Hurricanes WBB suffer 30-point loss to Georgia Tech in season finale, 79-49

The Miami Hurricanes women’s basketball team were riding high on a four-game win streak, looking to end the regular season strong. However, the Canes suffered a reality check against Georgia Tech at the McCamish Pavillion Sunday afternoon, losing 79-49. 

Two sophomore guards scored in double figures for Miami. Gal Raviv put up 11 while Ahnay Adams had 10. 

UM could not stop Georgia Tech’s Talayah Walker. The guard tied her career high in points with 33. 

Miami center Ra Shaya Kyle put up seven rebounds despite the team being out rebounded 42-38. They also shot a lackluster 4-for-21 from three-point range.

Georgia Tech shot 47% from the field compared to Miami’s 31%

The Yellow Jackets started out the game strong, scoring the first seven points and holding Miami scoreless for almost two minutes. 

Walker put up 10 early points in less than five minutes which led to a 21-10 GT lead. Coming out of the first quarter media timeout, the Yellow Jackets continued to run the floor going on a 12-0 run. After one, Miami trailed 26-12.

Similarly to the first quarter, GT opened the second with two baskets. Adams countered that with a three-pointer to get Miami’s offense going. The three-pointer rejuvenated the team as they played tougher defense. 

UM forced five turnovers, including two steals from Adams. Despite the spirited defensive effort, Miami trailed 45-24 at halftime. Walker scored 20 of her 33 points in the first half.

Photographer Bella Ochoa // Graduate student center Ra Shaya Kyle takes it to the basket against Pittsburgh on Feb. 26, 2026 at Watsco

The Hurricanes nailed the first basket of the second half. Momentum quickly swung to the side of Georgia Tech as it went on on a 8-0 run to extend its lead 53-26. 

The Yellow Jackets continued to cruise, moving their advantage to as much as 39 points at 70-31. Miami got on the board just before the buzzer sounded to make it a 70-33 game.

Down 37, Miami would have to pull off a miracle to come back. No matter the score, the Hurricanes continued to compete. They went on a 12-1 run midway through the fourth quarter. 

The spirited run was not enough as Georgia Tech would go on to win its Senior Night game, 79-49.

Miami will look to shake off a rough game and set its eyes on the ACC Tournament.

UM will travel to Duluth, Ga. to face Stanford in the first round of the tournament on March 4 at 11 a.m. The tournament will be held at Gas South Arena.

Hurricanes Track and Field shines at ACC Championships

”We Can Go and Do Something Special in the ACC”, those were the words uttered by junior sprinter Ace Malone in an interview before Miami traveled to Boston for the ACC championships.

He was proven right, Hurricanes Track and Field was all over The Track at New Balance in Boston.

Throughout the weekend the Hurricanes made a statement at the ACC Indoor Championships taking home four gold medals.

Starting off with Malone he was a part of two of those gold medal performances both coming on Saturday. On Friday Malone set the school record in the prelims for the 400m. Then in the finals matched that time again at 45.41 seconds to take home gold in the event becoming the first Hurricane ever to win an ACC Championship in the 400m. Malone was joined by George Franks whose time of 46.01 landed him on the podium at third. 

Malone and Franks just a few hours later were back at it again in the 4×400 relay. Down by a few tenths of a second going into the final lap, Malone was trusted as the anchor to take the Canes through the end. With a split of 45.18 he gave Miami the boost they needed to take home their second gold of the Saturday and final gold of the weekend. 

The women weren’t far behind in their 4×400 run to close out the weekend. The group of Serena Tate, Gabriella Grissom, Nandy Kihuyu and Sanaa Hebron took the silver medal with a time of 3:31.10 improving on the group’s second place mark in Hurricane’s history. 

