List of Maryland Terrapins football honorees

The Maryland Terrapins football team was founded in 1892 to represent the University of Maryland in intercollegiate competition and has participated in the sport all but one season since its inception.[1] Over the course of the team's history, the Terrapins' performance has run the gamut from national championships to winless seasons.[2][3]

A group of men are playing football. One man is carrying a football, and several others are in his immediate surroundings; six or seven other men are running toward him. A small group of onlookers are watching in the background.
Since the Maryland Terrapins football team was founded in 1892, scores of its players have been named All-Americans, received national awards, and been inducted into various halls of fame.

During periods of both ascendancy and mediocrity, individual Maryland players of exceptional ability have received various accolades. In total, Terrapins have been named to an All-America team 58 times, an All-Atlantic Coast Conference team 196 times, an All-Big Ten Conference team 7 times, and an All-Southern Conference team 14 times. Of the All-America selections, twenty-three players received first-team honors a total of twenty-eight times. Eleven players were named consensus first-team All-Americans a total of twelve times, and five players were named first-team All-Americans by unanimous consensus.

Terrapins have won several nationally recognized individual awards, including the Chuck Bednarik Award, the Dick Butkus Award, the Lombardi Award, and the Outland Trophy, each of which recognizes the best player at a particular position in a given season. The College Football Hall of Fame has inducted six former Maryland players, and the Pro Football Hall of Fame has enshrined two. Four former Maryland head coaches have also been inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame. The University of Maryland Athletic Hall of Fame has inducted sixty-two former football lettermen and two former head coaches who were not alumni.

All-Americans

Each year, numerous publications and organizations release lists of All-America teams, hypothetical rosters of players considered the best in the nation at their respective positions.[4] Some selecting organizations choose more than one roster of All-Americans, in which case they use the terms "first team", "second team", and "third team" as appropriate.[5] Some selectors also award honorable mentions to outstanding players who did not make any of their teams.[6]

The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), a college sports governing body, uses officially recognized All-America selectors to determine the "consensus" selections. These are based on a point system in which a player is awarded three points for every selector that names him to the first team, two points for the second team, and one point for the third team. The individual who receives the most points at his position is called a consensus All-American.[7] Over time, the sources used to determine the consensus selections have changed,[8] and since 2002, the NCAA has used these five selectors to determine consensus All-Americans: the Associated Press (AP), American Football Coaches Association (AFCA), Football Writers Association of America (FWAA), The Sporting News (TSN), and the Walter Camp Football Foundation (WCFF).[9]

In 1923, end Bill Supplee was selected to the Associated Press second team, which made him the first Maryland player to be named an All-American.[10] Guard Bob Ward became the first Terrapin named to a first team when he received that honor from AP and the Football Writers Association of America in 1950. The following year, Ward became Maryland's first consensus All-American when he was unanimously chosen by every NCAA-recognized selector. Five other Terrapins have earned consensus All-America honors: Jack Scarbath in 1952, Stan Jones in 1953, Bob Pellegrini in 1955, Randy White in 1974, and linebacker E. J. Henderson in 2001. Henderson was also named a consensus All-American in 2002, which made him the first, and thus far only, Maryland player to receive the honor twice.[11]

