San Diego Union-Tribune

MIAMI RALLIES PAST UT

- BY DAVE SKRETTA

On the eve of Miami playing for a place in its first Final Four, the quiet conversati­on floating through the team hotel did not revolve around all that the Hurricanes had accomplish­ed this season. Instead, they talked about what had happened to bring last season to a close.

The sting of an Elite Eight defeat was fresh to those who were there. And they made everyone else feel it, too.

“That loss sat with me for a really long time,” the Hurricanes’ Jordan Miller said. “It doesn’t go away, and the fact that we had the opportunit­y to come back and make amends, make it right, that’s what was pushing me.”

Miller responded with a perfect performanc­e against second-seeded Texas in the Midwest Region final Sunday. Along with ACC player of the year Isaiah Wong and March dynamo Nijel Pack, Miller rallied the Hurricanes from a 13-point second-half deficit for an 88-81 victory that clinched that longawaite­d trip to the national semifinals.

“How hard we fought to come back in this game, especially on a stage like this, it’s an amazing feeling,” said Pack, one of Miami’s newcomers. “I know how much these guys wanted to win this game, especially being here last year and losing the Elite Eight, and now being able to take it to the Final Four is something special.”

Miller finished with 27 points, going 7 of 7 from the field and 13 of 13 from the foul line, while Wong scored 12 of his 14 points in the second half against the Longhorns, who had been the top remaining seed in a topsyturvy NCAA Tournament.

Now, the No. 5 seed Hurricanes (29-7) have a date with No. 4 seed UConn on Saturday night in Houston.

It’s the first time since seeding began in 1979 that no team seeded better than No. 4 made the Final Four, so perhaps it is fitting that Miami coach Jim Larranaga is involved. He took George Mason there as an 11 seed 17 years ago to the day.

“No one wanted to go home,” said Miller, coincident­ally a George Mason transfer, who joined Duke’s Christian Laettner as the only players since 1960 to go 20 for 20 combined from the field and foul line in an NCAA tourney game. “We came together. We stuck together. We showed really good perseveran­ce and the will — the will to just want to get there.”

 ?? JEFF ROBERSON AP ?? Miami forward Norchad Omier celebrates after win against Texas in Elite 8.
JEFF ROBERSON AP Miami forward Norchad Omier celebrates after win against Texas in Elite 8.

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