Wofford Terriers men's basketball

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The Wofford Terriers men's basketball team represents Wofford College in Spartanburg, South Carolina, United States, in Division I of the NCAA. The school's team competes in the Southern Conference. Wofford is coached by Dwight Perry, who was promoted after previous head coach Jay McAuley left the team during the 2022–23 season. Wofford plays its home games at Jerry Richardson Indoor Stadium, opened for the 2017–18 season as the replacement for Benjamin Johnson Arena.

Wofford Terriers men's basketball
2024–25 Wofford Terriers men's basketball team
UniversityWofford College
Head coachDwight Perry (2nd season)
ConferenceSoCon
LocationSpartanburg, South Carolina
ArenaJerry Richardson Indoor Stadium
(capacity: 3,400)
NicknameTerriers
ColorsOld gold and black[1]
   
Uniforms
Home jersey
Team colours
Home
Away jersey
Team colours
Away
Alternate jersey
Team colours
Alternate
NCAA tournament round of 32
2019
NCAA tournament appearances
2010, 2011, 2014, 2015, 2019
Conference tournament champions
2010, 2011, 2014, 2015, 2019
Conference regular season champions
2010, 2011, 2015, 2019

History

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Jim Neal with Wofford in 1951

The Terriers have been playing Division I basketball in the Southern Conference since the 1997–98 season. They have won four regular season SoCon Titles and five SoCon Tournament Championships and are one-time SoCon Tournament runner-ups. The Terriers currently[when?] hold a 1-5 record in the NCAA Tournament.[2] Wofford has defeated various high major opponents during their 27 years in NCAA Division I. They have beaten North Carolina twice, South Carolina twice, Georgia twice, Clemson, Georgia Tech, NC State, Seton Hall, Purdue, Tulane, Wake Forest, Texas A&M, Cincinnati, Auburn, Virginia Tech, Air Force, George Mason, and Xavier since joining D1 for the 1995-96 season.[3]

On March 8, 2010 the Wofford Terriers men's basketball team defeated Appalachian State to win the Southern Conference tournament, marking the first time Wofford qualified to compete in the NCAA tournament. Although Wofford came within a possession of upsetting 4th seeded Wisconsin in the first round, they eventually lost 49–53. The Terriers qualified for the NCAA tournament for the second time on March 7, 2011, winning the Southern Conference tournament over College of Charleston, 77-67, but they lost in the first round to BYU. Brad Loesing, point guard and 4.0 Phi Beta Kappa student, was selected first team Division 1 Academic All-American. In 2013, Wofford won the Southern Conference tournament and qualified for the NCAA tournament for the third time in five years, losing to Michigan in the second round. Wofford also won a spot in the 2015 NCAA tourney, going 28-6.[citation needed] In February 2016, Wofford set an NCAA record when it hit 17 of 21 shots from the three-point line against VMI. For the 2017 season, a new state-of-the-art basketball and volleyball arena, Jerry Richardson Indoor Stadium, opened on the Wofford campus.[4] In the 2017 season, Wofford defeated the defending national champion North Carolina Tar Heels in Chapel Hill, the first Wofford win against a ranked opponent & the first win against a Top 5 opponent in school history.[5]

During the 2018-19 season, Wofford was nationally ranked for the first time in school history. The Terriers finished with a 30-5 record and 18-0 in the Southern Conference, the first undefeated SoCon season in the modern era. As a 7-seed in the NCAA Tournament, they defeated 10th-seeded Seton Hall 84-68 in the first round, and during the game Wofford star shooting guard Fletcher Magee broke the NCAA record for All-Time Career Three Pointers made.[6] They went on to lose to Kentucky 62-56 in the second round of the NCAA tournament in a contest that garnered the second highest ratings of any game during the Round of 32.