Key

  First-team selection *

  Second-team selection †

  Third-team selection ‡

For a guide to the abbreviations used, see the glossary.
YearPlayerPositionFirst teamSecond teamThird teamRemarks
1923Bill SuppleeEAP
1928Gerald SnyderFBAP
1949Ray KrouseTAP
1950Bob Ward*GAP, FWAAUPI
1951Bob Ward*GAFCA, AP, FWAA, INS, TSN, UPI, WCFFunanimous
1951Dick ModzelewskiTAP
1951Ed ModzelewskiFBAP, UPI
1952Dick Modzelewski*TAP, INS, TSN, UPI, WCFFconsensus
1952Jack Scarbath*QBAP, INS, Look,[12] TSN, UPI, WCFFunanimous
1952Tom CosgroveCINS, NEA
1953Bernie Faloney*QBINS, TSNAP, UPI
1953Stan Jones*TAP, INS, TSN, UPIunanimous
1953Chet HanulakRBINS
1954Bill WalkerEAP
1955Bob Pellegrini*CAP, INS, TSN, UPI, WCFFunanimous
1955Mike Sandusky*TTSNUPI
1955Ed VerebRBINS
1955Bill WalkerEUPI
1956Mike Sandusky*TCSW
1961Gary Collins*EAFCA, FWAA, WCFFAP, UPIconsensus
1973Paul Vellano*GAFCAUPI
1973Randy White*DTAP
1974Steve Mike-Mayer*KTSN, Time
1974Randy White*DTAFCA, AP, FN, FWAA, Time, TSN, UPIunanimous
1974Louis CarterHBFN
1976Joe Campbell*DTAFCA, TSN, FWAAAP, UPIFNconsensus
1978Steve AtkinsRBFN
1978Charles JohnsonDLFN
1979Dale Castro*KFWAA, TSN, UPI, WCFFFNconsensus
1983Boomer EsiasonQBTSN
1983Ron SoltOGTSN
1984Kevin Glover*CTSN
1984Eric Wilson*LBFNAP
1985J. D. Maarleveld*OTAFCA, UPITSNconsensus
1985Al CovingtonDBFN
1987Ferrell EdmundsTEAP
1994Steve IngramOTFN
1999LaMont JordanRBFNTSN
1999Lewis SandersDBTSN
2001E. J. Henderson*LBAP, CBS, CNN, FN, FWAA, TSN, WCFFconsensus
2001Daryl Whitmer*CESPN
2001Brooks BarnardPFNCBS
2001Melvin FowlerCFN
2002E. J. Henderson*LBAFCA, AP, CBS, CFN, CNN, ESPN, FWAA, WCFFTSNconsensus
2002Todd Wike*CESPNCFN
2002Steve SuterRSCNN, TSN
2002Madieu WilliamsDBTSN
2002Matt CrawfordOTTSN
2003Randy StarksDTTSN
2003C. J. BrooksOGCFN
2004D'Qwell Jackson*LBCFN
2004Domonique FoxworthDBTSN
2005Vernon Davis*TEAFCA, AP, CFNCNN
2005D'Qwell Jackson*LBAFCA, AP, CFNCNN, TSN
2007Andrew CrummeyOGTSNAP
2014Brad Craddock*[13][14]KFWAAAP, WCFF
2015William Likely*[15][16]RSFWAAUSAT
2018Tre Watson[16]LBFWAA
References:;[11][17] Key:   * First team;   Second team;   Third team. For expansions of abbreviations see the glossary.

All-conference honorees

Shawne Merriman was a 2004 first-team All-ACC defensive end.

Just as the media recognizes the nation's best players with All-America lists, individual athletic conferences honor their best players with "all-conference" selections. In 1921, Maryland joined the Southern Conference (SoCon). Thirteen years later, Norwood Sothoron became the first Terrapin named to an All-Southern Conference team. Maryland was a member of the league from 1921 to 1952, and twelve Terrapins received All-Southern Conference honors a total of fourteen times.[18]

Quarterback Shaun Hill led the record-setting 2001 team.

After the 1952 season, Maryland and six other schools left the Southern Conference to form the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC).[19] The following year, the conference honored its inaugural season's best players with an All-ACC team. In that initial class, five Terrapins were selected to the first team and two to the second team. From 1953 to 2013, Maryland players received first-team All-ACC honors a total of 134 times. Terrapins were named to All-ACC second or third teams an additional 62 times, although those teams were not published continuously and there was not always a third team.[20][21] Since Maryland moved to the Big Ten Conference in 2014,[22] five Terrapins have been named to All-Big Ten first teams, and two have earned second-team honors.

