Maryland
UMBC Pitching shuts down Maryland, drop second-straight midweek – WMUC Sports
Baseball is commonly referred to as a game of inches. That was about how far Maryland was away from tying the game in the top of the eighth as Kevin Keister hustled to first base. Keister had just hit a slow ground ball toward second base that was fielded by second baseman Kyle Eddington. Eddington threw to Luke Trythall at first base just as Keister approached the bag.
The first base umpire called Maryland’s captain out.
UMBC (11-15, 3-3 America East) completed the upset beating Maryland (22-12, 4-5 Big Ten), 4-2, Wednesday night. It’s the first time Maryland has lost two back-to-back mid-week games since 2019.
Maryland had chances to earn its 14th come from behind victory, but each time Maryland’s lineup fell short.
The Terps had runners on the corners with one out in the top of the sixth. Keister and Alex Calarco were due up facing UMBC reliever Sam Daniels. Daniels struck out both Keister and Calarco, dissolving Maryland’s threat at tying the game.
Maryland had another chance with a couple of runners on in the eighth but failed to plate any of them. The Terps left six men stranded for the game.
The Terps had six hits in the game, all of them coming from the top five hitters in their lineup. The bottom of the lineup was a combined zero for 14.
Maryland’s pitching was solid in the game with the Terps getting a good start from former Sunday starter, Meade Johnson.
Johnson pitched five innings and allowed three earned runs. The junior right-hander held the Retriever contingent scoreless through the first four innings allowing only two baserunners in that time, both on walks.
The fifth inning was where Johnson struggled, giving up a lead-off homer to Trythall to begin the inning. UMBC scored two more runs in the inning, hitting three singles in consecutive at-bats occupying the base paths for Matthew Best. Best blasted a double that landed in the left field corner driving in two. The two RBI double flipped the lead to UMBC, 3-2.
Maryland scored its two runs in the fourth inning after being retired in order through the first three innings. The fourth started with UMBC making a pitching change replacing Eddie Sargent — who completed the three scoreless innings — with Sam Bell. Bell walked the first two Maryland hitters and was taken out in favor of reliever Ben Craig.
Craig got Eddie Hacopian to hit into a double play and was an out away from keeping the game scoreless. Sam Hojnar was at the plate and swung, hitting a slow dribbler that the catcher, Derek Paris, fielded cleanly and threw to first. Hojnar just beat out the throw from Paris and that hustle allowed Brayden Martin to score from third, giving the Terps their first lead of the game. Hojnar later stole second and scored on a hit from Kevin Keister putting Maryland up two. That ended Maryland’s scoring.
UMBC scored an insurance run in the bottom of the eighth, but it wasn’t needed as the Terps struck out looking twice in the top of the ninth, on their way to being set down in order.
The Terps loss to UMBC breaks a streak of 15 straight wins Maryland has had against its Baltimore neighbors, that dates back to 2007. The loss also marks Maryland’s sixth loss in its past nine games.
The Terps will look to bounce back this weekend as they head to Evanston, Illinois, to play a weekend series against Northwestern. Maryland has lost both of its last two Big Ten series.
Related
Maryland
Youth Reform Act advances out of Maryland Senate committee
Maryland
Maryland family wants answers after boy with special needs breaks leg in class
HYATTSVILLE, Md. — The parents of a 7-year-old first grader with autism are demanding answers from Prince George’s County Public Schools after their son suffered a severe leg fracture while at school — an injury no one has been able to explain.
Daevian Donaldson, a student at Felegy Elementary School in Hyattsville, is recovering from surgery after his femur was snapped and displaced during class last Friday, according to his parents, Daechele Kaufman and Anthony Donaldson.
RELATED | Prince George’s schools faces $150 million budget realignment: Superintendent explains
Kaufman said the day began normally as she dropped Daevian and his twin brother off for first grade. Around 9 a.m., she received an alarming phone call from the school.
“They just said he was on the floor screaming and didn’t want anyone to touch him,” Kaufman said.
She rushed to the school and found her son with obvious trauma to his leg. Neither staff nor Daevian — who communicates differently because he is on the autism spectrum — could explain how the injury occurred, she said.
Doctors later confirmed the severity of the injury through X-rays.
“When I saw the X-ray and one of the nurses said he was going to need surgery, all these wheels started turning,” Kaufman said.
Daevian Donaldson, a student at Felegy Elementary School in Hyattsville, is recovering from surgery after his femur was snapped and displaced during class, according to his parents. (7News)
The parents said they later learned Daevian’s regular teacher was attending a meeting at the time, and the special-needs classroom was being supervised by a substitute. They said no clear explanation has been provided for how a child could suffer such a serious injury without staff noticing what happened.
“It’s definitely neglect,” Kaufman said. “You can’t turn away and come back and say, ‘Oh, you fell,’ for a major injury like that. That’s not acceptable.”
After the family raised concerns publicly, Prince George’s County Public Schools issued a statement saying the district is investigating the incident and has placed the staff member involved on administrative leave.
Anthony Donaldson said that response does not go far enough.
“It needs to be more than one person on administrative leave,” he said. “Several people need to be evaluated on how they’re trained, or they need to be fired.”
Daevian is continuing to recover after surgery but is still experiencing pain, his parents said. As the interview concluded, the 7-year-old quietly asked for his medication.
The family said they want accountability — and assurances that other children, especially those with special needs, will be kept safe.
Maryland
Man killed in Maryland barn fire believed to be ‘The Wire’ actor Bobby J. Brown
The St. Mary’s County Sheriff’s Office is reporting that a 62-year-old man died in a barn fire at his home in Chaptico, Md. It’s believed that the victim was actor Bobby J. Brown, who starred on “The Wire.”
-
World2 days agoExclusive: DeepSeek withholds latest AI model from US chipmakers including Nvidia, sources say
-
Massachusetts3 days agoMother and daughter injured in Taunton house explosion
-
Montana1 week ago2026 MHSA Montana Wrestling State Championship Brackets And Results – FloWrestling
-
Louisiana5 days agoWildfire near Gum Swamp Road in Livingston Parish now under control; more than 200 acres burned
-
Denver, CO3 days ago10 acres charred, 5 injured in Thornton grass fire, evacuation orders lifted
-
Technology7 days agoYouTube TV billing scam emails are hitting inboxes
-
Technology7 days agoStellantis is in a crisis of its own making
-
Politics7 days agoOpenAI didn’t contact police despite employees flagging mass shooter’s concerning chatbot interactions: REPORT