Maryland
Takeaways from No. 4-seed Maryland women’s basketball’s Big Ten Tournament loss to 5-seed Michigan
No. 4-seed Maryland women’s basketball laid a dud in its only game of this year’s Big Ten Tournament. The Terps were embarrassed, 98-71, by No. 5-seed Michigan Friday afternoon.
Here are three takeaways from Maryland’s crushing loss.
A game of runs favored Michigan
Michigan started as well as it possibly could have. With the game tied at six, Michigan went on a remarkable 25-0 run.
“Just disappointed we came out as flat as we did, can’t happen in March,” head coach Brenda Frese said. “We couldn’t buy a bucket to start that first quarter.”
The Terps climbed back, though, as a 23-3 run brought the Terps within a point.
“I loved our response in the second quarter. I thought we got back to playing and being who we are, getting everyone involved in getting on the glass.” Frese said.
Maryland’s response was led by Sarah Te-Biasu, who scored 16 points on 4-of-5 shooting exclusively from deep in the second quarter.
“When you have that momentum in the second quarter, and it’s still going and going and going, you can build off of that,” Christina Dalce said. “I think we got too comfortable in the third quarter.”
Michigan went on another run in the third quarter, ballooning its lead to 20 points at the end of the frame.
Michigan won the game of runs, as Maryland could not respond in the fourth quarter.
Sellers struggled
Maryland star guard Shyanne Sellers posted one of her worst games of the season Friday. She scored two points on 1-of-3 shooting in only 19 minutes, and was clearly not fully healthy; Sellers looked slow and could not move very well.
“Offensively, I thought she got really frustrated. … she was losing her poise and composure,” Frese said.
Sellers was called for an intentional foul after elbowing Jordan Hobbs in the face, essentially ending her night. She has been day-to-day for more than a month and was a limited participant in practice this week.
“I think you saw the game. She had a tough night on both ends of the floor, defensively had a lot of baskets that were scored on her,” Frese said.
Her defense was lackluster. She couldn’t move to stay with her matchup, aiding Michigan’s going on that big run early.
Sellers has been dealing with a knee injury for the last month and a half, which seemed most notable on Friday as she reaggravated it.
“We have a couple of injured players, key players too,” Dalce said. “We tried our best at the end of the day, trying to do everything that we could, but they had fresh legs off the bench.”
Disappointing performance
Maryland came into Friday’s game with momentum as the higher seed and winners of six of its last seven games. The Terps’ confidence was completely shot in the first quarter, and even though the comeback effort was strong, Maryland couldn’t sustain it. The Terps lost in the Big Ten Tournament quarterfinals for just the second time in program history.
“I would say they came out ready, and I know they had a little bit of an edge because they played yesterday, but they just came out with more energy,” Te-Biasu said. “They just capitalized on everything.”
The Terps have two weeks to reflect on the blow out and get ready for the NCAA Tournament, where a loss ends their season.
“I feel like we need to have the mentality of this is the last one,” Dalce said. “I feel like the mentality today was we still have one more, but it needs to be like this is really the last one until next year.”
Maryland
The Final Stretch for Maryland’s 2027 Class: Identifying the Remaining Must‑Gets
In the modern era of college football, the recruiting cycle is a relentless 24/7 arms race where the standing still is the same as falling behind. While most programs are still flirting with 2027 targets, Mike Locksley is playing chess. By securing 20 “Hard Commits” for the 2027 cycle, Maryland has effectively built the skeleton of an entire class before some sophomores have even picked up their varsity letters.
Currently sitting at No. 37 in the national rankings, the Terrapins are signaling a massive shift in roster construction. This isn’t just about early-cycle momentum. It’s about a calculated, high-volume strategy designed to raise the program’s floor. The “Shell” is being fortified from the inside out, and the data suggests a staff that is more organized than ever.
Maryland’s 2027 recruiting class is already one of the most fascinating early builds in the Big Ten cycle, a 20‑man foundation built on receiver depth, national reach, trench size, and two legitimate blue‑chip cornerstones. But even with all that momentum, the class is still incomplete. The next phase of Maryland’s board, July through August, will determine whether this group becomes simply “solid” or truly transformational.
Below is a full breakdown of what’s missing, why it matters, and how it fits into the broader identity Maryland is constructing.
No. 1: WR/ATH: One More Game‑Breaker to Complete the Takeover
Maryland has already executed one of the boldest position‑group strategies in the country with six wide receivers in a single class. It’s a volume play designed for the transfer‑portal era, ensuring the Terps always have explosive depth regardless of attrition. Even with Myles McAfee (four-star), Davion Vanderbilt (three-star), Kyren Caldwell (three-star), Anthony Henderson (three-star), Alex Fontenot (three-star), and Mason McClure (three-star), the staff still wants one more finishing piece, a true matchup‑breaker.
