Monday, January 29, 2024

Furman sees five-game winning streak end at Wofford

            Furman's streak ends at Wofford

Wofford's Corey Tripp scored 20 points, and forward Kyler Filewich finished with 17 points and 10 rebounds, as the Terriers were able to snap a four-game losing streak in the series with Furman, downing the Paladins 77-67 in Southern Conference basketball action Saturday night before a crowd of 3,500 at Jerry Richardson Indoor Stadium.

With the win, Wofford improved to 12-9 overall and 5-3 in league play, while Furman fell to 11-10 overall and 5-3 in SoCon action. The win by Wofford snapped Furman's season-long five-game winning streak, while snapping what had become a two-game skid for the Terriers. 

Tripp finished out the contest by connecting on 8-of-15 shots from the field, however, was 0-for-5 from three-point range in the contest. He also finished the night connecting on 4-of-4 from the charity stripe.

Filewich, who transferred into Wofford from Southern Illinois a couple of years ago, posted his 17 points an 8-of-9 shooting effort from the field, which included a 1-of-4 effort at the charity stripe. Filewich completed his double-double performance for the Terriers by snagging 10 rebounds, with four of those offensive, which was part of a night that saw the Terriers snag 15 offensive rebounds that led to 16 second-chance points. 

Rounding out the Terrier players that finished in double figures in the contest was Jackson Sivills, who added 14 points on 5-fo-12 shooting from the field, including going 3-of-7 from long range. He was also 1-of-3 from the free throw line.

Furman was paced in the contest by four players reaching double figures. Redshirt senior guard Marcus Foster led all scorers with 22 points and added 10 rebounds, posting his third double-double in his fourth game back from injury, while also posting his second 20-plus point scoring performance since returning from his lower body injury that sidelined for nine games from Dec. 4-Jan. 17. 

Foster was able to finish the contest by connecting on 5-of-13 shots from the field, including having gone 4-for-7 from long range. He was also 8-of-11 from the free throw line. He also added two assists and a steal, while three of his 10 boards in the contest were offensive. 

Foster was joined in double figures by junior guard JP Pegues, who added 15 points on 4-of-12 shooting from the field, including a 3-of-6 effort from beyond the arc and was 4-for-5 from the free throw line. Pegues also added three assists and a steal to the Paladin cause.

Alex Williams matched Pegues' 15 points, with 15 of his own, as he connected on 5-of-13 shots from the field and was 3-for-10 from long range. He was also a perfect 2-for-2 from the foul line. 

Furman's double-figure scoring efforts were rounded out by PJay Smith Jr., as he added 11 points off the bench for the Paladins. He was 3-for-9 from the field and just 1-for-6 from long-range.

Wofford finished the night shooting a solid 46.8% (29-of-62) from the field, while struggling to find consistency from beyond the arc, as the Terriers could only muster a 26.1% (6-of-23) shooting effort from downtown. Wofford also finished connecting on just 65.1% (13-of-20) from the line. 

Furman finished shooting their second-lowest shooting percentage of the season from the field, as the Paladins were able to connect on just 31.0% (18-of-58) from the field, which included just a 31.4% (11-of-35) shooting effort from long range. The Paladins managed to connect on 74.1% (20-of-27) from the free throw line. Furman made only seven two-point field goals in the contest. 

Wofford finished the game owning advantages in total assists (16-10), total rebounds (47-34), points in the paint
 (46-14), and bench points (14-13). The Paladins owned advantages points from turnovers (14-11) and second-chance points (20-16). The Paladins also outscored the Terriers 33-18 from beyond the three-point line. The two teams were all even in fast-break points (12-12).

How It Happened:

The Terriers came out and took the game to the Paladins from the outset of the game, and were only seriously threatened two times in each half by Furman runs.

In the opening half of play, the Terriers took advantage of a poor start by the Paladins to build what was a 22-9 lead, as Furman misfired on 12 of its first 14 shots from the field. With the Terriers holding a 25-15 lead following a Jackson Sivills three-pointer with 7:38 to play in the opening half, the Paladins would mount what was a 12-4 run to get within two, bookending the scoring run with three pointers from Marcus Foster and JP Pegues, as the Paladins got to within 29-27 with 3:27 remaining in the opening half.

However, with the Terriers clinging to a 31-29 lead late in the opening half, Wofford would end up closing out the half on an 8-0 run to take a 10-point, 39-29, lead into the half. 

Wofford's spurt to end the half in the final 90 seconds of the opening frame would begin with a Dillion Bailey layup and conclude with a Kyler Filewich layup off an offensive rebound and put-back, staking the Terriers to their halftime lead.

Wofford would push its lead to as much 15 in the second half, at 50-35, following a jumper in the paint by Cory Tripp, which gave the Terriers a 50-35 lead with 16:16 remaining. Wofford started the second half in almost identical fashion to how it had started the game, outscoring the Paladins 21-8 in the opening four minutes of the frame. 

Furman would respond in much the same fashion that it had in the first as well, getting back into the game with a 12-2 run, which started with a PJay Smith Jr. three-pointer and then a three-point play the old-fashioned way, as the Paladins got six-point right off the bat to make it a 52-45 contest with 13:03 remaining.  

From there, Marcus Foster's layup with get the Paladins to within five, at 52-47, with 11:01 remaining. However, it would be as close as the Paladins would get for the remainder of the game, as the Terriers quickly grew the lead back to double digits after a Filewich jumper and a Jeremy Lorenz timely triple, which made it a 57-47 contest with 10:14 remaining. 

From there, the Paladins would trim it under double figures only once more the entire game, as PJay Smith's layup got Furman to within eight, at 57-49, with just under 10 minutes left. However, the Terriers immediately pushed the margin back to 15 following an Anthony Arrington layup in the paint followed by a three-pointer by Arrington following a missed triple on the other end by Smith, as Wofford assumed a 64-49 lead with 7:38 remaining.

Wofford would eventually take its largest lead of the game at 17 points, following a pair of Lorenz foul shots to make it a 68-51 Terrier lead with just over five minutes remaining. The Paladins would get as close as 10 three more times in the game, which included the final margin, as Marcus Foster secured his second-straight 20-point outing with a triple with 25 seconds remaining, setting the final score line, at 77-67. 

The Paladins will look to rebound from the loss in Spartanburg on Wednesday night, as the Paladins head for Charleston, S.C., and a 7 p.m. EST tip-off time with The Citadel. The Paladins won the first matchup between the two this season, downing the Bulldogs, 82-68, at Timmons Arena in early January. 

However, Furman dropped a 69-65 contest in their last visit to The Citadel (9-12, 1-7 SoCon) last February. That would prove to be Furman's final loss until a second round setback in the NCAA Tournament to San Diego State (L, 52-75). 

Wofford returns to the court on Wednesday evening, as it heads to Birmingham and the Pete Hanna Center to do battle with Samford (18-3, 7-1 SoCon). Tip-off for that contest is slated for 7:30 p.m. EST. 



Thursday, January 25, 2024

Furman ends Samford's 17-game winning streak

Purple Kryptonite: Furman again proves to be Samford's stumbling block

Marcus Foster leads Furman past Samford

On Jan. 25, 2023, Samford came to Greenville with a nine-game winning streak and was off to an 8-0 start to SoCon play, however, it would be Furman that would end that winning streak with a 91-84 overtime win between a pair of teams that would go on to tie for the regular-season league crown with identical 15-3 league ledgers. 

Furman would garner the No. 1 seed in Asheville for the 2023 SoCon Tournament by virtue of a 93-79 win in Birmingham over the Bulldogs to close the regular-season, preventing Samford from winning the regular-season outright and garnering the top overall seed for the tournament themselves. Mike Bothwell started that game in superhero fashion, scoring the first 16 points for the Paladins, powering Furman to a 16-9 early lead to quell the sellout crowd. It was part of a 35-point afternoon for the senior guard. 

In the 2022 SoCon Tournament semifinal at the Harrah's Cherokee Center in Asheville,  Furman's 71-68 win in a thrilling semifinal contest brought an end to Samford's season at penultimate stage

This season, Samford had nearly double the winning streak it had a year ago, as the Bulldogs led by head coach Bucky McMillan and his unique pressing style of basketball arrived at Timmons Arena in for a midweek, late January battle with the Paladins on the strength of a nation-leading 17 game winning streak, however, when the Bulldogs left Timmons Arena with a 78-68 loss to Furman, the winning streak would be no more. The Paladins are officially becoming Samford's winning streak kryptonite...A purple kryptonite of sorts which, at least temporarily, halt the successes of  "Bucky Ball."

