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Program overview

Maryland

2025 finish: 4-8-0 across 12 games. Jump into coaching history, title years, and long-view program trends.

SECU Stadium • College Park • MD

Big TenSECU Stadium
All-Time Wins
594
All-Time Losses
561
Win %
51%
National Titles
1

Track coaching history, title years, Heisman winners, roster movement, and the conference path that shaped the modern program.

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Save Maryland for roster, portal, recruiting, schedule, and TV personalization.

Current season hub

2026 Maryland hub

Next game: Maryland vs Howard on Sat, Sep 5.

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vs Howard

Sat, Sep 5 · Week 1

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2026 Maryland watchlist

Use the offseason window to track roster construction, portal movement, recruiting, and the next schedule baseline.

How to read this page

Maryland football program guide

This overview connects the core facts behind Maryland football: conference home, stadium context, all-time record, title seasons, Heisman winners, coaching tenures, and the recent season baseline. It is meant to be the starting point before moving into the deeper team tabs.

The latest indexed season is 2025, when Maryland finished 4-8. Use the related links to compare Maryland against national title lists, all-time wins, rankings, rivalries, recruiting, and transfer activity.

Program history

Maryland football history

Maryland football has a history that reaches back to the old Southern Conference and early ACC, with its greatest national achievement coming under Jim Tatum. The 1953 team gave Maryland a national championship and remains the program’s defining peak. Byrd Stadium, now SECU Stadium, became the home for a program that has often blended Mid-Atlantic recruiting with ACC and later Big Ten competition.

Tatum and later coaches gave Maryland strong periods, but the program has often battled inconsistency. The Terrapins have produced notable players and teams, including strong eras under Jerry Claiborne and Bobby Ross. The rivalry landscape has included Virginia, North Carolina, NC State, West Virginia, Penn State, and later Big Ten opponents, reflecting Maryland’s position between regions.

Ralph Friedgen’s arrival in 2001 produced one of the program’s best modern stretches. A Maryland alum, Friedgen quickly delivered an ACC championship and major bowl appearances, giving the Terps renewed national relevance. The program has also produced NFL talent such as Boomer Esiason, Stan Jones, Randy White, Vernon Davis, Stefon Diggs, and many others.

Maryland’s move to the Big Ten changed its identity, placing the Terps in the same division as Ohio State, Michigan, Penn State, and Michigan State for several years. Competing in that environment has been difficult, but the program’s access to the DMV recruiting region remains valuable. Maryland’s history is a mix of championship pedigree, local talent, and the ongoing challenge of finding sustained momentum in a crowded football landscape.

Program Snapshot

Program essentials

Core program details, venue context, and team visuals in one place.

Conference

Big Ten

Division

Not listed

Home field

SECU Stadium

Location

College Park, MD

Capacity

51,802

Venue type

Outdoor

Team Colors

AP Titles

1

Program Dashboard

This season and next actions

Start from the latest season record, then jump into the team history, coaching, and title surfaces most fans usually need next.

Current read

2025: 4-8-0

12 games tracked with a 33% win rate.

Current Season

Performance pulse

Wins
4
Losses
8
Ties
0
Games
12
Win %
33%

Conference Timeline

Realignment context

  • Big Ten Conference2014-
  • Atlantic Coast Conference1953-2013
  • NCAA Division I FBS independent schools1952
  • Southern Conference1922-1951
  • South Atlantic Intercollegiate Athletic Association1918-1921
  • NCAA Division I FBS independent schools1898-1917
  • Maryland Intercollegiate Football Association1894-1897
  • NCAA Division I FBS independent schools1892-1893

Stadium Access

Venue links

Coaching History

Sideline eras

24 coaches indexed
Mike Locksley2019-202532-36-0
Matt Canada20185-7-0
D.J. Durkin2016-201710-15-0
Randy Edsall2011-201522-34-0
Ralph Friedgen2001-201075-50-0
Ron Vanderlinden1997-200015-29-0
Mark Duffner1992-199620-35-0
Joe Krivak1987-199120-34-2
Bobby Ross1982-198639-19-1
Jerry Claiborne1972-198177-37-3
Roy Lester1969-19717-25-0
Robert Ward1967-19682-17-0
Lou Saban19664-6-0
Thomas Nugent1959-196536-34-0
Tommy Mont1956-195811-18-1
Jim Tatum1947-195573-15-4
Clark Shaughnessy19463-6-0
Bear Bryant19456-2-1
Clarence Spears1943-19445-12-1
Clark Shaughnessy19427-2-0
Jack Faber1940-19415-11-2
Frank Dobson1936-193918-21-0
Jack Faber19357-2-2
Curley Byrd1917-193488-70-14

National Championships

Title profile

1
Total Titles
0
CFP
0
BCS
1
AP
1
Coaches

Title Years

1953AP/Coaches

Heisman Trophy Winners

Award lineage

No Heisman Trophy winners from this school.

Quick Answers

Maryland quick answers

Record

4-8

Conference
Big Ten
Championship seasons
1
Coaching leader
Curley Byrd (88 wins)
Home venue
SECU Stadium

Frequently Asked Questions

Page-specific answers for the current selection.

What does Maryland coaching history show?

Maryland coaching history on this page spans 24 tracked head coaches, led by Curley Byrd with 88 wins from 1917-1934.

How many national championships does Maryland have?

Maryland has 1 recorded national championship season on this page: 1953.