 
Wofford Terriers in the 2019 NCAA Tournament

Fletcher went on to win the 2019 Lou Henson Award, an award given annually by CollegeInsider.com to the most outstanding mid-major men's college basketball player in NCAA Division I competition.[7] They spent the final 5 weeks in the AP Top 25 poll, finishing in the Final AP Top 25 at #19.[8] Following the season, legendary Wofford basketball coach Mike Young was hired as the new Head Coach at Virginia Tech, with Jay McAuley taking over as Wofford Head Coach.[9]

During the 2019-2020 season, Wofford beat the 17th ranked North Carolina Tar Heels again in Chapel Hill for the second time in three years.[10] They finished seventh in the Southern Conference during the regular season, but made a run in the Southern Conference Tourney, with its second appearance in the SoCon title game in as many years, losing to ETSU in the final.[11] The following season, 2020–21, the season was significantly shortened due to COVID-19 and no fans were allowed to attend games. Wofford finished Second in the SoCon during the regular season, a half game back of UNC-G. This sparked controversy as Wofford held a head-to-head advantage with UNC-G, and Wofford was not allowed to make-up a game with Samford which had been delayed and later cancelled. As a two seed in the SoCon Tournament, Wofford was upset by 7th-seed Mercer, losing 62-61.

NCAA Division I history

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After two years as a Division I independent, Wofford joined the Southern Conference for the 1997–98 season.[3]

Statistics overview
Season Coach Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Richard Johnson (Independent) (1995–1997)
1995–96 Richard Johnson 4–22
1996–97 Richard Johnson 7–20
Richard Johnson (Southern Conference) (1997–2002)
1997–98 Richard Johnson 9–18 6–8 T–2nd (South)
1998–99 Richard Johnson 11–16 8–8 3rd (South)
1999–00 Richard Johnson 14–16 8–8 3rd (South)
2000–01 Richard Johnson 12–16 7–9 5th (South)
2001–02 Richard Johnson 11–18 5–11 6th (South)
Richard Johnson: 68–126 34–44
Mike Young (Southern Conference) (2002–2019)
2002–03 Mike Young 14–15 8–8 T–3rd (South)
2003–04 Mike Young 9–20 4–12 5th (South)
2004–05 Mike Young 14–14 7–9 5th (South)
2005–06 Mike Young 11–18 6–9 5th (South)
2006–07 Mike Young 10–20 5–13 5th (South)
2007–08 Mike Young 16–16 8–12 4th (South)
2008–09 Mike Young 16–14 12–8 4th (South)
2009–10 Mike Young 26–9 15–3 1st (South) NCAA 1st Round
2010–11 Mike Young 21–13 14–4 T–1st (South) NCAA 2nd Round
2011–12 Mike Young 19–14 12–6 T–2nd (South) CBI 1st Round
2012–13 Mike Young 13–19 7–11 T–3rd (South)
2013–14 Mike Young 20–13 11–5 T–3rd NCAA 2nd Round
2014–15 Mike Young 28–7 16–2 1st NCAA 2nd Round
2015–16 Mike Young 15–17 11–7 T–3rd
2016–17 Mike Young 16–17 10–8 T–4th
2017–18 Mike Young 21–13 11–7 T–4th
2018–19 Mike Young 30–5 18–0 1st NCAA 2nd Round
Mike Young: 299–244 175–124
Jay McAuley (Southern Conference) (2019–present)
2019–20 Jay McAuley 19–16 8–10 7th
2020–21 Jay McAuley 15–9 12–5 2nd
2021–22 Jay McAuley 19–13 10–8 T-3rd TBC Withdrew[Note A]
Jay McAuley: 53–38 30–23
Total: 420–408

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

^A. After initially accepting a bid to play in the 2022 The Basketball Classic, Wofford ultimately withdrew, ahead of their game against Youngstown State.[12]

Postseason

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NCAA Division I Tournament results

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The Terriers have appeared in the NCAA Division I tournament five times. Their combined record is 1–5.

Year Seed Round Opponent Result
2010 #13 First Round #4 Wisconsin L 53–49
2011 #14 Second Round #3 BYU L 66–74
2014 #15 Second Round #2 Michigan L 40–57
2015 #12 Second Round #5 Arkansas L 53–56
2019 #7 First Round
Second Round
#10 Seton Hall
#2 Kentucky
W 84–68
L 56–62

CBI results

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The Terriers have appeared in the College Basketball Invitational (CBI) one time. Their record is 0–1.

Year Round Opponent Result
2012 First Round Pittsburgh L 63–81

CIT results

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The Terriers have appeared in the CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament (CIT) one time. Their record is 0–1.

