More than two hours before Maryland hosted Iowa, the line to enter Xfinity Center stretched to the parking lot. Some fans carried signs; others wore black-and-gold shirts and jerseys with No. 22 on them.
Maryland
Maryland can’t derail the Caitlin Clark show in a 93-85 loss to No. 3 Iowa
Maryland’s first sellout crowd since 2016 gasped, screamed and shouted as Clark poured in 38 points during a 93-85 victory for No. 3 Iowa in front of 17,950.
“Caitlin did natural Caitlin things, which are spectacular,” Hawkeyes Coach Lisa Bluder said.
It took all of 16 seconds for Clark to give the people what they came to see: She buried a three-pointer from four steps behind the arc on her first touch during the first possession. That was, quite literally, just the beginning. She closed the quarter with a buzzer-beating, sidestep triple in front of the Maryland bench and grinned. She had 14 points but was just getting started.
Clark closed the second quarter with Iowa’s last nine points, including a play in which she turned in a behind-the-back dribble before spinning away from her defender and banking in a runner while being fouled. Naturally, she hit the free throw for the three-point play. The Hawkeyes (21-2, 10-1 Big Ten) went into halftime with a 52-38 lead.
Maryland (12-10, 4-7) seemed to feed off the energy in the building during an initial burst in which it took an 11-3 lead following Clark’s game-opening triple. At that point, Bluder called a timeout and the Hawkeyes took over for the rest of the half.
“We knew they were going to make another run,” Clark said. “That’s just what their teams do. I think at times Maryland’s record doesn’t show how good Maryland is.”
Maryland trailed by 18 early in the third quarter before its best run of the night got the home crowd roaring. The Terps ripped off a 25-5 stretch as Bri McDaniel heated up and they got out in transition for a 63-61 lead. Iowa regrouped to take a 73-66 advantage into the fourth quarter.
McDaniel pushed hard in transition to help Maryland tie the score at 76 as Iowa seemed to be on its heels defensively. It wasn’t quite enough: Clark’s three-pointer put the Hawkeyes ahead for good, clinching a fourth straight loss for the Terps.
“I think it just shows our maturity,” Clark said. “We go to Ohio State, and we have a nice lead there. We blow it, can’t really ever gain the momentum back. But here I think we kind of took another step forward.”
Clark, who made 7 of 17 three-point tries, added 12 assists and six rebounds. As she nears the NCAA scoring record, she has notched 20-plus points in 108 of 123 career games. Molly Davis added 17 points and Kate Martin had 15 as Iowa shot 46.2 percent.
“We wanted to pick our poison,” Maryland Coach Brenda Frese said. “We wanted to make [Clark’s] shots difficult, but we also wanted to kind of keep everybody else down below their average. For the most part, we were able to do that, minus the game that Molly Davis had. She kind of was that X-factor. I thought the zone kind of really slowed [Clark] up. Still had seven threes, but I thought it kind of forced her out of rhythm when we went to the zone in the second half.”
Jakia Brown-Turner led Maryland with 25 points and nine rebounds. McDaniel added 22 points. Shyanne Sellers had 14 points, eight assists and seven rebounds.
Sellers was back after a one-game absence with a knee injury. She told her teammates earlier in the week that she was determined to play. She practiced Friday, went through shoot-around Saturday and was declared good to go. She wore a bulky brace on her left knee but took her normal spot in the starting lineup, though some of her quickness and cutting ability seemed to be affected.
“We had a lot of intensity,” Sellers said of the second half. “We were attacking them really hard and making it tough to guard and then getting the ball out quicker. I thought that was one of our best games of just getting the ball out quick and trying to run it down their throat and trying to take advantage of the mismatches.”
A rough week and a half has Maryland being viewed as an NCAA tournament bubble team and in danger of missing out for the first time since 2010. That’s the only time the Terps have missed the tournament since 2003. ESPN’s latest bracket projection has Maryland as a No. 12 seed and the last team in the field, but that was before Saturday’s loss to Iowa (which is projected as a No. 1 seed).
“There’s no doubt that we’re an NCAA tournament team,” Frese said. “Our record doesn’t indicate [that, but] we have the number two strength of schedule in the country. … Our NET rating’s still in the top 30s, and we still have four games in our conference against top-50 teams.”
Maryland
Power restored to University of Maryland after campuswide outage
COLLEGE PARK, Md. (7News) — A campuswide power outage at the University of Maryland prompted crews to respond overnight, including dispatching staff to assist people stuck in elevators.
In an advisory, the university said Facilities Management staff were on site assessing the situation and that crews were being dispatched to individuals in elevators.
Just after 1:30 a.m, the university said power was in the process of being restored across campus and that most residence halls had power. The university said steam and hot water would continue to improve as full campus power restoration continued.
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Pepco said that around midnight, it began receiving calls about an outage impacting the university. Pepco crews responded and determined Pepco equipment was not the source of the outage.
As of publication, university officials have not responded to 7News’ request for a comment.
Maryland
Body pulled from river near Bladensburg Waterfront
PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY, Md. (7News) — An investigation is underway after a body was spotted in the Anacostia River near the Bladensburg Waterfront in Maryland on Saturday.
The Prince George’s County Park Police confirmed on social media around 4:50 p.m. that officers responded to the area after reports of a dead person in the water.
Authorities said the investigation is in its early stages.
Officials have not released the identity of the person, and the cause of death has not yet been determined.
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This is a developing story that will be updated as more information becomes available.
Maryland
‘Kicking the can down the road:’ Will Maryland leaders address billion-dollar deficits?
Gov. Wes Moore is touting his “fiscal responsibility” along with a balanced budget proposal, which some lawmakers and economists say ignores Maryland’s most pressing issue ahead: billions of dollars in structural debt.
Moore has boasted that his administration balanced the budget this year without new taxes or fees — a reality possible in large part by a series of tax and fee hikes last year.
Meanwhile, the Maryland Department of Legislative Services projects a nearly $3 billion structural deficit in fiscal year 2028, growing to roughly $4 billion by fiscal year 2030. State lawmakers will likely have to make cuts, raise taxes or both next year.
Dr. Daraius Irani, the vice president of business and public engagement at Towson University, said Maryland leaders are running behind on long-term budget solutions and should get ahead of the issue this legislative session.
“Four years ago really would have been the time to really … look into some of the efficiencies,” he told Spotlight on Maryland. “They ignored some of these structural deficits.”
Irani said state leaders need to pursue structural reforms instead of short-term budget patches.
“The Maryland State Government really needs to look at sort of what it does, what its mission is. One of the challenges that it faces is its revenues aren’t growing as fast as expenditures,” he said. “Collectively, we really have done a poor job of managing Maryland’s finances writ large I really think that Maryland needs to use this crisis to focus.”
Will taxes go up next year?
Del. Matt Morgan, R-St. Mary’s County, said Maryland Democrats prioritized avoiding tax increases in an election year. He said Marylanders should not be surprised if their elected officials raise taxes next year to counter the increasing deficit.
“They’re kicking the can down the road, and they’ve been kicking the can down this entire term,” Morgan told Spotlight on Maryland. “This is an election budget. No one’s told us what we’re going to do next year.”
Maryland leaders raised a series of taxes and fees last year to address the state’s deficit, including a new tax on IT and data services, tax hikes on high-income earners, and increased tax rates on vehicles, cannabis and sports betting.
Two key factors in the deficit spike next year include scheduled spending increases for Medicaid and the Blueprint education plan. Morgan said his colleagues may have no choice but to reassess these programs and restructure the state government.
“You can make the necessary cuts in the hard choices. Unfortunately, that is probably revolving around the Blueprint front and around the Medicaid expansion,” Morgan told Spotlight on Maryland. “I think when you look down deep inside the budget, you’re finding a lot of programs that are duplicated. You could get rid of a lot of expansion in government.”
Spotlight on Maryland asked Moore’s office what his plan is to address the state’s structural deficits, and whether he would commit to no new taxes and fees in a potential second term. The office did not make that commitment.
His spokeswoman emailed the following statement: “Governor Moore inherited a structural deficit after years of Maryland’s spending outpacing its revenue.Despite that, he has balanced the budget each year in office while focusing on growing Maryland’s economy. Since Day One, he’s been clear that Maryland must break our economy’s dependence on Washington to address the state’s long-standing fiscal issues. That’s why the Governor has been so diligent about growing our state’s private sector and has ushered in major job-creating economic investments from companies like AstraZeneca, Samsung Biologics, and Sphere Entertainment Co. While we appreciate the sentiment about him earning a second term, right now, his focus is passing yet another responsible, balanced budget.”
Doug Mayer, who previously worked as a spokesman for then-Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, said that Moore has no one to blame for the structural deficit but his political allies. Mayer emphasized that Hogan vetoed the $30 billion Blueprint education plan over budget concerns and wanted to restructure state government to save money in the long term. Both efforts, he said, were shut down by the Democratic supermajority in the legislature.
“Moore is a political coward,” Mayer told Spotlight on Maryland. “The budget situation is never going to get better. They’re just going to raise taxes. They won’t do it this year because they’re playing games.”
Another factor in Maryland’s fiscal woes is the loss of revenue from residents leaving for other states. A report last year from the Maryland Comptroller found that from 2022 to 2024, Maryland ranked among the top 10 in the nation for the largest net loss of residents to domestic migration. This included an increase in the number of young adults fleeing amid concerns about housing costs.
‘Next year is very concerning’
Senate Minority Leader Steve Hershey said Moore’s proposed budget does not address future deficits. He said state leaders need to lead with urgency and prove that Maryland is affordable for residents and fruitful for businesses.
“Next year is very concerning and should be concerning for Marylanders,” Hershey told Spotlight on Maryland. “We would like to send market signals out to businesses to tell them that we have a way to address these deficits, that we’re going to scale back the Blueprint, that we’re not going to have to raise taxes. Because as we saw last year, they raised taxes on businesses, and businesses are making decisions every day on whether to stay in Maryland, whether to expand in Maryland, or maybe even come to Maryland. And they need to know what this legislature is looking at with respect to how the budget is going to be here for the next couple of years.”
Spotlight on Maryland sent the following questions to Sen. Guy Guzzone, D-Howard County, chair of the Budget and Taxation Committee; and Del. Ben Barnes, D-Anne Arundel and Prince George’s counties, chair of the Appropriations Committee.
How do you plan to address Maryland’s pending structural deficits?
Are you committed to avoiding any new taxes or fees?
Guzzone and Barnes did not respond.
Spotlight on Maryland is a joint venture by The Baltimore Sun, FOX45 News and WJLA in Washington, D.C. Have a news tip? Call 410-467-4670 or email SpotlightOnMaryland@sbgtv.com. Contact Patrick Hauf at pjhauf@sbgtv.com and @PatrickHauf on X.
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