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PJay Smith had 21 points and six rebounds in Furman's 73-70 win over ETSU Wednesday. Photo courtesy of Furman |
Furman didn't have a whole lot of time to figure out what exactly needed to be done between its loss to Wofford Monday and its next game against ETSU on Wednesday, but there was a sense that something had to change. While there was plenty that took place behind the scenes in those 48 hours between games, a transparent change came in the starting lineup. Freshman Eddrin Bronson made his first collegiate start on Wednesday, while Ben VanderWal came in off the bench.
A very transparent change came after tip-off as the Paladins clearly came out with more fire in their belly than they did to start the Wofford game. Neither one of those factors equated to a simple fix though. While neither team led by more than five points for the first 38-and-a-half minutes of the game, Furman trailed for more than 20 minutes. With the game on the line down the stretch though, the Paladins' defense stood tall and Furman held on for a 73-70 win.
"Tonight was a gut check for our group and I thought it was a heck of a response. We haven't been playing as well as we need to from an energy, emotion and effort standpoint. We've been playing tight. ... We lose one in Greensboro and since then, we almost look like we're in a pressure cooker," Furman coach Bob Richey said. "We showed clips this morning of some of our defense early in the year and mirrored it to clips from Monday night, just to show the difference. It wasn't by any means perfect tonight. There's still some possessions we'd like to have back, but it was better and it looked more like Furman basketball.
"It was a very good opponent. (ETSU coach) Brooks (Savage) does a great job. It was a war of a game, and I thought we had some gumption down the stretch to finish it out."
This marked the ninth time that Furman has come back from a second-half deficit to win. As has been the case in many of these games in which it "found a way", this was truly a team effort. The Paladins (15-3, 3-2 Southern Conference) trailed for most of the first half. They stayed within striking distance down the stretch of it thanks to Davis Molnar, who entered Wednesday averaging 3.3 points per game off the bench. From the 6:28 mark of the first half to the final second, Molnar accounted for all seven of Furman's points.
"Davis is one of those guys that just loves to compete. He's fearless. ... All summer and fall, he's worked on his shot and his shooting numbers are fantastic in practice. He's got to shoot with confidence," Richey said. "Davis is incredibly physical and he can play the three, the four or the five. He's a little bit like a Swiss Army knife. He can dribble it up, post it, drive guys and make shots from the hedges."
ETSU (10-8, 3-2) shot 53.8 percent in the first half but only led 36-35 at the break after Furman's Nick Anderson drilled a three-pointer at the final horn. The biggest problem for the Paladins in the opening half was the result of offensive rebounds. Furman had nine offensive boards, but only eight points off them. Meanwhile, the Buccaneers had six offensive boards and 12 points off those.
Furman made sure that didn't last in the second half. While ETSU did collect nine offensive rebounds in the second half, they scored 11 off those. A big reason the Bucs, who trail only Wofford in highest offensive rebound average in the SoCon, got so many in the second half is that they had so many more opportunities thanks to misses. The Paladins held ETSU to 31 percent (9-of-29) shooting in the second half.
After Jaden Seymour's putback cut Furman's lead to 59-58 with 6:07 remaining, ETSU didn't make another field goal until there was just 19 seconds left to play. With 3:31 left, the game was tied at 60 before Anderson's second three-point attempt of the game splashed through the net. With 2:08 left, VanderWal's putback pushed the lead to 65-60. Garrett Hien made a tremendous leaping steal along the sideline 16 seconds later. That led to a PJay Smith layup with 1:29 left as Furman took the biggest lead of the night for either team at 67-60.
Anderson's layup with 38 seconds left pushed Furman's lead to 70-62 and it looked like that might seal the win, but this game was far from over. After VanderWal missed a pair of free throws with 26 seconds left, ETSU's John Buggs drilled a three-pointer and drew a foul. Buggs completed the four-point play to cut the lead to 70-68 with 19 seconds remaining. After Smith made 1-of-2 free throws with 11 seconds left, the Bucs passed on trying for the tie. Instead, Quimari Peterson drove in for a layup with 4.9 seconds left to cut the lead to 71-70.
