Miami WBB wins fourth straight, takes down Pitt 79-58 on Senior Night

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Honoring its seniors at the Watsco Center Thursday night, the Miami Hurricanes women’s basketball team turned its four-game losing streak into a four-game win streak after crushing the Pittsburgh Panthers 79-59.

The Lady Canes fourth straight victory now makes them 16-12 overall and 8-9 in ACC play.

Ra Shaya Kyle shined on her senior night, scoring a career high 36 points. On the other side of the ball, she brought in 13 rebounds, marking her 19th double-double of the season. 

Other notable performances include Gal Raviv with 14 points and Amarachi Kimpson posting 10 on the offensive side. Also, sophomore Ahnay Adams had 10 rebounds, which was a career high. The Canes have continued consistency over the past four games on both ends of the ball.

The energy in Watsco center was electric following tipoff, sending Miami on a 13-2 run over the Panthers in the first two minutes. They were able to extend this lead to 17-4, working hard to put up points and block. 

However, the momentum fell slightly, giving the Panthers an opportunity to score, and they took it. They went 7-0 to close the quarter, wrapping up the quarter at 17-11 Miami. 

The Hurricanes needed the second quarter to build up this momentum and they did so despite pressure from Pittsburgh. It wasn’t until after the first timeout that Miami turned a 3-point deficit into a 33-21 lead. They outscored the Panthers 16-10 in the second quarter, with eight points from Kyle and five from Kimpson.

Photographer Bella Ochoa // Sophomore guard Gal Raviv in the paint against Pittsburgh on Feb. 26, 2026 at Watsco

After the half, Miami went on a 7-0 run, scoring 75 percent from the field. Overall, the Canes shot 47.8 percent from the field, demonstrating their determination on offense in the third quarter. 

This sent Miami into a 40-21 lead, forcing a timeout by Pittsburgh. The break only gave Miami more momentum, adding six more points to the board and leaving the Panthers scoreless for almost three minutes. 

In the third quarter Kyle went five-for-five and recorded 12 points in the quarter, adding to her 36 point total. The Hurricanes had 23 points in the period, stretching their lead to 56-38 heading into the fourth. 

Miami showed off their physicality in the last 10 scoring 16 of its points in the paint, led by Kyle with 10 and Kaviv with four. They also controlled the glass, outrebounding the Panthers by 6.

The final regular-season home game ended in a 79-58 victory for the Canes.

The Hurricanes face off against Georgia Tech in their last regular season game in Atlanta on Sunday. Tipoff is at 2 p.m.

HUGE RIVALRY WIN: Are the Canes Now a Lock for March Madness?

Men’s Basketball is coming off a rivalry win against the Florida State Seminoles, while Baseball gears up for a rivalry series against the Florida Gators.

Liam and Zach recap Basketball’s recent success and break down Baseball’s historic weekend against the Lafayette Leopards.

Luke Chaney also joins the duo from CaneSport to analyze Miami Basketball’s talent and resurgence.

Grove Festival Highlights, Voodoo Doughnuts Review and Miami Music Week Announcements

This week on Eye of the Hurricane, we’re breaking down the biggest Arts and Entertainment stories around Miami.

We start in Coconut Grove, where the 62nd annual Coconut Grove Arts Festival brought nearly 300 artists to South Florida for a weekend of live music, culinary vendors, and vibrant artwork, filling the streets with thousands of visitors.

Next, we head to Wynwood, where Portland-based Voodoo Doughnuts has officially opened its doors. With Miami-inspired flavors, its iconic Voodoo Doll doughnut, and a bright pink, photo-ready interior, our Arts & Entertainment Editor, Samantha Rodriguez, gives her verdict on whether it’s worth the 30-minute drive from campus.

Then, we look ahead to Miami Music Week as the Winter Music Conference announces its second wave of programming. With new artist speakers, major label executives, and a three-day pool party series, WMC continues to position Miami as a global hub for electronic music, industry networking, and cultural influence.

We close out with an Opinion shoutout highlighting coverage of the Winter Olympics and the overlooked dominance of Team USA’s women athletes.

All that and more — right here on Eye of the Hurricane.

‘Son of Hamas,’ New Provost Initiatives and Updates on Rashaun Jones Trial

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This week on Catch Up Canes, we’re breaking down three major stories shaping conversations on campus and beyond.

