The Rutgers Scarlet Knights ground and pound the Miami Hurricanes to the tune of 31-24 in New York City for the 2023 Pinstripe Bowl Title. RU head coach GregSchiano went full bully ball against his former protege MarioCristobal.
The Canyonero Keys to victory were true in every sense. I predicted a three point Rutgers win and it was seven points:
1- Stop the run. Rutgers rushed for 208 yards and three TD’s on 4.6 yards per carry. That isn’t stopping the run, and the RU QB only needed 15 pass attempts to win the ball game. The tush push game wasn’t that effective for RU but worked eventually every time, including their fake off of it.
2- Play to Brown’s strengths. OC ShannonDawson dialed up a handful of QB designedruns but this wasn’t a display of Brown’s strengths at all. Also, once Brown had his passing game going the offense decided to revert back to 1997 and ran into a stacked box.
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3- Limit turnovers. Brown threw an early pick but the offense wasn’t turnover prone. That was their loneturnover of the game. The blockedpunt for a touchdown was atrocious and shows the lack of detail in the kicking game.
The Doppler
Miami finished 4-of-12 on 3rd down and 1-of-2 on 4th down, including a horribly called 4th and 2 play to essentially seal the game for RU. Rutgers offense finished 5-of-12 on 3rd down and 1-of-1 on 4th down.
Miami was penalized five times for 45 yards including costly personal fouls. Rutgers wasn’t much smarter being penalized six times for 58 yards with the two caveman coaches looking at each other like the Spider-Man pointing meme.
Miami had the two lone ‘turnovers’ including the blocked punt, and RU won the time of possession battle 34-25. Somewhere a JoshGattis just got his wings.
As I’ve said a million times- kicking wins and loses games and Miami’s punt being blocked and recovered by the Scarlet Knights for a TD cost them the momentum and difference in the final score.
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Miami Offense
QB Jacurri Brown scored three touchdowns (two rushing) with one interception in his first playing time in over a year. Brown rushed for 47 yards while passing for 5.8 yards per attempt. Neither are world beater stats.
MarkFletcher rushed two times for two yards before going down with an injury. HenryParrish rushed 11 times for 46 yards (4.2 per carry).
Xavier Restrepo caught 11 balls for 99 yards and a touchdown in a solid game for the veteran receiver who has caught balls from a half dozen QB’s as a Hurricane.
The offensive line was manhandled even with three starters and their blocking TE CamMcCormick all playing. They allowed two sacks and four TFL’s and couldn’t push the pile on key 3rd and 4thdown plays.
Above– That sack is on JalenRivers, not LuisCristobalJr. Rivers lets his man go inside, that’s the forbidden screw up! As an OL you can allow outside pressure, but never interior.
Above– Dawson has to figure out why his offense doesn’t work versus zone, and why his QB’s can’t seem to identify clear defenders in the passing window.
Above– For what was an abysmal game for Miami, a few bright points did happen. They dialed up a nice insidezoneread with an arc’ingH for Brown. He pulls, and slides into home for a touchdown.
Above– Brown is inconsistent with ball placement, but when he’s on he’s really on. Beautiful dime to Restrepo for a TD.
Miami Defense
The Miami front six were dominated by Rutgers offensive line. KyleMonangai rushed for 163 yards on 6.5 yards per carry and a score. QB GavinWimsett scored twice on the tush push, and backup RB Samuel Brown V picked up another 38 on the ground.
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Wimsett finished 7-of-15 passing for 5.6 yards per attempt but didn’t turn the ball over. He hit ChristianDemel on one big pass for 23 yards but missed a few wide open shots.
Miami failed to sack Wimsett but did pick up four TFL’s against the RU front. Miami DB’s collected four PBU’s on the afternoon.
Above– Miami’s defense was plagued by missedtackles once again. Rueben Bain Jr. was one of few defenders that really went all out in the Pinstripe Bowl.
Above– RU bounces splitzone outside and the WR sets up a perfect moving screen to spring the RB to the corner of the end zone. That’s not a crack back it’s just a clean pick.
Above– The “tush push” isn’t worth putting in a GIF or video, but the fake is! Reminds me of single wing high school football. Through the legs to the RB who has a beautiful ankle breaking cut off a Miami defender.
Above– More ‘Canes diving, lunging, leaving their feet and coming up with air. LanceGuidry needs to get back to the drawing board on his tackling and pursuit work.
The Blocked Punt
The punter needs to be counting the number of threats to blockers to the right. He’s far outnumbered and has to know that.
Above– Just another example of a lack of attention to detail. How does Cristobal not call a timeout seeing they’re outnumbered? He’s clueless in the kicking game and it shows.
The Wrap
The game went exactly as many of us predicted it would. Rutgers run game pounded on Miami’s weaker defensive front, Wimsett couldn’t hurt Miami through the air, Brown was okay but not a P5 starting QB, and Cristobal mismanaged the kicking game and clock once again.
