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Baltimore Sun: 5 Things To Look For in Maryland vs. Minnesota

keflavik

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Oct 2, 2002
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1. Will Maryland put some pressure on a freshman walk-on quarterback?

When second-year coach P.J. Fleck named Zack Annexstad as his starter Aug. 20, many assumed it was to light a fire under his upperclassmen by the time the Big Ten season began. But Annexstad, a local favorite who used a postgraduate year at the IMG Academy in Florida to improve his stock, has performed better than expected...

2. The health of offensive tackles Damian Prince and Derwin Gray, as well as running back Lorenzo Harrison III.

How much of last week’s offensive woes were directly attributable to the absence of the two redshirt senior linemen and a junior who had played well the previous week at Bowling Green is still up for debate, but clearly the Terps missed them against Temple. Since their injuries were not disclosed, it’s hard to predict whether they are serious enough to keep them out again.

If Prince and Gray are unable to go, or if they reinjure themselves Saturday, replacements Ellis McKennie and Marcus Minor have to play a lot better than they did against the Owls...

3. How quick a hook Canada has if quarterback Kasim Hill starts slowly again.

Canada made it clear that there’s not going to be any major changes yet, but if Hill continues to regress from his opening game performance against Texas (17 of 29 for 222 yards and two touchdowns), as he seems to have the past two weeks, Canada might consider giving redshirt sophomore Tyrrell Pigrome more than just a few packages.

The problem is, Pigrome is much more susceptible to making critical mistakes than Hill, with turnovers in each of the past two games. Hill is also too talented and too important to Maryland’s success this season and going forward for Canada to be impatient, but this game is too crucial to not at least consider making a switch, if at least temporarily.

4. Was last week’s performance by the defense an indication that opponents have found a major flaw?

After looking much improved from the past two seasons during the first two games, Maryland’s defense seemed to revert back to the nightmarish performances that culminated with an embarrassing 66-3 home loss to No. 10 Penn State to close out the 2017 season. After seemingly playing more of a pressing, attacking man-to-man defense against Texas and Bowling Green, the Terps appeared to settle into a soft zone against the Owls, with disastrous results...

5. Whether Friday’s report by the independent medical consultant has any impact on the team’s performance.

Canada said at a news conference Monday his team is focused strictly on its opponent and upcoming game as it awaits the report, which is expected to be released by the Board of Regents late Friday afternoon.(
NOTE: It was released yesterday. It wasn't good.) But depending on the results of the investigation into Jordan McNair’s death, if there’s anything that might not have been reported already, it could become another distraction for the players to deal with as they get ready to play the Gophers.

Given that this is the first of two external reviews being conducted, with the second looking into allegation of a “toxic culture” under third-year coach DJ Durkin, there’s a chance that last week’s performance is an indication of a team that has lost its emotional edge after two stirring performances to honor the memory of their late teammate.

http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/...-maryland-minnesota-5-things-0921-story.html#

 
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