Maryland baseball found itself with a runner on base against No. 1 UCLA at the top of the seventh inning after Aden Hill singled to right field.
Maryland
Maryland baseball destroyed by No. 1 UCLA, 12-2, in 7 innings
Brayden Martin took the box after him, hitting a fly ball to center field. With no outs, Hill sped toward second base and began rounding the bases.
But UCLA’s center fielder Will Gasparino caught the ball.
Hill couldn’t beat Gasparino’s throw back to first. As the double play took shape, Maryland’s chance of catching up from four runs behind disappeared.
UCLA then blew its lead wide open, scoring six runs in the bottom of the seventh frame to end the game early, 12-2.
In the bottom of the first with runners on the corners and an out, UCLA’s Roman Martin smashed a ground ball down the left field line for an RBI double. He brought home his teammate Roch Cholowsky to take the lead.
Shortly thereafter, Cashel Dugger obliterated Maryland pitcher Lance Williams’ breaking ball, sending it clear over Bud Coombs’ head in right field for a grand slam. With two outs, the Terps suddenly faced their largest first-inning deficit of the season.
Williams managed to escape a second grand-slam set-up unscathed, striking out a batter to finish the inning.
Martin took the batters box in the top of the third after Aden Hill slid into second base in the previous at-bat. The junior utility man knocked an RBI-double along the left field line, allowing Hill to cross home to put the Terps on the board.
In the bottom of the fifth inning, Martin began his own trek around the diamond, reaching first on a fielder’s choice that took Bud Coombs off the bases.
The Bruins loaded the bases, and Williams faced Dean West for the fourth time. After a strike — it followed three straight balls — Williams issued his first walk of the game, bringing home yet another Bruin to increase UCLA’s lead.
Lance Williams’ outing on the mound lasted more than half the game, mildly improving over five innings. In the bottom of the first, the junior gave up 10 bases, five of which came from hitting the batter. Williams began to settle in by the end of the fifth, only allowing one RBI.
The Terps had no problem making it to the bases on Friday, but struggled early to come all the way around the horn. Across five innings, Maryland recorded eight base hits, yet only two runners made it home.
To change that trend, though, Ty Kaunas stepped to the plate in the top of the sixth. The freshman shortstop sent the ball through the 5-6 hole for an RBI single, bringing Paul Jones II home and closing UCLA’s lead to four runs.
Brayden Ryan took over for Williams at the bottom of the sixth, and his tenure on the mound started smoothly. The redshirt junior didn’t allow any runs in the sixth and recorded one strikeout.
After Hill’s base-running mishap in the top of the next inning, though, Ryan didn’t fare much better.
After posting one more strikeout, Ryan let three straight singles pass him by, loading the bases yet again. Just two pitches later, West wore another pitch, allowing Dugger to bank a second run on the day and UCLA’s lead to increase.
Another two-run single one batter later and a hit batter ended Ryan’s day on the mound. Andrew Koshy took over to do damage control, but he hurled a wild pitch of his own for a runner to advance and score.
With two outs left in the inning, UCLA’s Payton Brennan singled through the right side for a two-run RBI, sparking NCAA’s run-rule to end the game early.
1. Bruin batters beware. Maryland’s pitching staff hit eight batters total. Six of the nine UCLA hitters got hit at least once, and two wore a pair of pitches. The Terps almost hit the Bruins with the ball (8) as many times as they hit the ball (9).
2. Scoreboard 180. The last time a UCLA-Maryland game ended early was just one season ago, in 2025. The Terps were on the flip side of the coin though, beating the Bruins, 13-3.
3. Go-to reliever. Koshy has had the most mound appearances for the Terps despite never starting a game, and he’s posted a 5.87 ERA. The junior averages 1.4 allowed runs per game, and he hasn’t allowed a run since March 13.
Maryland
What’s on Maryland lawmakers’ deadline day to-do list
Maryland lawmakers, like many of the rest of us, are motivated by deadlines, and a major one comes at midnight.
Monday is the 69th day of the General Assembly’s 90-day session. Known as Crossover Day, it’s the deadline for bills to pass one chamber — the Senate or the House of Delegates — and cross over to the other for the best chance of full passage.
This being politics, exceptions can always be made for a late-emerging, high-priority issue. But most bills that fail to make the crossover deadline will be left in the legislative dust for the year.
Senators and delegates have spent long hours in session over the past week, advancing hundreds of bills. During multiple hours’ worth of sessions Saturday, the House of Delegates churned through long lists of bills, fueled by pizza that was brought into the delegates lounge.
So which of the 2,653 bills and 16 resolutions are charging ahead, and which ones are hanging in the balance? Here’s a quick rundown.
Fighting federal immigration enforcement
Even though state lawmakers have limited ability to respond to ramped-up federal immigration enforcement, Democrats are floating seemingly every option possible.
They have already passed a law banning local jails from having formal cooperation agreements with Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Gov. Wes Moore signed that law a month ago.
Since then, lawmakers have considered a raft of actions, though none has yet fully passed.
They include measures to protect noncitizens from enforcement at sensitive locations such as hospitals, prevent personal data from being used for enforcement, and require state and local law enforcement to document federal immigration enforcement.
Lawmakers also are considering bills to require local zoning approval for private detention facilities, and to set standards and oversight for conditions in those centers.
Attacking energy issues
The House of Delagates approved a bill on energy policy that cobbles together multiple ideas — including about $150 annual savings on electric bills — last week. It’s expected to be considered in the Senate after the crossover deadline.
The bill would also require data centers to submit plans showing how they would employ local labor and use battery storage to lessen their impact on the electric grid.
Senate Democratic leaders and Moore are on board with the plan, so the bill shouldn’t face trouble reaching final passage before the end of session.
The bill is called the Utility RELIEF Act, with RELIEF standing for Reducing Energy Load Inflation for Everyday Families.
$70B budget moving forward
The Senate signed off on a roughly $70 billion state budget last week, sending it to the House of Delegates, where it will be debated this week.
There are no tax or fee increases in the budget, though it includes more than $1 billion of spending cuts and fund shifts to cover a gap between revenue coming in and anticipated spending.
Among the most difficult cuts is $127 million sliced from the Developmental Disabilities Administration, which is slightly less than the governor’s original proposal of a $150 million spending cut.
Senate President Bill Ferguson noted that this is the fastest the budget has moved — at least since the coronavirus pandemic-shortened session in 2020.
“This is something that we really wanted to make sure that we got the Senate product done early, so that we wouldn’t have this at the end of session,” said Ferguson, a Baltimore Democrat. “So we could deal with all of the other issues.”
Criminal and juvenile justice reforms
Lawmakers have advanced a bill to ban the sale of Glock handguns and facsimiles because their trigger design allows them to be easily converted into machine guns.
And, on juvenile justice, they are working to reduce the list of crimes for which minors are automatically charged as adults.
Lawmakers are also advancing a version of a bill intended to push the state to carry out plans to build a prerelease and reentry center for incarcerated women. The version in the Senate removes a requirement to put the facility in Baltimore, raising concerns among some advocates.
Lawmakers have yet to vote on a bill that would reform the process through which people can seek criminal charges through a district court commissioner with no input from police or prosecutors. A Baltimore Banner investigation documented how the process can be easily abused.
Foster care improvements
The House of Delegates approved three bills Saturday aimed at improving the troubled foster care system, including creating a foster care ombudsman and banning the state from placing foster children in hotels or keeping them in hospitals when not medically necessary.
One of the bills is called Kanaiyah’s Law for Kanaiyah Ward, a 16-year-old girl who died by suicide last fall in a Baltimore hotel where she was supposed to receive one-on-one supervision.
House Speaker Joseline Peña-Melnyk praised delegates for their unanimous votes on the bills.
“When you go home, each and every one of you has to feel proud of these three bills that just passed, because they are really important,” she said.
Governor’s priorities
Most of the Democratic governor’s priorities are moving forward in some fashion, including legislation to limit grocery stores from rapidly changing prices for different customers, facilitate housing construction around mass transit stops, promote economic development and set a process for the state health secretary to make vaccine recommendations.
Moore put forward a bill on energy policy, which is not moving, but he was involved in developing the larger energy bill.
Symbols and commemorations
The House of Delegates is moving forward with a bill to designate megadolon as the state shark.
Another bill is progressing in the House that would require the governor to proclaim January as Muslim American Heritage Month and May as Jewish American Heritage Month.
The House is also advancing legislation banning state and local governments from using Confederate names on government property such as streets, parks and buildings.
The Senate, meanwhile, passed a bill setting Jan. 13 as Korean American Day and another designating the Natural History Society of Maryland as the state’s natural sciences museum.
Redrawing congressional districts
A hot issue early in the session was whether to redraw Maryland’s congressional district boundaries to give Democrats a chance at a sweep of all eight seats in this fall’s election. The state currently has one Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives.
Moore championed the plan, which sailed through the House of Delegates before stalling in the Senate. The proposed map has remained parked in the Senate Rules Committee, where it’s expected to stay.
Moore’s team floated the idea that it was working on a “Plan B” for redistricting — possibly pushing a new map for the 2028 election — but nothing has been put forward publicly.
