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Originally Released: May 13, 2003 Date Opponent Time/Score RadioTV 3/2 DUKE* (5/7) (Turf) W, 13-7 WMUC 3/8 at Towson (3/17) W, 12-8 WMUC WMAR 3/11 BUCKNELL (3/19) (Turf) W, 14-8 WMUC 3/15 at Stony Brook (3/-) W, 16-4 WUSB 3/22 NO. CAROLINA* (2/13) L, 6-10 3/25 vs.Butler 1 at Boca Raton (7/-)W, 18-9 3/29 at Virginia (7/2) W, 8-7 WMUC 4/5 at Navy (4t/16) W, 9-7 WMUC 4/12 JOHNS HOPKINS (5/1) (ot) L, 5-6 WMUC WMAR 4/18 vs. Duke 2 (5/13) ACC SF L, 6-7 WMUC 4/25 UMBC (5/13) W, 15-8 WMUC WMAR 4/28 GEORGETOWN (4/5) W, 9-5 WMUC 5/3 at Notre Dame (4/18) W, 10-4 5/11 OHIO STATE 3 (3/17) NCAA W, 8-5 WMUCCSTV 5/17 vs. Mass. (3/5) 4 NCAA 12:30 p.m. WMUC ESPNReg. 5/24 NCAA Semifinals at Balt. 11:30 a.m. WMUC ESPN2 5/26 NCAA Final at Baltimore 11 a.m. WMUC ESPN 1-Boca Raton, Fla.; 2-ACC Semifinal at Charlottesville, Va. 3-NCAA First Round at College Park, Md.; 4-NCAA Quar- terfinals at Syracuse, N.Y. Homes games in BOLD CAPS are played at Byrd Stadium, *-ACC games; All dates and times are subject to change. The No. 3 seeded Maryland men's lacrosse returns to the NCAA Tournament Quarterfinals for the first time since 2000, as the Terps will take on No. 5 Massachusetts this Saturday at 12:30 p.m., at the Carrier Dome in Syracuse, N.Y. The game will be the first of a quarterfinal doubleheader as host No. 6 Syracuse faces No. 4 seed Princeton in the second game at 3:30 p.m. Both quarterfinals will be produced by ESPN Regional Television and televised live back to the Baltimore/Washington D.C. area on Comcast SportsNet. The game also airs on regional television to more than 32 million homes including live broadcasts on Empire Sports Network, New England Sports Network (NESN) and Comcast SportsSouth and on a tape delayed basis on Fox SportsNet New York beginning at 7 p.m.. Dave Ryan (play-by-play) and Dale Drypolcher (color commentary) will call the action. The game will also air live on the radio at 88.1 FM (WMUC) in the College Park area and be available on WMUCSports.com. The Terps (11-3 overall) are making their 26th NCAA Tournament appearance, the third most of any school in NCAA history. Maryland has reached the NCAA Quarterfinals 24 times in those 26 showings. It also marks the Terps’ 12th appearance in the Quarterfinals since the field was expanded from the original eight in 1986. The Minutemen (13-2 overall) are making their 15th NCAA appearance and are in the quarterfinals for the ninth time -- fifth since the field expanded in 1986. The winner of the Maryland/Massachusetts game will advance to the 2003 NCAA Lacrosse National Semifinals and will take on the winner of the Virginia/Georgetown game on Saturday, May 24 in Baltimore, Md., at newly renamed M&T Bank Stadium (formerly Ravens Stadium). The semifinal doubleheader will face-off at 11:30 a.m. with the order of the games to be announced on Monday, May 19. Both semifinals will be televised live on ESPN2. The title game will be played on Memorial Day Monday, May 26 at 11 a.m. and be televised on ESPN. With a win over UMass, Maryland would advance to the lacrosse final four for the 17th time (third only to Johns Hopkins and Syracuse). It would also be the Terps’ first trip to the semifinals since the 1998 season. Maryland has won the national champion- ship twice (1973 and 1975). Massachusetts has never advanced to the lacrosse semifinals since the tournament started in 1971. The Terps advanced to the NCAA Quarterfinals with an 8-5 victory over No. 17 Ohio State last Sunday, May 11 at Byrd Stadium. Maryland is now 33-23 all-time in NCAA tournament games. Maryland received well-balanced scoring -- some from unlikely sources in the win over the Buckeyes. Senior captain Mike Mollot (Holbrook, N.Y.) led the way with two goals and an assist and ACC Rookie of the Year Joe Walters (Rochester, N.Y.) scored his team-high 32 goal in the win. To show the Terps’ balance, all four members of the Terps’ second midfield scored. Sean Leary (Troy, Mich.), Matt Brock (Manakin-Sabot, Va.) and Willy Passavia (Stony Brook, N.Y.) scored the game’s first three goals and Jamie Daue (Lutherville, Md.) notched his fourth goal of the season after Mollot’s first tally in the game. The Terps’ defense continued to be stellar holding Ohio State to a season-low five goals. Maryland has held each of its last three opponents to five goals or fewer as senior goalie Danny McCormick (McLean, Va.) has a 5.28 goals against average in the last three games. Junior defenseman Lee Zink (Rowayton, Conn.) held the nation’s fifth-leading scorer Curtis Smith without a point. That marked the third straight game, Zink has shutout his man. Fellow All-American defenders Michael Howley (Wantagh, N.Y.) and Chris Passavia (Stony Brook, N.Y.) have dominated in helping Maryland to force 86 turnovers over the last three games (28.7 to/pg). Over its current four-game winning streak the Terps have outscored its opponents 42-22 including holding No. 5 Georgetown to just five goals and No. 18 Notre Dame to just a season-low four goals. university of 2728 Comcast Center College Park, Md. 20742 Ph: (301) 314-7062 Fax: (301) 314-9094 • Contact: Jason Yellin • [email protected] Men’s Lacrosse SID: Jason Yellin E-mail address: [email protected] SID Phone/Fax: 301-314-7062/301-314-9094 Website: www.umterps.com Men’s Lacrosse SID: Chris Forman E-mail address: [email protected] SID Phone/Fax: 413-545-2439/413-545-1556 Website: www.umassathletics.com 2003 Record: 11-3 (2-1 ACC) 2002 Record: 9-4 (1-2 ACC) 2003 Ranks:3rd (USILA), 3rd (Media), 3rd (Sun/WMAR) Head Coach: Dave Cottle (Salisbury ‘78) Coach’s Record: 201-77 (.723)/21st season Coach’s Record at UM: 20-7 (.741)/2nd season Ass’t Coach: Dave Slafkosky (Johns Hopkins ‘74) Ass’t Coach: Paul Cantabene (Loyola ‘93) Ass’t Coach: Steve Gorski (UMBC ‘96) Leading Scorer (G-A=P): Joe Walters (32-10=42) 2003 Record: 13-2 (3-2 ECAC) 2002 Record: 11-3 (5-0 ECAC) 2003 Ranks: 5th (USILA), 6th (Media), 6th (Sun/WMAR) Head Coach: Greg Cannella (Massachusetts ‘88) Coach’s Record: 77-46 (.626)/9th season Coach’s Record at UMass: 77-46 (.626)/9th season Ass’t Coach: Andy Shay (LeMoyne ‘92) Ass’t Coach: Chris Gabrielli (Massachusetts ‘01) Leading Scorers (G-A=P): Jeff Zywicki (41-21=62) Team W-L Pct. ACC Pct. #1 MARYLAND 11-3 .786 2-1 .667 #2 Virginia 12-2 .857 2-1 .667 #3 North Carolina 7-6 .538 2-1 .667 #4 Duke 8-7 .533 0-3 .000 2003 ACC Tournament at Charlottesville: Apr. 18: ACC Semifinals - Duke 7, Maryland 6 Virginia 13, North Carolina 12 (OT) Apr. 20: ACC Championship - Virginia 12, Duke 6 2 Brian Hunt Gr., 6-0,181 19-10-29 157 career pts., 15 hat tricks 11 Dan LaMonica Jr., 5-10,170 11-20-31 121 pts., most by Jr. in ACC 15 Joe Walters ACC ROY Fr., 6-0,185 32-10-42Most goals by UM Fr.since ‘95 1 Mike Mollot ACC R-Sr., 5-11,19015-18-33 166 career pts. - 14th at UM 22 Justin Smith Jr., 6-1,220 11-4-15 28 goals in last 21 games 34 Ryan Moran ACC Sr., 5-11,180 22-7-29 37 career goals in last 25 g. 25 Sean Leary Sr., 6-5, 240 5-0-5Scored game’s 1st goal vs. OSU 27 Matt Brock R-Sr., 5-10,1831-3-4 First goal of year vs. Ohio State 28 Willy Passavia Sr., 6-5,195 5-3-8 Scored vs. Ohio State 33 Jamie Daue Sr., 6-5,195 4-4-8 Scored vs. Ohio State 13 Brett Harper (LSM)Sr., 5-11,186 34 GB, 27 CT Second on team in CT 6 Drew Virk (F-O) Jr., 6-1, 200 36/87, 28 GB Starting F-O last 4 gms. 18 Paul Gillette (SSM)Jr., 5-10,165 57 GB, 15 CT Team leader in GB’s 29 Lee Zink Jr., 6-4,195 38 GB, 28 CT13 CT’s in last 3 games 44 Chris Passavia ACC Jr., 6-1,210 40 GB, 21 CT 100th GB vs. UMBC 42 Michael Howley ACC Sr., 6-1,205 40 GB, 22 CT 171 career groundballs 3 Danny McCormick R-Sr., 5-9,170 6.72 GAA, 146 sv.20-7 rec. last 2 yrs. ACC - All-ACC selection; ACC ROY - ACC Rookie of the Year May 10: Johns Hopkins 14, Army 2; Towson 11, Penn State 6; Princeton 16, Albany 10; Virginia 19, Mt. St. Mary’s 8 May 11: Georgetown 9, Rutgers 6; UMass 9, Hofstra 6; Maryland 8, Ohio State 5; Syracuse 13, Dartmouth 11 May 17: #3 Maryland vs. Massachusetts, 12:30 p.m. #4 Princeton at Syracuse, 3:30 p.m. May 18: Towson at #1 Johns Hopkins, 12:30 p.m. #2 Virginia vs. Georgetown, 3:30 p.m.

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Originally Released: May 13, 2003

Date Opponent Time/Score RadioTV3/2 DUKE* (5/7) (Turf) W, 13-7 WMUC3/8 at Towson (3/17) W, 12-8 WMUC WMAR3/11 BUCKNELL (3/19) (Turf) W, 14-8 WMUC3/15 at Stony Brook (3/-) W, 16-4 WUSB3/22 NO. CAROLINA* (2/13) L, 6-103/25 vs.Butler1 at Boca Raton (7/-)W, 18-93/29 at Virginia (7/2) W, 8-7 WMUC4/5 at Navy (4t/16) W, 9-7 WMUC4/12 JOHNS HOPKINS (5/1) (ot) L, 5-6 WMUC WMAR4/18 vs. Duke2 (5/13) ACC SF L, 6-7 WMUC4/25 UMBC (5/13) W, 15-8 WMUC WMAR4/28 GEORGETOWN (4/5) W, 9-5 WMUC5/3 at Notre Dame (4/18) W, 10-45/11 OHIO STATE3 (3/17) NCAA W, 8-5 WMUCCSTV5/17 vs. Mass. (3/5)4 NCAA 12:30 p.m. WMUC ESPNReg.5/24 NCAA Semifinals at Balt. 11:30 a.m. WMUC ESPN25/26 NCAA Final at Baltimore 11 a.m. WMUC ESPN1-Boca Raton, Fla.; 2-ACC Semifinal at Charlottesville, Va.3-NCAA First Round at College Park, Md.; 4-NCAA Quar-terfinals at Syracuse, N.Y.Homes games in BOLD CAPS are played at Byrd Stadium,*-ACC games; All dates and times are subject to change.

• The No. 3 seeded Maryland men's lacrosse returns to the NCAA Tournament Quarterfinals for the first time since 2000, as theTerps will take on No. 5 Massachusetts this Saturday at 12:30 p.m., at the Carrier Dome in Syracuse, N.Y. The game will be thefirst of a quarterfinal doubleheader as host No. 6 Syracuse faces No. 4 seed Princeton in the second game at 3:30 p.m.

• Both quarterfinals will be produced by ESPN Regional Television and televised live back to the Baltimore/Washington D.C. areaon Comcast SportsNet. The game also airs on regional television to more than 32 million homes including live broadcasts onEmpire Sports Network, New England Sports Network (NESN) and Comcast SportsSouth and on a tape delayed basis on FoxSportsNet New York beginning at 7 p.m.. Dave Ryan (play-by-play) and Dale Drypolcher (color commentary) will call the action.The game will also air live on the radio at 88.1 FM (WMUC) in the College Park area and be available on WMUCSports.com.

• The Terps (11-3 overall) are making their 26th NCAA Tournament appearance, the third most of any school in NCAA history.Maryland has reached the NCAA Quarterfinals 24 times in those 26 showings. It also marks the Terps’ 12th appearance in theQuarterfinals since the field was expanded from the original eight in 1986. The Minutemen (13-2 overall) are making their 15thNCAA appearance and are in the quarterfinals for the ninth time -- fifth since the field expanded in 1986.

• The winner of the Maryland/Massachusetts game will advance to the 2003 NCAA Lacrosse National Semifinals and will take onthe winner of the Virginia/Georgetown game on Saturday, May 24 in Baltimore, Md., at newly renamed M&T Bank Stadium(formerly Ravens Stadium). The semifinal doubleheader will face-off at 11:30 a.m. with the order of the games to be announcedon Monday, May 19. Both semifinals will be televised live on ESPN2. The title game will be played on Memorial Day Monday, May26 at 11 a.m. and be televised on ESPN.

• With a win over UMass, Maryland would advance to the lacrosse final four for the 17th time (third only to Johns Hopkins andSyracuse). It would also be the Terps’ first trip to the semifinals since the 1998 season. Maryland has won the national champion-ship twice (1973 and 1975). Massachusetts has never advanced to the lacrosse semifinals since the tournament started in 1971.

• The Terps advanced to the NCAA Quarterfinals with an 8-5 victory over No. 17 Ohio State last Sunday, May 11 at Byrd Stadium.Maryland is now 33-23 all-time in NCAA tournament games.

• Maryland received well-balanced scoring -- some from unlikely sources in the win over the Buckeyes. Senior captain Mike Mollot(Holbrook, N.Y.) led the way with two goals and an assist and ACC Rookie of the Year Joe Walters (Rochester, N.Y.) scored histeam-high 32 goal in the win. To show the Terps’ balance, all four members of the Terps’ second midfield scored. Sean Leary(Troy, Mich.), Matt Brock (Manakin-Sabot, Va.) and Willy Passavia (Stony Brook, N.Y.) scored the game’s first three goals andJamie Daue (Lutherville, Md.) notched his fourth goal of the season after Mollot’s first tally in the game.

• The Terps’ defense continued to be stellar holding Ohio State to a season-low five goals. Maryland has held each of its last threeopponents to five goals or fewer as senior goalie Danny McCormick (McLean, Va.) has a 5.28 goals against average in the last threegames. Junior defenseman Lee Zink (Rowayton, Conn.) held the nation’s fifth-leading scorer Curtis Smith without a point. Thatmarked the third straight game, Zink has shutout his man. Fellow All-American defenders Michael Howley (Wantagh, N.Y.) andChris Passavia (Stony Brook, N.Y.) have dominated in helping Maryland to force 86 turnovers over the last three games (28.7 to/pg).

• Over its current four-game winning streak the Terps have outscored its opponents 42-22 including holding No. 5 Georgetown tojust five goals and No. 18 Notre Dame to just a season-low four goals.

university of

2728 Comcast Center • College Park, Md. 20742 • Ph: (301) 314-7062 • Fax: (301) 314-9094 • Contact: Jason Yellin • [email protected]

Men’s Lacrosse SID: Jason YellinE-mail address: [email protected] Phone/Fax: 301-314-7062/301-314-9094Website: www.umterps.com

Men’s Lacrosse SID: Chris FormanE-mail address: [email protected] Phone/Fax: 413-545-2439/413-545-1556Website: www.umassathletics.com

2003 Record: 11-3 (2-1 ACC)2002 Record: 9-4 (1-2 ACC)2003 Ranks:3rd (USILA), 3rd (Media), 3rd (Sun/WMAR)Head Coach: Dave Cottle (Salisbury ‘78)Coach’s Record: 201-77 (.723)/21st seasonCoach’s Record at UM: 20-7 (.741)/2nd seasonAss’t Coach: Dave Slafkosky (Johns Hopkins ‘74)Ass’t Coach: Paul Cantabene (Loyola ‘93)Ass’t Coach: Steve Gorski (UMBC ‘96)Leading Scorer (G-A=P): Joe Walters (32-10=42)

2003 Record: 13-2 (3-2 ECAC)2002 Record: 11-3 (5-0 ECAC)2003 Ranks: 5th (USILA), 6th (Media), 6th (Sun/WMAR)Head Coach: Greg Cannella (Massachusetts ‘88)Coach’s Record: 77-46 (.626)/9th seasonCoach’s Record at UMass: 77-46 (.626)/9th seasonAss’t Coach: Andy Shay (LeMoyne ‘92)Ass’t Coach: Chris Gabrielli (Massachusetts ‘01)Leading Scorers (G-A=P): Jeff Zywicki (41-21=62)

Team W-L Pct. ACC Pct.#1 MARYLAND 11-3 .786 2-1 .667#2 Virginia 12-2 .857 2-1 .667#3 North Carolina 7-6 .538 2-1 .667#4 Duke 8-7 .533 0-3 .0002003 ACC Tournament at Charlottesville:

Apr. 18: ACC Semifinals - Duke 7, Maryland 6 Virginia 13, North Carolina 12 (OT)Apr. 20: ACC Championship - Virginia 12, Duke 6

2 Brian Hunt Gr., 6-0,181 19-10-29 157 career pts., 15 hat tricks11 Dan LaMonica Jr., 5-10,170 11-20-31 121 pts., most by Jr. in ACC15 Joe Walters ACC ROY Fr., 6-0,185 32-10-42Most goals by UM Fr.since ‘95

1 Mike Mollot ACC R-Sr., 5-11,19015-18-33 166 career pts. - 14th at UM22 Justin Smith Jr., 6-1,220 11-4-15 28 goals in last 21 games34 Ryan Moran ACC Sr., 5-11,180 22-7-29 37 career goals in last 25 g.

25 Sean Leary Sr., 6-5, 240 5-0-5Scored game’s 1st goal vs. OSU27 Matt Brock R-Sr., 5-10,1831-3-4 First goal of year vs. Ohio State28 Willy Passavia Sr., 6-5,195 5-3-8 Scored vs. Ohio State33 Jamie Daue Sr., 6-5,195 4-4-8 Scored vs. Ohio State

13 Brett Harper (LSM)Sr., 5-11,186 34 GB, 27 CT Second on team in CT6 Drew Virk (F-O) Jr., 6-1, 200 36/87, 28 GB Starting F-O last 4 gms.18 Paul Gillette (SSM)Jr., 5-10,165 57 GB, 15 CT Team leader in GB’s

29 Lee Zink Jr., 6-4,195 38 GB, 28 CT13 CT’s in last 3 games44 Chris Passavia ACC Jr., 6-1,210 40 GB, 21 CT 100th GB vs. UMBC42 Michael Howley ACC Sr., 6-1,205 40 GB, 22 CT 171 career groundballs

3 Danny McCormick R-Sr., 5-9,170 6.72 GAA, 146 sv.20-7 rec. last 2 yrs.ACC - All-ACC selection; ACC ROY - ACC Rookie of the Year

May 10:Johns Hopkins 14, Army 2; Towson 11, Penn State 6;Princeton 16, Albany 10; Virginia 19, Mt. St. Mary’s 8

May 11: Georgetown 9, Rutgers 6; UMass 9, Hofstra 6;Maryland 8, Ohio State 5; Syracuse 13, Dartmouth 11

May 17: #3 Maryland vs. Massachusetts, 12:30 p.m.#4 Princeton at Syracuse, 3:30 p.m.

May 18: Towson at #1 Johns Hopkins, 12:30 p.m.#2 Virginia vs. Georgetown, 3:30 p.m.

No. Team Points Record LW1. Johns Hopkins 11-1 100 (5) 12. Virginia 11-2 95 23. MARYLAND 10-3 90 44. Princeton 10-3 82 65. Syracuse 8-5 75 96. Massachusetts 12-2 74 37. Rutgers 10-4 72 88. Georgetown 10-3 70 59. Towson 8-5 61 1110. North Carolina 7-6 51 1011. Hofstra 11-5 48 712. Penn State 7-6 46 1613. Duke 8-7 35 1314. Cornell 9-4 31 1415T. Ohio State 9-4 27 1215T UMBC 7-6 27 1517. Dartmouth 11-2 23 1818. Notre Dame 9-5 18 1719. Villanova 10-5 5 2020. Loyola 7-6 4 19Also receiving votes: Bucknell 2, Denver, Navy

No. Name Record Points Previous1. Johns Hopkins 11-1 260 (13) 12. Virginia 11-2 246 23. MARYLAND 10-3 235 44. Princeton 10-3 221 65. Syracuse 8-5 201 86. Massachusetts 12-2 197 37. Georgetown 10-3 181 58. Rutgers 10-4 173 99. Towson 8-5 149 1210. Hofstra 11-5 135 711. North Carolina 7-6 132 1012. Cornell 9-4 109 1313. Duke 8-7 107 1114. Penn State 7-6 97 1615. Dartmouth 11-2 70 1716. UMBC 7-6 62 1417. Ohio State 9-4 56 1518. Notre Dame 9-5 42 1919. Loyola 7-6 28 1820. Navy 6-7 14 20Also rec. votes: Denver 5, Bucknell 4, Villanova 1, Army 1.

’ • •

No. Name Record Points Previous1 Johns Hopkins 11-1 180 (9) 12 Virginia 11-2 171 23 MARYLAND 10-3 162 44 Princeton 10-3 153 65 Massachusetts 12-2 136 36 Syracuse 8-5 134 107 Rutgers 10-4 123 88 Georgetown 10-3 121 59 Towson 8-5 99 1110 Hofstra 11-5 92 711 Penn State 7-6 84 12T12 Cornell 9-4 74 913 North Carolina 7-6 70 1614 Duke 8-7 68 12T15 UMBC 7-6 51 1416 Dartmouth 11-2 46 1517 Ohio State 9-4 45 1718 Notre Dame 9-5 22 1819 Loyola 7-6 20 1920 Army 8-7 11 RVOthers rec. votes: Navy, Villanova, Denver, Bucknell, Yale

• The win over Notre Dame gave the Terps their 10th win of the season marking the 20th time in the 78 year history ofMaryland men’s lacrosse, that the Terps have won at least 10 games in a season. Overall, Maryland has a 636-204-4 (75.6win percentage) record in lacrosse without having ever posted a losing record in a season, ever.

• The win over Notre Dame gave head coach Dave Cottle has 200th career win. Cottle has a 20-7 (74.1 win percentage)record at Maryland in two seasons after he went 181-70 in 19 years at Loyola from 1983-2001. He is currently third on theactive career win percentage list, winning 72.3 percent of his games and ranks him tied with Duke’s Mike Pressler for ninthamong all active coaches in career coaching wins.

• The Terps have the nation’s third-team goals against average and best of any team in the tournament, allowing just 6.79goals per game (95 in 14 games). Last season the Terps tied with Cornell for the No. 1 scoring defense allowing just 7.00goals per game. UMass comes into the game with the nation’s third-highest scoring offense at 12.53 goals per game,which should make for some interesting match-ups.

• Maryland has outscored its opponents 41-12 in the second quarter and 113-61 from the second quarter on. In 14 games,the Terps have held six opponents scoreless in the second quarter, with every instance coming in the last 12 games.

’ ’• Maryland is making its 26th overall NCAA Tournament ap-

pearance in 2003. The Terps have played in the third-mosttournaments since the event began in 1971.

• The Terps have captured two NCAA championships, 1973and 1975. Earlier this season, the team celebrated the 30thAnniversary of the 1973 at halftime of the Johns Hopkinsgame on April 12, as more than 25 players from that teamcame back to Byrd Stadium.

• Only Johns Hopkins and Virginia have played in more. Thetop-seeded Blue Jays have appeared in the last 32 tourna-ments, only missing the first event in 1971. Virginia hasplayed in 27 NCAA Tournaments, playing in the last 11.

• Massachusetts is in its 15th NCAA Tournament and sec-ond in a row. Its 15th appearances are fifth most among all teams left in the tournament and is eighth-best all-time.

’• The Terps have won the third-most Division I NCAA Tournament games, com-

piling a 33-23 overall record in 56 games. Only Johns Hopkins (48-24) andSyracuse (43-15) have won more Division I games.

• Maryland is fifth by percentage (.592) among all teams ever to play in the tour-nament (Princeton, Syracuse, Johns Hopkins and Cornell are ahead).

• The Terps have captured two titles. Only six other schools have ever won theNCAA Championship: Syracuse (8), Johns Hopkins (7), Princeton (6), NorthCarolina (4), Cornell (3), Virginia (2).

