
It’s tougher this year at the Home of the Paladins. The home is away from home, though not too far.
Furman misses the homecourt advantage of Timmons Arena, which made Wednesday night’s 72-70 victory over Samford all the more significant. Timmons rocks, and next season will rock exponentially — $40 million is one measure – more.
Wednesday night’s victory kept Furman in the SoCon race, evening the home conference record at 2-2. Last year Furman was 6-2.
Guard Nick Anderson scored 17 of his season-high 24 points in the first half and Cooper Bowser went 8/8 from the field to add a career-best 21 to help Furman outlast Southern Conference-leading Samford, 72-70, Wednesday night in front of a national television audience on CBS Sports Network from Bon Secours Wellness Arena in front of 2,737.

Head coach Bob Richey called it “a chess match all game.
“You learn a lot more through the experience than the lesson,” he said.
The Paladins never trailed en route to improving to 17-5 overall and 5-4 in the SoCon. Samford slipped to 17-5 overall and 7-2 in league play.
Furman averages 2,500 at home, mostly at Bon Secours Wellness Arena.
The Paladins ulit a 51-39 lead in the second half with a 12-3 run, capped by back-to-back baskets from PJay Smith Jr. and Charles Johnston, with 12:13 to play. Samford mounted a late rally behind the shooting of Rylan Jones and Trey Fort to pull even at 65-65 on Lukas Walls’ layup with 3:38 on the clock.


Ben Vander Wal converted on 1/2 trips to the foul line to put the Paladins back in front and Anderson finished a pair of opportunities in the paint, the second coming with 1:49 remaining, to give Furman a 70-65 advantage. Walls’ three-point play with under 30 seconds left trimmed the Paladin lead back to just two points before Bowser was fouled on a long pass up court against the press with under 13 seconds on the clock. The sophomore hit both free throw attempts to increase the lead to 72-68.
Josh Holloway rushed up the floor and converted a layup with 5.9 seconds left and the Bulldogs fouled Smith to send the senior to the line. Smith missed both free throws, but Fort’s three-pointer from deep on the left wing as time expired caromed off the rim.
Furman shot .491 from the field to overcome a 7/24 effort behind the arc and 11/21 performance at the foul line. The Paladins outscored Samford 38-34 in the paint and 21-20 on points off turnovers.

Anderson connected on 9/13 shots, including 5/8 from three to score his 24 points while Bowser was perfect from the floor and 5/7 at the line to reach his career high. Vander Wal grabbed a game-high nine rebounds and dished out a career-best six assists for the Paladins.
Jones led the Bulldogs with 19 points and Fort finished with 12. Samford shot just .415 from the field. The Bulldogs hit 9/25 from 3-point range and 7/9 shots at the foul line.
Furman will play its second straight game on CBS Sports Network when it faces ETSU in a 2 p.m. matchup on Sunday at Freedom Hall in Johnson City, Tenn. Fans can listen to the action on The Fan Upstate at 97.7 FM and 1330 AM in Greenville, 97.1 FM and 1490 AM in Spartanburg, and via the Audacy app.
Take a look at the stats here.

Wellpilgrim.com is adjusting to the winter chill. Meanwhile, I’m fresh out of the hospital. It’s gonna take a while. I appreciate your patience and support.
Times are changing. I am aware of how irrelevant what I do for a living has become and thus how unimportant my efforts are. The readers appreciate them, but there aren’t enough of them. I doubt there ever will be again.
It’s what I do. It’s what I know.

Support the advertisers. They are all fine people who want their businesses associated with honest coverage of local sports.
In the off chance you’d like to read my novels and other books, they’re available on Amazon and many prominent bookseller sites.
You can read them on your phones and other devices for a modest cost. I make a bit more if you purchase the actual books, but what I mainly want is for folks to read them.
The Latter Days is a baseball novel about a former player and manager, Clyde Kinlaw, trying to prove the game hasn’t passed him by. His proof is a raw talent named Taiquan Wattson.
Thanks for putting up with me.


