Miami Herald

Canes surprise in absence of Lykes

- BY MICHELLE KAUFMAN mkaufman@miamiheral­d.com

The most remarkable thing about the Miami Hurricanes’ 22-point firsthalf lead over Virginia

Tech Tuesday night was that they got there with leading scorer and point guard Chris Lykes injured on the bench.

Miami led by 19 at the half (tying its largest halftime lead of the season), never lost the lead and came away with a muchneeded 71-61 victory over the Hokies.

Virginia Tech chipped away at the lead in the second half with outstandin­g play by redshirt freshman guard Tyrece Radford, and got to within four in the final minute. But the Canes hung on with clutch plays by freshman Harlond Beverly, who scored six points in the final 50 seconds and finished with 13 points and six assists in place of Lykes.

“It was a very good team effort. We shared the ball much better tonight,” UM coach Jim Larrañaga said. “We were very concerned coming in with their ability to make threes. They made eight of 22, but didn’t absolutely kill us.

Radford was the game’s leading scorer with 21 points on 9-of-12 shooting and he grabbed eight rebounds. DJ Vasiljevic led UM ( 11-9, 3-7 ACC) with 18 points and seven rebounds. Rodney Miller had 11 points and eight rebounds, Isaiah Wong added 10 and Anthony Walker seven.

“Harlond [Beverly] and Isaiah [Wong] are growing into ACC guards. They are getting more and more playing time. Harlond played 31 and Wong 29. As they gain more minutes, they gain more confidence,” Larrañaga said.

The Canes were 1-6 in January heading into Tuesday’s game, coming off back-to-back blowouts by Duke and North Carolina, and the sight of Lykes in sweats for the second game in a row was enough to discourage the UM fans at the Watsco Center. The team had lost four consecutiv­e games and hadn’t lost five in a row since 2007.

But Kam McGusty and Keith Stone returned to the lineup after injuries, and that seemed to energize the Hurricanes. McGusty missed the game at North Carolina with back spasms and Stone had been out the previous six games with a knee injury.

Freshmen guards Beverly and Wong started the second consecutiv­e game for UM, and Beverly distribute­d the ball well in Lykes’ absence.

“In the final minute, we got a couple of steals, we made the free throws and got the ball back,” Larrañaga saod. “We always talk about having poise at the end of close games, and we did that.”

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