• UMass has a 5-14 record in NCAA Tournament games, but has won a game ineach of its last three berths (1997, 2002 and 2003). They have never reached the NCAA semifinals.

• Maryland is the No. 3 seed in the NCAA Tournament for the sixth time and second in three years. Maryland was previouslya No. 3 seed in 1971, 1975, 1977, 1978 and 2001.

• The last time Maryland won the NCAA championship in 1975, the Terps were seeded No. 3. In 12 games as the No. 3 seed,Maryland has a 8-4 record, following its first round win over Ohio State on May 11.

• Prior to this year, Maryland fell to No. 6 seed Towson, 12-11 at Byrd Stadium, the last time they were a No. 3 seed in 2001.That game was the finale for coach Dick Edell, who retired the following fall due to health problems.

• The Terps and Minutemen have played four common teams this season with each team winning all four games.

• Maryland defeated Stony Brook (16-4 on March 15), Navy (9-7 on April 5), UMBC (15-8 on April 25) and Georgetown (9-5on April 28). The Terps outscored those four opponents by a score of 49-24.

• UMass defeated Stony Brook (17-7 on March 1), Navy (10-9 on March 8), UMBC (11-8 on April 5) and Georgetown (11-8on April 19). Overall, the Minutemen have a cumulative score of 49-32 against the same four teams.

• Maryland is 4-1 against teams which qualified for the 2003 NCAA Tournamentwith victories coming against No. 2 seed Virginia (8-7 on March 29), Towson (12-8 on March 8) , Georgetown (9-5 on Apr. 28) and Ohio State in the NCAA FirstRound (8-5 on May 11). The Terps’ only loss came to No. 1 Johns Hopkins (6-5on April 12 in overtime)

• The Terps have a 80.0 win percentage against teams in the field. Only JohnsHopkins has a better percentage at 87.5, having won seven of eight against thefield.

Date Coaches Ins. Lax LaxPowerSun/Ch2Preseason 5 -- 5 5March 3 3 5 3 3TMarch 10 3 4 3 3March 17 2 4 2 2March 24 7 7 7 8TMarch 31 4T 4 3 4April 7 5 4 4 4April 14 5 5 4 5April 21 5 5 5 6April 28 4 4 4T 4May 3 3 3 3 3

‘1. Johns Hopkins 32 (72-03)2. Virginia 27 (71-74, 78-86, 88, 90-91, 93-01)3. MARYLAND 26 (71-79, 81-83, 86-87, 89, 91-98, 00-01, 03)4. Syracuse 23 (79-81, 83-03)5. Massachusetts15 (76-77, 79, 81, 86-91, 93, 95, 97, 02, 03)6. Princeton 14 (90-03)7. Army 13 (71-73, 78, 81-85, 87, 93, 96, 03)8. Hofstra 12 (71, 73-75, 78, 93, 96-97, 99-01, 03)9. Rutgers 8 (72, 74-75, 84, 86, 90-91, 03)10T. Towson 7 (89, 91-92, 94, 96, 01, 03)10T. Georgetown 7 (97-03)2003 Newcomers: Albany, Dartmouth, Mount St. Mary’s, Ohio State,Penn StateEliminated Teams in Italics

1. Johns Hopkins 48-24 .6672. Syracuse 43-15 .7413. MARYLAND 33-23 .5924. Virginia 28-24 .5385. Princeton 26-7 .7886. Towson 7-6 .5387. Georgetown 6-6 .5008. Massachusetts 5-14 .263

1.Johns Hopkins 7-1 .8752. MARYLAND 4-1 .8003T.Massachusetts 5-2 .7143T. Virginia 5-2 .7145. Princeton 5-3 .6256. Georgetown 4-3 .5717. Syracuse 4-5 .4448. Towson 3-4 .429First Round Games Included

’ • •• UMass is 5-2 against the field of 16 with wins over Hofstra -- twice (14-7 on March 23 and 9-6 on May 11 in the NCAA First

Round), Albany (15-5 on March 18), Georgetown (11-8 on April 19), Syracuse (14-13 in OT on April 26). Their only twolosses this season came at the hands of teams in the tournament. They fell to Penn State (11-10 on March 29) andRutgers (12-9 on May 3).

• This is Dave Cottle’s first NCAA Tournament appearance as the headcoach of Maryland. He is coaching his 15th team to the NCAA Tourna-ment, with the previous 14 coming during his stint at Loyola. All 14 ofhis appearances came consecutively starting with the 1988 season andgoing through the 2001 campaign. Overall, Cottle is 9-14 in NCAA Tour-nament games, which ranks him fifth among all coaches in the 2003Tournament in wins. Only Princeton’s Bill Tierney (26-7), Virginia’s DomStarsia (16-14), Syracuse’s John Desko (12-2) , and Towson’s TonySeaman (11-15) have more tournament wins to their credit than Cottle.

• With his 15th tournament appearance, Cottle now ranks fifth all-time inmost NCAA Tournament Division I appearances as a head coach be-hind only Syracuse’s Roy Simmons Jr. (19), former Maryland coachDick Edell (17), Towson’s Tony Seaman (16) and Virginia’s Dom Starsia (16). With his streak of 14 consecutive tourna-ments while at Loyola, Cottle is second only to Simmons Jr. (19), for the longest consecutive steak.

• Cottle has now led his teams to the NCAA Quarterfinals on 13 occasions and to the NCAA semifinals twice with anappearance in the 1990 championship game where Loyola fell to Syracuse, 21-9. He also reached the NCAA semifinals,as the No. 1 seed with Loyola, but lost to Maryland, 19-8 at Byrd Stadium on May 23, 1998.

• Cottle has a perfect 7-0 coaching record against Massachusetts winning all of those games while he was at Loyola. In hisonly NCAA game against Massachusetts, Cottle led the Greyhounds to a 20-9 victory at Baltimore in the 1991 NCAA firstround. Overall, Cottle-coached teams have outscored UMass 102-55 in the seven games spanning from 1988 to 2000.Cottle has a 4-0 record against UMass head coach Greg Cannella winning consecutive games from 1997-2000.

• This will be the Terps’ second trip to Syracuse this season, as they scrimmaged the Orangemen back on Feb. 13 at theCarrier Dome. Cottle set up the game so that Maryland would become acclimated to playing a game in the dome, some-thing no member of the current Terps had done in a college game. He did this in anticipation of Maryland having to play anNCAA Tournament game at the dome. Lo and behold, the Terps were sent back to Syracuse by the NCAA committee, butnow have some experience in playing in the unique setting.

• In that preseason game, Maryland lost a high-scoring 15-14 battle as freshman sensation Joe Walters scored six goalsand added one assist. Ryan Moran had four goals and an assist as well.

• Overall, this will be Maryland’s third-ever game in a dome -- all of which have come in the Carrier Dome. The Terps losttheir first and only game against Syracuse in the Dome, a 12-5 decision, in the NCAA Semifinals on May 21, 1983.Maryland lost its only other game at the Dome, a 15-11 defeat to Towson also in the NCAA Semifinals on May 25, 1991.

• Maryland and Massachusetts have played just once before, a 13-4 Terp win in Amherst on May 8, 1983. In that win thirdteam All-American midfielder Kevin Sullivan scored three goals to lead Maryland . Tim Worstell also had two goals. Inthe nets, Kevin O’Leary (a current NCAA referee) made 15 saves as Maryland outshot UMass, 54-34.

• Against teams from the state of Massachusetts, the Terps are a perfect with a combined record of 35-0. They are neverlost to Boston College (1-0), Harvard (25-0), UMass (1-0), M.I.T. (2-0) or Williams College (6-0).

• UMass head coach Greg Cannella actually began his college la-crosse career at Maryland. He played in 10 games in the 1984season scoring three goals and adding three more assists. Afterthat season, the native Long Islander returned home to play a yearat Nassau C.C., where he was a first-team All-American and fol-lowed that with two years at UMass, where he graduated in 1988.

• Maryland does not have any players from the state of Massachu-setts on it roster, but UMass has two Free State natives in JustinWalker (Baltimore, Md.) and Jake Deane (Annapolis, Md.).

• With vast location differences the teams do not have many former high school teammates, just six Terps played on the sameteam high school teams as six Minutemen at four schools. Five of the 12 players (Tyler Hereth and Teddy Murphy fromMaryland and Scott Hinchney, Mike Nobile and Jack Reid of UMass) went to Glastonbury High School in Connecticut.

• Terp brothers Chris Passavia and Willy Passavia along with UMass’s Derek Kunkel won the New York State high schoolchampionship together at Ward Melville High School in 1999.

• Maryland enters the UMass game with a perfect 9-0 record against ECAC Lacrosse League foes since the league wasformed in 2000. This season, the Terps went 3-0 against ECAC teams with wins over UMBC, Navy and Georgetown.Maryland also picked up a pair of wins in each of the last three seasons against Navy and UMBC. Maryland has not facedMassachusetts, Penn State or Rutgers since the league started in 2000.

School Maryland MassachusettsGlastonbury (Conn.) Tyler Hereth Scott Hinchey

Teddy Murphy Mike NobileJack Reid

Haverford (Pa.) T.C. Behm Dane CollinsSt. Paul’s (Md.) Brent Hargest Matt LatchfordWard Melville (N.Y.) Chris Passavia Derek Kunkel

Willy Passavia

1971 (National Finalists)First Round/Quarterfinals: #3 Maryland 10, #6 Air Force 1Semifinals: #3 Maryland 10, #2 Navy 7Championship: #1 Cornell 12, #3 Maryland 61972 (Semifinals)First Round/Quarterfinals: #1 Maryland 9, #8 Rutgers 3Semifinals: #4 Johns Hopkins 9, #1 Maryland 61973 (NATIONAL CHAMPIONS)First Round/Quarterfinals: #1 Maryland 16, #8 Brown 4Semifinals: #1 Maryland 18, #4 Wash. & Lee 5Championship: #1 Maryland 10, #2 J. Hopkins 9, 2OT1974 (National Finalists)First Round/Quarterfinals: #1 Maryland 12, #8 Rutgers 6Semifinals: #1 Maryland 19, #4 Cornell 10Championship: #2 Johns Hopkins 17, #1 Maryland 121975 (NATIONAL CHAMPIONS)First Round/Quarterfinals: #3 Maryland 19, #6 Hofstra 11Semifinals: #3 Maryland 15, #7 Wash. & Lee 5Championship: #3 Maryland 20, #4 Navy 131976 (National Finalists)First Round/Quarterfinals: #1 Maryland 17, #8 Brown 8Semifinals: #1 Maryland 22, #4 Navy 11Championship: #2 Cornell 16, #1 Maryland 13, OT1977 (Semifinals)First Round/Quarterfinals: #3 Maryland 14, #6 Wash. & Lee 8Semifinals: #2 Johns Hopkins 16, #3 Maryland 91978 (Semifinals)First Round/Quarterfinals: #3 Maryland 15, #6 Virginia 10Semifinals: #2 Johns Hopkins 17, #3 Maryland 111979 (National Finalists)First Round/Quarterfinals: #2 Maryland 16, #7 Syracuse 13Semifinals: #2 Maryland 15, #3 Navy 10Championship: #1 Johns Hopkins 15, #2 Maryland 91981 (First Round)First Round/Quarterfinals:#1 Johns Hopkins 19, #8 Maryland 141982 (First Round)First Round/Quarterfinals:#2 Johns Hopkins 14, #7 Maryland 91983 (Semifinals)First Round/Quarterfinals: #6 Maryland 13, #3 Virginia 4Semifinals: #2 Syracuse 12, #6 Maryland 51986 (Quarterfinals)First Round: ByeQuarterfinals: #5 North Carolina 12, #4 Maryland 101987 (Semifinals)First Round: ByeQuarterfinals: #1 Maryland 12, #8 Penn 8Semifinals: #4 Johns Hopkins 13, #1 Maryland 81989 (Semifinals)First Round: ByeQuarterfinals: #4 Maryland 12, #5 Adelphi 11, OTSemifinals: #1 Syracuse 18, #4 Maryland 81991 (Semifinals)First Round: #7 Maryland 13, Rutgers 7Quarterfinals: #7 Maryland 16, #2 Brown 13Semifinals: Towson State 15, #7 Maryland 111992 (Quarterfinals)First Round: #6 Maryland 13, Duke 11Quarterfinals: #3 Princeton 11, #6 Maryland 101993 (First Round)First Round: #8 Army 15, Maryland 111994 (First Round)First Round: #8 Duke 14, Maryland 91995 (National Finalists)First Round: ByeQuarterfinals: #4 Maryland 14, Notre Dame 11Semifinals: #4 Maryland 16, #1 Johns Hopkins 8Championship: #3 Syracuse 13, #4 Maryland 91996 (Quarterfinals)First Round: ByeQuarterfinals: #7 Johns Hopkins 9, #2 Maryland 71997 (National Finalists)First Round: Maryland 14, #7 Georgetown 10Quarterfinals: Maryland 10, #2 Virginia 9Semifinals: Maryland 18, #3 Syracuse 17Championship: #1 Princeton 19, Maryland 71998 (National Finalists)First Round: #5 Maryland 18, Butler 10Quarterfinals: #5 Maryland 11, #4 Johns Hopkins 10, OTSemifinals: #5 Maryland 19, #1 Loyola 8Championship: #2 Princeton 15, #5 Maryland 52000 (Quarterfinals)First Round: #6 Maryland 14, Hofstra 12Quarterfinals #3 Princeton 10, #6 Maryland 72001 (Quarterfinals)First Round: ByeQuarterfinals #6 Towson 12, #3 Maryland 112003First Round: #3 Maryland 8, Ohio State 5Quarterfinals: #3 Maryland vs. Massachusetts, 12:30 p.m.

All-Time Record: 26 appearances - 33-23 (.589)

NCAA Division I Coaching Apperances (All-Time)1. Roy Simmons Jr., Syracuse 192. Dick Edell, Army & Maryland 173T. Tony Seaman, Penn, JHU, Towson163T. Dom Starsia, Brown & Virginia 165. Dave Cottle, Loyola & Maryland 15

NCAA Division I Coaching Victories (Active)1. Bill Tierney, Princeton 262. Dom Starsia, Brown & Virginia 163T. John Desko, Syracuse 123T. Tony Seaman, Penn, JHU, Towson115. Dave Cottle, Loyola & Maryland 9

’ • •

• Heading into the Ohio State game, only 13 current members of the Maryland rosterhad ever played in an NCAA Tournament game as Maryland did not make the tourna-ment last season. But now the current Terps have one win under their belts as theyface UMass this Saturday.

• Senior midfielder Mike Mollot leads all players in scoring in NCAA games as he hassix goals and six assists in four games. He had a career day with three goals and fourassists for a career-high seven points against Hofstra in the 2000 first round at UMBC.He also had a goal and assist vs. Towson in the 2001 quarterfinals. In the 2003 firstround against Ohio State, he had two goals and an assist.

• Junior attacker Dan LaMonica is second on the team in points in NCAA games. Inthat 2001 Towson quarterfinal game, he posted a team-high five points on two goalsand three assists. He had three assists in the win over Ohio State in the 2003 first round.

• Senior midfielder Jamie Daue is the only other Terps with more than one goal, as he scored in the 2001 Towson game andvs. the Buckeyes in 2003.

• Joe Walters, Matt Brock, Sean Leary, Ryan Moran and Willy Passavia all scored goals in the win over Ohio State.

• Prior to the 13-save effort vs. Ohio State, goalie Danny McCormick had played the final 46 seconds of the Terps’ 2000NCAA quarterfinal loss to Princeton for his only postseason action.

• As the Terps and Minutemen have not played in 20 years, it would be expected that no member of either team has facedthe other. But, Maryland has two players who played against UMass while they were playing at other programs.

• Junior midfielder Justin Smith (University Park, Md.) actually set his career for points in a game with five against UMasswhile he was a sophomore at UMBC. He tallied a hat trick and added two assists against UMass on April 6, 2002.Ironically, Smith tied his points high of five against Maryland in his final game with UMBC on May 4, 2002.

• Graduate student Brian Hunt also posted a hat trick against UMass in his only game against them while he was playingat Yale. He tallied three goals in Amherst on April 14, 2001.

• Maryland features five players who were honored by the ACC this season. SeniorsMichael Howley , Mike Mollot , Ryan Moran and Chris Passavia were named tothe All-ACC team. It was the third time Howley earned All-ACC accolades makinghim the first Terp to be honored three years in a row since Mark Douglas (1989-91).Mollot and Passavia were also named to the team last season. It was the first leaguehonor for Moran.

• Freshman attacker Joe Walters was named the league’s Rookie of the Year. He isthe first Terp to win the honor since Howley in 2000. Walters tallied his sixth hat trickvs. UMBC of his initial college campaign and added a goal against Ohio State in theNCAA First Round to raise his team high goal total to 32. He is closing in on theschool record for goals by a freshman set by Matt Hahn, who scored 36 in 1995.

• Senior captain Mike Mollot stands alone in 14th place all-time onMaryland’s scoring charts in the program’s storied lacrosse history aftera netted two goals and added an assist against Ohio State on Sundayand now has 166 points. He passed Mark Douglas (1988-91), whom hewas tied with at 157 entering the Georgetown game. Mollot currentlyhas 72 goals and 94 assists for 166 points in three-plus seasons. He canmove up to 13th with nine more points to tie Pete Worstell (1977-81).

• Mollot moved into 9th place all alone on the school’s all-time careerassist list with two assists vs. Notre Dame. He added another vs. OhioState and currently has 94 career assists passing Mike Hynes (1974-77). Mollot is just two assists from tying Jack Heim (1964-67) for eighthin the list.

• Mollot became the 30th player in Maryland history to surpass the 100-point plateau with the seven points against Towson on March 9, 2002.

• Junior Dan LaMonica became the 31st Terp with 100-plus points inhis career as he tallied two goals and added three assists vs. Butler onMarch 25. He now has 121 career points on 51 goals and 70 assists intwo-plus seasons after a three-assist game vs. Ohio State. It was histhird three-assist game of the season and 11th of his career. LaMonica’s70 career assists is 10 away from cracking the top-15 list at Maryland.

• Graduate student Brian Hunt piled up 128 points in his three seasons at Yale and ranks 10th all-time in Bulldog history inscoring. He had 78 goals and 50 assists from 1999-2001 with Yale. With the Terps, Hunt has scored 19 goals and added10 assists in his Maryland debut and now has 157 career points on 97 goals and 60 assists. He needs just three goals for100 all-time.

Dave Cottle, the third winningest active coach in lacrosse, isin his second season at the helm of the Maryland lacrosse pro-gram in 2003. He was named the eighth coach in the storied his-tory of Maryland lacrosse on Sept. 26, 2001 after a sensational19-year stint as the head coach at Loyola College in Baltimore.

Cottle, 47, took the reins from the ACC’s all-time winningestcoach, Dick Edell, who retired on Sept. 3, 2001 after 18 yearswith the Terps.

With a record of 201-77 (72.3) in 21 seasons, Cottle pickedup his 200th career win with a victory at Notre Dame, winning10-4 on May 4, 2003. He is currently tied for ninth as the activewinningest coach on the all-time career wins list.

“Coach Cottle’s 19 years of Division I head coaching suc-cess was an important consideration for the selection commit-tee,” said Maryland athletics director Deborah A. Yow. “We be-lieve that he will lead Maryland to its next national champion-ship in men’s lacrosse. We appreciated hearing from a num-ber of the former players who spoke highly about their experi-ence of playing under Coach Cottle. In addition, coaches ofstature such as Bill Tierney of Princeton spoke glowingly ofCoach Cottle’s leadership and coaching skills. We look for-ward to the future of our program under his direction.”

Cottle, who said the Maryland position was his “dream job,”was thrilled to join the Terrapins two years ago saying, “I’mexcited to come into a program with such a rich history asMaryland’s.”

Cottle led the Greyhounds to two national semifinal ap-pearances including an appearance in the 1990 championshipgame.

He has led his teams to top-10 finishes in each of the past14 seasons. The Greyhounds have finished with a winningrecord for the past 18 years dating to 1984. Loyola has alsoplayed in the last 14 NCAA Tournaments, entering the 1998and 1999 tournaments as the No. 1 seed.

One of the finest players in Salisbury State history, Cottlewas enshrined into the school’s Athletic Hall of Fame in 1989.During his career he rewrote the NCAA record book, while earn-ing All-America honors three times. He still holds many placesin the Salisbury State record book, and was just the secondplayer in collegiate lacrosse history to score over 100 points ina single season. The nation’s leading scorer in 1975, he servedas captain of the South team in the North-South All-Star Game.

Cottle received his bachelor of science degree in physicaleducation in 1978 from Salisbury.

He was an assistant coach for Team USA 1994, which wonthe world championship in Manchester, England. Cottle hasaddressed many lacrosse gatherings across the country, in-cluding the USILA Coaches’ Convention, and he serves as amember of the All-America Selection Committee. In Februaryof 1998 he was inducted into the Baltimore Chapter of the La-crosse Foundation’s Hall of Fame.

A graduate of Baltimore’s Northern High School, Cottle liveswith his wife, Lynn, daughters, Taylor and Tory, and son, Sean,in Edgewater, Md.

1. Bill Tierney, Princeton 77.2% 213-632. Dave Urick, Georgetown 75.7% 261-843. Dave Cottle, Maryland 72.3% 201-774. Dom Starsia, Virginia 71.7% 223-885. Mike Pressler, Duke 69.3% 201-896. Tony Seaman, Towson 65.8% 202-1057. Don Zimmerman, UMBC 63.9% 140-798. Jack Emmer, Army 63.8% 305-173(Minimum 100 games won)

1. Jack Emmer, Army 305-1732. Glenn Thiel, Penn State 267-1733. Dave Urick, Georgetown 261-844. Sid Jamieson, Bucknell 227-2185. Dom Starsia, Virginia 223-886. Bob Shillinglaw, Delaware 216-2107. Bill Tierney, Princeton 213-638. Tony Seaman, Towson 202-1059T. Dave Cottle, Maryland 201-779T. Mike Pressler, Duke 201-89Records through May 11

Player Goals Asst. Pts.1. Bob Boneillo (1977-80) 93 126 2192. Ray Altman (1961-63) 68 146 2143. Frank Urso (1973-76) 127 81 20811. Rob Chomo (1992-95) 73 107 180 Matt Hahn (1995-98) 149 31 18013. Pete Worstell (1977-81) 126 49 17514. MIKE MOLLOT (2000-pre.) 72 94 16615. Mark Douglas (1988-91) 109 48 15716. Rob Wurzberger (1988-91) 137 18 155

Player Goals Asst. Pts.1. Ray Altman (1961-63) 68 146 2142. Bob Boneillo (1977-80) 93 126 2193. Charles Wicker (1953-56) 78 121 1997. Andrew Whipple (1995-98) 93 97 1908. Jack Heim (1965-67) 85 96 1819. MIKE MOLLOT (2000-pre.) 72 94 16610. Mike Hynes (1974-77) 60 91 15111. Ed Mullen (1972-76) 102 89 191

Mike Mollot 6-6=12Dan LaMonica 2-6=8Joe Walters 1-2=3Jamie Daue 2-0=2Matt Brock 1-0=1Sean Leary 1-0=1Ryan Moran 1-0=1Willy Passavia 1-0=1Paul Gillette 0-1=1D. McCormick 60:46, 5 GA, 13 sv.

Kevin Cassese, M, DukeDan Hauber, D, DukeMike Mollot, M, MarylandMichael Howley, D, MarylandChris Passavia, D, MarylandDan LaMonica, A, MarylandConor Gill, A, VirginiaChris Rotelli, M, VirginiaMark Koontz, D, VirginiaJohn Christmas, A, VirginiaTillman Johnson, G, Virginia

’• Mike Mollot and Brian Hunt rank No. 1 and No. 2, respectively among all active

ACC players in career scoring. Mollot tops the charts with 166 points on 72 goalsand 94 assists. Hunt has the most goals of any ACC player with 97 along with 60assists for 157 points. Hunt did accumulate 128 of the points at Yale.

• Just a junior, Dan LaMonica moved into fourth place all alone with three assistsagainst Ohio State and now has 121 career points. He is the only non-senior withmore than 100 career points in the ACC. He has 121 points on 51 goals and 70assists.

• When looking at the ACC statistics, the Terps rank No. 1 or 2 in seven of nineteam and individual categories.

• In the team stats, the Terps have the top defense, allowing just 6.79 goals gameand the No. 2 scoring offense at 10.64 goals game.

• On the individual side Joe Walters is second in the conference in goals pergame (2.29 gpg) and is 20th nationally with that mark. He is tied for second withthree Virginia players in points per game (3.0 ppg) behind Duke’s Matt Rewkowski.

• In the assists column Dan LaMonica is second in the league averaging 1.42assists per game. Mike Mollot is third in the league at 1.29 assists per game.

• Goalie Danny McCormick leads the league in save percentage (62.1), whichranks seventh nationally and leads the ACC in goals against average (6.72),which is third nationally.

• No. 3 Maryland has continued its winning ways with a strong offense that is tallying 10.64 goals per game to rank No. 11 inthe nation in goals per game. The Terps are a perfect 7-0 when they score 10 or more goals this season with a high of 18vs. Butler in Florida on March 25. They broke a mini scoring slump with 15 against UMBC on April 25 -- that came on theheels of consecutive losses vs. Hopkins and Duke, when they combined for just 11 goals.

