Miami

Childress Hits 3 as Wake Forest Rallies to Beat Miami Hurricanes

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  • The Hurricanes fell to 0-8 in road games, 0-7 in the league, and were denied their first victory in Winston-Salem since 2011.

Wake Forest seemed headed for yet another double-figure loss during another struggle-filled season. Then the Demon Deacons picked up their hustle and started making shots — especially Brandon Childress.

Childress hit a 3-pointer with 25.2 seconds left, and Wake Forest rallied to beat Miami 76-75 on Tuesday night.

"We had some guys make some really big-time shots," coach Danny Manning said. "Just proud of the effort and the grit of the guys who continue to battle."

Chief among them was Childress.

The son of former Wake Forest great — and current assistant — Randolph Childress finished with 21 points while Chaundee Brown added 21 points and a career-best 14 rebounds for the Demon Deacons (11-16, 4-11 Atlantic Coast Conference).

They trailed by 14 with 8½ minutes remaining and were down 10 with less than two minutes to play before finishing on a 16-5 run keyed by eight points from Childress.

Childress' go-ahead 3 came after Zach Johnson's free throw put the Hurricanes up 75-73 with 31.7 seconds to play.

"I'm always believing in next shot, next play," Childress said. "I could have easily been passive, and the game might have had a different outcome."

Chris Lykes finished with 26 points, two shy of a career high, for Miami (12-15, 4-11). He held for the last shot — although coach Jim Larranaga said he wanted him to attack the rim a few seconds earlier — but his contested 3-pointer at the buzzer bounced off the front of the rim.

"It wasn't really Chris' last shot that cost us the game," Larranaga said. "It was the rushing and the lack of poise that we showed from about 3:28 to go. ... The turnovers, the rushed passes, the hurriedness that we showed. That, we haven't done that all year."

The Hurricanes fell to 0-8 in road games, 0-7 in the league, and were denied their first victory in Winston-Salem since 2011.

The Hurricanes have found ways to lose them all on the road, both the close ones (by three points in overtime at North Carolina, and by six at Florida State) and the routs (three losses by at least 14 points). But this one might hurt worst of all. It came nearly a year to the day after their last road victory — an upset at then-No. 9 North Carolina on Feb. 27, 2018.

"I thought we played a great game for 35 minutes," Larranaga said, "and just rushed like crazy in the last four minutes."

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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