Miami falls flat against rival No. 5 FSU, gets mercy ruled 14-1

Sebastian Font
2 min read
After a midweek win against FAU, energy was high in the Hurricane dugout. That energy was short-lived after No. 5 FSU pummeled Miami Thursday night, 14-1 via run-rule after seven innings.

Miami (13-10, 0-4 ACC) were simply dominated from start to finish by the Seminoles (19-2, 4-0 ACC). FSU’s scoring spree was powered by 14 hits and six homers, an impressive display of power from the visiting team.

The game was put out of reach in the fourth inning, where a flurry of hits and untimely errors lead to five runs being scored. Errors by Daniel Cuvet and Dorian Gonzalez Jr. kept the inning alive which didn’t help Miami’s starter Nick Robert.

Robert went 3.2 innings, giving up eight runs and once again struggled with the long ball. He gave up two homers in the first inning to FSU, which set the tone for the remainder of the game.

The only bright spot for Miami came in the form of freshman Fabio Peralta, who launched his first collegiate homer in the third when the game was relatively close. But beyond that, FSU starter Joey Volini dominated the ’Canes bats. Volini went the distance, only giving up two hits and one run.

In their four ACC games, Miami has already given up 39 runs for an average of 9.75 runs per game. Even at the high-scoring collegiate level, it’s nearly impossible to overcome such a deficit on the pitching side.

The Hurricanes will have a chance at redemption again tomorrow against the Seminoles, but it looks bleak as FSU will start lefty Jamie Arnold, the number one pitcher in the nation. Miami’s starter Griffin Hugus will have to put the team on his back tomorrow to even remotely have a chance.
 

Comments (47)

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I can't believe how bad we've become in baseball...like literally WTF
 
JD and Laz are either terrible talent evaluators, lazy recruiters, or kids just don't want to come here. I watch games all week long around the SEC and ACC and other than a few players (obviously Cuvet for one - he could start anywhere) we look closer to St. Bonaventure than we do FSU or the likes of TN.
 
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In general? Based on what?

Baseball and Basketball were not his calls... baseball his hand was forced by ARod and Cora.

Luckily we've run out of nepotism.
We'll see how this MBB hire goes.
The mess that became the end of the Coach L run
This baseball disaster
WBB regressed back to 2005
Football's best season in 3y is 18th in the country
 
Unreal how bad that AD hire has become.
He likely saw it like this:
Top 5 pitching staff in the country on our roster, long time pitching coach that recruited and developed said Top 5 staff sitting here ready to roll. It was a no brainer
 
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We'll see how this MBB hire goes.
The mess that became the end of the Coach L run
This baseball disaster
WBB regressed back to 2005
Football's best season in 3y is 18th in the country
So two older coaches retiring.

A promising unknown new hire for men's BB.

And football is trending to be the best it's been since the early 2000s.

I bet you had us going 8-4 last year in football and then raged regardless ehh?

To be clear Mario needs to continue this trend to ACCCG and Playoffs this year but saying the AD is a dumpster fire doesn't add up.
 
So two older coaches retiring.

A promising unknown new hire for men's BB.

And football is trending to be the best it's been since the early 2000s.

I bet you had us going 8-4 last year in football and then raged regardless ehh?

To be clear Mario needs to continue this trend to ACCCG and Playoffs this year but saying the AD is a dumpster fire doesn't add up.
Why is Miami hiring a 'promising' MBB coach and not another proven veteran that already knows how to be a head coach?

And sorry bud, I predicted 11-1 on SOTU (in fairness, it was after the FSU-GT game)
 
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