• Maryland has six players with 10 or more goals and five players with more than 28 points. Ten different Terps have fivegoals or more.

• Freshman attacker Joe Walters leads the scoring parade. The ACC Rookie of the Year, Walterstops the club with 32 goals and 42 points through 14 games. With 32 goals, he is closing in onthe Maryland school record for goals by a freshman set by Matt Hahn (36) in 1995. The left-handed attacker posted his sixth hat trick of the year vs. UMBC. He has posted four-goal effortsvs. Bucknell, Towson, Navy and Butler. He was named the WMAR-TV Star of the Game andMaryland Student-Athlete of the Week after the Towson game. Walters has scored a goal in thelast 13 games in a row and has multi-point games in 12 of 14 games as a freshman as well asnine multi-goal games. Walters and Ryan Moran are the only Terps with a point in all 14 gamesthis season.

• Junior attacker Dan LaMonica has 11 goals and 20 assists for 31 points ranking third on the team in point scoring. Hebecame the 31st Terp to pass the 100-point plateau with two goals and three assists vs. Butler on March 25. He now has121 career points on 51 goals and 70 assists in two-plus years of action. His career point total ranks first among all juniorsin the ACC and fourth overall. His six assists against Navy were a personal career high and the most by a Terp since TimCox also had six against Navy on April 14, 1990. He had his third three-plus assist game of the year against Ohio State andnow has 14 assists in his last seven games..

• A Tewaaraton Trophy “Player to Watch,” attacker Brian Hunt came to Maryland after graduatingfrom Yale last spring, has 15 career hat tricks dating back to his career with the Bulldogs afterposting three this season, most recently vs. Butler on March 25. His 40-game point scoring streakcame to an end at Virginia as he was held off scoring sheet for the first time since his sixth collegegame in 1999. He had two goals vs. Notre Dame in the regular-season finale and now has 157career points (2.96 PPG). Hunt’s 157 career points are second to only Mike Mollot in careerpoints among players in the ACC. Hunt is closing in on the 100 career goals mark, as he enteredthe tournament with 97. He has multiple points in 39 of 53 career games.

• All-ACC midfielder and Tewaaraton Trophy candidate Mike Mollot stands 14th on the Terps’ all-time career scoring chart with166 points after three points vs.Ohio State in the NCAA First Round. He is also in 9th place on Maryland’s all-time careerassist chart with five helpers in his last four games and now has 94 for his career. He has 72 goals and 94 assists in three-plus seasons. His 166 points are the most among all active players in the ACC. His 22-game point scoring streak come to anend vs. Johns Hopkins on April 12. Overall, 43 of his 59 career games have been multi-point games, including 10 this year.

• All-ACC midfielder Ryan Moran has 22 goals to rank second on the team in goals after posting the final goal of the game inthe Terps’ NCAA first round win over Ohio State. He had his fifth career hat trick vs. Duke in the ACC Semifinals -- three ofwhich have come against Duke. Moran, set a new career-high with four goals vs. Bucknell this season on March 11. He nowhas all 37 of his goals in his last 25 games, dating back to last season -- after never scoring his first two years with Maryland.He surpassed his season goal, assist and point totals from last season against UMBC as he had 15 goals, four assists and19 points last season. He has the longest point-scoring streak on the team at 15 games, including all 14 this season.

• The Terps’ extra-man unit was strong early in this season and is currently scoring on 30.6 percent of its opportunities.Maryland has scored 19 goals on 62 chances led by Ryan Moran and Joe Walters who have five EMG’s. Brian Hunt,Dan LaMonica and Mike Mollot each have two extra-man tallies as well. In comparison, last season the Terps scored just17 extra-man goals the entire season, on 63 chances (27 percent). The defense has held opponents to just 16 EMG’s on64 chances (25.0 percent).

Maryland Defense 6.79 g. all 1stDanny McCormick 62.1 save pct.1stDanny McCormick 6.72 GAA 1stMaryland Offense 10.64 goals 2ndJoe Walters 3.0 pts./pg 2ndJoe Walters 2.29 goals/pg2ndDan LaMonica 1.42 asst./pg 2ndMike Mollot 1.29 asst./pg 3rd

Danny McCormick 6.72 GAA 3rdDanny McCormick 62.1 save pct.7thJoe Walters 2.29 goals/pg20th

Player, School G-A= Pts.1. MIKE MOLLOT, Md 72-94=1662. BRIAN HUNT, Md. 97-60=1573. Kevin Brennan, Duke 71-51-1224. DAN LaMONICA, Md. 51-70=1215. Chris Rotelli, UVa. 83-36=1196. Kevin Cassese, Duke 78-40=1187. A.J. Shannon, UVa. 82-29=111

’ • •

Mike Mollot

Joe Walters

Maryland has allowed just one team toscore 10 goals in a game this season --North Carolina on March 22.

Maryland is 1-0 all-time against UMass,winning 13-4 on May 8, 1983

Maryland is on a four-game winningstreak.

All four members of the Terps’ rotatingsecond midfield (Matt Brock, Jamie Daue,Sean Leary and Willy Passavia) all scoredgoals in the NCAA first round win overOhio State.

Maryland is 5-0 in games on Artificial Turfthis season.

Maryland’s goals against average ranksthird in the nation.

Maryland is 8-0 when it wins over 50percent of its face-offs in a game.

Maryland is 9-0 all-time against teamsfrom the ECAC Lacrosse League, whichformed in 2000.

Maryland is 10-0 when leading at halftimethis season

Maryland has allowed only 12 goals in thesecond quarter this season, while theTerps have scored 41 in the secondquarter.

Maryland celebrated the 30th Anniversaryof its first NCAA Championship in 1973, athalftime of the Johns Hopkins game onApril 12.

Joe Walters has 32 goals this season andis closing in on the school record for goalsby a freshman in a season, set by MattHahn (36) in 1995.

Maryland is 35-0 all-time against teamsfrom the state of Massachusetts.

Ryan Moran has all 37 of his career goalsover the last two seasons spanning 25games, after he did not record a point inhis first two seasons.

Maryland has outscored its opponents 42-22 during its four-game winning streak.

Maryland held Ohio State to one goal overthe first 54:32 of the NCAA First Roundgame.

Maryland has forced its opponents into 86turnovers over the last three games (28.7per game).

Mike Mollot has 166 career points (72goals and 94 assists) to rank 14th all-timeon the Maryland career scoring chart..

Maryland last won the NCAA Champion-ship in 1975.

’ • •

• The Terps’ defense, the nation’s best last year allowing seven goals a game, and has contin-ued its prowess, allowing 6.79 goals per game (third best in the nation), backstopped bypreseason honorable mention goalie Danny McCormick. Preseason first-team All-Ameri-cans Michael Howley and Chris Passavia have teamed with Lee Zink and defensive mid-dies Brett Harper and Paul Gillette to keep opponents at bay. The Terps have allowed onlyone team to score 10 goals against Maryland this season -- North Carolina on March 22.Gillette leads the team in groundballs with 57, while Zink (28) and Harper (27) top the teamin caused turnovers. Howley and Passavia have forced 22 and 21 turnovers , respectively.Maryland has forced its last three opponents, Georgetown (33), Notre Dame (31) andOhio State (22) into 86 combined turnovers (28.7 per game).

• Zink, who was named the Maryland Student-Athlete of the Weekof April 28-May 4, may have been the best of the three over thelast three games. In those three games, he has forced oppo-nents into 13 turnovers including a team season-high (7) atNotre Dame. He also had a career-high nine groundballs vs.the Irish. Most impressive though, is that fact that he has notallowed the attacker which has been guarding to score in thelast three games. Included in that run, he blanked Georgetown’sleading scorer Neal Goldman and Ohio State’s Curtis Smith,who came into the NCAA Tournament as the nation’s fifth lead-ing scorer. Zink also scored his first career goal vs. Georgetown on April 28. Howley andPassavia are tied for third (along with Ryan Moran) on the team in groundballs with 40 asthey have consistently guarded top opposing attackmen. Howley shutout down the nation’sfifth-leading scorer at the time Patrick Walsh of Notre Dame, holding him pointless andwithout a shot until the final minute of the game.

• Overall, the Terps have outscored their opponents 149-95 (10.62-6.79) per game -- a 3.83goal margin (fourth best in the nation). Even more amazing is that opponents have just 12goals total in the second quarter and 21 in the third quarter for a combined total of 33 forthe second and third quarters. In contrast the Terps have 71 goals in the middle periods (a38 goal margin -- 29 in the secondquarter alone).

• The Terps’ defense has continued tobe stellar as it has had several runs ofholding its opponents scoreless. In 10of 14 games, the Terps have held op-ponents scoreless for stretches of atleast 20 minutes including five of thelast six games.

• To open its NCAA Tournament run,Maryland continued its stifling defensein holding Ohio State scoreless for thegame’s first 27:44 and them limitingthem to one goal over the first 54:28of the game.

• In its last regular-season game, theTerps kept Notre Dame off thescoreboard for 32:55 minutes after theIrish scored exactly one minute into thegame. They did not score again until 11:05 was left in the third quarter. Following that goal,the Irish did not score for another 9:25 -- meaning that they had just one goal in 42:30 span.Only the effort vs. Duke in the season opener was better.

• Maryland had perhaps its best defensive effort vs. Georgetown in limiting the Hoyas tojust five goals on 43 shots. The Hoyas committed 33 turnovers and were held off thescoreboard for 18:10 late in the game.

• Against UMBC, the Terps shutout the Retrievers in the second quarter -- marking the fifthtime a foe has failed to score in the second stanza to date -- and held UMBC off the boardfor 20:36 from the last first quarter until the early fourth quarter.

• Despite the loss, Maryland held No. 1 Johns Hopkins to just six goals as the Jays came intothe game as the nation’s fourth highest scoring team at 13.14 per game. Maryland keptHopkins off the scoreboard for a string of 27:21 from early in the third quarter until the game-winning goal 1:21 into overtime.

• Against Navy, the Maryland defense was on top of its game against as it allowed just onegoal over a span of 33:42 from the second through late fourth quarter.• Against Virginia, the Terps shutdown what was the fifth-highest scoring offense in thecountry and held the Cavaliers to just seven goals. Maryland limited the Virginia attack tofour goals on 17 shots with Howley, Passavia and Zink pressuring the attackers. Marylandblanked Virginia for a spell of 33:06 from the mid-first quarter until 4:14 left in the third quar-ter. Over that time, the Terps reeled off seven consecutive goals to build a 7-2 lead.

• The Terps kept Butler scoreless for a stretch of 24:32 from late in the second quarter untilearly in the fourth quarter.

• Maryland kept host Stony Brook to just one goal in the first 33:11 of the game in buildinga 15-1 lead in the early third quarter. With the score tied 1-1, Maryland went on a 14-goalrun holding Stony Brook scoreless for 27:32.

• After a high-scoring 6-6 first quarter with Bucknell, Maryland buckled down and held theBison off the scoreboard for more than 30 minutes and nearly shut them out for the sec-ond and third quarters before a fluke Bison goal with one second left in the third quarter.

• Against Towson, Maryland held the Tigers without a goal for almost 18 minutes from thesecond to the third quarter and with just one goal from the late second to late fourthquarters.

• Against Duke, the Terps held the then-No. 7 Blue Devils without a goal for 38 minutesspanning the final three quarters and to just one goal for nearly 50 minutes from midwayin the first quarter until late in the fourth quarter.

• Sixteen of the most talented male and female collegiate varsity lacrosse players in theUnited States and additional "players to watch" have been selected as candidates for thethird annual Tewaaraton Award, the most coveted and prestigious award a varsity la-crosse player can receive and a symbol of excellence in college lacrosse. The five final-ists will be announced in May.

• From Maryland, senior defenseman Michael Howley and senior midfielder/attackmanMike Mollot has been named to the list of the Top 16 candidates in the nation. Also,graduate attackman Brian Hunt has been named to the "Players to Watch" list. In addi-tion, former Maryland coach Dick Edell is serving as the Vice Chair of the committeewhich presents the award.

• The Tewaaraton Trophy is presented annually following the collegiate season to the topfemale and male varsity collegiate lacrosse players in the United States. Scholarship moneyis given to the recipient's college or university general scholarship fund. The Foundationcommittee honors Native American heritage with the name "Tewaaraton," the name theMohawk nation gave to their game and the progenitor of present day lacrosse and hasreceived approval from the Mohawk Council of Elders.

• The Terps, now in the fourth season of the new century, have an all-time record of 636-204-4 (.756), dating back to the first varsity team in 1924 (a team was not fielded in 1944 and1945 due to World War II). Maryland has finished every one of its previous 77 seasons witha .500 or better record, including last season when the Terps went 9-4. The program’s 600thwin came against Duke on April 21, 2000, 7-6 in the ACC Semifinals at Byrd Stadium.

• In the decade of the 1990s, Maryland recorded its most wins in any decade with a 95-47record. The .669 winning percentage matched Maryland’s win percentage of the 1980swhen the Terps went 83-41 and also compiled a .669 win percentage. This decade, theTerps are now 44-15 (.745).

• It is believed that the 2003 Maryland men’s lacrosse team is in the process of makingNCAA sports history as the Terps have a roster unlike any other in the history of collegeathletics. Maryland has a roster that has four players who led their respective teams inscoring in their last seasons of action. It is believed that this is the first instance of its kindin any sport.

• Maryland returns its own leading scorer from 2002 in senior Mike Mollot , who had 46points on 23 goals and 23 assists last season. The Terps have added three new playerswho join the team from other Division I programs where each of them led their respectiveteams in scoring in their last year of action.

• Graduate student Brian Hunt topped Yale’s scoring chart in 2001 and finished fourth inthe nation in points with 58 on 28 goals and 30 assists.

• Joe Parker, who is also a graduate student, played one year of lacrosse at Colgate lastseason, where he also led the team in points with 48 on 29 goals and 19 assists.

• Finally, junior transfer Justin Smith , who comes to the Terps from UMBC, was the Re-trievers’ leading scorer last season with 24 points on 18 goals and six assists.

• The Maryland men's lacrosse team has placed six players on the Inside Lacrosse/Face-OffYearbook Preseason All-America list. Senior defenseman Michael Howley and junior de-fender Chris Passavia were both named to the preseason first team. Last season Howleywas a USILA second-team All-American and Passavia was a member of the third team.

• Senior midfield/attackman Mike Mollot was named a second team preseason All-Ameri-can after he was a USILA second teamer last season. Junior attacker Dan LaMonica wasalso named to the second team. Last season, he was a USILA honorable mention All-American.

• Goalie Danny McCormick was named to the preseason honorable mention list afterbeing a USILA honorable mention All-American last year. Newcomer attackman BrianHunt, who comes to Maryland as a graduate student after playing at Yale, was also nameda preseason honorable mention All-American as he makes his debut as a Terp this spring.Hunt missed all of last year with a broken ankle.

Team 1 2 3 4 OT TotMaryland 36 41 30 42 0 149Opponents 34 12 21 27 1 95

Mar. 2 vs. Duke: 0 goals in 38:03, 1 goal in 46:48Mar. 8 at Towson: 0 goals in 17:36; 1 goal in 30:24Mar. 11 vs. Bucknell: 0 goals in 30:05, 1 goal in 26:54Mar. 15 at S.Brook: 0 goals in 27:32, 1 goal in 33:11Mar. 22 vs. UNC: 0 goals in 11:09, 1 goal in 19:17Mar. 25 vs. Butler: 0 goals in 24:32, 1 goal in 28:49Mar. 29 at Virginia: 0 goals in 33:06, 1 goal in 37:15Apr. 5 at Navy: 0 goals in 17:04, 1 goal in 33:42Apr. 12 vs. Hopkins: 0 goals in 27:21, 1 goal in 40:35Apr. 18 vs. Duke: 0 goals in 23:34, 1 goal in 28:19Apr. 25 vs. UMBC: 0 goals in 20:36, 1 goal in 22:45Apr. 28 vs. GTown: 0 goals in 18:10, 1 goal in 23:34May 3 at N.Dame: 0 goals in 32:55, 1 goal in 42:30May 11 vs. OSU: 0 goals in 27:44, 1 goal in 54:32

Lee Zink

• •• One of 16 national finalists for the Tewaaraton Trophy in 2002• 2003 All-ACC selection for second year in a row.• Has 166 career points (72 g., 94 ast.) to rank 14th all-time at UM

in career scoring, passed Mark Douglas (157 pts.) on 4/28.• Nine points away from 13th place (Pete Worstell -175 points)• Passed Mike Hynes (91) for 9th all-time at UM in career assists

with two helpers vs. Notre Dame (5/3) and now has 94.• ACC’s active career scoring leader with 166 points.• Had recorded a point in 22 straight games from 5/20/01 to 4/5/

03 before streak ended vs. Hopkins (4/12).• Third on UM and in ACC in assists with 18, (1.28 apg).• Multi-point games in 43 of 59 games including 10 this year.• Two goals - including clincher with 1:31 left-- and assist vs. Ohio

State (5/11) in NCAA First Round; named CSTV Star of Game.• Scored once and added two assists at Notre Dame (5/3).• Two goals including game-winner and an assist vs. G’Town (4/28).• Named Maryland Student-Athlete of Week after UMBC game.• Ninth career hat trick along with assist vs. UMBC (4/25)as he

started on attack - TerpVision Player of the Game.• Scooped up his 100th groundball vs. Duke (4/18) in ACC SF.• Scored seventh goal of the year in second quarter at Navy (4/5).• Scored two second-quarter goals at Virginia (3/29)• Sixth career game-winning goal and assist vs. Butler (3/25).• Three-point game with a goal and two asst. vs. UNC (3/22).• Back-to-back four-assist game at Stony Brook (3/15), added goal.• Four assists vs. Bucknell (3/11), eighth career game with 4 asst.• Tallied man-up goal and assist vs. Duke (3/2).• Preseason Second Team All-American by Inside Lacrosse/Face-

Off Magazine.• 2002 USILA Second Team All-American and All-ACC selection.• Led Terps in points (46), third in goals (23) and second in assists

(23) in 2002, recording points in all 13 games.

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2000 16/16 15 32 47 46 1 2 36 7/4:302001 16/16 19 21 40 74 2 3 30 6/5:002002 13/1 23 23 46 60 6 0 23 6/4:002003 14/1 15 18 33 60 2 2 24 3/3:00Totals 59/34 72 94 166 240 11 7 11222/16:30

CAREER HIGHSGoals: 5 vs. Towson (3/9/02)Assists: 5 vs. Towson (3/11/00)Points: 7 vs. Hofstra (5/14/00) & Denver (2/24/01) & Towson (3/9/02)Multi-Goal Games: 20; Multi-Point Games: 43, Hat Tricks: 9Point-Scoring Streak: 22 games from to May 20, 2001-Apr. 5, 2003

• •• Tewaaraton Trophy “Player To Watch” in 2002• Third on the team in goals (19) and tied for fourth in points (29).• Had posted a point in 40 consecutive games he played in prior to

Virginia (3/29), which was his first scoreless game since 4/3/99.• 39 of 53 career games have been multi-point games.• Averaging 2.97 ppg in his career with 157 points (97 g, 60a).• ACC’s second active career scoring leader with 157 points.• Scored two goals in the crease against Notre Dame (5/3).• Two goals and assisted Lee Zink’s first goal vs. G’Town (4/28).• Assisted Matt Urlock goal on Senior Night vs. UMBC (4/25).• Assisted Paul Gillette goal vs. Hopkins (4/12)• Had a goal and assist at Navy (4/5).• 15th career hat trick and assist vs. Butler (3/25).• Scored one goal vs. UNC (3/22).• Scored two goals and added two assists at Stony Brook (3/15).• Tallied two goals and an assist vs. Bucknell (3/11).• Second straight hat trick vs.Towson (3/8), four points total.• Notched 13th career hat trick & assist in UM debut vs. Duke (3/2).• Preseason Hon. Mention All-American by Face-Off Magazine .• Graduate student who returns to action after missing all of last

season at Yale with a broken ankle suffered on March 1, 2002.• 2001 USILA Honorable Mention All-American at Yale.• 128 career points at Yale in 3 yrs. (10th leading scorer).

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen1999Yale 13/10 19 5 24 2 24 1/1:002000Yale 13/13 31 15 46 5 23 0/0:002001Yale 13/13 28 30 58 4 27 5/3:302003 14/12 19 10 29 50 2 0 19 4/2:30Totals 53/48 97 60 157 13 93 10/7:00

CAREER HIGHSGoals: 5 vs. Drexel(3/6/99) & vs. Colgate (3/13/01)Assists: 5 vs. Albany (4/15/00) & Harvard (4/21/01)Points: 9 vs. Albany (4/15/00)Multi-Goal Games: 31; Multi-Point Games: 38, Hat Tricks: 15Point-Scoring Streak: 40 games from April 7, 1999-March 25, 2002

• •• Started last 27 games,has 6.72 GAA (ranking 3rd in the nation,

first in ACC) and 62.1 Sv. Pct (7th in nation).• Has a 5.28 GAA and 70.2 save pct. in the last three games.• Allowed just one goal in first 54:28, and made 13 saves in NCAA

First Round win over Ohio State (5/11).• Picked up 10th win of year with six saves at Notre Dame (5/3).• Made 14 saves, allowed just five goals in win over G’town (4/28).• Eighth win of year with 9 svs. vs. UMBC (4/25) on Senior Night• Stopped 11 Navy (4/5) in seventh win of the season.• 15 saves at Virginia (3/29), held UVa scoreless for 33:06.• Made 10 saves in 47:02 of action vs. Butler (3/25).• 15 saves vs. UNC (3/22); Stopped 9 shots vs. Bucknell (3/11).• Made 11 saves in win at Towson (3/8).• Career-high 17 saves in win over Duke (3/2), stopped 16 of 17

shots on goal over 50 min. span from first to fourth quarter.• Named ACC Player of the Week and Maryland Student-Athlete

of Week on March 3 after Duke win.• Preseason Hon. Mention All-American by Face-Off Magazine .• Ranked No. 1 in the nation in GAA (6.73) as starter in 2002.• 2002 USILA Honorable Mention All-American.

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GSSvs. GA Sv.% Min. GAA W-L GB Pen2000 5/0 16 7 69.6 41 10.24 0-0 4 0/0:002001 6/0 18 6 75.0 80 4.50 0-0 2 0/0:002002 13/13 122 83 59.5 740 6.73 9-4 33 0/0:002003 14/14 146 89 62.1 795 6.72 11-3 43 0/0:00Totals 38/27 302 185 62.0 1656 6.70 20-7 82 0/0:00

CAREER HIGHSSaves: 17 vs. Duke (3/2/03)

• •• Sidelined with mononucleosis -- out since UMBC (4/25) game.• Assisted Dan LaMonica’s game-tying goal vs. Hopkins (4/12).• Scored fourth goal of year vs. Butler (3/25) to finish 9-0 3rd qtr.• Career-high two goals at Stony Brook (3/15) giving him 4 goals.• Scored second goal and second game of 2002 at Towson (3/8).• Second career goal came in third quarter vs. Duke (3/2) in return.• Returns to action in 2003 after sitting out the 2002 season after

undergoing wrist/hand surgery.• Joined by his brother freshman Brendan Healy this season.

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2001 12/0 1 3 4 8 0 0 9 0/0:002002 Injured (Wrist/Hand Surgery)2003 10/0 5 2 7 18 0 0 5 0/0:00Totals 22/0 6 5 11 26 0 0 14 0/0:00

CAREER HIGHSGoals: 2 at Stony Brook (3/15/02)Assists: 1 on five occasions (most recent Johns Hopkins, 4/12/03)Points: 2 at Towson (3/8/03) & at Stony Brook (3/15/02)

• •• Scored first goal of year, and first assist of year vs. Butler (3/25).• Played late minutes in each of the first four games of 2003.• Made first 10 career starts on attack last season in first 10 games.• Had five goals in 2002 after not scoring all of his freshman year.

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2001 16/0 0 2 2 1 0 0 2 0/0:002002 12/10 5 0 5 18 0 0 12 0/0:002003 8/0 1 1 2 2 0 0 2 0/0:00Totals 36/10 6 3 9 21 0 0 16 0/0:00

CAREER HIGHSGoals: 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (2/26/02)Assists: 2 vs. Air Force (2/24/01)Points: 2 on four occasions (most recent vs. Butler, 3/25/03)

• •• Won 7/14 as primary face-off man vs Ohio State (5/11) in NCAA.• Continued as primary face-off man at N. Dame (5/3), winning 4/7.• Took opening face-off and eight more vs. Georgetown (4/28).• Took opening face-off vs. UMBC (4/25) for first time in his ca-

reer, won 5 of 12 draws,• Career-game vs. Butler (3/25), winning 11/17 face-offs scoop-

ing eight groundballs; won all six fourth-quarter face-offs.• Took six face-offs, won three and scooped 3 GB’s vs. Duke (3/2).• One of two Terps to be the first players from California, along

with high school teammate Peter Ellis.

