Miami, FL
Bucs Fall Flat in Miami, Remain Alive in Playoff Hunt
Tampa Bay 7, Miami 0 – 5:27 remaining in the first quarter
After another touchback, WR Jaylen Waddle got seven yards on an end-around but Ewers threw deep and incomplete on second. A false start then made it third-and-eight and Ewers got that and a lot more with his next pass. WR Theo Wease got open on the left sideline behind the defense and was able to gallop all the way to the end zone for the 63-yard score.
Tampa Bay 7, Miami 7 – 4:29 remaining in the first quarter
A holding penalty on the Bucs during the kickoff return that followed forced the offense to start at its own 17. A run and a reception on a screen pass by Irving picked up a total of four yards, but Mayfield put one up high for Evans on an out and he hauled it in for a first down at the 37. An illegal contact penalty gave the Bucs an added five yards, and two plays later a short catch by Otton left the Bucs in a third-and-two on the midfield stripe. After the two teams switched sides to start the second quarter, Mayfield tossed a swing pass to Irving in the right flat but LB Tyrel Dodson made a strong open-field tackle to keep the back from reaching the first-down marker. The Bucs left the offense on the field again, but this time only to induce an offside call, and when that didn’t work they punted away down to the Miami 13.
The Dolphins started the next drive in a jumbo package and succeeded in getting good push for two Achane carries of seven and 11 yards. Wright replaced Achane and had just as much success with a toss-sweep to the left for nine yards. Ewers’ first pass of the drive was a lob down the middle to Dulcich for a gain of 23 yards to the Bucs’ 37. CB Jamel Dean had good coverage on a slant by TE Darren Waller on the next play and the pass was incomplete. Wright bounced his next carry out to the right and hit the open field for a gain of 32, with only Winfield preventing the touchdown at the end. On first-and-goal, Ewers tried to throw a shovel pass to Waller but OLB Yaya Diaby deflected it back to the quarterback, who caught it and was tackled for a loss of six. After a short pass over the middle to Dulcich got the ball back to the four, Ewers threw backward to Dulcich out to his right and OLB Haason Reddick was on him immediately for a loss of seven. The Dolphins settled for Riley Patterson’s 29-yard field goal.
Miami 10, Tampa Bay 7 – 8:18 remaining in the second quarter
Johnson got the ensuing kickoff out to the Bucs’ 28, and short passes to WR Tez Johnson and Godwin added up to nine yards and a first down. Irving took a Wildcat snap on the next play, faked a handoff to White and tried to go up the middle but he was stopped for a loss of one. Mayfield tried to go deep on the next play to McMillan but CB Jason Marshall jumped in front of him to make a leaping interception. He got up and returned it close to midfield but a personal foul on the Dolphins during the return put the ball at the Miami 23.
Once again in a jumbo formation, the Dolphins gave it to Achane for a gain of four. A swing pass to Achane out to the left worked even better, as he ran out of bounds with a first down at the Miami 43. A rollout pass to Dulcich got the ball into Tampa Bay territory, and runs by Wright and Achane gained another first down at the Bucs’ 29. Another swing pass left to Achane presented him with open field and rumbled down to the 10-yard line. A rollout incompletion brought on the two-minute warning, and after the break the Dolphins lost 10 yards on a holding penalty. An underneath pass to Achane got the ball back to the 10 and on third-and-goal Ewers found Dulcich cutting left to right just inside the end zone for the 10-yard score.
Miami 17, Tampa Bay 7 – 1:43 remaining in the second quarter
Starting at their own 30 with 1:36 left, the Bucs had a good gain on a pass to Irving erased by a block-in-the-back penalty. Two plays later, Mayfield found McMillan behind the defense on the left sideline and hit him for a gain of 33 to the Miami 41. A scrambling incompletion stopped the clock with 56 seconds left in the half. A catch-and-run by Irving that would have gained another first down was marred by a downfield holding call that pushed the ball all the way back to the Miami 44. On second-and-13, Mayfield tried a downfield shot to Evans but it was well-covered and incomplete. After taking a timeout, Mayfield hit McMillan for a gain of seven to set up a 55-yard field goal try by McLaughlin, but it was blocked by DT Zeek Biggers.
That left Miami with 20 seconds and three timeouts, with the ball on Tampa Bay’s 45. Ewers dropped back to pass on first down but was hurried into an incompletion by a blitzing Winfield. Ewers tried a swing pass to Achane on the next snap but it hit the ground and rolled out of bounds and was ruled a backwards pass out of bounds that resulted in a five-yard penalty. Miami faced a third-and-15 with 13 sacks left and DL Logan hall brought the half to an end with a 10-yard sack.
