Miami (OH) Escapes Against Massachusetts To Improve To 26-0

The Miami (OH) RedHawks bench reacts.

In the wild, unpredictable world of college basketball, perfection is a ghost. It’s something you chase, something you dream about, but rarely something you actually catch. But don’t tell that to the Miami RedHawks. They aren’t just chasing ghosts; they’re busting them.

On Tuesday night in Amherst, Massachusetts, the No. 22-ranked RedHawks did what they’ve done 25 times before this season: they found a way to win. By taking down UMass 86-77, Miami didn’t just grab another W for the column—they cemented their status as the last unbeaten team in Division 1.

Surviving the Scare In Amherst

If you looked at the final score, you might think this was a cakewalk. It wasn’t. This game had “trap game” written all over it in permanent marker.

Miami looked comfortable early, holding an eight-point lead with 14 minutes left on the clock. But UMass wasn’t about to roll over on their home court at the Mullins Center. The Minutemen, scrappy and hungry, went on a tear, ripping off seven straight points to make it a nail-biter. They even took a 62-60 lead, sending a collective shiver down the spines of RedHawk fans.

The tension peaked when Isaiah Placide banked in a three-pointer at the shot-clock buzzer to tie the game at 68-68. You could almost feel the momentum shifting. But here’s the thing about this Miami team: they don’t panic. They just answer.

The Response That Defined the Night

Moments after shrugging in disbelief, Eian Elmer decided to make UMass believe. He drilled a three-pointer on the very next possession. It was a cold-blooded response that sucked the air right out of the building.

Then, Peter Suder took over. Capitalizing on a UMass turnover, Suder laid it in to push the lead to five, and suddenly, order was restored. Suder finished the night with a game-high 23 points, putting the team on his back when it mattered most. Luke Skaljac was the floor general Miami needed, dropping 16 points and dishing out 7 assists to keep the offense humming.

UMass never got closer than three points the rest of the way. Crisis averted. Perfection preserved.

The Vibe In Oxford? Pandemonium

Back home in Ohio, the scene was electric. While the team was handling business on the road, High Street in Oxford was buzzing. Coach Travis Steele, who has orchestrated this masterpiece of a season, knows exactly what’s happening back on campus.

It is not just about the numbers; it is about the feeling. It is about a campus uniting behind a team that refuses to lose. It is about 10,000 screaming fans turning Millett Hall into a fortress. It is the kind of magic you can’t bottle, but you sure can ride it as far as it goes.

What’s Next For the Unbeaten RedHawks?

There is no rest for the weary. The RedHawks (26-0, 13-0 MAC) return home to put their unblemished record on the line against Bowling Green on Friday. Can they go 27-0? At this point, betting against them feels like a fool’s errand. They’ve got the talent, they’ve got the coaching, and perhaps most importantly, they’ve got the “Miami Mindset.”