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| Asa Thomas had 20 points and a game-saving blocked shot with 11 seconds left in Furman's 73-72 win over Richmond Thursday. Photo courtesy of Furman |
KISSIMMEE, Fla. - Furman's Thanksgiving recipe for defeating an unbeaten team wasn't exactly perfect, but the main ingredient kept everyone from leaving and going to Cracker Barrel. That ingredient was defense. After holding Richmond to its lowest scoring output in a half in the first half Thursday, the Paladins allowed even fewer in the second half. They somehow avoided a colossal collapse down the stretch to hang on for a 73-72 win in the Imagination Bracket of the Terry's Chocolate ESPN Events Invitational at ESPN's Wide World of Sports at Disney World.
Furman's third consecutive win sends them into Friday's championship game against Illinois State at 3 p.m. It will be televised by ESPN2.
The Paladins (4-3) won despite having turnovers on each of its final five possessions, being outscored 7-0 over the final 2:45 and making just 9-of-21 free throws in the game. While Richmond did have that seven-point run to end the game, it also made just one of its last seven shots. Furman held the Spiders, who were averaging 90 points per game and had not scored fewer than 84 in any game this season, to 40.7 percent shooting.
"We're starting to figure some things out. We're not a finished product, but that's a heck of a win right there, versus a team that's really good," Furman coach Bob Richey said. "We've got to keep getting better, but man that was a fun day. The turkey's going to taste a whole lot better after that.
"We've got a lot of size and we have to find ways to utilize it. What we did today was mix in our man and our zone (defenses). In our man, we were a little bit more aggressive. We were hedging on the ball a little bit and I thought that affected their guards, who are lightning fast. They're really good with the ball in their hands and in getting to the paint. We really wanted to restrict paint because they shoot (an average of) 28 free throws per game. The reason I went to the zone was I was thinking, 'if we can eliminate the free throws, maybe we can get this win.' "
Richmond made 15-of-17 free throws Thursday.
The Spiders' Collin Tanner opened the game scoring on a three-pointer 20 seconds in. Nine seconds later, an Alex Wilkins' jumper got Furman on the board. At the 18:21 mark, Asa Thomas drilled a three off a feed from Wilkins and a tone was set for the day as the Paladins took a lead they never relinquished. Furman stretched its lead to as many as 15 with 8:26 left in the first half when a three-pointer by Wilkins capped a 12-2 run.
A late flurry by the Spiders cut the Furman lead to 43-38 at the half. Only one other team held Richmond to 38 in a half this season and that was VMI in the second half of the Spiders' 87-54 win.
"We really found a way today. Obviously in the first half we were hot there on offense and kind of stagnated in the end," Thomas said. "But our defense came through. We've been working on that in practice so much. Our guys really put it to the test today and it was great."
In the second half, Richmond made it one-score game seven different times. It could never pull even or take the lead as Furman seemingly always had a quick response. A three-point play by Richmond cut the lead to 50-47 with 16:06 remaining, but Charles Johnston answered seven seconds later with a layup. That started a 10-2 run by the Paladins over the next six minutes to push their lead to 11.
Wilkins' jumper with 3:06 left gave Furman an eight-point advantage, but it was the Paladins' last field goal attempts of the day as it went full turnover-mode the rest of the way. The mistakes on the offensive end didn't affect Furman's defensive effort at all. Thomas can attest to that.
The Paladins final turnover came with 30 seconds left when Thomas dribbled off his foot out of bounds under Richmond's basket. Rather than mope, Thomas hustled back to the other end and made a huge blocked shot of Will Johnston's potential go-ahead layup with 11 seconds left. That shot landed out of bounds, so the ball remained with the Spiders. They got two shots off in the final six seconds but each bounced away not really close to being good.
"We thought we could throw the (1-3-1) zone out there and throw them off the rhythm a little bit. We knew it wasn't going to last the whole game. (Richmond's) Chris (Mooney) is too good a coach," Richey said. "After they figured it out, we had to trust our man-to-man (defense) late.
"That's the beauty of the win. They had two cracks at a baseline out to potentially take the lead and we got two stops. To be honest with you, the two looks they got weren't good. That's our guys having the ability to really lock in."
Richmond made just 10-of-31 field goals (32.3 percent), including 3-of-14 three-pointers (21.4 percent), in the second half as Furman held it to 34 points. Richmond leading scorer Aiden Argabright had just three points on 0-of-4 shooting from the floor. Jaden Daughtry led three Spiders in double figures with 12 points.
Wilkins overcame six turnovers to score a career-high 26 points. He also had four rebounds, three assists, one steal and drew eight fouls. Thomas had 20 points and three assists, while Cooper Bowser had 10 points, five rebounds and three assists. Johnston finished with nine points and seven rebounds. It's the first time he hasn't had double figures in rebounds this season and just the second that he hasn't scored in double figures. Ben Vander Wal had five points, five rebounds, two steals and two blocks.