A touchback to start the second half put the Bucs at their own 35. A play-action pass to WR Emeka Egbuka picked up a quick seven but a shotgun handoff to Irving was stopped for no gain. Mayfield scrambled on third down and tried to throw on the run to Godwin but his pass hit the dirt in front of the receiver. Riley Dixon’s punt was downed at the Miami 31 after a net of just 27 yards.
After a false start, Ewers threw downfield in Waller’s direction but it was well out of reach. On the next play, Diaby broke immediately through the line and swarmed over Ewers for a nine-yard sack, and the Dolphins just gave it to Achane on third-and-24. He got two and the Dolphins punted it back, with Johnson’s 12-yard return taking it to the Tampa Bay 35. A swing pass to White was good for six yards, and Mayfield scrambled on second down for three more. Mayfield then kept the game alive with a wild back-and-forth scramble that got him just past the sticks. After a seven-yard White run, Mayfield found Tez Johnson on a crossing route and hit him stride for a gain of 17 to the Miami 30. A shot to Evans in the end zone didn’t work, and Irving was tackled by his foot on second down to make it third-and-10. Mayfield saved the day again with another scramble, this time diving at the end to get 11 yards and a first down at the 19. Irving final broke loose on his next carry, darting up the middle for 12 yards to the seven. CB Jack Jones run-blitzed off the left edge on first-and-goal and dropped Irving for a loss of two. White couldn’t get through traffic on a short pass on second down, leaving the Bucs in a third-and-goal from the eight. On third down, Mayfield tried to pull up short on a pass and ended up loosing control of the ball. He was able to recover to set up a 33-yard field goal by McLaughlin.
Miami 17, Tampa Bay 10 – 3:49 remaining in the third quarter
Return man Malik Washington got the momentum right back for the home team, returning the next kickoff 47 yards to the Bucs’ 45. LB SirVocea Dennis dropped Achane for a loss of five on first down but the Dolphins back broke tackles going around left end on the next play and got 18 yards to the Bucs’ 32. Two more Achane runs took it down to the 20. OLB Jason Pierre-Paul got a hand on Ewers’ next pass and a false start made it second-and-15. An eight-yard run by Wright brought the third quarter to a close. On third-and-seven, Ewers threw short over the middle to Washington but Parrish came up quickly to make the stop and the Dolphins sent out Washington for a 31-yard field goal to restore the 10-point lead.
Miami 20, Tampa Bay 10 – 14:15 remaining in the fourth quarter
After a touchback, Mayfield went deep down the left sideline to Evans but the receiver was called for offensive pass interference. Short passes to Egbuka and Godwin got the Bucs into a third-and-seven, but a difficult pass through traffic to Evans was too hard to hold onto and the punt unit came on. Dixon dropped his kick near the goal line and it bounced back to the four where it was downed by long-snapper Evan Deckers.
Another false start moved the ball back to the two, and Dennis kept Achane from gaining anything on a first-and-12 carry. S Christian Izien figured out a quick pass to Waller and dropped him at the one-yard line. However, Ewers was able to get the ball to TE Julian Hill for a 15-yard completion on third-and-11 that kept the drive moving. Three plays later, with the clock descending below 10 minutes, the Dolphins faced a third-and-nine and nearly got another conversion on a slant to WR Cedrick Wilson that went for eight. The ensuing punt was fair caught at the Bucs’ 21 with 8:37 left in regulation.
The Bucs went into hurry-up mode and Mayfield found Egbuka for seven yards before a hurried incompletion made it third down. Mayfield then found McMillan wide open out to the right and the receiver raced up the sideline for a 33-yard gain to the Miami 43. After a miracle escape from a near sack on the next play, Mayfield was able to find Evans for 11 yards, but on the next play he tried to fit a seam pass through coverage to Egbuka and it was intercepted by Davis at the five-yard line. Davis returned it to the Miami 26 with seven minutes left in regulation.
The Bucs’ defense managed to get off the field quickly, with CB Benjamin Morrison making an acrobatic pass breakup on third down to force a punt, but the clock was down to 5:20 when the offense got the ball back, still down two scores.
Two quick passes to Godwin picked up 17 yards but a deeper shot to Egbuka was broken up. An outlet pass to Irving on third down left the Bucs in a fourth-and-one but Godwin broke a tackle to get the necessary yards, then continued fighting to get to the sideline and stop the clock. Now at the Miami 38, Mayfield threw to McMillan for seven but he was sacked by Chubb on the next play and lost a fumble, with the OLB Quinton Bell recovering for the defense at the Miami 41.
A Ewers scramble on third down three plays later gained a first down and continued to drain the clock. Three runs then left Miami in a fourth-and-four at the two-minute warning. The Dolphins punted down to the Bucs’ nine-yard line with 1:50 left.
