Heat to practice in Houston as sports teams keep close eye on Hurricane Matthew

— -- With all eyes on Hurricane Matthew, the Miami Heat have decided to pack up once again and fly to Houston on Wednesday to resume preseason workouts.

A team spokesman said the Heat, who arrived home Tuesday night after a 106-95 victory over the Washington Wizards in their preseason opener, will again leave Wednesday night after preparing their homes and families for the storm's possible arrival.

Hurricane Matthew is a Category 3 storm, and forecasters expect it to strengthen and be very near Florida's Atlantic coast by Thursday evening as it moves north and likely heads up the East coast.

The Heat will use the Houston Rockets' practice facilities while the Rockets travel to China for two preseason games.

The Heat's next scheduled game is Saturday against the Minnesota Timberwolves in Kansas City. Team officials tried to secure a practice location closer to Kansas City, but the Sun Sentinel reported that the team was unable to find enough hotel rooms and also considered training in Memphis, Chicago and Milwaukee before settling on Houston.

Football games were postponed, other events canceled and countless contingency plans were being made Tuesday because of Hurricane Matthew.

Storm shutters were being drawn shut across windows at the University of Miami, where the 10th-ranked? Hurricanes?were preparing for?their annual rivalry game with No. 23? Florida State?on Saturday. Hurricane warnings were issued Tuesday night for parts of?Florida, with forecasters saying hurricane conditions -- winds of 74 mph or more -- were likely to hit the state Thursday.

"I don't know what we'll do, to be honest with you," Miami coach Mark Richt said. "Just keep everybody safe, first. We'll do the best we can."

Schools in Florida, Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina were already reacting, with some soccer, volleyball and other collegiate contests scheduled for the next few days either canceled or postponed. South Carolina was still hoping to play host to Georgia in their SEC football game Saturday night, though Gov. Nikki Haley suggested that was unlikely.

"As of now I can't imagine that happening," said Haley, who planned to issue an evacuation order Wednesday affecting coastal areas in her state. "But certainly we're going to continue to watch this."

Two other college football games -- Albany State at Charleston Southern and Bethune-Cookman at South Carolina State -- have already been postponed.

The? Tampa Bay?at Florida NHL preseason game scheduled for Thursday remains scheduled, for now -- though the arena the? Panthers?call home was in the area under a hurricane watch. The Panthers were scheduled to fly to West Point, New York, on Friday,?but if winds close airports in the Miami area those plans would obviously be affected.

Cancellations included the decision by Gulfstream Park West to scrap its live thoroughbred racing cards for Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. Wednesday was to be first day of racing this season at the track in Miami Gardens, Florida.

The Miami Dolphins are scheduled to host the Tennessee Titans on Sunday, and officials are keeping close watch.

"We're watching the weather with the hurricane that's going on down there," Titans coach Mike Mularkey said Tuesday on his radio show. "There may be some weather issues. There's a very slight chance that game could be moved up here. There's been some discussion because of it."

The Atlantic Coast Conference -- which could have at least five Saturday football games directly affected by the storm -- said it was monitoring Matthew closely and hoped that games will be played as scheduled.

Florida State is scheduled to fly in Thursday night for the Miami game, though forecasters say Thursday could be the day when the Miami area gets the worst of Matthew's wind.

"We've looked through every scenario known to man and we'll figure it out here when it gets there and we'll fly down when they tell us to fly down and play when they tell us to play," Florida State coach Jimbo Fisher said.

Other Saturday ACC games that figure to be potentially affected include Army at Duke, Virginia Tech at North Carolina, Syracuse at Wake Forest and Notre Dame at N.C. State.

Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly said pushing his team's game back to Sunday was possible, if events warrant.

"Everything is on the table right now," Kelly said.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.