An unbeaten team on the road. A conference opponent that already pushed them to the brink. And an offensive profile that keeps lighting up scoreboards across the country. Tuesday night’s Mid-American Conference matchup between No. 23 Miami (Ohio) and Buffalo has all the ingredients of another fast, high-scoring game that demands attention from start to finish.
Miami enters at 22–0 overall and 10–0 in MAC play, one of only two undefeated teams left in Division I. Buffalo, meanwhile, is trying to stabilize its season and protect home court after an uneven stretch. When these teams met in January, the result was a 105–102 overtime thriller, and very little about the matchup suggests a slower pace this time around.
This game sets up as another offensive-heavy contest, with the total score projection sitting well into the 160s. Based on team style, efficiency, recent form, and multiple prediction models, the numbers continue to point in the same direction.
Game Overview: Miami (Ohio) at Buffalo
Miami (Ohio) has separated itself from the rest of the MAC with elite offense, depth, and consistency. The RedHawks lead the conference in scoring at 93.7 points per game and rank first in three-point shooting at 40.1%. Their ability to score in bunches is unmatched at this level.
Buffalo comes in at 14–8 overall and 4–6 in conference play, but the Bulls are not short on offensive weapons. They average close to 80 points per game and rely heavily on guard-driven scoring. Defense and ball security have been the bigger issues, especially against teams that can apply sustained pressure.
The venue shifts to Buffalo for this meeting, but the underlying matchup remains the same: elite offense versus a defense that has struggled to get stops.
Miami (Ohio)’s Offense Sets the Tone
Miami’s offense is the central reason this game projects as another high-total affair. The RedHawks rank among the top teams nationally in offensive efficiency, effective field goal percentage, and assist rate. They are not reliant on one scorer, which makes them difficult to slow down for 40 minutes.
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Brant Byers (15.4 PPG) leads the team and controls tempo.
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Peter Suder (14.3 PPG) provides shot creation and late-game confidence.
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Miami consistently shoots above 57% from the field in conference play.
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Their spacing and ball movement generate clean three-point looks throughout the game.
Even in games where Miami starts slowly, their offensive ceiling allows them to erase deficits quickly. That trait showed again last weekend when they turned a tight game against Northern Illinois into an 85–61 blowout by locking in defensively and pushing pace.
Buffalo’s Scoring Ability Keeps Pace High
Buffalo’s offense is good enough to contribute meaningfully to the total score. Guards Daniel Freitag (20.1 PPG) and Ryan Sabol have carried the Bulls through stretches of the season, and both were effective in the first meeting with Miami.
Against Miami in January:
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Buffalo scored 102 points
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Shot 53.8% from the field
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Made 13 three-pointers at a 50% rate
Those numbers may regress slightly, but Buffalo’s shot profile still favors scoring. They push tempo, attack early in possessions, and are comfortable trading baskets. That style rarely leads to low-scoring outcomes, especially against a team that plays as fast and efficiently as Miami.
Why I’m Confident in the Over 163.5 Total Scores Prediction
The total score projection above 163.5 is supported by several strong indicators that all point in the same direction.
First, pace. Both teams rank above the national average in possessions per game. Miami is comfortable running, and Buffalo rarely slows opponents down.
Second, shooting efficiency. Miami’s three-point accuracy and Buffalo’s willingness to attempt shots early in the shot clock create a high-volume environment. Even modest efficiency leads to points piling up quickly.
Third, defensive limitations. Buffalo struggles with:
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Transition defense
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Defensive rebounding
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Preventing open perimeter shots
Miami has also acknowledged that its defense, while improving, is still not elite. The RedHawks win games by overwhelming teams offensively, not by grinding them down.
Fourth, recent form. Miami has scored at least 85 points in five of its last six games. Buffalo has allowed 90 or more points multiple times at home, including a 95-point outing allowed to Ohio just days ago.
Finally, historical evidence. The first meeting produced 207 total points. While overtime helped inflate that number, regulation alone still pushed the total near this range.
All signs suggest another game where both teams reach the 80s.
Turnovers, Rebounding, and Extra Possessions
One overlooked factor that supports a higher total is extra possessions. Buffalo has struggled with turnovers and defensive rebounding. In its loss to Ohio, the Bulls allowed 13 offensive rebounds and committed 13 turnovers.
Miami thrives on second chances and quick-strike scoring. Extra possessions do not just add points; they also increase pace as teams scramble to recover defensively.
When Miami gets extended possessions, their shooting efficiency tends to rise as defenses wear down.
Prediction Model Score Projections
Multiple respected college basketball models align closely on this matchup and total score range:
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KenPom: Miami 88, Buffalo 80 (168 total)
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Sagarin Ratings: Miami 90, Buffalo 82 (172 total)
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Torvik: Miami 87, Buffalo 79 (166 total)
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Haslametrics: Miami 91, Buffalo 83 (174 total)
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Bart Torvik: Miami 89, Buffalo 81 (170 total)
Across these five models, the average projected total is approximately 170 points, well above 163.5.
Home Court Matters, But Not Enough to Slow the Game
Buffalo’s home court has not consistently suppressed scoring. The Bulls are 6–5 at home, and several of those wins still featured high totals. Miami has already shown it can score anywhere, including in hostile environments.
Home court may help Buffalo’s shooting confidence, but that often leads to faster play rather than a slower, more controlled game.
What to Expect When the Game Tips Off
Expect an aggressive start from Miami, with early three-point attempts and quick ball movement. Buffalo is likely to respond by pushing tempo rather than slowing the game down. If the first meeting is any guide, scoring runs will come in waves, and neither team will be comfortable sitting on a lead.
Miami’s ability to score efficiently for long stretches, combined with Buffalo’s need to keep pace offensively, creates a game script that naturally climbs into the upper 160s or beyond.
Final Thoughts: A Game Built for Points
This matchup brings together an elite offense, a fast tempo, and two teams that prefer to score rather than stall. Miami’s undefeated run has been fueled by consistent production, while Buffalo’s strengths and weaknesses both contribute to higher totals.
From efficiency metrics to recent results to model projections, the data continues to support a game that plays out in the open floor with sustained scoring on both sides. Tuesday night’s clash offers everything fans enjoy in MAC basketball: pace, shooting, and momentum swings that keep the scoreboard moving until the final buzzer.
My pick: 163.5 total scores LOSE