That wasn’t the only success Miami received over the course of the weekend. Day one was about as exciting for Miami with a strong showing in the field. Women’s weight throw had the podium covered in orange and green as (in this order) Tania Da Silva, Jocelyn Pringle, and Calea Jackson swept the podium. Da Silva went into her final throw in fourth but with a throw of 21.78m she boosted herself to the top of the podium taking gold in the weight throw for the first time since Debbia Ajagbe in 2020. Rounding out the podium Pringle’s throw of 21.54m was the program’s third longest and personal best for Pringle. Jackson’s throw of 21.39m for bronze was also a personal best. 

Last but not least for the Hurricanes to land gold, it was again Miami’s do it all star Edgar Campre taking home his second ACC Heptathlon title last winning in 2024. Throughout the weekend Edgar won in three of the seven events, the 60m hurdles, the long jump, and shot put, taking second in the regular 60m. 

Aside from the gold medal winners Miami put on some impressive performances throughout the weekend. 

On Thursday Kennedy Sauder earned bronze in the men’s high jump with a clearance of 2.11m. In the men’s weight throw both Desmond Coleman and Heath Vernor improved on their respective fourth and fifth best throw marks in school history. Friday saw five  Hurricanes fight their way into the finals. Sanaa Hebron and Nandy Kihuyu in the women’s 400m, Natalie Varela and Gabriella Grissom in the women’s 800m, and a new personal best from Ashton Torns in the 60m for the men. Then Saturday, Adriana Kruzmane earned silver in the women’s triple jump with a 13.11 mark, now fifth all time in program history and Lauren Kirby set a new personal best in the shot put. 

Overall after a productive weekend Miami women’s team stood at 62 points, fourth best in the ACC and the men at 49, sixth best. 

Together Miami held 111 points, good for the third most in the conference barely edging out the University of Virginia. 

Next up for the Hurricanes is the indoor National Championships in Fayetteville, Ark. as Miami is set up to have a good amount of representation with their performance throughout this last weekend.

Takeaways from Miami’s rain-shortened reality check against No.10 Florida

The Florida Gators have dominated the Miami Hurricanes in baseball over the past two decades, winning 16 of the last 20 series. 

Hurricane fans often looked towards this annual series with utter disdain, but this year had a bit of hope as the Canes came into the series undefeated at 10-0.

But that hope was short-lived, as the No. 10 Gators stamped their authority over Miami for the fifth-straight year, securing the series win by taking the opening two games of the series before Sunday’s game was canceled due to rain.

Here’s what we learned about Miami this weekend as Florida took control of the all-time series 138-136-1:

Same old story

Miami came into this matchup as the 17th-ranked team in the country with some of the hottest bats in the nation, racking up an average north of 15 runs per game.

The bats were hot, the vibes were high and it just felt like it was finally Miami’s time to get over its gator-sized hump.

And yet, once UF shortstop Brendan Lawson launched an opposite-field homer in the top of the first inning on Friday, it felt like the series was already over.

UM players looked defeated, played tight and felt overmatched both nights. On multiple occasions, Miami would get runners on, but could never come through to swing the momentum towards the orange and green. 

On the other hand, UF was calm and collected — as if this wasn’t a series it hoped to win, but one it expected to win.

The Canes historically are undoubtedly a “blue-blood” program with four national titles and their names all over the NCAA record books. But for most college-aged fans and recruits, they’ve only seen Miami defeat UF a handful of times in their entire life.

That’s not just a tough stretch, that’s an identity — one that directly impacts recruiting and the overall brand of the program.

David Lebowitz, Photo Editor/ The Hurricanes meet at the mound against Florida on Febrauary 27, 2026.

Bullpens made the difference

For all the negativity surrounding the series as a whole, both games were relatively close.

On Friday night, the game was tied 2-2 heading into the eighth, while on Saturday, the game was tied 4-4 heading into the seventh.

But Florida was able to deal damage against Miami relievers as they launched game-icing home runs on both nights.

The Hurricanes, on the other hand, simply had no answers for Florida’s relievers, who would come in and shut the door. Florida brought in flamethrowers in the form of Jackson Barberi and Joshua Whritenour, who overpowered UM with their fastballs that touched 100 mph consistently.

While such talent would’ve been revered on the Miami side, the Canes would’ve also appreciated their consistency. In five innings of work, Miami’s relievers allowed eight runs and seven walks. 

The backend of this Hurricane bullpen must improve heading into ACC play next weekend against Boston College. 

Starters shine

Arguably the only positives from this weekend were Miami’s starting pitchers AJ Ciscar and Rob Evans.

The Hurricane starters took care of business in their appearances over the last few weeks, but that was against subpar competition in Lehigh and Lafayette. 

A key focus heading into this weekend was whether or not they could raise their game to match Florida’s offense.

And they did just that.

Ciscar surgically worked his way through UF’s lineup on Friday, generating plenty of weak contact while not allowing a single walk through seven innings of work. 

Evans answered the call as well on Saturday. Putting aside his adventurous second inning where he gave up four runs on five hits, the New York native carved up Florida hitters at will, tallying up 12 strikeouts — the most from a Hurricane starter since Gage Ziehl struck out 15 in 2024.

If Miami’s starters can continue to give their offense a chance, the bats will come around and make this Hurricane team a real force in the ACC.

Miami delivers 76-54 drubbing of Boston College, blowing out Eagles in convincing season sweep

Just 21 days ago, Miami was tied with Boston College with 3:50 left in the second half, fighting for their lives to escape with a narrow win on the road.

Now, just three weeks later at that same time, only two Canes starters remained on the floor as UM cruised to a 22-point rout over the Eagles, their largest margin of victory in an ACC contest since 2023. 

The Hurricanes (23-6, 12-4 ACC) showed no mercy to BC (10-19, 3-13 ACC), whose blistering defensive display held the Eagles to only 54 points — the fewest allowed to any conference opponent in over two years. 

Miami’s end-to-end dominance was reflected in the box score, stuffing the stat sheet in virtually every key offensive and defensive category.

The Canes destroyed Boston College on the glass and in the turnover margin, dictating play in both rebounding and points in the paint. 

Most notably, they forced a season-high 18 turnovers and 14 steals, capitalizing with 22 points scored off of BC’s numerous miscues. 
Miami used a strong first-half to bury Boston College away before the second half even began.

After giving up an early 13-6 lead to the visitors, Miami responded by going on a 30-6 run to close out the first frame, allowing just one basket in the last eight minutes to take a 36-19 advantage at the break. The Eagles missed 12-of-13 shots in one stretch. 

The Hurricanes kept the momentum rolling over the final 20 minutes, leaning on standout performances off the bench from Tru Washington and Noem Dovrat to secure the season sweep over BC for the first time since 2021-22. 

Washington posted 14 points in his newfound role as Miami’s sixth man, nabbing a career-high six steals along with a team-best plus-30 rating. 

Brian Mulvey Photo Editor // Junior Guard Tru Washington remains focused against Boston College on Feb. 28, 2026.

The Israeli guard Dovrat dazzled in the reserve unit, setting a season-high 12 points while going 4-for-5 from three-point range in his limited action. 

Dovrat spoke to the media postgame about his record outing. 

“I know my role on the team is to shoot the ball, especially outside the three-point line,” Dovrat said. “So I just came in and shot it. I have the confidence from the coach, from my teammates. Whenever I’m open, I just shoot it. Shots just fell in today.”

With its 23rd victory on the year, UM’s 2025-26 campaign under first-year head coach Jai Lucas has now officially been cemented as the fourth-best regular season in program history. 

The 16-win improvement from the Canes’ 7-24 record in 2024-25 also means that Lucas has now executed the greatest single-season turnaround of any Division I school this year.

Despite the unprecedented success, Lucas continues to demand more from his team heading into March. His insatiable hunger for excellence came across in his messages to the media after the game.

“One thing I was telling the guys after the game is going into March, you have to continue to develop a killer instinct where you get these leads and these moments where you can go from 10 to 15, or 15 to 20,” Lucas said. “You have to be able to sustain the lead. You can’t just give and take. So we’ve got to do a better job of closing down the stretch.”

At 23-6 with two regular-season games remaining, Miami is essentially guaranteed an NCAA Tournament berth, currently projected as a No. 8 seed.

Up next, the Canes will look to clinch a double-bye in the upcoming ACC tournament with a win at SMU (19-10, 8-8 ACC) on Wednesday. Tip-off is at 7 p.m. ET in Dallas on ACC Network. 

Brian Mulvey Photo Editor // Senior Center Ernest Udeh Jr. interlocks arms at the net against Boston College on Feb. 28, 2026.

No. 10 Gators spoil Rob Evans career-high 12 strikeouts, defeat No.17 Miami 8-4.

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With two outs and the bases loaded, Miami reliever Ryan Bilka thought he escaped the jam with a tie ballgame still intact as center fielder Mikey Torres recorded the final out of the inning.

But just as he crossed the first baseline to head back to the Hurricane dugout, the umpires gathered on the mound and called a balk on Bilka, negating the final out and pushing forward all the runners 90 feet — giving the Gators a one-run lead they’d ride the momentum into a 8-4 win.

The call sent Canes fans into a fury as boos and expletives rained down on Mark Light Field, overshadowing a spectacular night of baseball from both sides from start to finish.

In the bottom of the first, with two outs and runners on the corners courtesy of multiple errors, senior outfielder Derek Williams pimped a three-run shot to left-center field for the first runs of the game.

The blast marked Williams’ fifth homer on the young season, combining his power output with an impressive .550 average.

But Florida (11-1) did not waste any time coming back. 

In the second inning the Gators put up four runs on five hits, with three consecutive hits to start the inning. 

However, the inning marked the only hits Miami starter Rob Evans would give up during his outing.

Making his second start this season, the lefty racked up 12 strikeouts through six innings with seven of those coming in a row between the third and fifth innings.

Every time he left the bump after an inning of work, he looked towards the Miami bullpen and let out an infectious roar. 

One thing is clear, rivalry games mean more. 

On the other side, Florida’s Aidan King didn’t have the same success. The sophomore righty only went 2.1 innings after being pulled in the third with a presumed hand injury. The ball was turned over to relief arm Ricky Reeth who calmly worked through the fourth.

Torres’ speed paid dividends in the fifth. 

David Lebowitz, Photo Editor/ Sophomore Outfiled Micahel Torres runs towards first base against Florida on Febrauary 27, 2026.

After whacking a double down the left field line, Torres advanced to third on a passed ball. Now standing 90 feet from home, Cuvet hit a shallow fly ball to center field. Florida center fielder Kyle Jones threw a dot to the catcher but Torres’s speed was no match as he slid into home head first safely tying the score 4-4 through five innings of play.

Miami head coach J.D. Arteaga let Evans go to work to start the seventh with his pitch count at 87. After a walk and a hit by pitch to start the inning, Arteaga turned to Richmond transfer Ryan Bilka.

Evans walked off the mound to a standing ovation from 3,555 fans in attendance, the second sold out crowd this weekend.

Through the controversial balk call in the seventh inning, Bilka remained in the game for the eighth inning.

With two runners on, he gave up a two-run home run to Ethan Surowiec, extending the Gators’ lead 8-4.

And just like last night, the Hurricanes bats could not mount a late inning comeback as the flamethrowing Joshua Whritenour closed the game for the blue and orange. 

Florida now has won six straight series against the Hurricanes and has not lost a series at Mark Light Field since 2014. Miami (10-2) will look to spoil a potential Gators sweep and get back in the win column on Sunday. The game is slated to start at 1 p.m. and will air on ACCNX.