Next steps
After the crossover deadline, lawmakers have three weeks to finalize the bills they intend to send to the governor. Each bill must be approved in the exact form by both the House and the Senate by midnight April 13, and the final days can be marked by wrangling over fine details.
If lawmakers fear Moore will veto any bills, they could present them to the governor early to give themselves time for veto override votes. Typically, veto overrides are taken up in the next scheduled legislative session. There is no session planned before the election.
Maryland
Mindframe Named Maryland-Bred Horse of the Year
In a year in which three Maryland-bred runners were Grade 1 winners, including a Breeders’ Cup win, Mindframe is the 2025 Maryland-bred Horse of the Year, as well as champion older male, as announced at this year’s ninth annual Renaissance Champion Awards, held Sunday afternoon, March 22, at Laurel Park. The event is a collaborative effort between the Maryland Horse Breeders Association and the Maryland Thoroughbred Horsemen’s Association, which recognizes excellence in Thoroughbred racing and breeding in Maryland in the past year.
The richest state-bred runner of 2025 with $1,407,220 earned in five starts, Mindframe ranked as one of the best of his generation. He came into the year after taking the title of Maryland-bred champion 3-year-old male when recording two seconds in his only two stakes starts, both Grade 1s, including the Belmont Stakes. In his first start at 4, the Todd Pletcher-trainee returned after a nearly eight-month layoff to record his first stakes victory in the Gulfstream Park Mile-G2 in March. His next two starts were at the highest level. Dropping back to seven furlongs for the Grade 1 Churchill Downs Stakes on Kentucky Derby day, he rallied to get up at the wire over one of the best fields assembled all year, which included Book’em Danno, Nysos and Mullikin.
Back at Churchill in late June, Mindframe faced five rivals, including Sierra Leone, First Mission, Mystik Dan and Hit Show, in the Grade 1 Stephen Foster and won decisively while stopping the clock in 1:47.48 for the mile and an eighth, just .22 seconds off the track record.
Racing for Repole Stable and St. Elias Stables LLC, which purchased the son of Constitution for $600,000 as a yearling at the Keeneland September sale from breeder Larry Johnson, Mindframe was the second-choice against seven others in the Jockey Club Gold Cup-G1 at Saratoga in August but was eliminated at the start when slammed from the outside, losing rider Irad Ortiz. He would not run again until the Breeders’ Cup Classic-G1 at Del Mar in November and, after battling on the front end into the far turn, he weakened late to finish fifth. Now at stud at Claiborne Farm in Paris, Ky., he retired with a career record of 9-5-2-0 while earning $2,054,580.
Other divisional champions:
Champion 2-Year-Old Male: Romeo
Dk.b./br.c., 2023, Honor A. P.–Fancy Love, by Not For Love. Bred by John C. Davison. Owned by Joseph Lloyd. Trained by John J. Robb. Foaled at Glade Valley Farm, Frederick.
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Champion 2-Year-Old Filly: Dazzling Dame
B.f., 2023, Girvin–Awesome Dama, by Corinthian. Bred by Maria M. Haire. Owned by Respect the Valleys LLC. Trained by Brittany T. Russell. Foaled at Northview Stallion Station, Chesapeake City.
Champion 3-Year-Old Male: Barbadian Runner
Dk.b./br.g., 2022, Barbados–Quiet Run, by Northern Afleet. Bred by Shamrock Farm. Owned by AJ Will Win Stables LLC. Trained by Henry Walters. Foaled at Shamrock Farm, Woodbine.
Champion 3-Year-Old Filly: Onyx Ten
B.f., 2022, Street Magician–Chattolanee, by Rock Hard Ten. Bred and owned by Frank T. Sample. Trained by Gary Capuano. Foaled at Dance Forth @ Roland Farm, Warwick.
Champion Older Female, Sprinter: Splendora
Dk.b./br.m., 2021, Audible–Miss Freeze, by Frost Giant. Bred by The Elkstone Group LLC. Owned by By Talla Racing LLC. Trained by Bob Baffert. Foaled at C-Dog Farm, Chesapeake City.
Champion Turf Runner: Future Is Now
B.m., 2020, Great Notion–Past as Prelude, by Bernardini. Bred by R. Larry Johnson. Owned by the Estate of R. Larry Johnson. Trained by Mike Trombetta. Foaled at Dance Forth @ Roland Farm, Warwick.
Champion Steeplechaser: Keys Discount
Dk.b./br.g., 2019, Medal Count–Divertimento, by Rizzi. Bred by Bryan Minnich. Owned by Mrs. John R.S. Fisher. Trained by Jack Fisher. Foaled at Anchor and Hope Farm, Port Deposit.