First, Mosab Hassan Yousef, author of “Son of Hamas,” drew a sold-out crowd at a Student Support Initiative event. Yousef, the son of a Hamas co-founder who later became an informant for Israel’s Shin Bet, spoke about his personal journey, extremism, and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. His appearance sparked strong reactions, with supporters praising the event as a platform for dialogue and critics raising concerns about its political implications.

Next, newly appointed Academic Provost Thomas LeBlanc addressed the Student Senate, promising to revamp career services. LeBlanc emphasized expanding internship pipelines, strengthening employer partnerships, and better aligning academic programs with career outcomes — signaling a shift toward more career-focused institutional priorities.

And finally, in the ongoing trial of Rashaun Jones, the lead detective in the Pata case took the stand this week. Testimony centered on investigative procedures and key evidence tied to the case, marking another significant development as proceedings continue.

That’s all for this edition of Catch Up Canes. Stay tuned for more updates on the stories impacting the U.

Therapy app leverages drunk shuttle crash in campus marketing scheme

The UM shuttle that crashed earlier this month due to an allegedly drunk driver is being used as a marketing technique for a therapy app. Lusaea, the app, is referencing the incident in posters across campus, claiming that it helped students who are suffering after the accident. 

The fliers, which were first seen near the front entrance of Ungar by Hurricane reporters, read, “Drunk bus driver put me in therapy. The ride ended. The anxiety didn’t — but Lusaea helped me out.”

Lusaea flyer posted up at Ungar on Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2026. Photo credit: Mel Tenkoff.

The messaging references an incident that happened on Monday, Feb. 16, when a RSMAS shuttle driver was arrested after crashing while allegedly driving under the influence with approximately 15 students in the vehicle. Two students suffered minor injuries from the accident. 

The shuttle driver is facing one charge of driving under the influence, two charges of DUI with damage to property or person and one charge of refusal to submit to a breath test. His license has since been suspended as a result of these charges.

A QR code on the flyers directs viewers to the App Store to download Lusaea, a “therapy companion app to make your therapy sessions more effective.”

The Hurricane contacted several students who were on the shuttle, all of whom said they were not contacted by Lusaea, have no affiliation with the app and did not ask for the incident to be referenced in promotional materials. 

Lusaea flyers posted up at Whitten Learning Center on Thursday, Feb. 26, 2026. Photo credit: Vivian Amoia.

“A number of my friends have sent me photos of those posters, and it’s been shared in the group chat,” said Alastair Shen, a student who was on the shuttle during the accident. “As far as I’m aware, the app or posters aren’t related or partnered or requested by any of us. All of us just laughed at the irony.”

Since Tuesday, Feb. 24, other versions of the flyers have been spotted around Dooley Memorial and Whitten LC. 

New flyers read, “This shuttle ride changed me. I got off the bus. The stress stayed — but Lusaea helped me out.”

It is unclear who put the fliers up around campus. Lusaea has no visible ties to UM, and the account is not following anyone and has no followers on Instagram. 

“Any posters not found to be in compliance with University policy will be removed,” the University said in a statement to The Hurricane. 


On Feb. 27th, Lusaea reached out to set up a meeting with The Hurricane. The Hurricane will be updating the article as soon as we receive more information.

Diamonds aren’t a girl’s best friend — Olympic gold is

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I’m a retired elite athlete in the way some people were child actors.

At one point, my entire life revolved around wrestling and most other things seemed relatively insignificant in comparison. Daily strength training would lead into practice, which started in the afternoon and went well-into the evening, often followed by some endurance running. Weekends were for competing. 

And like most elite athletes growing up, the Olympics were a staunch motivator. I believed that if I simply trained harder, I could one day compete under the United States’ banner. A mid-match shoulder dislocation and labral tear — and the subsequent surgery afterwards — set those Olympic-minded thoughts on fire.

Now, my singlet is folded neatly in a box at the top of my closet, along with my plaques and medals, but one thing has remained: The Olympics are everything to me. 

For as long as I can remember, the even years held some of my most vivid memories, like sitting cross-legged in front of the TV at odd times, trying to teach myself a backbend as Simone Biles broke every record on Earth, Chloe Kim setting the standard for in-competition 1080s — and asking my mom why I never learned to snowboard. I sobbed when Helen Maroulis became the first American woman to win an Olympic gold medal in wrestling. Like so many young athletes, the Olympics have always felt personal.

Ahead of this year’s games, I couldn’t wait to watch my favorite events like Halfpipe, Slopestyle and Figure Staking, especially as Alysa Liu was returning after early retirement.

But if these Olympics have proved anything, it’s that women are already delivering gold — and our culture refuses to treat it like it counts.