The win would see Furman improve to 11-9 overall and 5-2 in the SoCon with its fifth-straight win, while Samford dropped just its third game of the season, falling to 17-3 overall and 6-1 in the Southern Conference. The win for the Paladins was its 29th in its last 32 games at Timmons Arena. 

The Bulldogs entered the game as the nation's second-highest scoring team behind only Kentucky, averaging 90.4 PPG, however, for just the third time this season, Furman held them to less than 70. Only Purdue (45 pts), VCU (65 pts) and Furman (68 pts) have held the Bulldogs to less than 70 pts in a game this season.

The Paladins, which held Samford to just 25 points in the opening half, were only the second team to hold the Bulldogs to less than 31 points in a half this season, joining Purdue. Samford's previous point total low for a half in SoCon play this season came in an 80-64 win at The Citadel, as the other Bulldogs held Samford to just 31 points in the opening half of that contest earlier in league play.  

Furman went to the half of Wednesday night's contest with a 34-25 lead, using good old fashioned defense to help build that halftime advantage, holding the Bulldogs to just 37.5% (12-of-32) shooting from the field, including a 0-of-9 shooting effort from three-point range. 

The win by the Paladins also marked the 150th win for head coach Bob Richey in his seventh season as the head coach of the Furman basketball program, and he is the second-winningest coach in Paladin basketball history, and he is the fastest to reach 150 wins as head coach. In the 10-point win over the Bulldogs, Richey improved to 150-64 and .701 winning percentage as head coach, which has him ranked among the Top 20 active Division I head coaches in NCAA Division I college basketball. 

The win also marked Furman's 60th home conference win since the start of the 2015-16 season, as the Paladins improved to 60-8 overall against Southern Conference opposition during that timespan, as well as improving their overall mark to 106-17 at Timmons Arena over the past nine seasons. 

The night for the Paladins belonged to Marcus Foster, who posted his second double-double in just his third game back for the Paladins, as he finished with 22 points and 11 rebounds to lead all scorers in the contest. Foster finished as one of four Paladins in double figures, connecting on 7-of-17 shots from the field and was 3-of-7 from three-point land, including going 5-of-6 from the charity stripe. 

Foster was joined in double figures by Alex Williams, who added 16 points, while JP Pegues finished with 12 and PJay Smith came off the bench to add 11. Carter Whitt led the Paladins with seven assists, as Furman finished with a team total of 19 helpers in the contest. 

Samford finished the contest with three players finishing in double figures, led by Achor Achor, who posted 19 points, which included scoring 11 of the Bulldogs' 25 first-half points. He finished contest by knocking down 9-of-12 shots from the field and also added six rebounds, an assist and a steal. Achor was joined in double figures by AJ Staton-McCray, who added 14 points, posting all 14 of those in the second half, while Nathan Johnson added 10, and like Staton-McCray, scored all of those points in the second half. 

The Paladins finished the game connecting on 45.9% (28-of-61), which included shooting 42.9% (12-of-28) from beyond the arc. Furman also shot a solid 76.9% from the charity stripe, knocking down 10-of-13 from the foul line.

The Bulldogs finished the game connecting on 43.8% (28-of-64) from the field and shot 33.3% (9-of-27) from three-point range. 

Furman finished the night holding advantages in points from beyond the arc (36-27), total assists (19-14), total rebounds (41-35), second-chance points (19-10), points from the free throw line (10-3), and free throw attempts (13-10).

Samford held advantages in points in the paint (38-28), points from turnovers (20-15), fast-break points (10-7) and bench points (24-22). 

How It Happened:

Samford started the game in strong fashion, as Achor Achor finished with a strong one-handed jam off a nice feed from Rylan Jones on a pretty pick-and-roll for the first points of the night. 

A Furman turnover would result in the next two for the Bulldogs, as Dallas Graziani converted a layup to make it a 4-0  Bulldogs lead. 

Furman's first points of the evening would come via an Alex Williams three-pointer, making it a 4-3 game. Another turnover allowed Rylan Jones to double Samford's early lead off an easy layup. Williams promptly tied the game on a three from the corner on Furman's next time down the floor.

Samford would take its final lead of the night when Graziani gave the Bulldogs an 8-6 lead after he got past Carter Whitt and dribbled to the basket for the layup to give Samford the two-point lead with 17:24 left in the opening half.

After Garrett Hien was fouled shooting and converted 1-of-2 free throws on the other end of the floor, the Paladins continued to dig in on the defensive end of the floor and come up with stops against the SoCon's and one of the nation's most explosive offensive teams. The Bulldogs went to the first media timeout of the evening clinging to the 8-7 lead.

PJay Smith Jr. blocked a Graziani layup attempt just after the first media timeout and then after Riley Allenspach came up with the offensive rebound, but an alert defensive play by Marcus Foster saw him knock the ball off Allenspach out of play, creating the Samford turnover. Foster missed a layup attempt on the other end, however, Ben VanderWal would come up with a big block, preserving Furman's one-point deficit. 

Smith buried an open three on the other end with 14:49 left in the opening half, giving the Paladins their first lead of the night. Following another Paladin defensive stop, VanderWal tipped in a Foster missed layup on the other end to help increase Furman's lead to four, at 12-8. 

After Achor Achor responded with a layup to get the Bulldogs back to within two, VanderWal received a beautiful pass from Carter Whitt in the lane, and he converted the reverse layup to make it a 14-10 Paladin lead with 13 minutes remaining in the opening half. VanderWal had a chance to complete the three-point play the old fashioned way, however, missed the free throw. 

Following an Alex Williams block of a Nathan Johnson shot attempt, Furman was off and running again, and it was Carter Whitt who would give the Paladins their biggest lead of the night to that point, with a jumper in the lane that concluded a 9-2 Paladin run and gave Furman the 16-10 lead with 12:35 left in the opening half. 

A 6-0 spurt by Samford would eventually tie the game, 16-16, with just under 10 minutes to play in the half, as the Bulldogs got layups from Josh Holloway, Achor Achor, and Jaden Campbell to tie the contest, 16-16, with 9:42 remaining in the opening frame. 

The two teams went scoreless for over two minutes before a three by Williams from the top of the key restored the Furman lead, at 19-16, with 7:30 left in the opening half. Williams' triple sparked an 18-9 run to close the half by the Paladins, as Furman took a 34-25 lead into the halftime locker room. The Paladins held a pair of 10-point advantages down the stretch of the opening half of play, with the second of those coming after a Garrett Hien two-handed dunk in the paint, which gave the Paladins a 31-21 lead with 4:05 left in the opening half.

In the second half, Samford would make things interesting early in the second half. Following a JP Pegues three-pointer, which gave the Paladins their largest lead of the evening, at 44-33, with 17:03 left, a 7-0 run by the Bulldogs, which started and ended with Achor Achor layups and was sandwiched by an AJ Staton-McCray made three-pointer, to get the Bulldogs to within four, at 44-40, with 14:08 left in the game. 

However, the Paladins would respond with a 12-3 run, which commenced with a three-pointer by PJay Smith Jr and concluded with another Williams triple from the corner, giving the Paladins a 56-43 lead with 10:30 left in the contest, as Timmons Arena likely reached its highest decibel level the entire evening. 

The Bulldogs continued to hang around, thanks in large part to Nathan Johnson's good perimeter shooting, as his back-to-back threes, coupled with a Samford defensive stop, got the Bulldogs back to within seven, at 56-49, with 8:57 left. 

However, Furman turned up the heat on the defensive end of the floor, limiting the Bulldogs to just one basket over the next 4:16 and used an 11-4 spurt to take complete control of the game, as Foster's made layup gave Furman a 67-53 lead with 5:07 remaining. It was Foster's final made shot of the night--a three-pointer with 1:47 remaining--that staked the Paladins to their largest lead of the night, at 76-60, before the Paladins eventually settled on the 10-point win.

The Paladins will return to action Saturday evening at the Jerry Richardson Indoor Stadium to face the Wofford Terriers (11-9, 4-3 SoCon) with tip-off set for 6 p.m. EST. Samford will be in Johnson City Saturday to do battle with East Tennessee State (10-10, 2-5 SoCon). Tip-off for that contest is set for 4 p.m. EST at Freedom Hall.

Postgame Press Conference:

Head coach Bob Richey: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M-WGOflprSY

Players Carter Whitt and PJay Smith Jr.: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nF9X-ZJMjpo

Wednesday, January 24, 2024

SoCon Basketball 2023-24: week 3 recap and power rankings

Samford and Western Carolina provided a good national platform for SoCon Hoops

Rylan Jones drives vs Western Carolina (phoro courtesy of Samford athletics)

When CBS Sports Network selected the game between Samford and Western Carolina to showcase as one of its Southern Conference games to air to a national audience, both the network and SoCon ended up coming out winners.

For a league battling for an elusive first-ever at-large bid, the atmosphere inside the Ramsey Center was electric, and that picked up not only if you were actually in attendance for the 6 p.m. EST tip-off, but also to the wider audience viewing the broadcast at home.

Much was made about Samford's style of play, leading the nation in scoring in the lead-up to the matchup, while WCU's Vonterius Woolbright was making headlines for his unique skillset that he brought to the backcourt, leading the nation in both double-doubles, while ranking second in rebounding average.

On the strength of a 35-point, 10-rebound performance from Achor Achor, Samford collected its nation-leading 16th-straight win on the college basketball hardwood, defeating Western Carolina 75-71 before the third-largest crowd in Ramsey Center history in a battle of SoCon unbeatens. 

The win sees the Bulldogs improve to 16-2 overall and 5-0 in Southern Conference play, while Western Carolina falls to 15-3 overall and 4-1 in league action. The Bulldogs have now won 20 of their past 23 SoCon games, with the lone losses over that span coming against Furman (2) and Wofford. 

Achor's career night came on a 12-of-22 shooting performance from the field, while connecting on a career-best 5-of-9 from three-point range. Achor had only connected on 17 three-pointers for the season entering the Tuesday night battle, while Rylan Jones added 18 points and Jaden Campbell finished with 10. 

While it was Achor that somewhat surprisingly was the game's top performer, it was still another strong effort from Woolbright, who registered his 15th double-double of the season, finishing with 23 points and 10 rebounds. Also in double figures for the Catamounts were Russell Jones Jr., who finished with 22 points, while DJ Campbell rounded out the Catamounts in double figures with 12.

Neither team shot the ball particularly well, with the Bulldogs connecting on 43.1% (25-of-58) for the game, while connecting a slightly higher clip from three-point range, finishing 44.4% (8-of-18) from long range. 

Western Carolina drops second-straight in Greenville

Needless to say that it was an especially tough week for Western Carolina's basketball team before any result was rendered, but after Tuesday night's loss at home to Samford, the Catamounts needed to rebound with a positive result the next time they took the floor in Greenville at Timmons Arena against the defending Southern Conference champion Furman Paladins. 

However, it was Furman that would end up handing the Catamounts just their fourth loss of the season, as JP Pegues would knock down a three from the top of the key with eight-tenths of a second remaining, giving the Paladins a thrilling 65-62 win in the friendly confines of Timmons Arena. 

The win would mark Furman's fourth-straight win and would see the Paladins improve to 10-9 overall and 4-2 in league play, while the Catamounts fell to 15-4 overall and 4-2 in league action.

Pegues' three-pointer with time winding down was part of what was a flurry of seven-straight points he scored down the stretch to lead the Paladins to the win. He was one of three Paladins in double figures, as Marcus Foster finished with 14 points, while Alex Williams registered his first-ever double-double, posting 13 points and a career-high 11 rebounds.

Vonterius Woolbright scored 16 of his game-high 27 points in the second half, while also adding a double-double with 16 rebounds. He rounded out his afternoon in Greenville by finishing the afternoon with six of the team's 11 assists in the loss. 

Despite falling behind 5-0 on a three-pointer from Russell Jones Jr. and a Vonterius Woolbright, the Paladins would fight back to tie the game three times inside the opening 11:46 of the game before Alex Williams made a shot in the lane to give Furman its first lead of the game, at 18-17, with 8:14 left in the half. 

The Paladins finished the half on an 18-9 run, and it was a JP Pegues three with just eight seconds remaining in the half, which allowed Furman a double-digit, 36-26, halftime lead. Pegues' shot to end the half would foreshadowing of his shot to come later, which would be the final points of the game. The Paladins had led by as many as 11 in the opening half of play. 

While Furman had a 10-point lead at the half, most who follow Southern Conference basketball, know just how good and gritty Justin Gray's Western Carolina Catamounts are, and that the no lead Furman could have had in the game would have provided comfort. Just last season in Furman's 83-80 Southern Conference Tournament semifinal win in overtime against the Catamounts last March, Western Carolina had battled back from a 20-point deficit in the second half to take a late lead before Furman tied the game to send it into overtime.

The Catamounts came out of the locker room and were the aggressor, taking the game to the Paladins and used a 13-2 run to assume what was a 39-38 on a Vonterius Woolbright layup with 14:26 left in the game. In a scoring drought similar to the one near the end of the first half at VMI, which saw the Paladins go for more than five minutes without a basket in what would eventually wind up being a 40-point win (100-60), the Paladins would miss nine consecutive shots following Carter Whitt's second-chance layup inside the first minute of the second half.

All told, Furman ended up making only 2-of-16 shots from the field to open the second half, which almost spanned an entire 10 minutes, stretching from the 19:12 mark-9:40 mark of the second half, as Western Carolina eventually built a five-point, 53-48 lead following a Woolbright layup in the paint with 7:32 left. 

Despite its struggles, Furman's defense kept it alive, as the Paladins had been outscored 27-12 to start the second half and found themselves on the brink of letting the game get away. 

On the ensuing possession following Woolbright's layup, which gave the Catamounts a five-point lead, the Paladins faced maybe their most important possession of the game, and following a Marcus Foster missed shot, Alex Williams grabbed the rebound and put the layup back in and was fouled in the process, however, his missed foul shot opportunity left the Paladins still facing a three-point deficit, at 53-50. 

After a miss by Western Carolina on the other end, the Paladins had a chance to get closer, however, Carter Whitt drew a two-shot foul and made the first, but Alex Williams was whistled for a lane violation on Whitt's second attempt, leaving Furman's deficit at two, 53-51, with 6:12 remaining. 

A pair of Woolbright free throws put the Catamounts back up by four with 5:45 remaining, however, the Paladins weren't going anywhere. Williams again made a layup on Furman's next trip down the floor, getting Furman back to within two, at 55-53, with just under five minutes remaining. 

Following missed threes by Tre Jackson for Western Carolina, and for Furman by Alex Williams and Marcus Foster, it was an offensive rebound by Williams off Foster's miss three-pointer and subsequent layup to follow that tied the contest, 55-55, with 3:22 left. That would be the score as the two teams headed to their respective benches for the final media timeout of the game, with just 2:56 left to play. 

Just before the final media timeout, Woolbright drove the lane hard, however, it appeared Foster had forced a jump ball, but he was instead whistled for his first personal foul, sending Woolbright to the line for two shots. He knocked down both, restoring the Catamount lead, 57-55.

On Furman's next possession, Foster had his layup attempt blocked by Woolbright, however, he got his own rebound and passed to Pegues before Pegues gave the ball back to Foster, and then he knocked down Furman's first three of the second half to give the Paladins the 58-57 lead with 2:23 left. 

Western Carolina would again put its fate in the hands of Woolbright, and after missing his first layup attempt, came up with his own rebound and put-back to help the Catamounts retake the lead, at 59-58, with 1:57 left. 

Pegues answered by bursting past Russell Jones Jr. for a layup to give the Paladins at 60-59 lead with 1:38 remaining. When Woolbright drove the lane the next time down the floor, Foster got some help side defense from Carter Whitt, and allowed Foster to come up with the steal and the ball, putting Furman in excellent position with just over a minute remaining.

Furman head coach Bob Richey called a timeout with 51 seconds remaining. With the shot-clock winding down, Pegues drove hard down the lane guarded hard by Woolbright, flicking a layup high off the left glass before it spun around the front rim and down through the hoop to give Furman a 62-59 lead in acrobatic fashion with just 39 seconds left. 

