-Maryland, Hill 15-21-0-187, Harrison 1-4-0-9. EMU, Edwards10-22-2-69, Carey 5-7-0-31.RECEIVING-Maryland, Gary 6-76, Williams 4-28, Whitmer 3-69, Shanks2-17, Riley 1-6. EMU, Walter 5-36, Archie 3-16, Ibom 2-6, Roberson 1-19.MISSED FIELD GOALS-Maryland, Novak 28, 40.TACKLES-Maryland, Henderson 5-3--8, T. Jackson 4-1--5, Graves 3-2--5,Joe 1-4--5, Ambush 3-1--4. EMU, Philpot 5-4--9, Brooks 6-2--8.A-42,105.

GAME 2Sept. 8, 2001

Maryland 50, Eastern Michigan 3WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. - Bruce Perry rushed for a career-high276 yards, scoring on runs of 50 and 80 yards, as Marylandbeat Wake Forest, 27-20.

The game featured the two top rushers in the AtlanticCoast Conference in Perry and Wake’s Tarence Williams, whocame into the game averaging 137 yards. Williams finished with100 yards -- 70 coming in the second half -- but could never findthe kind of holes that allowed Perry to rumble frequently into thesecondary.

Perry finished with the second-highest rushing total inschool history and the seventh-highest in ACC history.

Perry opened with an 80-yard touchdown run. He addeda 50-yard score with 8:38 to play in the game that gave theTerps (3-0, 2-0 ACC) a 27-13 edge.

The Deacons (2-1, 0-1) answered with a 42-yard TDpass from James MacPherson to Jason Anderson that pulledthem to 27-20 with 6:54 to play. The Deacons had two latechances to tie the game.

The first drive ended with an incompletion, while a TonyJackson interception in the end zone with 39 seconds to playstopped the second.

Maryland had 519 yards of offense and got 222 passingyards from quarterback Shaun Hill.

The Terps led 10-3 at halftime, but made several mis-takes that kept Wake Forest close. The Terps had a 13-yardscoring pass from Hill to Daryl Whitmer called back because ofa holding penalty in the second quarter. On its next drive, Mary-land moved the ball 72 yards on 12 plays, but turned the ballover when safety Adrian Duncan intercepted a pass in the endzone just before halftime.

September 22, 2001Maryland 27, Wake Forest 20

1st 2nd 3rd 4th FinalMaryland 7 3 7 10 27Wake Forest 3 0 7 10 20

First Quarter UM-B. Perry 80 run (Novak kick), 14:40 WFU-T. Ashe 25 field goal, 5:28Second Quarter UM-N. Novak 27 field goal, 8:30Third Quarter UM-M. Riley 1 run (Novak kick), 8:20 WFU-T. Williams 11 run (Ashe kick), 1:47Fourth Quarter UM-N. Novak 29 field goal, 12:31 WFU-T. Ashe 37 field goal, 10:25 UM-B. Perry 50 run (Novak kick), 8:38 WFU-J. Anderson 42 pass from J. MacPherson, 6:54

MD WFUFirst Downs 24 18Rushes-Yards 51-297 46-163Passing 222 216Return Yards 18 97Sacked-Yards Lost 2-16 1-12Comp-Att-Int 16-23-2 17-32-1Punts 5-39.4 5-48.8Fumbles-Lost 0-0 0-0Penalties-Yards 9-99 4-30Time of Possession 30:56 29:04

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING-Maryland, Perry 30-276, Riley 12-25, Crawford 1-8. WFU, T.Williams 23-100, Stone 7-26, Staton 6-24, Davis 1-15, Young 1-5.PASSING-Maryland, Hill 16-23-2-222. WFU, MacPherson 16-29-1-214,Young 1-3-0-2.RECEIVING-Maryland, Gary 5-77, Williams 3-45, Perry 3-34, Murphy 2-28, Monroe 1-15, Riley 1-13, Dugan 1-10. WFU, Anderson 5-88, Davis 5-80, Stone 4-41, Thomas 1-8, Mughelli 1-4.MISSED FIELD GOALS-Maryland, Novak 42.TACKLES-Maryland, Henderson 11-6--17, Thompson 6-4--10, Joe 5-3--8,Okanlawon 7-0--7, Whaley 5-2--7, T. Jackson 4-3--7, R. Jones 3-4--7.WFU, Duncan 6-5--11, Chukwumah 6-5--11, Hopkins 4-6--10.A-22,372.

GAME 3Sept. 22, 2001

Maryland 27, Wake Forest 20

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MARYLAND vs. DUKE • GAME RECAPS

COLLEGE PARK, Md. - Bruce Perry ran for 153 yards and atouchdown Saturday as the Terrapins won their fourth straight,32-20, over error-prone West Virginia.

The Terrapins are soaring to new heights under RalphFriedgen, who joins H.C. “Curly” Byrd as the only two coachesto begin their first season at Maryland with four straight wins.

It was the fourth straight 100-yard game for Perry to startthe season, who carried 31 times and caught two passes for 28yards against a defense geared to stop him.

Shaun Hill threw for a touchdown and ran for another asMaryland improved to 4-0 for the second time since 1978. The1995 team started 4-0 but faded to a 6-5 finish and did notreceive a bowl bid.