This year, at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan-Cortina, Team USA took home 33 medals — 12 of them gold. Eight of those gold medals belonged to women. 

It wasn’t a supporting role, nor a feel-good storyline. It was the headline. 

Through the 2026 Olympics, it was women setting the standard of excellence. Except, the conversation hasn’t really been reflecting that. 

I know what it feels like to win and still be treated like an afterthought. I’ve stood on podiums where the applause felt thinner than it did for the boys before me. I’ve been booed walking onto the mat. I competed against boys while fighting for girls’ wrestling to exist at all. I trained in rooms where their schedules came first.

So when women bring home the majority of the gold and still get treated like the B-story, I recognize the pattern. I don’t need it explained to me.

Instead of celebrating the amount of women who took home medals from Milan, the story on everyone’s lips is the American Men’s Ice Hockey team and its historic victory, and President Trump calling to offer congratulations — just to mock the Olympic champion Women’s Ice Hockey team in the same sentence.

“And you know, I have to invite the women’s team,” Trump said over speakerphone before the locker room erupted into laughter. “I fear I may be impeached if I don’t.” 

Although there were some outliers that seemed genuinely supportive of the women’s team’s win, one voice could be heard shouting “Absolutely!” and “2 for 2!” in the recording, those singular voices could not overpower the ‘boys-club energy’ radiating off the rest of his team. 

I’ve heard that laugh before — in wrestling rooms, around me at tournaments as I warmed up. It’s the kind of laugh that feels like casual cruelty. Not inherently personal, just how it’s always been. It still lands the same.

Some men’s hockey team members — like Jake Guentzel, Kyle Connor, Brock Nelson, Jackson LaCombe and Jake Oettinger — declined Trump’s invitation to the White House.

While this may be nice to hear, the rest of the men’s team paraded through the White House halls. Those few players’ actions were left reading more like a footnote than anything.

Amid the public backlash post-games, brothers and Team USA teammates Quinn and Jack Hughes seemed to double down on the matter. Sons of Olympic women’s team staff member Ellen Wienberg-Hughes, the Hughes’ response felt disrespectful and offhanded. 

“People are so negative out there and they are trying to find a reason to put people down and make something out of almost nothing,” Jack Hughes told reporters Monday night. 

Quinn Hughes shared that sentiment, saying that the team was “excited” to visit the White House and attend the State of the Union, sharing that it was going to be special for the team.

FBI director Kash Patel has also been berated in the headlines lately, downing beers and jumping up and down with players in the Team USA locker room, after having flown to Italy via American taxpayer dollars — something he has been ridiculed for in the past. 

When headlines focus on political figures laughing about “having to invite” the women’s team, or public officials celebrating men’s hockey all while women fight for visibility, it reveals something deeper than one moment of disrespect. 

It makes the value gap hard to ignore. 

Forget about the pay gap for a minute. Nearly 64% of the medals won this year by Team USA went home around the necks of female athletes — and yet, society is treating them like a sideshow. You cannot claim to support women’s sports while devaluing them in the same breath. 

We often celebrate excellence in theory. But we seem to hesitate when excellence belongs to women — unless it’s packaged as inspiration, overcoming adversity or a thoughtful human-interest feature narrated in a soft piano voice.

Gold, apparently, still needs a qualifier.

Women aren’t lacking results. They’re lacking recognition. The same people saying they want to ‘protect women’s sports’ don’t see the importance of women’s sports. When society doesn’t put female athletes on the same pedestal as male athletes, it signals to every young girl and woman that no matter what she accomplishes or how good she is at something, it will never be enough. 

Women aren’t asking to be celebrated for trying. They’re asking to be valued for winning.

Maybe “everyone watches women’s sports” is wishful thinking right now. And it shouldn’t be.

Our sisters and daughters don’t wait to be inspiring. They already have the gold. The real problem is that society is still unwilling to treat it like it counts.

Cars broken into and stolen near House 57 Complexes

Two cars across the street from the House 57 Complexes were broken into and one was stolen early in the morning on Wednesday, Feb. 25, according to UM student Whitney Shelton.

House 57 is an off-campus “student-focused apartment building” located across 57th Avenue from University Village.

Shelton, one of the UM students who was a victim of the robbery, said that her car was stolen on Wednesday morning and was found later the same day at an apartment complex in North Miami, nearly 30 minutes away. Her identification papers, such as her ID and passport, were stolen from inside the car. 

