Sunday, January 4, 2026
Sha Sounds Off: Creighton
UConn’s lack of A-game not a concern as Huskies power past Marquette
5 Thoughts: Seton Hall stuns Creighton with another comeback
Western Carolina downs Furman in OT for resilient road win
By Justin Mathis (@J_Math23)
GREENVILLE, S.C. – After winning a thriller earlier this week to close out the previous year, Furman aimed to start 2026 on the right foot against a very tough Western Carolina squad to end the opening week of Southern Conference play.
The sellout crowd at Timmons Arena got its money’s worth, but only one group donning purple would leave ecstatic after this one. On this night, the Catamounts (5-8, 1-1 SoCon) emerged from the battle with an 80-77 overtime victory over the Paladins (10-5, 1-1), the first for Western Carolina in Greenville since November 28, 2012.
With less than two minutes left in the opening half, WCU’s Cord Stansberry and Marcus Kell each drilled three-pointers to create a 38-27 lead, only to see Charles Johnston drain a triple and Alex Wilkins swish a no-doubter from behind the mid-court logo, slicing the Catamount lead to 38-33.
“The place was rocking and unfortunately, I didn’t have our team ready to play in that first half at the necessary intensity and effort that is required to win in league games,” lamented Furman head coach Bob Richey. “We got beat up on the backboard and did a poor job defending the three-point line. I thought that when we finally woke up, we played pretty good basketball, but we didn’t play good enough to win it.”
Furman used an 8-2 burst over the first four minutes of the second half to pull within two points, and later surged ahead 44-42 on consecutive baskets by Wilkins. However, the lead was short-lived, as Justin Johnson and Kell quickly combined for a 7-0 burst and five-point Catamount cushion.
The Paladins jumped ahead by one point via an Asa Thomas triple, but Western Carolina picked up a trio of baskets – two from Tidjiane Dioumassi and a Kell layup – to reclaim a 58-53 lead. In the final 2:30 of regulation, each side only tallied one field goal as Wilkins scored a layup for a two point Paladin advantage, but Julien Soumaoro countered with one of his own, tying the game at 65.
In overtime, Kell knocked down a jumper and Tom House hit a three-pointer, which made for a 68-67 Furman lead less than a minute into the extra frame. On the next Catamount possession, Soumaoro earned a trip to the charity stripe, making both shots for a 69-68 Western Carolina lead.
Those two free throws kickstarted a 9-0 Catamount run that included a Kell triple and two Dioumassi free throws for a 76-68 advantage with 1:15 to play.
“It’s good,” said Western Carolina head coach Tim Craft about being able to go to Soumaoro, who he previously coached at Gardner-Webb. “He has a lot of trust in us, and we have a lot of trust in him. When things get rocky at different points in the game, he’s pretty calm out there and pretty poised. He definitely makes a difference out there.”
Thomas was fouled on a three-pointer and made all three shots at the line, trimming the margin to five. On the next trip up court, Soumaoro drained a fadeaway jumper from the left side, pushing the Catamount lead to seven with 40 seconds left.
Things got crazy late as Furman employed a full court press, forced back-to-back Western Carolina turnovers on inbound passes, and converted them into layups by Johnston and Wilkins, respectively, and sliced it down to a 78-77 margin with 23 seconds remaining. The Catamounts got the next inbounds pass to Stansberry, who was fouled and made both free throws, securing the road win for Western Carolina.
“That’s a great team win,” Craft stated. “We showed a lot of resilience and toughness to bounce back from the loss on Wednesday. I think that says a lot about our confidence to make plays down the stretch. We had to make a couple of big shots like Julien Soumaoro’s pullup to get it to five. Obviously, the press offense with under 30 seconds left wasn’t very good and we’ve got to do a better job with that, but we had a big enough lead to be able to withstand some of that.”
Conversely, Richey does not subscribe to any ideas or suggestions that point to absences and injuries on the Paladins’ side of things as reasons for losses or shortcomings.
“I don’t want to hear injuries. I am not interested in that,” Richey stated without hesitation. “We had enough for the Mercer game, didn’t we? We felt like we had enough in the Charleston Southern game. We can’t switch the narrative, bail ourselves out, and say we’ve got injuries. Injuries had nothing to do with why (Western Carolina) hit 10 threes and 17 offensive rebounds on us, and we missed nine free throws. There’s a certain way you’ve got to play, and we failed in that area today.”