Catamount head coach Justin Gray then called a timeout of his own with 34 seconds left to set up a play to get an open look at a three, which he did successfully, and it would be DJ Campbell who would knock down the triple from the right elbow, tying the game, 62-62, and sending the WCU fans into a frenzy who made the short, two-hour and 15-minute trip from Cullowhee-to-Greenville. 

Furman head coach Bob Richey quickly called timeout with 17 seconds remaining, and had a play drawn up that Furman has yet to run this season, as he detailed in the postgame press conference, however, he scrapped the idea and decided to let JP Pegues do his thing. Pegues crossed the timeline and then patiently waited. He stepped back once, and then twice, and then with just under four seconds left decided it was go time, stepping back one final time, as Bernard Pelote could only watch Pegues' high-arching shot ring true with 0.6 left to the sound of Furman fans going crazy. 

After a discussion, 0.2 seconds were put back on the clock to make it 0.8 when WCU inbounded the ball again. The downtown effort by Pegues had given the Paladins their final lead of the day, 65-62, and after a WCU timeout, Furman intercepted the ensuing pass and celebrated one of its biggest wins of the season to firmly put themselves back in the Southern Conference regular-season title race.

Samford extends winning streak to 17

While Western Carolina lost a heartbreaker in Greenville, Samford extended its nation's best 17-game winning streak Saturday evening, improving to 17-2 overall and 6-0 in Southern Conference play, as the Bulldogs downed Mercer, 87-80, at the Pete Hanna Center Saturday evening in a gritty Southern Conference battle. 

The loss by the Bears saw them fall to 8-11 overall and 1-5 in SoCon action. Samford got another strong evening from AJ Staton-McCray and Achor Achor, who posted 20 points apiece and both posted five rebounds apiece in the win. 

Jaden Campbell finished the contest with 13 points, while Rylan Jones added 12 points and Josh Holloway rounded out the double-figure scorers for the Bulldogs with 10. 

Mercer was led by freshman phenom Jake Davis, who finished with 21 points and nine rebounds, while big man Jayln McCreary added 14 points and Jalen Cobb and Alex Holt rounded out the double-figure scorers for the Bears, adding 11 and 10 points, respectively. 

It looked as though Samford was headed for another league blowout win, getting out to a 10-0 lead with 17:17 left in the opening half of play, following a three-pointer by Rylan Jones. However, the Bears would get back into the game shortly thereafter, and would manage to hang around for much of the night from there. The Bears would score five of the next six points to get back into the contest, making it an 11-5 game when Jalyn McCreary converted a layup. 

After AJ Staton-McCray's three-pointer made it a nine-point game the next trip down the floor, however, the Alex Holt answered with back-to-back buckets for the Bears to get them back into the game. Samford then answered with a 10-2 run and threatened to blow the game open again, taking a 24-11 lead with 10:38 left in the half. 

Mercer then scored seven-straight points on a pair of Jake Davis foul shots, an Alex Holt layup and a three-pointer by Jalen Cobb, making it a 24-18 deficit for the Bears. Samford bounced right back with seven-straight points to push the lead back to 13, at 31-18, as Staton-McCray converted a pair of free throws, a layup, and Lukas Walls converted a layup to force Greg Gary to take a timeout. 

From there, the Bulldogs would lead by as many 14 points in the opening half down the stretch before settling for a 46-33 halftime lead.

In the second half, Mercer would cut into the Samford lead to seven, 51-44, early in the second half following a jumper from McCreary with 14:42 remaining in the game. Samford then pushed the lead back to 11 points by scoring the next four points, with Achor Achor's hook shot in the lane restoring a double-digit lead for Samford with 13:18 left.

Mercer's grit and toughness continued to show, however, as the Bears posted a 14-4 run to cut Samford's lead to just a point, at 59-58, with just under 10 minutes remaining on a three-pointer by Jake Davis. 

However, Samford would again create a little breathing room, as the Bulldogs would score the next five points on a jumper and a free throw by Achor and a pair of Rylan Jones charity shots to make it a 64-58 contest with 9:09 left.  The Bulldogs eventually pushed the lead back to double digits, at 71-60, with just under six minutes left on a three-point play the old fashioned way for Campbell. 

Mercer scored the next seven points to get right back into the game, getting a pair of free throws from Jalen Cobb, a jumper and free throw by Jah Quinones and a pair of David Thomas foul shots made a 71-67 game with just over four minutes left. 

Samford then scored the next seven points to go back up by 11, which essentially capped the win, with Staton-McCray's layup with 1:31 left giving the Bulldogs a 78-67 lead. 

The win sets up a huge matchup ahead for the Bulldogs, as Samford heads to Greenville, S.C. Wednesday night to take on defending champion Furman (10-9, 4-2 SoCon), who is suddenly hot and has won four-straight games. Tip-off for that contest is set for 7 p.m. EST at Timmons Arena. 

Mercer returns to action Wednesday night, as the Bears will be in Charleston to face off against The Citadel in a 7 p.m. EST game. 

VMI finishes the week by going 1-1

VMI had a unique week on the Southern Conference hardwood, as the Keydets went from a 40-point home loss in the midweek to Furman (L, 60-100) to claiming the Keydets' first Southern Conference win as well as the first win over a Division I opponent on the weekend, as the Keydets downed arch-rival The Citadel, 70-63, at Cameron Hall by the time the weekend arrived, which of course provided quite a big ending to the week for VMI.

The win over the Bulldogs helped VMI improve to 4-15 overall this season, which included a 1-5 mark in Southern Conference. The loss by The Citadel saw the Bulldogs fall to 8-11 overall and 0-6 in league play. 

The Keydets fought their way to a 16-point lead midway through the opening half of play, and then fought to hold on to that lead in the second half to snap what was a five-game losing streak, as the Keydets improved to 4-15 overall and 1-5 in Southern Conference action.

Earlier in the week in the loss to Furman, the Paladins met a VMI team suffering from not only its on-the-court struggles, but also a few off the court, as the Keydets team was bitten by the flu bug, and had only eight players dressed out to face Furman. Needless to say that wasn't conducive to the up-tempo style which the Keydets liked to play and the Keydets also ran into a Furman team playing some of its best basketball of the season, and for the first time in over a month, had a fully healthy lineup. 

Furman would hit 18 three-pointers, and Marcus Foster had a double-double, scoring all 18 of his points in the second half, and he also added 10 rebounds, and was one of four Paladins in double figures. Furman was led by Alex Williams, who posted 23 points while Carter Whitt added 21 points. PJay Smith Jr rounded out the Paladins in double figures, as he finished with 13. 

VMI finished the contest with three players in double figures, as Tyran Cook and Stephen Olowoniyi both posted 14 points, while Devin Butler rounded out the double-figure scorers with 11. 

In the win over The Citadel, VMI was able to notch its 60th win in the all-time series against the Bulldogs and did so by getting off to a fast start and never looking back. On the opening 10 minutes of the game, the Keydets were able to build a sizable, 16-point lead from beyond the arc, assuming what was a 25-9 lead. Taeshaud Jackson II, Devin Butler, Tyran Cook, and AJ Clark all connected on threes for VMI during the opening flurry. The Keydets eventually took what was a 35-29 lead to the break.

The Bulldogs battled back into the rivalry game like many expected they would, and eventually cut the Keydets lead to one, at 42-41, and then 46-45. On five separate possessions, the Bulldogs got to within one point, but VMI held on to the slimmest of leads, at 59-58, with 3:13 remaining. The Citadel tied the game, 59-59, with 2:45 left and took its first lead since the first basket of the game when Madison Durr knocked down the second of two free throws to give the Bulldogs a 60-59 lead.

Brennan Watkins helped the Keydets regain the lead with a three-pointer with 1:55 remaining, and after Quentin Millora-Brown tied the game with a dunk, a Stephen Olowoniyi layup restored the Keydets lead at 64-62, and it would a lead VMI wouldn't relinquish the rest of the game. A pair of Devin Butler foul shots would increase the VMI lead to four (66-62) with just 42 seconds remaining.

After a pair of missed three pointers and offensive rebounds by The Citadel, Millora-Brown would eventually be fouled by Olowoniyi with just 18 seconds remaining. Millora-Brown missed the first and made the second, leaving the Bulldogs down by three points. 

On the next trip down the floor, VMI's Devin Butler turned the ball over, however, the Bulldogs couldn't capitalize, as Marcus Pigram missed a three-pointer with eight seconds remaining, and Butler grabbed the rebound and he was fouled by Durr with six seconds remaining. Butler's two foul shots would give the Keydets a 68-63 lead. 

Then on The Citadel's next possession, Durr turned it over and the Bulldogs would be forced to foul Brennan Watkins. He knocked down a pair of foul shots with two seconds remaining, allowing the celebrations to start a bit early, as the Keydets increased their lead to 70-63, and that would ultimately prove to be the margin of victory. 

VMI had five players finish in double figures, led by Brennan Watkins' 14 points, six assists and six rebounds in what was a complete all-around effort. Tyran Cook added 12 points, while Devin Butler chipped in 11. Stephen Olowoniyi and AJ Clark came off the bench to provide 10 points apiece.

The Citadel's Quentin Millora-Brown led all scorers with 18 points in the contest and added a double-double, as he also corralled 10 rebounds in the contest. Madison Durr and AJ Smith also joined Millora-Brown in double figures with 12 points apiece, while Kenyan Davis added 10 off the bench. 

VMI will return to action on Wednesday night when it hosts East Tennessee State at Cameron Hall in a 6 p.m. EST tipoff.

The Citadel will head back to McAlister Field House where they will host Mercer in a 7 p.m. EST contest Wednesday night. 

UNC Greensboro continues to creep back up the league standings

UNCG posted a pair of wins over The Citadel and Wofford at the Greensboro Coliseum this past week, as the Spartans improved to 14-5 overall and 5-1 in league action, and are now sitting all alone in second place in the Southern Conference standings behind only Samford.  

The two wins over the Bulldogs and Terriers this week allowed the Spartans to improve their home record to 9-0 on the campaign, which marks the best start at home during a campaign since the 2004-05 season. 

In Wednesday night's clash with The Citadel, the Spartans were able to get a huge night from Mikeal Brown-Jones, as he dropped a season-high for points for a Southern Conference player, as he dropped 39 points against The Citadel in what was a 73-67 mid-week win. 

He would end up being the only Spartans player to finish the contest in double figures in the contest. The 39 points were also a career-high of course, for Brown-Jones, as he finished the contest going 14-of-21 from the field, including a going 3-for-4 from long range and was a perfect 8-for-8 from the charity stripe. 

Early in the second half, The Citadel took its second lead of the game after scoring 11-straight points to take the lead, 40-38, and then the teams traded baskets two more times and the score was tied a total of four times, with the final time seeing the score all tied, 51-51, with just under eight minutes remaining. Brown-Jones would connect on his third three-pointer of the game with 7:20 remaining, allowing the Spartans to take the 54-51 lead.

An Elijah Morgan three-pointer got the Bulldogs back to within two, at 60-58, with 4:23 remaining. That would be as close as the Bulldogs could manage to get the rest of the way, however, as Brown-Jones would close out the win at the free throw line, as he made four free throws in the final 13 seconds, allowing the Spartans to secure the six-point, 73-67 win.

Donovan Atwell was the next closest Spartan in double figures, posting nine points on hitting three of nine shots from long range in the contest.

The Citadel was led in the contest by Morgan's 20 points, knocking down 7-of-12 from the field, including going 6-for-10 from three-point range. Madison Durr and AJ Smith also finished with 18 points apiece to round out the Bulldogs players in double figures.

The Spartans would move to 3-0 against teams from the Palmetto State in the SoCon at the Greensboro Coliseum after dispatching of the Wofford Terriers, 82-59, Saturday evening. 

Mikeal Brown-Jones picked up right where he left off after he posted 29 points to lead three Spartans players in double figures, as he connected on 8-of-12 shots from the field, including going 2-for-3 from three-point range and was 11-of-12 from the line, completing his week with 68 points in two games.

Brown-Jones was joined in double figures by Keyshaun Langley, who finished with 16 points, while Jalen Breath rounded out the double-figure scorers with 11. 

Cory Tripp was one of three Terriers to finish in double figures in the game, as he posted 19 points on 8-of-16 and knocked down 3-of-6 from three-point land.  Anthony Arrington and Belal El Shakery added 11 points apiece off the bench.

UNCG started the game with a 13-0 run and never really looked back en route to getting the 23-point win. The UNCG defense was stifling to start out the game, holding the Terriers without a basket for the first 4:35. A little over midway through the first half, the Terriers cut the Spartans lead to six, at 24-18, following a Jackson Sivills with 9:05 remaining in the half.

Brown-Jones then responded with a pair of threes to put the Spartans back up double digits, at 30-18, with 8:27 left in the opening frame. The two teams traded buckets for the remainder of the opening half, and the Spartans took what was an 11-point, 41-30, lead into the halftime locker room. UNCG has won 13 of its 14 games this season when leading at the half. 

In the second half, Donovan Atwell scored five-straight points, which included a three-point play the old fashioned way in just over a minute of action, allowing the Spartans to take a 20-point lead (62-42) and UNCG would never look back, taking as much as a 26-point lead in the second half before eventually settling for the 23-point win. 

UNCG returns to action Wednesday night in what figures to be a huge league tilt, as the Spartans head to Cullowhee to tangle with a Western Carolina (15-4, 4-2 SoCon) team looking to put an end to a two-game skid. Tip-off for that contest is set for 7 p.m. EST at the Liston B. Ramsey Activity Center. 

Wofford will also be in action Wednesday night, as the Terriers will host Chattanooga at the Jerry Richardson Indoor Stadium. Tip-off for that contest is set for 7 p.m. EST.

Chattanooga gets a pair of impressive wins 

Chattanooga completed its week in impressive fashion, posting wins over both Mercer and East Tennessee State on Sunday, setting up a big matchup Wednesday night on the road at Wofford.

In the Southern Conference, life on the road is never easy, however, the Mocs are two-thirds through their three-game road trip and so far, so good, as UTC has posted a 2-0 record to this point.

In the first of the two road trip games last Wednesday night on the road at Mercer, the Mocs were able to pick up what was a 74-60 win over Mercer.

In that contest, Trey Bonham would lead the way for the Mocs, as he posted 27 points in helping the Mocs to a 14-point road win in the first game of the road trip. All told, Bonham finished the contest connecting on 11-of-16 shots from the field and went 3-for-6 from three-point land in the win. He also went a perfect 2-for-2 from the charity stripe, and posted a pair of steals and a block on the defensive end of the floor. 

Joining Bonham in double figures in the contest were Honor Huff, who posted 15 points, while Sam Alexis got close to notching another double-double, posting 10 points and adding eight rebounds.  The league's leading shot-blocker also added three swats to his totals. 

Mercer finished the contest with three players in double figures, as David Thomas led the team with 16 points, three rebounds, two assists and a steal. He would be joined in double figures by Anthony Bernard and Jake Davis, who finished with 11 and 10 points, respectively.

It was Mercer that actually got off to the better start of the two teams, taking an 11-3 lead early in the contest, as UTC struggled shooting the basketball early on in the contest. The Mocs would awaken to find their shooting touch shortly after then three minute lull to open the game, and scored 14 of the next 16 points in the game to take a 17-15 lead when Bonham knocked down a jumper at the 8:11 mark of the opening half to give the Mocs the lead.

He scored 12-straight points to help the Mocs take a 24-21 lead with 3:08 left in the opening half of play. After holding what was a 31-23 lead at the half, Bonham scored the Mocs' first five points of the second half, helping Chattanooga to extend its lead to double digits, at 36-25, at the 18:53 mark of the second half.

Mercer responded quickly with a 9-0 run, which began with an Alex Holt dunk and ended with an Anthony Bernard layup, getting back to within two, at 36-34, with 16:17 remaining in the contest. The game went back-and-forth over the next four minutes, as the Bears vanquished the double-digit lead, tying the contest, 45-45, on a layup by Thomas with just under 12 minutes remaining. 

The Mocs, however, slowly but surely worked their way back into the lead, building a two-possession advantage once again by scoring on five-straight possessions to reclaim a 56-51 lead following a Sam Alexis layup with 7:48 remaining. UTC put the clamps down on the defensive end of the floor, holding the Bears without a field goal for five minutes, and the lead swelled to its largest margin of the night, at 68-56, following a pair of Honor Huff free throws with 2:01 remaining.

From that point forward, Chattanooga was able to control things down the stretch en route to a 14-point, 74-60, road win. The Mocs stingy defense was able to limit Mercer to just 33.8% (22-of-65) from the charity stripe and just a 18.2% (4-of-22) effort from three-point range in securing the road win. 

The Mocs had their streak of 52-straight games with six or more made threes snapped in the road win, as the Mocs finished just 5-of-20 (25%) from three-point range in the contest. The 52-game streak had been the longest such streak in the NCAA.

From the win over Mercer, the Mocs traveled to Johnson City to take on East Tennessee State in what was a standalone game on Sunday on the Southern Conference hoops hardwood.  In a game that featured the SoCon's two most successful hoops programs, it was the Mocs that would leave the Tri-Cities with the upper hand, as Chattanooga earned an 81-74 win over the Bucs at Freedom Hall before a rowdy crowd of nearly 5,000 (4,896) fans.

The nationally-televised contest on ESPNU/ESPN2 saw Chattanooga get a huge performance from its bench, and namely, Jan Zedek, who came off the bench to lead four Mocs in double figures in the contest with 21 points. The son of former national champion George Zedek (UCLA 1995) would end the day by connecting on 8-of-11 shots from the field, which included an impressive 4-for-6 performance from beyond the arc.

Zedek was joined in double figures by UTC's diminutive backcourt duo of Trey Bonham and Honor Huff, as the two lightning-quick guards added 19 and 13 points, respectively, to Chattanooga's winning cause.  Sam Alexis just missed a double-double, posting 10 points and adding nine rebounds.

ETSU finished the contest with three players finishing in double figures, led by Ebby Asamoah's game-high 22 points, while Quimari Peterson and Jaden Seymour added 18 points apiece. Asamoah finished the contest going 7-of-17 from the field, which included a 1-for-9 shooting effort from beyond the arc. He did finish a perfect 7-for-7 from the charity stripe. 

The win saw Chattanooga improve to 12-7 overall and 4-2 inside league action, while ETSU fell for the fifth-straight game, dropping to 9-10 overall and 1-5 in league action. 

Like it had done in its road win at Mercer, Chattanooga got off to a fast start and held an 8-5 lead by the time the two teams headed to their respective benches for the first media timeout of the contest. Triples by Honor Huff and Trey Bonham and a two-handed hammer dunk by Tyler Millin had given the Mocs their first eight points of the tense road contest. 

ETSU came right back with a 20-4 run over the next five minutes and change, taking a 28-23 lead after following a Jadyn Parker layup at the 6:41 mark of the opening half.  

The Mocs would storm right back, however, using a 10-2 run to assume a 33-30 lead following a Noah Melson steal and one-handed flush on the other end with 3:21 remaining in the half. Then, Bonham's three at the halftime buzzer allowed ETSU to take all the momentum into the half, as his triple from the top of the key gave the Mocs a 36-32 halftime edge. 

The Mocs would pick up right where the left off towards the end of the opening half of play, as the Mocs would quickly increase their lead to seven points (44-37), with Sam Alexis getting off to a fast start, using a jumper in the lane and a dunk to spark the Mocs' fast start. 

ETSU came right back, however, cutting the UTC lead to just two (47-45) following a three-point play the old-fashioned way from Jaden Seymour with just over 13 minutes remaining. 

Jan Zidek then hit one of the bigger shots of his UTC career to stem the ETSU mini-run, as his fourth three of the night allowed Chattanooga to increase its lead to a five-point cushion (52-47) at the under 12 media timeout. The Mocs would continue to slowly increase their lead over the next four-and-a-half minutes, eventually pushing the lead to 61-52 with 8:14 left following a Trey Bonham jumper in the lane. 

The Bucs would mount one final charge late, getting to within 64-60 following a Quimari Peterson tear-drop effort in the paint with 6:28 left, prompting Dan Earl to take a timeout. 

It turned out to be the right move by Earl, as Tyler Millin's corner three helped UTC push the lead back to seven, at 69-62, before the Bucs answered with a Peterson triple to cut the Mocs lead back to four. The Mocs eventually pushed the lead back to six (73-67) on a Sam Alexis layup, and the Mocs were able to convert their three final field goal attempts, while playing good defense on the other end, helping keep the Bucs at bay and were able to capture a fourth-straight win inside Freedom Hall. 

SoCon Power Poll following Week 3

1. Samford--Nation's longest winning streak moves to 17-straight

2. UNCG--UNCG's performance last week and Mikeal Brown-Jones in particular sees them move up to No. 2

3. Western Carolina--Has a chance to get back up to No. 2 with a win Wed night at home vs. UNCG

4. Chattanooga--Chattanooga's defensive effort in league play has been impressive so far

T-4. Furman--Foster is back and apparently, so is Furman

6. Wofford--Terriers have been good at home against the lower tier of the league, but now the real tests begin to come

7. East Tennessee State--The Bucs are going to right the ship soon, and when they do, look out.

8. Mercer--The Bears have shown some of the best freshman talent in the league, but have yet to be very consistent

9. VMI--A win over The Citadel this past weekend has the Keydets showing signs of improvement

10. The Citadel--The Citadel needs a win in the worst way at home Wed. night against Mercer


Sunday, January 21, 2024

JP Pegues' three-pointer with 0.8 seconds left silences Western Carolina

Pegues' flurry to end the game sinks Western Carolina

Furman junior point guard JP Pegues drives the lane in the first half vs Western Carolina in Saturday's SoCon clash

Furman 65, Western 62

It's a rare thing in sports, but sometimes a sport gives back. It giveth and taketh away. Perhaps nowhere is that more evident than in the sport of basketball. 

Furman's 65-62 win over Western Carolina had all the drama of a classic Southern Conference game, and when JP Pegues connected on a big shot to give Furman the lead inside a second, an almost identical situation played out for Furman as one that did earlier in the season at Tulane, although this time, the Paladins didn't make the same mistake they did in that loss.

JP Pegues has become a known commodity to those that follow Southern Conference basketball after his shot sunk Virginia last March, allowing Furman to escape with a 68-67 win in an NCAA Tournament first round match and its first NCAA Tournament win in 49 years. He's become Furman's last-second sniper and silencer. If he gets the ball last, it's now become an expectation for him to win the game. Pegues scored Furman's final seven points of regulation to lead the Paladins to their 10th win of the season, putting the Paladins over .500 for the first time since mid-November.

Earlier this season, Pegues appeared to hit a buzzer-beating effort for a walk-off win in New Orleans, however, when eight-tenths of a second were put back on the clock, and that was enough time for Tulane to get fouled on a three-pointer, eventually sending the game to overtime tied, 92-92, after all three foul shots were made. Furman would lose 117-110 in double-overtime. 

On Saturday, DJ Campbell's three-pointer for Western Carolina would tie the game, 62-62, with 17 seconds remaining, and Furman took a 30-second timeout. Pegues had another last shot opportunity.  Once again, he didn't miss, giving the Paladins the 65-62 lead with 0.6 left. 

Two-tenths of a second were put back on the clock to make eight-tenths of a second remaining, only this time, the Paladins just knocked down the long pass and Carter Whitt collected the loose basketball and the Paladins could finally celebrate a thrilling Southern Conference win over a talented Western Carolina basketball team. 

The win saw the Paladins improve to 8-1 at Timmons Arena this season and 105-17 overall since the start of the 2015-16 season. The thrilling win also saw the Paladins improve to 59-8 against SoCon opposition in that same span. 

The win, which is Furman's fourth in succession, sees the Paladins Improve to 10-9 overall and 4-2 in league play, while the Catamounts fell to 15-4 overall and 4-2 in league play and have now lost consecutive games for the second time this season. In non-conference play, the Catamounts dropped back-to-back games at both Gardner-Webb (L, 77-82) and at High Point (L, 71-97). Prior to Saturday's loss to Furman, the Catamounts dropped a 75-71 contest to league-leading Samford before a crowd of 5,018 fans this past Tuesday night at the Ramsey Center. 

Pegues led three Paladin players in double figures, with a team-leading 17 points, while Marcus Foster added 14 points and Alex Williams had his first-career double-double, posting 13 points and 11 rebounds. His 11 rebounds were also a career-high. 

Pegues, a native of Nashville, Tenn, finished his afternoon by connecting on 6-of-12 shots from the field, including going 3-for-5 from three-point range and was a perfect 2-for-2 from the line. He added four assists, three rebounds and a steal.

