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PJay Smith had 25 points in Furman's 80-77 overtime win over Chattanooga in the SoCon Tournament semifinals. Photo courtesy of SoCon/Jeremy Fleming |
ASHEVILLE - From 1981 to 2021, the Furman men's basketball team played in the Southern Conference Tournament championship game just two times. On Monday night, the Paladins will play in the final for the third time in the last four seasons. In an absolute classic Sunday at the Harrah's Cherokee Center, fifth-seeded Furman knocked off No. 1-seed Chattanooga, 80-77 in overtime.
The Paladins (25-8) advance to face sixth-seeded Wofford with the SoCon title and a trip to the NCAA Tournament on the line Monday at 7 p.m. on ESPN. The Terriers (18-15) defeated seventh-seeded VMI, 85-65, in Sunday's other semifinal. It's a matchup of the lowest seeded teams to reach the final since 1988, when fifth-seeded Chattanooga topped seventh-seeded VMI in the same building Monday's title will be decided in.
Furman's victory snapped the nation's fourth-longest winning streak as Chattanooga had won 12 consecutive games. It also ended a run of seven consecutive SoCon Tournaments won by the No. 1 seed. It's just the second time since 2006 that a No. 1 seed hasn't reached the final.
"What a game. First, I want to give Chattanooga credit. Dan Earl's done a tremendous job with that group and that program. I've got a lot of respect for him. They went on a 12-game winning streak and were the hottest team in the league. Won the regular season outright. ... One of us had to lose today. Fortunately it wasn't us, but that was a heck of a ball game," Furman coach Bob Richey said. "Play after play, punch after punch, response after response, it was an unbelievable basketball game that you got five extra minutes of. Congratulations to them. It's hard to win 24 games. I'm assuming they'll get to keep playing in the NIT. Hopefully the metrics will be good enough for that."
Richey got a bit emotional when reflecting on what his program has experienced since the disappointment of last year's SoCon Tournament. Furman was the No. 5 seed last season as well, but lost to top-seeded Samford in the semifinals.
"It's been an unbelievable year in a lot of ways with this group. Glory to God for allowing me to lead it, but we had a tough day in this building a year ago in a lot of ways. ... We had a lot of things that we went through as a program the last 12 months. That hard locker room we had a year ago is the same one we entered into today," Richey said. "Sometimes life is challenging, and you've got to endure and you've got to push through. This team has been written off time and time again. ... We were underdogs yesterday to a team we swept in the regular season.
"Nobody had us winning this game today. But then you look at the little thing to the left and it says 24-8. Today it now says 25-8, which means no team in the Southern Conference has as many wins as this group. But everybody wants to talk about everybody else for some reason and that's fine, but this team has embraced that. The reason they've embraced that is because of the hard we went through in the spring when Twitter and y'all's (media) world thought that everybody was leaving our program and we had no players."
Richey extended his arms out to both sides where Nick Anderson sat to his left and PJay Smith to his right as he continued.
"You know what? We had players. More importantly, we had values and we knew what we were built on as a program. You're seeing it shine out. You're seeing these guys have a conviction. Usually in life, when you go through hard, you develop conviction which allows you to have endurance," Richey said. "We had to display that in a lot of ways today. ... We had to respond, respond and respond. To be able to lead this group and for them to be 25-8, playing for the third championship in four years, I couldn't be more proud of them.
"I've been able to coach with a tremendous peace this weekend because there's no pressure when you have purpose. This group right here has created purpose. You can see it when they play. You can see the resolve, the resiliency and the connection they're playing with."
It was a back-and-fourth game all night as they were 16 lead changes and 10 ties. In the final seconds of the first half, PJay Smith's three-pointer cut Chattanooga's lead to 35-34 at the half. Despite losing each of the regular season meetings, Sunday was the first time that the Paladins trailed the Mocs at the break.
At different points this season, Furman has had different players step up offensively. It seemed like that could be something that pays off this time of year and it did Sunday. Charles Johnston capped an 8-0 run early in the second half with a three that gave the Paladins their biggest lead of the game at 49-41.
A couple of minutes later, Johnston had a putback of his own missed three to push the lead to eight again at 55-47 with 11:56 remaining. The Mocs (24-9) responded with a 12-0 run before Johnston ended Furman's 5:49 scoring drought with a layup. Johnston, who had scored a total of 10 points over his last eight games since Feb. 2, finished with nine points and five rebounds in less than nine minutes off the bench Sunday.
