Maryland
Recreational marijuana: The road ahead for Maryland dispensaries
BALTIMORE — Leisure hashish in Maryland is correct across the nook – set to turn out to be authorized this July 1st.
There’s a brand new construction regulating the brand new trade – handed by each chambers as time waned on the legislative session in Annapolis.
For one Baltimore store, planning for authorized, non-medical hashish is nothing new. This summer season, they’re going to be open across the clock to navigate the brand new market.
“It has been filled with peaks and valleys, identical to life,” mentioned Connor Whelton, CEO of ReLeaf, a medical dispensary in Mount Vernon, and the smoke store proper beside it.
For the final two years, Whelton’s store has bulked as much as deal with leisure, and the inflow of demand sparked by it.
“It’s been actually a bet, if you’ll. We weren’t assured something,” mentioned Whelton. “We needed to put up some huge cash to transform this place to have the ability to take what we predict is coming subsequent. This subsequent wave of market seize.”
It’s a younger and fluid trade – Whelton says – identical to the tech growth within the 90s.
They’re a medical retailer proper now, however ReLeaf can promote leisure marijuana this July.
“There can be hefty charges to be paid to transform,” Whelton added. “There’s particular laws we’ve to comply with, advertising and marketing tips have modified, we’ll have to rent the suitable quantity of individuals to deal with, what we estimate can be, this subsequent wave.”
Final yr, Maryland voters handed a poll referendum to legalize leisure marijuana.
READ MORE: Maryland voters permitted marijuana legalization by huge margin
This yr, because the legislative session closed, state lawmakers handed the framework for authorized marijuana.
“I consider the archetype we’ve laid out is strictly what we’re searching for,” mentioned C.T. Wilson (D), a state delegate from Charles County. “We’ve given fairness, we’ve given alternative. We’ve made it to the place, like I mentioned, I feel individuals will cease going to those road degree drug offers to get what they want.”
As that construction heads to the governor’s desk, Whelton’s store will create its personal new construction to arrange.
“We are going to nonetheless have a direct lane for sufferers,” Whelton continued. “We don’t need to disrupt the affected person expertise, as a result of they’re the muse of how we bought right here. Some shops may need devoted hours for sufferers, others may need a devoted lane.”
However after all of the anticipation, for the store, the center of the summer season can’t come quickly sufficient.
“That is nice,” mentioned Whelton. That is what we’ve been working so exhausting for. It’s truly an emotional expertise.”
Maryland
Maryland volleyball takes down Ohio State in four sets
Maryland volleyball found itself down 15-14 in the opening set of its road match against Ohio State. As pin hitter Samantha Schnitta — the nation’s leader in service aces — stepped behind the service line, she hoped to tie the game.
She did just that with a service ace into the deep corner.
The ensuing serve hit the exact same spot, leaving Buckeyes’ defenders scrambling. The Terps, who post the 10th most aces per set in the country, tallied 10 in their four-set victory Friday night.
After consecutive Big Ten wins for the first time this season last weekend, Maryland hopped to ride the momentum. The Terps did exactly that, picking up their first conference road victory of the season.
“When you can go win good games on the road in the Big Ten, it helps the youngsters realize that there is a path to [win games],” head coach Adam Hughes said.
Ohio State’s outside hitter Emily Londot got her offense going with two early kills, knotting the score at four apiece. Freshman pin hitter Katherine Scherer, coming off a career-high 13 kills against UCLA, broke the deadlock with her first of the match.
Schnitta racked up her first service ace of the match before hitting the ensuing serve long. Kills from middle blocker Eva Rohrbach and outside hitter Sam Csire restored Maryland’s two-point lead, but Ohio State responded with seven of the next nine points — including another kill from Londot — moving the Buckeyes in front, 14-11.
Trailing by two, the Terps notched five straight points off consecutive blocks, and Maryland didn’t relinquish this lead despite several attempts from Ohio State. Schnitta gave the Terps set point before middle blocker Anastasia Russ closed it out with a block, 25-22.
