- Final0
1FAU
ALA7
407
40 - Final12LSU
AUB12
1012
10 - Final222
3ARIZ
ORE0
490
49 - Final310
4CLEM
FSU37
4937
49 - Final4
5VAN
UGA3
483
48 - Final515
6KSU
OKLA24
1924
19 - Final6
7MIZZ
SCAR10
3110
31 - Final7
8MD
WVU21
3121
31 - Final818
11MICH
ND6
136
13 - Final9
13CAL
USC9
279
27 - Final10
14UK
FLA0
380
38 - Final11
16UAB
OSU15
2915
29 - Final12
17UVA
TCU7
277
27 - Final13
19ORST
UCLA27
2027
20 - Final1420LOU
FIU28
2128
21 - Final15
21EMU
MSU7
237
23 - Final16
23SOAL
MSST10
3010
30 - Final17
25IDST
NEB7
737
73 - Final18
24BYU
BSU6
76
7
Final

Maryland 21
(2-2, 1-1 away)

(8) West Virginia 31
(3-0, 3-0 home)
Coverage: FX
12:00 PM ET, September 22, 2012
Mountaineer Field, MORGANTOWN, WV
With two blowout wins and a quarterback with as many touchdown passes as incompletions, West Virginia coach Dana Holgorsen hasn't had much to criticize.
However, one area where he'd like to see improvement is in closing out opponents -- something his team struggled to do last season against Maryland.
The eighth-ranked Mountaineers go for their seventh consecutive victory over the Terrapins on Saturday in Morgantown.
In its first season in the Big 12 after winning the Big East title in 2011, West Virginia (2-0) has defeated Marshall 69-34 and FCS opponent James Madison 42-12.
Senior Geno Smith has nine incompletions in 75 attempts and has thrown for 734 yards and nine touchdowns, leading the nation's third-ranked offense (612.0 yards per game).
Smith hasn't been sacked, and Holgorsen has praised him for being "perfect on turnovers."
However, Smith and the Mountaineers have some second-half flaws to fix before opening conference play Sept. 29 versus Baylor. West Virginia holds a 64-13 scoring edge in the first half, but that advantage is just 49-33 after the break.
"We need to start faster in the second half and we need to finish people," said Holgorsen, whose team outscored the Dukes 14-9 in the second half last Saturday at FedEx Field.
West Virginia had a similar problem in a 37-31 victory in College Park last Sept. 17, getting outscored 21-10 in the final 30 minutes.
Maryland (2-1), though, is a much different -- and younger -- team this season. Coach Randy Edsall already has played 12 true freshmen, including starting quarterback Perry Hills, who earned the job last month after C.J. Brown suffered a torn ACL.
Hills completed 10 of 24 passes for a season-low 109 yards in last Saturday's 24-21 loss to Connecticut. He's been sacked 10 times over the last two games, and the Mountaineers have every intention of maintaining that pressure and Holgorsen plans to give "looks to try to confuse him."
"He's a good looking kid that is trying to figure things out," said Holgorsen, whose team had four sacks last Saturday. "What they're going through is what we'd be going through if we had to start (freshman quarterback) Ford Childress."
The Terrapins have been solid against the pass -- they rank sixth in the nation with 124.3 yards allowed per game -- but they haven't faced a quarterback like Smith or a wide receiving corps with the talent of Stedman Bailey and Tavon Austin.
Bailey caught a career-high 13 passes for 173 yards and a career-best three TDs against James Madison, while Austin had 11 receptions for 113 yards and a score.
"Anyone can tell you that I don't have a favorite receiver, I don't have a go-to guy," Smith said after throwing for 411 yards and five TDs. "It's just I'm going to find the guy who's open and I'm going to get him the ball."
While Harris tops the Terrapins with 38 rushing attempts but averages 1.2 yards per carry, Holgorsen also can expect to see the ball in Stefon Diggs' hands a lot. The Maryland freshman is tied for the team lead in receptions with nine and he's posting 147.0 all-purpose yards per game, ranking among the top 25 in the FBS in both kickoff and punt return average.
"It's about our coverage units," Holgorsen said. "We spend a lot of time on kickoff coverage, we spend a lot of time on punt coverage and we gotta get people down the field and we've got to make tackles."
The Mountaineers are 74th in the FBS in kickoff return yardage defense (21.3) and 96th (13.0) in punt return defense.
West Virginia has won six straight in this series, including three in Morgantown, since a 41-7 Gator Bowl loss to the Terps to close the 2003 season.
SPONSORED HEADLINES
Top 25 Overview
West Virginia's offense has looked unstoppable through three games, and Maryland doesn't seem the likeliest team to stop it. At 2-1, though, the rival Terrapins already have equaled last season's win total. Geno Smith has turned heads with nine touchdowns and nine incompletions, ascending to the top of the Heisman heap for now. Can he keep it up?
Matchup
| MD | WVU | |
|---|---|---|
| W-L | 2-2 | 3-0 |
| Avg Points | 21.3 | 47.3 |
| Avg Points Allowed | 22.0 | 22.3 |
| Home Record | 1-1 | 3-0 |
| Road Record | 1-1 | 0-0 |
| Division Record | 0-0 | 0-0 |
| Conference Record | 0-0 | 0-0 |
| Complete Standings | ||
Team Averages & NCAA Ranks
| Offense | Team | Per Game Average / NCAA Rank |
|---|---|---|
| Total Yards | ||
| Passing Yards | ||
| Rushing Yards | ||
| Points Scored | ||
| Full Team Stats: Maryland | West Virginia | ||
Passing Leaders
| Maryland | CMP% | YDS | TD | INT | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P. Hills | 57.4 | 1336 | 8 | 7 | |
| S. Petty | 46.4 | 500 | 6 | 2 | |
| West Virginia | CMP% | YDS | TD | INT | |
| G. Smith | 71.2 | 4205 | 42 | 6 | |
| P. Millard | 47.4 | 87 | 2 | 1 | |
Rushing Leaders
Research Notes
Tavon Austin has gained 1106 of his 1352 yards after the catch since the start of last season, the most YAC of anyone on a ranked team. |
Geno Smith is 22 of 23 with five touchdowns when targeting Stedman Bailey in West Virginia's first two games. |
ESPN Stats & Information |

