Posts Tagged ‘terps’

June 25th, 2009 | 06:28 pm

Former Terp Finds Mini Tour Success

This may just be blatant self-promotion, but I wanted to provide a link to a story I wrote today in the Harrisburg Patriot-News that has some Terp interest.

Golfer Blaine Peffley transferred to Maryland after two years at Arizona. The former Pennsylvania state amateur champ participated in six of the Terps’ seven events in the spring of 2006, posting the team’s lowest scoring average by more than a stroke (72.3). He did not participate in any events in fall 2006 and left the university to turn pro the next spring. His sister, Lara, a Radford transfer, just finished her senior season with the Terps’ women’s team.

Since then, Peffley’s had an up-and-down career on the Hooter’s Tour. But this year, he’s enjoyed unprecedented success that has him in the top eight on the money list of the Hooter’s Tour and the eGolf Pro Tour (Formerly the Tarheel Tour).

Besides the PGA Tour success of former Terp player and coach Fred Funk, there hasn’t been a lot of talk about former Terps’ forrays into the pro game. The 24-year-old Peffley said he’s going to keep at his dream for as long as possible and with the out of nowhere success of his former Arizona teammate Ricky Barnes at last week’s U.S. Open, Peffley is a name to remember for the coming years.

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June 17th, 2009 | 09:54 pm

Wrestling ‘09-10 schedule released

The 2009-2010 Terps wrestling schedule.

Before I dive into the schedule, I have to say the wrestling section of umterps.com has received a face lift. Now whenever one clicks on the “Wrestling” section, cue in an intense video of Maryland wrestling from this past year, ending with the team hoisting the 2009 ACC championship.

I must say, I do approve. Who knows, maybe it will attract recruits? On that note, Maryland also released its 2009 incoming recruiting class this past week as well. Leading the way is 157-pound Jimmy Sheptock out of Northampton High School in Northampton, Pa. Sheptock, who finished 148-28, is ranked 79 on InterMat Wrestling’s top 100 for the class. Interesting to note that no wrestlers from the state of Maryland were on the InterMat Wrestling top 100 recruiting rankings.

UPDATE: The class does includes three wrestlers from the state of Maryland (per Coach McCoy):

-Steven Gamble 165/174 Sherwood High School-Sandy Spring, MD
-Danny Orem 133 Mt. St. Joseph-Baltimore, MD
-Eric Beverly 149 Walt Whitman High School, Bethesda, MD

Now onto the schedule. The Terps start the season with the Red and Black Wrestle-Offs exhibition in Comcast on October 24. The Terps officially get going when they take on Drexel and York College at home on November 7.

The Terps will be going against former-coach Pat Santoro and Lehigh once again, when the team travels to Troy, New York to take part in the Northeast Dual. The first ACC match for the Terps will be on December 4 in rematch against North Carolina, who beat Maryland in the ACC opener last season.

One of the biggest non-conference matches will come on January 22, when the Terps travel to Annapolis to take on rival Navy.

Overall, the schedule is just as difficult, but as promising last year. In the end, 2009 should be a great year for Terps wrestling.

May 28th, 2009 | 05:47 pm

Men’s Tennis Coach Jim Laitta is Out

Exactly a week after announcing that Terp women’s tennis coach Martin Novak was resigning, the Athletics Department opened a search for a new men’s tennis coach as former coach Jim Laitta’s contract will not be renewed.

While Novak’s resignation could have been foreseen, it was an interesting move to remove Laitta five years after he got the men’s tennis program fully-funded.

Laitta has been with University of Maryland for 19 years, coaching both the men’s and women’s programs at one time. He has been the sole coach of the men’s team for the past eight years. Under Laitta’s leadership, both the Terps men’s and women’s tennis programs became fully-funded and even garnered national status.

Laitta started with the Terps in 1990 with no scholarship players on either team. Eight years later, he had the women’s tennis program with the complete eight scholarships and led the women’s team to their first NCAA appearance in program history.

On the men’s side, Laitta produced the first All-Americans the school has seen in more than 30 years with Boris Fetbroyt and Andrew Orban.