Tricanes hosts UM’s first triathlon event on campus

The University of Miami’s triathlon club, Tricanes, hosted its first ever on-campus triathlon. A total of 120 students participated in Sunday’s Try-a-Tri event.  

Participants swam in the University Center outdoor pool for the swimming portion, rode spin bikes at Lakeside patio for the bicycle portion and ran from the intramural fields to the Fate bridge for the running portion.   

Tricanes President Sally Work talks about the noticeable energy that took over campus that day. 

“If you were walking anywhere on campus from 7:30 a.m.-11:00 a.m. on Sunday, it would be impossible not to have heard the try-a-tri DJ on the Lakeside stage, or the loud cheers and music from our volunteers posted around the IM fields cheering on the runners,” she said. 

For Work the event was about more than just racing and promoting the growing Triathlon Club. She feels that the triathlon brought the UM community together. According to Work, undergraduates, alumni, and faculty all participated in the event, and it was fulfilling to see how far the club had progressed. 

“Seeing this event come to fruition in the form that it did has been the most rewarding project I have worked on in my time at UM,” Work admits. 

Having the university host a triathlon has been a long-standing goal for Work. She had seen other campuses, like the University of Florida, host similar events and thought it was a “super cool premise.” The Tricanes would participate in the Gainesville triathlon every year. 

However, the club faced a multitude of obstacles when trying to plan their own triathlon. Work noted that campus being in an urban area proved difficult to plan courses for the biking and running sectors.  

Additionally, there was originally not much traction or interest surrounding the club, noting that when she became a member of the Tricanes, there were only a handful of students involved.

 “When I first joined as a freshman, there were only four of us, and this year we have over 20 active freshmen,” Work said. 

This year, the club has 60 active members, which is double the number from last year. This spike in interest is part of the reason that the triathlon was even possible. 

“With the growing ‘trendy-ness’ of triathlons and ‘hybrid athletes,’ I knew there was a general interest in the student body to participate in the triathlon,” Work explained. “Coupled with the rapid growth of our own team, [I] realized it may actually be possible to host our own triathlon on campus.” 

Work proposed the idea of a triathlon – with distances aligning to half of a traditional sprint triathlon – to the Director of Club Sports on Jan. 20, and by Feb. 22, the club had 120 people signed up. 

While the club had overcome the hurdle of getting people interested in trying out a triathlon, the planning of the event was far from easy. 

Over the next month, extensive preparation went into coordinating the event, from obtaining the proper equipment to ordering the correct amount of medals and shirts. 

Thanks to the communication and teamwork of everyone involved, the 2026 Try-a-Tri ran smoothly. Work shares her gratitude with all the people who helped make the event possible. 

“Staying organized and having such an engaged team and responsive executive board, made everything so much better. We all put 100% effort into planning this event, and it would not have been possible without such an amazing team.”

Short-term, Work considered the Try-a-Tri was a success, but she hopes to see this event become an exciting campus tradition.

Greek Week fosters community and philanthropy across UM chapters

The University of Miami’s Greek Week celebration is a week-long fundraiser that brings together all 33 Greek organizations on campus to raise money for a cause through friendly competition and social events. 

This year, chapters raised funds for the Dolphins Cancer Challenge in partnership with the Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center.

After taking a gap year in 2025, Greek Week got a complete makeover. UM’s Greek board tested a new structure this year by offering new events that have never been done in this particular format. 

The week opened with Greeks Got Talent, an event at Lakeside Patio that welcomed more than 800 attendees. Then, a Market & Field Day invited several vendors to the Foote Green, where sellers donated their proceeds to the cause. Friday saw the grand finale: Battle of the DJ’s, hosted at The Rock Plaza, showcased greek life’s best music-makers. 

Parker Osth, chair of the Association for Greek Letter Organizations (AGLO), remembered participating in Greek Week in 2024, and it gave him a glimpse at how vast UM Greek life truly is.