“We’re going to get better from this and I’ve got full confidence in that. What this team has shown to this point is they’re willing to figure some things out. We’re going to stare at this one right in the face, look at it, call it exactly what it is, and not let anybody set a narrative that this is on injuries. This is on guts, effort, rising up, playing harder, and competing. That’s what this is on and that’s where we’ve got to make a decision. That is exactly what we’re going to do.”
Wilkins paced the Paladins with 24 points and six assists, both of which were game highs. Johnston tallied 14 points and six rebounds, while Ben Vander Wal finished with 11 points, eight rebounds, and six assists. As a team, Furman was 11-for-32 from long distance and 8-for-17 from the charity stripe. The Paladins outscored Western Carolina, 34-28, in the paint, and 16-3 in fastbreak points. Furman will travel to Chattanooga on Wednesday before hosting VMI on Saturday at 2 p.m.
Soumaoro posted a team-high 16 points and eight boards for Western Carolina, while Kell also tallied 16 points. Stansberry notched 15 points, along with 12 points from Dioumassi. WCU won the rebound battle, 48-35, and shot 10-for-20 from the arc. Western Carolina outscored Furman 18-9 in second chance points, 17-11 in bench points, and 16-13 in points off turnovers. The Catamounts begin their longest two-game SoCon road trip of the season Wednesday at Samford before visiting The Citadel on Saturday at 1 p.m.
Saturday, January 3, 2026
Costly miscues from St. John’s rear their head in disappointing loss to Providence
Inside the Numbers: Bellarmine at Queens
CHARLOTTE – For anyone around the ASUN who hasn’t
been inside Curry Arena and relied solely on numbers, they may wonder why Chris
Ashby was the league’s Preseason Player of the Year.
Saturday, Ashby answered everybody’s questions. Eleven times.
The senior star set multiple personal records, including a
career-high 34 points, as Queens rewrote the school’s record book in a 98-76
offensive outburst over Bellarmine to move to 2-0 in the ASUN.
You know what happened.
Now, let’s go…Inside the Numbers!
- Of all the numbers that stood out from this game – and, as an editor’s note, this is why we’re breaking down the game this way, instead of via a game story – the three-ball obviously carried the day. Queens turned in record performances in numbers of threes attempted (54), made (24), and Ashby’s career-high and Division I best for a Royal (11).
“Obviously, we have record-breaker over here knocking down 11 threes,” Leonard said, while pointing at Ashby. “The hard thing about guarding us is that we allow a lot of guys to bring the ball up – and even (forward) Maban (Jabriel) at times, who’s 6-foot-9. Teams have got to figure out how they’re going to stop that. They decided to play zone and let us shoot 54 threes, which was an interesting decision.”
- Ashby broke a three-point dry spell in the conference opener against Eastern Kentucky, then had Saturday’s career effort. Ashby’s 20 three-point attempts was not a record – or really close – but the Houston native was incredibly effective. Ashby recorded a plus-28 in his time on the floor, which was by far the highest of any Royal.
“It feels good,” Ashby said. “I’ve put in the work, and my teammates just kept trusting me and getting me the ball.”
For his part, Ashby was at least a little aware of the record.
“I knew my record was 10. I didn’t know the school record was 10,” Ashby said. Leonard replied, “It was your record to start, so you broke your own record.”
- Queens tied a season-low in surrendering just three offensive rebounds to the Knights on the day. The Royals also allowed three in a loss to Villanova earlier this season. The mark eclipsed Queens’ prior season-low in a victory, set just two days prior against Eastern Kentucky.
Leonard should have been pleased with that number after the game, right? Well…
“I was pissed about all three,” Leonard said. “I thought we should have had them all. We told them – this is not a joke, I know we were plus-13 on the glass – but before the game, we said we were going to have a party on the glass. We ended up with 13 offensive rebounds to their three – that’s 10 extra possessions.”
“If you’re going to give us 12 more shots and then let us shoot a bunch of threes, we’re going to win. I’m just saying – I appreciate that our guys (repeatedly) went to the glass. They didn’t always get it, but you keep going, you stay consistent, and you wear them down.”
- Leonard was annoyed – coaches always are, in some way – with the Royals’ ball security in the second half. Even still, the result outweighed the annoyance.
“I was super pissed about the turnovers in the second half, because I didn’t think we should have eight. We were still plus-two in that margin.”
Despite the unforced errors, Queens still allowed just eight Bellarmine points off turnovers. The Royals turned 14 Knight miscues into 19 points.
