Paladins Dominate Second Half Behind Defense and Rebounding
GREENVILLE, S.C. — Furman needed a spark coming out of halftime. They got it — and then some.
Behind a sharp, composed 22-point performance from sophomore guard Asa Thomas, the Paladins erupted in the second half and cruised to a 79–44 victory over Ohio Christian on Wednesday night at Timmons Arena. Furman shot 52 percent, owned the glass 53–23, and suffocated the Trailblazers defensively to secure a complete home win.
It was Furman’s most convincing performance of the season — not because of the margin, but because of the way they seized control.
A Slow First Half Gives Way to a Fury of Energy
The opening 20 minutes were far from smooth.
Ohio Christian controlled tempo early, working long possessions and forcing Furman to play in the half court. Even as Thomas found his rhythm with mid-range jumpers and clean looks in transition, the Paladins couldn’t fully separate. A few rushed possessions and missed opportunities kept the Trailblazers close enough to feel dangerous.
Furman held a 32–23 lead at the break — solid, but far from the dominance they expected entering the night.
Everything flipped the moment the second half began.
A 17–4 Run Turns the Game Into a Blowout
Furman came out of the locker room with a new level of urgency.
They pressured passing lanes. They ran with purpose. They hit the offensive glass like it mattered. In just a handful of minutes, the Paladins unleashed a 17–4 run that broke the game wide open and erased any chance Ohio Christian had of hanging around.
Thomas continued to attack with confidence — hitting shots off screens, cutting without the ball, and pushing pace whenever he had a window. His ability to stay aggressive kept Furman in constant motion and sparked the team’s burst of momentum.
By the time the Trailblazers settled, the Paladins were up more than 20 and rolling.
Rebounding Sets the Tone for the Entire Night
While Thomas powered the offense, the win was built on physicality.
Furman’s overwhelming 53–23 rebounding advantage dictated the flow of the game. Second-chance points piled up, outlet passes launched fast breaks, and the Paladins repeatedly forced Ohio Christian into single-shot possessions.
The Trailblazers shot just 30 percent (17-for-57) and never established any rhythm thanks to Furman’s defensive pressure and size inside. Nearly every miss turned into immediate transition fuel for the Paladins.
The rebounding gap wasn’t just a number — it was the identity of the performance.
Thomas Sparks the Most Complete Stretch of Furman’s Season
Thomas didn’t just score; he set the tone. His 22 points on 9-of-16 shooting brought a steady, confident presence to the offense. Whether in transition, off the bounce, or spotting up, Thomas played with a poise that gave Furman direction in key moments.
As the lead grew, Furman’s ball movement sharpened, the bench contributed energy, and the defensive rotations tightened. It was the kind of full-team response that head coach Bob Richey has been demanding since the opening week of the season.
A Timely Step Forward as the Schedule Toughens
The Paladins needed a night like this — not just a win, but a surge.
After some early-season inconsistency, Furman finally strung together long stretches of connected, decisive basketball. The second-half burst was their most dominant run of the year, and the defensive discipline showed signs of genuine progress.
With more challenging opponents ahead, the Paladins now move forward with something they’ve been searching for since opening night:

