COLLEGE PARK, Md. - The fifth-ranked Maryland women's basketball team (25-2, 16-0) will host Indiana (14-13, 4-12) Thursday at 7 p.m. ET at XFINITY Center. The Terrapins will honor fifth-year senior Laurin Mincy prior to Thursday's game.
• For tickets, log on to the Terrapin Ticket Office online at umterps.com or call 1-800-IM-A-TERP. Parking will be free and open in all of the lots surrounding XFINITY Center.
• The Terps-Hoosiers game will be streamed online through BTN2Go. It will be a BTN Plus production and will require an additional subscription. Fans can access all Big Ten content on BTN Plus for $119.95 per year or a $14.95 monthly subscription. A Maryland School Pass for BTN Plus, which includes all Terrapin contests, home and away, on BTN Plus for $79.95 per year or for a $9.95 monthly subscription.
• Fans outside the U.S. can log can click here to watch and will need a subscription.
• Live stats will be available and live updates will be available on the Maryland Women's Basketball Twitter feed.
the latest
• Maryland won its 19th straight game Monday with a 65-34 win over Penn State. Brionna Jones led the way with 17 points, while nine Terrapins scored in the balanced effort. Maryland owned the glass, 51-27, and picked up 14 steals. Jones was named to the Big Ten Player of the Week Honor Roll for the third time this year Tuesday. RECAP | STATS
• The Terrapins won the Big Ten title outright last weekend in their first year in the league. This is the fourth conference title in head coach Brenda Frese's 14 years.
• The Terps lead the Big Ten in scoring (81.3), scoring margin (+20.8), field goal percentage (.482), free throw percentage (.751), three-point field goal percentage defense (.285), rebounding margin (+11.4) and offensive rebounds (16.0). Maryland is the only team with four players in the top 30 scorers in the conference - Shatori Walker-Kimbrough (14.0), Laurin Mincy (13.3), Lexie Brown (13.0) and Brionna Jones (12.8). Mincy and Walker-Kimbrough are Nos. 2 and 5 in the league in free throw percentage.
• Maryland is No. 6 in the country in scoring, scoring margin and field goal percentage and No. 7 in rebounding margin. Jones is No. 3 in the country in field goal percentage (.593) and Walker-Kimbrough is No. 19 (.551).
• The Terps are ranked No. 5 in this week's Associated Press poll and USA Today Coaches' poll.
• Maryland was picked to win the Big Ten in its first year in the league by both the conference's head coaches and the conference media. Lexie Brown was named to the Preseason All-Big Ten Team by the media.
• Maryland ended the 2013-14 ranked No. 11 in the final Associated Press poll and No. 4 in the USA Today Top 25 Coaches poll. They made a remarkable run to the program's fourth NCAA Final Four and second under head coach Brenda Frese. Along the way, they handled top-seeded Tennessee, 73-62 and then beat No. 4 Louisville, 76-73, on its home court in front of a sellout crowd to go to the Final Four.
Scouting the hoosiers
• Indiana is 14-13 overall and 4-12 in Big Ten play. Larryn Brooks is leading the Hoosiers with 12.0 points per game.
• This is the second meeting between Maryland and Indiana. The Terps took the first meeting earlier this year, 84-74 in Bloomington on Jan. 25. Lexie Brown led the way with 21 points and Shatori Walker-Kimbrough added 18. Brionna Jones picked up a double-double with 10 points and 14 boards. RECAP | STATS
• Brenda Frese is 2-2 vs. the Hoosiers. Indiana assistant coach Rhet Wierzba served as Maryland's director of operations for three years (2007-10).
maryland in the b1g
• Maryland is in its first season as a member of the Big Ten conference after playing in the ACC for 37 years. The Terrapins won 10 ACC Tournament titles and four ACC regular season titles.
• The Terps are 60-29 (.674) all-time against their 2014-15 Big Ten opponents. Maryland has won 25 straight games against Big Ten teams, dating back to 2007. The last loss to a Big Ten opponent was when the third-ranked Terps fell at No. 4 Rutgers, 68-60, on Dec. 3, 2007.
• In the 13 years under Frese, the Terps are 28-4 (.875) against their new conference opponents. Frese is 40-10 (.800) all-time vs. Big Ten opponents, which includes her time at Minnesota (2001-02) and at Ball State (1999-01).