Rookie of Year: Joe WaltersAll-ACC: Michael Howley

Mike MollotRyan MoranChris Passavia

All-Tournament: Ryan MoranPlayer of Week: Danny McCormick (March 3)

Paul Gillette (March 31)

Inside Lacrosse/Face-Off Magazine Preseason All-Americans: Michael Howley (First Team)

Chris Passavia (First Team)Dan LaMonica (Second Team)Mike Mollot (Second Team)Brian Hunt (Honorable Mention)Danny McCormick (Hon. Mention)

Star of the Game: Joe Walters (March 8)Mike Mollot (May 11)

Scholar-Athlete: Sean Leary (April 12)Mike Mollot (April 25)

Student Athlete of Week:Danny McCormick (March 3)Joe Walters (March 10)Paul Gillette (March 31)Mike Mollot (April 28)Lee Zink (May 4)

TerpVision Player of the Game:Dan LaMonica (April 12)Mike Mollot (April 25)Lee Zink (April 28)

Paul Gillette

Dan LaMonica

Mike MollotDanny McCormick

Ryan Moran

Michael Howley

Chris Passavia

Brian Hunt

’CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GSG A Pts. Shots Face-Off Pct. GB Pen2002 8/0 0 0 0 0 3/8 37.5 7 0/0:002003 14/4 0 0 0 0 36/87 41.4 28 3/2:00Totals 22/4 0 0 0 0 39/95 41.0 35 3/2:00

CAREER HIGHSGroudballs: 8 vs.Butler (3/2/5/03)Face-Off Wins: 11 vs.Butler (3/2/5/03)Total Face-Offs: 17 vs.Butler (3/2/5/03)

• •• Had been sidelined with a head injury, forcing him not to dress

for the ACC Tournament through the UMBC game.• Back-up goalie to senior starter and captain Danny McCormick.• Played final 12:58 vs. Butler (3/25), made two saves, 3 GA.• Made season debut vs. Bucknell (3/11), playing final 2:05.• Played career-high 15:48 at Stony Brook (3/15), making 1 save.

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GSSvs. GA Sv.% Min. GAA W-L GB Pen2002 6/0 11 5 68.8 35 8.53 0-0 1 0/0:002003 3/0 3 5 37.5 31 9.72 0-0 0 0/0:00Totals 9/0 14 10 53.8 66 9.09 0-0 1 0/0:00CAREER HIGHSSaves: 6 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (2/26/02)

• •• Man-down defense specialist has played in all 14 games, see-

ing more even-man time over last three regular-season games.• Continued solid play with two forced turnovers at N. Dame (5/3).• Career game vs. Georgetown (4/28), with 3 GBs and 2 CTs.• Made first career start on close defense on Senior Night vs.

UMBC (4/25), grabbed one groundball.• Grabbed one groundball and caused one TO vs. Duke (3/2).• First career point as he assisted Watkins’ goal at UMBC (5/4/02).CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2000 3/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0/0:002001 7/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 1/0:302002 10/0 0 1 1 0 0 0 9 0/0:002003 14/0 0 0 0 1 0 0 5 1/1:00Totals 33/0 0 1 1 1 0 0 17 2/1:30CAREER HIGHSAssists: 1 at UMBC (5/4/02)Points: 1 at UMBC (5/4/02)

• •• Has played last minutes in last two games vs. G’Town & ND.• Played valuable time vs. Butler (3/25), grabbed GB.• Saw late minutes vs. Duke (3/2), Bucknell (3/11), SB (3/15)• Second Terp from Ohio (Upper Arlington), joining Brett Harper.CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2002 5/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1/0:302003 6/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0/0:00Totals 11/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1/0:30

• •• Has come on to play some face-off wing and with 3rd midfield.• First career point came on assist at Stony Brook (3/15).• Made debut vs. Duke (3/2), also played at Towson (3/8).• Starred for nation’s No. 1 team in Landon, went 19-0 last year.• Joins brother Ian on the Terps this season, for second brother

combo along with the Passavias.

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2003 13/0 0 1 1 10 0 0 5 0/0:00

• •• First on Terps and second in ACC in assists with 20 and asst.

per game (1.42).• Third on the club in overall points with 31.• Became 31st player at UM with 100 career points with five-point

game vs. Butler (3/25), now has 118 points.• Highest scoring junior in the ACC, now 4th among all players.• Has points in 39 of 43 career games at Maryland.• 16 career multi-goal games and 30 career multi-point games.• Notched three assists vs. Ohio State (5/11) in NCAA First Round.• Grabbed his 100th career groundball at Notre Dame (5/3).

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2001 4/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0/0:002002 5/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0/0:002003 13/0 0 1 1 0 0 0 2 2/1:30Totals 22/0 0 1 1 0 0 0 3 2/1:30

• •• Left-handed attacker leads Terps in goals (32) and points (42).• ACC Rookie of the Year is second on the league in goals per

game & is 15th nationally (2.28 gpg).• On verge of UM freshman goal mark (36), set by Matt Hahn in 1995.• One of two Terps to score a point in all 14 games, with goals in

the last 13 games.• Notched fourth game-winning goal and added two assists in

win over Ohio State (5/11) in NCAA First Round.• Scored two goals including game-winner and a man-up at Notre

Dame (5/3).• Opened scoring with man-up goal and added an assist vs.

Georgetown (4/28).• Netted sixth hat trick of the year vs. UMBC (4/25), also added

an assist for four-point game.• Scored twice against Duke (4/18) in ACC Semifinals• Opened UM’s scoring vs. Hopkins (4/12).• Fourth four-goal game of year at Navy (4/5), scored game-win-

ner with 3:05 left in fourth quarter.• Fourth hat trick and an assist at Virginia (3/29), scored go-ahead

goal to make it 3-2 and eventual game-winner in fourth quarter.• Four goals vs. Butler (3/25) for second time in rookie season.• Scored two goals vs. UNC (3/22), taking career-high 17 shots.• Tallied a man-up goal late in first quarter at Stony Brook (3/15).• Back-to-back four goals vs. Bucknell (3/11) and Towson, also

added two assists for career-high six points in win.• WMAR Star of the Game at Towson (3/8) with first four career

goals & assist for five points; named UM Student-Athlete of Week.• Started and had two assists in collegiate debut vs. Duke (3/2).• Netted six goals in preseason scrimmage at Syracuse (2/13).• H.S. All-American: 268 career points (143 g, 125 a) at Irondequoit,

second only to former Terp All-American Andrew Whipple.

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2003 14/14 32 10 42 102 5 4 27 4/2:30

CAREER HIGHSGoals: 4 on four occasions (most recent at Navy, 4/5/03)Assists: 2 vs. Duke (3/2/03), Bucknell (3/11/03) & Ohio St. (5/11/03)Points: 6 vs. Bucknell (3/11/03)Multi-Goal Games: 8; Multi-Point Games: 11, Hat Tricks: 6Point Scoring Streak: 14 (since first game at UM, Mar. 2, 2003)Goal-Scoring Streak: 13 games since March 8, 2003 at Towson

• •• Made collegiate debut on native Long Island at Stony Brook (3/15).• Freshman who comes from family of athletes: brothers Nick and

Chris playing lacrosse at Duke and brother Sean at Princeton.

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2003 3/0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0/0:00

• •• Comes on as fourth attack man, also a man-up specialist.• Scored Terps’ final goal at Notre Dame (5/3), his fifth of year.• Beautiful behind-the-back goal vs. UMBC (4/25) on Senior Night

in his second start of the season.• Started on a attack at Navy (4/5) for ailing Brian Hunt.• Scored twice in fourth quarter vs. Butler (3/25).• Scored man-up goals vs. Bucknell (3/11).• Six goals in ‘02 after missing all of 2001 season with torn ACL.

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen1999 10/1 3 0 3 9 0 0 6 0/0:002000 9/4 10 0 10 24 1 0 13 0/0:002002 11/0 6 0 6 16 2 0 4 0/0:002003 14/2 5 0 5 22 1 0 6 2/2:00Totals 44/7 24 0 24 71 4 0 29 2/2:00

CAREER HIGHSGoals: 3 vs. Johns Hopkins (4/16/00) & vs. Mt. St. Mary’s (2/26/02)Points: 3 vs.Johns Hopkins (4/16/00) & vs. Mt. St. Mary’s (2/26/02)

• Tallied 11th goal and added 17th assist vs. Georgetown (4/28).• Scored with 10 seconds left in first half vs. UMBC (4/25)• Scored and added two assists against Duke (4/18) in ACC SF.• Game-tying goal and two assists vs. Hopkins (4/12), for 3 pts.• Career-high six assists -- on six straight UM goals at Navy (4/5),

most assists in a game since Tim Cox, also vs. Navy (4/14/90).• Scored seventh goal of year at Virginia (3/29).• Passed 100-point plateau with an assist vs. Butler. Two goals

and three assists for five pts. for 25th career multi-point game.• Assisted a Joe Walters man-up goal at Stony Brook (3/15).• Held scoreless for just second time in career vs. Bucknell (3/11).• Scored sixth career goal vs.Towson (3/8), also was sixth career

game-winner, also added assist in win.• Seventh career hat trick including game-winning goal vs. Duke

(3/2); two goals came on man-up; scored on all three shots.• Preseason second team All-American by Face-Off Magazine.• USILA Hon. Mention All-American & All-ACC selection in 2002• Recorded a point in first 22 career games, held scoreless at

UNC (3/23/02) for first time in his career.• In 2002, second in points with 39 and team leader in assists (24).

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2001 16/13 25 26 51 64 1 3 39 4/5:002002 13/11 15 24 39 52 3 1 35 6/4:002003 14/14 11 20 31 25 2 2 27 2/1:30Totals 43/38 51 70 121 141 6 6 10112/10:30

CAREER HIGHSGoals: 3 on seven occasions (most recent vs. Duke, 3/2/03)Assists: 6 at Navy (4/5/03)Points: 6 vs. Towson (3/9/02) & 6 at Navy (4/5/03)Multi-Goal Games: 16; Multi-Point Games: 30, Hat Tricks: 7

• •• Took first career shot, which was on goal, vs. Butler (3/25)• Made 2003 debut vs. Bucknell (3/11), playing on 4th midfield.• One of two Terps to be the first players from California, along

with high school teammate Drew Virk.

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2002 1/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0/0:002003 3/0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0/0:00Totals 4/0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0/0:00

• •• One of the nation’s premier long-stick defensive midfielders.• Has started 42 of last 43 games on face-off wing or defense.• Second on team in caused turnovers with 27; also has 34 GBs.• Had one GB, two CT’s against hometown team Ohio State (5/

11) in NCAA First Round.• Solid defense with 3 CT’s and 2 GB’s at Notre Dame (5/3).• Grabbed 3 GB, forced 3 turnover vs. Georgetown (4/28).• Credited with first collegiate assist on Senior Night vs. UMBC

(4/25), assisting Schwartzman’s goal, also had 3 GBs, 3 CTs.• Scored final goal in win at Navy (4/5), also had 3 GBs.• Three GB’s and helped to hold Virginia (3/29), scoreless for 33:06.• Four groundballs and 2 caused TO’s vs. Butler (3/25).• Had two GB and team-high 3 caused TO’s vs. UNC (3/22).• Three groundballs and two caused TO’s at Stony Brook (3/15).• Strong game vs, Bucknell (3/11) with 4 GB and 3 caused TO’s.• Grabbed three GB and caused two TO’s at Towson (3/8).• Two groundballs including 100th career GB vs. Duke (3/2).

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GSG A Pts. Shots Face-OffPct. GB Pen2000 16/0 1 0 1 1 0/0 0.0 18 2/1:302001 16/16 0 0 0 2 6/17 35.3 47 12/10:002002 13/12 1 0 1 1 3/4 75.0 34 6/4:002003 14/14 1 1 2 2 0/0 0.0 34 4/2:30Totals 59/42 3 1 4 6 9/21 42.9 133 24/18:00

CAREER HIGHSGoals: 1 vs. Mt.St.Mary’s (2/27/00) , at UMBC (5/4/02) & at Navy (4/5/03)Assists: 1 vs. UMBC (4/25/03)Points: 1 on four occasions (most recent vs. UMBC, 4/2/5/03)Groundballs: 7 vs. North Carolina (3/24/01)

• •• Played 13 of 14 games as second-string short stick def. midfielder.• First career point on an assist to Dan LaMonica at Towson (3/8).• Key minutes and one groundball vs. Duke (3/2).

’CAREER HIGHSGoals: 4 vs. Maryland (5/4/02)Assists: 2 vs. Mt. St. Mary’s (3/3/01) & at Massachusetts (4/6/02)Points: 5 at Massachusetts (4/6/02) & vs. Maryland (5/4/02)Multi-Goal Games: 10; Multi-Point Games: 13, Hat Tricks: 4

• •• Assisted Jamie Daue goal in debut at Stony Brook (3/15).• Freshman left-handed attacker who led Northport to the L.I. title.

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2003 1/0 0 1 1 4 0 0 0 0/0:00

• •• Consistent fourth defenseman has played in all 14 games.• Two groundballs vs. UMBC (4/25).• Started and grabbed on 1 GB at Virginia (3/29).• Drew first career start vs. Butler (3/25) on close defense.• One GB on in man-down and close def. role vs. Duke (3/2).• Steady reserve close defenseman played in all 13 games in 2002.

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2001 12/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 1/1:002002 13/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 0/0:002003 14/2 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 1/1:00Totals 39/2 0 0 0 0 0 0 17 2/2:00

• •• Cited by Cottle as one of the Terps’ most improved players in ‘03,

has been running as one of four players on second midfield.• Opened scoring vs. Ohio State (5/11) with rifle shot in NCAA

First Round game, took three shots with increased playing time.• Started on first midfield vs. UMBC (4/25) on Senior Night and

scored late in the first quarter.• WMAR Scholar-Athlete during the Johns Hopkins (4/12) game.• Scored fifth career goal vs. Butler (3/25), taking four shots.• Career-high with two goals at Stony Brook (3/15) including EMG.

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2000 3/0 1 0 1 1 0 0 2 0/0:002001 3/0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0/0:002002 6/0 1 1 2 2 0 0 4 1/1:002003 11/0 5 0 5 16 1 0 0 0/0:00Totals 22/0 7 2 9 19 1 0 6 1/1:00

CAREER HIGHSGoals: 2 at Stony Brook (3/15/02)Assists: 1 vs. Air Force (2/24/01) & vs. Mt. St. Mary’s (2/26/02)Points: 2 at Stony Brook (3/15/02)

• •• Scored first goal of year vs. Ohio State (5/11) in NCAA First

Round game, running with second midfield.• Ran with the first midfield vs. UMBC (4/25) on Senior Night.• Picked up career-best three groundballs at Navy (4/5).• Played in all seven games this season on the third midfield line.• Career-high two assists in return to home state at Virginia (3/29).• Assisted Bill McGlone’s go-ahead goal vs. Bucknell (3/11).

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen1999 13/0 1 0 1 13 0 0 7 1/1:002001 9/0 1 0 1 3 0 0 1 2/1:002002 13/0 8 1 9 32 0 2 12 1/1:002003 14/0 1 3 4 9 0 0 6 1/1:00Totals 49/0 11 4 15 57 0 2 26 5/4:00

CAREER HIGHSGoals: 3 vs. Delaware (3/16/02)Assists: 2 at Virginia (3/29/02)Points: 3 vs. Delaware (3/16/02)

• •• Career-high four goals & seven points, ran with 1st midfield early

on, now playing on second midfield and as man-up specialist.• Scored to make it 3-0 vs. Ohio State (5/11) in NCAA First Round.• Assisted Dan LaMonica goal in 3rd qtr. vs. Duke (4/18) in ACC.• Scored 10th career goal vs. Butler (3/25) to open scoring.• Assisted Joe Walters’ man-up goal in third qtr. vs. UNC (3/22).• In return to hometown, scored a goal at Stony Brook (3/15).• Scored second goal of year vs. Bucknell (3/11) in first quarter.

• Scored Terps’ first goal of 2003, 56 seconds into Duke game (3/2).• Teams with brother Chris for one of two brother tandems on the

Terps (along with the Healys).

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2000 13/0 3 1 4 16 0 0 5 0/0:002001 13/0 0 1 1 14 0 0 5 2/1:002002 13/0 3 3 6 15 1 0 4 0/0:002003 13/0 5 3 8 23 0 0 7 1/0:30Totals 52/0 11 8 19 68 1 0 21 3/1:30

CAREER HIGHSGoals: 1 on 11 occasions (most recent vs. Ohio State, 5/11/03)Assists: 1 on seven occasions (most recent vs. UNC, 3/22/03)Points: 2 on three occasions (most recent vs. Virginia, 3/31/02)

• •• Started last 25 of 27 on close defense, has 38 GB and 28 CT,

which leads the team in caused turnovers.• Starting long-pole on close defense along with preseason All-

Americans Michael Howley and Chris Passavia.• Has held his opposing man scoreless for three games in row.• Had three groundballs and a CT in blanking OSU’s Curtis Smith

-- nation’s fifth leading scorer -- vs. Ohio State (5/11) in NCAA.• Named Maryland Student-Athlete of the Week on May 4 after

week in which he had 10 groundballs, 12 caused turnoversand first career goal.

• Posted career highs with nine groundballs and seven causedturnovers at Notre Dame (5/3) limiting Irish to 0 goals in 32:55.

• Career game with first goal and 5 caused turnovers vs.Georgetown (4/28), also held leading scorer Goldman pointless.

• Named TerpVision Player of the game vs. Georgetown.• Did not start on Senior Night vs. UMBC (4/25), but had 2 GBs.• Grabbed five GB’s and caused 4 turnovers at Navy (4/5).• Three GB’s and helped defense to keep Virginia (3/29) score-

less for 33:06.• Three groundballs and caused TO vs. Butler (3/25).• Three GB’s in win at Towson (3/8).• Team-high 4 caused TO’s and 3 GB vs. Duke (3/2) in opener.

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2001 16/0 0 0 0 2 0 0 8 2/2:002002 13/12 0 0 0 0 0 0 28 7/6:302003 14/13 1 0 1 1 0 0 38 14/12:00Totals 43/25 1 0 1 3 0 0 74 23/20:30CAREER HIGHSGoals: 1 vs. Georgetown (4/28/03)Points: 1 vs. Georgetown (4/28/03)Groundballs: 9 at Notre Dame (5/3/03)

• •• Has emerged a key face-off man over the last four games.• Won 5/10 at Notre Dame (5/3), also had three groundballs.• Career-game on Senior Night vs. UMBC (4/25), winning ca-

reer-high 9/15 face-offs.• Equaled then-career-hi taking nine face-offs at Virginia (3/29).• Won 80% (4/5) face-offs at Stony Brook (3/15), tying hi for wins.• Won 4/9 face-offs vs. Bucknell (3/11), both career-highs in win.• Won one-of-two face-offs vs. Duke (3/2).CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GSG A Pts. Shots Face-Off Pct. GB Pen2000 3/0 0 0 0 0 0/0 0.0 1 0/0:002001 6/0 1 0 1 2 2/5 40.0 2 0/0:002002 6/0 0 0 0 2 7/17 41.2 6 2/2:002003 12/0 0 0 0 0 29/61 47.5 7 0/0:00Totals 27/0 1 0 1 4 38/83 45.8 13 2/2:00

CAREER HIGHSGoals & Points: 1 at Mount St. Mary’s (4/25/01)Face-Off Wins: 9 vs. UMBC (4/25/03)Total Face-Offs: 15 vs. UMBC (4/25/03)

• •• Joins Brian Hunt (Yale) as graduate students after playing at

other D-I schools, having played at Colgate.• Moved to defensive midfield after playing offense at Colgate.• Made Terps’ debut vs. Bucknell (3/11) with a shot on GB.• Led the Red Raiders in scoring in his only collegiate lacrosse

season with 48 points on 28 goals and 19 assists.• Football All-American at Colgate, school’s 4th all-time receiver.CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GSG A Pts. Shots Face-Off Pct. GB Pen2002Colg 14/8 29 19 48 71 35/66 53.0 31 2/1:002003 12/0 0 0 0 6 0/0 0.0 9 0/0:00Totals 26/8 29 19 48 77 35/66 53.0 40 2/1:00

• •• Cited by coaches as the team’s most consistent all-around player.• Team leader with groundballs with 57(4.1 per game), 15 CT’s.• Has four goals and three assists as a defensive midfielder.• Grabbed five groundballs for sixth time in a game this season

at Notre Dame (5/3), also caused two turnovers.• Added to team-high groundball total with 4 GB vs. G’town (4/28).• Scooped 5 GB’s and 2 CT’s, also scored fourth goal to open

UM scoring vs. UMBC (4/25).• Grabbed four groundballs vs. Duke (4/18) in ACC Semifinals.• Netted third goal of the year vs. Hopkins (4/12), in transition.• Scored with 0:00.9 left in first quarter at Navy (4/5), also 2 GBs.• ACC Player of the Week and UM Athlete of Week on March 31.• Grabbed four GB’s and assisted go-ahead goal at Virginia (3/29).• Career-high nine groundballs vs. Butler (3/25), five GB in first

quarter; also added fifth career assist on Dan LaMonica goal.• Four groundballs vs. UNC (3/22).• Assisted Walters’s goal vs. Bucknell (3/11), added 6 GB, 3 CT.• Corraled 100th career groundball vs. Bucknell.• Scored fourth career goal at Towson (3/8), also had 6 GB’s.• Tied then-career high w/ 7 GB vs. Duke (3/2), also caused 3 TO’s.• Won first annual “Big Man Award” named after coach Dick Edell,

as the player who exemplifies selfless and positive qualities.

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2001 16/0 2 1 3 12 0 0 24 0/0:002002 13/12 1 2 3 4 0 0 60 0/0:002003 14/14 4 3 7 5 0 0 57 1/0:30Totals 43/26 7 6 13 21 0 0 141 1/0:30

CAREER HIGHSGoals: 1 on seven occasions (most recent vs. UMBC, 4/25/03)Assists: 1 on six occasions (most recent at Virginia, 3/29/03)Points: 2 at Bucknell (3/12/02)Groundballs: 9 vs. Butler (3/25/03)

• •• Saw late time vs. Butler (3/25).• Made season debut in return to Long Island at Stony Brook (3/15).

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2002 2/0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 0/0:002003 2/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0/0:00Totals 4/0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 0/0:00

• •• Freshman face-off specialist who will see limited time.• Lost only face-off in ACC Semifinals vs. Duke (4/18).• Lost only face-off in collegiate debut vs. Duke (3/2).• Father is long-time official Rich Tamberrino, the NLL’s Director

of Officials; brother Tom played at Georgetown.

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GSG A Pts. Shots Face-Off Pct. GB Pen2003 5/0 0 0 0 0 2/10 20.0 1 0/0:00

• •• Has scored 28 goals in his last 21 games over two years.• Has 11 goals and four assists in first year with Maryland.• Scored two goals, including go-ahead goal, and added assists

at Notre Dame (5/3) playing with the first midfield.• Started on first midfield vs. G’Town (4/28) -- took four shots.• Haunted his former team with two goals (including game-win-

ner) and two assists vs. UMBC (4/25) -- his UM points high (4).• Seventh goal -- scoring in 3 straight games -- vs. Hopkins (4/12).• Netted go-ahead goal to make it 4-3 at Navy (4/5) in 9-7 win.• Scored Terps’ first goal and assisted second at Virginia (3/29).• Scored twice at Stony Brook (3/15), as all 2nd MF’s scored 2 g.• Tallied fourth-quarter goal vs, Bucknell (3/11) on only shot, 2 GB.• Scored in UM debut vs. Duke (3/2).• Junior transfer from UMBC, running with the second midfield.• Moved to midfield late last season at UMBC and scored 17 of

his team-high 18 goals in the final seven games.

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2001UMBC 11/7 8 3 11 35 3 0 23 1/1:002002UMBC 12/12 18 6 24 52 4 1 18 1/0:302003 14/0 11 4 15 29 0 1 7 0/0:00Totals 37/19 37 13 50 116 7 2 48 2/1:30

CAREER HIGHSGoals: 4 vs. Cornell (3/5/02) & vs. Lafayette (3/30/02)Assists: 3 on four occasions (most recent vs. Canisius, 4/26/02)Points: 6 vs. St. Joe’s (3/9/02), VMI (3/19/02) & Lafayette (3/30/02)Multi-Goal Games: 10; Multi-Point Games: 12, Hat Tricks: 8

• •• Became fourth member of second midfield to score a goal vs

Ohio State (5/11) in NCAA First Round.• Assisted Gillette’s goal to open UM scoring vs. UMBC (4/25) on

Senior Night in running with the first midfield.• Scored third goal of the year at Virginia (3/29) to make it 7-2.• Career-high two assists vs. Butler (3/25), coming in span of 7:03.• Scored twice at Stony Brook (3/15), as all 2nd MF’s scored 2 g.• Assisted Joe Walters’ second goal at Towson (3/8).