Avon Cobourne ran for 128 yards and Shawn Terry re-turned a kickoff 100 yards for West Virginia (2-2). But Brad Lewisthrew four interceptions and the Mountaineers lost two fumbles.

The Mountaineers’ fifth turnover enabled the Terrapinsto take a 25-13 lead with 41 seconds left in the third quarter.After Randall Jones returned an interception 30 yards, GuilianGary caught a pass from Hill on a slant pattern and sprinted therest of the way for a 29-yard score.

Maryland later got some breathing room with an 81-yarddrive capped by Hill’s 1-yard sneak with 12:11 left. Perry ac-counted for 47 yards, including 18 on a pass from Hill.

Maryland took advantage of two turnovers to go up 19-13 at halftime. WVU’s first possession ended with an intercep-tion in the end zone by Tony Jackson, and late in the half MikeWhaley scooped up a Lewis fumble and ran 52 yards for atouchdown.

Lewis went 31-for-52 for 279 yards and a touchdown,but his five turnovers were too much for WVU to overcome.

September 29, 2001Maryland 32, West Virginia 20

1st 2nd 3rd 4th FinalWest Virginia 0 13 7 0 20Maryland 7 12 6 7 32

First Quarter UM-M. Riley 3 run (Novak kick), 3:55Second Quarter WVU-B. Rauh 27 field goal, 14:57 UM-B. Perry 6 run (Novak kick blocked), 11:40 WVU-B. Rauh 34 field goal, 9:31 WVU-P. Braxton 8 pass from B. Lewis (Rauh kick), 4:31 UM-M. Whaley 52 fumble return (Siljkovic kick failed), 2:15Third Quarter UM-G. Gary 29 pass from S. Hill (pass failed), 0:41 WVU-S. Terry 100 kickoff return (Rauh kick), 0:24Fourth Quarter UM-S. Hill 1 run (Novak kick), 12:11

MD WVUFirst Downs 23 27Rushes-Yards 52-181 43-151Passing 192 279Return Yards 81 176Sacked-Yards Lost 2-22 3-37Comp-Att-Int 13-32-0 31-52-4Punts 10-44.6 3-36.0Fumbles-Lost 0-0 3-2Penalties-Yards 7-80 5-45Time of Possession 28:17 31:43

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING-Maryland, Perry 31-153, Killian 2-16, Riley 6-12, Crawford 2-7.WVU, A. Cobourne 31-128, C. Rego 1-13, B. Lewis 9-11.PASSING-Maryland, Hill 13-32-0-192. WVU, Lewis 31-52-4-279.RECEIVING-Maryland, Gary 6-81, Williams 3-37, Perry 2-28, Monroe 1-32, Parson 1-14. WVU, A. Brown 10-108, Braxton 7-72, Terry 5-39, Nastasi5-39.MISSED FIELD GOALS-noneTACKLES-Maryland, Henderson 14-4--18, Littles 6-2--8, Joe 3-5--8, T.Jackson 4-3--7, T. Okanlawon 4-2--6, R. Jones 4-2--6. WVU, Sherrod 9-8--17, Kayden 2-8--10, Hackett 3-5--8, King 4-3--7.A-40,166.

GAME 4Sept. 29, 2001

Maryland 32, West Virginia 20COLLEGE PARK, Md. - Off to their best start in 23 years, theMaryland Terrapins found themselves in a rather unaccustomedspot after playing UVa -- alone atop the ACC.

Shaun Hill threw for two touchdown passes and BrucePerry ran for 143 yards and a score as No. 25 Maryland re-mained unbeaten by defeating Virginia, 41-21.

The Terrapins let a 24-7 halftime lead dwindle to threepoints, then pulled away in the fourth quarter to snap a nine-game losing streak against the Cavaliers and emerge as thelone undefeated team in the ACC through October 6.

Billy McMullen had 11 catches for 175 yards and a TD forUVa. Backup QB Matt Schaub was 20-for-33 for 271 yards anda TD, but he threw a costly fourth-quarter interception.

After Virginia closed to 24-21 late in the third quarter, Hillcapped an 80-yard drive with a five-yard touchdown pass toJafar Williams with 13:26 left. Maryland’s Tony Okanlawon thenreturned an interception 34 yards to the Virginia 28, setting upa six-yard touchdown run by Perry.

That assured Maryland its first win over Virginia since1991 and its first 5-0 start since 1978. Hill went 22-for-35 for237 yards and ran for a score. Perry had a career-high eightcatches for 51 yards.

The Terrapins scored two touchdowns in a 73-secondspan to go up by 17 points at halftime. After Hill threw a 53-yardtouchdown pass to Gary, Maryland’s Curtis Williams blocked apunt and Leroy Ambush recovered the ball in the end zone.

Held to four yards on five carries over the first 15 minutes,Perry took a pitch and ran 45 yards on the first play of the sec-ond quarter to set up a four-yard touchdown run by Hill.

