No. 20 Maryland men's basketball stays hot, sprints past USC, 88-71
Published in Basketball
COLLEGE PARK, Md. — Early in Maryland men’s basketball’s game against Southern California, Derik Queen had a chance for a fast-break dunk before banging the ball off the back rim and out.
That missed opportunity was one of few miscues made by the No. 20 Terps as they had too much firepower to be contained by the visiting Trojans in an 88-71 victory Thursday night before an announced 14,662 at Xfinity Center.
Maryland (21-6, 11-5 Big Ten) collected its fourth consecutive win and eighth in the past nine games. The team also improved to 16-1 at Xfinity Center this season, tying St. John’s and Missouri for the most home wins among NCAA Division I schools so far.
More importantly, the Terps remained close behind No. 11 Wisconsin (20-5, 10-4) and No. 13 Purdue (19-7, 11-4) in the hunt for a top-four seed in the Big Ten Tournament and a double-bye to the quarterfinal round. They currently sit in fifth place in the conference with five games left in the regular season.
Sophomore shooting guard Rodney Rice ignited Maryland by scoring 15 of his game-high 22 points in the second half and accumulating four rebounds and two assists. Junior point guard Ja’Kobi Gillespie scored 11 of his 20 points in the second half and accrued four assists, two rebounds and two steals and senior power forward Julian Reese compiled his 13th double-double of the season on 19 points, 10 rebounds, three steals and two assists.
Queen, the star freshman from Baltimore, registered the 10th double-double of his fledgling career with 13 points, 17 rebounds and three assists, and graduate student small forward Selton Miguel finished with 11 points, four rebounds and three assists. For the sixth time this season, the Terps had every starter score 10 points or more and broke a tie with Kentucky for the most such performances among teams from the so-called power conferences.
The opening four minutes of each half proved to be the catalyst for Maryland. Over those stretches, they outscored USC 13-3 in the first half and 15-5 in the second half.
On both occasions, Trojans coach Eric Musselman sought to blunt the Terps’ momentum by using timeouts. On both occasions, the strategy worked for a few minutes, but Maryland regained its rhythm and maintained its advantage.
In the first half, the Terps sprinted to an 18-5 lead in the first 5:56. But the Trojans rallied back, working their way to draw within 30-27 with 2:28 remaining thanks largely to redshirt freshman shooting guard Wesley Yates III’s 11 points.
But USC did not score another point in the period, and Maryland scored seven unanswered points on 5 of 6 free throws and a dunk by Queen to take a 37-27 lead into halftime.
The Terps continued to pressure the Trojans in the second half, embarking on a 15-5 run for a 52-32 advantage that marked its largest of the game. USC tried several times to make a comeback, but the team never got closer than six points.
Yates paced the Trojans with a team-best 21 points and two rebounds, and sophomore shooting guard Kevin Patton Jr. came off the bench to contribute 11 points and two assists. But USC (14-12, 6-9) dropped its second game in a row and fourth in its last five, slipped to 2-4 this winter against ranked opponents, and remained winless in four all-time meetings with Maryland.
The Trojans are 2-12 when scoring fewer than 77 points. The Terps improved to 18-2 when scoring more than 77 points.
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