Final Jan 8
L-MD 72 3.0 o140.0
ARMY 74 -3.0 u140.0
Final Jan 8
NAVY 59 2.5 o140.5
HC 70 -2.5 u140.5
Final Jan 8
CCAR 51 7.5 o126.0
APP 74 -7.5 u126.0
Final Jan 8
L-IL 79 -2.0 o148.0
LAS 68 2.0 u148.0
Final Jan 8
NKU 61 2.5 o136.0
YSU 72 -2.5 u136.0
Final Jan 8
CONN 66 1.0 o142.0
VILL 68 -1.0 u142.0
Final OT Jan 8
DEP 80 2.5 o133.0
HALL 85 -2.5 u133.0
Final Jan 8
MURR 71 5.5 o138.0
UNI 68 -5.5 u138.0
Final Jan 8
DAY 72 -10.5 o147.5
MASS 76 10.5 u147.5
Final Jan 8
FSU 80 2.5 o152.5
MIA 65 -2.5 u152.5
Final Jan 8
FOR 61 17.0 o145.0
VCU 73 -17.0 u145.0
Final Jan 8
HP 93 -8.5 o153.5
CHSO 79 8.5 u153.5
Final Jan 8
CLEV 80 2.0 o139.5
RMU 69 -2.0 u139.5
Final Jan 8
TEM 79 3.5 o145.5
ECU 80 -3.5 u145.5
Final Jan 8
MISS 73 3.5 o148.5
ARK 66 -3.5 u148.5
Final Jan 8
UNCA 76 4.0 o153.5
LONG 85 -4.0 u153.5
Final Jan 8
GW 75 6.0 o152.0
URI 67 -6.0 u152.0
Final Jan 8
ND 65 2.5 o138.5
NCST 66 -2.5 u138.5
Final Jan 8
RICH 58 11.5 o130.0
GMU 64 -11.5 u130.0
Final Jan 8
ALA 88 -11.5 o157.0
SCAR 68 11.5 u157.0
Final Jan 8
WCU 69 12.5 o144.5
WOF 77 -12.5 u144.5
Final Jan 8
AMER 54 3.0 o124.5
BU 60 -3.0 u124.5
Final Jan 8
LEH 62 6.5 o138.5
COLG 67 -6.5 u138.5
Final Jan 8
DRKE 64 1.5 o126.5
BRAD 57 -1.5 u126.5
Final Jan 8
WIN 83 -3.5 o159.5
WEBB 89 3.5 u159.5
Final Jan 8
ETSU 70 -2.0 o151.5
MER 68 2.0 u151.5
Final OT Jan 8
FUR 67 -14.0 o138.0
CIT 63 14.0 u138.0
Final Jan 8
MILW 73 3.0 o155.5
IPFW 78 -3.0 u155.5
Final OT Jan 8
LAF 62 3.5 o131.5
BUCK 65 -3.5 u131.5
Final Jan 8
PRE 67 -3.5 o148.0
SCUS 77 3.5 u148.0
Final OT Jan 8
JOES 81 -3.0 o134.0
DUQ 85 3.0 u134.0
Final Jan 8
FAU 75 -5.5 o154.0
CHAR 64 5.5 u154.0
Final Jan 8
COLO 74 6.0 o149.0
UCF 75 -6.0 u149.0
Final Jan 8
USC 69 6.0 o149.0
IND 82 -6.0 u149.0
Final Jan 8
SIU 86 9.5 o156.0
BEL 90 -9.5 u156.0
Final OT Jan 8
INST 95 1.5 o162.0
VALP 98 -1.5 u162.0
Final Jan 8
ILST 51 -5.5 o130.5
EVAN 69 5.5 u130.5
Final Jan 8
SBON 68 3.5 o141.5
SLU 73 -3.5 u141.5
Final Jan 8
BUT 65 3.0 o137.0
PROV 84 -3.0 u137.0
Final OT Jan 8
GASO 78 3.0 o155.0
GAST 82 -3.0 u155.0
Final Jan 8
ASU 55 14.0 o144.5
KU 74 -14.0 u144.5
Final Jan 8
UMKC 58 1.5 o137.5
NEOM 77 -1.5 u137.5
Final Jan 8
PSU 52 7.0 o163.0
ILL 91 -7.0 u163.0
Final Jan 8
VT 59 9.0 o142.5
STAN 70 -9.0 u142.5
Final Jan 8
TAM 80 2.5 o147.0
OKLA 78 -2.5 u147.0
Final Jan 8
SDST 72 2.0 o156.0
STT 73 -2.0 u156.0
Final Jan 8
USD 80 31.5 o157.0
GONZ 93 -31.5 u157.0
Final Jan 8
RICE 59 11.0 o122.5
UNT 81 -11.0 u122.5
Final Jan 8
AFA 38 18.5 o130.0
SDSU 67 -18.5 u130.0
Final Jan 8
UVA 61 4.0 o128.5
CAL 75 -4.0 u128.5
Florida State 14th ACC11-4
Miami (FL) 18th ACC4-11

Florida State @ Miami (FL) preview

Watsco Center

Last Meeting ( Mar 9, 2024 ) Miami-Florida 75, Florida State 83

Florida State made the NCAA Tournament's Sweet 16 as recently as 2021. Miami reached the Final Four in 2023.

Yet when the Seminoles visit the Hurricanes in an ACC game on Wednesday night in Coral Gables, Fla., both programs are in a bit of a mess.

Miami (4-10, 0-3 ACC) hasn't beaten a major-conference team this season. They also lost -- perhaps most embarrassingly -- at home to a Charleston Southern team that entered that game 1-7 overall.

Soon after, Miami coach Jim Larranaga resigned on Dec. 26. Larranaga has had a Hall of Fame-type career, but he is 75, and it was evident that this program needs a rebuilding effort that likely will require a younger coach.

Bill Courtney, 54, is serving as the interim coach until Miami finds a replacement for Larranaga.

Meanwhile, Florida State (10-4, 1-2) has a much better record, but the Seminoles have dropped most of their higher-profile games, including losses to Florida, LSU, North Carolina State and Louisville.

Off the court, things seem to be far worse for the Seminoles as coach Leonard Hamilton has been sued by six of his former players. Those players allege that Hamilton failed to deliver on promises to deliver $250,000 in NIL money to each of them.

Jamir Watkins leads the Seminoles in scoring (19.3 ppg). Malique Ewin tops FSU in rebounds (7.3 per game) and field-goal percentage (57.6) while ranking second in scoring (13.3).

FSU is coming off a 90-74 win over Syracuse on Saturday. Four Seminoles players scored in double figures, and all four were starters.

"(Our depth) is not quite there yet," Hamilton said.

As for Miami, point guard Nijel Pack is expected to miss his fifth straight game due to a foot injury and an illness. Pack, an elite long-rang shooter, leads Miami in scoring (13.9 ppg).

Without Pack, Miami has been relying on scorers such as Matthew Cleveland (12.7) and Lynn Kidd (11.3). Kidd also leads Miami in rebounds (7.4).

Miami also has a pair of impressive freshmen guards in Divine Ugochukwu and Jalil Bethea. Bethea, a five-star recruit, is coming off the bench to average 7.0 points. Ugochukwu is shoot 75.7 percent on 2-pointers while averaging 5.5 points.

Courtney, who said Larranaga was his mentor for 28 years, now has control of Miami's program -- at least for the duration of this season.

"We still have a whole slate of ACC games," Courtney said, "and we have to get ready.

"But I hated that (Larranaga) felt he had to step down and that we as assistant coaches couldn't do anything to fix it."

--Field Level Media

Pages Related to This Topic