Upsets make sports worth watching. If the favorite won each time, then watching sports would be just as predictable as an episode of Walker: Texas Ranger when Chuck Norris' girlfriend gets kidnapped, he uses his Native American heritage to magically figure out where she is and then he kicks the crap out of some crooked hillbilly Texans to save her.
Some of the greatest moments in sports revolve around upsets.
The "Miracle on Ice," when a team of amateur and collegiate hockey players from the U.S. defied the odds to beat the long-dominant U.S.S.R. team in the height of the Cold War at the 1980 Winter Olympics. Sportscaster Al Michaels immortalized the moment with a simple question: "Do you believe in miracles?"
Super Bowl III, when a cocky quarterback named Joe Namath boldly predicted his New York Jets would beat the heavily favored Baltimore Colts. Many thought he was crazy, but after a gritty 16-7 victory, Broadway Joe became legendary.
The list goes on and on.
Cheering for the underdog goes beyond the movie Rudy, all the way back to David and Goliath. It's a timeless storyline that continues every day at sporting events across the world.
This fall has already seen a slew of monumental and thrilling upsets. The college football world has been turned upside down from the get-go, starting with Appalachian State University and continuing all the way to the University of Illinois upsetting the No. 1 Ohio State University Buckeyes this past weekend.
College basketball has gotten off to an equally unpredictable start. Ohio State lost to Division-II University of Findlay in exhibition play only days after Grand Valley State University, another Division-II school, beat No. 8 Michigan State University.
The little-known Atlantic Sun conference had a sensational week providing several colossal upsets with Belmont University overthrowing the University of Cincinnati and Gardner-Webb University shocking University of Kentucky at Rupp Arena.
Even the much-anticipated debut of O.J. Mayo couldn't stop another Atlantic Sun team, Mercer University, from stunning No. 18 University of Southern California.
If the Atlantic Sun can do it, why can't the MAC? Why not Miami University?
It wouldn't even be the first time for the RedHawks.
Last season the hockey team went on the road to beat the University of New Hampshire to reach the Regional Final in the NCAA Tournament for the first time in team history. Miami had the odds stacked against them playing a tough Wildcats team on their home ice, yet came away on top.
Almost exactly nine years ago, the Miami men's basketball team upset the No. 18 University of Tennessee Volunteers 68-62 at a raucous Millett Hall. Current NBA veteran Wally Szczerbiak scored 34 points that night and kicked off a magical season for the RedHawks, leading the Red and White all the way to the Sweet Sixteen.
Last year the RedHawks upset No. 1 seeded University of Toledo and then shocked the University of Akron in the MAC Championship game off of Penno's prayer. Miami almost continued the upset magic, narrowly succumbing to No. 3 seeded University of Oregon.
With a tough non-conference schedule including visits to USC, University of Louisville, Illinois and the University of Kansas, there will be no shortage of upset opportunities for the RedHawks.
Miami's basketball team will almost certainly enter each contest as the consensus underdog.
Will we pull off another big upset this year?