- Saturday demonstrated the Royals’ versatility. Just shy of
48 hours after scoring 50 points in the paint against EKU, Queens notched just
18 in the lane against Bellarmine. This came largely due to the Bellarmine zone
allowing the Royals to pass out of the top of the key and find open shooters.
- Queens set yet another season-high offensively, dishing 27 dimes on 33 made shots. The Royals’ prior season-high was 24 against South Carolina State in mid-December.
“That’s probably my most favorite statistic is the amount of assists,” Leonard said. “Twenty-seven assists for a team is phenomenal. Hats off to these guys. I’m just proud of their effort.”
The Royals have recorded four 20-assist games this season. Along with the 24-assist effort against South Carolina State, Queens helped on 23 buckets against Gardner-Webb and 20 against Sacred Heart.
“I know that our guys play for a spirit and for each other,” Leonard said. “We run the floor for each other. We cut for each other. We screen for each other and we get paint touches for each other.”
- Guard Nas Mann epitomizes the team atmosphere with which Queens plays. Mann continued his development in 2025-26 by nearly logging a triple-double with eight points, eight assists, and 10 rebounds.
“Nas is an unbelievable player, in that he just makes the right play,” Leonard said. That’s why he’s gone from a good player last year to an elite player this year. They all trust each other and they play to their strengths.”
Mann explained the evolution of his game.
“We were talking over the summer, and the biggest thing they wanted me to do was that they said, ‘We want you to be Josh Hart for our team. Josh Hart rebounds, he scores, he passes, and I responded to them and said I couldn’t pass,’” Mann joked. “I surprised myself, and now I’m over here. You’ve got unbelievable shooters around me. You’ve got Chris, you’ve got (forward) Carson (Schwieger), you’ve got (forward Yoav) Berman.”
“It’s really all just slowed down for me. I’m seeing the lanes open up. I’m seeing my shots open up. I’m playing through my jump shot and playing off two feet. It’s really just the work and watching film, (along with) my coaches and teammates and all the faith they have in me.”
Ashby’s 34 led Queens and all scorers. Ashby hit 11-of-21
tries (11-of-20 from three) on the day. Three Royals joined him in doubles,
including Schwieger’s 17 on 6-for-12 shooting (5-for-11 from distance), 12 for
Jordan Watford to go with his eight helpers, and 11 for Berman. Queens
connected on 33-of-67 (49.3 percent) from the field and 24-of-54 (44.4 percent)
from beyond the arc. The Royals sank 8-of-13 (61.5 percent) from the line.
Star Bellarmine forward Jack Karasinski exceeded his 21
points per game average, booking 24 on 7-for-12 shooting and a perfect 5-of-5
from distance. Brian Waddell added 15 on 7-of-11 shooting, with Kenyon Goodin
scoring 11 and Tyler Doyle contributing 10. The Knights hit 25-of-48 tries
(52.1 percent) and knocked down 45 percent (9-of-20) from distance. Bellarmine
went to the line 25 times, hitting 17 (68 percent).
Bellarmine returns to Louisville for a pair of home games,
beginning with a Thursday tilt against 2-0 Central Arkansas. The Knights and
Bears are set for a 7:00 (Eastern) tip from Knights Hall, with streaming
coverage over ESPN+. Queens ventures to the Sunshine State for the first of a
pair against Jacksonville Thursday night. Game time from Swisher Gym is set for
7:00, with ESPN+ handling the stream.
QUEENS 98, BELLARMINE 76
BELLARMINE (5-9, 0-2 ASUN)
Waddell 7-11 0-0 15, Donald 1-4 0-0 2, Karasinski 7-12 5-9
24, Goodin 3-5 3-4 11, Bolden 0-2 0-0 0, Doyle 3-5 3-4 10, Watkins 0-0 3-4 3,
Wilson 2-4 1-2 5, Hunter 0-2 0-0 0, Whitaker 1-2 0-0 2, Neal 1-1 0-0 2, Clark
0-0 2-2 2, Wassler 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 25-48 17-25 76.
QUEENS (7-8, 2-0)
Parker 3-3 2-3 9, Schwieger 6-12 0-1 17, Mann 3-8 1-3 8,
Ashby 11-21 1-2 34, Berman 4-10 0-0 11, Watford 3-5 4-4 12, Larson 1-1 0-0 2,
Jabriel 1-3 0-0 3, Clark 1-3 0-0 2, Henry 0-1 0-0 0, Celestin 0-0 0-0 0, Crider
0-0 0-0 0. Totals 33-67 8-13 98.
