Last season, the Cinderella run to Super Regionals as the No. 3 seed was just the start of what the Miami Hurricanes baseball program could return to under J.D. Arteaga. This season, the Canes finished with a 38-18 record and in fifth place in the conference, while playing like a two seed all season, ranking as high as No. 17 in the country before falling out and remaining in the low 20s to high 30s in their RPI rankings. However, the Canes' goals have always been to get to Omaha, and now they know where their journey begins as they look to make that dream a reality. Moreover, that reality can quickly change overnight. Arteaga highlighted this after the Canes' loss to eventual ACC Baseball Championship winners Georgia Tech. It's the survive-and-advance season.Rob Evans throwing a complete game against Stanford | Miami Hurricanes Athletics It's not another chance tomorrow," Arteaga said. "So that's something we talked about coming into this is understanding what a loss at this point of the season means. It's kind of a practice run this week. If we lose we're out of the tournament but we got a chance to dress out and compete next weekend. Next weekend we lose and then season's over and for some guys their careers are over. So a learning lesson that we can't take anything for granted. We've got to show up, we've got to be ready to go for nine innings every game."This story will be updated with game dates and times once the NCAA bracket is fully revealed on Monday morning.Follow all social media platforms to stay up to date with everything Miami Hurricanes-related: Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Youtube, and BlueSky.Read More Miami Hurricanes News:Add us as a preferred source on GoogleFollow
Miami Earns Two Seed as Regional Destination is set for the Path to Omaha
Last season, the Cinderella run to Super Regionals as the No. 3 seed was just the start of what the Miami Hurricanes baseball program could return to under J.D.
Miami Hurricanes baseball secured a two seed in the NCAA Regional, closing the 2025 season 38-18 and earning a spot in the bracket on the path to the College World Series in Omaha. In a single-elimination format, coach J.D. Arteaga frames every game as terminal: one loss ends the season — and for seniors, their careers.







