ANNAPOLIS, Md. — Posted in Maryland’s locker room this year was a stark reminder of the pitfalls a defending national champion can face.
This decade has not been kind to teams attempting a repeat. Loyola was ousted in the first round in 2013. So were Duke (2015), Denver (2016) and North Carolina (2017).
“We were literally like ‘We don’t want to be like some of those teams,’” Maryland coach John Tillman said. “They are terrific programs, but outside of Duke repeating [in 2014], it’s been almost like ‘Wow, that is the curse.’ We had to push that much more, but we had to navigate that everyone wants to celebrate and I’m like ‘That was last year.’”
Tillman could exhale and take the long view just a little Sunday afternoon. A week after surviving Robert Morris to open the NCAA tournament, his Terrapins had once again handled matters in the quarterfinals, dealing Cornell a 13-8 defeat at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium.
“I don’t think we’ve really peaked yet,” said freshman attackman Bubba Fairman, who had three goals and two assists. “I think we’re coming along.”
The top-seeded Terrapins (14-3), who improved to 7-0 in quarterfinals under Tillman, will meet fourth-seeded Duke (15-3) in Saturday’s semifinals in Foxborough, Mass.
Jordan Dowiak scored four goals for the Big Red (13-5), who never led and trailed by as many as eight goals before a four-goal flurry in the fourth quarter.
“We didn’t find our groove early,” Cornell interim coach Peter Milliman said. “We had a few looks in the first half that I think are usually pretty good looks for us and they didn’t fall.”
Maryland adopted a common tactic to deal with Big Red attackman Jeff Teat, shutting off the sophomore and effectively limiting the sophomore’s direct impact on the game. Teat had two assists (one in transition) and took only one shot.
Sophomore Jack Welding had the primary responsibility for locking off Teat, though fellow defensemen Curtis Corley and Bryce Young and short stick Adam DiMillo (on extra man) also took turns as Maryland was content to play 5-on-5.
“A lot of teams are not really comfortable playing defense in that environment, and I think a lot of the goals we scored today — although it doesn’t show up in the stat sheet — those were part of Jeff being shut,” Milliman said. “I’m not oblivious to the fact that he’s one of the best players in our game and we are much better offensively with him touching the ball. But as you can see, there were some early parts of the game where we made that the game plan, to get Jeff the ball, we probably struggled more than anything else.”