October 6, 2001Maryland 41, Virginia 21

1st 2nd 3rd 4th FinalVirginia 0 7 14 0 21Maryland 0 24 0 17 41

Second Quarter UM-S. Hill 4 run (Novak kick), 13:26 UM-N. Novak 25 field goal, 6:25 UVa-B. McMullen 63 pass from M. Schaub (Greene kick), 5:30 UM-G. Gary 53 pass from S. Hill (Novak kick), 1:51 UM-L. Ambush recovers blocked punt (Novak kick), 0:38Third Quarter UVa-A. Harris 13 pass from M. Schaub (Greene kick), 12:24 UVa-M. Schaub 3 run (Greene kick), 3:04Fourth Quarter UM-J. Williams 5 pass from S. Hill (Novak kick), 13:26 UM-B. Perry 6 run (Novak kick), 9:16 UM-N. Novak 33 field goal, 2:36

MD UVaFirst Downs 23 16Rushes-Yards 55-243 25-64Passing 237 281Return Yards 126 66Sacked-Yards Lost 2-20 0-0Comp-Att-Int 22-35-1 21-38-1Punts 3-35.7 6-38.7Fumbles-Lost 1-1 3-1Penalties-Yards 9-85 7-79Time of Possession 37:09 22:51

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING-Maryland, Perry 25-143, Riley 10-51, Hill 16-47. UVa, Harris 12-39, Foreman 5-28, Pearman 3-11.PASSING-Maryland, Hill 35-22-1-237. UVa, Schaub 33-20-1-271.RECEIVING-Maryland, Perry 8-51, Gary 5-99, Williams 3-14, Parson 2-18, Riley 1-18, Monroe 1-15, Dugan 1-13, Lynch 1-9. UVa, McMullen 11-175, Mason 3-42, Luzar 2-22, Anderson 2-12, Harris 1-13.MISSED FIELD GOALS-Maryland, Novak 33. UVa, Greene 22 (blocked).TACKLES-Maryland, T. Jackson 5-4--9, Joe 3-5--8, C. Hill 2-4--6, C. Cox4-1--5, Henderson 2-3--5, R. Jones 1-3--4. UVa, Duckett 7-8--15, Crowell4-11-15, Pope 4-7--11, Evans 5-5--10, Newby 3-6--9.

GAME 5Oct. 6, 2001

Maryland 41, Virginia 21ATLANTA — When Ralph Friedgen and George O’Leary aresitting in their rocking chairs by the lake, boy, will they have astory to tell about the first time they squared off as head coaches.

Nick Novak kicked a 26-yard field goal in overtime andMaryland (No. 22 AP/No. 20 ESPN/USA Today) remained un-beaten when Joe Burns fumbled for 15th-ranked Georgia Tech,giving Friedgen a 20-17 victory over his former school. Novak,a redshirt freshman, forced the extra session with a career-long 46-yard field goal on the final play of regulation and theTerps’ win was their first over a ranked opponent since 1990, aspan of 33 games.

Tech won the coin toss and put Maryland on offense first.The Terps picked up a first down before settling for Novak’sshort field goal. The ball then went to the Yellow Jackets and on2nd-and-7, Burns took a handoff on a simple run up the middlebut appeared to hit one of his own lineman as he tried to cut.The ball popped loose, safety Randall Jones fell on it for theTerrapins and the game ended, Maryland victorious.

The drive to tie the game in the fourth started when theTerps got the ball at their own 20 and drove to the Tech 46,where Shaun Hill hooked up with freshman Rich Parson on a17-yard completion on 3rd down. Maryland then spiked the balland Novak booted the long field goal as time ran out.

Maryland’s first score came early when Burns fumbledwhile taking a handoff from Godsey and E.J. Hendersonscooped it up at the 36 and ran the other way for a TD less thanthree minutes into the game.

The Terrapins made it 14-0 in the second after anotherJackets turnover launched an eight-play, 68-yard drive thatended with Jafar Williams scoring on an 11-yard reverse.

October 11, 2001Maryland 20, Georgia Tech 17 (OT)

1st 2nd 3rd 4th O T FinalMaryland 7 7 0 3 3 20Georgia Tech 0 0 7 10 0 17

First Quarter UM-E.J. Henderson 36 fumble recovery (Novak kick), 12:47Second Quarter UM-J. Williams 11 run (Novak kick), 6:13Third Quarter GT-Burns fumble recovery in end zone (Manget kick), 6:32Fourth Quarter GT-J. Smith 25 pass from G. Godsey (Manget kick), 14:54 GT-Manget 39 field goal, 6:33 UM-N. Novak 46 field goal, 0:00Second Quarter UM-N. Novak 46 field goal

MD GTFirst Downs 19 20Rushes-Yards 34-92 39-50Passing 210 320Return Yards 56 49Sacked-Yards Lost 3-17 4-27Comp-Att-Int 21-41-2 26-45-3Punts 7-44.7 5-42.2Fumbles-Lost 0-0 6-3Penalties-Yards 8-53 8-75Time of Possession 37:09 30:09

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING-Maryland, Perry 18-49, Hill 14-29, Williams 1-11, Lynch 1-3.Ga. Tech, Burns 20-57, Ford 8-14, Watkins 1-7.PASSING-Maryland, Hill 20-39-2-206, Barnard 1-1-0-4. Ga. Tech, Godsey26-45-3-320.RECEIVING-Maryland, Williams 7-73, Perry 5-29, Gary 4-60, Parson 2-23, Shanks 1-17, Lynch 1-4, Dugan 1-4. Ga. Tech, Campbell 9-108, Smith5-49, Glover 5-36, Watkins 3-68, Matvay 3-39, Burns 1-9.MISSED FIELD GOALS-Maryland, Novak 32. Ga. Tech, Manget 37.TACKLES-Maryland, Henderson 13-5--18, Thompson 7-5--12, T. Jack-son 6-6--12, Whaley 9-2--11, Joe 5-6--11, Okanlawon 5-2--7, Starks 3-3--6. Ga. Tech, Wimbush 3-10--13, Rogers 7-1--8, Young 6-2--8, Mitchell 1-6--7, Hester 5-1--6.