This off-season Miami adds even more freshmen talent to the roster and pushes out some old time Manny Diaz players. Cristobal either needs to do a lot of growing as a coach or Miami will never be a playoff contender, even in the 12-team era.
MIAMI — South Florida shoppers and diners face a familiar question on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day: what’s open and what’s not? From supermarkets like Publix and Winn-Dixie closing their doors to convenience stores like 7-Eleven ready to rescue last-minute needs, holiday hours vary widely across the region.
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Here’s what you need to know about supermarkets, restaurants, shopping malls and more on Dec. 24 and 25:
South Florida supermarkets
Publix: Open on Christmas Eve until 7 p.m.; closed on Christmas Day.
Winn-Dixie: Open on Christmas Eve, closing at 9 p.m.; closed on Christmas Day.
Aldi: Open on Christmas Eve from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.; closed on Christmas Day.
Fresh Market: Christmas Eve hours 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. closed on Christmas Day.
Sedano’s: Christmas Eve hours 7 a.m. to 6 p.m; Christmas Day 8 .m. to 6 p.m.
Trader Joe’s: Open on Christmas Eve from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.; closed on Christmas Day.
Whole Foods: Many stores open on Christmas Eve with modified hours; closed on Christmas Day.
Department and big retail stores in South Florida
Target: Open on Christmas Eve from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.; closed on Christmas Day.
Walmart: Open on Christmas Eve from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m.; closed on Christmas Day.
Big Lots: Open on Christmas Eve from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.; closed on Christmas Day.
BJ’s Wholesale Club: Open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Christmas Eve. Closed on Christmas Day.
Costco: Open on Christmas Eve from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; closed on Christmas Day.
Sam’s Club: Open on Christmas Eve from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; closed on Christmas Day.
Miami, Broward, Palm Beach pharmacies and convenience stores
CVS: Open on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day; hours may vary by location.
Walgreens: Open on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day; hours may vary by location.
7-Eleven: Open 24 hours on both Christmas Eve and Christmas Day.
South Florida malls
Aventura Mall: Christmas Eve hours 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. Closed on Christmas Day.
Brickell City Centre: Christmas Eve hours 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Closed on Christmas Day.
Broward Mall: Christmas Eve hours 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Closed on Christmas Day.
Coral Square Mall: Christmas Eve hours 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Closed on Christmas Day.
Dadeland Mall: Christmas Eve hours 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Closed on Christmas Day.
Dolphin Mall: Christmas Eve hours9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Closed on Christmas Day.
The Falls: Christmas Eve hours 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Closed on Christmas Day.
Florida Keys Outlet Marketplace: Christmas Evehours 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Closed on Christmas Day.
Galleria Fort Lauderdale: Christmas Eve hours 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Closed on Christmas Day.
Miami International Mall: Christmas Eve hours 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Closed on Christmas Day.
Miami Worldcenter: Individual store hours vary on Christmas Eve. Closed on Christmas Day. Lucky Strike, however, is open on Christmas Day from 3 p.m. to 1 a.m.
Pembroke Lakes Mall: Christmas Eve hours 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Closed on Christmas Day.
Sawgrass Mills: Christmas Eve hours 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Closed on Christmas Day.
Shops at Merrick Park: Christmas Eve hours 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Closed on Christmas Day.
Westland Mall: Christmas Eve hours 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Closed on Christmas Day.
Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach restaurants
At least some of these restaurants locations are open on Christmas Day:
Government offices, libraries, garbage collection
No services on Christmas Day.
Mass transit in South Florida
Miami-Dade: Metrobus, Metrorail and Metromover will run Christmas Day on a Sunday schedule. Metrolink will not be operating. STS customers can reserve or cancel a trip at 305-871-1111.
Broward: Broward County Transit buses will run Christmas Day on a Sunday schedule. Trip planning help for fixed and TOPS Paratransit routes will be available 8:30 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. at 954-357-8400 (TTY 954-357-8302).
Tri-Rail: The rail service will run on its weekend/holiday schedule.
Brightline: Service on Christmas Day.
Please note that hours can vary by location, and some stores may have further modifications. Check with your local store to confirm their specific holiday hours to ensure a smooth shopping experience.
CBS Miami Team
The CBS Miami team is a group of experienced journalists who bring you the content on CBSMiami.com.
MIAMI (AP) — Bam Adebayo scored 17 of his 23 points in the second half and the Miami Heat snapped a three-game skid with a 110-95 win over the Brooklyn Nets on Monday night.
Nikola Jovic scored 18 points and Tyler Herro added 17 points and 12 rebounds for the Heat, who are 7-0 when holding opponents under 100 points. Miami’s Duncan Robinson had 17 points, shooting 5 for 10 from 3-point range.
Cam Johnson and Noah Clowney each scored 19 points for Brooklyn. The Nets’ Keon Johnson scored 15 and Tyrese Martin finished with 14.