"These guys (Smith and Anderson) scored a lot of points but Garrett Hien had the highest plus-minus tonight. Ben VanderWal continues to make winning plays. Tom House and Eddrin Bronson, all those guys do too," Richey said. "What about Chuck Johnston, who played five minutes last night in the quarterfinal game, and the seven consecutive points he had tonight and the belief he played with. Every single person in that locker room has believed and that's what's been fun about this."
After Johnston's scoring streak, Nick Anderson had eight consecutive points for Furman including an off-balance floater in the lane that gave Furman a 65-64 lead. UTC's Honor Huff, who had an unbelievable shooting night tried to answer but VanderWal made a tremendous block of Huff's corner three. Undeterred, Huff made his seventh and eighth three-pointers of the game on the Mocs' next two possessions as they took a 70-65 lead with 1:33 remaining.
On Furman's ensuing possession, Smith answered with a three. After a Chattanooga turnover, Smith's fadeaway jumper tied the game with 27 seconds left. The Mocs played for the last shot of regulation. After Trey Bonham drove to the basket, Cooper Bowser blocked his layup attempt to force overtime.
Anderson hit a jumper in the paint for Furman's lone bucket in overtime, which snapped a 72-72 tie and gave the Paladins the lead for good. A key sequence came with Furman clinging to a 75-74 lead in the final minute. As the Paladins were setting up their half-court offense, VanderWal caught a pass. Wieland came racing at VanderWal to try to foul the 53.2 percent free throw shooter, but VanderWal quickly took one dribble to his left away from Wieland. He then twisted his body to avoid being fouled and fired a pass to Anderson, who drew the. Anderson, an 88.4 percent foul shooter, hit both free throws to push the lead to three with 34 seconds left.
Wieland's layup with 19 seconds to play cut the lead to one before Smith was fouled. Smith drilled both of his free throws to make it 79-76 with 16 seconds left. The Mocs then had a an inexplicable turnover as Bonham was looking at the inbounds pass from Garrison Keeslar, but then looked away after it was thrown. The ball ended up going straight to Furman's Eddrin Bronson, who fell as he collided with Bonham. From the seat of his pants, Bronson fired a pass to Anderson, who was fouled with 12 seconds left. Anderson made 1-of-2 to make it 80-76.
Bonham grabbed a rebound of his own missed layup and drew a foul with 3.4 seconds left. Bonham made the first throw and missed the second. The Mocs got a hand on the rebound before it was knocked out of bounds by Bowset, leaving UTC one last chance to tie. Bonham's long three as time expired sailed right of the rim.
After Huff's eighth three-pointer with 1:33 left in regulation, he didn't try another the rest of the game. Huff never made more than one three in the two regular season meetings against Furman, but it wasn't really needed as UTC dominated the paint in both of those games. Frank Champion did quite a bit of that damage, but unfortunately for the Mocs he was injured in practice on Tuesday and sidelined for the tournament.
"The last two games, they beat us 75-35 in the paint. So tonight's game plan was guarding the paint. We get to the first media (timeout) and it's 9-9 (all Huff threes) and they've got no paint points," Richey said. "The staff was like 'do we change up?' I was 'no, stick with the plan.' ... He's (Huff) a really good player, but we can't give up the paint. You see tonight the paint (scoring) was 32-28 (for UTC) ... so it was much tighter tonight.
"A lot of times when you play teams that shoot threes, you get caught up in it. They're going to make threes. Honor Huff's a really good player. Trey Bonham and Bash (Wieland) are really good players, and let's not act like the other guys aren't good players. What ends up happening is if you focus so much on that three-point line, you get extended. We gave up 14 unaffected layups in two games against them, so we had to make sure we stuck with our plan regardless of what was going on on the floor. We did extend a little bit of coverage on Huff once he was hot. We ended up putting PJay on him. PJay's an unbelievable defender, but you gotta pick - are we going Huff or Bonham, two of the best guards in the league. ... Typically, putting PJay Smith on somebody is a pretty good solvent for us."
Smith finished with 25 points, eight rebounds and four assists, while Anderson had 23 points for Furman. Hien was the lone other Paladin in double figures with 10 points and plus-minus of plus 13. Bowser had seven points, seven rebounds and two blocks. VanderWal had just two points, but he might have been the MVP of the game. He had seven rebounds, including six offensive, five assists, no turnovers and the big block of Huff's three.
"We wouldn't be here without Ben. He's a warrior who plays extremely hard. Like Nick (Anderson) said, Ben does everything he or I wouldn't do," Smith said. "Everybody needs somebody like that on a team. ... He's accepted his role and just makes winning plays every time."
Huff finished with a game-high 28 points and made 8-of-11 threes. Wieland had 16 points, eight rebounds and two steals, while Bonham had 14 points, five rebounds and two steals also for Chattanooga.