“[At UM], Greek life … is just small enough to be familiar with people in every chapter but just large enough where it would be impossible to know everyone,” said Osth. “That makes UM Greek Week special in that it has a sense of broader community that might not exist at larger universities.”

Jordan Chiarelli, the assistant director of Greek life at UM, guided student leaders to plan and execute the schedule. She supports risk management, logistics, budgeting and communication across chapters. Chiarelli describes Greek Week as “a high energy, campus wide celebration of service, spirit and community.”

“[Greek Week] is intended to create shared experiences across chapters and councils that might not otherwise interact as often,” said Chiarelli. “For the University of Miami community, it strengthens unity within Greek life while also demonstrating our collective commitment to service and philanthropy. It shows that Greek organizations can come together for something bigger than themselves.”

According to Chiarelli, UM’s individualized focus on collective impact sets their Greek Week apart from other universities. While other universities may compete solely to achieve a title for their own chapter, UM places a strong emphasis on teamwork.

“Greek Week reflects many of the core values we see year-round within our Greek community, including service, leadership, philanthropy and friendship,” said Chiarelli. “While Greek Week is concentrated into one high energy week, the collaboration, charitable efforts and sense of belonging mirror what our chapters work toward throughout the academic year.”

Florida takes all-time series lead against Miami, defeats UM 7-2

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Miami sophomore right-hander AJ Ciscar grinded through seven innings of work, determined to give his offense a chance to win.

But on a full count to Florida’s designated hitter Jacob Kendall to lead off the eighth, Ciscar hung a slider he wished he could’ve had back. 

Kendall launched a go-ahead solo shot into the parking lot in right field, which sparked a five-run rally for Florida to take the series opener 7-2.

The late inning dramatics were fitting for the atmosphere at Mark Light Field — a sold-out affair with 3,555 fans in attendance on their feet the whole night. More than 600 of those fans were students who crowded into the student section and wherever there was space.

Both teams came into this game tied at 136 wins a piece, with the winner taking the opener of the series and all-time bragging rights.

Friday starter Ciscar took the mound for the third time this season aiming for another impressive outing.

But UF had other plans for the Fort Lauderdale native, as Florida shortstop Brendan Lawson launched a solo homer in the first inning.

The draft-eligible sophomore was named Baseball America’s top prospect for the 2027 MLB Draft following his Freshman All American season last year and finished the night 3-3 with two RBI’s.

Despite the first inning shell-shock, Ciscar would settle down, getting out of the inning and through the next two scoreless with four strikeouts.

David Lebowitz, Photo Editor/ Sophomore Right-handed Pitcher AJ Ciscar watches his pitch on Friday, February 13, 2026.

However he was equally matched by Florida’s starter Liam Peterson. The flamethrowing righty had Miami guessing at the plate early, striking out six in his opening three innings.

Lawson would haunt the Canes again in the top of the fourth, leading off the inning with a two-strike single to right field. The Canadian native would come around to score on a sac fly by right fielder Cash Stayer, giving UF an early 2-0 lead.

Ciscar again bounced back with another scoreless pair of innings, but this time the offense had his back.

Jake Ogden began the bottom of the inning with a checked-swing double down the right field foul line, followed up by a Mikey Torres single to put runners on the corners.

Peterson then sat down third baseman Daniel Cuvet and catcher Alex Sosa on three straight pitches, looking like the Canes would once again be left scoreless again.

But the red-hot Derek Williams would break the offensive lull and shutout simultaneously however, with a weak grounder down the third base line that just stayed fair for an infield RBI single.

Peterson would subsequently be taken out of the game for sophomore relief pitcher Jackson Barberi, but this wouldn’t stop the Canes rally, as West drove a grounder through the third base gap for another Miami run, tying the game at 2-2.

A scoreless seventh followed before the aforementioned Kendall homer broke the game open for UF.

Ciscar was pulled from the game following an error from Ogden on a fly ball in shallow left field.

Over seven innings, Ciscar tallied seven strikeouts with three earned runs, and was replaced by fifth-year reliever Packy Bradley-Cooney.

