Selection Sunday

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Mike Lopresti | krikyasport.com | March 12, 2026

31–1 and waiting: Miami (Ohio)’s magical season faces Selection Sunday uncertainty

Final buzzer bench reactions from last 20 years of March Madness
CLEVELAND – After 31 wins, and now one defeat . . . after all the close calls that turned out right, and now the one that didn’t . . . after a season that was so perfect, until it wasn’t, the world of the Miami RedHawks revolves around three words.
 
In or out?
 
It will be a long 72 hours, waiting for the verdict from the NCAA selection committee after Massachusetts took down the RedHawks 87-83 Thursday in the Mid-American Conference quarterfinals. Their fate is in the hands of a group of people studying metrics and strength of schedule and all those other deep-dive numbers. A zero on the right side of the hyphen of the RedHawks would have made such data harmless. But how about a 1?
The Miami camp says it will not let the vigil obsess them. At least try not to.
 
Not their MAC player of the year. “I think we proved we earned a spot in there. But I can just control what I can control,” Peter Suder said.

Not their freshman guard. “This one hurts. We’ve got take this blow and look forward to Sunday and look past this,” said Trey Perry. “We’ve got to take this hurt and feel it and if we do get the opportunity … when  we do get the opportunity – we’ve got take that anger and go out there and play, everything we’ve got.”

If...when. Yeah, it’s hard to know just what to use at the moment.

🗓️ CHECK OUT: Men's basketball scoreboard 

“I try to look at it a different way like, how are we not in it?” coach Travis Steele said. “I’d be very, very surprised if we’re not.”

But he also said the Steele house will not be gripped by anxiety this weekend.

“I’m not letting anybody take my mind. I’m not going to waste one second.

"When you’ve been fired before (at Xavier), listen, you don’t care anymore. You don’t care what people think, you don’t have to be politically correct. I’m going to live life the way I live it, unapologetically.”

🙌 WANT MORE? Check out the recap of UMass upset over Miami (OH)
      
The issue is if he and his team will be living in the bracket next week. Some of the scheduling metrics might be skeptics. As are some of the bubble teams who would love to see another vacant seat at the table. Miami's No. 54 spot in the most recent NET rankings from the NCAA and 268th-rated schedule on KenPom just got louder.

But the coach who vanquished them is certain.

“They’d better (get a bid). It’d be a complete embarrassment,” UMass coach Frank Martin said. “We’ve created a bad system. All our teams in our league were all assigned a number before the season started. Those metric numbers that are assigned to us, how do we ever change those numbers if we can’t play the teams that are assigned the number 20 to start the season? Because they aren’t scheduling us.”

Miami UMASS MBB

Leaving that debate aside, there was another vivid message from Thursday.

Miami had its remarkable magic over four months, through nine wins by one possession or in overtime. But it wasn't as powerful as the magic of March. Things happen. They just do.

Here was a 16-15 UMass team that until recently had lost six games in a row. A No. 8 seed that had its own season of continual tight finishes. The Minutemen played nine one-possession games in the MAC, but unlike Miami’s knack for escape, they went 4-5. One of those losses was 86-84 at the RedHawks’ place in late January. Something of a warning shot, it turned out.

They had their share of pain and stayed together, waiting for their chance. Thursday it came, at 11 a.m. “We had nothing to lose,” said guard Marcus Banks Jr. “A conference tournament, everybody’s  0-0.”

Miami’s warm and cuddly story could not survive some of the cold, hard facts of basketball. You’re in imminent danger of losing when you give up 17 offensive rebounds, when you’re pounded 54-30 on points in the paint and 23-8 in second chance scoring.  Bravado at the end would not save the RedHawks this time. It was UMass with six points in the last 29 seconds and Miami with a killer turnover. And with that, the Minutemen had the first win over a ranked opponent in more than 12 years.
 
Martin, who once took South Carolina to the Final Four in a life given to basketball, wanted this moment badly for his resilient players, and in the aftermath had to fight tears. “I’ve coached in front of 13,000 people at a high school game, I’ve coached in the Final Four, I’ve coached at Kansas, I’ve coached at Syracuse, I’ve been in front of incredible crowds. I was more nervous today than I’ve probably been in my whole career because these kids have actually tried really hard  . . . “

That’s when he lowered his head to compose himself for several seconds before finally going on, “I’m happy for them. I feel bad for Miami but I’m happy for our guys.”

UMASS MBB

Meanwhile, what’s a locker room like for a team taking its first loss of the season on March 12?

"Probably a little bit of shell-shock,” Steele said. “We’ve got to stick together. The outside noise has been there the whole year with our group. The whole year. We’ve got become even tighter, more together in these moments. Big events call for big responses. We’ll move on.”

They said they’ll focus on their own improvement, not a committee room.

📝 TRACK: Each auto-bid for 2026 March Madness

“We’ve got a great group of guys that can handle things like this and we’re just going to get better from it,” Suder said. “Our connectivity’s the biggest thing we have. That’s our superpower and that’s not going to change.”

Same for Steele.

“You’ve got to move on, you’ve got to go next play very quickly. That’s life,” he said. “We’ve got to watch the film. You’ve got to dissect it. You’ve got to own it. I think that’s where it starts.

“We’ve got to rebound better. That’s the elephant in the room.”

It was a loss so shocking, even the start time came with questions, with Miami as the No. 1 seed scheduled in the rather odd 11 a.m. slot. 

Miami OH suffers first loss of the season

"I’ve never done that in my four years of playing college basketball but they had to do the same thing so that’s all I’ve got to say to that," Suder said.

"I think they just need to look at," Steele mentioned. "I’m not saying there needs to be a change. I’m not going to use that as an excuse. We lost the game, UMass played well, they kicked our tails on the glass around the rim. But yeah, they probably should look into it."
 
But that's for later. The issue now is if the Miami RedHawks have done enough already.
   
One could even come up with the scenario that Miami gets a dividend from defeat. 

⏮️ REWIND: Final buzzer bench reactions from the last two decades of March Madness

What if the RedHawks are sent to the First Four in Dayton? That's 40 miles from campus. The Miami fans would pour in, so it could be a quasi-home game against a like-seeded team the RedHawks would have a shot to beat.

But first, they have to get invited.

“I believe with every ounce of my being we should be in the tournament,” athletic director David Sayler said. “It’s what March Madness is about, celebrating stories like this.”
   
Only now that story has bumped into a reality of mid-March. You lose in your conference, you must wait. Wait and hope. Even if you’re 31-1.
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🏆 HISTORY: Title winners | MOP winners | Most tournament titles
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