April 1, 2002
ATLANTA (AP) - This one makes up for all the heartaches, all the
embarrassment, all the bitter losses in one maddening March after
another.
The Maryland Terrapins are 2002 national champions, and from now on that
will be the defining moment for a program known previously for the death
of
Len Bias, and for coming up short in big games.
Maryland beat Indiana 64-52 Monday night, capping the best season in the
history of the program. Coming in as heavy favorites, the Terrapins blew
a
12-point lead and nearly gave away the game.
Any Maryland fan who followed the program should have known it wouldn't
be
easy. After all, this is the same team that frittered away a 22-point
cushion against Duke in the Final Four a year ago.
This time, though, the Terrapins won. Better yet, they beat a team that
came
in with a winning tradition on its side.
Maryland (32-4) won by relying on its three seniors, even though Juan
Dixon,
Lonny Baxter and Byron Mouton didn't perform in a fashion that will earn
them a place in NCAA championship lore.
Dixon, the leading scorer in Maryland history, went more than 20 minutes
without a point. Baxter was 3-for-10 from the field in the first half,
and
Mouton scored just one basket.
Yet Baxter, limited to only four points in 14 foul-plauged minutes
against
Kansas on Saturday, finished with 15 points and 14 rebounds. He took
care of
the lane, while Dixon worked the perimeter to score 18.
It was a formula that produced 31 wins before Monday night, and a
team-record 32nd came against a game but outmanned Indiana team.
And now Maryland can no longer be referred to as the best program never
to
win a championship. No longer can Gary Williams, now in his 24th season,
be
called the best coach never to win a title.
It was a long time coming.
Baxter, Dixon, Mouton and Chris Wilcox ended the night by doing what Len
Elmore, Tom McMillen, Steve Francis, Bias and Joe Smith never did during
their time at Maryland: cutting down the nets to celebrate a national
championship.
Before this, the Terrapins' most notable games were defeats. There was
the
debacle at the Final Four against Duke, and a 103-100 overtime loss to
North
Carolina State in the 1974 Atlantic Coast Conference tournament final.
Now, there's a new game at the top of the list.
Dixon finished his career at Maryland as the school's leading scoring
(2,269) and with a run of 54 straight games in which he scored in double
figures.
This Maryland team played longer and won more games than any in the rich
history of the program. After opening with a loss to Arizona on Nov. 8 -
the
earliest start in school history - the Terrapins dropped only three more
games over the next 143 days.
It was a season that will be celebrated when the team moves to a new
arena
across campus next season. First, though, a banner will be hung at
venerable
Cole Field House that reads "Maryland Terrapins: 2002 National
Champions."
It's about time.
By DAVID GINSBURG
AP Sports Writer