When Rambo arrived in 2014, he was the consensus No. 1 recruit in the country. Talk about expectations. As a freshman, he scored 30 goals as a complementary finisher around seniors like midfielder Mike Chanenchuk.
The following fall, Rambo was involved with former teammate and student assistant coach Brian Cooper in an incident that initially produced first- and second-degree assault charges against each of them, while Rambo also was charged with destruction of property.
Rambo later received probation before judgment on a single count of second-degree assault and was acquitted of a charge of destruction of property. Rambo set about clearing his name by fulfilling community service obligations, while serving a suspension throughout the 2015 preseason.
“That was a difficult one,” Tillman said. “Matt was accused of something without all of the facts being known. We didn’t rush to judgment. Matt learned that if you play here, you are a celebrity and you’re under a microscope. With social media, the game might be over, but the TV is still on you.”
“Matt learned the hard way that, with everybody knowing who he is, he’s got to walk a tighter line,” said Rich Rambo, Matt’s father. “Student-athletes are scrutinized more than students. To me, it was blown out of proportion. He was embarrassed by it. He took it on the chin and held his head high. He’s a model Maryland student and a better man because of what happened.”
Rambo also became a better lacrosse player, culminating in a senior season in which he became the first 40-40 scorer in Terps history with 42 goals and 45 assists.
“I never thought this would happen,” he said at the Tewaaraton ceremony. “I just went there to be the best, like our motto, and try to win a national championship, so this is icing on top.”
Rambo, of course, did not do it alone. Alongside Heacock and Rambo, one-time Syracuse transfer Dylan Maltz cleaned up the scraps. The fun-loving attackmen called themselves “Run DMC.” Midfielder Connor Kelly emerged as one of the deadliest shooters in college lacrosse. Reserve faceoff specialist Jon Garino and Maryland’s fleet of athletic long poles became big factors down the stretch, especially as the Terps found ways to neutralize Albany’s TD Ierlan, Denver’s Trevor Baptiste and Ohio State’s Jake Withers, the top three draw men in the country. Rotanz, a converted attackman who as a sophomore had to overcome a rare and severe case of viral vertigo, scored 33 goals as a starting senior midfielder, including three in the championship game. Heck, even second-line middie Adam DeMillo scored twice in the final.
Now about that pressure. The 42-year drought was an obvious storyline after the game, but players and coaches, for the first time, could speak on it with a smile on their faces.
“I’m so happy [not to hear about 1975],” Rotanz said. “It’s 2017 now.”
No scene was more indicative of what this title meant to College Park than the Harpoon Tap Room in Terminal A of Boston’s Logan Airport on Monday night of Memorial Day. Dozens of Marylanders raised their glasses to memories of years past, the unpleasant ones washed away. Before it was time for three consecutive flights bound for Baltimore to take off, they chanted “T-E-R-P-S” in unison for the whole terminal to hear.
“We’re taking the trophy back College Park!” said Matt Heacock, Colin’s brother, as he boarded the Southwest Airlines flight back to the state of champions.
— Gary Lambrecht contributed to this article