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PJay Smith (0) and Davis Molnar celebrate after Smith's game-winning three in Furman's 78-75 win at Wofford Saturday. Photo courtesy of Furman |
SPARTANBURG - Furman's regular season finale Saturday was a pretty good summary of much of the season. Once again, the Paladins built a big early lead. Once again, they saw that lead evaporate. Once again, Furman found a way to come out on top. PJay Smith's three-pointer with 1.1 seconds left lifted the Paladins to a 78-75 win at Wofford.
The victory clinched a fifth-place finish in the Southern Conference for Furman (23-8, 11-7). The Paladins will take on fourth-seeded Samford in the SoCon Tournament quarterfinals in Asheville. Tip-off for the final game of Saturday's quadruple header at the Harrah's Cherokee Center is scheduled for approximately 8:30 p.m.
Furman improved to 15-4 in games decided by single digits this season and enters the postseason as one of the hottest teams in the league. Only three SoCon teams head to Asheville on a winning streak: Regular season champion Chattanooga has won 11 consecutive games, while third-seeded ETSU and the Paladins have won four straight. It's the longest streak for Furman since winning six in a row from Dec. 4 to Jan. 1.
"We got off to a good start, which in this series has often been a big storyteller. ... In our game in Greenville (an 81-62 loss), we got off to a horrible start so we wanted to get a better one today," Furman coach Bob Richey said. "We knew they wouldn't go away. They did a good job and man, they got this place rocking. It got crazy and we had to survive the momentum of it. They hit the three (to go up 74-70) and we could've folded, but we didn't. We ran action that we literally drew up on the board. We haven't got to practice it at all and Garrett Hien hits the big three.
"And then PJay (hits the winner). I told him in the locker room that he earned that in April, May and June. He worked his tail off and chose to lead this team with the way he worked, the way he modeled our program values and wanting to be here. ... It's 23 wins and counting for him and his team. Not a lot of players can say that. For him to finish the regular season with that shot and that momentum, that was earned a long time ago and I couldn't be more proud of him."
The 1-3-1 zone with a big out front has been a difference maker for Furman's defense down the stretch and that continued on Saturday. After it took The Citadel 10 attempts to make its first field goal in the Paladins' previous game, it took Wofford eight tries to make it's first shot on Saturday. By the time the Terriers got on the scoreboard on Jackson Sivills' three-pointer at the 15:48 mark, Furman had already built a 12-0 lead with all of its scoring coming from Smith and Nick Anderson. During that opening four-minute stretch of seven missed shots, Wofford also had three turnovers.
Having big men like Garrett Hien and Cooper Bowser at the top of that zone has caused havoc for perimeter passing by Furman's opponents of late. Even when balls aren't deflected, the threat has still been affective. Wofford had a couple of passes that were thrown so high over defenders they ended up as out of bounds turnovers.
"I really feel like it's just given Garrett some purpose up there. It's been a nice little change up for us. It's not a zone built to just sit in for long stretches because people can get in on it, just like they did in the second half," Richey said. "It's allows us to use our length, which we have. We don't have speed. So it allows us to cover some space with that length. It helped us get a big margin. Looking back, that was a key to winning the game."
Bowser's jumper gave Furman its biggest lead at 28-9 with 8:21 remaining in the first half. The Terriers refused to just roll over and play dead though. Over a stretch of just 74 seconds, Wofford went on an 8-0 run to cut the lead to 31-22 with 5:34 left. The Paladins were able to stem that tide and took a 40-29 lead into halftime.
Wofford shot just 32.4 percent in the opening half, but that trend did not continue. Furman led 49-36 on Davis Molnar's fast break layup off a Smith steal and assist at the 15:44 mark. The Terriers answered with a 14-4 run over the next four minutes capped by Corey Tripp's step back jumper to cut the lead to 53-50.
Wofford kept things tight as Furman couldn't buy a bucket. From Anderson's layup at the 14:15 mark to his layup at the 7:57 mark, the Paladins went 0-for-7 from the field. However, they didn't lose the lead during that stretch thanks to going 7-for-9 from the foul line.
