Wiggins scores 17 to lead Maryland past Minnesota 72-59

Aaron Wiggins scored 17 points, and Maryland cruised past Minnesota 72-59 Sunday night for a sweep of the season series.

Four players scored in double figures for the Terrapins, who last month handed the Golden Gophers their only loss at home. Maryland (11-10, 5-9 Big Ten) has won six straight against Minnesota over the last four years.

The Terrapins shot 53%, their best performance in a conference game this season. It’s the first time Maryland topped the 70-point mark since tallying 100 in a win over Wingate on Jan. 15.

Jamal Mashburn Jr. led the Golden Gophers (13-8, 6-8) with 14 points. Minnesota is 13-1 at home — 6-1 in the conference — and 0-7 on the road.

After trailing by 19 in the first half, the Golden Gophers cut it to 65-59 before Wiggins iced it with a 3-pointer with 2:39 left just before the shot clock was set to expire.

Maryland got off to a blistering start, limiting Minnesota to 1-for-8 shooting while taking a 16-3 lead. After Terps forward Galin Smith blocked a shot in the lane by Mashburn and dunked on the other end to make it 20-8, Gophers coach Richard Pitino called a timeout in hopes of shifting the momentum.

It didn’t work.

An 8-0 run capped by a 3-pointer from Donta Scott put Maryland up 29-10, a surprising performance by a team that had lost four of its previous six games to fall to .500 for the first time all season.

Minnesota trailed 44-28 at halftime after missing 19 of 27 field-goal attempts, being outrebounded 20-13 and having twice as many turnovers as assists (4-2).

The second half was more of the same. After the Golden Gophers closed to 52-40, Jairus Hamilton hit a 3-pointer and Hakim Hart added a three-point play during an 8-2 spurt that made it 60-42 with 10:37 remaining.

GOT YOUR NUMBER

Maryland owns a 12-2 record all-time against Minnesota and is 8-2 against the Golden Gophers since joining the Big Ten in 2014. The Terps have won two Big Ten games this season by double-digits — both against Minnesota (63-49 on Jan. 23).

BIG PICTURE

Minnesota: Sure it’s tough to win on the road in the Big Ten, but Minnesota’s struggle is difficult to rationalize and more than cancels out its strong record at home in league play.

Maryland: If the Terps played this way all season, there would be no question about their worthiness as a potential participant in the NCAA Tournament. Unfortunately for Maryland, this display of sharp shooting and strong defense was anything but typical.

UP NEXT

Minnesota: The Golden Gophers remain on the road, facing Indiana for the only time this season on Wednesday night.

Maryland: The Terps host Nebraska on Tuesday night in a makeup of a game postponed from Jan. 16 because of coronavirus issues in the Nebraska program. Maryland then hosts the Cornhuskers again Wednesday night in a game switched from Nebraska.