Vonterius Woolbright, who has led the SoCon all season in scoring and rebounding, recorded his 16th double-double in 19 games this season, as he posted 27 points, 16 rebounds and dished out six assists, continuing his outstanding season. Woolbright continues to show why he was the preseason pick for Southern Conference Player of the Year, as he has scored in double figures in all 19 games for the Catamounts this season, and with his 27 points Saturday, has now totaled exactly 400 points this season.

He finished the contest by connecting on 10-of-17 shots from the field and was 1-for-2 from three-point land. Woolbright also connected on 6-of-9 shots from the charity stripe. It also marked his 57th-career game in double figures with the Catamounts. 

Woolbright was one of two Catamount players in double figures, as he was joined by DJ Campbell, who added 11 points and four boards.

The Paladins finished the game connecting on 41.3% (26-of-63) from the field, which included connecting on 36.8% (7-of-19) from three-point land. The Paladins shot the ball at just a 50% (6-of-12) clip from the charity stripe.

Western Carolina finished the game by connecting 40% (24-of-60) of its shots from the field, and connected on 27.3% (6-of-22) and the Catamounts were 72.7% (8-of-11) from the free throw line. 

Both teams were even in total rebounds (40-40), bench points (13-13), assists (11-11) and points in the paint (36-36).  Western Carolina held advantages in points off turnovers (13-10) and fast-break points (4-3). Furman held its only advantage in second-chance points (14-8), as the Paladins once again posted 12 offensive rebounds, marking the 10th time in the last 11 games they have been able to accomplish that feat.

How It Happened:

Despite falling behind 5-0 on a three-pointer from Russell Jones Jr. and a Vonterius Woolbright, the Paladins would fight back to tie the game three times inside the opening 11:46 of the game before Alex Williams made a shot in the lane to give Furman its first lead of the game, at 18-17, with 8:14 left in the half. 

The Paladins finished the half on an 18-9 run, and it was a JP Pegues three with just eight seconds remaining in the half, which allowed Furman a double-digit, 36-26, halftime lead. Pegues' shot to end the half would foreshadowing of his shot to come later, which would be the final points of the game. The Paladins had led by as many as 11 in the opening half of play. 

While Furman had a 10-point lead at the half, most who follow Southern Conference basketball, know just how good and gritty Justin Gray's Western Carolina Catamounts are, and that the no lead Furman could have had in the game would have provided comfort. Just last season in Furman's 83-80 Southern Conference Tournament semifinal win in overtime against the Catamounts last March, Western Carolina had battled back from a 20-point deficit in the second half to take a late lead before Furman tied the game to send it into overtime.

The Catamounts came out of the locker room and were the aggressor, taking the game to the Paladins and used a 13-2 run to assume what was a 39-38 on a Vonterius Woolbright layup with 14:26 left in the game. In a scoring drought similar to the one near the end of the first half at VMI, which saw the Paladins go for more than five minutes without a basket in what would eventually wind up being a 40-point win (100-60), the Paladins would miss nine consecutive shots following Carter Whitt's second-chance layup inside the first minute of the second half.

All told, Furman ended up making only 2-of-16 shots from the field to open the second half, which almost spanned an entire 10 minutes, stretching from the 19:12 mark-9:40 mark of the second half, as Western Carolina eventually built a five-point, 53-48 lead following a Woolbright layup in the paint with 7:32 left. 

Despite its struggles, Furman's defense kept it alive, as the Paladins had been outscored 27-12 to start the second half and found themselves on the brink of letting the game get away. 

On the ensuing possession following Woolbright's layup, which gave the Catamounts a five-point lead, the Paladins faced maybe their most important possession of the game, and following a Marcus Foster missed shot, Alex Williams grabbed the rebound and put the layup back in and was fouled in the process, however, his missed foul shot opportunity left the Paladins still facing a three-point deficit, at 53-50. 

After a miss by Western Carolina on the other end, the Paladins had a chance to get closer, however, Carter Whitt drew a two-shot foul and made the first, but Alex Williams was whistled for a lane violation on Whitt's second attempt, leaving Furman's deficit at two, 53-51, with 6:12 remaining. 

A pair of Woolbright free throws put the Catamounts back up by four with 5:45 remaining, however, the Paladins weren't going anywhere. Williams again made a layup on Furman's next trip down the floor, getting Furman back to within two, at 55-53, with just under five minutes remaining. 

Following missed threes by Tre Jackson for Western Carolina, and for Furman by Alex Williams and Marcus Foster, it was an offensive rebound by Williams off Foster's miss three-pointer and subsequent layup to follow that tied the contest, 55-55, with 3:22 left. That would be the score as the two teams headed to their respective benches for the final media timeout of the game, with just 2:56 left to play. 

Just before the final media timeout, Woolbright drove the lane hard, however, it appeared Foster had forced a jump ball, but he was instead whistled for his first personal foul, sending Woolbright to the line for two shots. He knocked down both, restoring the Catamount lead, 57-55.

On Furman's next possession, Foster had his layup attempt blocked by Woolbright, however, he got his own rebound and passed to Pegues before Pegues gave the ball back to Foster, and then he knocked down Furman's first three of the second half to give the Paladins the 58-57 lead with 2:23 left. 

Western Carolina would again put its fate in the hands of Woolbright, and after missing his first layup attempt, came up with his own rebound and put-back to help the Catamounts retake the lead, at 59-58, with 1:57 left. 

Pegues answered by bursting past Russell Jones Jr. for a layup to give the Paladins at 60-59 lead with 1:38 remaining. When Woolbright drove the lane the next time down the floor, Foster got some help side defense from Carter Whitt, and allowed Foster to come up with the steal and the ball, putting Furman in excellent position with just over a minute remaining.

Furman head coach Bob Richey called a timeout with 51 seconds remaining. With the shot-clock winding down, Pegues drove hard down the lane guarded hard by Woolbright, flicking a layup high off the left glass before it spun around the front rim and down through the hoop to give Furman a 62-59 lead in acrobatic fashion with just 39 seconds left. 

Catamount head coach Justin Gray then called a timeout of his own with 34 seconds left to set up a play to get an open look at a three, which he did successfully, and it would be DJ Campbell who would knock down the triple from the right elbow, tying the game, 62-62, and sending the WCU fans into a frenzy who made the short, two-hour and 15-minute trip from Cullowhee-to-Greenville. 

Furman head coach Bob Richey quickly called timeout with 17 seconds remaining, and had a play drawn up that Furman has yet to run this season, as he detailed in the postgame press conference, however, he scrapped the idea and decided to let JP Pegues do his thing. Pegues crossed the timeline and then patiently waited. He stepped back once, and then twice, and then with just under four seconds left decided it was go time, stepping back one final time, as Bernard Pelote could only watch Pegues' high-arching shot ring true with 0.6 left to the sound of Furman fans going crazy. 

After a discussion, 0.2 seconds were put back on the clock to make it 0.8 when WCU inbounded the ball again. The downtown effort by Pegues had given the Paladins their final lead of the day, 65-62, and after a WCU timeout, Furman intercepted the ensuing pass and celebrated one of its biggest wins of the season to firmly put themselves back in the Southern Conference regular-season title race.

The Paladins will have a chance to even put themselves in better standing for league title chase Wednesday night, welcoming SoCon unbeaten and winner of 17-straight games Samford (17-2, 6-0 SoCon) into Timmons Arena for a 7 p.m. EST tip-off. 

The 17-game winning streak by Bucky McMillan's Bulldogs is the longest winning streak in NCAA Division I college basketball. The Bulldogs defeated Mercer, 87-80, at the Pete Hanna Center on Saturday night to run their streak to a whopping 17 games after opening the season with losses at No. 2 Purdue (L, 45-98) and VCU (L, 65-75). Furman won both meetings against Samford last season, including a 92-85 overtime win in Greenville, ending Samford's eight-game winning streak to open SoCon play. 

Western Carolina returns to action Wednesday night hosting UNC Greensboro (14-5, 5-1 SoCon) in Cullowhee, with tip-off for that contest set for 7 p.m. EST at the Liston B. Ramsey Activity Center.