But Laitta fell into tough luck with a 6-39 ACC record the past four seasons with the men’s team. This season, the Terps were in multiple close matchups but failed to live up to preseason expectations. The Terps finished with a 7-14 overall record and were just 1-11 in the ACC.

“We appreciate Jim’s efforts, but we have decided to move our men’s tennis program in a new direction,” Kathy Worthington, senior associate director of athletics, said in a press release Thursday. “We’re not where we expect to be competitively, with very good facilities and scholarship support.”

One of Laitta’s complaints during the regular season was the difficulty of creating a competitive program at Maryland for various reasons, including location. The Terps currently play off-campus on Paint Branch Parkway at the Tennis Center at College Park, which has no affiliation with the university.

Laitta said that while the facility is in better shape than the courts they used to use (Outside of Cole Field House), being off-campus is detrimental to the team. The home matches this season rarely had more than 20 spectators, most of which were parents. Laitta said the poor student-fan support made for almost a neutral court atmosphere and has hurt recruiting.

The fully-funded status of the men’s tennis team scholarship wise might mean the Athletics Department expected more from the teams. I will hopefully have more information in the days to come.

Remember to check back at the blog for future updates as the search for two new tennis coaches continues.

eckarddbk@gmail.com

May 8th, 2009 | 05:24 pm

From Boise to Mobile

An interesting bit of information just crossed my e-mail inbox that Terp football fans hope they don’t have to worry a whole lot about in 2009.

The ACC has released its official bowl tie-ins for this year, and the GMAC Bowl in Mobile, Ala. has replaced the Humanitarian Bowl as the conference’s 9th bowl option. It was previously announced that the Humanitarian Bowl would go with a Mountain West Conference vs. WAC match-up after seven years as an ACC affiliate. The Terps beat Nevada in Boise, Idaho, on December 30, 2008, in the conference’s final appearance on Bronco Stadium’s blue turf.

But conference officials have replaced it with the GMAC, which has been around since 1999 and currently pits a Conference USA team against a MAC foe. After an ACC-record 10 teams qualified for bowls in 2009, it’s a good bet that an ACC team will appear in this bowl, which Tulsa has won the last two seasons.

For more optimistic fans, here is the complete 2009 ACC Bowl lineup:
FedEx Orange Bowl – January 5, 8 p.m
Chick-fil-A Bowl – December 31, 7:30 pm
Konica Minolta Gator Bowl – January 1, 1 pm
Champs Sports Bowl – December 29, 8 pm
Gaylord Hotels Music City Bowl – December 27, 8:15 pm
Meineke Car Care Bowl – December 26, 4:30 pm
Emerald Bowl – December 26, 8 pm
EagleBank Bowl – December 29, 4:30 pm
GMAC Bowl – January 6, 7 pm

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May 6th, 2009 | 09:24 pm

Muhtadi Makes Moves

Dean Muhtadi’s Sunday night consisted of working on several projects and papers as he flew back to BWI from Green Bay, Wisconsin.

But don’t let the end of the former Terp defensive lineman’s weekend fool you.

Muhtadi, who is swamped with work here at the end of the semester as he works toward his MBA at the Smith School of Business, actually had one of the best weekends of his life.

The former D-III Christopher Newport transfer, along with former Terp tackle Dane Randolph, earned a free agent contract with the Green Bay Packers at the conclusion of a three-day tryout.

“We both tried to be pretty professional about it, but I could barely hold it in,” Muhtadi said of the moment he and Randolph were privately told their fate by a Packers official. “It pretty much took all I had not to go nuts right then and there.”

For Muhtadi, who was not on scholarship before this season and didn’t crack the Terp starting lineup until midseason, it was the latest, greatest hurdle cleared in a career that has continued to exceed expectations.

He said he came into the tryout cautiously optimistic after running through the Packers’ positional needs in his head. The team, which drafted nose tackle B.J. Raji in the first round of April’s draft, ultimately signed four undrafted free agents from a participant pool of more than 20 players.

“I feel like I had an edge this weekend because I’ve been in this situation so many times,” said Muhtadi, who called it “a great weekend for Terp football.” “But I gotta say, it’s definitely more gratifying to go this route.”

