LIVE 13:47 2nd Nov 25
CMU 41 13.0 o128.0
MINN 41 -13.0 u128.0
LIVE 00:47 2nd Nov 25
SCAR 64 5.0 o148.5
XAV 70 -5.0 u148.5
LIVE 01:06 1st Nov 25
SJSU 31 4.0 o136.0
UTEP 22 -4.0 u136.0
LIVE 19:17 1st Nov 25
RSTATE 0
ORU 2
LIVE 18:56 1st Nov 25
NORF 0 6.5 o146.5
UCD 3 -6.5 u146.5
LIVE 11:03 2nd Nov 25
AUB 59 -3.5 o144.5
ISU 60 3.5 u144.5
LIVE 17:43 1st Nov 25
0 -0.0 o0.0
WEB 7 0.0 u0.0
LIVE 17:02 1st Nov 25
ACU 4 -3.0 o149.5
USM 4 3.0 u149.5
ERAZ -0.0 o0.0
IDST 0.0 u0.0
LIVE 06:36 2nd Nov 25
UALR 29 23.0 o152.0
ILL 78 -23.0 u152.0
LBSU 7.5 o132.0
UNCG -7.5 u132.0
DAY 9.0 o156.5
UNC -9.0 u156.5
Final Nov 25
RAD 63 -14.0 o141.5
CHS 48 14.0 u141.5
Final Nov 25
HAMP 64 6.5 o135.0
DUQ 59 -6.5 u135.0
Final Nov 25
M-OH 70 -4.5 o136.0
SIE 58 4.5 u136.0
Final Nov 25
BALL 63 3.0 o148.5
EKY 61 -3.0 u148.5
Final Nov 25
CHAMP 58 -0.0 o0.0
SOU 121 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 25
HOW 77 -2.0 o153.0
UMBC 95 2.0 u153.0
Final Nov 25
DREX 81 5.5 o146.0
PFW 87 -5.5 u146.0
Final Nov 25
UAB 98 -11.5 o156.0
ULL 86 11.5 u156.0
Final OT Nov 25
JAC 89 -4.0 o147.5
MER 90 4.0 u147.5
Final Nov 25
BSU 83 -13.0 o148.0
SDST 82 13.0 u148.0
Final OT Nov 25
MEM 99 8.0 o149.0
CONN 97 -8.0 u149.0
Final Nov 25
INDPU 88 5.5 o143.0
AAMU 83 -5.5 u143.0
Final Nov 25
ILST 64 2.5 o149.0
GW 72 -2.5 u149.0
Final OT Nov 25
SIU 79 5.0 o143.5
LT 85 -5.0 u143.5
Final Nov 25
CSN 89 -8.0 o155.0
DEN 60 8.0 u155.0
Final Nov 25
PSU 85 -16.0 o151.5
FOR 66 16.0 u151.5
Final Nov 25
HP 73 -14.5 o145.5
ODU 67 14.5 u145.5
Final Nov 25
COLO 56 7.5 o144.0
MSU 72 -7.5 u144.0
Final Nov 25
LONG 64 10.5 o142.0
KSU 80 -10.5 u142.0
Final Nov 25
MW 74 7.5 o137.5
UMASS 81 -7.5 u137.5
Final Nov 25
RICH 67 -0.0 o0.0
FLATC 57 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 25
MICH 75 -9.5 o146.5
VT 63 9.5 u146.5
Final Nov 25
CLEM 70 -2.5 o144.5
SF 55 2.5 u144.5
Final Nov 25
LIU 65 12.5 o153.0
WIN 87 -12.5 u153.0
Final Nov 25
TAMCOM 65 1.5 o137.5
STONE 67 -1.5 u137.5
Final Nov 25
UNH 57 17.0 o146.0
CLMB 83 -17.0 u146.0
Final Nov 25
WIGB 69 25.0 o154.0
OSU 102 -25.0 u154.0
Final Nov 25
COR 84 -1.5 o159.0
IONA 68 1.5 u159.0
Final Nov 25
TNST 78 10.0 o153.0
CHAT 85 -10.0 u153.0
Final Nov 25
NCAT 81 3.0 o160.0
BUFF 82 -3.0 u160.0
Final Nov 25
WCOLL 43 -0.0 o0.0
NAVY 94 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 25
CARU 36 -0.0 o0.0
NCCU 91 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 25
MISCM 35
NICH 79
Final Nov 25
LEM 77 13.0 o152.5
UTRGV 97 -13.0 u152.5
Final OT Nov 25
MOSU 74 2.5 o133.5
BC 76 -2.5 u133.5
Final Nov 25
UTECH 66 11.0 o146.0
MONT 69 -11.0 u146.0
Final Nov 25
INST 77 -3.0 o152.0
USI 87 3.0 u152.0
Final Nov 25
ORST 55 5.0 o127.5
UNT 58 -5.0 u127.5
Final Nov 25
RU 50 -0.0 o0.0
SDAK 112 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 25
IW 63 7.0 o141.5
USA 84 -7.0 u141.5
Final Nov 25
UTSA 72 11.0 o150.0
TROY 86 -11.0 u150.0
Final Nov 25
EMU 74 -2.5 o130.0
HCU 73 2.5 u130.0
Final Nov 25
MCNS 58 -1.5 o134.0
LIB 62 1.5 u134.0
Final Nov 25
QUIN 67 10.5 o158.5
SLU 81 -10.5 u158.5
Final Nov 25
UMES 35 35.0 o145.5
ARK 109 -35.0 u145.5
Notre Dame 0th Atlantic Coast11-15
Miami 0th Atlantic Coast10-17

