GREENVILLE, S.C. — The first roar came midway through the opening half, the kind that rattles the rafters at Timmons Arena and lets an opponent know the afternoon is about to get uncomfortable. By the final horn, Furman had turned that noise into a statement. Behind a suffocating second-half defensive effort and a balanced offensive attack, the Paladins pulled away from VMI for a commanding 69–48 Southern Conference victory Saturday, the kind of win that feels heavier than the score suggests.
Furman, now 12–5 overall and 3–1 in league play, absorbed VMI’s early resistance before tightening the vise after halftime. What began as a measured chess match evolved into a showcase of discipline, depth and physicality — the hallmarks of a Paladin team finding its stride as conference play deepens.
Measured Start, Steady Control
The opening 20 minutes were anything but flashy, but they unfolded on Furman’s terms. The Paladins dictated pace, moved the ball patiently and prevented VMI from finding easy looks in transition. Senior guard Alex Wilkins set the tone early, probing the defense, knocking down perimeter shots and calmly orchestrating Furman’s offense when possessions slowed.
VMI refused to go quietly. TJ Johnson powered the Keydets with his versatility, scoring inside and stretching the floor to keep the visitors within reach. Walker Andrews added timely perimeter shooting, and VMI capitalized on a few Furman miscues to keep the margin manageable. Still, every small surge by the Keydets was met with a composed response, and Furman carried a 34–27 lead into halftime without ever feeling rushed.
Second-Half Surge Breaks It Open
Whatever drama lingered at the break evaporated quickly. Furman emerged from the locker room with sharper edges — closing driving lanes, contesting every catch and turning missed shots into momentum. The Paladins opened the second half with an emphatic run that pushed the lead into double figures and forced VMI to chase the game.
Wilkins continued to lead by example, finishing with a team-high 17 points, while sophomore Eddrin Bronson delivered the kind of bench performance that tilts games. Bronson buried four three-pointers, each one arriving at a moment that sapped VMI’s confidence and sent the home crowd to its feet. Ben Vander Wal added 11 points and did the quiet work inside, cleaning the glass and finishing through contact as Furman steadily widened the gap.
Defensively, the Paladins were relentless. VMI struggled to find clean looks, shooting under 30 percent for the game as Furman outscored the Keydets 35–21 after halftime. What had been a seven-point game at the break turned into a grind for VMI, with every possession contested and every rebound hard-earned.
Depth, Discipline and a Defining Edge
The numbers told the story Furman wanted to write. The Paladins owned the glass, outrebounding VMI 48–32, and turned defensive stops into extended possessions. Three Furman players finished in double figures, a reflection of an offense that doesn’t rely on one voice but thrives when everyone speaks.
For VMI, Johnson led the way with 15 points and Andrews added 10, but the Keydets couldn’t overcome Furman’s physicality or the steady accumulation of small advantages — an extra rebound here, a deflection there — that eventually buried them.
A Win That Resonates
As the final seconds ticked away and the crowd rose one last time, this win felt less like a routine conference result and more like a reminder. Furman didn’t overwhelm VMI with spectacle. It outworked, outthought and outlasted the Keydets — possession by possession, stop by stop.
In January, games like this matter. They don’t always make headlines, but they shape seasons. And on this afternoon inside Timmons Arena, Furman showed it has the depth, resolve and edge to turn steady pressure into something louder — a warning to the rest of the Southern Conference that the Paladins are settling in, and they’re not done climbing.