Postgame Press Conference:

Head coach Bob Richey-- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pJKPzAywvj4

Players JP Pegues and Marcus Foster--https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U4I7ifzfzPk

Wednesday, January 17, 2024

Foster returns and Furman hits the century mark on the road in win at VMI

Foster’s return comes as Furman begins to hit its stride



Furman was feeling good about itself after racking up a pair of home wins against East Tennessee State and The Citadel when it headed for VMI Tuesday. Adding to that excitement was having top scorer Marcus Foster back in the fold and in the starting five against the Keydets. Foster responded by making quite the splash in his return, scoring all 18 of his points in the second half, while adding 10 rebounds and was one of four Paladins in double figures in what was a 100-60 road rout of VMI Wednesday night at Cameron Hall.

With the win, Furman established its longest winning streak of the season, notching a third-straight win to improve to 9-9 overall and 3-2 in SoCon play, while the Keydets dropped to 3-15 overall and 0-5 in league play. 

The 100 points marked the third time this season the Paladins have registered triple digits and also the 16th time the Paladins have reached the century mark in seven seasons under head coach Bob Richey. The Paladins have only lost once when reaching the century mark under Richey. That came earlier this season, as the Paladins dropped a 117-110 contest at Tulane in double overtime.

The Paladins were hot in the second half especially, canning 12 of their 18 triples in the latter 20 minutes of play. The 18 triples by the Paladins matched a season-high, which the Paladins also accomplished against Bob Jones in a 100-58 win earlier this season. 

After connecting on just 16.2% (18-of-111) from long range in a recent four-game stretch, which included losses to Anderson, UNCG and Chattanooga, the Paladins are connecting at a 43.1% (38-of-88) from long-range in the past three wins. Furman has also registered 65 assists on 105 made baskets in the past three outings, and that means that 62% of Furman's made field goals over the past three games have come from via an assist. That means Furman's offense is functioning to an optimal level. 

Furman was led in the contest by Alex Williams, who continued his streak of 20-point performances since returning to the lineup, as he posted his third-straight since returning to the lineup four games ago against Chattanooga. 

Williams scored 14 of his points in the opening half and continued his hot shooting from long range, as he came in 10 for his last 13 from three-point range in the past two games, and he was able to bang in 5-of-8 from downtown in the road win over the Keydets. He is now 15-of-21 from three-point range over the past three games.  All told, Williams finished connecting on 9-of-14 from the field. He also finished with six rebounds and a steal.

Whitt finished by posting 15 of his 21 points in the opening half of play, and the sophomore from Raleigh also finished the contest connecting on 8-of-15 from the field and 5-for-8 from long range. In addition to his 21 points, Whitt also grabbed four rebounds, dished out a pair of assists, a pair of steals and blocked a shot. 

Foster scored his 18 second-half points by going 6-for-7 from the field and he also finished with 10 rebounds to complete his double-double performance.  His 10 boards led the team, and his double-double was his third in his career, going along with his 15-point, 14-rebound effort against High Point back in the 2021-22 season, as well as his 21-point, 11-rebound performance in Furman's win at ETSU last season. 

PJay Smith Jr. had a good night shooting the ball from beyond the arc, finishing with 13 points on a 4-for-5 effort from long-range, which included the rare four-point play in the early stages of the second half. 

JP Pegues and Tyrese Hughey led the Paladins with five assists apiece. 

As a team, Furman finished the night connecting on 48.0% (36-of-75) from the field, including an impressive 48.6% (18-of-37) performance from three-point range. The Paladins also finished the night connecting on 66.7% (10-of-15) from the charity stripe. 

In its defense, it wasn't just Furman's outstanding shooting and it functioning now at nearly a level we all expected at the start of the season that led to VMI's lopsided loss, as the Keydets also had their own issues to deal with--and in particular illness-- as VMI dressed only eight players due to several players being under-the-weather with the flu. 

VMI fought the entire night, however, after hanging around early, the Keydets couldn't keep pace and after the opening five minutes of the second half, the Paladins blew open the game and the contest was never really in doubt after that.

The Keydets finished the night with finished the night with a trio of players finishing in double figures, as freshman guard Tyran Cook finished the night with a team-hight tying 14 points 6-of-14 shooting from the field, however, went 0-for-5 from three-point range. Cook also added two assists, a rebound and a steal.

The other Keydet to finish the night in double figures was Stephen Olowoniyi finished the contest by posting his second-straight double-figure effort off the bench for the Keydets, as he posted 14 points to tie for team-high honors and flirted with a second-straight double-double, as he posted eight rebounds to go along with his solid scoring night. 

In the 134-96 loss at Samford last time out, the freshman from Melbourne, Australia posted 16 points and 10 rebounds. He finished his evening against the Paladins by connecting on 7-of-8 shots from the field.  

Rounding out the Keydets In double figures in the contest was Devin Butler, who posted 11 points in 34 minutes of floor time. 

After connecting at better than a 50% from both the field and from long range en route to posting a season-high point total (96 pts) in a road loss at Samford Saturday afternoon, the Keydets struggled to find that same shooting groove against an improving defensive Furman team, as the Paladins would limit the Keydets to just a 38.7% (24-of-62) from the field, which included just a 20% (5-of-20) shooting effort from long range. VMI also finished the night with a shooting at a 63.6% (7-of-11) clip from the free throw line. 

Taeshaud Jackson II showed why he is one of the premier rebounders in all of mid-major basketball, as he finished by collecting 13 of the team's 29 rebounds, and finished with eight points. 

The Paladins finished the night holding advantages in points in the paint (36-34), second-chance points (19-8), total rebounds (32-29), total assists (22-11), points off turnovers (13-12), and bench points (26-19). VMI held its only advantage in the contest in fast-break points (17-4).

How It Happened:

In the opening half of play, Furman would take a 41-26 lead into the locker room on the strength of a combined 29 points from Carter Whitt (15 pts) and Alex Williams (14 pts), as the duo combined to connect on five of Furman's first six downtown efforts and Furman finished the opening half connecting on a solid 6-of-16 (37.5%) from long-range, which helped lead to that 15-point halftime lead. 

By contrast, the Keydets, which held their lone lead of the contest at 6-5 following a Devin Butler layup in the paint with 17:08 remaining in the opening half, struggled shooting the ball connecting on just 35.5% (11-of-31) on the opening half, including going just 1-for-10 from downtown. 

Furman would increase their lead to as much as 19 points prior to the first media timeout of the second half, as Whitt and Williams picked right up where they left off in the opening half with a pair of threes, while Pegues added a layup to run out to the 49-30 lead in the early portions moments of the second half. 

VMI would cut it back to 15 just prior to the first media timeout on a one-handed slam from Stephen Olowoniyi dunk in transition, however, as the Paladins went to the first media timeout of the second half up by 51-36. Shortly thereafter, the Keydets would get to within 13 after Taeshaud Jackson II connected on one of VMI's four second half triples, making it a 52-39 with just under 14 minutes remaining in the frame following his corner triple. 

However, the Paladins would assume full control of the game over the next seven minutes, fashioning a 29-8 run, which started with Marcus Foster's first points of the game on a jumper in the lane with 13:43 remaining, restoring Furman's 15-point advantage it enjoyed at the half, and fittingly, it would be a Foster triple with 6:58 remaining to cap the run, helping the Paladins fatten its lead to 34 points, at 81-47. His jumper to start the run and triple to end it were part of 11 points that Foster would score during that seven-minute stretch in the second half, which ultimately ended up deciding the result. 

Top Two Coming to Timmons:

Furman is getting ready to face a pair of its toughest challenges of the 2023-24 season, as the top two teams in the SoCon are set to make a trip to Timmons Arena over the next two games. 

The Western Carolina Catamounts and the Samford Bulldogs met just this week in a SoCon blockbuster before a crowd of better than 5,000 on-hand at WCU's Ramsey Center Tuesday night, and it was the Bulldogs that came away with a thrilling 75-71 win on the road, notching a 16th-straight win (nation’s longest winning streak) of the season and ascended to the SoCon's top spot as the league's lone unbeaten (5-0). 

The loss was just WCU's third of the season, snapping WCU's nine-game winning streak and 10-game home court winning streak. The Catamounts were one of three teams in the SoCon to defeat Furman last season, as the Catamounts downed the Paladins 79-67 in Cullowhee early in league play.

The Paladins and Catamounts are set for a 2 p.m. EST tip-off Saturday afternoon at Timmons Arena. The Paladins are 104-17 at Timmons Arena since the start of the 2015-16 season, including posting a 58-8 mark against SoCon foes. 

Samford will be in Timmons Arena next Wednesday night for 7 p.m. EST tip-off time. 

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