Brooklyn closed the first half on a 17-6 run and cut its deficit to a point at the break. The Heat outscored the Nets 52-38 in the second half.
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Heat star forward Jimmy Butler missed his second straight game because of a stomach illness. Miami reserve guard Dru Smith left the game because of a lower left leg injury early in the second quarter and did not return.
Takeaways
Nets: Brooklyn is 2-8 since a season-best three-game win streak in November. Six of the losses have been by double figures, including two by 25 or more points.
Heat: Miami snapped a three-game skid. The win marked the second time this season Miami avoided a four-game slide.
Key moment
After scoring eight points and squandering a 22-point lead in the fourth quarter of Saturday’s 121-114 loss at Orlando, Miami began the fourth period Monday with five unanswered points, stretching its lead to 88-78. The Heat outscored Brooklyn 27-17 in the period.
Key stat
Miami shot 21 of 24 from the line, with Adebayo going 7 for 8 and Herro 5 for 6.
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Up next
Both teams are back in action Thursday. The Nets visit Milwaukee and the Heat are at Orlando.
Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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About a week ago, even amid Jimmy Butler rumors, the Miami Heat were enjoying their longest win streak of the season and hoping to maintain their turnaround to challenge in the Eastern Conference.
Now, they enter the holiday week having lost three in a row, with each loss highlighting a different concern. Blowing a 25-point lead against an injury-depleted Orlando Magic team certainly poses worries, even without Butler in the lineup.
Sealing the deal remains the point of the game, though.
Whether it’s closing out close games (1-6 in matchups decided by three or fewer points) or just beating good teams (5-8 against opponents .500 or better), the Heat are struggling to stand out in ways that broaden their margins. Stretches like the last three games have seen them blow an eight-point lead in overtime within two minutes (at the Detroit Pistons last Monday), lose the battle on the glass against one of the league’s worst rebounding teams (Oklahoma City on Friday) and score eight points in the final period against a team missing its two best players (Orlando on Saturday).
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Even with Butler missing most of the last two games, those results aren’t reassuring. Against Detroit, he had a seemingly flawless game, but Miami still lost by one point. Coming close without the cigar is tough business for any team, but especially one capable of resembling playoff form one moment and suddenly collapsing by the next.
Entering Monday, Miami is still sixth in the East, but it’s closer to Play-In territory than consistently resembling teams who have either weathered storms without their best players (Orlando) or resemble new form after slow starts (Milwaukee is 15-12 after starting 2-8).
“Being able to close out games, a lot of that is my responsibility with Jimmy not here,” Tyler Herro said. “So I’ll be better on Monday and going forward.”
The Heat have an NBA-high six losses by one possession this season, which could pose ample regret down the stretch if the team remains on the outside looking in for postseason hopes. But beyond playing for the playoffs, rumors about Butler’s future make it even tougher to envision this team’s identity beyond this season. Miami has enjoyed great success since acquiring the six-time All-Star in 2019, but stretches like this past weekend illustrate the fine margins it must thrive with, with or without its star player.
On the season, Miami’s net rating swings by plus-8.7 points depending on Butler’s presence. The difference between him being on the court (plus-6.2 net rating) or on the bench (minus-2.5) is that of Miami being either seventh in the NBA or closer to 20th. But coach Erik Spoelstra won’t blame one variable for any loss, even if that variable has star power behind it.
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Whether Butler is injured, ill or (rumored to be) traded, Spoelstra doesn’t dwell on narratives when it comes to wins or losses.
“I’m not thinking any other thought. If guys say they can go, we’re going right now,” Spoelstra said after Friday’s loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder, during which Butler played only seven minutes.
From examining depth (hello, extended Kel’el Ware minutes on Saturday!) to simply staying afloat until the team is fully healthy, the Heat will need to succeed at the edges to remain viable in the East playoff picture. No matter how the Butler saga shakes out, Miami will still be relying on Herro and Bam Adebayo to hold things down as Spoelstra remains focused on how to maximize his roster, possessions and, ultimately, the team’s season.
Matchups against teams like the Brooklyn Nets (11-17) can be chances for Miami to start another win streak or simply play its best game of the season, but it would still be only one win against a relative sea of confounding defeats. At this point, how well the Heat carries things from one game to the next will determine their season, but the real test will be how well they carry things from one quarter to the next.
One night, the Heat can beat the team with the NBA’s best record (Cleveland Cavaliers), and on others, they lose two road matchups by a combined three points to a team with Play-In ambitions (Detroit). Now at .500 again, Miami’s identity this season might be stuck somewhere in the middle. No matter how strong its glimpses of potential may seem, inexplicable lapses can only make it harder to maximize a path upward in the East standings or assess how to best retool for the future.
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At this point, the best case for the team (and fans) is to simply take it all one day at a time.
(Photo of Tyler Herro and Duncan Robinson: Fernando Medina / Getty Images )