It appeared that Furman had fully regained command when Hien drilled a three-pointer to push the lead to 68-60 with 4:53 remaining. The basketball gods frowned on Hien's post-shot celebration to the other end of the floor near the Wofford student section though, as the Terriers answered with a 14-2 run to take the lead for the first time. They grabbed the lead on a three-point play by Tripp, which began with a phenomenal dunk on Hien that had the home crowd going wild. Sivills' three-pointer with 1:13 left capped the flurry and gave Wofford a 74-70 lead.
Hien, who had not scored prior to his three that preceded Wofford's run, had Furman's lone two during that run. He then answered with a huge three with 53 seconds left. After his eighth consecutive point for Furman cut the lead to one, there was no celebration this time. Instead, the Paladins locked down defensively.
Despite the Terriers keeping big man Kyler Filewich - a 33 percent foul shooter - on the floor, Furman chose not to foul him. They played straight up and with the shot clock winding down, Bowser made a great play to severely impact Dillon Bailey's driving layup attempt without fouling. On a day in which the Paladins were owned on the glass, including 17 offensive boards for Wofford, they managed to get this huge loose ball rebound when Anderson saved the ball off of Filewich's head out of bounds with 23.5 seconds left.
The teams traded pretty cheap fouls, especially given the game-on-the-line situation. After Smith made both of his free throws with 15.1 seconds left put Furman ahead 75-74, Tripp only made 1-of-2 at the other end to leave the game tied at 75-75 with eight seconds left. With Furman out of timeouts, Smith took the inbounds pass all the way to the top of the key, took a step back and drilled a long three with 1.1 seconds left.
The Paladins held on as Jeremy Lorenz's contested three-pointer at the buzzer bounced off the rim no good. Given the fact that it wasn't listed in the official play-by-play, it appears the shot would not have counted anyway.
"I feel like my teammates and coaches trust me enough to take the last shot. I just knew there was eight seconds left and we didn't have any timeouts, so I was just thinking to go out there and win for my team and I did that," Smith said. "It really wasn't a lot of pressure since we were tied. I just went out there free of mind. I go out there and practice shots like that every day, and I just ended up making that one."
Smith padded his All-SoCon resume with a game-high 26 points, four steals, three assists and one turnover. He was just 5-of-15 from the floor, but all five were three-pointers and he made all 11 of his free throws. As a team, Furman went 22-of-28 from the foul line while Wofford was 15-of-21. Anderson was the lone other Paladin in double figures with 21 points and just one turnover. Hien finished with those eight vitally important points, five rebounds, three assists and no turnovers.
The output by Smith and Anderson was even more significant given the fighting they had to do to get open enough to score. There were active hands by Wofford defenders on both of them away from the ball all night.
"Teams are going to be physical and try to knock us out of what we do, but I give credit to my coaches and teammates," Smith said. "My teammates set good screens to get us open and we end up getting good looks."
Wofford shot 60 percent from the floor in its 46-point second half. The Terriers outrebounded Furman, 39-24, for the game. They outscored the Paladins 36-18 in the paint and 18-5 in second chance points, but Furman once again found a way to victory.
With an unpredictable SoCon Tournament on deck, finding different ways to win like the Paladins have this season could prove to be quite valuable.
"Every game plan, it's 'what can you give up?' and 'what are they going to get because that's just what they do?' We can't inject Bowser with all this weight before he has to go mash up with Filewich," Richey said. "So he's (Filewich) is going to get some and they're going to make some threes, but we had to win certain aspects of it. We won the free throw line tonight, which was a huge deal to us going into the game. We won the three-point line, which is a big deal. We built a margin that allowed us to sustain some of that stuff.
"I just can't say enough about our guys' responses when adversity set in. You need that in March. ... We're headed to Asheville to take them one at a time, but this group is excited to see what they can do in this tournament."
Filewich went 8-for-10 from the floor (and 0-for-3 at the foul line) to finish with 16 points and 11 rebounds for Wofford. While he was solid on Saturday as he's been all season, his plus-minus was minus-19 during his 28 minutes on the floor. Tripp also scored 16 points, but he finished with six of the Terriers' 13 turnovers.
Smith earns Player of the Week honors
Smith's heroics Saturday helped him claim SoCon Player of the Week honors announced Tuesday. Smith's numbers in Spartanburg followed a 19-point showing in Furman's 43-point win over The Citadel last Wednesday. Smith also had four assists against the Bulldogs.
It's the fourth Player of the Week award claimed by Smith this season and first for any Paladin since conference play began.