Maryland carried this momentum into the second set, sprinting out to a 4-1 lead, after a serve from libero Lilly Gunter landed in the middle of the court. Buckeyes’ outside hitter Reese Wuebker cut the Terps’ lead to one. But three Ohio State errors pushed the score to 8-4.
A monstrous strike from Csire kept Maryland rolling. But Londot, a two-time All-American, sharply hit the ball cross court, cutting the Terps’ deficit to three. Schnitta helped restore Maryland’s five-point lead after a powerful serve gave Rohrbach an easy kill. A serve from Rohrbach just trickled over the net, moving the score to 18-13.
Just a few minutes later, Schnitta put the Terps just two points away from a second set victory after a kill and a combined block with Russ. Schnitta then closed it out, 25-18, off a kill that deflected off the fingertips of Ohio State’s front line.
“I thought we were playing pretty efficient,” Hughes said. “I didn’t think we made a ton of bad errors and bad mistakes. We were blocking some balls early and forcing them into some tough angles and tough situations.”
Londot gave the Buckeyes an early lead in the third set off a kill and service ace. But Schnitta and Scherer added a kill apiece to push Maryland in front. Ohio State responded with a major blow, scoring seven of the next nine points.
After Hughes’ second timeout in short succession, the Terps got their offense going. Schnitta tipped the ball off the block and a few points later, Russ destroyed the ball in the middle of the court.
After Maryland went down, 16-11, it rattled off six straight points. Schnitta continued her impressive game with three more service aces, giving her six for the match. Scherer added two kills to help the Terps push in front, but Ohio State stormed right back with eight points of its own, taking the third set, 25-18.
“[Schnitta] was definitely on from the end line,” Hughes said. “I thought her tosses were really good. … She started to get a little bit physically fatigued late, but she was scoring points from the front row, from the back row.”
The Buckeyes looked to carry its late momentum from the third into the fourth set. Instead, Maryland hung around, with two kills and one service ace from Schnitta tying the set at five apiece. Just three points later, middle blocker Eloise Brandewie recorded a kill, sparking a three-point run from Ohio State.
Trailing 12-8, the Terps launched a major comeback, scoring seven of the next eight points. Schnitta notched three kills and Gunter added a service ace that was barely in, landing in the back right corner. But the Buckeyes stayed in the set, knotting it at 17 apiece off two kills from Brandewie.
Both teams traded three-point spurts, as two kills from outside hitter Emmi Sellman tied the score back up. But Maryland landed the last blow — up 22-21 — it scored the final three points. A kill from Csire just tipped the fingertips of Ohio State’s blockers before the Buckeyes made two costly errors, leading to the Terps 25-21 set victory.
Three things to know
1. Maryland dominated on the road. It took the Terps nine matches to pick up their second Big Ten win of the season, but after beating Michigan State in four sets, Maryland has been rolling. Friday’s match marks the Terps’ first win in Columbus, Ohio, since 2018.
2. Schnitta kept rolling. After recording 36 kills over the last two matches, Schnitta kept the hot streak going. She tallied a match-high 18 kills on 34 attempts, hitting an impressive 44.1% in the match. She also added seven service aces.
3. Defense on full display. Maryland entered the match with the 13th-most digs and total blocks in the Big Ten. The Terps, however, seemingly tracked every ball down against Ohio State. Maryland totaled 71 digs and nine blocks, including a match-high 16 digs.
Maryland
What channel is Rutgers football vs Maryland on today? Time, TV schedule for Week 12 game
Rutgers football schedule 2024: Opponents for home and away games
A look at the Rutgers University’s football opponents for the 2024 season.
COLLEGE PARK, Maryland − One more win.
That’s all Rutgers football needs to become bowl eligible for a second-consecutive season.
The Scarlet Knights will try to earn that victory when they play against Maryland today at SECU Stadium in College Park.
The Terrapins have won the last three meetings between the teams.
Here’s how to watch and some key information to know:
What channel is Rutgers vs Maryland on today?
Watch Rutgers vs Maryland on Fubo (free trial)
TV: FS1
Chris Myers will be on play-by-play alongside analyst Spencer Tillman.
