AUBURN, Ala. — It was a hard night under the bright lights of Neville Arena for Wofford. After a spirited start, the Terriers found themselves outmanned, out-paced and ultimately out-classed, falling 93-62 to Auburn on Tuesday night. The final margin tells only half the story—what matters more is what the scoreboard revealed about the gap between a hungry SoCon squad and a polished, loaded Power Five program.
Early Fire, Then a Freeze
For a while, Wofford looked like the team that had turned heads just days earlier. Guard Kahmare Holmes attacked with confidence and composure, while Chace Watley knocked in a couple of early buckets to keep the Terriers in striking distance. At one point, the Terriers were hanging tough, hustling for every loose ball, making enough plays to believe that maybe they could withstand Auburn’s size and speed. But the chill wind of momentum shifted as halftime neared.
The Tigers closed the first half on a run that put the Terriers on their heels—a combination of length, physicality and execution that Wofford couldn’t quite match. The Terriers headed into the locker room trailing, and they knew they would need something extraordinary to reverse the tide.
Auburn Flips the Script, Wofford Struggles to Respond
When the second half began, Auburn hit the gas pedal. The Tigers knocked in early shots, pulled down the glass and ran Wofford off the floor. Forward Keyshawn Hall was the wrecking ball—20 points, 11 rebounds and 6 assists as he bullied his way wherever he pleased. The rebounding telling: Auburn 37, Wofford 20. Wofford’s three-point shooting never found daylight—5 of 23 from beyond the arc—and Auburn’s length disrupted the passing lanes and forced contested shots.
By midway through the half, the lead had ballooned to 20. The Terriers fought to stop the bleeding, but the momentum had gone. Auburn pounced on every miscue, every missed rotation and every shell-shocked moment. Wofford, to their credit, kept playing but the nights like this are less about what you do right and more about what the opponent makes you do wrong.
What Went Wrong for the Terriers
There’s no single villain in this one—just a collection of issues that compounded. Defensively, Wofford had trouble navigating the pick-and-rolls, switching smoothly and keeping up with Auburn’s downhill attacks. Offensively, the Terriers got stagnant: too many isolations, too many long rebounds, too many turnovers (12 of them) and not enough rhythm. On the glass they were outrebounded, and once the Tigers established the interior offensive rebound edge, the game slipped out of reach.
And depth? The bench couldn’t muster enough impact. Auburn simply had more bodies who could do damage, more legs, more physicality. Wofford’s upper class showed up, but the younger guys got tested—and learned.
Bright Spots Amid the Defeat
This wasn’t a total wipe-out for the Terriers. Holmes once again showed he can create and score; Watley kept showing up every time. The bench flashes were limited, but they were there. Wofford boxed out when they needed to, contested enough shots to show fight, and never looked like they gave up—even when the scoreboard said otherwise. Coach Kevin Giltner’s message afterwards made it clear: nights like this expose where you are and where you want to go.
The Road Ahead
Now comes the work. Wofford returns home with a notebook full of “here’s what happened” and “here’s how we respond” pages. The mark isn’t the loss—it’s how quickly the Terriers react. Tighten up the rotations, rebound like your life depends on it, clean up the turnovers, find a level of toughness that matches a team like Auburn and their caliber.
For the Wofford faithful: this is a bitter pill, but potentially a sweet lesson. The Terriers came, competed and were reminded of what it takes. What they do next will tell the full story.