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2000 5/0 0 1 1 0 0 0 4 0/0:002001 16/0 7 3 10 25 0 2 13 1/0:302002 13/0 2 1 3 18 0 0 17 1/1:002003 14/0 4 4 8 21 0 1 5 3/2:30Totals 48/0 13 9 22 64 0 3 39 5/4:00

CAREER HIGHSGoals: 2 vs. Air Force (2/24/01) & at Towson (3/10/01) & at SB (3/15/03)Assists: 2 vs. Butler (3/25/03)Points: 2 on five occasions (most recent vs. Butler (3/25/03)

• •• Running with first midfield, starting face-off man for first 10 games.• All-ACC selection and member of the ACC All-Tournament Team.• All 37 career goals in his last 25 games.• Second in goals (22), tied for fourth in points (29), tied for third

in GB (40).• Equaled last season’s totals for goals, assists & points in 10 games.• Only Terp with at least one point in every game -- 15 in a row.• Sealed win over Ohio State (5/11) with empty net goal with 0:16

left in NCAA First Round game.• Scored two goals in a game for the fourth game in a row at

Notre Dame (5/3), has seven multi-goal games this year.• Scored two goals -- one man-up -- and added an assist vs.

Georgetown (4/28).• Tied career high in points with four on two goals and two assists

vs. UMBC (4/25), did not take any face-offs, but had 3 GBs.• Fifth career hat trick and third vs. Duke (4/18) came in ACC

Semifinals; stopped on possible game-tying shot as time ex-pired in ACC’s.

• Broke two-game goal drought with tally vs. Hopkins (4/12).• Assisted first and game-winning goals by Walters at Navy (4/5).• Set up Joe Walters’ game-winning goal at Virginia (3/29), 5 GB’s.• Tallied a goal including team-high 4th man-up goal vs. Butler

(3/25); also had 5 GB’s.• Scored last goal of game vs. UNC (3/22)• Scored a goal, won 4/5 face-offs and had 3 GB at Stony Brook

(3/15), in return to native Long Island.• Career-high four goals, including game-winner vs. Bucknell (3/11).• Equaled career-best with 10 face-off wins in 12 att., vs. Buck.• Two goals and assist at Towson (3/8); also won 3/7 face-offs.• Two goals for eight career tallies vs. Duke (3/2).• Won 8/13 face-offs in return to the role he had for two years.• Also grabbed 4 GB including 100th career vs. Duke (3/2).• In 2002, emerged an offensive weapon on the second midfield

after primarily serving as a face-off specialist his first two years.• Sixth on team in points (19), 15 goals after none in 2000-01.

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GSG A Pts. Shots Face-Off Pct. GB Pen2000 13/1 0 0 0 1 38/95 40.0 29 0/0:002001 16/5 0 0 0 2 59/115 51.3 51 0/0:002002 13/2 15 4 19 42 0/1 0.0 18 2/1:002003 14/10 22 7 29 73 38/76 50.0 40 5/4:00Totals 56/17 37 11 48 118 135/287 47.0 138 7/5:00

CAREER HIGHSGoals: 4 vs. Bucknell (3/11/03)Assists: 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (2/26/02) & vs. Towson (3/9/02).Points: 4 vs. Bucknell (3/11/03) & vs. UMBC (4/25/03)Groudballs: 8 on three occasions (most recent vs. UMBC, 5/5/01)Face-Off Wins: 10 vs. Virginia (4/20/01) & vs. Bucknell (3/11/03)Total Face-Offs: 16 at Virginia (3/31/00) & vs. Virginia (4/20/01)Face-Off Percentage: 87.5 (7-of-8) at Navy (4/7/01)Multi-Goal Games: 11; Multi-Point Games: 14, Hat Tricks: 5Point Scoring Streak: 14 games dating to May 4, 2002 at UMBC

• •• Has played in 12 games, winning 58.9 (33/56) face-offs.• Ranked among ACC and national leaders in face-off win pct.• Won 9/12 at Navy (4/5) including 8 of the last 10 draws.• Won career-high 11/12 face-offs (91.7%)& 6 GB’s at Towson (3/8).• Missed most of 2002 with a thumb injury, playing in two games.

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GSG A Pts. Shots Face-Off Pct. GB Pen2001 3/0 0 0 0 0 2/5 40.0 0 0/0:002002 2/0 0 0 0 0 3/4 75.0 3 0/0:002003 12/0 0 0 0 1 33/56 58.9 15 0/0:00Totals 17/0 0 0 0 1 38/65 58.5 18 0/0:00

CAREER HIGHSGroudballs: 6 at Towson (3/8/03)Face-Off Wins: 11 at Towson (3/8/03)Total Face-Offs: 12 at Towson (3/8/03)

• •• Back-up goalie to senior starter and captain Danny McCormick.• Played final 1:12, making two saves at Notre Dame (5/3).• Debut at Stony Brook (3/15), playing 14:12, making 5 saves.

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GSSvs. GA Sv.% Min. GAA W-L GB Pen2003 2/0 7 1 87.5 15 3.90 0-0 0 0/0:00

• •• Reserve attackman has seen increased playing time lately.• Netted fourth quarter goal vs. UMBC (4/25).• Scored two goals in a game for second time at Stony Brook (3/15).• Saw late time vs. Duke (3/2) at Towson (3/8), vs. Bucknell (3/11).• Won Larry Levitt Freshman of the Year Award in 2002.

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2002 8/0 3 1 4 6 0 0 1 0/0:002003 10/0 3 0 3 6 1 0 0 0/0:00Totals 18/0 6 1 7 12 1 0 1 0/0:00CAREER HIGHSGoals: 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (2/26/02) & at Stony Brook (3/15/03)Assists: 1 vs.Yale (4/26/02)Points: 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (2/26/02) & at Stony Brook (3/15/03)

• •• Running with the third midfield unit.• First career assist on first of three Walters’ goals vs Butler (3/25).• Scored third goal of year vs. UNC (3/25).• Scored go-ahead goal vs. Bucknell (3/11) in 2nd qtr., to make it 7-6• Scored first college goal on first shot in first game vs. Duke (3/2).• Two-time H.S.All-American, who led Ridley to Pa. state title twice.• Member of the United State U-19 World Team that will play this

summer in the championships at Towson.

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2003 13/0 3 1 4 18 0 0 5 0/0:00CAREER HIGHSGoals: 1 vs.Duke (3/2/03), vs. Bucknell (3/11/03) & UNC, (3/22/03)Assists: 1 vs. Butler (3/25/03)Points: 1 on four occasions (most recent vs. Butler (3/25/03)

• Saw time vs. Stony Brook (3/15) in return to L.I. and Butler (3/25).• Made collegiate debut vs. Bucknell (3/11), playing late minutes.

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2003 4/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0/0:00

• •• Ran on third midfield at Notre Dame (5/3), for most playing time.• Also played and took one shot vs. Butler (3/25).• Made 2003 debut with 3 shots at Stony Brook (3/15).

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2002 5/0 0 3 3 0 0 0 1 0/0:002003 3/0 0 0 0 4 0 0 1 0/0:00Totals 8/0 0 3 3 4 0 0 2 0/0:00

CAREER HIGHSAssists: 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (2/26/02)Points: 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (2/26/02)

• •• One of 16 national finalists for the Tewaaraton Trophy in 2002• Named All-ACC for third year in row, first Terp with three straight

league honors since Mark Douglas (1989-91)• Has started last 58 games in a row, dating to second career game.• Tied for third on team in groundballs (40), also third in caused

turnovers with 22.• Grabbed 3 GB and had 2 CT’s in win over Ohio State (5/11).• Held high school teammate and the nation’s fifth-leading scorer

Patrick Walsh pointless at Notre Dame (5/3) also had 4 GBs.• Grabbed 5 GB, forced 4 TO’s and held Hoyas’ top goal scorer

Mike Hammer to one goal vs. Georgetown (4/28).• On Senior Night vs. UMBC (4/25) had 4 GBs and 4 CTs.• Had three groundballs and two caused TO’s vs. Duke (4/18) in

ACC Semifinal.• Season-hi 6 GB vs. Hopkins (4/12), keyed 27:26 scorless drought.• Two GB’s and aided defense in blanking Virginia (3/29) for 33:06.• Scored fourth career goal and grabbed 3 GB’s vs. Butler (3/25).• Two groundballs and one caused TO vs. UNC (3/22).• Two GB’s and two caused TO’s at Towson (3/8).• Four GB’s vs. Duke (3/2), as he played close def. & LSM, help-

ing to hold Kevin Cassese to two points.• Preseason First Team All-American by Face-Off Magazine .• Along with teammate Chris Passavia, featured on the cover of

Inside Lacrosse’s 2003 Men’s Season Preview.• 2002 USILA Second Team All-American and All-ACC selection.CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2000 16/15 0 1 1 2 0 0 26 9/6:302001 16/16 2 3 5 5 0 0 57 8/8:002002 13/13 1 1 2 8 0 0 48 2/1:302003 14/14 1 0 1 3 0 0 40 1/0:30Totals 59/58 4 5 9 18 0 0 17120/16:30CAREER HIGHSGoals: 1 on three occasions (most recent at Bucknell, 3/12/02)Assists: 1 on five occasions (most recent at Bucknell, 3/12/02)Points: 2 at Bucknell (3/12/02)Groundballs: 8 at UMBC (5/4/02)

• •• Named to All-ACC Team for second year in a row in 2003.• Tied for third on team in groundballs with 40 and fourth in caused

turnovers with 21.• Helped Terps to hold Ohio State (5/11) to one goal in first 54:28

in NCAA First Round game, also had 3 GB amd 2 CTs.• Keyed defense that shutdown Notre Dame (5/3) attack, holding

them scoreless for 32:55.• Season-high six groundballs vs. Georgetown (4/28).• Had four GB’s including 100th career & 1 CT vs. UMBC (4/25).• Had team season-high five caused turnovers along with 2

groundballs vs. Duke (4/18) in ACC Semifinals.• Four GB vs. Hopkins (4/12), keyed 27:26 scorless drought.• Three GB’s and 1 caused TO at Navy (4/5).• One GB and aided defense in blanking Virginia (3/29) for 33:06.• Grabbed 4 GB’s and caused 2 TO’s vs. Bucknell (3/11).• Three GB’s, three caused TO’s in opener vs. Duke (3/2).• Preseason First Team All-American by Face-Off Magazine .• Along with teammate Michael Howley, featured on the cover of

Inside Lacrosse’s 2003 Men’s Season Preview.• 2002 USILA Third Team All-American and All-ACC selection.

CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2001 15/10 0 0 0 2 0 0 33 13/11:302002 13/13 1 0 1 3 0 0 38 11/8:302003 13/12 0 0 0 2 0 0 40 13/9:30Totals 41/35 1 0 1 7 0 0 11137/29:30

CAREER HIGHSGoals: 1 at Bucknell (3/12/02)Points: 1 at Bucknell (3/12/02)Groundballs: 7 vs. Virginia (3/31/01)

• •• Scooped a late groundball at Notre Dame (5/3).• Grabbed a GB and caused at TO vs. Butler (3/25).• Saw late time vs. Duke (3/2) & vs. Bucknell (3/11) & at SB (3/15).CAREER STATISTICSYear GP/GS G A Pts. ShotsEMGGWGGB Pen2002 5/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2/2:002003 5/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0/0:00Totals 10/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 2/2:00

’’

Date Opponent (Md.Rank/Opp.Rank) Score Rec. ACC Scoring (G-A-Pts/GWG in CAPS.) Goalie, Saves Att.Mar. 2 DUKE* (5/7) Turf W, 13-7 1-0 1-0 Hunt 3-1-4, LaMONICA 3-1-4, Moran 2-0-2, Mollot 1-1-2, Walters 0-2-2, I.Healy 1-0-1, McCormick 17 1,831

McGlone 1-0-1, W.Passavia 1-0-1, Smith 1-0-1Mar. 8 at Towson (3/17) W, 12-8 2-0 Walters 4-1-5, Hunt 3-1-4, Moran 2-1-3, LaMONICA 1-1-2, I.Healy 1-1-2, Gillette 1-0-1, McCormick 11 3,760

Daue 0-1-1, Melzer 0-1-1, Mollot 0-1-1Mar. 11 BUCKNELL (3/19) Turf W, 14-8 3-0 Walters 4-2-6, MORAN 4-0-4, Mollot 0-4-4, Hunt 2-1-3, W.Passavia 1-1-2, McGlone 1-0-1, McCormick 9 612

Smith 1-0-1, Urlock 1-0-1, Brock 0-1-1, Gillette 0-1-1 Beh, 0Mar 15 at Stony Brook (3/-) W, 16-4 4-0 Mollot 1-4-5, Hunt 2-2-4, DAUE 2-0-2, I.Healy 2-0-2, Schwartzman 2-0-2, Smith 2-0-2, Leary 2-0-2, McCormick 5 1,232

Moran 1-0-1, W. Passavia 1-0-1, Walters 1-0-1, Caretsky 0-1-1, B.Healy 0-1-1, LaMonica 0-1-1 Behm 1; Murphy 5Mar. 22 NORTH CAROLINA* (2/13) L, 6-10 4-1 1-1 Mollot 1-2-3, Walters 2-0-2, Moran 1-0-1, Hunt 1-0-1, McGlone 1-0-1, W.Passavia 0-1-1 McCormick 15 2,182Mar. 25 Butler at Boca Raton, Fla.(7/-) W, 18-9 5-1 LaMonica 2-3-5, Walters 4-0-4, Hunt 3-1-4, Urlock 2-0-2, Bordley 1-1-2, MOLLOT 1-1-2, Daue 0-2-2, McCormick 10 432

I.Healy 1-0-1, Howley 1-0-1, Leary 1-0-1, Moran 1-0-1, W.Passavia 1-0-1, Gillette 0-1-1, McGlone 0-1-1 Behm 2Mar. 29 at Virginia* (7/2) W, 8-7 6-1 2-1 WALTERS 3-1-4, Mollot 2-0-2, Smith 1-1-2, Brock 0-2-2, LaMonica 1-0-1, Daue 1-0-1, McCormick 15 3,207

Gillette 0-1-1, Moran 0-1-1Apr. 5 at Navy (4t/16) W, 9-7 7-1 LaMonica 0-6-6, WALTERS 4-0-4, Hunt 1-1-2, Moran 0-2-2, Gillette 1-0-1, Harper 1-0-1, Mollot 1-0-1, Smith 1-0-1 McCormick 11 3,295Apr. 12 JOHNS HOPKINS (5/1) L, 5-6 (ot) 7-2 LaMonica 1-2-3, Gillette 1-0-1, Moran 1-0-1, Smith 1-0-1, Walters 1-0-1, I.Healy 0-1-1, Hunt 0-1-1 McCormick 7 8.183Apr. 18 Duke (5/13) - ACC SF at Virginia L, 6-7 7-3 Moran 3-0-3, LaMonica 1-2-3, Walters 2-0-2, W.Passavia 0-1-1 McCormick 4 2,330Apr. 25 UMBC (5/13) W, 15-8 8-3 Mollot 3-1-4, Moran 2-2-4, SMITH 2-2-4, Walters 3-1-4, Gillette 1-0-1, LaMonica 1-0-1, Leary 1-0-1 McCormick 9 1,933

Schwartzman 1-0-1, Urlock 1-0-1, Daue 0-1-1, Harper 0-1-1, Hunt 0-1-1Apr. 28 GEORGETOWN (4/5) W, 9-5 9-3 Hunt 2-1-3, MOLLOT 2-1-3, Moran 2-1-3, Walters 1-1-2, LaMonica 1-1-2, Zink 1-0-1 McCormick 14 2,671May 3 at Notre Dame (4/18) W, 10-4 10-3 Smith 2-1-3, Mollot 1-2-3, Moran 2-0-2, WALTERS 2-0-2, Hunt 2-0-2, Urlock 1-0-1 McCormick 6, Murphy 2 1,770May 11 OHIO STATE (3/17) NCAA 1st W, 8-5 11-3 Mollot 2-1-3, WALTERS 1-2-3, LaMonica 0-3-3, Brock 1-0-1, Daue 1-0-1, Leary 1-0-1, McCormick 13 2,294

Moran 1-0-1, W.Passavia 1-0-1,May 17 Massachusetts (3/5) NCAA QF12:30 p.m. ESPN Regional TV, WMUCSports.comMay 24 NCAA Semifinals at Baltimore 11:30 a.m. ESPN 2 WMUCSports.comMay 26 NCAA Final at Baltimore 11 a.m. ESPN, WMUCSports.com

’## Name GP-GS G A Pts Sh Shot% SOG SOG% GW UP DN GB T/O CT Faceoff Pct Pen-Min15 Joe Walters 14-13 32 10 42 102 .314 75 .735 4 5 0 27 17 4 0-0 .000 4- 2.51 Mike Mollot 14-1 15 18 33 60 .250 36 .600 2 2 0 24 37 4 0-0 .000 3- 3.011 Dan LaMonica 14-14 11 20 31 25 .440 19 .760 2 2 0 27 29 2 0-0 .000 2- 1.534 Ryan Moran 14-10 22 7 29 73 .301 48 .658 1 5 0 40 13 5 38-76 .500 5- 4.02 Brian Hunt 14-12 19 10 29 50 .380 40 .800 0 2 0 19 19 1 0-0 .000 4- 2.522 Justin Smith 14-0 11 4 15 28 .393 18 .643 1 0 0 7 14 1 0-0 .000 0- 0.028 Willy Passavia 13-0 5 3 8 23 .217 14 .609 0 0 0 7 7 1 0-0 .000 1- 0.533 Jamie Daue 14-0 4 4 8 21 .190 12 .571 1 0 0 5 8 1 0-0 .000 3- 2.54 Ian Healy 10-0 5 2 7 18 .278 11 .611 0 0 0 5 8 0 0-0 .000 0- 0.018 Paul Gillette 14-14 4 3 7 5 .800 5 1.000 0 0 0 57 14 15 0-0 .000 1- 0.517 Matt Urlock 14-2 5 0 5 22 .227 17 .773 0 1 0 6 7 0 0-0 .000 2- 2.025 Sean Leary 11-0 5 0 5 16 .312 11 .688 0 1 0 0 2 0 0-0 .000 0- 0.039 Bill McGlone 13-0 3 1 4 18 .167 12 .667 0 0 0 5 7 1 0-0 .000 1- 1.027 Matt Brock 14-0 1 3 4 9 .111 6 .667 0 0 0 6 5 0 0-0 .000 1- 1.038 Andrew Schwartzman 10-0 3 0 3 6 .500 6 1.000 0 1 0 0 2 1 0-0 .000 0- 0.013 Brett Harper 14-14 1 1 2 2 .500 1 .500 0 0 0 34 6 27 0-0 .000 4- 2.55 J.R. Bordley 8-0 1 1 2 2 .500 2 1.000 0 0 0 2 3 1 0-0 .000 0- 0.042 Michael Howley 14-14 1 0 1 3 .333 2 .667 0 0 0 40 10 22 0-0 .000 1- 0.529 Lee Zink 14-13 1 0 1 1 1.000 1 1.000 0 0 0 38 7 28 0-0 .000 14-12.010 Brendan Healy 13-0 0 1 1 10 .000 3 .300 0 0 0 5 3 1 0-0 .000 0- 0.023 Bret Caretsky 1-0 0 1 1 4 .000 2 .500 0 0 0 0 1 0 0-0 .000 0- 0.014 Alex Melzer 13-0 0 1 1 0 .000 0 .000 0 0 0 2 3 0 0-0 .000 2- 1.032 Joe Parker 12-0 0 0 0 6 .000 2 .333 0 0 0 9 5 1 0-0 .000 0- 0.041 Dave Matz 3-0 0 0 0 4 .000 4 1.000 0 0 0 1 1 1 0-0 .000 0- 0.044 Chris Passavia 13-12 0 0 0 2 .000 2 1.000 0 0 0 40 9 21 0-0 .000 13- 9.516 Michael Hartofilis 3-0 0 0 0 2 .000 0 .000 0 0 0 0 1 0 0-0 .000 0- 0.035 Jeremy Pastula 12-0 0 0 0 1 .000 0 .000 0 0 0 15 1 0 33-56 .589 0- 0.012 Peter Ellis 3-0 0 0 0 1 .000 1 1.000 0 0 0 0 1 0 0-0 .000 0- 0.08 Frank Luciano 14-1 0 0 0 1 .000 1 1.000 0 0 0 5 1 9 0-0 .000 1- 1.045 Tyler Hereth 5-0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0 0 0 1 1 1 0-0 .000 0- 0.040 Ryan Lang 4-0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0 0 0 1 1 0 0-0 .000 0- 0.037 Teddy Murphy 2-0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 .000 0- 0.030 Jim Sbarra 12-0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0 0 0 7 3 0 29-61 .475 0- 0.024 Dave Wagner 14-2 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0 0 0 5 2 2 0-0 .000 1- 1.020 David Tamberrino 5-0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0 0 0 1 0 0 2-10 .200 0- 0.019 Matt Aksionoff 2-0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 .000 0- 0.09 Gavin Webb 6-0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0 0 0 2 3 0 0-0 .000 0- 0.07 T.C. Behm 3-0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 .000 0- 0.06 Drew Virk 14-4 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0 0 0 28 9 6 36-87 .414 3- 2.03 Danny McCormick 14-14 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0 0 0 43 14 2 0-0 .000 0- 0.0 Total............... 14 149 90 239 515 .289 351 .682 11 19 0 514 284 158 138-290 .476 66-50.5 Opponents........... 14 95 56 151 449 .212 251 .559 3 16 1 450 334 101 152-290 .524 65-50.5

|---GOAL AVERAGE---| |--SAVES--| |-RECORD-| Shots## Name GP-GS Minutes GA GAAvg Saves Pct W L T Faced37 Teddy Murphy 2-0 15:24 1 3.90 7 .875 0 0 0 93 Danny McCormick 14-14 795:06 89 6.72 146 .621 11 3 0 4277 T.C. Behm 3-0 30:51 5 9.72 3 .375 0 0 0 13 Total............... 14 841:21 95 6.77 156 .622 11 3 0 449 Opponents........... 14 841:21 149 10.63 202 .575 3 11 0 515

GOALS BY PERIOD 1st 2nd 3rd 4th OT Total#3 Maryland......... 36 41 30 42 0 - 149Opponents........... 34 12 21 27 1 - 95

SHOTS BY PERIOD 1st 2nd 3rd 4th OT Total#3 Maryland......... 128 133 124 130 0 - 515Opponents........... 120 109 88 131 1 - 449

SHOTS ON GOAL BY PRD 1st 2nd 3rd 4th OT Total#3 Maryland......... 87 91 85 88 0 - 351Opponents........... 76 53 49 72 1 - 251

SAVES BY PERIOD 1st 2nd 3rd 4th OT Total#3 Maryland......... 42 41 28 45 0 - 156Opponents........... 51 50 55 46 0 - 202

ATTENDANCE SUMMARY MARYLAND OPPTotal.................... 19706 13264Dates/Avg Per Date....... 7/2815 5/2653Neutral Site #/Avg....... 2/1381

CLEARS: #3 Maryland 268-328 .817, Opponents 210-290 .724.MAN-UP OPPS: #3 Maryland 19-62 .306, Opponents 16-64 .250.

Score By Qtr. Shots By Qtr. Saves By Qtr. Groundballs By Qtr. Face-Offs F-O Pct. Clears Clear Pct. EMO EMO Pct. Penalties#7 Duke 3 1 0 3 7 12 8 11 12 43 4 6 2 3 15 8 3 4 8 23 11/23 47.9 11/13 84.6 1/6 16.7 6/5:00at #5 Maryland 2 5 2 4 13 9 13 5 8 35 4 3 7 3 17 8 11 6 10 35 12/23 52.1 20/25 80.0 4/6 66.7 6/5:30

#3 Maryland 4 3 2 3 12 12 17 7 7 43 1 3 1 6 11 10 13 10 10 43 14/22 63.6 18/27 66.7 3/6 50.0 8/6:00at #17 Towson 3 2 1 2 8 7 7 4 14 32 3 4 4 1 12 13 9 13 6 41 8/22 36.4 21/26 80.7 3/8 37.5 6/4:30

#19 Bucknell 6 0 1 1 8 10 6 7 5 28 3 4 7 0 14 3 7 6 3 19 10/25 40.0 16/19 84.2 1/7 14.3 8/7:00at #3 Maryland 6 1 2 5 14 9 9 10 8 36 3 4 0 2 9 9 7 6 11 33 15/25 60.0 17/21 81.0 3/6 50.0 8/5:00

#3 Maryland 7 6 2 1 16 13 11 8 12 44 1 4 1 5 11 12 8 5 6 31 14/23 60.9 15/18 83.3 3/6 50.0 5/4:30at Stony Brook 1 0 2 1 4 2 10 4 7 23 3 3 2 7 15 5 8 7 3 23 9/23 39.1 9/18 50.0 0/5 0.0 6/4:30

#13 North Carolina 1 2 5 2 10 16 12 10 4 42 4 5 8 8 25 10 6 12 4 32 15/21 71.4 12/20 60.0 4/6 66.7 5/4:00at #2 Maryland 0 2 2 2 6 6 9 14 18 47 7 3 3 2 15 5 6 10 9 30 6/21 28.6 12/15 80.0 1/5 20.0 6/4:30

vs. Butler 4 2 0 3 9 10 11 2 10 33 5 3 4 3 15 9 7 5 3 24 12/31 38.7 12/17 70.6 2/4 50.0 3/2:30#7 Maryland 2 3 9 4 18 10 10 24 9 53 3 4 2 3 12 12 6 25 15 58 19/31 61.3 22/25 88.0 1/3 33.3 4/3:00

#7 Maryland 1 5 1 1 8 11 10 7 5 33 3 5 2 5 15 6 15 8 7 36 5/19 26.3 23/29 79.3 1/6 16.7 4/3:00at #2 Virginia 2 0 2 3 7 9 9 10 16 44 4 3 2 3 12 8 10 7 11 36 14/19 73.7 17/25 68.0 1/4 25.0 6/4:00

#4 Maryland 2 3 0 4 9 7 7 5 11 30 5 3 2 1 11 3 12 6 16 37 10/18 55.6 20/23 87.0 0/3 0.0 4/2:30at #16 Navy 3 1 1 2 7 9 6 4 4 23 3 1 4 2 10 8 8 6 10 32 8/18 44.4 22/30 73.3 1/4 25.0 3/1:30

#1 Johns Hopkins 2 2 1 0 1 6 8 6 5 9 1 29 4 5 3 3 0 15 9 10 7 6 0 32 10/14 71.4 13/19 68.4 0/2 0.0 2/1:30at #5 Maryland 1 1 1 2 0 5 7 6 6 7 0 26 2 1 2 2 0 7 9 5 5 5 1 25 4/14 28.6 15/17 88.2 0/2 0.0 2/1:30

#13 Duke (ACC SF) 4 0 2 1 7 10 9 7 3 29 4 2 2 4 12 10 5 5 9 29 9/14 64.3 15/18 83.3 1/4 25.0 4/3:30vs. #5 Maryland 1 1 2 2 6 7 6 4 12 29 2 2 0 0 4 3 9 5 12 29 5/14 35.7 16/21 76.2 0/3 0.0 4/3:00

#13 UMBC 3 0 2 3 8 7 4 3 11 25 2 5 4 4 15 10 7 6 12 35 13/27 48.1 15/21 71.4 0/3 0.0 1/0:30#5 Maryland 5 3 4 3 15 7 9 10 8 34 2 2 1 4 9 8 8 13 13 42 14/27 51.9 23/26 88.5 0/1 0.0 3/1:30

#5 Georgetown 1 1 2 1 5 9 12 8 14 43 3 3 5 2 13 12 9 12 17 50 16/18 88.9 18/25 72.0 1/7 14.3 10/7:30#4 Maryland 2 2 2 3 9 11 8 7 5 31 3 3 3 5 14 10 5 10 15 40 2/18 11.1 26/35 74.4 2/10 20.0 8/7:00

#4 Maryland 2 3 0 5 10 11 11 5 15 42 1 2 3 2 8 9 12 6 14 41 9/18 50.0 23/24 95.8 1/4 25.0 2/2:00at #18 Notre Dame 1 0 2 1 4 3 5 10 7 25 6 5 4 4 19 7 10 7 10 34 9/18 50.0 17/25 68.0 0/2 0.0 4/4:00

#17 Ohio State (NCAA) 0 1 0 4 5 8 4 3 15 30 3 1 4 2 10 7 13 5 15 40 8/17 47.1 12/14 85.7 1/2 50.0 1/0:30#3 Maryland 1 3 1 3 8 8 7 12 5 32 5 2 1 5 13 7 8 6 12 33 9/17 52.9 18/22 81.8 0/1 0.0 2/1:30

PLAYER Duke Towson Bucknell S. Brook N. Carolina Butler Virginia Navy Hopkins Duke-ACC UMBC Georgetown Notre Dame Ohio State UMass1 Mollot, Mike 1-1-2, 3-0 0-1-1, 3-1 0-4-4, 4-0 1-4-5, 1-0 1-2-3, 4-2 1-1-2, 4-3 2-0-2, 9-1 1-0-1, 3-1 0-0-0, 3-1 0-0-0, 4-3 3-1-4, 5-3 2-1-3, 5-1 1-2-3, 5-4 2-1-3, 7-42 Hunt, Brian 3-1-4, 8-0 3-1-4, 6-2 2-1-3, 5-2 2-2-4, 2-1 1-0-1, 5-2 3-1-4, 5-3 0-0-0, 2-2 1-1-2, 3-1 0-1-1, 1-1 0-0-0, 2-1 0-1-1, 2-1 2-1-3, 3-1 2-0-2, 5-2 0-0-0, 1-03 McCormick, Danny 0-0-0, 0-1 0-0-0, 0-5 0-0-0, 0-3 0-0-0, 0-3 0-0-0, 0-1 0-0-0, 0-4 0-0-0, 0-6 0-0-0, 0-2 0-0-0, 0-3 0-0-0, 0-3 0-0-0, 0-2 0-0-0, 0-3 0-0-0, 0-2 0-0-0, 0-64 Healy, Ian 1-0-1, 2-0 1-1-2, 3-0 0-0-0, 2-0 2-0-2, 4-0 0-0-0, 1-2 1-0-1, 4-1 0-0-0, 0-1 0-0-0, 0-0 0-1-1, 1-0 0-0-0, 1-0 INJ-mono INJ-mono INJ-mono DNP5 Bordley, J.R. 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 1-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-1 DNP 1-1-2, 1-1 DNP DNP DNP DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-06 Virk, Drew 0-0-0, 0-3 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-2 0-0-0, 0-8 0-0-0, 0-1 0-0-0, 0-1 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-1 0-0-0, 0-3 0-0-0, 0-2 0-0-0, 0-3 0-0-0, 0-47 Behm, T.C. DNP DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP DNP DNP INJ-head INJ-head INJ-head DNP DNP8 Luciano, Frank 0-0-0, 0-1 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-1 0-0-0, 0-3 0-0-0, 1-0 0-0-0, 0-09 Webb, Gavin 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-1 DNP 0-0-0, 0-1 DNP DNP DNP DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP10 Healy, Brendan 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 1-1 0-0-0, 0-0 0-1-1, 3-2 0-0-0, 0-2 0-0-0, 2-0 0-0-0, 1-0 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 1-0 0-0-0, 2-0 0-0-0, 0-011 LaMonica, Dan 3-1-4, 3-2 1-1-2, 2-2 0-0-0, 1-1 0-1-1, 1-0 0-0-0, 1-1 2-3-5, 3-1 1-0-1, 3-2 0-6-6, 1-4 1-2-3, 2-4 1-2-3, 3-3 1-0-1, 2-2 1-1-2, 1-3 0-0-0, 0-1 0-3-3, 2-112 Ellis, Peter DNP DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP 0-0-0, 1-0 DNP DNP DNP DND DNP DNP DNP DNP13 Harper, Brett 0-0-0, 0-2 0-0-0, 0-3 0-0-0, 0-4 0-0-0, 0-3 0-0-0, 0-2 0-0-0, 0-4 0-0-0, 0-3 1-0-1, 1-3 0-0-0, 1-0 0-0-0, 0-1 0-1-1, 0-3 0-0-0, 0-3 0-0-0, 0-2 0-0-0, 0-114 Melzer, Alex 0-0-0, 0-1 0-1-1, 0-1 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-015 Walters, Joe 0-2-2, 3-2 4-1-5, 10-2 4-2-6, 8-1 1-0-1, 2-0 2-0-2, 17-3 4-0-4, 10-4 3-1-4, 4-3 4-0-4, 9-3 1-0-1, 6-2 2-0-2, 7-1 3-1-4, 5-3 1-1-2, 7-2 2-0-2, 7-0 1-2-3, 7-116 Hartofilis, Michael DNP DNP DNP 0-0-0, 2-0 DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP DNP DNP DND DNP DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP17 Urlock, Matt 0-0-0, 4-0 0-0-0, 0-0 1-0-1, 2-0 0-0-0, 0-2 0-0-0, 1-0 2-0-2, 6-2 0-0-0, 1-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 1-0 0-0-0, 0-0 1-0-1, 4-0 0-0-0, 2-1 1-0-1, 1-0 0-0-0, 0-018 Gillette, Paul 0-0-0, 0-7 1-0-1, 1-6 0-1-1, 0-6 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 1-4 0-1-1, 0-9 0-1-1, 0-4 1-0-1, 1-2 1-0-1, 1-0 0-0-0, 0-4 1-0-1, 1-5 0-0-0, 0-4 0-0-0, 0-5 0-0-0, 0-119 Aksionoff, Matt DNP DNP DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP DNP DNP DND DNP DNP DNP DNP20 Tamberrino, David 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-1 DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP DNP DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP DNP DNP DNP22 Smith, Justin 1-0-1, 1-0 0-0-0, 3-0 1-0-1, 1-2 2-0-2, 4-0 0-0-0, 2-0 0-0-0, 0-0 1-1-2, 2-0 1-0-1, 3-2 1-0-1, 1-0 0-0-0, 2-1 2-2-4, 3-1 0-0-0, 4-1 2-1-3, 3-2 0-0-0, 0-023 Caretsky, Bret DNP DNP DNP 0-1-1, 4-0 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DND DNP DNP DNP DNP24 Wagner, David 0-0-0, 0-1 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-1 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-1 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-2 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-025 Leary, Sean DNP DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 2-0-2, 3-0 DNP 1-0-1, 4-0 0-0-0, 3-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 1-0-1, 1-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 2-0 1-0-1, 3-027 Brock, Matt 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 1-0 0-1-1, 0-0 0-0-0, 3-0 0-0-0, 1-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-2-2, 0-1 0-0-0, 0-3 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 1-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 2-1 1-0-1, 1-028 Passavia, Willy 1-0-1, 3-0 0-0-0, 3-2 1-1-2, 2-1 1-0-1, 1-0 0-1-1, 0-0 1-0-1, 3-1 0-0-0, 4-0 DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 0-1-1, 0-1 0-0-0, 2-1 0-0-0, 1-0 0-0-0, 3-0 1-0-1, 1-129 Zink, Lee 0-0-0, 0-3 0-0-0, 0-3 0-0-0, 0-1 0-0-0, 0-2 0-0-0, 0-2 0-0-0, 0-3 0-0-0, 0-3 0-0-0, 0-5 0-0-0, 0-1 0-0-0-, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-2 1-0-1, 1-1 0-0-0, 0-9 0-0-0, 0-330 Sbarra, Jim 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-1 0-0-0, 0-1 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-3 0-0-0, 0-232 Parker, Joe DNP DNP 0-0-0, 1-1 0-0-0, 1-2 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-2 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 1-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-1 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 2-1 0-0-0, 1-233 Daue, Jamie 0-0-0, 1-0 0-1-1, 1-0 0-0-0, 0-0 2-0-2, 2-1 0-0-0, 2-1 0-2-2, 3-1 1-0-1, 2-0 0-0-0, 2-1 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 1-0 0-1-1, 0-0 0-0-0, 1-0 0-0-0, 2-0 1-0-1, 4-134 Moran, Ryan 2-0-2, 6-4 2-1-3, 7-2 4-0-4, 8-6 1-0-1, 2-3 1-0-1, 7-0 1-0-1, 4-5 0-1-1, 1-5 0-2-2, 5-2 1-0-1, 5-2 3-0-3, 7-4 2-2-4, 4-3 2-1-3, 5-2 2-0-2, 8-2 1-0-1, 4-035 Pastula, Jeremy 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 1-6 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-3 0-0-0, 0-1 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-3 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-1 DNP 0-0-0, 0-1 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP37 Murphy, Teddy DNP DNP DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP38 Schwartzman, And. 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 2-0-2, 4-0 DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP DNP 1-0-1, 2-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-039 McGlone, Bill 1-0-1, 1-1 0-0-0, 0-1 1-0-1, 2-0 0-0-0, 2-0 0-1-1, 5-1 0-1-1, 1-0 0-0-0, 1-0 0-0-0, 1-0 0-0-0, 3-1 0-0-0, 1-0 0-0-0, 1-0 0-0-0, 0-1 0-0-0, 0-1 DNP40 Lang, Ryan DNP DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-1 DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP DNP DNP DND DNP DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP41 Matz, Dave DNP DNP DNP 0-0-0, 3-1 DNP 0-0-0, 1-0 DNP DNP DNP DND DNP DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP42 Howley, Michael 0-0-0, 0-4 0-0-0, 0-2 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-1 0-0-0, 0-2 1-0-1, 1-3 0-0-0, 0-2 0-0-0, 0-1 0-0-0, 1-6 0-0-0, 1-3 0-0-0, 0-4 0-0-0, 0-5 0-0-0, 0-4 0-0-0, 0-344 Passavia, Chris 0-0-0, 0-3 0-0-0, 0-3 0-0-0, 0-4 0-0-0, 0-3 0-0-0, 0-2 DNP 0-0-0, 0-1 0-0-0, 0-3 0-0-0, 0-4 0-0-0, 0-2 0-0-0, 1-4 0-0-0, 0-6 0-0-0, 0-1 0-0-0, 1-345 Hereth, Tyler 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP 0-0-0, 0-0 0-0-0, 0-0 DNP 0-0-0, 0-1 DNP DNP DNP DND DNP DNP 0-0-0, 0-1 DNPRedshirting for season: 26 Scott Slosson, 43 Brent Hargest, 48 Patrick Howell; Key: DNP-Did Not Play; DND-Did Not Dress; DNT-Did Not Travel; INJ-Injured.

PLAYER Duke Towson Bucknell S. Brook N. Carolina Butler Virginia Navy Hopkins Duke-ACC UMBC Georgetown Notre Dame Ohio State UMass3 McCormick, Danny 17-7, 60:00 11-8, 60:00 9-8, 57:55 5-1, 30:00 15-10, 60 10-6, 47:02 15-7, 60 11-7, 60 7-6, 61:21 4-7, 60:00 9-8, 60:00 14-5, 60:00 6-4, 58:48 13-5, 60:007 Behm, T.C. DNP DNP 0-0, 2:05 1-2, 15:48 DNP 2-3, 12:58 DNP DNP DNP INJ-head INJ-head INJ-head DNP DNP37 Murphy, Teddy DNP DNP DNP 5-1, 14:12 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP 2-0, 1:12 DNP

PLAYER Duke Towson Bucknell S. Brook N. Carolina Butler Virginia Navy Hopkins Duke-ACC UMBC Georgetown Notre Dame Ohio State UMass6 Virk, Drew 3/6, 50.0 0/2, 0.0 0/1, 0.0 0/2, 0.0 2/6, 33.3 11/17, 64.7 2/5, 40.0 0/3, 0.0 0/1, 0.0 1/2, 50.0 5/12, 40.0 1/9, 11.1 4/7, 57.1 7/14, 50.020 Tamberrino, David 0/1, 0 DNP 0/1, 0.0 1/5, 20.0 DNP 1/2, 50.0 DNP DNP DNP 0/1, 0.0 DNP DNP DNP DNP30 Sbarra, Jim 1/2, 50.0 0/1, 0.0 4/9, 44.4 4/5, 80.0 1/2, 50.0 0/1, 0.0 3/9, 33.3 DNP 0/0, 0.0 DNP 9/15, 60.0 0/4, 0.0 5/10, 50.0 2/3, 66.734 Moran, Ryan 8/13, 61.5 3/7, 42.9 10/12, 83.3 4.5, 80.0 1/5, 20.0 6/10, 60.0 0/4, 0.0 1/3, 33.3 3/10, 30.0 2/5, 40.0 0/0 0/2, 0.0 0/0 0/035 Pastula, Jeremy 0/1, 0.0 11/12, 91.7 1/2, 50.0 5/6, 83.3 2/8, 25.0 1/1, 100.0 0/1, 0.0 9/12, 75.0 1/3, 33.3 2/6, 33.3 DNP 1/3, 33.3 0/1, 0.0 DNP

POINTSPlayer Points (G-A-P) OpponentDan LaMonica 6 (0-6-6) at Navy, 4/5Joe Walters 6 (4-2-6) Bucknell, 3/11Dan LaMonica 5 (2-3-5) vs. Butler, 3/25Mike Mollot 5 (1-4-5) at Stony Brook, 3/15Joe Walters 5 (4-1-5) at Towson, 3/8Mike Mollot 4 (3-1-4) UMBC, 4/25Joe Walters 4 (3-1-4) UMBC, 4/25Ryan Moran 4 (2-2-4) UMBC, 4/25Justin Smith 4 (2-2-4) UMBC, 4/25Joe Walters 4 (4-0-4) at Navy, 4/5Joe Walters 4 (3-1-4) at Virginia, 3/29Joe Walters 4 (4-0-4) vs. Butler, 3/25Brian Hunt 4 (3-1-4) vs. Butler, 3/25Brian Hunt 4 (2-2-4) at Stony Brook, 3/15Ryan Moran 4 (4-0-4) Bucknell, 3/11Brian Hunt 4 (3-1-4) at Towson, 3/8Brian Hunt 4 (3-1-4) Duke, 3/2Dan LaMonica 4 (3-1-4) Duke, 3/2

GOALSPlayer Goals OpponentJoe Walters 4 at Navy, 4/5Joe Walters 4 vs. Butler, 3/25Joe Walters 4 Bucknell, 3/11Ryan Moran 4 Bucknell, 3/11Joe Walters 4 at Towson, 3/8Mike Mollot 3 UMBC, 4/25Joe Walters 3 UMBC, 4/25Joe Walters 3 at Virginia, 3/29Brian Hunt 3 vs. Butler, 3/25Brian Hunt 3 at Towson, 3/8Brian Hunt 3 Duke, 3/2Dan LaMonica 3 Duke, 3/2

ASSISTSPlayer Assists OpponentDan LaMonica 6 at Navy, 4/5Mike Mollot 4 at Stony Brook, 3/15Mike Mollot 4 Bucknell, 3/11Dan LaMonica 3 Ohio State, 5/11 (NCAA)Dan LaMonica 3 vs. Butler, 3/25

SHOTSPlayer Shots OpponentJoe Walters 17 North Carolina, 3/22Joe Walters 10 vs. Butler, 3/25Joe Walters 10 at Towson, 3/8Joe Walters 9 at Navy, 4/5Mike Mollot 9 at Virginia, 3/29

GROUNDBALLSPlayer Groundballs OpponentLee Zink 9 at Notre Dame, 5/3Paul Gillette 9 vs. Butler, 3/25Drew Virk 8 vs. Butler, 3/25Paul Gillette 7 Duke, 3/2Chris Passavia 6 Georgetown, 4/28Michael Howley 6 Johns Hopkins, 4/12Danny McCormick 6 at Virginia, 3/29Ryan Moran 6 Bucknell, 3/11Michael Howley 6 Bucknell, 3/11Paul Gillette 6 at Towson, 3/8

CAUSED TURNOVERSPlayer Caused TO’s OpponentLee Zink 7 at Notre Dame, 5/3Lee Zink 5 Georgtown, 4/28Chris Passavia 5 vs. Duke, 4/18Michael Howley 4 Georgetown, 4/28Michael Howley 4 UMBC, 4/25Lee Zink 4 at Navy, 4/5, Duke, 3/2

FACE-OFF WINSPlayer Face-Off Wins OpponentDrew Virk 11 (11/17) vs. Butler, 3/25Jeremy Pastula 11 (11/12) at Towson, 3/8Ryan Moran 10 (10/12) Bucknell, 3/11Jim Sbarra 9 (9/15) UMBC, 4/25Jeremy Pastula 9 (9/12) at Navy, 4/5

SAVESPlayer Saves OpponentDanny McCormick 17 Duke, 3/2Danny McCormick 15 at Virginia, 3/29Danny McCormick 15 North Carolina, 3/22Danny McCormick 14 Georgetown, 4/28

Tendency OverallOverall Record 11-3Home 5-2Road 5-0Neutral 1-1

ACC Record 2-1Non-Conference Record 8-1ACC Tournament Record 0-1NCAA Tournament Record 1-0

On Grass 6-3On Turf 5-0

Leading after first quarter 6-0Trailing after first quarter 4-3Tied after first quarter 1-0

Leading at the half 10-0Trailing at the half 1-3Tied at the half 0-0

Leading after third quarter 11-0Trailing after third quarter 0-3Tied after third quarter 0-0

In overtime 0-1

Maryland has more shots 8-1Opponent has more shots 3-1

Maryland has more saves 5-0Opponent has more saves 6-3

Maryland wins more face-offs 8-0Opponent wins more face-offs 2-3

Maryland has more groundballs 8-0Opponent has more groundballs 2-2

Maryland has higher clear pct 7-2Opponent has higher clearing pct. 4-1

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16Maryland 1 1 1 2 3 1 1 1Opponent 2 1

Tendency OverallMaryland scores an extra-man goal 8-1Maryland doesn’t score on EMO 3-2

Maryland has more goals on EMO 5-0Opponent has more goals on EMO 3-2

Maryland more penalties 5-1Opponent has more penalties 4-0Teams have equal penalties 2-2

Maryland has more penalty minutes 6-1Opponent has more penalty minutes 4-1

Games decided by one goal 1-2Games decided by 2-4 goals 4-1Games decided by 5-8 goals 4-0Games decided by 9-12 goals 2-0Games decided by 13-19 goals 0-0

Maryland scores less than 10 goals 4-3Maryland scores 10 or more goals 7-0Maryland scores 15 or more goals 3-0Maryland scores 20 or more goals 0-0

Opponent scored less than 10 goals 11-2Opponent scores 10 or more goals 0-1

vs. Top 5 ranked opponent 2-1vs. Top 10 ranked opponent 3-1vs. Top 20 ranked opponent 6-2vs. 11-20 ranked opponent 4-1vs. Unranked opponent 2-0

vs. Team with winning record 7-3vs. Team with .500 record 3-0vs. Team with losing record 1-0

Maryland in March 6-1Maryland in April 3-2Maryland in May 2-0

Points 29 vs. Butler, 3/25Goals 18 vs. Butler, 3/25Goals in Qtr. 9 vs. Butler, 3/25Assists 11 vs. Butler, 3/25Shots 53 vs. Butler, 3/25Shots in Qtr. 24 vs. Butler, 3/25Shots On Goal 33 vs. Butler, 3/25Saves 17 Duke, 3/2Saves in Qtr. 7 Duke, 3/2

North Carolina, 3/22Groundballs 58 vs. Butler, 3/25GB in Qtr. 25 vs. Butler, 3/25Face-Offs 31 vs. Butler, 3/25Face-Off Wins 19 vs. Butler, 3/25Face-Off Pct. 63.6 at Towson, 3/8Clears 26 Georgetown, 4/28Clear Pct. 95.8 at Notre Dame, 5/3X-Man Goals 4 Duke, 3/2X-Man Pct. 66.7 Duke, 3/2Penalties 8 at Towson, 3/8

Bucknell, 3/11Georgetown, 4/28

Penalty Min. 7:00 Georgetown, 4/28Turnovers 33 Georgetown, 4/28Caused TO’s 19 at Notre Dame, 5/3

Points 18 North Carolina, 3/22Goals 10 North Carolina, 3/22Goals in Qtr. 6 Bucknell, 3/11Assists 8 North Carolina, 3/22Shots 43 Duke, 3/2

Georgetown, 4/28Shots in Qtr. 16 North Carolina, 3/22

at Virginia, 3/29Shots On Goal 25 North Carolina, 3/22Saves 25 North Carolina, 3/22Saves in Qtr. 8 North Carolina, 3/22Groundballs 50 Georgetown, 4/28GB in Qtr. 17 Georgetown, 4/28Face-Offs 31 vs. Butler, 3/25Face-Off Wins 16 Georgetown, 4/28Face-Off Pct. 88.9 Georgetown, 4/28Clears 21 at Towson, 3/8Clear Pct. 84.6 Duke, 3/2X-Man Goals 4 North Carolina, 3/22X-Man Pct. 66.7 North Carolina, 3/22Penalties 10 Georgetown, 4/28Penalty Min. 7:30 Georgetown, 4/28Turnovers 33 Georgetown, 4/28Caused TO’s 11 Georgetown, 4/28

No. 7 Duke (2-1) 3 1 0 3 -- 7No. 5 Maryland (1-0) 2 5 2 4 -- 13Scoring: Duke- Kevin Brennan 3-0-3, Kevin Cassese 1-1-2, Ben

Fenton 1-1-2, Matt Monfett 0-2-2, Dan Flannery 1-0-1, DevanWray 1-0-1, Matt Rewkowski 0-1-1. Maryland- Brian Hunt 3-1-4,Dan LaMonica 3-1-4, Ryan Moran 2-0-2, Mike Mollot 1-1-2, JoeWalters 0-2-2, Ian Healy 1-0-1, Bill McGlone 1-0-1, Willy Passavia1-0-1, Justin Smith 1-0-1.

Goalies: Duke- A.J. Kincel (60:00, 13 GA, 15 saves), Maryland-Danny McCormick (60:00, 7 GA, 17 saves).

Team Stats: Duke MarylandShots 12-8-11-12=43 9-13-5-8=35Saves 4-6-2-3=15 4-3-7-3=17Face-Offs 11/23 12/23Groundballs 8-3-4-8=23 8-11-6-10=35Clears 11/13 20/25Extra-Man Opp. 1/6 4/6Penalties 6/5:00 6/5:30Attendance: 1,831

COLLEGE PARK, Md. - After a slow start, Maryland goalieDanny McCormick made sure an overflow crowd of 1,831would not go home disappointed as the Terps cruised to a13-7 season-opening victory over ACC rival Duke (2-1) Sun-day at the Artificial Turf Facility.

McCormick had a career-high 17 saves to lead a stellardefensive effort that kept Duke off the scoreboard for a 38-minute stretch from early in the second quarter until thegame's final moments.

