No. 21 Maryland needs freshman Smith to excel in postseason

COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) — Maryland’s success in the postseason could depend heavily on the performance of Jalen Smith, a lanky freshman who has both shined and struggled for the No. 21 Terrapins.

Smith had 19 points and 11 rebounds in the regular-season finale against Minnesota last Friday, which earned him Big Ten freshman of the week honors for the third time.

However, on several other occasions, the 6-foot-10 forward has looked every bit like an 18-year-old in his first college season. Smith scored one point against Loyola of Chicago, two points against Indiana — missing all nine of his shots —and tallied a combined 26 points on 11-for-30 shooting over a four-game stretch in February.

Although named to the Big Ten All-Freshman team, Smith is averaging a modest 11.5 points and 6.7 rebounds after being named a McDonald’s All-American coming out of Mount Saint Joseph’s High School in Baltimore.

“The season has been up and down for me,” Smith acknowledged. “I’ve had a lot of good games and a lot of bad games. But it’s all a part of the process.”

The Terrapins (22-9, 13-7) can only hope Smith finds his groove in the Big Ten Tournament this week, beginning Thursday, and continues to excel in the NCAA Tournament. On a team with six freshmen, Maryland’s most prominent players, junior guard Anthony Cowan Jr. and 6-10 sophomore center Bruno Fernando, can’t do it alone.

“We need him. He knows it,” coach Mark Turgeon said of Smith. “It hasn’t always gone the way he wanted it to this year, but he’s handled it with class.”

Dealing with high expectations was expected. But that was only one challenge Smith had to overcome this season.

“He had to play a little bit out of position because he was a center in high school, where he was always the biggest guy on the floor,” Turgeon said. “Having to play with Bruno was a big adjustment, having to guard guards was a big adjustment. He’s worked hard and he’s gotten tougher.”

Nicknamed “Stix” because of his slender frame, Smith has been diligent in the weight room.

“He’s doing extra workouts. He’s doing a lot of things to help get ready,” Turgeon said.

Against Minnesota, Smith knocked down three 3-pointers to supplement Cowan’s 21 points and Fernando’s 11 points and 11 rebounds, his 20th double-double of the season.

“Those three, with Bruno included, are about as talented as any three players in our league,” Minnesota coach Richard Pitino said. “Cowan’s been a terrific player in this league for a long time. Jalen is a really good freshman. When Jalen’s hitting 3s and then he’s driving you, it makes it tough to cover.”

Fernando has frequently been double-teamed when getting the ball in the middle. If Smith can flourish in the weeks ahead, opposing teams will have no choice but to turn their attention toward the Terrapins’ other big man.

“Jalen is stepping in the right direction, where we want him to be,” Fernando said. “Now we got to keep feeding him the ball. He is being aggressive, he’s getting a lot stronger and finishing. So we got to keep doing it.”