httpss://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AAaYz2TLuXg
Instead, for Miami’s players t was the sober realization that now, the Hurricanes may no longer control their own destiny in the quest to win Miami’s sixth national championship.
Pittsburgh, which last November upset eventual ACC and national champion Clemson, notched another stunner on Friday, handing the second-ranked Hurricanes a 24-14 loss and snapping Miami’s 15-game win streak.
A win Friday may not have put them in that pressure-packed a position considering Miami had moved to No. 2 in the CFP rankings this week.
The Pittsburgh defense kept Miami from ever finding any kind of consistency, with Rosier struggling to hit his targets for much of the afternoon.
Pittsburgh outgained Miami 345-232, held the Hurricanes to a season-low 45 rushing yards and limited Miami to 4-of-15 on third-down conversions.
In its 128-year history of football, Pittsburgh had never upset as highly ranked an opponent as Miami at home until Friday.

