Terps coach Gary Williams says Maryland's talent took over the game.
By FRED GOODALL
AP Sports Writer
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Gary Williams didn't have to do a lot to motivate
fifth-ranked Maryland. Valparaiso's reputation as a giant-killer in the NCAA
tournament took care of that.
Playing with the business-like attitude of a Final Four contender, the
Terrapins wore down their first-round opponent in the NCAA South Regional to
advance with an 82-60 victory Thursday.
Laron Profit and Terence Morris each scored 18 points and Steve Francis had
15 points and seven assists for the second-seeded Terrapins (27-5), who looked
like a team with everything it takes to win it all.
"It feels good to have one under your belt," Maryland coach Gary Williams
said. "Playing in the first round is always a scary situation, especially
playing a team like Valpo with their tradition and what they did last year."
Valpo stunned Mississippi 70-69 in the first round on Bryce Drew's
buzzer-beating 3-pointer in 1998, then upset Florida State to make it to the
round of 16, where the Crusaders lost to Rhode Island.
But there would be no repeat this time. A 9-0 run in the closing minutes of
the first half built Maryland's lead to 12 and the Terrapins were never
seriously threatened after that.
Valpo trimmed a 10-point halftime deficit to 50-44 before Francis and Juan
Dixon hit 3-pointers during a 10-0 burst that put Maryland in control again.
Another 10-0 spurt increased the lead 71-49 with seven minutes to go.
"Early in the game, Valpo was really competing with us," Williams said.
"As the game went on, we were able to wear them down."
Maryland, playing in a school-record sixth straight NCAA tournament under
coach Gary Williams, tied its mark for victories in a season set 27 years ago.
Valpo, the only team in the nation that's won both its conference
regular-season and tournament titles each of the past five years, finished with
a 23-9 record.
Zoran Viskovic led the Mid-Continent Conference champions with 14 points and
nine rebounds. Greg Tonagel and Jason Jenkins scored 10 apiece for the
Crusaders, who dubbed themselves "Young Guns" this season because their
starting lineup featured three freshmen.
"This game will help us become better basketball players," said Valpo
coach Homer Drew. "With a young team, this game will be a nice game to grow on
for next year."
The victory was the eighth in nine games for Maryland (27-5), which finished
second in the ACC regular-season standings to top-ranked Duke.
Morris scored 13 of his 18 points in the first half. He also finished with
10 rebounds. Francis, meanwhile, made six of eight shots and dazzled fans with
a number of slick passes, including an alley-oop that Profit snared for a
one-handed, crowd-pleasing dunk late in the first half.
"We came out a little stale in the first half," said Francis, Maryland's
leading scorer during the regular season. "In the second half, we got our
pressure up."
Valpo begged to differ. Drew thought the Terrapins were impressive all
afternoon.
"Give them credit," he said. "They made it into a 94-foot game."