Muhtadi, who was dealing with a hamstring injury during March’s Terp Pro Timing Day, said the team likes his ability to play multiple defensive line positions, but when he and Randolph were summoned from the dining room of the Packer training facility, they still thought it was “to sign some sort of release form.”

He’ll head back to Green Bay on May 17 after finals are over for what he called “rookie acclimation week” before “organized team activities,” a sort of NFL spring ball, start the next week.

Muhtadi’s still got his business career as a Plan B, but for now, he’s focusing on trying to stay in the pro game for as long as possible. That road takes him through Green Bay, a place known for its football at Lambeau Field, which the fun-loving lineman called “a shrine” that gives him chills to walk through, with his former teammate Randolph.

“It’s great,” Muhtadi said. “I’ve got my foot in the door right now. I prety much jump started my career with this weekend. We’ll see where it goes.”

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April 28th, 2009 | 10:32 am

The Senior Legacy

As the pro football futures of many former Terps fell into place throughout the weekend, former center Edwin Williams had his phone by his side to make sure his teammates knew he was thinking about them. 

“There’s a lot of texting,” said Williams, who signed as an undrafted free agent with the Washington Redskins. “They don’t want me calling them on the phone, just a little shout-out of congratulations or ‘how’s it going?’ That’s how it’s always been. We’re a tight group.”

After five Terps were drafted over the weekend tying a Ralph Friedgen-era high, eight more Terps have worked out arrangements with NFL teams.

From a senior class that featured 33 seniors that led to a Pro Timing Day with 24 participants, this year’s Terps will be well-represented when NFL training camps roll around this summer.

“Having five players drafted into the National Football League is a big stamp for our senior class,” new Philadelphia Eagles’ linebacker Moise Fokou said Sunday night. “Plus with some other guys hopefully catching on places in the next few days, some way somehow, we’ll make our mark on the League.”

These former Terps join 25 others already on NFL rosters. They know the challenges ahead if they hope to make an opening week roster.

While last year’s seniors fell short of their major objective of winning an ACC Championship, linebacker Dave Philistin said they can still share a new goal of representing this university at the next level.

“It’s good to see that people are getting recognition and getting signed,” said Philistin, who signed with the Seattle Seahawks. “Now it’s what you do from it now. They cut drafted players and they cut free agents. I’m sure everybody who went to a team will do their thing.”

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April 16th, 2009 | 03:34 pm

Spring Practice No. 10 – No Rest for the Hungry

This morning the Terp football team had the first of three successive days of workouts.

The rains this week washed out Tuesday’s practice. And coach Ralph Friedgen was forced to slide in a workout tomorrow afternoon before Saturday’s scrimmage to keep the team on schedule for its 15 spring practices, which will culminate in the Red-White game next weekend.

The ninth-year coach lamented the tough scheduling following the practice, saying his hands were tied given the weather and class schedules. With the compressed schedule, the team’s time in the film room will be cut short, according to Friedgen.

“I’m running out of days,” he said.

To make matters worse, Friedgen said he noticed his team tiring at the end of the workout for the first time this spring. He blamed the problem on not making sure the players finished breakfast, which may have contributed to low blood sugar and a lack of focus.

At a press conference to kick off the spring, Friedgen talked about making sure the players got a good breakfast, even with the early morning workouts and suggested he would add extra breakfast lines to streamline the process.

So Friedgen is mindful of the stress weeks like this cause on his players. He noted that it would’ve been easier for scheduling purposes to stick with a similar schedule that involved practicing on Friday, when there are fewer classes to plan around.

But Friedgen, apparently, isn’t that cruel.

“I wouldn’t want to interrupt those three-day weekends,” Friedgen said.

TERP NOTE: Best play of the day came courtesy Da’Rel Scott. The junior running back calmly lobbed a halfback pass to Torrey Smith during the full-team portion of practice that completely fooled the defense. It was reminiscent of his 9-yard touchdown pass to Darrius Heyward-Bey against Wake Forest and provided a reminder that he finished last season with more passing yards than former Terp quarterback Josh Portis.
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April 15th, 2009 | 09:16 pm

I like my soda like I like my football team…

In Wednesday’s edition of The Diamondback, I have a short profile of new special teams coordinator Charles Bankins. The timing was right for such a piece. Once the season starts, any focus on the special teams will likely be on the questionable kicking situation or dynamic returner Torrey Smith. But right now, the team is trying to adapt to its third coach in three years and Bankins is trying to get situated in the position after just taking over in late February.