GAME 6Oct. 11, 2001

Maryland 20, Georgia Tech 17 (OT)

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2001MARYLANDfootball

KICKOFF RETURNED FOR TDMaryland – Lewis Sanders (98 yards) vs. W. Carolina, 9-11-97.Opponent – Shaun Terry (100 yards), West Virginia, 9-29-01.

BLOCKED PUNT RETURNED FOR TDMaryland – Leroy Ambush vs. Virginia, 10-6-01.Opponent – David Carter (10 yards), W. Virginia, 9-19-98.

PUNT RETURNED FOR TDMaryland – Jermaine Lewis (66 yards) vs. NC State, 11-4-95.Opponent – Darnell Stephens (89 yards), Clemson, 11-15-91.

INTERCEPTION RETURNED FOR TDMaryland – Shawn Forte (69 yards) vs. Virginia, 10-7-00.Opponent – Morocco Brown (30 yards), NC State, 11-8-97.

FUMBLE RETURNED FOR TDMaryland – E.J. Henderson (36 yards) at Georgia Tech, 10-11-01.Opponent – LeVar Talley (10 yards), Temple, 9-26-98.

RECORDED A SAFETYMaryland – vs. North Carolina, 9-1-01 (Tyrone Stewart tackled Willie Parkerfor a seven-yard loss).Opponent – at Clemson, 10-14-00 (ball snapped over Brooks Barnard’s head;Barnard kicked out of end zone).

BLOCKED A PUNTMaryland – Curtis Williams vs. Virginia, 10-6-01.Opponent – Malcolm Tatum, at Florida State, 11-13-99.

BLOCKED A FIELD GOALMaryland – E.J. Henderson vs. Virginia, 10-6-01.Opponent – Jerry Gaines, Eastern Michigan, 9-8-01.

BLOCKED A PATMaryland – Marlon Moye-Moore vs. Florida State, 9-28-00.Opponent – Rick Sherrod, West Virginia, 9-29-01.

DEFENSIVE SHUTOUTMaryland – vs. West Virginia (33-0), 9-18-99.Opponent – Clemson (23-0), 10-10-98.

PLAYER PASSED FOR 6 TDSMaryland – None.Opponent – Chris Weinke (6, 5, 6, 30, 26, 28), at Florida State, 11-13-99.

PLAYER SCORED 5 TDSMaryland – Bob Shemonski (22 rush, 26 rush, 82 PR, 4 rush, 8 rush) vs. Va.Tech, 11-7-50.

PLAYER PASSED FOR 5 TDSMaryland – Scott Milanovich (5, 14, 27, 5, 12) vs. NC State, 11-5-94.Opponent – Chris Weinke (6, 5, 6, 30, 26, 28), at Florida State, 11-13-99.

PLAYER SCORED 4 TDSMaryland – LaMont Jordan (4 rush, 49 rush, 17 rush, 1 rush) vs. Clemson, 10-16-99.Opponent – Robert Baldwin (3 rush, 1 rush, 11 rush, 34 rush), Duke, 9-3-94.

PLAYER SCORED 4 TDS RUSHINGMaryland – LaMont Jordan (4, 49, 17, 1) vs. Clemson, 10-16-99.Opponent – Robert Baldwin (3, 1, 11, 34), Duke, 9-3-94.

PLAYER PASSED FOR 4 TDSMaryland – Scott Milanovich (5, 14, 27, 5, 12) vs. NC State, 11-5-94.Opponent – Dan Ellis (2, 50, 11, 20), Virginia, 11-20-99.

PLAYER SCORED 3 TDSMaryland – Bruce Perry (8 rush, 24 rush, 31 rush) vs. E. Michigan, 9-8-01.Opponent – Koren Robinson (5 rec., 5 rush, 22 rec.), NC State, 11-4-00.

PLAYER SCORED 3 TDS RUSHINGMaryland – Bruce Perry (8, 24, 31) vs. E. Michigan, 9-8-01.Opponent – Tyree Foreman (4, 2, 1), at Virginia, 10-7-00.

PLAYER PASSED FOR 3 TDSMaryland – Brian Cummings (46, 23, 31) at NC State, 11-8-97.Opponent – Philip Rivers (5, 3, 22), NC State, 11-4-00.

PLAYER SCORED 3 TDS RECEIVINGMaryland – Guilian Gary (32 rec., 11 rec., 13 rec.) vs. Georgia Tech, 11-18-00.Opponent – Peter Warrick (5, 26, 28), at Florida State, 11-13-99.