When the NCAA abolished the one-platoon system in 1965,[23][24] the ACC began naming separate all-conference offensive and defensive teams. In 1974, Maryland won its first ACC championship since 1955, and a school record six Terrapins were named to the conference's first team. Maryland secured the title again in 1975 and 1976, and surpassed the previous mark when seven Terrapins were named first-team All-ACC for each of those seasons.[20][21] The 2001 squad set a new benchmark when eight players made the first team, and the 2002 Terrapins equaled that feat.[20]

In 2003, the Atlantic Coast Conference published the "ACC 50th Anniversary Football Team", a list of the league's fifty best players from its first half-century as chosen by a 120-member committee.[25] Four former Terrapins were included on the list: Boomer Esiason, a Maryland quarterback from 1981 to 1983; Stan Jones, a tackle from 1951 to 1953; Bob Pellegrini, a guard from 1953 to 1955; and Randy White, a defensive tackle from 1972 to 1974.[26]

Key

  First-team selection *

  Second-team selection †

  Third-team selection ‡

For a guide to the abbreviations used, see the glossary.
YearPlayerPosition
1976Ken Roy*DB
1976Tom Schick*T
1976Larry Seder*DL
1977Ted Klaube*DL
1978Steve Atkins*RB
1978Lloyd Burruss*DB
1978Charles Johnson*DL
1978Bruce Palmer*DL
1979Dale Castro*K
1979Larry Stewart*T
1979Charlie Wysocki*RB
1980Lloyd Burruss*DB
1980Marlin Van Horn*DL
1980Charlie Wysocki*RB
1982Jess Atkinson*K
1982Mark Duda*DL
1982Dave Pacella*T
1983Clarence Baldwin*DB
1983Pete Koch*DL
1983Ron Solt*G
1983Eric Wilson*LB
1984Al Covington*DB
1984Kevin Glover*C
1984Greg Hill*WR
1984Bruce Mesner*DL
1984Eric Wilson*LB
1985Al Covington*DB
1985Keeta Covington*DB
1985Chuck Faucette*LB
1985Len Lynch*G
1985J. D. Maarleveld*T
1986Keeta CovingtonDB
1985Bruce Mesner*DL
1986Chuck Faucette*LB
1986Bruce Mesner*DL
1987Ferrell Edmunds*E
1987Kevin Walker*LB
1988Dan Plocki*K
1988Warren Powers*DL
1989Larry WebsterDT
1990Barry Johnson*WR
1991Mitch Suplee*C
1991Dan DeArmasK
1991Frank WycheckTE
1991Mike JarmolowichLB
1991Mike WebsterDL
1992Marcus Badgett*WR
1992Mike JarmolowichLB
1993Scott Milanovich*P
1993Jermaine LewisWR
1993Steve IngramOT
1993Scott MilanovichQB
1994Steve Ingram*T
1994Scott MilanovichQB
1994Geroy SimonWR
1995Jermaine Lewis*WR
1995Andreal JohnsonDB
1995Eric OgboguLB
1998Eric Barton*LB
1998LaMont JordanRB
1999Delbert Cowsette*OT
1999LaMont Jordan*RB
1999Lewis Sanders*CB
1999Brad MessinaOL
1999John WaerigTE
1999Jamie WuOL
2000LaMont Jordan*RB
2000Kris JenkinsDL
YearPlayerPosition
2001Brooks Barnard*P
2001Melvin Fowler*OC
2001E. J. Henderson*LB
2001Tony Jackson*DB
2001Tony Okanlawon*DB
2001Bruce Perry*RB
2001Daryl Whitmer*WR
2001Todd Wike*OG
2001Matt CrawfordOT
2001Guilian GaryWR
2001Shaun HillQB
2002Brooks Barnard*P
2002Matt Crawford*OT
2002Chris Downs*RB
2002Domonique Foxworth*DB
2002E. J. Henderson*LB
2002Nick Novak*K
2002Steve Suter*RS
2002Todd Wike*C
2002Lamar BryantOG
2002Randy StarksDL
2002Madieu WilliamsDB
2003Nick Novak*K
2003Randy Starks*DL
2003Steve Suter*RS
2003C. J. Brooks*G
2003Jeff DuganTE
2003Kevin EliDL
2003Domonique FoxworthDB
2003D'Qwell JacksonLB
2003Adam PodleshP
2003Madieu WilliamsDB
2004C. J. Brooks*G
2004Domonique Foxworth*DB
2004D'Qwell Jackson*LB
2004Shawne Merriman*DL
2004Adam PodleshP
2005Vernon Davis*TE
2005D'Qwell Jackson*LB
2005Lance BallRB
2005Adam PodleshP
2006Andrew CrummeyOL
2006Erin HendersonLB
2006Darrius Heyward-BeyWR
2006Adam PodleshP
2007Erin Henderson*LB
2007Dre Moore*DT
2007Andrew CrummeyOG
2008Travis Baltz*P
2008Da'Rel Scott*RB
2008Edwin Williams*C
2008Alex WujciakLB
2010Tony Logan*SP
2010Torrey Smith*WR
2010Kenny Tate*S
2010Alex Wujciak*LB
2010Joe VellanoDT
2011Joe Vellano*DT
2012Joe Vellano*DT
2012Demetrius HartsfieldLB
2014Brad Craddock*K
2014William Likely*DB
2014Stefon DiggsWR
2014Andre MonroeDL
2015Yannick Ngakoue*DL
2015William Likely*DB, RS
2017D.J. Moore*WR

