Miami, FL
Police identify victims in Miami-Dade helicopter crash
MIAMI-DADE, Fla. — The victims involved in the deadly helicopter crash in Miami-Dade have been identified.
According to WSVN, a Fox affiliate in Miami, 71-year-old Clement Zanzuri and his daughter, 27-year-old Jordan Ann Zanzuri, were in the helicopter when it crashed into a canal Wednesday afternoon near Southwest 184th Avenue and 120th Street. Records show they live in Miami.
Jordan came out of the water before divers located her father. They both went to the hospital where Clement died.
Jordan is expected to survive, police say.
The helicopter took off from Fort Myers and was heading to Miami Executive Airport, police say.
The NTSB and FAA will not confirm what airport the helicopter took off from, but said it will be part of the investigation.
A preliminary report from the NTSB will be released in 30 days.
Miami, FL
The Porsche Design Tower In Miami Is Sinking
Just north of Miami sits a string of barrier islands home to some of the most lavish luxury condos on the planet. But that may not be the case for much longer if Mother Nature has anything to say about it. Many of those structures are sinking at an “unexpected” rate, according to a new study—including the 641-foot tall Porsche Design tower.
Opened in 2014, the Porsche Design Tower was the first automaker-branded residence in the city—and one of the first buildings anywhere in the world with a car elevator. It has since spawned competitors like the 818-foot Aston Martin skyscraper just down the road, with other automaker residences soon to pop up from brands like Bentley, Mercedes-Benz, and even Pagani.
But now, some of those companies may want to give their skyscrapers a second thought.
Photo by: Porsche
A new study from the University of Miami shows that 35 buildings along Sunny Isles Beach and the surrounding coastal areas have sunk by as much as three inches between 2016 and 2023. That includes the Porsche Design Tower, the Ritz-Carlton Residences, and both Trump Towers, among others. This comes less than four years after a 12-story residential tower collapsed in Surfside, Florida, just a few miles down the street.
“Almost all the buildings at the coast itself, they’re subsiding,” Falk Amelung, a geophysicist at the University of Miami’s Rosenstiel School of Marine, Atmospheric and Earth Science and the study’s senior author, said in an interview with the Miami Herald. “It’s a lot.”
Photo by: Porsche
Researchers looked at satellite imagery that can measure subsidence (or, sinking land) down to fractions of an inch. In this case, researchers discovered subsidence ranging from 0.8 to just over 3 inches in places like Sunny Isles Beach and Surfside. Two buildings in Miami Beach—the Faena Hotel and the L’atelier condo—and one in Bal Harbour were also affected.
For now, experts say the sinking isn’t necessarily cause for alarm. No structural issues have been reported to any of the buildings thus far, and many newer buildings—like the Porsche Design Tower, which is just 10 years old—naturally sink into the soil years after completion due to their weight.
But researchers are keeping an eye on the situation nevertheless.
Miami, FL
Betting Odds & Prediction for Detroit Pistons vs Miami Heat on Monday
After entering their short break on a high note following a big road victory against the New York Knicks, the Detroit Pistons were brought right back down to earth by the Boston Celtics.
A victory at Madison Square Garden didn’t give the Pistons the proper momentum to waltz into TD Garden to pick up a second-straight win. Instead, the defending champs shot the lights out from deep, and issued the Pistons a beatdown.
The Celtics sent the Pistons back home with a 123-99 loss. Over the last couple of days, Detroit had an opportunity to rest up and regroup. On Monday, they’ll get back on the court for a matchup against the Miami Heat.
The Pistons will get slightly healthier compared to their matchup in Boston. After losing Jalen Duren for the night with a wrist injury, the big man is expected to be back in the mix. However, Detroit will be without its starting forward, Tobias Harris, as he deals with a thumb injury.
Recently, the Pistons have lost seven of their last ten games. They’ve been struggling more at home this year, winning just four of their 11 matchups in Detroit. The road won’t get much easier on Monday as the Pistons take on the Heat, who have won their last four games.
Detroit Pistons vs Miami Heat
Date: Monday, December 16, 2024
Time: 7 PM ET
Location: Little Ceasars Arena
Spread: Heat -4.5
Moneyline: MIA -190, DET +160
Total O/U: 217.5
*All Odds are Provided by FanDuel Sportsbook and are subject to change. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem and wants help, call 1-800-GAMBLER.
Spread: Heat -4.5
Moneyline: MIA -190
Total O/U: OVER 217.5
Miami, FL
Miami AD: Should review CFP release schedule
ORLANDO, Fla. — Miami athletics director Dan Radakovich said Sunday the College Football Playoff selection committee might need to revisit whether it releases a ranking the week of conference championship games.
