Miami Herald

Pitt’s long-range shooters a challenge for Canes

- BY MICHELLE KAUFMAN mkaufman@miamiheral­d.com Michelle Kaufman: 305-376-3438, @kaufsports

The Miami Hurricanes said it felt great to beat Florida State by 23 points on the road Tuesday, finally putting an end to a nine-game losing streak to the Seminoles. But the 20th-ranked Canes did not have much time to celebrate because a difficult game at Pitt awaits them Saturday afternoon.

Miami (16-4) has a better overall record than Pitt (14-7), but the two teams are tied for third place in the ACC, along with North Carolina, with a 7-3 league record. Clemson is in first place at 9-1 and Virginia is second at 7-2.

Pitt is coming off a two-point win over Wake Forest on Wednesday during which the Panthers set a program record with 18 three-pointers. Forward Blake Hinson made eight of Pitt’s threes, tying a school record for threepoint­ers in one game.

Miami coach Jim Larrañaga called Pitt a “lights out” three-point-shooting team that poses many challenges for the UM defense.

“[Jamarius] Burton is a two-way guard — strong and tough,” Larrañaga said. “Hinson and [Greg] Elliott are outstandin­g three-point shooters.”

Hinson leads Pitt in scoring (16.2) and rebounds (6.4). Burton averages 15.9 points and 4.5 assists. The Panthers’ defense also concerns Larrañaga .

“One of the things Coach [Jeff] Capel has

done is he’s gotten a group of hard-nosed kids who really play defense,” Larrañaga said.

Larrañaga said he expects the game to come down to two categories: who scores better in transition and who scores better out of their pick and roll offense.

Isaiah Wong leads Miami in scoring (16.3), assists (3.6) and steals (1.5). Two of Miami’s three

losses this season came on Wong off-nights. He had a poor shooting night on the road at Georgia Tech and was “sick as a dog” with a sinus infection during a two-point loss at Duke.

“We need Isaiah,” Larrañaga said. “He’s one of the best players in the league and when he’s 100 percent, he’s a handful for the opponent.”

Two players who have stepped up for UM of late are guards Nijel Pack and Wooga Poplar. Over the past three games, Pack, who transferre­d from Kansas State, is shooting 50 percent on three-pointers while averaging 17 points.

“Nijel went from being a predominan­tly a shooting guard to a point guard, that’s a huge difference in responsibi­lity, you’re handling the ball more and I think he’s just getting more confident and comfortabl­e,” Larrañaga said.

The coach had a chat with Poplar last week and challenged him to play more like Kam McGusty, who graduated after UM’s Elite Eight run last spring. He responded with 14 points, five rebounds, three assists, and two steals against FSU.

“I told him, `You’re in the starting lineup for a reason and you need to have the kind of balance in your game like Kam had,’ ” Larrañaga said. “He did it all against FSU. That was a Kam McGusty type game.”

 ?? SAM NAVARRO Special to the Miami Herald ?? UM’s Nijel Pack is averaging 17 points during the past three games, hitting half of his threepoint attempts. ‘Nijel’s ... getting more confident and comfortabl­e,’ said coach Jim Larrañaga.
SAM NAVARRO Special to the Miami Herald UM’s Nijel Pack is averaging 17 points during the past three games, hitting half of his threepoint attempts. ‘Nijel’s ... getting more confident and comfortabl­e,’ said coach Jim Larrañaga.

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