Miami-Dade police arrived at House 57 at 4:50 p.m., more than an hour after Shelton called at 3:39 p.m. Shelton’s boyfriend had left the car unlocked with the keys inside the night before, Shelton told Miami-Dade police. 

Sergeant Manuel O. Lora, from the Miami-Dade police department, said the robbery occurred between 11 p.m. on Tuesday, Feb. 24 and 10 a.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 25

Shelton believes her car was stolen at 4 a.m, four hours after she parked it at 12 a.m. She said her BMW app tracker marked her car had arrived at the North Miami apartment complex at 5 a.m. 

Shelton said two other students’ cars were broken into. One was a female with a white Jeep Wrangler, whose belongings were not stolen. The other, a male, stated that his valuables were missing from his vehicle. 

While Shelton’s report has been confirmed by the Miami-Dade Police Department, reports for the other two vehicles have not yet been confirmed. 

The police report given to Whitney Shelton on Wednesday, Feb. 25 after her car was broken into and stolen from House 57. // Photo via Whitney Shelton.

No cameras were operating in the area during that time, Sargent O. Lora said. Miami-Dade police did an “area canvass”, speaking to residents and investigating the area, but it “showed nothing.”  

Soon after she retrieved her car, at 11:30 a.m., Shelton said her mother got a call from an unknown person. 

“My mom got a random call saying [a woman] had all of my valuables … and then sent me pictures of my possessions in the grass next to my complex,” said Shelton. 

The image Whitney Shelton received from an unknown number after her car was broken into and stolen from House 57 on Wednesday, Feb. 25. // Photo via Whitney Shelton.

According to Shelton, when the police attempted to trace the phone number, they found that it belonged to a burner number from a Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) app. 

VoIP apps allow users to create a secondary phone number, as well as allow for the user to make voice and video calls over the internet instead of traditional phone lines. 

Shelton said she set up an Uber courier — a delivery service that sends items across town through Uber’s network — with the caller. She got her passport and ID back, but her wallet and keys are still missing.

“Don’t leave your things in your car or you will become a target,” said Sergeant O. Lora.

According to the Miami-Dade Police Department, a full report on the case will be made public by March 2 as no detective has been assigned to the case yet. 

Canes score seven in the ninth to stun FAU, 11-7

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The Miami Hurricanes won their 10th straight game of the season in dramatic fashion on Wednesday night in Boca Raton. Down 7-4 with one out in the ninth, the Canes erupted with a seven-run ninth inning to take down the Florida Atlantic Owls 11-7. 

Down three and facing its first loss of the season, Miami’s bats came alive. With a runner on first and one out, Daniel Cuvet homered to deep left center field, bringing the Canes to within one.

Three batters later, Brylan West came up with the bases loaded, looking to complete the comeback. West smoked a ball into the gap in left center field, scoring two and taking an 8-7 lead.

Then, Jake Ogden opened the floodgates.

Ogden laced a bases-clearing double in between the left and center fielders, the final blow to a seven-run ninth inning.

Right-handed reliever Ryan Bilka loaded the bases with two outs, but worked himself out of the jam to earn the win. Bilka was awarded the win after 2.0 innings pitched in relief.

The Canes seized control of the game early with RBI singles in the second and third innings from West, Alex Sosa, and Derek Williams. 

The Owls struck back with three runs of their own over the course of the next two innings, tying the game at six entering the seventh inning.

Another Williams RBI single gave the Hurricanes the lead, but the Owls answered with two runs on an RBI single and an error to regain the lead.

With another RBI single and then a wild pitch, the Owls tacked on two more in the eighth, extending their lead to four.

The No. 17 Hurricanes are now primed to face rivals No. 10 Florida in their biggest test of the season yet. First pitch is scheduled for 7 p.m., with the game set to air on ACC Network and broadcast on WVUM 90.5 FM.

David Lebowitz, Photo Editor/ Senior Jake Ogden and Fifth-Year Senior Derek Williams talk between an at-bat on February 22, 2026.

Miami delivers statement 83-73 road victory over FSU

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For the first time in three years, Miami men’s basketball triumphed over rival Florida State University (14-14, 7-8 ACC) with an 83-73 win, building on the Hurricanes’ storming run of form and taking their ACC record to 11-4.

The fixture opened in end-to-end fashion as both sides exchanged baskets until Miami (22-6, 11-4 ACC) reached an 8-6 lead by way of a Malik Reneau free throw. While a calm corner three from AJ Swinton put FSU back into the lead by the fifth minute, responsive threes from Tre Donaldson and Tru Washington put the Hurricanes back in front, maintaining their lead throughout the first half.

