Miami takes No. 1 seed in ACC, edges Pitt 78-76 for title
CORAL GABLES, Fla. (AP) — Wooga Poplar made a career-best six 3-pointers for 18 points, and 16th-ranked Miami captured the No. 1 seed for the Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament with a 78-76 win over No. 25 Pittsburgh on Saturday night.
Miami (24-6, 15-5 ACC) shares the regular-season title with Virginia, which clinched its half of the crown with a 75-60 win over Louisville earlier Saturday.
The Cavaliers cut down the nets in Charlottesville after that game — but they'll be the No. 2 seed for the conference tournament, behind a Hurricanes team that was picked fourth in the league's preseason poll and beat Virginia in the teams' only meeting.
It's Miami's first No. 1 seed for the ACC Tournament since 2013.
Jordan Miller scored 17 points and Norchad Omier had 15 points and 13 rebounds for the Hurricanes — who held a whopping 42-20 rebounding edge.
Blake Hinson had 24 points for Pitt (21-10, 14-6), which would have been the No. 1 seed with a win. Nike Sibande scored 16 for the Panthers, who got 13 from Jamarius Burton and 10 from Nelly Cummings.
Hinson made a contested 3 with 13 seconds left, getting Pitt within 78-76. Isaiah Wong got the inbounds pass to Omier, who ran 4.7 seconds off the clock before getting fouled — and giving Pitt one last chance.
It came from Hinson, who fired from about 35 feet. The shot hit the rim, time expired and the Hurricanes student section poured from the stands to celebrate a title.
Poplar had never made more than two 3-pointers in a game for Miami and entered Saturday with six 3s in his last six games combined. But he kept making them at the biggest times for the Hurricanes, who led for all but about 5 1/2 minutes and kept thwarting every Pitt try at the lead.
This season has been an amazing turnaround for Pitt, which was a No. 12 seed — or worse — in each of the last six ACC tournaments. The Panthers were 12th on the bracket in each of the last two years, 13th in 2020, 14th in 2019, 15th in 2018, and 14th in 2017.
Pitt coach Jeff Capel inherited a program that had lost 19 consecutive games against ACC opponents. Entering this season, the Panthers had — by far — the ACC's worst record in conference regular-season and tournament games, going 28-91 in that span.
BIG PICTURE
Pitt: The Panthers go to the ACC Tournament already assured of snapping the program's streak of six consecutive losing seasons. The last time a Pitt team won more games in a season was 2013-14 when the Panthers went 26-10.
Miami: Jim Larrañaga became the 14th men's coach to win at least 250 games at two different four-year schools. He won 273 at George Mason, and now has 250 at Miami. Some of the other names on that list: Bob Huggins, Roy Williams, Rollie Massimino, Eddie Sutton, Lou Henson, Bo Ryan, Dana Altman, and Fran Dunphy.
POLL IMPLICATIONS
Miami has been ranked in each of the last 12 polls, all somewhere between No. 12 and No. 25. Pitt was ranked this week for the first time since the poll of Jan. 11, 2016.
50 FOR MIAMI
This is the second time in program history that Miami has won 50 games in a two-year span after last year's club went 26-11. The only other instance was when the 2014-15 and 2015-16 clubs combined to win 52 games.
UP NEXT
Pitt: ACC Tournament Wednesday or Thursday.
Miami: ACC quarterfinals Thursday against either Syracuse or Wake Forest.