Halftime: Queens 50-40. 3-Point
goals: Queens 24-54 (Parker 1-1, Schwieger 5-11, Mann 1-5, Ashby
11-20, Berman 3-8, Watford 2-4, Jabriel 1-3, Clark 0-2, Henry 0-1), Bellarmine
9-20 (Waddell 1-3, Donald 0-2, Karasinski 5-5, Goodin 2-3, Bolden 0-1, Doyle
1-2, Wilson 0-1, Hunter 0-2, Whitaker 0-1). Fouled out: NA. Rebounds: Queens 40 (Mann 10), Bellarmine
27 (Goodin 6). Total fouls: Queens 23, Bellarmine 17.
Technicals: NA.
Friar freshmen outduel St. John’s seniors as PC topples Johnnies at MSG
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Iona recovers from Mount misstep with resilient win over Siena
Friday, January 2, 2026
Queens clamps down on defense, outlasts EKU in battle of top ASUN teams
CHARLOTTE – New Year’s Day marked the opening day of
ASUN conference play for 2026. Based on how Thursday’s game between Queens and
Eastern Kentucky went, it very well could have been a preview of what may take place
the final day of the league’s tournament in Jacksonville.
Queens placed five scorers in double figures and broke open
a 40-minute heavyweight bout with a late 11-3 run to finally fend off EKU,
91-89, at Curry Arena.
“Hats off to EKU,” Queens coach Grant Leonard said after the
game. “(Coach) A.W. (Hamilton)’s club has been the winningest program in the
ASUN over the last three years, and we knew they were going to come in here and
battle like crazy.”
As demonstrative as Leonard’s words were, they may have been
an understatement.
Eastern Kentucky (4-10, 0-1 ASUN) scored six of the game’s
first seven points, as Queens missed its first five shots. Avantae Parker
started the festivities for the Royals, booking an and-one that nearly erased
the Colonels’ early lead. Queens (6-8, 1-0) seized the lead with a 6-0 run that
set the tone for a back-and-forth affair until the final horn. The sides
struggled to create separation in an opening half that was largely separated by
no greater than two possessions.
Queens looked to gain some breathing room with a 7-0 run
that stretched the Royals’ lead to 44-35. The burst was punctuated by a high-effort
put-back bucket by Parker over two Colonels, which led to an extremely rare fist-pump
and yell from Leonard before the Royals’ big man went on to make the free
throw.
“The emphasis for us was for urgency in this game,” Leonard
said. “I thought that was our most urgent play in the entire game. (Guard)
Chris (Ashby) pulled up for three, which is what we wanted him to do. Avantae
went up one-on-two and won the ball and put it back in for an and-one.”
Leonard then addressed Parker’s earning the team’s adopted
mascot, Buddy the Street Dog.
“He’s got Buddy the Street Dog for a reason,” Leonard said. “It’s
his for the day. He earned it. I thought
he was the hardest-playing guy on the floor.”
The burst would be quickly countered, however. Eastern
Kentucky closed the half on a 14-2 run, buoyed by four straight three-pointers –
three of them from guard MJ Williams – to take a 49-46 advantage to the
interval. Despite the quick burst, Williams would manage just two second-half
points – largely because of a reminder from Leonard and his staff.
“I had some choice words for them (at the half),” Leonard
said. “He’s one-hand dominant and he’s small, so he shouldn’t be able to shoot
over you. If he’s shooting (over you), there’s not enough ball pressure being
applied. I thought (that) in the second half, he was way more contested, there
was way more pressure, and he was way more sped-up.”
Queens bounced back from the break with three consecutive
Parker buckets as part of a run that again leveled the score at 56 following a
Yoav Berman basket. The sequence of ties and narrow leads for both sides again
ensued throughout much of the second half, creating similar drama to a game
played in March. Even when Carson Schwieger canned a triple in front of the
Royals’ bench to extend the lead to four, the fans seemed unable to exhale.
As the Royals finally managed to break free a bit with a run
in the final four-minute segment of the game, the reason Williams struggled in
the second half also proved to be the catalyst for Queens – freshman guard
Jordan Watford. Watford got it done on defense, providing several key stops,
including one on Colonels guard Turner Buttry that jarred the ball loose and
compelled a 10-second violation. He got it done on offense, recording six
straight Royal points during the surge. Most importantly, he got it done by
responding to his coach’s challenge.
“(Leonard) told me straight up that you can’t play if you’re
not going to guard,” Watford said. “That’s kind of been the label on me –
people have been saying I can’t guard. That’s not the label I want. I want to
be able to show I can guard.”
