SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP) -- Maryland kept stealing the ball, running for layups and hitting shots. Led by John Gilchrist, the No. 13 Terrapins dominated No. 25 Memphis. Maryland won 84-61 Friday night over a less disciplined Tiger squad that committed 21 turnovers, missed 44 of 62 shots and never had a chance in the second half of the Basketball Hall of Fame Tip-Off Classic.<br>
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"We're going to have some fun this season," Gilchrist said after posting impressive numbers - 16 points, 10 rebounds, seven assists and five steals with only one turnover in 32 minutes.<br>
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As a team, Memphis totaled five assists and three steals.<br>
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"That's as bad as it gets," Memphis coach John Calipari said. "They were more intense, had more of a sense of urgency, beat us to loose balls, beat us to loose rebounds and scrambled like crazy."<br>
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Nik Caner-Medley added 15 points for Maryland (3-0), which led 37-29 at halftime then scored the first seven points of the second half before taking a 28-point lead with 10 minutes to go. Most of the Terrapins' baskets in that stretch came on layups and fastbreaks - with many set up by steals - and they hit 49 percent of their shots for the game.<br>
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"This time of year, I was very pleased with our intensity level," Maryland coach Gary Williams said. "I thought our defense was the key."<br>
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Rodney Carney scored 23 points and Sean Banks had 12 for Memphis (4-2). Its other loss was to Syracuse, now ranked fourth.<br>
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With the score tied for the fourth time at 16-16 with 11:22 left in the first half, the Terrapins took control by scoring the next nine points. That began a 15-2 run that gave them a 31-18 lead with 6:09 left in the half. Gilchrist scored six of the 15 points, including a dunk after his steal. <br>
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"The points, rebounds and assists were great," Williams said, "but I thought his handling of the tempo of the game was really impressive."<br>
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And when Gilchrist, a junior, wasn't handling the ball, sophomore D.J. Strawberry did a good job at it. He had just eight points but added three steals.<br>
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Memphis freshman point guard Darius Washington was no match for them, finishing with nine points, one assist, two steals and six turnovers.<br>
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"They've got veterans in the backcourt. This is a little bit of a wakeup for Darius," Calipari said.<br>
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Gilchrist led the Terrapins in points, assists and steals last season when Maryland won the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament and he was named its MVP.<br>
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The Tigers' 21 turnovers led to 32 points and they shot just 29 percent.<br>
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Any comeback hopes ended early in the second half. Travis Garrison made a free throw and a layup off a steal by Caner-Medley, who followed with his own layup. Then McCray followed with another layup for a 44-29 lead.<br>
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It was 53-39 before Maryland pulled away again with a 16-2 surge. Strawberry started it with a layup and McCray scored three of the last four baskets for the 69-41 advantage. The lead increased to 32 points at 79-47 before Memphis cut into it in the last six minutes as Williams began clearing his bench.<br>
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That was one of the few good moments for Calipari, who coached at nearby Massachusetts from 1988 to 1996.<br>
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"It was great seeing all my friends," he said. "Short of that, it's been a while since I've had that kind of thing done to one of my teams and I thanked Gary for putting his subs in with five minutes to go because it could have gotten ugly."
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