The Buccaneers managed to make it a one-score game with a 60-second, 91-yard touchdown drive. Godwin did most of the damage, taking a pass and dashing 58 yards all the way to the Miami 32. A pass-interference call drawn by Evans made it first-and-goal at the four and Mayfield then rolled left and threw to Evans in the end zone for a four-yard touchdown.
The Buccaneers attempted an onside kick after that score and McLaughlin got his skimmer to take a big hop near the 10-yard mark, but Achane jumped to corral it and was able to hold on.
Miami, FL
Miami biotech executive was followed into his condo by man who allegedly threw him from 25th floor
A Miami biotech executive was followed into the skyscraper where he lived by the man, accused of pushing him off the building’s 25th floor, newly-released surveillance video shows.
Justin Zelin, 35, was seen walking into Miami Beach’s 47-story Akoya Condominium with a bearded man Corey Hutterli, 37, following behind on Feb. 12 — three days before his death, NBC6 reported.
Zelin, who was wearing a casual outfit, threw away some trash in a garbage can before walking up to the entry door in the high-rise condominium’s parking lot, unaware he would fall to his death.
Hutterli, who was wearing a bucket hat, was following closely behind, carrying bottles of alcohol.
Just three days later, Harvard graduate Zelin called 911 to report a disturbance. During the call, he ordered Hutterli to leave the apartment, WPLG reported.
Zelin, who had worked as a biotechnology equity research analyst at BTIG since January 2021, reportedly shouted, “Get away from me Sasha,” using a nickname Hutterli was known by.
There was a bust-up and cops said, “During said physical altercation defendant Hutterli caused victim Zelin to perish due to blunt force trauma.”
Zelin’s body hit a path on the ground floor, according to surveillance video recorded eight minutes after the 911 call.
Hutterli’s defense team claimed Zelin “went over the balcony” after an alleged mental episode.
They claimed Zelin, who was identified as JZ in court documents, screamed at Hutterli in “what can only be described as a complete break with reality.”
“JZ can be heard ranting, claiming that he was killed by a homeless person, and insisting that he is dead.
“During this mental break, JZ ran in and out of the apartment, and then he went over the balcony of his 25th-floor condo and fell to his death.”
But the state of Hutterli’s body suggested something more sinister had happened. He had scratches on his cheek, and a cut on his thumb.
He was also in what “appears to be an excited state, according to police.
“What’s going on?” a shoeless Hutterli asked one officer.
“Somebody, he freaked out, attacked me.”
The cop asked Hutterli if he was alone, to which he replied, “No I don’t know where he is.
“I kept telling him to relax.”
Hutterli then blurted out, “What is the situation? Did he jump?”
Cops then searched the apartment – which had items strewn inside – and they found Hutterli’s bucket hat.
There were blood spatters on the rails, and clumps of Hutterli’s beard hair were also found.
Blood was also found on Hutterli’s shirt – and they found ketamine in his bag.
Hutterli was arrested on April 8 and faces a second-degree murder charge, which carries a maximum sentence of life imprisonment.
Cops were able to make an arrest after Zelin’s DNA was discovered on Hutterli’s jacket.
He also faces burglary with assault or battery, possession of a controlled substance, and drug paraphernalia charges.
Tributes, meanwhile, were paid to Zelin following his death.
“Justin was one of the best biotech analysts I have ever worked with,” friend Amit Jolly wrote on Linkedin.
“His work was rigorous, thoughtful, and deeply coordinated.
“He had a rare ability to see around corners and articulate complex ideas with clarity and conviction.
“Our field has lost an extraordinary mind, and many of us have lost a trusted voice and friend.”
Miami, FL
Miami-Dade condo owners plead for help after weeks-long elevator outrage impacting residents’ health
Condominium owners near Doral are appealing for help after their buildings have been without elevator service for weeks. They are speaking exclusively with CBS News Miami, sharing stories of hardship amid the area’s suffocating heat. Several owners, who are elderly and have disabilities, say they are struggling to climb the stairs.
This is not the first time the issue has plagued Parkwood Condominiums. Last July, CBS News Miami reported that one building in the complex had been without elevator service for more than a week.
Currently, service has been out at 9240 Fontainebleau Boulevard since May 14. The elevator at 9270 Fontainebleau Boulevard has been out of service since May 15, and the elevator at 9180 Fontainebleau Boulevard is also non-functional, though the duration there is unknown.
Ronald Bedenis, who has lived on the fifth floor of 9240 Fontainebleau Boulevard for 31 years, expressed worry for his wife and others.
“It’s terrible. People are having a really difficult time,” Bedenis said. “My wife cannot go out. I have an 80-year-old woman who cannot go down the stairs. Another neighbor is 104 years old, and she is in a wheelchair. How is she supposed to get down and buy food?”