Speaking to ESPN at a Pop-Tarts Bowl media event ahead of the Hurricanes’ matchup against Iowa State, Radakovich noted how difficult it was for his players in the days after the Dec. 3 rankings, which had Miami (10-2) behind Alabama (9-3) at No. 12 and on the outside looking in. The situation was compounded when committee chair Warde Manuel said teams that were not playing in conference title games were “locked in” and would not be reevaluated.
“It was a really, really difficult four or five days for the players, both at Alabama, at our place,” Radakovich said. “SMU loses, what are they in the middle of at that point in time? The NCAA basketball tournament, there’s some parallels to it, but you’re either going to be in or you’re going to be out when it’s all unveiled, right? Sometimes, that’s a better way.”
Lt. Gen. Richard Clark, the CFP executive director, said during a Sports Business Journal Intercollegiate Athletics Forum panel last week in Las Vegas that he did not think six rankings were too many — echoing comments Manuel made after the final rankings release.
“I think it’s good for the game. I think it gives people a sense of how we see teams from that eighth week on,” Manuel said.
Radakovich, who served on the first CFP selection committee in 2014 while AD at Clemson, said he has talked to others about revising the rankings release schedule just for the penultimate week.
“They’ll do a ranking before Thanksgiving. You probably just let that stand, and then you have the championship games, and then the committee gets together that weekend and they make their final rankings,” Radakovich said. “Because if you’re close and you aren’t playing, you can’t do anything and if there are other people that you’ve played along the way that are playing, maybe that changes your strength of schedule, it changes some other things. So I think as you get closer to the end, I think that would just be a good idea to say, ‘Maybe we’ll just leave that one off to the side.’”
Radakovich said it was “unusual” that Manuel said teams were locked in after the penultimate rankings release but, “If that’s what they were looking at, that’s why I come back with, ‘Don’t do a ranking.’”
Miami finished No. 13 in the final ranking, behind Alabama and Big 12 champion Arizona State. The Hurricanes will play Iowa State on Dec. 28 in the Pop-Tarts Bowl in Orlando, Fla., with a chance to get to 11 wins for the first time since 2003.
In addition to potentially revisiting the rankings release schedule, Radakovich said he is in favor of expanding the playoff to 16 teams, and that there needed to be further discussions with ACC commissioner Jim Phillips and others within the league on whether it makes sense to play without divisions.
“It needs to be something that we look at,” Radakovich said. “This is our first year we didn’t have divisions. Is it a really good idea? I don’t know. Maybe it is, maybe it isn’t. But I think whether you have divisions or not, brands playing brands is very important. We can’t stay static. Jim and the people associated with the scheduling in the conference are looking to see if there’s other opportunities to make it better.”
Phillips said one key component as it relates to divisions is how the committee will value conference championship games moving forward. SMU (11-2) made it into the playoff ahead of Alabama and Miami despite losing in the ACC championship game to Clemson.
“We have data from one year, but will that be a criteria moving forward?” Phillips said. “Will it not be a criteria? Will the teams that play in a championship game have some kind of protection? I don’t want to read into that. I’d like to hear from the committee after it’s over, about what some of those conversations were, and I think I’m not the only one.”
Though the season ended in disappointment, Radakovich said the Hurricanes feel like they have something left to prove in their final game. That goes for quarterback Cam Ward, who finished fourth in the Heisman Trophy voting Saturday. Ward has given every indication he will play in the game.
“Our players, we talked about the leadership council, the young men who were on that have said, ‘We want to be able to play and finish this season, there’s still things to play for,” Radakovich said. “That 11th win hasn’t happened in a long time. They’re all disappointed we didn’t get the chance to play for a championship in the ACC so this could be an opportunity to do that.”
ESPN’s Heather Dinich contributed to this report.
-
Technology1 week ago
Struggling to hear TV dialogue? Try these simple fixes
-
Business1 week ago
OpenAI's controversial Sora is finally launching today. Will it truly disrupt Hollywood?
-
Politics3 days ago
Canadian premier threatens to cut off energy imports to US if Trump imposes tariff on country
-
Technology4 days ago
Inside the launch — and future — of ChatGPT
-
Technology2 days ago
OpenAI cofounder Ilya Sutskever says the way AI is built is about to change
-
Politics2 days ago
U.S. Supreme Court will decide if oil industry may sue to block California's zero-emissions goal
-
Technology3 days ago
Meta asks the US government to block OpenAI’s switch to a for-profit
-
Politics4 days ago
Conservative group debuts major ad buy in key senators' states as 'soft appeal' for Hegseth, Gabbard, Patel