Bradley-Cooney walked the first batter he faced, immediately replaced by the left-handed Jake Dorn to face the dangerous bat of Lawson on the same side of the plate. 

Ultimately the switch was in vain, as Lawson continued to prove himself uncontainable, shooting a ball on the ground past the outstretched glove of West for an RBI single, putting the Gators up 4-2.

The Canes then saw their third pitching change in the eighth as Lazaro Collera took over on the mound to try and limit the damage.

After a walk to load the bases, Collera battled to a 3-2 count where the resulting pitch was returned Cuvet’s way as a chopping grounder. Cuvet would make a play to home, where an outstretched Sosa reigned in his wild throw to keep a run from scoring.

Despite getting the crucial out, Collera couldn’t keep UF at bay, walking a man on to score a run and giving up a sacrifice fly to score another.

Miami’s fourth pitching change of the inning followed as freshman left-hander Jack Durso entered the game for the final out of the eighth.

A line drive would score one, but a laser from Dylan Dubovik in left field ended the inning at the plate.

In need of a miracle down five, the Canes couldn’t make it happen during the final two innings at the plate, suffering their first loss of the season.

Miami (10-1) will look to even the series tomorrow night against Florida (10-1) at 6:30 p.m at Mark Light Field.

Miami men’s tennis suffers heartbreaking 4-3 Loss to Louisville

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The University of Miami men’s tennis team fell to the Louisville Cardinals 4-3 at the Bass-Rudd Tennis Center in Louisville on Friday afternoon.

The match started off with a nailbiter doubles point. The Cardinals cruised at court three, as Hamza El Amine and Pedro Cressoni took down Miami’s Nacho Serra Sanchez and Saud Alhogbani 6-1.

The Hurricanes responded well on the other courts. At court two, Jules Garot and Rafael Segado defeated Louisville’s Matei Onofrei and Russell Lokko 7-5 after a late break. 

The doubles point came down to a tiebreaker at the top court. The Hurricanes’ Jakub Kroslak and Antonio Prat were able to rally and defeat the Cardinals’ Walid Ahouda and Andre Steinbach 7-5 in a thrilling tiebreak, giving the doubles point to Miami.

The Hurricanes were initially able to carry over the momentum into singles. Sanchez won emphatically over El Amine 6-0, 6-1 at court two. Garot also dominated, beating Lokko 6-1, 6-2 at court six to give UM a 3-0 lead.

Shortly after, everything started to go downhill for Miami.

Prat fell 6-2, 6-2 at court one to Ahouda, who played an incredible all-around match. At court three, Kroslak came up short against Steinbach 6-4, 6-4 narrowing the Hurricanes’ lead to 3-2.

No. 4 Segado had a strong 7-5 win in the first set, but was unable to sustain his play. Onofrei cruised in the next two sets, 6-1 and 6-2, tying the match at three points each.

The match came down to court five. The match was close the entire way through. Alhogbani was able to win the first set 6-4 before dropping the second 6-4. The third set was a nailbiter until Cressoni was able to break late, winning 6-4 and giving the Cardinals the 4-3 victory.

This was a gut wrenching loss for Miami, dropping its first match of ACC play. The Canes look to bounce back in South Bend on Sunday against Notre Dame. After that, UM returns home next weekend against Wake Forest and NC State.

Miami senior Martin Katz prepares to strike the ball during his doubles match against UCF at the Neil Schiff Tennis Center on Feb. 7, 2025. Photo Credit: Staff Photographer | Marra Finkelstein

Bryan Pata murder trial nears end after almost 20 years

The trial of Rashaun Jones for the alleged murder of his former UM football teammate, Bryan Pata, is coming to a close nearly 20 years after Pata was killed. 

The trial continued on Wednesday, Feb. 25, starting with testimony from Sgt. Sergio Cremisini, current supervisor of the Homicide Intelligence Department for the Miami-Dade Sheriff’s Office  homicide unit.