Streaming: Fubo (free trial), FOX Sports App
Radio: WFAN 660 AM/101.9 FM, FOX Sports New Jersey 93.5 FM/1450 AM, Sirius XM386
Rutgers football vs Maryland time today
- Date: Nov. 16
- Time: 6 p.m.
Rutgers football vs Maryland prediction, odds
Maryland is a 5.5-point favorite according to Action Network as of Nov. 15.
O/U: Over 52.5 (-110), Under 52.5 (-110)
Moneyline: Rutgers +173, Maryland -210
Prediction: The Scarlet Knights played really well against Minnesota. While Maryland will present different challenges, Rutgers’ defense seems to have found its swagger again. If the Scarlet Knights’ defense can limit the Terrapins offense from connecting on big plays, and their offense can take advantage of a poor passing defense, I like Rutgers’ chances of escaping College Park with a close victory. I’ll say Kaliakmanis connects with Ian Strong for a big touchdown late. Rutgers 28, Maryland 24
Rutgers football 2024 schedule
Aug. 29: vs. Howard, W, 44-7
Sept. 7: vs. Akron, W, 49-17
Sept. 21: at Virginia Tech, W, 26-23
Sept. 27: vs. Washington, W, 21-18
Oct. 5: at Nebraska, L, 14-7
Oct. 12: vs. Wisconsin, L, 42-7
Oct. 19: vs. UCLA, L, 35-32
Oct. 25: at USC, L, 42-20
Nov. 9: vs. Minnesota, W, 26-19
Nov. 16: at Maryland, 6 p.m., FS1
Nov. 23: vs. Illinois, TBA
Nov. 30: at Michigan State, TBA
Maryland football 2024 schedule
Aug. 31: vs. UConn, W, 50-7
Sept. 7: vs. Michigan State, L, 27-24
Sept. 14: at Virginia, W, 27-13
Sept. 21: vs. Villanova, W, 38-20
Sept. 28: at Indiana, L, 42-28
Oct. 11: vs. Northwestern, L, 37-10
Oct. 19: vs. USC, W, 29-28
Oct. 26: at Minnesota, L, 48-23
Nov. 9: at Oregon, L, 39-18
Nov. 16: vs. Rutgers
Nov. 23: vs. Iowa
Nov. 30: at Penn State
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Maryland
Live Coverage: Maryland leads Marquette, 34-30, at halftime
Marquette’s Shaka Smart talks about Al McGuire Center vs George Mason
The Golden Eagles played at their on-campus arena for the second time in the last three seasons.
COLLEGE PARK, Maryland – The Marquette men’s basketball team (3-0) has its first road game of the season at Maryland (3-0) at 8 p.m. at the Xfinity Center.
Refresh your browser for live updates:
Ja’Kobi Gillespie had 14 points and Derik Queen added 11 as Maryland took a 34-30 lead into the break.
Kam Jones led MU with 10 points on 4-for-9 shooting.
MU freshman Damarius Owens missed the first three games with an injured toe.
He has been warming up before the last few games, but he made his debut at Maryland.
He took a hard foul on a fast break, but got up quickly and hit two free throws for his first points with the Golden Eagles.
The Terrapins held a 27-23 lead at the 3:30 mark of the first half after a 7-0 run.
Marquette starters Ben Gold and Kam Jones each picked up their second fouls with just under 10 minutes remaining in the first half.
Both immediately took seats on the bench.
MU has struggled offensively with Jones off the floor.
Kam Jones has started this season scorching.
That continued on the road. The senior guard hit his first three shots and had seven points as MU grabbed a 10-6 advantage at the first media timeout.
Derik Queen, a 6-foot-10 freshman, had a remarkable debut for the Terrapins with 22 points and 20 rebounds against Manhattan.
The former McDonald’s All-American is the second-highest rated recruit in Maryland hoops history.
The highest-rated recruit? Former Whitefish Bay Dominican standout Diamond Stone.
Guards: Kam Jones, Stevie Mitchell, Chase Ross
Forwards: David Joplin, Ben Gold
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