Vinel: Opening Day 2020 will be memorable for different reasons
By Chris Vinel | March 26, 2020Oh, and the Reds will be good, too.
Oh, and the Reds will be good, too.
It’s bigger than just baseball — the Reds are who we rally around, and they provide some of our sweetest memories. For me, I can’t help but tear up as I think back to the times spent in Great American Ball Park with my father.
So what does the XFL, a second-tier league with no history of success, have to do with women’s pro leagues?
Landon Stephens, a senior, was playing the last baseball game of the 2019 collegiate baseball season and, perhaps, the last of his Miami career.
Nobody knows how to react. Players are staring at the floor. There are blank, expressionless faces. An eerie silence.
Here’s a look at what went right (and wrong) for the RedHawks this season:
Let’s keep this short and simple: there were some pretty high expectations for head coach Jack Owens and his RedHawks team this year, and they were not met.
The RedHawks’ head football coach added five years onto his deal and bumped his annual salary from $533,360 to $550,000.
A Miami University football Twitter account spilled the beans.
Monday night in Buffalo, Miami was the disruptive underdog.
Miami ends its season with an 11-21 (4-14 MAC) record.
Miami claimed all three games in the series, going undefeated in a Saturday doubleheader before taking the Sunday finale.
“For [Bam Bowman] to have a night like tonight, I was hoping that final three would’ve went down, not only for our sake, but for him, because he does deserve it,” Miami head coach Jack Owens said.
It’s senior week! This time on Press Box Thoughts Patrick and Josiah have a double feature with hockey senior Grant Frederic and women’s basketball senior Savannah Kluesner.
On a night that held so much promise for the Miami RedHawks, it seemed like none of the bounces went their way.
Lauren Dickerson never thought she would be in this position.
All he wants is a moment — one opportunity he can boot through the uprights.
It seems that Miami baseball thrives at home but struggles on the road.
Oh, how sweep it is.
Miami fell to Akron, 75-62, Saturday at Millett Hall.