All-Southern Conference honorees

Bill Guckeyson was the second Maryland player named to the All-Southern Conference team. He received the honor back-to-back in 1935 and 1936.
YearPlayerPosition
1934Norwood SothoronB
1935Bill GuckeysonB
1936Bill GuckeysonB
1937Jim MeadeB
1947Lu GambinoB
1949Ray KrouseT
1950Bob WardG
1950Elmer WingateE
1951Ed ModzelewskiB
1951Bob WardG
1952Stan JonesT
1952Jack ScarbathB
Reference:[18]

Award recipients

Various organizations bestow awards recognizing the best player overall or at a specific position, and some of these annual awards are considered highly prestigious honors. All of the following individual awards bestowed upon Terrapins have gone to linemen and defensive players. In 1952, tackle Dick Modzelewski was awarded the Outland Trophy, for best interior lineman, and the Touchdown Club's Knute Rockne Award for best lineman. The following year, Stan Jones won the Knute Rockne Award. In 1955, the Touchdown Club bestowed its Walter Camp Memorial Trophy, for best player, and Knute Rockne Award, for best lineman, upon center Bob Pellegrini, who was also named the Lineman of the Year by United Press International (UPI). In 1974, Randy White won the Lombardi Award, for best lineman or linebacker; the Outland Trophy, for best interior lineman; and was named the UPI Lineman of the Year. In 2002, E. J. Henderson received the Chuck Bednarik Award, for best linebacker, and the Dick Butkus Award for best lineman or linebacker.[2]

Jack Scarbath finished second in the 1952 Heisman Trophy voting.

By comparison, Maryland's offensive players and backs have fared better with conference accolades. Quarterback Jack Scarbath was named the 1952 Southern Conference Player of the Year, and Bernie Faloney received ACC Player of the Year honors the following season. In 2001, running back Bruce Perry was named the ACC Offensive Player of the Year.[2]

No Terrapin has ever won the Heisman Trophy, but several have received votes. In 1952, quarterback Jack Scarbath was the Heisman runner-up,[27] and his successor, Bernie Faloney, finished fourth in the voting the following year.[28] Center Bob Pellegrini finished sixth in 1955,[29] end Gary Collins finished eighth in 1961,[30] defensive tackle Randy White finished ninth in 1973,[31] and quarterback Boomer Esiason finished tenth in 1983.[32]

After his national championship-winning season in 1953, Jim Tatum received Coach of the Year honors from the AFCA and the FWAA. He was also named coach of the year by the Southern Conference in 1951 and the Atlantic Coast Conference in 1953 and 1955. The Sporting News named Jerry Claiborne the nation's top coach in 1974, and in 1982, his successor, Bobby Ross, received that distinction from the Touchdown Club.[2] For his first-year turnaround of a team that had one winning season in the previous decade,[1] Ralph Friedgen received national Coach of the Year plaudits from at least eight organizations.[2]

