CORAL GABLES, Fla. (AP) -- Darius Rice played brilliantly for 40

minutes and still managed to save his best for last.

The nephew of Oakland Raiders receiver Jerry Rice capped a

43-point performance by stealing an inbounds pass and sinking a

3-pointer at the final buzzer, and the Miami Hurricanes stunned (No. 8 ESPN/USA Today, No. 11 AP) Connecticut 77-76 Monday night.

UConn appeared to clinch a victory when Ben Gordon hit two free

throws with 8.9 seconds left, giving him 32 points and the Huskies

a 76-72 lead.

But Miami's Armondo Surratt drove for an uncontested layup with

4 seconds to go and Shamon Tooles' hurried inbounds pass was stolen

in the corner by Rice, who swished a shot as time expired.

"The guy threw the ball in, and I just stuck my hand out,''

Rice said. "I said, 'This is mine.' I shot it, and I had no doubt

it was going in.''

When it did, a jubilant Rice sprinted the length of the court

with his fists in the air as Hurricanes fans poured onto the floor

to celebrate.

The defeat left UConn players crying in their locker room. Coach

Jim Calhoun said Taliek Brown, rather than Tooles, was supposed to

inbound the ball that Rice intercepted.

"I did the wrong thing by passing it,'' said Tooles, his eyes

red. "I cost us the game. They trusted me to be in the game. I'm

supposed to make the correct pass.''

Miami (8-7, 1-3 Big East) broke a three-game losing streak,

including an overtime loss at UConn on Jan. 11. The Huskies (11-3,

2-1), beaten Saturday at North Carolina, have lost two in a row for

the first time since last Feb. 2.

"It's a devastating loss for us, the way it happened,'' Calhoun

said. "I feel awful for our kids.''

Rice's career-best scoring performance tied for the

third-highest in Big East history. The 6-foot-10 junior made 16 of

27 shots, including seven of 12 3-pointers.

"It was just one of those nights,'' Rice said. "The basket was

as big as the ocean.''

The victory could be the start of a big week for the Rice

family. Darius' uncle will play in the Super Bowl on Sunday against

Tampa Bay.

"Raiders by 15,'' Darius predicted.

Rice carried the Hurricanes, whose only other double-figure

scorer was James Jones with 11 points.

Brown scored 13 points for UConn, which lost despite shooting 56

percent. Center Emeka Okafor had just seven points, five rebounds

and no blocks, all well below his averages.

The Huskies rallied from a 14-point first-half deficit, and

Gordon's 3-pointer put them ahead 67-64 with two minutes left.

After a Miami turnover, Gordon sliced through the defense for a

leaner to make it 69-64.

But the Hurricanes scored 13 points in the final minute as they

kept fouling UConn to get the ball back.

"Fans might have been leaving, and people might have thought

this game was over,'' Miami coach Perry Clark said. "But our kids

just did not give up.''

The Huskies lost despite making seven of 10 free throws in the

last minute.

Calhoun shook up the UConn lineup, starting senior Tony

Robertson and freshman Hilton Armstrong in place of Mike Hayes and

Denham Brown at forward. But the Huskies fell behind by double

digits in the first half for the sixth game in a row.

"One of these days we're going to have to finally start playing

from the beginning and not wait until we're down,'' Gordon said.

Rice scored 10 consecutive Miami points to put his team ahead

21-15. He had 24 of the Hurricanes' first 29 points, and his fifth

3-pointer of the first half put them up 34-21.

"That's probably the best game he has played in his life,''

Gordon said. "There's not much you can do.''