His neighbor, 68-year-old Sandra Hanson, shared her struggle. “It is horrible. It is very bad because my husband is 80 years old and he cannot walk. He is very sick. He is stressed out,” Hanson said.
At 9270 Fontainebleau Boulevard, 77-year-old heart patient Luis Jorge said the outage is impacting his health.
“They put two catheters in my heart before, and I have another operation coming up,” Jorge said. “To go down is not a problem. But to go up is a problem. We called, and there is no one to talk to. I feel like I am in prison”.
His neighbor, Iris Hernandez, called the situation “frustrating”.
“It’s a big hardship, and I am in disbelief,” Hernandez said. “I feel like I am in a nightmare. I would like to see the elevator fixed”.
CBS News Miami contacted Atlas Property Management Services in Doral and received a statement from Joaquin Alvarez, the property manager.
Alvarez reported some progress at 9270 Fontainebleau Boulevard, where a damaged property edge was repaired, but they are waiting for a control card. At 9240 Fontainebleau Boulevard, Alvarez said the elevator had a damaged valve, and he expected a new one to be installed by the end of the week. He confirmed the Condominium Association had authorized repairs.
For 9180 Fontainebleau Boulevard, Alvarez said the problem involves a defective control board, which the elevator company is working with the manufacturer to resolve. He noted the issue has been ongoing “for a while” but did not provide a repair completion date for that building.
Miami, FL
Developers pay off $115M in Miami construction loans as condos near sellout
South Florida developers knocked out a combined $115 million in construction loans for Miami condo towers that are nearly sold out, as the demand for hospitality-branded residences heats up in the region.
North Development paid off a $70 million loan to Forman Capital and Core Capital for Domus Brickell Park, while Rosso Development and Midtown Development paid off a $45 million mortgage to Arkansas-based Bank OZK for The Standard Residences, Midtown Miami.
The projects have hit major milestones.
North’s 172-unit Domus Brickell Park recently opened and has posted 120 closings, while Rosso and Midtown’s 228-unit Standard Residences is nearing completion with only five units left to sell.
North Development, a partnership between Ricardo Dunin’s Oak Capital and Juan Carlos Tassara’s Edifica, paid off its loan in April for the building at 1611 Southwest Second Avenue.
The project offers a mix of studios, one-bedroom and two-bedroom units that are short-term rental friendly. Units were marketed from the $600,000s to $1.2 million.
Zyscovich Architects is the architect, and Urban Robot Associates is the interior design firm. Amenities include the Peacock Room, which Dunin previously described as an activated lobby with food and beverage concepts, a market, and co-working spaces for guests and the public that were inspired by the ACE hotel in New York.
The payoff comes as North pushes ahead with Domus Brickell Center, another short-term-rental-friendly condo tower nearby. The developer said that 35-story, 579-unit project at 1034 Southwest Second Avenue is more than 50 percent sold and ahead of schedule. Less than a year ago, the project secured $220 million in financing, consisting of $180 million in C-PACE funding from Coral Gables-based Bayview PACE and a $40 million mortgage from Core Capital.
A few miles north, Rosso Development and Midtown Development paid off a $45 million construction loan for The Standard Residences, Midtown Miami, the first standalone residential project from the lifestyle hospitality brand. Another Standard-branded residential tower is under development in Brickell by Newgard Development Group and Two Roads Development.
Designed by Arquitectonica, the 12-story Midtown project includes 228 residences and more than 34,000 square feet of amenities, featuring a rooftop pool, pickleball court, coworking spaces and several food-and-beverage offerings, including a Juvia Group restaurant on the rooftop.
Units range from 432 square feet to 965 square feet, and include studios to two-bedroom condos. Owners will be able to rent their units out for terms as short as one month. In October 2023, fewer than 35 units remained, priced between $500,000 to $1 million.
A JLL Capital Markets debt advisory team led by Brian Gaswirth and Jimmy Calvo arranged the financing in 2023. According to JLL, the loan was paid off ahead of schedule.
Bank OZK is one of South Florida’s most active condo construction lenders. The bank also provided PMG’s state record-setting $668 million construction loan for Waldorf Astoria Residences Miami, which is expected to become the tallest residential tower south of New York City.
Even as interest rates have gradually come down in recent years, the environment is still relatively high, and construction costs continue to climb.
Read more
Juvia to open rooftop restaurant at Standard Residences in Midtown
Development
South Florida
Standard Residences in Midtown Miami scores $45M construction loan
Residential
South Florida
Ricardo Dunin, Juan Carlos Tassara land $220M financing for Domus Brickell Center
Development
South Florida
Ricardo Dunin, Peruvian partner score $70M loan for Domus Brickell
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