Key Takeaways
- The History: Miami (Ohio) secured its first NCAA Tournament victory since 1999, ending nearly three decades of frustration.
- The Sniper: Eian Elmer exploded for 23 points, shooting a lethal 6-of-9 from beyond the arc.
- What’s Next: The 11th-seeded RedHawks advance to the Round of 64 to face No. 6 seed Tennessee on Friday.
DAYTON, Ohio — The skeptics questioned if they belonged. The RedHawks answered with a blizzard of three-pointers. Miami (Ohio) ignored a 339th-ranked strength of schedule and a late SMU surge to secure an 89-79 victory in the First Four on Wednesday night. The win marks the program’s first trip to the winner’s circle in the Big Dance since Bill Clinton was in office.
The 3-Point Barrage
Miami didn’t just win; they hunted. The RedHawks’ offense centered on a relentless perimeter attack that left the Mustangs scrambling. Miami connected on 16-of-41 attempts from downtown, stretching the SMU defense until it snapped. Eian Elmer set the tone early, scoring 14 of his 23 points in the first half while the RedHawks built a nine-point cushion by the break.
SMU didn’t go quietly. Led by Jaden Toombs, who tallied 20 points and 11 rebounds, the Mustangs briefly snatched a 49-48 lead early in the second half. That lead lasted exactly 18 seconds. Peter Suder sparked a quick response with a tough pull-up jumper, and Brant Byers buried back-to-back triples to reclaim control for good. Miami outmatched the Mustangs’ size advantage with sheer volume, matching SMU’s 35 rebounds despite being significantly undersized.
| Player | Points | 3PM-A | Rebounds |
|---|---|---|---|
| Eian Elmer (MIA) | 23 | 6-9 | 5 |
| Brant Byers (MIA) | 19 | 4-8 | 4 |
| Jaden Toombs (SMU) | 20 | 0-0 | 11 |
What They Said
“The message I gave our guys was to leave no doubt. I think we were the more attacking team from the jump ball to the final buzzer. We knew we belonged in this field, and tonight we proved it.”
— Travis Steele, Miami (Ohio) Head Coach
“I was expecting a lob on that break, but Peter [Suder] saw me trailing and hit me with an amazing pass. That’s just March magic. We’re not finished yet.”
— Eian Elmer, Miami (Ohio) Forward
The Road to Philadelphia
The RedHawks (32-1) now carry the momentum of a pro-Miami crowd in Dayton into the Midwest Region’s main bracket. They travel to Philadelphia to face No. 6 seed Tennessee on Friday afternoon. While the Volunteers bring a physical SEC defense, Miami’s ability to field five shooters simultaneously presents a nightmare matchup for any traditional power. If the RedHawks keep shooting 39% from deep, the Cinderella story is only beginning.