The Seminoles remained firmly in the tie, never falling more than seven points away from the Canes and consistently recuperating their deficit.

Still, as the first half neared its close, Washington stormed into a hot streak, knocking down seven of Miami’s next 10 points, topping this spell off with an off-the-dribble three from the top of the key in the half’s final seconds.

The Hurricanes ended the half with a 38-32 lead, scoring 14 out of 30 from the field (46.7%) and an even 50% (6-of-12), from beyond the arc. Meanwhile, the Noles only scored from the 3-point line on 4-of-15 attempts (26.7%), highlighting the disparity in shot-taking ability between Miami’s starting guards and FSU’s five.

As the second half went underway, the Canes and the Noles traded blows until Donaldson ripped a deep three on his fellow Tallahassee natives to push the Hurricanes’ lead up to 10 at 46-36.

The Seminoles responded compellingly through crawling back over the next six minutes to tie the game at 57 each. Yet, no matter how forceful the FSU comeback appeared to be, the Hurricanes’ ignition was hotter, as Donaldson continued his domineering display with three two-pointers and a transition three to push Miami into the largest lead of the game at 73-62. 

Miami continued to absorb the Seminoles’ pressure, fending off numerous threes in the game’s closing minutes.

David Lebowitz, Photo Editor/ Senior Guard Tre Donaldson drives toward the paint against Virginia Tech on February 17, 2026.

The Hurricanes’ persistent drives into the paint, in combination with the Seminoles’ growing desperation to claw themselves to a late comeback, allowed Miami to draw numerous fouls as the game died out, slowing down the tempo and dampening any sense of a spark that the opposition could threaten with.

Free throws from Donaldson, Washington, Reneau, and Henderson closed out the game, resulting in its 83-73 finish.

Miami’s conviction from the field improved in the second half as the Canes notched 17 from 29 (58.6%). Despite a downturn in 3-point completion of 33.3%, they continued to dominate in the paint both offensively and defensively, outrebounding FSU 42-23 and beating them in the paint 42-30.

The industriousness in the paint that the Hurricanes have displayed throughout the season continued in this game and continues to be an immensely positive takeaway from the ACC campaign as March Madness approaches ever so near.

Meanwhile, Malik Reneau maintained his excellent form, leading the game with 23 points and 12 rebounds.

Donaldson’s 15-point surge in the second half pushed the senior to 21 points, complementing his six assists and six rebounds.

Washington and Ernest Udeh Jr contributed equally off-the-ball with seven rebounds each, the former also scoring 11 points and the latter netting seven. Henderson earned 10 points and six rebounds and Dante Allen achieved eight points.

The impact from players across the board not only highlights the rise in quality of these players individually, but is also testament to the culture of work rate and intensity in the paint that Miami head coach Jai Lucas has helped instill in his brief time at the institution.

This win, in isolation, would already be a significant indicator of Miami’s development since last year’s 3-17 ACC record. But placed in the context of the program’s poor recent history against the Seminoles, this triumph stands even taller and will help push the Hurricanes to fight onwards as they return home to play Boston College at the Watsco Center on Saturday, Feb. 28, at 2 p.m. EST.

David Lebowitz, Photo Editor/ Freshman Guard Dante Allen celebrates after beating Virginia Tech on February 17, 2026.

Miami women’s golf places seventh at UNF Collegiate

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At the Jacksonville Golf and Country Club on Tuesday, the Miami Hurricanes women’s golf team placed seventh out of 14th at the UNF Collegiate, shooting 59 over par.

Canes’ Stella Jelinek fired a final-round two-under par to lead Miami to the seventh-place finish, finishing three strokes behind sixth-place South Alabama.

Miami posted a three-round total of 59-over-par 923 in the 14 team event. Jelinek finished tied for 24th at 13-over 229, the Canes’ top individual result of the tournament. 

Barbora Bujakova moved up four spots in the final round to tie for 32nd at 15-over 231, while Ashleen Kaur tied for 39th at 17-over 233. Cloe Amion Villarino tied for 50th at 21-over 237 and Rebekah Gardner tied for 58th at 24-over 240 to round out the Canes’ scoring five. 

Ultimately, Oklahoma State won the team title at 24-over par, with Florida Gulf Coast finishing right below the Cowboys at 29-over.

Miami returns to competition March 6-8, teeing off at the Gators Invitational at Mark Bostick Course in Gainesville, Florida.