Hidden Golfer & Baseball Win Propel Miami

Hidden Golfer & Baseball Win Propel Miami - painting of Miami Hurricanes baseball, golf venue

Canes Rally Past Wildcats in Midweek Thriller

The No. 24 Miami Hurricanes baseball squad snapped its weekend slump with a 5-2 victory over Bethune-Cookman at Mark Light Field. After falling victim to a tough series against Florida, Miami leaned on a three-run seventh inning to seize control. FIU transfer Brylan West and sophomore Fabio Peralta provided early run support, but it was Derek Williams’s two-run double in the seventh that swung momentum irreversibly. Jake Dorn picked up the win in relief, and Richmond transfer Ryan Bilka closed out the ninth for Miami’s first save of the season. With a bullpen that silenced the Wildcats over the final three frames, the Hurricanes now turn their attention to ACC play against Boston College, hoping this spark carries into the conference season.

If you’ve ever wondered what it’s like to watch a highly anticipated tennis match between two lawn chairs, this midweek baseball game had the same edge-of-your-seat drama—minus the rackets. Miami’s relief corps apparently moonlight as magicians: poof, no runs allowed! And let’s all salute our new closer, Ryan Bilka, who must have mistaken the mound for a living room couch because he looked that comfortable shutting the door on Bethune-Cookman. Now the Canes head into ACC play with the swagger of a squad that just discovered they can, in fact, score more than two runs and actually close games. Paris Hilton’s “That’s hot” tagline has never been more applicable: that seventh inning was on fire.


From Waves to Greens: Miami’s Underrated Golf Sensation

Scarlett Schremmer, a former competitive surfer turned No. 1 golf recruit, has quietly become the crown jewel of Miami’s women’s golf program under coach Janice Olivencia. Though she only picked up a club at 13, Schremmer’s athletic grit and ocean-born mindset propelled her to the national spotlight, including a top finish at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur. After a brief stint at Texas A&M, she returned to Coral Gables seeking familiarity, culture, and a coach who understands her self-awareness ethos. Balancing sports broadcasting studies with relentless practice, Schremmer aims to grow the women’s game, win majors, and share golf’s transformative power—all while bonding with teammates over bead bracelets and beach outings.

Who knew that trading sea spray for sand traps could lead to such stealthy dominance? Scarlett Schremmer’s journey reads like a beach-to-bunker fairy tale: once shredding waves in Hawaii, now shredding par at Augusta. Forget fish tales—this is the real catch. And in true Miami fashion, she doesn’t just putt; she parties, bead-bracelet in hand. Her off-course major in sports broadcasting promises endless tee-time tales, because nothing says “golf commentary” like recounting how your last drive almost ended in a seagull collision. If the Cane women’s program ever needs a mascot, just send out a surfboard with a golf club taped to it—it’ll be perfect.


Leave a Reply

Discover more from Progrums

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading