Miami Herald

FIU’s Borregales transfers to UM

- BY SUSAN MILLER DEGNAN sdegnan@miamiheral­d.com

Former FIU Panther Jose Borregales hurt the Miami Hurricanes with some magnificen­t kicking in the Panthers’ Nov. 23 upset victory.

Now he’s joining them. Borregales, the Panthers’ finest kicker in school history, announced Sunday he will be transferri­ng to the University of Miami for his final year of college football after graduating from FIU. No doubt the Hurricanes are ecstatic with the announceme­nt considerin­g what had to be some of the most horrendous kicking this season in Miami history.

Because Borregales is a grad transfer, he can play immediatel­y for Miami.

“Blessed to be given this opportunit­y,’’ Borregales said in a tweet that announced his decision. “No matter the hate I’m ready to work #CaneGang.’’

Borregales’ younger brother Andres, the nation’s top prep kicker who helped Hollywood ChaminadeM­adonna win a state championsh­ip this past season as a junior, is already committed to the Canes’ recruiting class of 2021.

“The Borregales legacy starts now,” Andres tweeted in response to his brother’s commitment.

The Canes in 2019 used three kickers who went a combined 12 for 20 (60 percent) in field goals, most notably because scholarshi­p kicker Bubba Baxa struggled by going 5 of 10 to start the season, including three misses from 20 to 29 yards out — as well as two missed extra points.

Against the Hurricanes, Jose Borregales, who played in high school at Miami Booker T. Washington, hit a 29-yard field goal in the opening quarter, a 50-yard field goal with two seconds left in the first half and his own school-recordtyin­g 53-yarder in the third quarter. He also kicked three extra points before FIU went on to win 30-24.

“It was just getting back to basics,” Borregales said after the victory over UM, when asked about his high energy against UM and how he bounced back from early season struggles. “As a kicker, everything has to be the same each kick. So, I just went back, looked at old film to see what I was doing right and had to take that into the game. I knew it was a big game. I knew we all had to come in and be energetic and support the defense and offense and special teams, so I was just trying to be the main guy to motivate everybody.’’

Borregales’ 281 career points set the school record for scoring. He redshirted in 2016 and then was 15 of 18 for field goals in 2017, with all 40 extra points converted. In 2018 he hit 14 of 18 field-goal attempts and 54 of 55 extra points. This season he was 21 of 29 for field goals and 37 of 39 on extra points — and hit three of his four attempts from 50-plus yards and 10 of 11 from 40-plus.

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