And on this day, the Terps’ ability to shut down an Albany bunch coming off a riveting victory against North Carolina.
Goalie JD Colarusso made 13 saves against the Tar Heels. He was chased in the first half against Maryland.
Fields shredded the Tar Heels for three goals and four assists. Maryland cut down his feeding opportunities and kept him to six shots during a three-goal, one-assist performance.
And after Ierlan throttled North Carolina last week and Maryland for the first quarter, the Terps turned to Garino, who won 12 of his 14 tries against the freshman. Tillman acknowledged winning anything close to 50 percent was an aim; Maryland took 16 of 30 at the X.
“In a sense, everything that went really well for us last week against North Carolina went the opposite today,” Marr said.
Ierlan’s struggles over the final three quarters exacerbated a problem that surfaced even earlier. Albany had to play much more defense than usual, and the effect was a ragged bunch that couldn’t contend with Rambo (who tied Joe Walters atop Maryland’s career goals list with 153), Kelly and the rest of the Terps’ potent offense.
“It made us tired running around the field a lot,” defenseman Stone Sims said. “Long possessions took a toll on us and they capitalized on little mistakes that we made.”
The differences between Maryland’s one-goal win over the Great Danes in April and its blowout on a neutral site on Sunday ran far deeper than where the games was played. The preparation for the two contests were starkly different.
The trip to Albany was in the middle of a nine-day gauntlet sandwiched between a home date against then-unbeaten Penn State and a trip to Rutgers. It was rescheduled after a March 11 postponement to a far-from-ideal spot on the calendar.
This time, Maryland had a week to prepare for an offense led by Fields, who completed his junior year with 55 goals and 62 assists to finish fourth on the all-time single-season points list.
Just as importantly, it knew exactly what to expect from the Great Danes’ explosive attack.
“Last time having a two-day turnaround just doesn’t let you put some things in,” said defenseman Tim Muller, who was matched up on Fields in both games. “Having a week allows you to put more stuff in and look more into their plays and decide what we need to do.”
This isn’t likely to be the last Albany is heard from. Only two senior starters depart from a team that has made five consecutive NCAA tournament trips and three appearances in the quarterfinals in that span.
But the breakthrough will have to wait at least another year. The bludgeoning Maryland delivered ensured that in a hurry.
“They were very good,” Marr said. “I just think they were better than us today. It would’ve been nice if we could have gotten a couple bounces, for sure, but I’m not sure we could have overcome some of the bounces because they were on.”