Players

National AwardRecipient(s) and year received
Lou Groza AwardBrad Craddock (2014)
Chuck Bednarik AwardE. J. Henderson (2002)
Dick Butkus AwardE. J. Henderson (2002)
Walter Camp Memorial TrophyBob Pellegrini (1955)
Lombardi AwardRandy White (1974)
Outland TrophyRandy White (1974); Dick Modzelewski (1952)
Knute Rockne AwardBob Ward (1951); Dick Modzelewski (1952); Stan Jones (1953); Bob Pellegrini (1955)
UPI Lineman of the YearBob Pellegrini (1955); Randy White (1974)
Conference AwardRecipient(s) and year received
ACC Player of the YearBernie Faloney (1953); Bob Pellegrini (1955); Randy White (1974); E. J. Henderson (2001)
ACC Offensive Rookie of the YearDanny O'Brien (2010)
ACC Offensive Player of the YearBruce Perry (2001)
ACC Defensive Player of the YearE.J. Henderson (2001 & 2002); D'Qwell Jackson (2005)
SoCon Player of the YearBob Ward (1951); Jack Scarbath (1952)
Jacobs Blocking TrophyJohn Gormley (1936); Bob Pellegrini (1955); Ralph Sonntag (1969); Dave Pacella (1982)
Jim Tatum AwardJonathan Claiborne (1997); Nick Novak (2004); Josh Wilson (2006)
Brian Piccolo AwardAl Neville (1972); David Visaggio (1974); J. D. Maarleveld (1984); Mike Anderson (1989)
BakkenAndersen Kicker of the YearBrad Craddock (2014)
RodgersDwight Return Specialist of the YearWilliam Likely (2015)

Coaches

"Coach of the Year"Recipient(s) and year received
AFCAJim Tatum (1953); Ralph Friedgen (2001)
Associated PressRalph Friedgen (2001)
Bobby Dodd AwardRalph Friedgen (2001)
College Football NewsRalph Friedgen (2001)
CNN Sports IllustratedRalph Friedgen (2001)
Eddie Robinson AwardRalph Friedgen (2001)
FWAAJim Tatum (1953)
Home Depot AwardRalph Friedgen (2001)
The Sporting NewsJerry Claiborne (1974)
Walter Camp AwardRalph Friedgen (2001)
Washington Touchdown ClubBobby Ross (1982)
Atlantic Coast ConferenceJim Tatum (1953 & 1955); Jerry Claiborne (1973, 1974, & 1975); Bobby Ross (1983); Ralph Friedgen (2001)
Southern ConferenceJim Tatum (1951)

Hall of Fame inductees

Two former Terrapins players are enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame (pictured): Stan Jones and Randy White.

The College Football Hall of Fame has commemorated many of the sport's most outstanding and most innovative personalities. Among them are six former Maryland players and four former Maryland head coaches.[33] In 1980, Bob Ward became the first Maryland player in the College Football Hall of Fame.[33] At 5 feet 9 inches (1.75 m) and 185 pounds (84 kg), Ward was nicknamed the "watch-charm guard", but consistently outplayed much larger opponents.[34] He also served as the team's head coach in 1967 and 1968, but without much success.[35] In 1983, the Hall of Fame inducted former quarterback Jack Scarbath, who led Maryland to a school-record 22-game winning streak and an upset victory over first-ranked Tennessee in the 1952 "Game of the Century".[12][36] That season, Scarbath was named a first-team All-American by unanimous consensus and finished as the runner-up in the Heisman Trophy vote.[12] Tackle Dick Modzelewski, inducted in 1993, won the 1952 Outland Trophy as the nation's best lineman and later had a 14-year career in the National Football League (NFL).[37] Center Bob Pellegrini was inducted in 1996. Named the ACC's best blocker in 1955, Pellegrini was a starter on the 1953 national championship team, the AP Poll eighth-ranked 1954 team, and the third-ranked 1955 team.[38]

Two former Maryland players have been inducted into both the College Football Hall of Fame and the Pro Football Hall of Fame for accomplishments during their professional playing careers.[39] Tackle Stan Jones was named a unanimous consensus All-American after the 1953 national championship campaign.[40] After graduation, he embarked upon a 13-year NFL career that included seven consecutive Pro Bowls. Jones was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1991 and the College Football Hall of Fame in 2000.[41] Defensive tackle Randy White was twice named to the All-American first team, the second time by unanimous consensus in 1974. That season, White helped Maryland to an ACC championship and received numerous lineman and player of the year accolades.[42] During his 14-year NFL career, White played in three Super Bowls, six National Football Conference championships, and missed only one game.[43]

Clark Shaughnessy was the first Maryland coach inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame.