“(That was) unbelievable character from Jordan,” Leonard
added. “To take that – to get put on the bench and to respond. In the first
half, he was by far the best defensive player (at) pressuring the ball. That’s
character, and I appreciate that from Jordan. He’s always had it. Now he’s just
got to maintain it.”
Berman proved to be another defensive standout. As effective
as Berman was on the offensive end of the floor, his slowing down of EKU
forward Montavious Myrick earned special plaudits from Leonard.
“Berman’s a fantastic player, and I wouldn’t be shocked if
he’s our leading scorer at the end of (the) conference (season). He’s actually
been one of our best defenders, as well,” Leonard said. “He guarded Myrick a
bunch down the stretch and did the best job on him.”
“Hats off to Berman. He can guard guards. He can guard
forwards. He’s really physical, and his basketball IQ is off the charts. I’m
really happy with where Berman’s at.”
Ashby also broke an 0-for-15 string from three during the
game, draining a triple in front of the Royals’ bench. Leonard has full
confidence in his star guard.
“He was 1-for-8 -- alright, he was 1-for-8, and I wish he had
shot more, but he's still a plus in the plus-minus, and Chris is a leader by
example,” Leonard said. “He's often the toughest dude. He never says anything
(negative).”
“We all love Chris, and he makes every single guy on our
team better, because of the way he practices and how hard he works. We all
trust Chris. Chris is an unbelievable
player.”
Eastern Kentucky coach A.W. Hamilton offered praise for
Queens after the game.
“Give them credit,” Hamilton said. “They got 50 points in
the paint. They got the calls and they outplayed us. We had a shot right at the
end. We let this one get away.”
Watford led Queens with 17 points on 6-for-10 shooting and
5-for-5 from the line in 19 minutes of reserve duty, logging a team-leading plus-20
during his time on the floor. Parker booked 16 and a season-high eight boards.
Berman tallied 14 on 6-for-9 shooting, while Nas Mann knocked down 7-of-8 free
throw tries to finish with 12. Maban Jabriel logged 11 in 19 minutes off the
bench.
The Royals shot 50.8 percent (31-for-61) from the field,
shaking off a 5-for-24 (20.8 percent) effort from distance. Queens also shot
77.4 percent (24-for-31) from the line.
Williams led EKU and all scorers with 18, hitting 6-of-12
from the field and 4-of-8 from three. Myrick added 16 on 6-of-12 shooting. Buttry
finished with 14, while Jackson Holt poured in 13 off the bench and Juan
Cranford tallied 12. The Colonels shot 49.2 percent (30-for-61) while hitting
42.4 percent (14-for-33) from beyond the arc. EKU hit 71.4 percent (15-for-21) from the stripe.
Eastern Kentucky travels to The Coliseum in Carrollton, Ga.,
to take on West Georgia Saturday afternoon. Tip time is set for 2:00 (Eastern),
with streaming planned for ESPN+. Queens remains at home to welcome Bellarmine
to Curry Arena. Game time is set for 3:00, with ESPN+ handling the coverage.
QUEENS 91, EASTERN KENTUCKY 89
EASTERN KENTUCKY (4-10, 0-1 ASUN)
Buttry 3-7 5-5 14, Cranford 4-13 2-2 12, Myrick 6-12 4-9
16, Ball 2-4 0-0 6, Paul 2-2 2-2 6, Williams 6-12 2-3 18, Harris 0-0 0-0 0,
Cooper 2-3 0-0 4, Holt 5-9 0-0 13, White 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 30-61 15-21 89.
QUEENS (6-8, 1-0)
Mann 2-8 7-8 12, Parker 6-7 4-9 16, Ashby 1-8 0-0 3,
Schwieger 3-7 1-2 9, Berman 6-9 2-2 14, Watford 6-10 5-5 17, Henry 0-1 2-2 2,
Clark 1-3 0-0 2, Larson 2-3 1-1 5, Jabriel 4-5 2-2 11. Totals 30-58 15-21 82.
Halftime: Eastern Kentucky 49-46. 3-Point
goals: EKU 14-33 (Buttry 3-7, Cranford 2-9, Ball 2-4, Williams 4-8,
Holt 3-5), Queens 5-24 (Mann 1-4, Ashby 1-8, Schwieger 2-6, Berman 0-2, Clark
0-2, Jabriel 1-2). Fouled out: NA.
Rebounds: Queens 37 (Parker 8), EKU 29 (Myrick 7). Total
fouls: EKU 26, Queens 18. Technicals: NA.