THREE PLAYERS SCORED 2 TDSMaryland – Jermaine Lewis (5 rec, 27 rec), Mancel Johnson (14 rec, 12 rec),Geroy Simon (94 KOR, 5 rec) vs. NC State, 11-5-94.Opponent – Ki-Jana Carter (63 rush, 4 rush, 36 rush), Brian O’Neal (4 rush, 1rush), Bobby Engram (10 rec, 16 rec), Penn St., 10-2-93.

TWO PLAYERS SCORED 2 TDSMaryland – LaMont Jordan (6 rush, 2 rush, 1 rush), Guilian Gary (8 rec., 10rec.) vs. Middle Tennessee, 9-23-00.Opponent – Joe Burns (1 run, 1 run), Kelly Campbell (5 rec., 18 rec.), GeorgiaTech, 11-18-00.

PLAYER SCORED 2 TDS RUSHINGMaryland – Bruce Perry (8, 24, 31) vs. E. Michigan, 9-8-01.Opponent – Joe Burns (1, 1), Georgia Tech, 11-18-00.

PLAYER PASSED FOR 2 TDSMaryland – Shaun Hill (53, 5), vs. Virginia, 10-6-01.Opponent – Matt Schaub (63, 13), Virginia, 10-6-01.

PLAYER SCORED 2 TDS RECEIVINGMaryland – Guilian Gary (32 rec., 11 rec., 13 rec.) vs. Georgia Tech, 11-18-00.Opponent – Kelly Campbell (5, 18), Georgia Tech, 11-18-00.

50-YD. FIELD GOALMaryland – Dan DeArmas (50 yards) at Duke, 10-26-91.Opponent – Nelson Welch (52 yards), Clemson, 11-14-92.

45-YD. FIELD GOALMaryland – Nick Novak (46 yards) at Georgia Tech, 10-11-01.Opponent – David Greene (48 yards), at Virginia, 10-7-00.

FIVE FIELD GOALSMaryland – Dale Castro (45, 29, 18, 32, 42) vs. Mississippi State, 9-22-79.Opponent – Sebastian Janikowski (27, 47, 48, 23, 36), Florida St., 10-3-98.

FOUR FIELD GOALSMaryland – Dan Plocki (26, 45, 24, 33) vs. Wake Forest, 10-16-85.Opponent – Sebastian Janikowski (27, 47, 48, 23, 36), Florida St., 10-3-98.

THREE FIELD GOALSMaryland – Brian Kopka (41, 25, 22) vs. Virginia, 11-20-99.Opponent – Kent Passingham (27, 26, 31), at NC State, 11-6-99.

THREE FIELD GOALS 40 YARDS OR MOREMaryland – None.Opponent – None.

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TWO FIELD GOALS 40 YARDS OR MOREMaryland – Brian Kopka (43, 43) at W. Virginia, 9-19-98.Opponent – David Greene (42, 43), Virginia, 11-20-99.

FOUR FIELD GOALS 30 YARDS OR MOREMaryland – None.Opponent – None.

THREE FIELD GOALS 30 YARDS OR MOREMaryland – Brian Kopka (36, 47, 31) vs. Duke, 10-4-97.Opponent – Sebastian Janikowski (47, 48, 36), Florida St., 10-3-98.

TWO-POINT CONVERSION BY RUSHMaryland – Shaun Hill run vs. NC State, 11-4-00.Opponent – Jamie Barnette run, NC State, 11-21-98.

TWO-POINT CONVERSION BY PASSMaryland – Shaun Hill to Maurice Shanks vs. E. Michigan, 9-8-01.Opponent – Spencer Romine to Richmond Flowers, Duke, 10-30-99.

MISSED PAT (KICK)Maryland – Vedad Siljkovic vs. West Virginia, 9-19-01.Opponent – Tony Lazzara (twice), at Clemson, 10-14-00.

DEFENSIVE EXTRA-POINTMaryland – None.Opponent – L. Grant (100-yd. Interception return), Duke, 10-26-96.

40 RUSHING ATTEMPTSMaryland – Charlie Wysocki (49-217) at Duke, 10-25-80.Opponent – Ray Robinson (40-178), NC State, 11-4-00.

30 RUSHING ATTEMPTSMaryland – Bruce Perry (31-153) West Virginia, 9-29-01.Opponent – Avon Cobourne (31-128), West Virginia, 9-29-01.

30 RUSHING ATTEMPTS IN ONE HALFMaryland – Charlie Wysocki (32) at Duke, 10-25-80.

300 RUSHING YARDSMaryland – LaMont Jordan (37-306) vs. Virginia, 11-20-99.Opponent – John Leach (46-329), Wake Forest, 11-20-93.

200 RUSHING YARDSMaryland – Bruce Perry (30-276) at Wake Forest, 9-22-01.Opponent – Raymond Priester (36-204), Clemson, 10-25-97.

150 RUSHING YARDSMaryland – Bruce Perry (31-153) West Virginia, 9-29-01.Opponent – Ray Robinson (40-178), NC State, 11-4-00.

100 RUSHING YARDS BY A QUARTERBACKMaryland – Randall Jones (11-115) at Duke, 11-14-98.Opponent – Woodrow Dantzler (22-183), Clemson, 10-16-99.

TWO PLAYERS WITH 100 YARDS RUSHINGMaryland – LaMont Jordan (135) and Brian Underwood (114) at Temple, 9-27-97.Opponent – Zack Crockett (123) and Warrick Dunn (104), Florida St., 9-10-94.