In 1968, Clark Shaughnessy became the first Maryland coach inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame. Shaughnessy pioneered the pass-oriented variation of the T-formation that largely replaced the single-wing, and he coached Maryland for two non-consecutive seasons in the 1940s. Shaughnessy mentored Terrapins quarterback and future head coach Tommy Mont, the third-ranked passer in the nation in 1942.[44][45] Bear Bryant, inducted in 1986, is best known for leading Alabama to six national championships, but his first head coaching job came at Maryland in 1945. Bryant's team finished the season 6–2–1, and he later said that the Maryland position was the one "that launched me to whatever I've accomplished".[46][47] Jim Tatum, inducted in 1984, served as Maryland's head coach from 1947 to 1955, and his teams secured two national championships, three conference championships, and five bowl game appearances. Tatum compiled a 73–15–4 record without a losing season, and he remains Maryland's all-time winningest coach of the modern era.[48][49] When Jerry Claiborne arrived in 1972, Maryland had suffered through seven straight losing seasons. In his second year, Claiborne engineered a turnaround, and from 1973 to 1978, he led Maryland to six consecutive bowl games and three consecutive ACC championships.[1] After losing the 1977 Cotton Bowl Classic to Houston, Maryland narrowly missed an opportunity for the national championship.[50] Claiborne was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1999.[51]

Since 1982, the University of Maryland Athletic Hall of Fame has enshrined some of the school's greatest athletes. Inductees have included sixty-two football players, three of whom also served as head coach, and two head football coaches who were not alumni of the university.[52][53] Eleven football lettermen were in the inaugural class, including Harry Clifton "Curley" Byrd, who was a multi-sport athlete,[52] 24-year football coach,[54] athletic director, professor, university president, and politician.[55] Other football players in the 1982 class included Bosey Berger, a Major League Baseball player;[56] Burton Shipley, Maryland's first basketball coach;[57] and Fred Linkous, a Lacrosse Hall of Famer.[58]

College Football Hall of Fame

Key

  Pro Football Hall of Fame inductee ^

For a guide to the abbreviations used, see the glossary.

InductedCoachAt U-Md.
1968Clark Shaughnessy1942, 1946
1984Jim Tatum1947–1955
1986Bear Bryant1945
1999Jerry Claiborne1972–1981

University of Maryland Athletic Hall of Fame

InductedPlayerPositionGraduated
1986Francis A. BuscherE1934
1986Jessee J. KrajovicG1931
1987William E. KrouseT1941
1987Tommy MontQB, HC1947
1988Bernie FaloneyQB1953
1988John D. GilmoreB1943
1988Raymond J. PoppelmanQB1933
1988Victor G. WillisE1937
1990Charles A. MayB1931
1990Edward M. MinionT1938
1990Myron B. StevensB1927
1991Stan JonesT1953
1991Robert SmithC1942
1992Dick ModzelewskiT1953
1992Ray KrouseT1950
1994Chet HanulakB1954
1994Mike SanduskyT/G1957
1995Tom BrownB1962
1995Randy WhiteDT1974
1995Earl WidmyerB1935
1996Bob PellegriniC1956
1997Gary CollinsE1961
1998Stan LavineQB1950
2000Jerry ClaiborneHCN/A
2000Kevin GloverC1985
2000Dick ShinerQB1963
2002Ed ModzelewskiB1951
2003Boomer EsiasonQB1983
2004J. D. MaarleveldOT1985
2004Bill WalkerE1954
2005Tom CosgroveC1952
2009Dale CastroK/P1981

References:[52][53]

Glossary

Abbreviations
PositionsSelectors
BBackOGOffensive guardAFCAAmerican Football Coaches AssociationFWAAFootball Writers Association of America
CCenterOTOffensive tackleAPAssociated PressINSInternational News Service
DBDefensive backPPunterCFNCollege Football NewsNEANewspaper Enterprise Association
DLDefensive linemanQBQuarterbackCNNCNN Sports IllustratedTSNThe Sporting News
DTDefensive tackleRBRunning backCSWCollege Sports WritersUPIUnited Press International
EEndRSReturn specialistESPNESPN.comWCFFWalter Camp Foundation
FBFullbackTTackleFNFootball News
GGuardTETight end
KPlacekickerWRWide receiver
LBLinebacker

References