"I thought our defense was really impressive," said Mary-land head coach Dave Cottle . "We played really solid fromthe second quarter on. I have to give Coach Slafkosky a lotof credit for a great gameplan. I told the team before thegame that we had to win the goalie matchup and today wedid. McCormick was excellent in goal."

Brian Hunt and Dan LaMonica each registered hat tricksto pace the Maryland offense that scored 11 consecutive goalsduring the Duke drought.

Duke scored three of the game's first four goals to jumpon top early, before Maryland's defensive pressure stymiedthe Blue Devil attackers.

LaMonica's hat trick was the seventh of his career, as theTerrapins avenged two one-goal defeats to the Devils lastyear. LaMonica's first goal began the Maryland onslaughtand Hunt's second score seconds later tied the game at four.Goals by Mike Mollot, Hunt and Ryan Moran gave the Terpsa 7-4 halftime advantage.

The Terrapins scored six times in the first 23 minutes ofthe second half, before Duke tallied the final three goals.

Maryland utilized its man-up chances, scoring on four ofsix extra-man opportunities, while Duke was held to just onegoal with the man advantage.

"We really took advantage of our man-up chances," Cottleadded. "When Dan LaMonica and Brian Hunt play the waythey did, it really gives us a big lift on the man-up."

In their last two home games against Duke, Maryland hasoutscored the Devils 26-12, including a 13-5 victory in 2001

Freshman Bill McGlone scored his first career-goal whileJunior transfer Justin Smith scored his first as a Terp andIan Healy returned from his injury-redshirt season with theTerps’ other goal.

Kevin Brennan tallied three goals to pace the visitors andgoalie A.J. Kincel had 15 saves.

Maryland has now won 10 consecutive season openersand has a 74-3-1 all-time record in season openers dating to1924.

No. 3 Maryland (2-0) 4 3 2 3 -- 12No. 17 Towson (1-2) 3 2 1 2 -- 8Scoring: Maryland- Joe Walters 4-1-5, Brian Hunt 3-1-4, Ryan

Moran 2-1-3, Ian Healy 1-1-2, Dan LaMonica 1-1-2, Paul Gillette1-0-1, Jamie Daue 0-1-1, Alex Melzer0-1-1, Mike Mollot 0-1-1,Towson- Hunter Lochte 3-0-3, Ryan Obloj 0-3-3, Drew Pfarr 2-0-2, Brad Monaco 1-1-2, Brian Myers 1-0-1, Kevin Rutledge 1-0-1, Matt Florio 0-1-1

Goalies: Maryland- Danny McCormick (60:00, 8 GA, 11 saves),Towson- Reed Sothron (60:00, 12 GA, 12 saves).

Team Stats: Maryland TowsonShots 12-17-7-7=43 7-7-4-14=32Saves 1-3-1-6=11 3-4-4-1=12Face-Offs 14/22 8/22Groundballs 10-13-10-10=43 13-9-13-6=41Clears 18/27 21/26Extra-Man Opp. 3/6 3/8Penalties 8/6:00 6/4:30Attendance: 3,760

TOWSON, Md. - Maryland freshman attacker Joe Waltersscored the first four goals of his collegiate career to lift theNo. 3 Terps to a 12-8 victory over No. 17 Towson at MinneganField at Towson Stadium on a sunny Saturday afternoon.Graduate attackman Brian Hunt added his 14th career hattrick in the Terps' 11th consecutive win at Towson against theTigers.

Walter scored his third and fourth goals of the game in aspan of 26 seconds late in the fourth quarter to clinch thewin, giving the Terps an 11-6 advantage with just over fiveminutes remaining in regulation. Hunter Lochte drew the Ti-gers to within four at 11-7 as he netted his third of the gamewith 4:07 left in the game and Brian Myers made it 11-8 with2:57 left. Hunt tallied his third of the game with

The Terps defense showed its power and strength in thethird quarter as it held Towson scoreless for a span of morethan 17 minutes. Maryland jumped to a 9-5 lead as Moranscore his second man-up goal and Dan LaMonica tallied hissixth career goal against Towson. LaMonica's goal was as-sisted by Alex Melzer, who notched his first career point onthe scoring play. Drew Pfarr ended the Tiger drought with agoal with 1:55 left in the thitd quarter.

Maryland increased its halftime lead to 7-5 outscoring theTigers 3-2 in the second quarter. Paul Gillette scored hisfourth career goal and first of the season to make it 5-4 with10:57 left in the first half. The Terps built the lead to two at 6-4 as Moran netted his first of two man-up goals in the gamewith just over minutes left in the half. After Lochte scored hissecond of the game to bring Towson back to within one,Walters scored his second of the game with 2:33 left in thefirst half to give the Terps to 7-5 intermission lead.

The Terps jumped out to a 3-1 lead just 4:41 into the gameas Walters, Ian Healy and Hunt scored in a span of 2:26. ForWalters, the goal was the first of his career. The Tigers ral-lied back with two goals to tie the game as Kevin Rutledgenetted a man-up goal and Lochte scored with 2:55 left in thefirst to make it 3-3. Hunt notched his second of the game offan assist by Ian Healy with 2:23 left in the first.

Maryland junior face-off specialist Jeremy Pastula wona career-best 11 face-offs in 12 attempts for a 91.7 win per-centage.

Towson goalie Reed Sothoron made a career-high 12saves, while Maryland's Danny McCormick made 11 savescoming off his ACC Player of the Week honor.

COLLEGE PARK, Md. - Heading into this game at the Arti-ficial Turf Facility, it was thought to be a low-scoring affair.

After all, Maryland had the nation's top defense last sea-son allowing 7.0 goals per game, while Bucknell had held eachof its last two opponents to just two goals and held its oppo-nents to 5.67 goals per game ealy in the season.

So what do we get, a 6-6 tie after the first quarter.After that surprisingly high-scoring first quarter, No. 3 Mary-

land buckled down on defense and picked up a 14-8 victoryover the No. 19 Bison on a chilly afternoon.

Junior midfielder Ryan Moran and freshman attacker JoeWalters each scored four goals to power the Terps to the win.For Moran, the four goals set a new career-high. For Walters,it marked the second straight game the freshman had talliedfour goals after he did at Towson. Walters also added two as-sists for a career-high six points.

Senior midfielder Mike Mollot picked up four assists in thewin and now has 82 in his career to stand 12th all-time atMaryland.

With the score tied 6-6 after the fast-paced first quarter, theteams slowed the game down in the second half and the de-fense went to work as Maryland scored the only goal of thesecond quarter to take the lead for good as freshman mid-fielder Bill McGlone netted his second career goal with 1:05left in the first half to make it 7-6.

Walters and Moran each scored their second goals of thegame in the third quarter as the Terps built a 9-6 lead before aBucknell goal by Andrew Copelan with one second left in thethird made it 9-7.

Walters and Moran each scored twice in the fourth quarteras the Terps distanced themselves from Bucknell coming awaywith the 14-8 victory. The Terps other final quarter goal camefrom Justin Smith.

The first quarter was played at a frenetic pace with the teamstrading goals. Moran opened the scoring just 31 seconds intothe game to set the pace. Bucknell's Rob Lane quickly an-swered less than a minute later. Maryland graduate attackerBrian Hunt scored the first of his two goals in the quarter tomake it 2-1. Walters made it 3-1, before the Bison's DennisGeraghty scored two goal sandwiched around a WillyPassavia tally to make it 4-3 with 4:04 left in the first.

Senior attacker Matt Urlock scored a man-up goal to makeit 5-3 and Hunt followed with his second to make it 6-3 with2:32 left in the period. Bucknell then scored the final threegoals of the quarter as Andrew "Worthy" Sanders, Rob Laneand Copelan scored to tie the game after one quarter at 6-6.

Bucknell goalie Justin Sussman made 14 saves while theTerps' Danny McCormick made nine in the win.

The Terps outshot Bucknell 36-28 and scooped up 33groundballs to the Bison's 19.

Led by Moran, who won 10 of his 12 face-offs, Marylandwon 15 of the game's 25 draws.

No. 19 Bucknell (2-2) 6 0 1 1 -- 8No. 3 Maryland (3-0) 6 1 2 5 -- 14Scoring: Bucknell- Dennis Geraghty 3-0-3, Andrew Copelan 2-1-

3, Rob Lane 2-0-2, Worthy Sanders 1-0-1, Chris Cara 0-1-1, RyanGoodman 0-1-1. Maryland- Joe Walters 4-2-6, Ryan Moran 4-0-4, Mike Mollot 0-4-4, Brian Hunt 2-1-3, Willy Passavia 1-1-2, BillMcGlone 1-0-1, Justin Smith 1-0-1, Matt Urlock 1-0-1, Matt Brock0-1-1, Paul Gillette 0-1-1.

Goalies: Bucknell- Justin Sussman (60:00, 14 GA, 14 saves),Maryland- Danny McCormick (57:55, 8 GA, 9 saves), T.C. Behm(2:05, 0 GA, 0 saves).

Team Stats: Bucknell MarylandShots 10-6-7-5=28 9-9--10-8=36Saves 3-4-7-0=14 3-4-0-2=9Face-Offs 10/25 15/25Groundballs 3-7-6-3=19 9-7-6-11=33Clears 16/19 17/21Extra-Man Opp. 1/7 3/6Penalties 8/7:00 8/5:00Attendance: 612

No. 3 Maryland (4-0) 7 6 2 1 -- 16Stony Brook (1-3) 1 0 2 1 -- 4Scoring: Maryland- Mike Mollot 1-4-5, Brian Hunt 2-2-4, Jamie

Daue 2-0-2, Ian Healy 2-0-2, Sean Leary 2-0-2,AndrewSchwartzman 2-0-2, Justin Smith 2-0-2, Ryan Moran 1-0-1, WillyPassavia 1-0-1, Joe Walters 1-0-1, Bret Caretsky 0-1-1, BrendanHealy 0-1-1, Dan LaMonica 0-1-1. Stony Brook- George LaFlare2-0-2, Michael Poch 0-2-2, Jason Cappadoro 1-0-1, Kyle Hacker1-0-1.

Goalies: Maryland- Danny McCormick (30:00, 1 GA, 5 saves),T.C. Behm (15:48, 2 GA, 1 save), Teddy Murphy (14:12, 2 GA, 5saves). Stony Brook - Jeff Slater (31:49, 15 GA, 6 saves) ErrolWilson (28:11, 1 GA, 9 saves).

Team Stats: Maryland Stony BrookShots 13-11-8-12=44 2-10-4-7=23Saves 1-4-1-5=11 3-3-2-7=15Face-Offs 14/23 9/23Groundballs 12-8-5-6=31 5-8-7-3=23Clears 15/18 9/18Extra-Man Opp. 3/6 0/5Penalties 5/4:30 6/4:30Attendance: 1,232

STONY BROOK, N.Y. - The No. 3 Maryland Terrapins useda seven-goal first quarter to build a 7-1 advantage en routeto a 16-4 win over Stony Brook at LaValle Stadium. The first-ever meeting between the two teams was all Maryland asthe Terps broke a 1-1 tie by scoring 14 straight goals to re-main undefeated and run their record to 4-0. The loss dropsStony Brook to 1-3.

Brian Hunt put the Terps up 1-0 at 12:53 of the first quar-ter off a feed from Mike Mollot but Stony Brook's JasonCappadoro answered with his seventh goal of the season toeven the score at 1-1 at the 9:21 mark. Maryland respondedwith 12 unanswered goals to close out the first half, four ofthem set up by Mollot. The Tewaaraton Trophy candidatehad a goal and four assists in the first half as Maryland tooka 13-1 lead into the break.

After Maryland extended the lead to 15-1 early in the third,George LaFlare ended the Stony Brook drought with back-to-back goals to get SB within 15-3. Kyle Hacker scored hisfirst goal as a Seawolf at 4:19 of the fourth quarter to closeout the scoring.

Mollot finished with a game-high five points while Hunttotaled four points (2 goals, 2 assists) on the afternoon. IanHealy, Justin Smith, Sean Leary, Jamie Daue and AndrewSchwartzman each scored twice as 10 different Terrapinsrecorded a goal in the win. Danny McCormick made fivesaves to earn the victory in goal.

LaFlare led the way for SB with his pair of goals, the fourthstraight game in which he has recorded a point. Jeff Slatermade six saves and Errol Wilson stopped nine shots in reliefof Slater.

No. 13 UNC (5-2, 1-0) 1 2 5 2 -- 10No. 2 Maryland (4-1, 1-1) 0 2 2 2 -- 6Scoring: North Carolina- Austin Garrison 4-1-5, Ryan Blair 1-4-

5, Kyle Bell 1-2-3, Mike McCall 2-0-2, Bryant Will 2-0-2, JedProssner 0-1-1. Maryland- Mike Mollot 1-2-3, Joe Walters 2-0-2,Ryan Moran 1-0-1, Brian Hunt 1-0-1, Bill McGlone 1-0-1, WillyPassavia 0-1-1.

Goalies: North Carolina- Paul Spellman (60:00, 6 GA, 25 saves).Maryland - Danny McCormick (60:00, 10 GA, 15 saves).

Team Stats: North Carolina MarylandShots 16-12-10-4=42 6-9-14-18=47Saves 4-5-8-8=25 7-3-3-2=15Face-Offs 15/21 6/21Groundballs 10-6-12-4=32 5-6-10-9=30Clears 12/20 12/15Extra-Man Opp. 4/6 1/5Penalties 5/4:00 6/4:30Attendance: 2,182

COLLEGE PARK, Md. - North Carolina goalie PaulSpellman had a career day to lift No. 13 North Carolina to astunning 10-6 upset win over the host Terrapins in Maryland'sreturn to Byrd Stadium.

Spellman had a career-best 25 saves to lead a stellarHeel defensive effort, while senior Austin Garrison paced theCarolina offense with four goals and an assist to hand theTerps their first loss of the season in front of 2,182 on a beau-tiful day in College Park.

Joe Walters registered two goals for the Terps. MikeMollot added a goal and two assists for the second-rankedTerrapins (4-1, 1-1).

Spellman held the Terps scoreless for the game's first 23minutes while Garrison gave North Carolina (5-2, 4-1) a three-goal bulge by scoring twice in 35 seconds midway throughthe second period.

The Terps pulled to within one at halftime on goals byBrian Hunt and Mollot. Despite the comeback, the Heelsdominated the first half outshooting Maryland 28-15.

The Heels put the game out of reach in the third stanza,outscoring the home squad 5-2. Two goals from Mike McCalland tallies from Kyle Bell, Bryant Will and Ryan Blair gavethe visitors a four-goal lead heading into the final period.Carolina extended its lead to six on fourth-quarter goals byWill and Garrison, before Walters and senior Ryan Moranclosed out the scoring for Maryland.

The Tar Heel win was the first against Maryland since1996. The six goals was the lowest offensive output for Mary-land since a 6-5 victory over Navy last April.

Butler (3-4) 4 2 0 3 -- 9No. 7 Maryland (5-1) 2 3 9 4 -- 18Scoring: Butler- Ryan Ward 3-1-4, Kyle Tietjen 0-3-3, Rich Pavlick

2-1-3, Anthony Crimmins 1-0-1, Bill Derrick 1-0-1, Jason Soporito1-0-1, Dan Torgersen 1-0-1, Douglas Mathias 0-1-1, LawrenceO’Toole 0-1-1. Maryland- Dan LaMonica 2-3-5, Joe Walters 4-0-4, Brian Hunt 3-1-4, Matt Urlock 2-0-2, J.R. Bordley 1-1-2, MikeMollot 1-1-2, Jamie Daue 0-2-2, Ian Healy 1-0-1, Michael Howley1-0-1, Sean Leary 1-0-1, Ryan Moran 1-0-1, Willy Passavia 1-0-1, Paul Gillette 0-1-1, Bill McGlone 0-1-1.

Goalies: Butler- Brendan Winkler (57:53, 17 GA, 15 saves), SamAshley (2:07, 1 GA, 0 saves), Teddy Murphy (14:12, 2 GA, 5saves). Maryland- Danny McCormick (47:02, 6 GA, 0 saves),T.C. Behm (12:58, 3 GA, 2 saves).

Team Stats: Butler MarylandShots 10-11-2-10=33 10-10-24-9=53Saves 5-3-4-3=15 3-4-2-3=12Face-Offs 12/31 19/31Groundballs 9-7-5-3=24 12-6-25-15=58Clears 12/17 22/25Extra-Man Opp. 2/4 1/3Penalties 3/2:30 4/3:00Attendance: 432

BOCA RATON, Fla. - The No. 7 Maryland men's lacrosseteam outscored Butler 9-0 in the third quarter on the way toan 18-9 victory over the Bulldogs in a game played the St.Andrew's School in Boca Raton, Fla., on a beautiful night.

Fourteen different Terps had points led by junior attackerDan LaMonica, who had five on two goals and three assistsincluding his 100th career point. Attackmen Brian Hunt andJoe Walters also had big days with Hunt racking up threegoals and an assist. Walters had his third four-goal game ofthe year and added an assist for five points.

Trailing 6-5 at halftime, the Terps (5-1 overall) scored allnine goals in the third quarter and built a 14-6 lead headingto the final period. In that run, a Tewaaraton Trophy player towatch, Hunt scored two of his three goals on the night.

LaMonica scored the go-ahead goal -- off a Hunt helper -- to make it 7-6 Terps 2:29 into the second half. LaMonicaalso added two assists late in the quarter including an assiston Walters' third goal of the game to make it 12-6. That as-sist marked the 100th career point of LaMonica's career injust 34 career game. LaMonica is the 31st player in Maryland'sstoried history to hit the century plateau in points. He fin-ished the game with five points (two goals and three assists)and now has 102 career points.

Senior Matt Urlock also scored twice in the game -- withboth of his goals coming in the the fourth quarter.

The other Terp goals came from J.R. Bordley, Ian Healy,Michael Howley, Sean Leary, Mike Mollot, Ryan MoranandWilly Passavia . For All-American defenseman Howley, thegoal was his first of the year and fourth in his career.

Junior Drew Virk was a key to the Terps’ success all nightas he won a career-high 11 face-offs in 17 attempts.

Maryland dominated in all catergories as they outshot theBulldogs 53-33 and scooped up 34 more groudballs thanButler, 58-24. Junior Paul Gillette corraled a career-high ninegroundballs, whiole Virk also posted a personal best witheight GB's. Gillette also added an assist.

Butler, fell to 3-4 overall. Ryan Ward scored three goals inthe defeat and Kyle Tietjen added three assists

No. 7 Maryland (6-1, 2-1) 1 5 1 1 -- 8No. 2 Virginia (5-2, 0-1) 2 0 2 3 -- 7Scoring: Maryland- Joe Walters 3-1-4, Mike Mollot 2-0-2, Justin

Smith 1-1-2, Matt Brock 0-2-2, Dan LaMonica 1-0-1, Jamie Daue1-0-1, Paul Gillette 0-1-1, Ryan Moran 0-1-1. Virginia- ChrisRotelli 0-4-4, John Christmas 2-0-2, Matt Ward 1-1-2, Kyle Dixon0-2-2, Joe Yevoli 1-0-1, Billy Glading 1-0-1, A.J. Shannon 1-0-1,Justin Mullen 1-0-1.

Goalies: Maryland- Danny McCormick (60:00, 7 GA, 15 saves).Virginia- Tillman Johnson (60:00, 8 GA, 12 saves).

Team Stats: Maryland VirginiaShots 11-10-7-5=33 9-9-10-16=44Saves 3-5-2-5=15 4-3-2-3=12Face-Offs 5/19 14/19Groundballs 6-15-8-7=36 8-10-7-11=36Clears 23/29 17/25Extra-Man Opp. 1/6 1/4Penalties 4/3:00 6/4:00Attendance: 3,207

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. - The No. 7 Maryland men'slacrosse team scored seven consecutive goals and kept Vir-ginia scoreless for a span of 33:06 on its way to an 8-7 vic-tory over No. 2 Virginia on a sunny and warm afternoon.Maryland won at Klockner Stadium for the first time since the1998 ACC Championship game which it defeated the hostCavaliers, 14-11. It was also the Terps' first regular-seasonwin at Klockner Stadium and first in Charlottesville, Va. since1989.

The Terps (6-1 overall 2-1 ACC) held off a furious come-back as Virginia scored the final three goals of the gameincluding two in the final 1:39 to come within one as Joe Yevoliscored with 1:23 left. But goalie Danny McCormick was tre-mendous in the final minute of action as he stopped Virginia'sleading goal scorer John Christmas on a point- blank shotwith 49 seconds left and started a Maryland clear as the Terpspreserved the win. The senior captain finished with 15 savesin the win.

Freshman attacker Joe Walters racked up his fourth hattrick of the season and added an assist for a team-high points.Mike Mollot added two goals

on the Terps defense:"This is our best defensive effort of the season, said head

coach Dave Cottle.” When you play a potent offense likethat you have to be aware every minute of the game. We dida great job of defensively in transition and didn't give up a lotof breaks."

Maryland scored six unanswered goals over the final 20:13of the first half to build a 6-2 lead at halftime.

Virginia opened the scoring on a pair of early goals byChristmas and Billy Glading before the Terps reeled off six ina row. Junior Justin Smith got the run going with an unas-sisted goal with 5:13 left in the first quarter.

The Terps scored all five goals of the second quarter asMollot scored the first and final goals of the quarter -- the firstoff a pass from Smith 4:39 into the quarter. Walters scoredtwo straight goals to make it 4-2 with 4:09 left in the half.

Dan LaMonica scored on a wraparound goal to make it5-2 with 2:17 left in the half. Mollot's man-up goal off a passfrom Walters made it 6-2 with 33 seconds left in the half.

McCormick came up huge in the first half holding the Vir-ginia at bay after the two early goals stopping eight straightshots on goal over the final 22 minutes of the half.

No. 4 Maryland (7-1) 2 3 0 4 -- 9No.16 Navy (4-5) 3 1 1 2 -- 7Scoring: Maryland- Dan LaMonica 0-6-6, Joe Walters 4-0-4, Brian

Hunt 1-1-2, Ryan Moran 0-2-2, Paul Gillette 1-0-1, Brett Harper1-0-1, Mike Mollot 1-0-1, Justin Smith 1-0-1. Navy- Ian Dingman2-2-4, Ben Bailey 1-0-1, Thomas Morris 1-0-1, Joe Bossi 1-0-1,Eddy Holton 1-0-1, Kelly Nash 1-0-1, Greg Conklin 0-1-1

Goalies: Maryland- Danny McCormick (60:00, 7 GA, 11 saves).Navy- Seth DiNola (60:00, 9 GA, 10 saves).

Team Stats: Maryland NavyShots 7-7-5-11=30 9-6-4-4=23Saves 5-3-2-1=11 3-1-4-2=10Face-Offs 10/18 8/18Groundballs 3-12-6-16=37 8-8-6-10=32Clears 20/23 22/30Extra-Man Opp. 0/3 1/4Penalties 4/2:30 3/1:30Attendance: 3,295

ANNAPOLIS, Md. -- The streak is over!For the first time in five years Maryland did not beat Navy,

6-5, instead the Terps racked up a 9-7 victory at Rip MillerField. One streal does continue though, as Maryland has nowwon 11 consecutive games against Navy.

Freshman attacker Joe Walters posted his fourth four-goal game of the season and junior attacker Dan LaMonicaposted a career-high six assists as the Terps broke the un-canny streak of 6-5 games.

Walters scored off a pass from LaMonica with 7:52 to putthe Terps' ahead for good at the score of -- 6-5. LaMonicathen set a new career-best as he assisted the goal that madeit 7-5 setting up gradudate student Brian Hunt with 6:22 leftin the game.

Walters added his fourth goal of the game with 3:05 left tomake it 8-5. Navy then made it interesting as Eddy Holtonand Ian Dingman scored in a span of 59 seconds to make it8-7 with 1:38 left in regulation.

Maryland senior long-stick midfielder Brett Harper icedthe game as he took a pass from Hunt and scored from about30 feet out for the clincher -- making it 9-7 with 37 secondsleft.

Navy tied the game at 5-5 as Ben Bailey netted a goal offa pass from Ian Dingman with 4:41 left in the third quarter.That set the stage for the fouth quarter where a 6-5 gamewas a distinct possibility. But as it turned out -- it was not tobe.

It was the Dan LaMonica assist show in the second quar-ter as he set up all three Maryland goals on some sweetpassing as the Terps took a 5-4 lead into halftime.

LaMonica set up both Mike Mollot and Justin Smith fortwo goals within 1:21 to give the Terps their first lead of thegame at 4-3. Navy tied the game as long-stick midfielderThomas Morris made a full-fiels rush and beat Maryland goalieDanny McCormick with 6:15 left in the first half. But theTerps took the lead in halftime as Walters scored his secondof the game off a pass from LaMonica with 3:06 left in thequarter.

Navy built a 3-1 lead in the first 13:25 of action as KellyNash, Ian Dingman and Joe Bossi scored for the Midship-men, sandwiched around a Walters' tally for the Terps. ButMaryland got back to within one at 3-2 as and changed thegame's momentum as junior defensive midfielder PaulGillette converted with nine-tenths of a second left in thefirst quarter off a pass from LaMonica.

