USC shrugs off injury to top scorer, eases past Maryland

Field Level MediaField Level Media|published: Wed 14th January, 01:23 2026
NCAA Basketball: Maryland at Southern CaliforniaJan 13, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Maryland Terrapins guard Myles Rice (2) collides with Southern California Trojans guard Ryan Cornish (9) in the first half at Galen Center. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Jordan Marsh scored 20 points to lead injury-depleted Southern California past Maryland 88-71 on Tuesday in Los Angeles.

The Trojans (14-3, 3-3 Big Ten) were already playing without Rodney Rice, lost for the season to a shoulder injury sustained in late November, but season-long leading scorer Chad Baker-Mazara was also limited in the Tuesday tilt.

Baker-Mazara, a wing who averages 19.9 points per game, posted seven points in just eight minutes, the result of a neck ailment. With its star spending much of the night on the bench, USC faced a stiff challenge throughout the first half from a Maryland team seeking its first Big Ten win.

The Terrapins (7-10, 0-6) rode the hot hand of David Coit, who erupted for 30 points, to exchange the lead with the Trojans for the game's first 25 minutes. But after falling behind 52-48 early in the second half, USC went on a 10-0 run bookended with Jerry Easter II baskets.

The surge gave the Trojans a lead they never relinquished.


Easter scored 10 points, as he joined Marsh among a quintet of USC scorers in double figures. Ezra Ausar finished with 12 points, Jacob Cofie added 12 points and Gabe Dynes scored 10 points.

The 7-foot-5 Dynes, who shot 5-for-6 from the floor, also grabbed eight rebounds to match Maryland's Solomon Washington for game-high honors. USC bested the Terrapins on the glass 35-24 after Maryland outrebounded UCLA 48-29 on Saturday.

The Trojans effectively limited the Terrapins' offensive rebounding opportunities, allowing Maryland only four offensive boards. A lack of second-chance opportunities hurt a Maryland offense that struggled to score from the floor, going just 21-for-48 (43.8%) on field-goal attempt to USC's 34-for-66 (51.5%).

Washington and Darius Adams each scored 11 points for the Terrapins.

USC scored more field goals off of assists -- 23 -- than Maryland made total field goals.

Marsh, Ausar, Cofie and Kam Woods each dished four assists for the Trojans.


--Field Level Media

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