• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Baltimore Sports Today

Baltimore Sports Today

Baltimore Sports News Continuously Updated

  • Football
    • Ravens
    • Redskins
  • Baseball
    • Nationals
    • Orioles
  • Basketball
    • Mystics
    • Wizzards
  • Capitals
  • Soccer
    • Blast
    • D.C. United
    • Spirit
  • Colleges
    • George Mason
    • George Washington University
    • Georgetown
    • Howard
    • Johns Hopkins
    • Morgan State
    • Towson
    • University of Maryland

How Maryland men’s basketball compares to the program’s best NCAA Tournament teams of the past

March 19, 2025 by Testudo Times

Jordan Budney/Testudo Times

The Terps make their 31st all-time appearance in the national tournament.

No. 4-seed Maryland men’s basketball has navigated a challenging yet highly successful 2024-25 campaign. At 25-8, the Terps have secured their most wins in a season since 2015-16 — a run that ended in a Sweet 16 appearance.

But how does this year’s Maryland squad compare to some of the program’s best teams of the past?

The “what if” 2019-20 season: The closest parallel

One of the most compelling comparisons is the 2019-20 team, which saw its season cut short due to COVID-19. Maryland finished 24-7 and won the Big Ten regular season title. According to ESPN’s projected bracket, the Terps would have entered the NCAA Tournament as a No. 4-seed with a 2% chance of winning it all.

Metrics from KenPom.com suggest that this year’s team is closer to that 2020 squad than many might expect. Maryland currently ranks No. 12 in net rating on the website, just one spot below the 2020 team. Offensively, the 2025 Terps rank 28th, compared to the 2020 team’s 18th spot. Defensively, this year’s squad is a clear step up at sixth compared to the 2020 team’s 22nd rankings.

However, a key distinction is the strength of schedule. The 2020 team played the 13th-toughest schedule in the country, while the 2025 squad faced the 52nd-most difficult slate.

The rosters also bear striking similarities. The 2020 team was led by Anthony Cowan Jr., who averaged a team-high 16.3 points and led Maryland with 4.7 assists and a steal per game. His impact mirrors that of Ja’Kobi Gillespie, who has posted 14.7 points per game while leading the team with 5.0 assists and 1.8 steals per game. Both were All-Big Ten selections — Cowan as a first-teamer and Gillespie as a third-teamer.

The frontcourt comparison is equally compelling. Jalen Smith, a lottery pick in the 2020 NBA Draft, averaged 15.5 points, 10.5 rebounds and 2.4 blocks per game. Derik Queen, Maryland’s 2025 standout big, has similarly been a dominant interior presence, averaging 16.3 points and 9.0 rebounds per game. Like Smith, Queen is projected to be a first-round pick.

Yet this year’s Maryland team may be even more offensively potent. Unlike the 2020 squad, which relied primarily on Cowan and Smith (with only Aaron Wiggins also averaging double figures), the 2025 team features five double-digit scorers — making it one of the most balanced offensive groups in program history.

The 2015-16 team: A more proven benchmark

The 2015-16 team, which reached the Sweet 16 as a No. 5 seed before falling to No. 1-seed Kansas, remains the closest recent Maryland team to actually make a deep tournament run.

KenPom ranked that squad No. 22 overall and 24th in offensive and 32nd in defensive efficiency, respectively. Additionally, its strength of schedule ranked 39th — tougher than this year’s but not as demanding as the 2020 team’s.

Statistically, this year’s Maryland team holds a significant edge. The 2025 Terps led the Big Ten in net rating (+20.7), compared to the 2016 squad, which ranked fourth in the conference (+13.4).

The 2015-16 team was led by Melo Trimble, an All-Big Ten second-team selection who averaged 14.8 points and 4.9 assists per game. A key supporting piece was Diamond Stone, the only Maryland recruit ever rated higher than Queen by 247Sports Composite. Stone posted 12.5 points and 5.4 rebounds per game as a freshman, earning All-Big Ten third-team honors.

Stone also elevated his play in March, delivering a 23-point, eight-rebound effort in the Big Ten Tournament quarterfinals and a 14-point performance on 6-of-8 shooting in the NCAA Tournament second round against Hawaii. For Maryland to make a deep run in 2025, Queen may need to replicate that type of late-season dominance.

The 2002 national champions: A long shot

Let’s stack up the 2025 team against the program’s gold standard — the 2002 national championship squad.

That legendary team went 32-4 and ranked No. 3 in KenPom, boasting the fourth-best offensive and seventh-best defensive rating.

In an odd coincidence, KenPom’s No. 1-ranked team this year is also Duke. While it may not mean much, the Blue Devils have only finished No. 1 in KenPom two other times in the past 23 years — adding an interesting historical wrinkle.