The awards for Breeder, Broodmare, and Stallion of the Year are familiar names. For the second year in a row, the late R. Larry Johnson, breeder of Mindframe and additional 2025 champion Future Is Now, is Maryland Breeder of the Year.
Slow and Steady, the dam of two stakes winners in 2025, and four total for the partnership of ZWP Stable and Non Stop Stable, gets her second award, having previously been so honored in 2022.
Great Notion, now pensioned at his longtime home at Northview Stallion Station in Chesapeake City, earns his 10th consecutive award as Maryland Stallion of the Year.
This press release has not been edited by BloodHorse. If there are any questions please contact the organization that produced the release.
Maryland
Maryland baseball drops second straight conference series, falls 8-3 to No. 1 UCLA
After Game 1 against No. 1 UCLA ended in the seventh inning due to the run rule on Friday, Maryland baseball was out for revenge.
Its bid for vengeance was strong, as it outhit the Bruins Saturday, 13-10. But it couldn’t keep up on the scoreboard.
The Terps ultimately fell to UCLA, 8-3, at Jackie Robinson Stadium in Los Angeles. Maryland has now lost their second Big Ten series in a row after losing two out of three games against Purdue last weekend.
With two outs in the top of the first inning, catcher Rylen Stockton collected his 13th RBI of the season with a double to left field, giving Maryland a one-run head start.
But UCLA didn’t allow the Terps to hold any sort of lead for long.
In the bottom of the first, Bruins’ infielder Roman Martin tied the game with a double RBI. With two runners on base, Payton Brennan blasted a home run over the left field wall on his first pitch, making it a 4-1 game.
Maryland senior Aden Hill recorded his third home run of the season to give the Terps another run in the top of the second.
The Bruins responded quickly, extending their lead in the bottom of the third with a sacrifice fly to center field by Will Gasparino. That hit was followed by another RBI by Cashel Dugger, giving UCLA a four-run advantage.
Maryland scored its last run of the game in the top of the fourth inning, as redshirt junior Devin Russell launched his second double of the season to bring in the Terps’ third run.
With the bases loaded, sophomore right-handed pitcher Cristofer Cespedes took the mound in place of Evan Smith in the bottom of the fourth. After walking one runner to make it a 7-3 game, Cespedes closed the inning with a strikeout and fielder’s choice to third base.
Cespedes dominated the mound, holding the Bruins entirely scoreless until the eighth inning. The sophomore threw seven strikes and only allowed five walks through the 19 batters he faced.
The Terps created multiple scoring opportunities but struggled to follow through, recording 13 hits and only three runs. At least one of Maryland’s runners were left on base at the end of each inning aside from one.
Tensions began to rise in the eighth inning.
Maryland kicked off the frame with a walk, which was followed by a single by freshman Nate Hawton-Henley — his second hit of the game in his third start of the season.
UCLA inserted its third pitcher, Chris Grothues, with two runners on base. Grothues struck out Hill, but the Bruins replaced him with Cal Randall after he only threw four pitches. Randall recorded his first strikeout, but walked junior Brayden Martin to load the bases.
The Bruins were quick to replace Randall with their fifth pitcher of the game, Easton Hawk. David Mendez stepped up to the plate with hopes of bringing home at least one of the three runners on base. Instead, he grounded out to second base on his first pitch.
In the bottom of the eighth, Cespedes walked Phoenix Call before striking out Dean West. With one runner on base, Cholowsky blasted a double down the left field line, bringing Call home and making it an 8-3 game.
After walking another batter, Landon Edwards replaced Cespedes and recorded the final out with a strikeout.
Maryland had one last chance in the top of the ninth to bring in more runs after two walks, but it failed to do any significant damage.
The Terps will try to avoid the sweep during Game 3 on Sunday.
1. Maryland’s bullpen was much more reliable Saturday. During Game 1, Maryland’s bullpen hit six batters total — two were hit twice. While the Terps threw seven strikeouts on Friday and eight on Saturday, four fewer runs were allowed.
2. The Terps’ offense improved since Game 1. Maryland’s bats seemed to move a lot more on Saturday compared to Friday. The Terps recorded one more run than the day before, but also registered four more hits. The Terps were also more calculated while facing UCLA’s pitchers during Game 2, walking four more times than in Game 1.
3. Can Maryland avoid the sweep? On Saturday, the Bruins went through five pitchers to keep up with the Terps. Although Maryland lost by five runs, it was five fewer runs allowed than in Game 1, where they were destroyed 12-2 in a contest that ended in the seventh inning. If the Terps keep their bats moving, they may have a chance of avoiding the sweep. Sophomore Jake Yeager will take the mound for Game 3 — he has only lost one game out of his five starts.
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