You are currently viewing the printable version of this article, to return to the normal page, please click here.
The Washington Times

The Blue Devils they don’t know

For most of the last decade and a half, an ACC team couldn't ask for a much friendlier matchup than what Maryland will encounter Saturday when it visits Duke.

These are the Blue Devils, owners of 14 straight losing seasons but a remarkably unfamiliar foe to the Terrapins. No current Maryland player has faced Duke, and the prospect of a potential pummeling sure sounded good in the winter and spring.

That was then, though.

"Coming into the season, when I saw we played Duke, I was excited," safety Jamari McCollough said. "I was like, 'Yes, it might be an easy win for us.' But I've definitely changed my mind."

The Terps (2-5, 1-2 ACC) demonstrated over the last month and a half they can be counted upon for no sure things. Meanwhile, Duke (3-3, 1-1) is halfway to its first bowl appearance since 1994 and is coming off a dissection of N.C. State and a bye week to prepare for the closing stretch.

Oh, and then there's this tidbit: Duke opened the week as an eight-point favorite, though the line fell to five in recent days.

"Are we favored?" Duke coach David Cutcliffe asked reporters this week. "Lord have mercy."

It's a situation Maryland coach Ralph Friedgen saw coming more than a year ago when Cutcliffe was starting his first season. Friedgen, at the time figuring he wouldn't see the Blue Devils until 2010, mused Cutcliffe would build Duke into a national contender by then. When told the next meeting between the schools was actually in 2009, Friedgen accelerated his projection of Duke's rise by a season.

While the Blue Devils aren't collecting top-25 votes, they are a vastly superior outfit to the teams that compiled a 10-82 record from 2000 to 2007. Quarterback Thaddeus Lewis, with the help of a young but talented receiving corps, is thriving in Cutcliffe's potent offense.

The Terps, meanwhile, aren't much familiar with Duke at all. The ACC expanded to 12 teams in 2005, but its current schedule rotation didn't start until a year later. That allowed two series - Maryland-Duke and Florida State-North Carolina - to lapse for five years before picking up this week.

One sign of the gap between games against Duke: In the teams' last meeting, the Terps' Joel Statham enjoyed a career day, throwing for 362 yards and four touchdowns. Need another? Maryland has played Middle Tennessee three times since it last saw the Blue Devils.

The scheduling quirk effectively turned the Terps' trip into a conference game with the familiarity of a nonconference opponent.

"It's just weird we haven't played them," quarterback Chris Turner said. "I haven't been there. I haven't seen them. I don't know anything about them. I know they're a very different team now than when I was a freshman. They have really skilled players at all their positions now. It's not the old Duke at all. So lucky me."

Indeed, there is some role reversal. Duke is in solid shape for a bowl berth, as Maryland usually is this time of year. And the Terps are eager to find a way out of a recent rut, historically a familiar place for the Blue Devils once October arrives.

"This is a different team," fullback Cory Jackson said. "We have to realize that they're not the team they were five years ago. They're not the team we watched on TV playing and getting their butts beat every week. This is an improving team that wants to show something. They would like to do big things this season."

The Terps still would, too. It just won't be easy - even against Duke.

Note - Friedgen said tailback Gary Douglas (shoulder) will miss the game. Davin Meggett and Caleb Porzel are expected to be Maryland's top backs, but both D.J. Adams and Morgan Green will make the trip.

Comments
blog comments powered by Disqus
You Might Also Like
  • IRS official Lois Lerner is sworn in on Capitol Hill in Washington on May 22, 2013, before the House Oversight Committee hearing to investigate the extra scrutiny IRS gave to tea party and other conservative groups that applied for tax-exempt status. Lerner told the committee she did nothing wrong and then invoked her constitutional right to not answer lawmakers' questions. (Associated Press)

    IRS head Lois Lerner, who invoked 5th Amendment, may be compelled to testify

  • President Obama answers questions during his new conference in the Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House in Washington on April 30, 2013. (Associated Press)

    Obama defends drone strikes, reignites Gitmo debate in crucial speech

  • ** FILE ** Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, accompanied by Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., chair of the tea party caucus, speaks during a news conference with tea party leaders about the IRS targeting tea party groups, Thursday, May 16, 2013, on Capitol Hill in Washington. (AP Photo/Molly Riley)

    Conservatives propose compromise of balanced budget, higher debt limit

  • Celebrities In The News
  • Backstreet Boys singer-songwriter Nick Carter has written the memoir "Facing the Music and Living to Talk About It." (AP Photo/Bird Street Books)

    Nick Carter: Backstreet Boy pens memoir

  • Debbie Reynolds: We all knew Liberace was gay

  • "Glee" star Lea Michele attends the Fox Network 2013 Upfront party at Wollman Rink in Central Park in New York on Monday, May 13, 2013. (Evan Agostini/Invision/AP)

    Lea Michele: ‘Glee’ star has book scheduled for 2014