THREE PLAYERS WITH 100 YARDS RUSHINGMaryland – Richard Jennings (136), Steve Atkins (126) and Jamie Franklin(105) vs. Virginia, 11-22-75.

75-YD. TD RUNMaryland – Bruce Perry (80) at Wake Forest, 9-22-01.Opponent – Willie Parker (77) North Carolina, 9-1-01.

50-YD. NON-SCORING RUNMaryland – LaMont Jordan (66) at Florida State, 11-13-99.Opponent – Willie Parker (61), North Carolina, 11-11-00.

50-YD. TD RUNMaryland – Bruce Perry (50) at Wake Forest, 9-22-01.Opponent – Willie Parker (77) North Carolina, 9-1-01.

50 PASS ATTEMPTSMaryland – Scott Milanovich (62-46-1, 380, 1 TD) at Florida St., 11-18-95.Opponent – Brad Lewis (52-31-4, 279, 1 TD), West Virginia, 9-29-01.

40 PASS ATTEMPTSMaryland – Shaun Hill (46-29-1, 318, 3 TD) vs. Georgia Tech, 11-18-00.Opponent – George Godsey (45-26-3, 320, 2 TD), Georgia Tech, 10-11-01.

35 PASS ATTEMPTSMaryland – Shaun Hill (39-20-2, 206, 0 TD) at Georgia Tech, 10-11-01.Opponent – George Godsey (45-26-3, 320, 2 TD), Georgia Tech, 10-11-01.

40 PASS COMPLETIONSMaryland – Scott Milanovich (62-46-1, 380, 1 TD) at Florida St., 11-18-95.Opponent – James MacPherson (49-28-3, 1 TD), Wake Forest, 10-21-00.

30 PASS COMPLETIONSMaryland – Scott Milanovich (62-46-1, 380, 1 TD) at Florida St., 11-18-95.Opponent – Devin Scott (49-32-1-228, 0 TD), at Temple, 9-2-99.

25 PASS COMPLETIONSMaryland – Shaun Hill (46-29-1, 318, 3 TD) vs. Georgia Tech, 11-18-00.Opponent – George Godsey (45-26-3, 320, 2 TD), Georgia Tech, 10-11-01.

400 YARDS PASSINGMaryland – Scott Milanovich (416) at Wake Forest, 11-20-93.Opponent – Spencer Romine (404), Duke, 10-30-99.

300 YARDS PASSINGMaryland – Shaun Hill (318) vs. Georgia Tech, 11-18-00.Opponent – George Godsey (320), Georgia Tech, 10-11-01.

250 YARDS PASSINGMaryland – Shaun Hill (318) vs. Georgia Tech, 11-18-00.Opponent – George Godsey (320), Georgia Tech, 10-11-01.

10 RECEPTIONSMaryland – Geroy Simon (16-124) at Florida St., 11-18-95.Opponent – Antonio Brown (10-108), West Virginia, 9-29-01.

TWO PLAYERS WITH 10 RECEPTIONSMaryland – Walt Williams (11) and Geroy Simon (10) at Syracuse, 11-19-94.

100 YARDS RECEIVINGMaryland – Jason Hatala (3-129) vs. Duke, 10-4-97.Opponent – Kelly Campbell (9-108), Georgia Tech, 10-11-01.

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TWO PLAYERS WITH 100 YARDS RECEIVINGMaryland – Geroy Simon (124) and Jermaine Lewis (102) at Florida St., 11-18-95.Opponent – Kendall Newson (135) and Tyrone Calico (100), Middle Tennessee,9-23-00.

THREE PLAYERS WITH 100 YARDS RECEIVINGMaryland – Jason Kremus (119), Mancel Johnson (106) and Russ Weaver(105) at Wake Forest, 11-20-93.

200 YARDS RECEIVINGMaryland – Jermaine Lewis (9-205) vs. Duke, 9-23-95.Opponent – Dez White (5-215), at Ga. Tech, 9-30-99.

75-YD. NON-SCORING RECEPTIONMaryland – Scott Milanovich to Jermaine Lewis (78) at No. Carolina, 9-11-93.

75-YD. TD RECEPTIONMaryland – Brian Cummings to Jason Hatala (76) vs. Duke, 10-4-97.Opponent – Joe Hamilton to Dez White (80), at Ga. Tech, 9-30-99.

50-YD. NON-SCORING RECEPTIONMaryland – Calvin McCall to Moises Cruz (54) at Clemson, 10-14-00.Opponent – George Godsey to Kerry Watkins (64), Georgia Tech, 11-18-00.

50-YD. TD RECEPTIONMaryland – Shaun Hill to Guilian Gary (53) vs. Virginia, 10-6-01.Opponent – Matt Schaub to Billy McMullen (63), Virginia, 10-6-01.

TEAM GAINED 300 YARDS RUSHINGMaryland – vs. Virginia (445), 11-20-99.Opponent – Clemson (395), 10-21-95.

TEAM GAINED 400 YARDS RUSHINGMaryland – vs. Virginia (445), 11-20-99.Opponent – Ga. Tech (411), 10-9-93.

TEAM FAILED TO GAIN 100 YARDS RUSHINGMaryland – at Georgia Tech (92), 10-11-01.Opponent – Georgia Tech (50), 10-11-01.