The thing I most took away from my interview with Bankins is how different he is then outgoing coach Danny Pearman. Pearman, a longtime ACC assistant, is a good guy who has a lot of passion for the game, but he has a little bit of a gruff exterior.

Bankins is more dynamic. The day after he was hired, I reached him in his new office at Gossett Team House and he made time to answer all my questions about his past and future. He seems like he’d be a good recruiter and a good, patient teacher of the game. The players and other coaches seem to get along with him well. And although this is his first time with a major college football program, he seems to be adjusting well.

But I couldn’t find a spot in my story for my favorite Bankins moment that perhaps most illustrates my above point.

At the end of our 10+ minute interview following an 8 am weekday workout, I was drawing thin on things to ask him, but I was having so much fun in the interview, I wanted it to go on a little longer.

“Coach,” I said. “I see you got two Mountain Dews there. You need a little pick-me-up at this point in the day.”

“Nah. This one is a spare,” Bankins said, flashing a broad smile. “It’s like the two-deep on special teams. I have one, and I’d rather have it and not need it than need it and not have it.”

Of course.
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April 9th, 2009 | 03:20 pm

Spring practice No. 8: Ralph Says ‘Run’

When I rolled up to Terp football practice today, I thought I must have been late. The team was running, like it would at the conclusion of practice. Turns out, coach Ralph Friedgen was just trying to send his guys a message about finishing plays.

Friedgen was upset because during the full-team portion of the practice, he was waiting to blow the play dead when all of his defenders ran to the ball carrier, taking the proper pursuit angles. Finally, Friedgen had enough and sent the entire team on a pair of full-field sprints.

“What happens is we get in bad habits, and then we start decelerating and all of the sudden we lose our angles,” Friedgen said. “I’m bound and determined to get that where it needs to be. I’ve been fighting it for the last three years.”

The main reason for this, according to Friedgen, is to create more turnovers. He cited missed opportunities at fumble recoveries in recent years because of players stopping before the play was over, particularly mentioning the team’s loss at Florida State two seasons ago when the Terps failed to recover five Seminole fumbles.

“That’s just effort,” Friedgen said. “We can get effort. We’re going to demand effort, and I’m going to get my coaches to get them to get effort or we’re going to keep running and running until we get it done. This is a young team that’s got to learn how to practice.”

The Terps may have gotten off lucky today. Friedgen said he makes not of how hard players are running their sprints, and if it’s not up to his standards, he may send the players on 10 full-field runs next time.

That doesn’t sound like something they might be interested in at 9 am on a weekday morning.

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April 2nd, 2009 | 03:34 pm

Spring Practice Session No. 5 – The Offense Strikes Back

Terp coach Ralph Friedgen likes to say that at this point in the year, the defense is usually well ahead of the offense.

At the end of today’s practice, the Terp wide receivers and quarterbacks got a chance to prove him wrong.

In the final period of the day, Friedgen set up a drill in which the receivers squared off against the defensive backs with the rest of the team watching to decide which unit would run at the end of practice.

The defense got a chance to practice the style of press-man-to-man coverage that new defensive coordinator Don Brown favors. Terp quarterbacks Chris Turner and Jamarr Robinson showed they are pretty comfortable with the young receiving corps.

Cornerback Nolan Carroll intercepted Turner on the drill’s opening play, but the offense rebounded behind big plays from Torrey Smith, Quintin McCree, Adrian Cannon and a non-contact jersey wearing Ronnie Tyler to force the defense to close the practice running. Cornerback Michael Carter pulled up lame with an apparent leg injury after being beaten by Smith on a go-route straight down field.

Although Friedgen praised his defensive backs after practice for their efforts, he said the real test will be Saturday’s scrimmage.

“That’s real sexy to play press-man, but you’re out there on an island, and you better be able to do it,” Friedgen said.

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