No. 1 Johns Hopkins (7-1)2 2 1 0 1 -- 6No. 5 Maryland (7-2) 1 1 1 2 0 -- 5Scoring: Johns Hopkins- Kevin Boland 2-0-2, Joe McDermott 1-1-

2, Peter LeSueur 0-2-2, Kyle Barrie 1-0-1, Adam Doneger 1-0-1,Kyle Harrison 1-0-1, Greg Peyser 0-1-1. Maryland- Dan LaMonica1-2-3, Paul Gillette 1-0-1, Joe Walters 1-0-1, Ryan Moran 1-0-1,Justin Smith 1-0-1, Ian Healy 0-1-1, Brian Hunt 0-1-1.

Goalies: Johns Hopkins- Rob Scherr (61:21, 5 GA, 15 saves).Maryland - Danny McCormick (61:21, 6 GA, 7 saves).

Team Stats: Johns Hopkins MarylandShots 8-8-5-9-1=29 7-6-6-7-0=26Saves 4-5-3-3-0=15 2-1-2-2-0=7Face-Offs 10/14 4/14Groundballs 9-10-7-6-0=32 9-5-5-5-1=25Clears 13/19 15/17Extra-Man Opp. 0/2 0/2Penalties 2/1:30 2/1:30Attendance: 8,183

COLLEGE PARK, Md. - In what has become a trend inrecent years, another nailbiter marked the most storied ri-valry in collegiate lacrosse as top-ranked Johns Hopkinslanded a dramatic 6-5 overtime victory over No. 5 Marylandin front of a raucous crowd of 8,183 at Byrd Stadium and alive television audience on WMAR-Channel 2 in Baltimoreand a national audience on College Sports Television Net-work (CSTV).

Joe McDermott scored the game-winner 1:21 into over-time to break a 27 minute scoreless streak for the Blue Jays(7-1), who notched their second consecutive overtime winagainst the Terrapins, who fall to 7-2 on the year.

Maryland fought back from a two-goal fourth quarter defi-cit to tie the game with 8:37 left on Dan LaMonica's fourthgoal of the season, but neither team could find the back ofthe net in the final minutes of regulation.

"I'm really proud of the way we played today," said Mary-land head coach Dave Cottle. "We played defense from thebeginning to the end [and] had chances on the offense butwe weren't able to convert."

The Blue Jays jumped out to an early lead on KyleHarrison's score 40 seconds into the game. Maryland's JoeWalters knotted the game at one with 8:40 left in the firstquarter. Adam Doneger's goal with one second remaininggave the Blue Jays a one-goal edge heading to the secondquarter.

Kevin Boland doubled the Blue Jays lead three minutes intothe second stanza, before Maryland's Paul Gillette sliced theHopkins lead to one. Kyle Barrie's goal less than a minute laterrestablished the Blue Jays two-goal advantage at halftime.

The Jays extended their lead to three when Bolandnotched his second goal of the game four minutes after thebreak. The Terrapin offense got going when Justin Smithclosed the gap to two with 5:11 remaining in the third quarterand Ryan Moran's twelfth goal of the year moved the Terra-pins within one score.

LaMonica tallied two assists to go along with his game-tying goal and Danny McCormick recorded seven saves inthe loss.

Johns Hopkins dominated the faceoff battle winning 10 of14 draws and goalie Rob Scherr notched 15 saves in a stel-lar performance. With the win, Hopkins has defeated all fourACC schools in consecutive games, marking the first time inregular-season lacrosse history that any team has defeatedall four conference schools in a single season

Four of the last six games in the series have been one-goalaffairs, including last year's 9-8 Hopkins overtime win in Balti-more and the Terrapins 10-9 win in 2001. It was the lowestscoring game in the series since a 6-1 Terrapin victory in 1951.

The crowd was the largest since April 15, 1995, in a one-goal game that saw No. 1 Hopkins tally a 16-15 win overthird-ranked Maryland before 12,200.

No. 13 Duke (8-5) 4 0 2 1 -- 7No. 5 Maryland (7-3) 1 1 2 2 -- 6Scoring: Duke- Kevin Cassese 3-0-3, Matt Rewkowski 3-0-3, Dan

Flannery 0-2-2, Kevin Brennan 0-2-2, Matt Monfett 1-0-1. Mary-land- Ryan Moran 3-0-3, Dan LaMonica 1-2-3, Joe Walters 2-0-2,Willy Passavia 0-1-1.

Goalies: Duke- A.J. Kincel (60:00, 6 GA, 12 saves). Maryland -Danny McCormick (60:00, 7 GA, 4 saves).

Team Stats: Duke MarylandShots 10-9-7-3=29 7-6-4-12=29Saves 4-2-2-4=12 2-2-0-0=4Face-Offs 9/14 5/14Groundballs 10-5-5-9=29 3-9-5-12=29Clears 15/18 16/21Extra-Man Opp. 1/4 0/3Penalties 4/3:30 4/3:00Attendance: 2,330

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. - The No. 13/No. 4 seed DukeBlue Devils handed the No. 5/No. 1 seed Maryland Terra-pins, a 7-6 loss in the first ACC men's lacrosse semifinal at arain Klockner Stadium.

The Blue Devils (8-5 overall) jumped out to a 4-1 leadafter the first quarter and held on as Maryland mounted acomeback late in the game. All-ACC midfielder Kevin Cassesescored two of his three goals in the first quarter. All-ACC at-tacker Matt Rewkowski also netted three for the Blue Devils.

Maryland (7-3 overall) was led by senior All-ACC mid-fielder Ryan Moran who scored three goals and had a chanceto tie the game as he was stopped by Duke goalie A.J. Kincelas time expired after the Terps made a full-field rush in thefinal seconds.

Kincel was stellar against Maryland again, as he made12 saves.

Duke opened on top 3-0 in the first 12 minutes of the con-test as Rewkowski, Matt Monfett and Cassese scored goals.Maryland's Joe Walters then got the Terps on the scoreboardat the 2:34 mark of the opening quarter, but, on the ensuingface-off, Cassese won the draw, secured the ground ball andraced to goal, beating Maryland goalkeeper DannyMcCormick for a 4-1 Blue Devil advantage.

Moran then scored consecutive goals at the 3:40 mark ofthe second quarter and 14:18 mark of the third period to pullthe Terrapins within 4-3. After Rewkowski scored on a passfrom Kevin Brennan with 8:54 left in the third quarter,Maryland's Dan LaMonica found the back of the net on afeed from Willy Passavia at the 6:23 mark.

Cassese's man-advantage goal closed the third quarterscoring, and Rewkowski's third goal of the day at the 11:54mark of the final period pushed the Duke lead to three goalsat 7-4.Maryland fought back with Moran scoring at the 9:51mark, and Walters' goal with just 46 seconds remaining cutthe lead to one. Duke then won the face-off and held the balluntil a turnover gave Maryland possession with 13 secondsleft. The Terps went the length of t he field, but Kincel savedMoran's shot with two seconds left on the clock to preservethe victory.

Duke, which has eliminated Maryland from the ACC Tour-nament in each of the past three seasons, avenged a 13-7loss to the Terps back on March 2 in College Park.

The Blue Devils fell to Virginia in the ACC title game, 12-6.The Cavaliers Billy Glading was named the tournamentMVP after he tallied five goals in the championship game.Moran was named to the All-Tournament team from Mary-land.

No. 13 UMBC (7-5) 3 0 2 3 -- 8No. 5 Maryland (8-3) 5 3 4 3 -- 15Scoring: UMBC- Josh Gerber 3-0-3, Phil Grillo 2-1-3, James Hyland

1-0-1, Joey Kestermann 1-0-1, Pat Muston 1-0-1, Joe Cahill 0-1-1, Greg Wojtech 0-1-1. Maryland- Mike Mollot 3-1-4, Joe Walters3-1-4, Ryan Moran 2-2-4, Justin Smith 2-2-4, Paul Gillette 1-0-1,Dan LaMonica 1-0-1, Sean Leary 1-0-1, Andrew Schwartzman1-0-1, Matt Urlock 1-0-1, Jamie Daue 0-1-1, Brett Harper 0-1-1,Brian Hunt 0-1-1.

Goalies: UMBC- Tim Flanagan (60:00, 15 GA, 15 saves). Mary-land - Danny McCormick (60:00, 8 GA, 9 saves).

Team Stats: UMBC MarylandShots 7-4-3-11=25 7-9-10-8=34Saves 2-5-4-4=15 2-0-0-4=6Face-Offs 13/27 14/27Groundballs 10-7-6-12=35 8-8-13-13=42Clears 15/21 23/26Extra-Man Opp. 0/3 0/1Penalties 1/0:30 3/1:30Attendance: 1,933

COLLEGE PARK, Md. - While Mother Nature providedthe steady rain at Byrd Stadium, Maryland's seniors providedthe steady offense in the Terps 15-8 victory over intra-staterival UMBC before 1,933 and a live television audience onWMAR and CSTV on Senior Night.

Led by hat tricks from senior all-ACC selection Mike Mollotand ACC rookie of the year Joe Walters, Maryland snappeda two-game losing streak to improve to 8-3 as the regularseason winds down. 12 Maryland seniors and two graduatestudents were honored before the game, as the veteranstallied seven of the Terrapins' 15 goals.

UMBC (7-5) jumped on the board early, scoring three ofthe game's first four goals, before seven consecutive scores- including two each from Mollot and fellow senior RyanMoran - gave Maryland an 8-3 halftime advantage.

Mollot, who moved into a tie for 14th place on the Terpsall-time scoring list with 157 points, secured his ninth careerhat trick with 4:28 remaining in the third quarter to give theTerps an insurmountable 11-5 cushion. Walters notched histhird goal of the game midway through the final stanza.

Senior Jim Sbarra helped Maryland dominate ball con-trol through much of the game, winning a career-high nine of15 faceoffs, while senior netminder Danny McCormick andthe Terps' defense had two separate scoreless streaks of 21and 18 minutes, holding the Retrievers to just two goals inthe middle quarters.

Junior midfielder Justin Smith registered two goals andtwo assists against his former team. Last season, Smith ledUMBC in scoring before transferring to Maryland this fall.

Maryland's other goals came from Paul Gillette, DanLaMonica, Sean Leary, Andrew Schwartzman and MattUrlock, who had the play of the night, scoring on a behind-the-back shot from in front of the crease off a pass from BrianHunt late in the third quarter.

The Terrapins have won 10 of 12 games in the series.UMBC was led by senior Josh Gerber's three goals and goalieTim Flanagan's 15

No. 5 Georgetown (10-2) 1 1 2 1 -- 5No. 4 Maryland (9-3) 2 2 2 3 -- 9Scoring: Georgetown- Phil Vincenti 2-0-2, Walid Hajj 1-1-2, Trevor

Walker 1-0-1, Mike Hammer 1-0-1, Jordan Vettoretti 0-1-1. Mary-land- Mike Mollot 2-1-3, Ryan Moran 2-1-3, Brian Hunt 2-1-3,Dan LaMonica 1-1-2, Joe Walters 1-1-2, Lee Zink 1-0-1.

Goalies: Georgetown- Rich D’Andrea (60:00, 9 GA, 13 saves).Maryland - Danny McCormick (60:00, 5 GA, 14 saves).

Team Stats: Georgetown MarylandShots 9-12-8-14=43 11-8-7-5=31Saves 3-3-5-2=13 3-3-3-5=14Face-Offs 16/18 2/18Groundballs 12-9-12-7=50 10-5-10-15=40Clears 18/25 26/35Extra-Man Opp. 1/7 2/10Penalties 10/7:30 8/7:00Attendance: 2,671

COLLEGE PARK, Md. - After more than a three-monthdelay, No. 4 Maryland's first-ever regular season matchupwith regional rival and fifth-ranked Georgetown lived up to itsphysical expectations in front of 2,671 at a warm Byrd Sta-dium evening.

Veterans Brian Hunt, Ryan Moran and Mike Mollot eachnetted two goals and Lee Zink's first-career goal and strongdefense propelled the Terrapins to a 9-5 victory in their regu-lar season home finale.

The teams combined for a whopping 66 turnovers and 18penalties as the Terps (9-3) pulled away from the feisty Hoyasin the fourth quarter, inching the Terps closer to securing their26th NCAA Tournament berth and a possible first-round homegame.

Walters' man-up goal, off a Hoya turnover, gave Mary-land a quick lead 1:10 into the game. Hunt's sixteenth goalof the season, in which he deked Georgetown goalie RichD'Andrea, gave Maryland a 2-1 edge after one quarter andMoran beat two defenders for his first of two goals in thegame early in the second stanza for a two-goal Terrapin lead.

The teams traded scores for a 4-2 Maryland lead at thebreak and continued the aggressive play into the second half.After Georgetown (10-2) closed the deficit to one at 5-4 mid-way through the third quarter on Phil Vincenti's second goalof the game, the Terrapins ripped off three straight scores,capped by Zink on a nice feed from Hunt, to put the gameaway.

Maryland goalie Danny McCormick again had a longscoreless streak, holding the Hoyas off the board for 18 min-utes spanning the third and fourth quarters. The senior fin-ished with 14 saves.

The Terps close defense, featuring Zink and all-ACC se-lections Michael Howley and Chris Passavia combinedfor 12 groundballs and nine forced turnovers. Zink forcedfive of those Hoya turnovers. Off the bench, reservedefenseman Frank Luciano picked up three groundballs andtwo caused turnovers.

Georgetown's Andy Corno had a sensational day onfaceoffs, winning 16 of 18 draws. The Hoyas played withoutsenior captain Kyle Sweeney who was diagnosed with a bro-ken left ankle earlier in the day.

No. 4 Maryland (10-3) 2 3 0 5 -- 10No. 18 Notre Dame (9-5) 1 0 2 1 -- 4Scoring: Maryland - Justin Smith 2-1-3, Mike Mollot 1-2-3, Ryan

Moran 2-0-2, Joe Walters 2-0-2, Brian Hunt 2-0-2, Matt Urlock 1-0-1. Notre Dame- Owen Mulford 1-1-2, Brian Giordano 1-0-1,Matt Howell 1-0-1, Travis Wells 1-0-1, Matt Ryan 0-1-1.

Goalies: Maryland - Danny McCormick (58:48, 4 GA, 6 saves),Teddy Murphy (1:12, 0 GA, 2 saves). Notre Dame- DannyMcCormick (60:00, 5 GA, 14 saves).

Team Stats: Maryland Notre DameShots 11-11-5-15=42 3-5-10-7=25Saves 1-2-3-2=8 6-5-4-4=19Face-Offs 9/18 9/18Groundballs 9-12-6-14=41 7-10-7-10=34Clears 23/24 17/25Extra-Man Opp. 1/4 0/2Penalties 2/2:00 4/4:00Attendance: 1,770

NOTRE DAME, Ind. - A stifling Maryland defense shut-down Notre Dame's top two scorers as the No. 4 Terps posteda 10-4 win at the No. 18 Irish on a sunny Sunday afternoon.The win gave Maryland coach Dave Cottle his 200th careerwin (200-77) in 21 years of coaching at Loyola (1983-2001)and Maryland (2002-03).

The Terps defense equaled its fewest goals allowed thisseason in holding the Irish to just four and held Notre Dameto its lowest output since the 2000 season as Loyola --coached by Cottle -- held them to two in a 12-2 win on March18, 2000.

Maryland's defensive trio of Michael Howley , ChrisPassavia and Lee Zink held Notre Dame's leading scorersPatrick Walsh and Dan Berger pointless. Walsh entered thegame as the nation's fifth leading scorer with 52 points. Zinkhad his second sensational performance of the week as heposted a career high nine groundballs and forced seven turn-overs -- the most by any Terp this season. Walsh was held tojust one shot -- which came in the final minute of the game -- as his high school teammate and friend Howley shut himdown all afternoon.

Defensive midfielders Paul Gillette and Brett Harperwere also key in the team's success. Goalie DannyMcCormick made eight saves in goal as the Terps outshotthe Irish 42-25.

The Terps' offense also clicked early and late in the gameas four players scored twice: Brian Hunt, Joe Walters, Jus-tin Smith and Ryan Moran. Maryland opened a 5-1 lead athalftime and outscored the Irish 5-1 in the fourth quarter onthe way to the win.

After Notre Dame opened the scoring Maryland scoredthe nest five goals brigding the first two quarters. Moran andSmith scored unassisted to make it 2-1 after the first quarter.Then Hunt, Smith and Walters all tallied in the second quar-ter to make it 5-1 at intermission. The Terps limisted the Irishto just eight first-half shots.

Notre Dame cut the lead to 5-3 at the end of the thirdquarter as Matt Howell and Brian Giordano scored.

But the Terps turned up the offense and defense in thefourth outscoring the Irish 5-1, including the first five goals ofthe quarter. All five goals were unassisted as Moran and Huntscored on great indivdual efforts to make to 7-3. Then MikeMollot (Holbrook, N.Y.) made it 8-3 before Walters and MattUrlock (Lutherville, Md.) scored to close out the Terps' scor-ing.

No. 17 Ohio State (9-5) 0 1 0 4 -- 5No. 3 Maryland (11-3) 1 3 1 3 -- 8Scoring: Ohio State- Pat Myers 2-0-2, Mike Norton 1-0-1, Andrew

Bender 1-0-1, Peter Dillon 1-0-1, Bryan Mulford 0-1-1. Maryland-Mike Mollot 2-1-3, Joe Walters 1-2-3, Dan LaMonica 0-3-3, MattBrock 1-0-1, Jamie Daue 1-0-1, Sean Leary 1-0-1, Ryan Moran1-0-1, Willy Passavia 1-0-1.

Goalies: Ohio State - Tony Russo (60:00, 8 GA, 10 saves). Mary-land - Danny McCormick (60:00, 5 GA, 13 saves).

Team Stats: Ohio State MarylandShots 8-4-3-15=30 8-7-12-5=32Saves 3-1-4-2=10 5-2-1-5=13Face-Offs 8/17 9/17Groundballs 7-13-5-15=40 7-8-6-12=33Clears 12/14 18/22Extra-Man Opp. 1/2 0/1Penalties 1/0:30 2/1:30Attendance: 2,294

COLLEGE PARK, Md. - Through more than 54 minutesat Byrd Stadium in the first round of the 2003 NCAA men'slacrosse tournament, third-seeded Maryland's offense wasclicking and its defense appeared unbreakable.

But within a three-minute span late in the game, the No.17 Ohio State Buckeyes had the crowd of 2,294 on the edgeof its seats, nearly overcoming a five-goal fourth quarter deficitbefore succumbing to the Terrapins 8-5 on a humid and windyafternoon in College Park and a national television audienceon CSTV.

The Terps, who will play Massachusetts (9-6 winners overHofstra in the first round) in the tourney quarterfinals, built a6-1 lead on strong team defense and had major offensivecontributions from unlikely sources.

CSTV Player of the Game Mike Mollot led the Terps withtwo goals and an assist. Joe Walters had a goal and twoassists for a three-point game.

Second-line midfielders Sean Leary, Matt Brock andWilly Passavia's first-half goals staked Maryland (11-3) to a3-0 lead in a defensive-minded 30 minutes of action that sawonly 27 combined shots between the teams. The goals wereonly the fifth of the season for Leary and Passavia, whileBrock's tally was his first of the season.

Mollot's unassisted goal gave Maryland a 4-0 lead, be-fore Ohio State's Mike Norton broke Maryland goalie DannyMcCormick's nearly 28-minute scoreless streak with just overtwo minutes remaining in the first half.

Jamie Daue scored his fourth goal of the season midwaythrough the third stanza and Walters deked Buckeye goalieTony Russo to give Maryland a seemingly safe five-goal leadwith less than 12 minutes to play. McCormick again shut downthe Buckeyes' offense through much of the second half, untilthe late Ohio State rally.

The Buckeyes (9-5) scored four goals in three minutes -including two in 12 seconds - and Pat Myers' second goal ofthe rally drew Ohio St. to within one goal as time wound down.Mollot stopped the bleeding with his second tally and RyanMoran closed the scoring with his 22nd goal of the seasoninto an empty net to secure the Maryland victory.

Despite the near late-game collapse, Maryland's defen-sive effort marked the best showing in an NCAA Tournamentgame since 1983 when the Terps held the Virginia Cavaliersto just four goals in a first-round affair. McCormick finishedwith 13 saves, including several one-on-one stops.

The game was also the lowest scoring NCAA Tournamentgame between two teams since Syracuse beat Princeton, 7-5 in the First Round in 1999.

No. Name Yr. Pos. Hgt. Wgt. Hometown/High School (Last School)

1 Mike Mollot (C) R-Sr. M/A 5-11 190 Holbrook, N.Y./Sachem

2 Brian Hunt Gr. A 6-0 181 West Chester, Pa./Unionville (Yale)

3 Danny McCormick (C) R-Sr. G 5-9 170 McLean,Va./Landon (Md.)

4 Ian Healy R-So. M 5-7 170 Great Falls, Va./Landon (Md.)

5 J.R. Bordley Jr. A/M 5-6 160 Vienna, Va./Landon (Md.)

6 Drew Virk Jr. DM 6-1 200 Ross, Calif./St. Ignatius (Denison)

7 T.C. Behm So. G 6-1 190 Villanova, Pa./The Haverford School

8 Frank Luciano Sr. D 6-1 210 Mountain Lakes, N.J./Mountain Lakes

9 Gavin Webb So. D 6-3 230 Columbus, Ohio/Upper Arlington

10 Brendan Healy Fr. M 5-11 175 Great Falls, Va./Landon (Md.)

11 Dan LaMonica Jr. A 5-10 170 Parkton, Md./Boys’ Latin

12 Peter Ellis R-So. M 6-1 190 Ross, Calif./St. Ignatius (Bridgton Academy, Maine)

13 Brett Harper (C) Sr. DM 5-11 186 Columbus, Ohio/Upper Arlington

14 Alex Melzer Jr. DM 6-0 200 Darien, Conn./Darien

15 Joe Walters Fr. A 6-0 185 Rochester, N.Y./Irondequoit

16 Michael Hartofilis Fr. A/M 6-2 184 Huntington, N.Y./St. Anthony’s

17 Matt Urlock R-Sr. A 6-0 188 Lutherville, Md./Loyola

18 Paul Gillette Jr. DM 5-10 165 Millersville, Md./Severna Park

19 Matt Aksionoff So. M 5-11 185 Baldwin, N.Y./Baldwin

20 David Tamberrino Fr. FO 5-8 190 Lutherville, Md./Loyola

22 Justin Smith Jr. M 6-1 220 University Park, Md./DeMatha (UMBC)

23 Bret Caretsky Fr. A 6-0 190 Northport, N.Y./Northport

24 David Wagner Jr. D 6-2 210 Severna Park, Md./Severna Park

25 Sean Leary Sr. M 6-5 240 Troy, Mich./Detroit Country Day

26 Scott Slosson Fr. M 5-11 165 Cockeysville, Md./Boys’ Latin

27 Matt Brock R-Sr. M 5-10 183 Manakin-Sabot, Va./Collegiate

28 Willy Passavia Sr. M 5-10 180 Stony Brook, N.Y./ Ward Melville

29 Lee Zink Jr. D 6-4 195 Rowayton, Conn./Darien

30 Jim Sbarra Sr. M 5-11 192 Great Falls, Va./Langley

32 Joe Parker Gr. M 6-3 198 Crofton, Md./Arundel (Colgate)

33 Jamie Daue Sr. M 6-5 205 Lutherville,Md./Boys Latin

34 Ryan Moran (C) Sr. M 5-11 180 Setauket, N.Y./Chaminade

35 Jeremy Pastula Jr. FO 6-0 200 Yorktown, N.Y./Yorktown

37 Teddy Murphy Fr. G 6-2 180 Glastonbury, Conn./Glastonbury

38 Andrew Schwartzman So. A 6-1 183 Owings Mills, Md./Pikesville

39 Bill McGlone Fr. M 6-2 205 Swarthmore, Pa./Ridley

40 Ryan Lang Fr. M 5-11 175 Northport, N.Y./Northport

41 Dave Matz So. A 5-7 160 Woodstock, Vt./Woodstock Union (Bridgton Academy, Maine)

42 Michael Howley (C) Sr. D 6-1 205 Wantagh, N.Y./Wantagh

43 Brent Hargest Fr. M 6-1 190 Cockeysville, Md./St. Paul’s

44 Chris Passavia Jr. D 6-1 210 Stony Brook, N.Y./Ward Melville

45 Tyler Hereth So. D 6-2 195 Glastonbury, Conn./Glastonbury

48 Patrick Howell Fr. M 6-1 190 Arlington, Va./Bishop O’Connell

Head Coach: Dave Cottle (Salisbury State ‘78/Second year at Maryland, 21st year overall) 200-77 overall record

Assistant Coach: Dave Slafkosky (Johns Hopkins ‘74/20th year at Maryland)

Assistant Coach: Paul Cantabene (Loyola ‘93/1st year at Maryland)

Volunteer Assistant Coach: Steve Gorski (UMBC ‘96/1st year at Maryland)

Student Assistant Coach: Nate Watkins (Maryland ‘02/1st year at Maryland)

Athletic Trainer: Shawn Hendi (George Washington ’96)

Strength & Conditioning Coach: Craig Fitzgerald (Maryland ’96)

Athletic Media Relations Director: Jason Yellin (Stony Brook ’96)

Managers: Alissa Clendenen, Matt Mindel, Ryan Small