TEAM GAINED 300 YARDS PASSINGMaryland – vs. Georgia Tech (318), 11-18-00.Opponent – Georgia Tech (320), 10-11-01.

TEAM GAINED 400 YARDS PASSINGMaryland – at Wake Forest (425), 11-20-93.Opponent – Duke (404), 10-30-99.

TEAM FAILED TO GAIN 100 YARDS PASSINGMaryland – vs. Virginia (69), 11-20-99.Opponent – at North Carolina (42), 11-11-00.

TEAM GAINED 400 YARDS TOTAL OFFENSEMaryland – vs. Virginia (480), 10-6-01.Opponent – Georgia Tech (547), 11-18-00.

TEAM GAINED 500 YARDS TOTAL OFFENSEMaryland – at Wake Forest (519), 9-22-01.Opponent – Georgia Tech (547), 11-18-00.

TEAM GAINED 600 YARDS TOTAL OFFENSEMaryland – at Va. Tech (649), 9-25-93.Opponent – Florida St. (613), 9-28-00.

TEAM FAILED TO GAIN 200 YARDS TOTAL OFFENSEMaryland – vs. Virginia (127), 11-1-97.Opponent – Eastern Michigan (124), 9-8-01.

SCORED 50 POINTS OR MOREMaryland – vs. Eastern Michigan (50-3), 9-8-01.Opponent – Florida St. (7-59), 9-28-00.

PLAYED AN OVERTIME GAMEMaryland – at Georgia Tech (W-1OT, 20-17), 10-11-01.

PLAYED TO A TIE GAMEvs. La. Tech (Independence Bowl, 34-34), 12-15-90.

The Last Time...MARYLAND VS. DUKE • LAST TIME

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MARYLAND VS. DUKE • MEDIA INFO/HISTORY

Terp MEDIA SERVICESCONTACTS AND INTERVIEWS

Contact Greg Creese, assistant director, Jason Baum, staff assistant, or Dave Haglund, associate athleticdirector for media relations, for weekly interviews or information regarding the Terps.

Practices are generally (but not always) open to local media outlets and the public (except for Friday walk-throughs, which are closed). Monday practices are closed to the media.

Coach Friedgen media availabilities: Sunday--2:30 p.m. local media teleconference; Tuesday--12:40 p.m.non-local media teleconference; 1 p.m. weekly press conference/luncheon; Wednesday--11:40 a.m. ACC Tele-conference and post-practice; Thursday--post-practice; Saturday--post-game.

Player media availabilities: Monday afternoon--by appointment only, if available, minimum 24-hour advancenotice; Tuesday--media luncheon (selected players only) and post-practice; Wednesday--post-practice; Thursday--pre-practice (if available, by appointment only, minimum 24-hour advance notice); Saturday--post-game.

No player interviews shall be conducted on Fridays or Sundays. Cameras and photographers are allowed toshoot the first 30 minutes of practice Tuesday, Wednesday andThursday, unless otherwise noted. Team drills arenot accessible to cameras or photographers. Team meetings before, during and after practice are private.Media Relations Office — 301-314-7064 Media Relations Fax — 301-314-9094Creese’s email — [email protected] Haglund’s email — [email protected]

MARYLAND NEWS & NOTES BY E-MAILWeekly football releases from the Maryland athletic media relations office may be obtained automatically everyMonday morning by contacting Greg Creese at [email protected]. Note: this is a media service only.

ACC WEEKLY TELECONFERENCEACC coaches are featured in a weekly teleconference each Wednesday from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., beginning Aug.29 and concluding Nov. 14. Each coach will have 10 minutes to make an opening statement and answer questions.Access the teleconference by dialing 913-981-5537. The 2001 ACC Coaches Teleconference schedule:

Tommy Bowden, Clemson (11:00 a.m.), Carl Franks, Duke (11:10 a.m.), Bobby Bowden, Fla. State (11:20a.m.), George O’Leary, Georgia Tech (11:30 a.m.), Ralph Friedgen, Maryland (11:40 a.m.), John Bunting,UNC (11:50 a.m.), Chuck Amato, NC State (12:00 p.m.), Al Groh, UVA (12:10 p.m.), Jim Grobe, Wake Forest(12:20 p.m.)

MEDIA TEAMLINKReleases, statistics and other sports information from all ACC schools as well as other conferences and institutionsaround the country are available by accessing www.mediateamlink.com. You can have updated documentsdelivered directly to your e-mail and/or fax machine the moment they are updated. MediaTeamLink is FREE to allaccredited media. To set up an account, log on to www.mediateamlink.com, and click the “Sign Up Here” buttonand complete the short form. Documents requested via fax will incur a 15 cents per page fee (email is free). Thissite is for accredited media only.

ACC WEEKLY SATELLITE FEEDACC weekly football highlights are available on satellite feed every Wednesday, beginning Aug. 29. Feeds includecoach & player interviews, and highlights from previous week’s games.

Aug.29-Nov. 14 -- 2:30 p.m.- 3:30 p.m.; Telstar 8 (C-band); downlink frequency 3860 Mhz; Audio 6.2/6.8 Mhz.

WEEKLY MEDIA LUNCHEONHead coach Ralph Friedgen meets the media every Tuesday at 1 p.m. on the second floor of the Tyser TowerPress Box. Lunch service begins at 12:30 p.m.