Notre Dame @ Miami preview

Watsco Center

Last Meeting ( Feb 23, 2020 ) Miami-Florida 71, Notre Dame 87

If nothing else, Miami Hurricanes forward Anthony Walker is a master of the obvious.

"Our shots are not falling from 3," he said, "and we've got to improve."

Miami (6-7 overall, 2-6 Atlantic Coast Conference), which resides last in the ACC in 3-point percentage (26.9), will get another opportunity to show improvement on Sunday when it hosts Notre Dame (4-8, 1-5).

The Fighting Irish are third in the ACC in 3-point percentage (37.4). But what should give the Hurricanes hope for a victory is the fact that Notre Dame's defense is last in the league in 3-point percentage allowed (38).

Unlike Miami's previous game, an 83-57 loss to Syracuse on Tuesday, Notre Dame doesn't play much zone. The Fighting Irish's defense also ranks second-worst in the league in points allowed (74.6).

Those factors could lead to an offensive breakout for some of Miami's scorers, including Isaiah Wong, who ranks fourth in the league in points per game (17.5). Wong scored a career-high 30 points and had six assists and no turnovers in a 78-72 win over 16th-ranked Louisville on Jan. 16.

But that was against man defense. Three days later, Miami played Syracuse's 2-3 zone and got blasted.

Chris Lykes, Miami's leading scorer last season, hasn't played since the second game of the campaign due to an ankle injury. He is day-to-day.

Notre Dame, meanwhile, has been off since snapping a four-game losing streak with an 80-70 home win over Boston College on Jan. 16.

The Irish, however, haven't won a road game since posting a 64-63 victory over Kentucky on Dec. 12. Notre Dame is 1-4 away from home this season.

Notre Dame prides itself on playing solid defense without fouling. Offensively, the Irish have a lot of shooters, and no one is more efficient than Nate Laszewski.

Laszewski ranks first in the ACC and 12th nationally in 3-point shooting (55.3) and first in the ACC in field-goal percentage (64.1).

He leads Notre Dame and ranks seventh in the ACC in scoring (16.7). He also leads Notre Dame and ranks fourth in the conference rebounds (7.7).

"It's kind of blowing my mind what Nate's doing," Notre Dame coach Mike Brey said. "He's a shoe-in for ACC Most Improved Player."

Laszewski may also win Player of the Year, and he has certainly earned consideration for the NBA draft.

"Just being confident," Laszewski said. "Coach Brey preaches to step up, shoot it and make it."

The other key Notre Dame players are Prentiss Hubb, who leads the team in assists (5.0) and averages 13.7 points; Dane Goodwin (13.3 scoring average); and Cormac Ryan (9.4 points per game). Goodwin and Trey Wertz both shoot over 40 percent on 3-pointers.

Miami's best 3-point shooter is Matt Cross (43.5 percent). But Cross, after scoring 16 points off the bench against Louisville, was held scoreless and took just three shots against Syracuse's zone.

"We have to knock down shots," Walker said. " Nobody in our locker room has given up hope."

--Field Level Media

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