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RedHawks fail to finish strong in postseason

By Ben Garbarek

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Published: Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Updated: Sunday, February 14, 2010

As the month of March separates the champs from the chumps, Miami University has fallen short so far in its marquee men's winter sports.

The ice hockey team came the closest to hoisting hardware this month, succumbing to the University of Michigan in the CCHA Tournament final. Is it nit-picking to criticize a team for making a championship game? Absolutely, but merely being content is like telling Rosie O'Donnell to pluck her eyebrows: you're missing the point.

The Red and White fought valiantly to get there and dodged a bullet with their overtime, come-from-behind win over the University of Notre Dame in the semifinals. Yet, as Miami builds toward becoming one of the nation's elite hockey programs, RedHawk fans should raise their standards and not be merely satisfied with just making it that far.

The Miami-Michigan hockey rivalry has skyrocketed this season, but unfortunately for the RedHawks it's beginning to resemble Roger Federer and Andy Roddick more than Duke University and the University of North Carolina.

Healthy rivalries feature evenly matched teams with contests that are rarely predictable. Duke and North Carolina square off on the hardwood every year, and while the Tar Heels may be the better team this year, next year it may be the Blue Devils.

So far this season, Miami has failed to notch a single win against the Wolverines in the three biggest games of their season. As much as I may hate to admit it, until the RedHawks start winning more critical contests against Big Blue, it's tough to even call it a rivalry.

Fortunately for Miami, they still have a chance to redeem themselves. Both squads will compete in the NCAA Tournament and have their sights on the national championship. A big weekend in Denver will make RedHawk fans forget all about their heartbreak in Detroit.

The men's basketball team didn't have much luck around St. Patrick's Day either. The stage seemed set for another magical run to the Big Dance. However, it was déjà vu all over again as Miami finished the season with a 15-14 record for the second year in a row.

The RedHawks made an emotional visit to head coach Charlie Coles, seeing their leader for the first time since he left the bench because of health concerns. In a scene fit for the movies, the players spoke with Coles in the hospital before the start of their MAC Tournament title defense.

Miami was a long shot to win the MAC Tournament again this year, but there was no Doug Penno bank shot this time as the Red and White fell to eventual champ Kent State University in the semifinals.

Miami fought to even get to the semifinals though, coming from behind to edge the University at Buffalo by one point in the first round and upsetting rival Ohio University in the following round. Just like its hockey counterparts, Miami should not be embarrassed by its finish in the conference tournament, but rather just add it to the list of unfinished business.

Miami's solid showing did earn them another postseason berth in the inaugural College Basketball Invitation. I'll be the first to admit I had never heard of it until the RedHawks were invited, but a drubbing at the hands of the University of Tulsa wasn't the way anyone in Oxford wanted the season to end.

Playing without the services of standout forward Michael Bramos, the RedHawks looked like a ship without its rudder. Without its coach and most explosive player, Miami didn't have the pages for their storybook ending this time around.

Both of these teams have put together championship caliber seasons that have given RedHawk fans plenty to cheer for, but maybe it's time for an exclamation point to end these seasons and not just a period.

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