The 2002 team was led by Maryland legend Juan Dixon, who won Final Four Most Outstanding Player honors, averaging 20.4 points and 4.6 rebounds per game. In the frontcourt, Lonny Baxter and Chris Wilcox provided dominant two-way play. Their production is somewhat comparable to the Queen-Julian Reese duo — two paint-dominant bigs with rebounding prowess and NBA potential.

Baxter, like Reese, added significant muscle — 35 pounds — during his college career. Wilcox, a highly ranked young player, left Maryland after two years and was drafted No. 8 overall — right around where Queen is projected to go.

What can we learn?

While historical comparisons can only tell us so much, one thing is clear — Maryland’s most successful teams have followed a familiar blueprint: a ball-dominant, college-ready guard (Dixon, Trimble, Cowan, Gillespie) paired with a dominant, NBA-caliber big man (Baxter, Wilcox, Stone, Smith, Queen).

This year’s team fits that mold. Now, it’s time to see if the results will follow.

Filed Under: University of Maryland

Primary Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • Two Ravens Starters Return to Practice, But Kyle Hamilton Is Sidelined
  • 90% win rate: Trump’s Supreme Court winning streak raises questions
  • Commanders quarterly report: Special teams up; defense down; offense TBD
  • Late for Work: Lamar Jackson Reportedly Unlikely to Play Against Texans
  • Newly elected Arizona lawmaker has yet to be sworn into office, as House Democrats welcome her

Categories

  • Baseball
    • Nationals
    • Orioles
  • Basketball
    • Mystics
    • Wizzards
  • Capitals
  • Colleges
    • George Mason
    • George Washington University
    • Georgetown
    • Howard
    • Morgan State
    • Navy
    • Towson
    • University of Maryland
  • Football
    • Ravens
    • Redskins
  • Soccer
    • Blast
    • D.C. United
    • Spirit
  • Uncategorized

Archives

Our Partners

All Sports

  • 247 Sports
  • Bleacher Report
  • CBS Baltimore
  • Forgotten 5
  • NBC Sports Washington
  • Maryland Sports Blog
  • OurSports Central
  • PressBoxOnline.com
  • The Baltimore Sun
  • The Baltimore Wire
  • The Sports Daily
  • The Sports Fan Journal
  • The Spun
  • USA Today
  • Washington Post
  • Washington Times

Baseball

  • MLB.com - Orioles
  • MLB.com - Nationals
  • Baltimore Baseball
  • Birds Watcher
  • Camden Chat
  • District On Deck
  • Federal Baseball
  • Last Word On Baseball - Nationals
  • Last Word On Baseball - Orioles
  • MLB Trade Rumors - Nationals
  • MLB Trade Rumors - Orioles
  • Nationals Arm Race
  • Orioles Hangout

Basketball

  • NBA.com
  • WNBA.com
  • Amico Hoops
  • Bullets Forever
  • High Post Hoops
  • Hoops Hype
  • Hoops Rumors
  • Last Word On Pro Basketball
  • Pro Basketball Talk
  • Real GM
  • Wiz Of Awes

Football

  • Baltimore Ravens
  • Washington Redskins
  • Baltimore Beatdown
  • Baltimore Gridiron Report
  • Ebony Bird
  • Hogs Haven
  • Last Word On Pro Football - Washington Commanders
  • Last Word On Pro Football - Baltimore Ravens
  • NFL Trade Rumors - Ravens
  • NFL Trade Rumors - Redskins
  • Our Turf Football - Ravens
  • Our Turf Football - Redskins
  • Pro Football Rumors - Ravens
  • Pro Football Rumors - Redskins
  • Pro Football Talk - Redskins
  • Pro Football Talk - Ravens
  • Redskins Gab
  • Ravens Wire
  • Redskins Wire
  • Riggos Rag
  • Total Ravens

Hockey

  • Washington Capitals
  • Elite Prospects
  • Japers Rink
  • Last Word On Hockey
  • Pro Hockey Rumors
  • Pro Hockey Talk
  • Stars And Sticks
  • The Hockey Writers

Soccer

  • Baltimore Blast
  • Black And Red United
  • Last Word on Soccer - DC United
  • Last Word on Soccer - Spirit
  • MLS Multiplex

College

  • Big East Coast Bias
  • Busting Brackets
  • Casual Hoya
  • College Football News
  • College Sports Madness
  • Fourth Estate
  • GW Hatchet
  • Saturday Blitz
  • The Diamondback
  • The Hilltop
  • The Hoya
  • Testudo Times
  • Zags Blog

Copyright © 2025 · Magazine Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in