Bowser Brothers Headed to the City of Brotherly Love
PHILADELPHIA, PA--You almost couldn’t write a better NCAA Tournament script
for both the brother tandem of Cole and Cooper Bowser than opening the NCAA Tournament in the City of Brotherly Love on Friday night when the 15th-seeded Paladins take on the No. 2 seed UConn Huskies in the opening round at Xfinity Mobile Arena.
While the brothers share plenty of similarities, it's the complimentary differences as a part of their own individual 'games' that have been a major ingredient in Furman's championship formula so far this season.
Six-foot-11 junior center Cooper Bowser has developed into a dominant mid-major big man, as he showed in Furman's 76-61 championship win over No. 1 seed East Tennessee State, posting 21 points and 11 rebounds on 9-of-12 shooting in helping the Paladins collect their second SoCon Tournament title in a four-year span.
Cole Bowser, a 6-6 true freshman and athletic specimen, had arguably two of the most impactful plays in that championship win, with his emphatic defensive play at a pivotal moment in the second half on a chase down block off the backboard, which gave the Paladins the lift they needed at a critical point, while demoralizing an opponent just starting to gain a little momentum and confidence. While the play was originally whistled as a goaltending violation, a wise coaching challenge by head coach Bob Richey and staff saw the call overturned and the points come off the board, restoring Furman's 13-point lead (68-55) with just under five minutes remaining.
Without either one of them, it's hard to imagine the Paladins cutting down the nets as Southern Conference champions in Asheville last week, knocking off East Tennessee State, 76-61, in the championship game.
Despite how the narrative would eventually play out to lead the Paladins to Philly, that wasn't the original plan heading into the season at least. However, sometimes the adversity you aren't prepared for is what makes a champion a champion. It's not the plan you have, it's how you alter the original plan that ultimately determines whether or not the goal is reached.
The Redshirt Comes off of Cole Bowser
Furman’s men’s basketball team didn’t know what adversity lay ahead in 2025-26, but by the time the calendar year flipped to 2026, those best laid plans to begin a championship quest being now being challenged by injuries, eventually affecting and challenging the depth of the team, but at the same time, strengthening it as a byproduct of such adversity.
In nine seasons under head coach Bob Richey, never had the injury bug bitten with such a bite. It forced head coach Bob Richey to make some decisions he wouldn't have thought he would have encountered entering the season.
For brothers Cooper and Cole Bowser, the season was going to be
special to be together on the same team for the first time since elementary
school even if it meant one of them—Cole Bowser—would be redshirting the season,
which obviously meant that the two wouldn’t be on the same floor together in
year one. It was still special just being a part of the same team, however.
Cole Bowser has a history of being a winner that started long before he became a fixture in Furman's rotation as a true freshman in 2025-26 for the Paladins. Furman would need his services much sooner than they had originally thought.
Prior to his career starting with the Paladins, the younger Bowser spent his prep career at the famed DeMatha Catholic, helping the Stags to a 23-7 record as a senior, while averaging 6.8 PPG and 3.5 RPG en route to helping the DeMatha to 24 wins and a national ranking as a junior. He had season-high 31 points in a game as a junior to lead DeMatha to a win over The Heights School.
Rated as a three-star recruit by 247 among several other recruiting services, Furman had the inside track to land Cole Bowser as a result of his brother, Cooper Bowser, who was already beginning to establish himself as a budding star for the Furman basketball program under head coach Bob Richey.
That move would come shortly before the tip-off of Furman's second game of the season against defending champion Chattanooga. As I walked in McKenzie Arena just before the tip-off between Furman and defending SoCon regular-season champion Chattanooga, Paladin basketball media relations director Jordan Caskey informed me that Furman would be removing the redshirt from true freshman Cole Bowser into the lineup. It was a move that head coach Bob Richey hadn't hesitated to make.
The debut for the younger Bowser was one that would show what type of profound impact he could have. In his debut against the Mocs, Cole Bowser brought the energy, defense and rebounding to the Furman lineup, and in his first game in the Furman lineup Cole Bowser would have an impact on Furman's play, as the true freshman snagged 10 rebounds and posted six points to help the Paladins to the 78-67 win.
"Cole [Bowser] had a huge piece in the game tonight...six points and he had 10 rebounds and played tremendous defense and just did an unbelievable job of doing some of the gritty things that we felt like we were missing on Saturday and that all went into this decision to play him and we've got to try to continue to win these games and build our team and we're not going to make any excuses and we're not going to talk about who's out...we're going to talk about who's in," Bob Richey said after his team's 78-67 road win at Chattanooga.
In keeping with the Bowser tradition established by his older brother Cooper throughout his Furman career, Cole Bowser was a perfect 3-of-3 from the field in his first game as an NCAA Division I basketball player. He also added a pair of assists on the offensive end of the floor, while turning it over only once in his NCAA Division I college hoops debut.
It could be argued that Bowser’s steal and powerful dunk just before the half, which capped a 15-0 run to end the half and saw the Paladins head to the locker room with a 39-30 lead to the break, was a definable turning point for the Paladins.
For Bowser, it was a fitting way that his first collegiate points should have come on a two-handed hammer dunk, which also kept with the theme of excited rim-rockers that have been provided by him throughout his Paladin career to this point.
Bowser’s performance on the boards and his defensive energy were a small sample size of-Furman’s overall sacrifice dedication in both areas was evident from the outset of the contest, as the Paladins posted a 39-32 edge on the glass after getting outrebounded 48-35 and held the Mocs to just 37.5% (24-of-64) from the field, as Furman posted one of its best all-around defensive performances of the season.
Cole Bowser's impact would also be notable in Furman's road win at Samford, in which the Paladins were limited to just eight scholarship players. In that game, he would again end up being a huge piece in what ended up in a 77-73 road win over the Bulldogs, which proved to be one of the biggest of the season.
In the road win in Homewood, Cole Bowser had another strong effort in 18 minutes of floor time, as he garnered his first-ever start in a Furman uniform. He finished the game with eight points and four rebounds, which included a pair of corner threes, and that would indeed become a big part of his game and one of the strengths of his game as the season would progress.

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