The prosecution argued that jealousy drove Jones to kill Pata. They cited circumstantial evidence, including Jones’ behavior and phone records from the night of the murder, while the defense asked the court to dismiss the charges and not give the case to the jury.

“There is no way the jury could find that Mr. Jones committed this crime beyond a reasonable doubt,” said defense attorney Sara Alvarez.

Cremisini reviewed cell phone records for the defendant, Rashaun Jones, including date, time, duration, and approximate location of calls made or received through local cell towers.

The prosecution asked Cremisini about Jones’ calls on the night of the murder between Jones and his ex-girlfriend, Sherry Abramson, who had called Jones repeatedly after she found out about the incident.

The prosecution highlighted Jones’ use of *67, a feature that hides the caller’s phone number from recipients, displaying the name as “unknown.” Although the recipient will not see the caller’s name, cell records still reflect the caller’s ID.

Records show Jones used *67 several times to call Abramson, while the prosecution argued and questioned why he specifically used *67 on the day of the homicide.

“Why would you call your girlfriend from a blocked number?” said state attorney Cristina Diamond. “The records speak for themselves.”

The prosecution also pointed to Jones’ cellular connection to different cell towers, specifically tower 142, a tower located near Pata’s apartment.

“Are the records consistent with someone who was home all night?” the prosecution asked.  

“No,” Cremisini answered.

Defense attorney Christian Maroni heavily questioned Cremisini during the cross-examination.

“You can’t testify at all ― you have no knowledge ― none of this information that you’ve testified about sheds any light on where Mr. Jones’ phone was at the time the homicide occurred, correct?” Maroni asked.

“Yes, that’s correct,” Cremisini said.

Following Cremisini’s testimony prior to closing arguments, Dr. Emma Lew, the former chief medical examiner for Miami-Dade County, testified that Pata died of a gunshot wound to the head.

“The manner of death was homicide,” she testified.

Closing statements followed at 3:46 p.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 25, meaning that the verdict will be announced at sentencing upon the jury’s decision.

The prosecution discussed Jones’ character, reminding the jury of difficulties Jones faced and the complicated relationship he had with Pata, who they argued was thriving. 

“Bryan has everything the defense wants, and he chooses to let jealousy overtake him and kill Bryan Pata,” Pata’s legal team argued. 

They touched on what the prosecution described as Jones’ “unimpressive” collegiate career, despite being a promising high school recruit.

Prosecutors noted that this affected Jones’ mindset, worsening what they claimed was an already existent distaste for Pata.   

“That dream [of playing in the NFL] ended because of the jealousy of the defendant,” said state attorney Cristina Diamond.

The prosecution then discussed the victim, Bryan Pata, and his character.

Diamond cited Pata’s ambitions for the NFL, his relationship with his girlfriend, Jada Brody, and his successful car-detailing work as reasons for Jones’ jealousy.

Among teammates, coaches and detectives, the case centered around an eyewitness account from Paul Conner, a former UM English teacher, who was “90% certain” he saw Jones leaving Pata’s residence after hearing a gunshot.

Pata’s attorney used this alleged sighting as proof that Jones was guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

However, the defense’s responding statements said otherwise.

Defense attorney Sara Alvarez questioned the validity of Conner’s statement, citing evidence that Conner was proven to have poor eyesight and that the murder occurred at night. 

Conner was presumed to be deceased, but was found alive and living in Louisville, Kentucky. He was determined unable to testify in person by the judge as a “result of significant memory issues.

The defense also argued that the quality of Jones’ reference photo was inadequate, suggesting that Conner’s selection of Jones from a lineup of potential suspects was unreliable.

“Even if the evidence is viewed in a light most favorable to the state, it is entirely insufficient to support a conviction in this case,” said defense attorney Sara Alvarez.

The jury has not reached a verdict after hours of deliberation, and were told to return on Monday, March 2.