GREENVILLE, S.C. (Jan. 17, 2026) — On a night when rivalry bristled as visibly as the SoCon standings, Furman seemed poised to protect its home floor and make a statement against Wofford. Timmons Arena was buzzing early and often, not just because this matchup has delivered so many classic showdowns through the years, but because both teams came in with identical 4-2 conference records and momentum to protect. What unfolded was a collision of wills in which Furman led in the first half but could not close the door, ultimately falling 74–70 to the Terriers in a game defined by tough defense, timely scoring and razor-thin margins.
Furman’s early intensity was unmistakable. The Paladins moved the ball with purpose and attacked in transition, forcing Wofford to match their physicality. When Furman built a seven-point lead by halftime, it wasn’t just the crowd that sensed control — the Paladins had done it with balance and discipline. But rivalry games often come down to critical possessions, and in the second half Wofford answered each Furman run and seized momentum late to steal the night on the Paladins’ home court.
Terriers Take Control With Second-Half Push
Wofford flipped the script in the second half with sustained aggression that began on the defensive end and then translated into points. The Terriers outscored Furman 44–33 after intermission, using a combination of perimeter shooting and physical rebounding to wear down the Paladins. Wofford’s leaders took over when the ball mattered most. Kahmare Holmes, the Terriers’ leading scorer this season, was assertive all afternoon, finishing with 21 points and pulling down seven rebounds, driving the paint and hitting key shots that kept Wofford’s comeback alive. Holmes’ ability to score under contact — something he’s done consistently this season — helped Wofford stay within striking distance as the second half progressed.
Complementing Holmes was guard Cayden Vasko, who chipped in 12 points while facilitating Wofford’s offense with poise. Vasko’s vision and decision-making in pick-and-roll situations helped the Terriers sustain pressure on Furman’s defense, especially during the late runs. Nils Machowski, Wofford’s sharpshooter, provided timely perimeter bursts, knocking down multiple threes that shifted momentum and trimmed Furman’s lead at critical junctures. Together, those contributions exemplified Wofford’s collective attack — relentless, opportunistic and efficient when possessions were paling in pressure.
Paladins Battle, But Execution Wavers Late
Furman kept pace through much of the second half on the strength of freshman guard Alex Wilkins, who continues to emerge as the heartbeat of the Paladin offense. Wilkins paced Furman with 22 points and handed out five assists, attacking closeouts and generating clean looks for himself and his teammates. His assertiveness kept Furman within striking distance late, forcing Wofford to stay disciplined on switch defense and rotation. Also contributing for the Paladins was forward Charles Johnston, whose steady presence on the glass yielded eight rebounds, and he chipped in nine points while anchoring Furman’s interior defense. Eddrin Bronson added eight points with his usual energy, hitting tough mid-range jumpers and finishing hard at the rim against aggressive closeouts.
Still, late-game execution proved elusive. A couple of contested jumpers rimmed out, transition opportunities stalled, and defensive lapses on the boards allowed Wofford crucial second-chance buckets that kept the Terriers ahead. Each time the Paladins answered, Wofford responded in kind — a sequence that underscored how narrow the margins were in this rivalry. Furman’s senior leadership showed moments of brilliance, but on this night the Paladins couldn’t sustain the consistency needed in the final minutes.
Numbers That Told the Story
The first half belonged to Furman, which posted 37 points in the opening stanza to Wofford’s 30, reflecting disciplined offense and aggressive rebounding. After halftime, however, the Terriers’ 44 points spoke to a shift in momentum and execution. Furman’s depth and balanced scoring — led by Wilkins’s 22 — kept them competitive, but Wofford’s collective push in the second half proved decisive.
The Terriers’ ability to convert on key possessions and control the pace — despite Furman’s early lead — was reflected in the final tally. Holmes’s 21 points and Vasko’s 12 were the core drivers of Wofford’s scoring, with solid spacing and timely threes keeping pressure on the Paladins. Furman’s stat line showed a strong night from its top contributors, but the late swings in possession and points off turnovers chipped away at a lead that had felt secure at intermission.
What It Means for Furman
Losses in rivalry games tend to leave deeper marks, especially when home court and a first-half advantage were firmly in hand. For Furman, this one stings not because the effort lacked intensity — it didn’t — but because the Paladins were in a position to close it out. Wilkins’s continued growth as a primary offensive weapon remains a highlight of the night, and Johnston’s work on the boards showed that Furman’s interior presence is still a force in the SoCon.
As conference play tightens and every matchup inches the standings closer, attention will turn to how Furman responds. The Paladins now head into their next stretch with a clear challenge: protect home floor and convert leads into wins against teams like Wofford who match them physically and strategically. If Furman’s identity in the SoCon is going to be defined this season, it will be by the lessons learned from nights like this one — and how quickly they translate into sharper execution moving forward.