Smith ran back to Molnar to catch the inbounds pass, before spinning away from two defenders and racing down the sideline. Smith fired a pass to Bronson, but before he got it off a third ETSU defender had caught up and fouled him with 2.1 seconds left. Smith made both free throws this time. Everyone then held their breath as Peterson's heave from beyond half court hit the backboard and the inner front of the rim before falling away no good as time expired.
Peterson, the SoCon's leading scorer, finished with 21 points for ETSU. Seymour added 18 points and eight rebounds before fouling out.
Smith had 21 points and six rebounds to lead Furman. Anderson finished with 14 points on just 4-of-5 shooting and had four assists. After not scoring over the previous three games, Bronson had 11 points while Molnar finished with nine. Hien was huge factor Wednesday as the Paladins outscored the Bucs by 15 points during his 22 minutes on the floor. Hien had five points, seven rebounds, five assists and three steals. Two of his assists were beautiful passes from the top of the key to Bronson down low.
"Ben understood (the lineup change) and he's a great teammate. ... Ed's been a little timid lately, but he's coming along. We know what he can do, so it's just great to see him come out there and play the way he played," Smith said. "Then Ben came on and made big plays. That tip-in (to make it 65-60) was huge. They're just two great teammates."
Hien's impact on the victory started well before Wednesday.
"We're all leaving here two nights ago (after the Wofford loss) and we're miserable. I look down at my phone and it's Garrett. He said, 'I need to come talk to you. Can I come to your house?' So at 11 o'clock at night, Garrett Hien and PJay Smith walk into my house," Richey said. "They told me, 'We can't go to sleep tonight without discussing this. We've got to get this right.'
"That's the winning fabric that allows you - in a 48-hour window - to change your starting lineup, change a few different roles and do whatever we've got to do to get this thing right. That's what I'm most proud of tonight. ... I don't think people understand how hard it is to turn on a game that emotional in which you got beat that bad. Idealistically, you can think you're just supposed to wash that and flip the page. It's not that easy."
Richey met individually with a few players Tuesday evening, including VanderWal. Before Richey could begin to discuss what to do moving forward, VanderWal had an idea about the starting lineup.
"He said, 'Coach, take me out of the lineup. Don't do that to G (Hien). He's a fifth-year and I see that one of us has to come out. Let it be me.' You just don't see that. Nobody comes to you and is like, 'Coach, I get it.' " Richey said. "So then I meet with Garrett and tell him that we've got to get more spacing out there and he's got to play with more belief. ... I told him, 'I need your spirit and your leadership.'
"That's why this group has been special. We're not going to be defined by a loss or two here or there. We're going to be defined by how we finish."
How they finish is another reason for the starting lineup switch. Richey said he wanted to make it crystal clear that it was in no way a demotion for VanderWal. In the here and now, it was done to get a third shooter on the floor and space things out more. It also gives Furman the chance to bring a guy off the bench who always brings a ton of energy in VanderWal. In the long term, Richey believes Bronson's development is going to be a big part of Furman's fortunes in March.
"I don't think Ed's going to think he played perfect tonight, nor do I, but I do think he played with some swagger and aggression. This team needs a third guard that can take some stress off PJay and Nick," Richey said. "Ed's a three-level scorer who was playing unbelievable basketball this summer before his injury. ... It all comes down to what happens in March and I've got to get him these reps now to let him work through some things and build confidence.
"You're talking about an athlete, who can finish and can create. ... He's got the capability to make big plays and if we can put those on film, it changes how they're able to guard Nick and PJay."
Furman will wrap up the three-game homestand on Saturday when it hosts Chattanooga at 5 p.m. The Mocs (11-7, 3-2) enter the 100th meeting in this series coming off a thrilling 83-81 overtime win against Wofford on Wednesday. Saturday's game will be the second half of a doubleheader at The Well as the Furman women's team takes on UNC Greensboro at 2 p.m.