Why? Because the Big Ten is becoming a “basketball‑on‑grass” league. Locksley wants a room where any of the top four receivers can win a game. The final WR/ATH spot is about securing a player with elite burst or positional versatility, someone who can line up inside, outside, or in the backfield and tilt the field. This isn’t about quantity anymore. It’s about finding the one athlete who raises the ceiling of the entire group.
No. 2: Defensive Back Flexibility: A Hybrid Safety/Nickel
Kenaz Sullivan, the class headliner, gives Maryland a legitimate CB1 with national credibility, but the modern Big Ten requires more than boundary corners. Maryland still needs a hybrid safety/nickel defender who can cover slot receivers, fill alleys, and disguise coverages.
Maryland already holds four defensive back commitments, but none fully match the “Swiss Army knife” profile the staff is targeting, a hybrid safety‑nickel who can cover in space, trigger downhill, and disguise looks. That role has become essential as Big Ten offenses lean heavily on motion, spread formations increasingly require a third coverage‑capable defender, and Maryland’s own scheme thrives on versatility and post‑snap deception. Adding a flexible nickel defender would round out the secondary and give the Terps the adaptability needed to counter the conference’s evolving offensive trends.
No 3: Edge/DL Upside: One More Pass‑Rush Body With Length
Maryland has addressed the interior with Jayden Agberodiola, a 6‑foot-3, 340‑pound space‑eater built for November football, and added versatility with Zeke Walkup and Levi Babin, but the class still lacks one more true pass‑rush body with length and twitch.
This is the missing ingredient for a Big Ten defense. A pass‑rusher who can consistently win one‑on‑one on third down, possesses the frame to grow into a 250‑plus‑pound edge, and complements the interior size Maryland has already secured. While the Terps have made clear strides under Brian Williams, climbing into the conference’s top tier requires more natural, high‑ceiling rushers who can change games in obvious passing situations. That final edge/DL spot is all about upside, landing a long, developmental athlete with the traits to eventually become a true difference‑maker.
No. 4: Offensive Line: The Most Important Remaining Need
This is the big one. Maryland has three offensive linemen committed, including Alabama tackle Caleb Canty, who brings true SEC‑level size and movement skills, but the staff knows the Big Ten is won in the trenches, and the offensive line remains the most important remaining priority. July camps will ultimately shape the board, yet the Terps still need a true left‑tackle frame, more interior depth, and higher‑rated linemen to raise the class’s per‑player average. The offensive line is where Maryland can make its biggest leap. The class has depth everywhere else, but now it needs quality and long‑term upside in the trenches to match.
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Maryland
Afternoon Summertime Storms Across Maryland Today
We’ll see a few afternoon and early evening scattered storms today followed by a drier end to the weekend. Highs today will reach the mid 80s with overnight lows in the upper 60s to lower 70s.
Mainly sunny and drier for the end of the weekend
Sunday is trending drier with lower humidity and a high near 85. Our temperaturs stay warm but comfortable on Monday with afternoon temperatures peaking the mid-80s. The chance of rain remains slim through much of next week.
Hot weather returns to Maryland by midweek
Temperatures start an upward trend beginning Tuesday. By midweek temperatures soar into the mid and upper 90s both Wednesday and Thursday afternoons. Humidity won’t be as bad as the July 4th week but heat indices could still reach near or above 100° during the afternoon hours for a few days. Heat will gradually ease heading into next weekend.
Maryland
Maryland crab prices climb as catches fall
MARYLAND (WBFF) — Art D’Amico remembers when a bushel of crabs cost about $35 in the mid-1970s. Today, the president of the Annapolis Anglers Club pays nearly $400 a bushel — a price he says has climbed by at least $150 in the past five years.
“Everything’s more expensive,” said D’Amico, who has been involved in Chesapeake Bay fishing and crabbing since 1973, adding that he’s never seen crab prices like this before.
The soaring cost reflects more than inflation. Watermen, seafood dealers and economists say higher operating costs, shifting markets and concern about Maryland’s blue crab population are pushing prices higher, making one of the state’s signature summer traditions more expensive. But many Marylanders are still buying crabs, even at record prices.
“It’s definitely not what we’re accustomed to this time of year as far as quantity and price,” said John Ecker, a managing partner of Conrad’s Crabs, which has four locations in Maryland. “I’ve been here for 19 years doing this and, yeah, they’re getting higher.”
Read the full story on The Baltimore Sun.
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