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N.C. State whips slumping Maryland

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Posted 6:17AM on Monday 24th January 2005 ( 20 years ago )
COLLEGE PARK, MARYLAND - North Carolina State played a marvelous first half, limiting Maryland to five field goals and going 10-for-18 from 3-point range to take a seemingly insurmountable lead.<br> <br> That was the easy part. The challenge was making the 26-point margin stand up.<br> <br> Led by Julius Hodge and Engin Atsur, the Wolfpack withstood a spirited comeback by the Terrapins and pulled away to an 85-69 victory Sunday.<br> <br> Hodge had 20 points and 11 rebounds, and Atsur scored 17 for N.C. State (12-6, 2-3 Atlantic Coast Conference). Ilian Evtimov added 16 points for the Wolfpack, who came in losing five of six.<br> <br> In each of its league losses this season, N.C. State blew a double-digit lead. Against Maryland in the ACC tournament last season, the Wolfpack led by 21 before losing.<br> <br> So after they took a 53-27 lead at halftime, the Wolfpack turned their attention toward avoiding another come-from-ahead defeat.<br> <br> ``We knew Maryland was going to make a run,&#39;&#39; Hodge said, ``but no matter what we were not going to lose this game.&#39;&#39;<br> <br> The Terrapins (11-5, 2-3) got within 10, but could get no closer.<br> <br> ``Maybe as difficult as anything tonight was when Maryland made its run, our guys showed the ability to hold tight and withstand the rally and increase the lead,&#39;&#39; Wolfpack coach Herb Sendek said. ``I think that took tremendous heart, as much heart as it did to play as well as they did the first 20 minutes.&#39;&#39;<br> <br> Nik Caner-Medley had 15 points and 10 rebounds for the Terrapins, who suffered their worst home loss since an 82-64 defeat against Duke on Jan. 3, 1999. Caner-Medley came in averaging 20.7 points over his previous seven games, but was held scoreless in the first half.<br> <br> Maryland went 5-for-20 from the field and had 10 turnovers before halftime.<br> <br> ``We just weren&#39;t ready to attack a good team,&#39;&#39; Maryland coach Gary Williams said. ``We didn&#39;t move the ball well on offense and we didn&#39;t have a spark on the defensive end of the court.&#39;&#39;<br> <br> Not in the first half, anyway.<br> <br> Maryland opened the second half with a full-court press that keyed a 14-4 run and cut the margin to 16. After a basket by Hodge, Caner-Medley hit a runner in the lane and James Gist made a three-point play to make it 59-46 with 9:49 left.<br> <br> A 5-0 burst cut the margin to 10 with 8:32 to go. At that point, the Wolfpack made only two field goals in the second half.<br> <br> But Atsur heated up when it mattered most. He hit two 3-pointers and a free throw in a 7-2 run that gave the Wolfpack a 15-point cushion with 5:38 remaining.<br> <br> ``Against Maryland in the ACC tournament, and against Duke and Virginia Tech, we were up and we lost. I think we learned hard lesson from those games that helped us today,&#39;&#39; Atsur said.<br> <br> The Wolfpack made six of their first nine shots, including four 3-pointers, to take a 16-4 lead. Maryland was 1-for-6 with three turnovers during that span.<br> <br> It was 18-10 before Jordan Collins sank a 3-pointer and Cedric Simmons and Hodge both made three-point plays during a 13-2 spurt that put NC State up by 19. After Ekene Ibekwe made a free throw for Maryland, Evtimov scored five straight points and Levi Watkins added a 3-pointer to make it 39-13.<br> <br> John Gilchrist then made successive 3-pointers to begin an 8-0 Maryland run, but Simmons scored five straight points and Atsur hit a 3-pointer to boost the margin to 27.<br> <br> ``They came out much harder than we did,&#39;&#39; Ibekwe said. ``I&#39;m proud of our team for coming out in the second half and playing hard, but the margin was too large. We couldn&#39;t defeat it.&#39;&#39;<br> <br> Tony Bethel saw limited action for the Wolfpack after missing four straight games with colitis. He was held scoreless in two minutes.

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