Skip to main content

Hurricanes close out regular-season with 69-68 win over Virginia Tech

Hurricanes close out
regular-season with 69-68 
win over Virginia Tech

In more than four decades of coaching, Hurricanes men’s basketball coach Jim Larrañaga acknowledges he’s seen a little bit of everything.
But having one of his teams win four straight games that all came down to the final possession? That may be a first, even for him.
That experience came Saturday afternoon.
With just three seconds left in a tied game, Hurricanes freshman Chris Lykes hit one of two free throws that helped lift Miami to a 69-68 win over Virginia Tech in the Hurricanes’ regular-season finale at the Watsco Center on UM’s campus.
The victory came just days after a stunning 91-88 upset of No. 9 North Carolina in Chapel Hill, a 79-78 thriller over Boston College and a 77-74 win at Notre Dame — games that all but assured the Hurricanes a spot in the NCAA Tournament later this month.
Now, the Hurricanes have to wait and see how things will shake out for them in the ACC Tournament, where they could secure a double bye if Duke notches a win over North Carolina late Saturday night in Durham.
But that was almost a secondary thought in the afternoon as the Hurricanes walked off the floor after another thrilling win, this one coming on a day when Miami honored its three seniors Ja’Quan Newton, Mike Robinson and Chris Stowell.
“I told the team they’re like the cardiac kids. They somehow are enjoying being on the edge at the end of these games,” Larrañaga said. “I’ve coached for 46 years and I can never remember four consecutive games ending on the final possession, and winning all four. Guys did a tremendous job. A lot of credit goes to Virginia Tech for the way they played in the first half. I thought they were very, very good and then I thought our team really responded at halftime, came out and played great the whole second half.”
While all three of Miami’s seniors started Saturday, it was the underclassmen that gave the Hurricanes (22-8, 11-7) a needed spark.
Miami, which trailed 39-32 at halftime, opened the second half on a 15-3 run that gave them their first lead since the opening minutes. During that stretch, sophomore Dewan Huell would connect on three straight possessions, while Lykes, fellow freshman Lonnie Walker and junior Anthony Lawrence all hit from 3-point range.
And though Virginia Tech would rally during a 3-minute Miami scoring drought and even take the lead on the strength of two free throws from Chris Clarke with 1:13 left, Walker and Lykes responded.
It was Walkers’ jumper with 55 seconds left that tied the game at 68 and Lykes’ free throw that eventually gave the Hurricanes the win.
“Just try and make one,” Lykes responded with a smile when asked his thoughts heading to the free throw line in that moment. “I really wasn’t trying to think about anything. That’s how you miss. We shoot free throws every day, so I just tried to go up there and make them both. … We talk about it every time before the game, it’s just poise down the stretch. … I think those past games have helped us. We can come back whatever the score may be at that point in time, but we’ve really just had a lot of poise down the stretch these last four games.”
Added Walker, “We’ve been through so much so the way we approach it and how calm and collected we are, it’s been a big deal. Situations like that, we know what we can do, we know what we need to do and the past four games, we’ve been kind of figuring that out and approaching it pretty well.”
Sharp-shooting sophomore DJ Vasiljevic, who was 4-of-6 from 3-point range, finished with a team-high 16 points, while Lykes added 15 points and seven assists. Walker finished with 12 and Huell added nine.
Justin Robinson had a team-high 18 points for Virginia Tech (21-10, 10-8).
========================================================
Source--http://www.sun-sentinel.com/sports/miami-hurricanes/fl-sp-um-mens-hoops-virginia-tech-20180303-story.html

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Blow To Bitcoin As Coinbase CEO Makes Stark Warning

Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong sits for a portrait in their San Francisco headquarters on May 4, 2018. (Photo by Christie Hemm Klok for The Washington Post via Getty Images) Bitcoin and cryptocurrency adoption rates around the world are growing, but not quickly enough to prevent  the bitcoin price from falling  — and now the chief executive of San Francisco-based Coinbase, one of the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchanges, has warned that widespread, mass bitcoin adoption for payments is going to be a long time coming. The bitcoin price is currently just over $6,000 after falling below the psychological barrier yesterday for the second time this year. The bitcoin price is down some 70% from its highs at the end of last year and many of newer cryptocurrencies that have been created in the last few years have been all but wiped out. The bitcoin price has fallen far from its 2017 highs in recent months. COINDESK “I think it will be quite some time before you cross t

90% of Cryptocurrency Market Facing ‘Extinction-Level Event’: Xapo President

A reckoning coming to the cryptocurrency markets, an “extinction-level event” that’s poised to wipe out 90 percent of the more than 1,800 coins and tokens that aren’t named bitcoin. That’s the prognostication of  Xapo  President Ted Rogers, anyway, who said that the impending altcoin bloodbath will provide discerning investors with an incredible opportunity to load up on  bitcoin  at a discount. “We could be in the midst of the extinction-level event for “cryptoassets” that many maximalists have predicted. 90%+ of @CoinMarketCap list will disappear eventually – might as well happen now,” Rogers wrote on Twitter. “Meantime, lower BTC price means incredible opportunity to buy more #bitcoin.” Ted Rogers @tedmrogers We could be in the midst of the extinction-level event for “cryptoassets” that many maximalists have predicted. 90%+ of @ CoinMarketCap list will disappear eventually - might as well happen now. Meantime, lower BTC price means incredible opportuni

There Is No ‘Bitcoin’: What the SEC Doesn’t Get About Cryptocurrency

Edan Yago is the founder of  CementDAO , an effort to bring together stablecoins into a unified ecosystem.  He previously was the CEO and co-founder of software firm Epiphyte and helped set up the industry associations DATA and the Stablecoin Foundation.  The views expressed here are his own. —————————- The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has been gone to significant lengths in an attempt to understand the crypto asset space. This effort is to be applauded. However, the SEC has failed to come to terms with one fundamental aspect of crypto assets and systems. Namely, properly constructed crypto systems do not involve “persons” or “entities” and do not represent a form of property. For this reason, they do not have any analogue in the traditional financial world, nor can they fall under financial regulation. In the traditional financial world, assets are a claim on a specific property. For example, a commodity, shares in a company or a debt owed. Crypto asset