MARYLAND BROADCAST SPORTSLINEBroadcast quality sound bites from coach Ralph Friedgen are available each week on the Maryland Sportsline. Call410-451-4117 for recaps from each game.

TERP NEWS CLIPSArchived stories from local/regional newspapers about the Terp football program can be found on the athleticdepartment’s official website, www.umterps.com, by clicking in the “Terp News Clips” link on the front page andfootball page.

FOLLOWING THE TERRAPINSMARYLAND SPORTS ON THE INTERNETAll the latest in Terp sports news, including game broadcasts,can be accessed at www.umterps.com.

RALPH FRIEDGEN TV SHOWThe Ralph Friedgen Show, hosted each week by Johnny

Holliday, can be viewed each Saturday at 9:30 a.m. on ComcastSportsNet.

MARYLAND FOOTBALL RADIO NETWORKJohnny Holliday, in his 23rd season as Voice of the Terps,

calls the play-by-play alongside color analyst and former Ter-rapin Jonathan Claiborne. Tim Strachan handles sideline com-mentary. WBAL (1090-AM in Baltimore) and WTEM (980-AM inWashington, D.C.) serve as the network’s flagship stations.The pre-game show begins 40 minutes prior to every kickoff.

PRONUNCIATION GUIDE97 Tosin Abari .......................... toe-suhn uh-BAR-ee3 Rob Abiamiri ............................... A-BE-uh-meery30 Curome Cox ........................................ curr-OHM75 Eric Dumas .......................................... DOO-mus21 Guilian Gary .................................... JOO-lee-uhn52 Monté Graves ..................................... mahn-TAY4 Latrez Harrison ..................................... luh-TREZ12 Randall Jones ...................................... ran-DELL38 Gerrick McPhearson .... pronounced with hard g11 Tony Okanlawon ................ oh-KAHN-luh-wahn71 Durrand Roundtree ............................. duh-RAND95 William Shimé ....................................... SHE-may17 Vedad Siljkovic ............ vuh-DAD SILL-kuh-vick34 Steve Suter ........................ rhymes with scooter12 Shai Warsaw .................................................. s h y66 Todd Wike ............................... rhymes with bike19 Jafar Williams ......................................... juh-FAR34 Madieu Williams .................................. muh-DOO13 Dennard Wilson .................................. duh-NARD

COACHESTom Brattan ........................................ rhymes with latinRalph Friedgen ............................................... FREE-junRay Rychleski ...................................... rich-LESS-keyDave Sollazzo .............................................. so-LAH-zoCharlie Taaffe ..................................... ryhmes with half

Terp HISTORY AND FACTSTEAM HISTORYOverall—109th season (1892-94, 1896-present)542-485-43 (.526)Byrd Stadium—52nd season (1950-present)160-99-1 (.617)

NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS1953

ACC CHAMPIONSHIPS1953, 1955, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1983, 1984, 1985

FINAL RANKINGS (AP; AP/Coaches)1949 (14), 1951 (3), 1952 (13), 1953 (1), 1954 (8), 1955 (3),1973 (20), 1974 (13), 1975 (13), 1976 (8), 1978 (20), 1982(20/18), 1983 (NR/24), 1984 (12/9), 1985 (18/17)

BOWL GAMES (6-9-2)1948 Gator Bowl, 1950 Gator Bowl, 1952 Sugar Bowl, 1954Orange Bowl, 1956 Orange Bowl, 1973 Peach Bowl, 1974Liberty Bowl, 1975 Gator Bowl, 1977 Cotton Bowl, 1977 Hallof Fame Bowl, 1978 Sun Bowl, 1980 Tangerine Bowl, 1982Aloha Bowl, 1983 Citrus Bowl, 1984 Sun Bowl, 1985 CherryBowl, 1990 Independence Bowl

TERPS IN THE NFL(as of Oct. 13)

Eric Barton, LB (OAK)Delbert Cowsette, DL (WAS)Cliff Crosby, DB (IND)John Feugill, OL (DEN)Eric Hicks, DE (KC)Kris Jenkins, DT (CAR)LaMont Jordan, TB (NYJ)Jermaine Lewis, WR (BAL)Neil O’Donnell, QB (TEN)Eric Ogbogu, DL (NYJ)Lewis Sanders, DB (CLE)Chad Scott, DB (PIT)John Waerig, TE (DET)Larry Webster, OL (BAL)Frank Wycheck, TE (TEN)

The Maryland Football Network: Cumberland (WTBO, 1450-AM), Frederick (WFMD, 930-AM), Hagerstown (WARK, 1490-AM), Lexington Park (WMDM, 1690-AM), Oakland/MountainLake Park (WMSG, 1050-AM), Pocomoke City (WDMV, 540-AM). Affiliates are subject to change.

TERRAPIN FANPHONEInformation on Maryland athletics, including actualities with

head coach Ralph Friedgen, can be obtained by calling theTerrapin Fanphone at 301-314-TERP.

HIGHLIGHT FEEDS OF HOME GAMESThe University of Maryland media relations office will provide

a satellite feed to include highlights and Ralph Friedgen’s post-game interview following home games that are NOT televised.Satellite information will be distributed the week of such games.