• Maryland is 13-2 (.867) against Big Ten teams at home in XFINITY Center. All are under Frese. Those two losses were against Penn State on Dec. 4, 2002 and against Ohio State in the NCAA Second Round in 2003.
Maryland in the rankings
• Maryland is one of the most consistent winning programs in the country. The Terrapins have been ranked in 91 straight Associated Press polls, dating back to the preseason poll of the 2010-11 season.
• Maryland has been ranked for 150 weeks in the last 10 seasons, with 126 of those weeks in the AP top 10 and 57 in the AP top 5.
• The Terps appeared in the AP Top 5 on Jan. 26, 2015 for the first time since March 12, 2012.
home sweet home
• The Terps are 480-127 (.791) all time in College Park, dating back to the inaugural 1971-72 season. The Terps are also 187-32 (.854) at home under Brenda Frese, whose first season in College Park was the inaugural season of XFINITY Center.
• Maryland is 114-6 (.950) all-time in non-conference games in XFINITY Center.
• The Terps own one of the longest home win streaks in NCAA history. They won 48 straight home games starting Nov. 9, 2007 with a 76-52 season-opening win over Princeton. The streak ended on Jan. 21, 2010 with an 80-77 loss to Miami.
family ties
• Head coach Brenda Frese and her younger sister, Marsha, are the only two sister head coaches in Division I. Marsha is in her this year as head coach at UMKC and was an assistant under Brenda at Ball State, Minnesota and for two years at Maryland.
• Many Terrapins have NBA pedigree in their background. Lexie Brown's dad is 1991 NBA Slam Dunk Champion Dee Brown, who is currently an assistant with the Sacramento Kings.
• Aja Ellison's dad is 1989 No. 1 overall draft pick Pervis Ellison, who also won a national championship at Louisville. Her mother, Timi, ran track at Maryland.
• Lexie and Aja's dads played together with the Boston Celtics in the mid-1990s.
• Kiara Leslie's older brother, C.J., played at NC State from 2010-13 and now plays professionally in Korea.
• Malina Howard's younger sister, Marisa, is a freshman post player at Division II Goldey-Beacom.
• Brionna Jones' older brother, Jarred, plays at Loyola (Md.).
fRESE COACHING TREE
• Head coach Brenda Frese has quite the extensive coaching tree, having been in the women's basketball collegiate circuit for over 16 years. She's worked with some of the best basketball minds in the country and has helped them achieve great things.
Marsha Frese (Head Coach at UMKC) - Assistant at Ball State, Minnesota, Maryland
Jeff Walz (Head Coach at Louisville) - Assistant at Minnesota, Maryland
Joanna Bernabei-McNamee (Head Coach at Pikesville) - Assistant at Minnesota, Maryland
Daron Park (Head Coach at Cal State-Fullerton) - Assistant at Maryland
Stephanie Stevens (Head Coach at Gallaudet) - Staff at Maryland
Danielle Hemerka (Assistant at American, Saint Francis) - Staff at Maryland
Rhet Wierzba (Assistant at Indiana) - Director of Operations at Maryland
Billy Fennelly (Assistant at Iowa State) - Staff at Maryland
Zach Kancher (Assistant at Miami) - Staff at Maryland
Laura Harper (Assistant at High Point) - Player at Maryland
Jade Perry (Assistant at Albright) - Player at Maryland
Mike Bowden (Video Director for Louisville Men) - Staff at Maryland
David Adkins (Player Development for Wizards) - Assistant at Maryland
Winston Gandy (Player Development Asst. for Wizards) - Staff at Maryland
Ryan Richman (Video Director for Wizards) - Intern at Maryland
Kyle Tarp (Director of Basketball Performance at MD) - Staff at Maryland
Chris Campbell (Head Coach at Sherwood High School) - Director of Operations at Maryland
overtime is our time
The phrase, “Overtime is our time!” became one of the catch phrases from the Terps' 2006 NCAA title run. That 2005-06 team went 6-0 in overtime games and won the national title in extra time vs. Duke.
• Maryland is 15-2 (.882) in overtime games in head coach Brenda Frese's 12 years.
• In the 2007-08 season, Frese was not on the sidelines for two of the Terps' overtime games. She missed a 97-86 double overtime loss at North Carolina on Jan. 26, 2008 and a 74-71 win at Virginia Tech on Feb. 4, 2008, due to her pregnancy with her sons.
• The Terps' only overtime loss with Frese on the sidelines was a 95-91 loss at Florida State on Jan. 16, 2005.
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