Year Round Opponent Result
2018 Second Round Central Michigan L 94–98

National honors

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Lou Henson Award - National Mid-Major Player of the Year

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Fletcher Magee (2018–19)

Sporting News - National Coach of the Year

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Coach Mike Young (2018–19)

AP All-America Team

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Noah Dahlman (2009–10) [13]

Fletcher Magee (2017–18) [14]

Fletcher Magee (2018–19) [14]

National Association of Basketball Coaches - All-District First Team

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Storm Murphy (2020–21)

Cameron Jackson (2018–19)

Fletcher Magee (2018–19)

Fletcher Magee (2017–18)

Eric Garcia (2016–17)

Spencer Collins (2015–16)

Karl Cochran (2014–15)

Karl Cochran (2013–14)

Brad Loesing (2011–12)

Noah Dahlman (2010–11)

Noah Dahlman (2009–10)

National Association of Basketball Coaches - All-District Second Team

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Nathan Hoover (2019–20)

Lee Skinner (2014–15)

Lee Skinner (2013–14)

Karl Cochran (2012–13)

Kevin Giltner (2011–12)

Noah Dahlman (2008–09)

Junior Salters (2008–09)

US Basketball Writers Association - Player of the Week

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Fletcher Magee (March 3, 2019)

Charleston Classic - All Tournament Team

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Jamar Diggs (2010–11)

Chicago Invitational - All Tournament Team

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Brad Loesing (2011–12)

[14]

Academic honors

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Academic All-America Team

Brad Loesing 2011–12 (1st Team)[15]

Academic All-District Team

Brad Loesing 2011–12 (1st Team)[16]

Brad Loesing 2010–11 (1st Team)[17]

Greg O'Dell 1991–92

Harold Jackson 1981–82

Southern Conference honors

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Southern Conference Player of the Year

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SoCon media first presented a player of the year award at the end of the 1951–52 season. The league's coaches began awarding their own version in 1989–90.

Southern Conference Defensive Player of the Year

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Southern Conference Freshman of the Year

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SoCon media first presented a freshman of the year award at the end of the 1978–79 season. The league's coaches began awarding their own version in 1992–93.

  • Ian Chadwick: 1997–98 (both)
  • Karl Cochran: 2011–12 (both)
  • Fletcher Magee: 2015–16 (both)

Southern Conference Coach of the Year

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SoCon media have presented a coach of the year award since the 1946–47 season. The league's coaches began awarding their own version in 1988–89.

  • Mike Young: 2009–10 (both), 2013–14 (media), 2014–15 (both), 2018–19 (both)

All–Southern Conference Team (Coaches)

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Storm Murphy 2020–21 (1st Team)

Nathan Hoover 2019–20 (2nd Team)

Fletcher Magee 2018–19 (1st Team)

Cameron Jackson 2018–19 (1st Team)

Fletcher Magee 2017–18 (1st Team)

Cameron Jackson 2017–18 (2nd Team)

Fletcher Magee 2016–17 (1st Team)

Eric Garcia 2016–17 (1st Team)

Spencer Collins 2015–16

Karl Cochran 2014–15

Lee Skinner 2014–15

Karl Cochran 2013–14

Brad Loesing 2011–12

Kevin Giltner 2011–12

Noah Dahlman 2010–11

Noah Dahlman 2009–10

Tim Johnson 2009–10

Noah Dahlman 2008–09

Drew Gibson 2007–08

Howard Wilkerson 2005–06

Mike Lenzly 2002–03

Ian Chadwick 2000–01

Ian Chadwick 1999–00

Ian Chadwick 1998–99

All–Southern Conference Team (Media)

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Storm Murphy 2020–21 (1st Team)

Nathan Hoover 2019–20 (3rd Team)

Fletcher Magee 2018–19 (1st Team)

Cameron Jackson 2018–19 (1st Team)

Fletcher Magee 2017–18 (1st Team)

Cameron Jackson 2017–18 (2nd Team)

Fletcher Magee 2016–17 (1st Team)

Eric Garcia 2016–17 (1st Team)

Spencer Collins 2015–16 (1st Team)

Karl Cochran 2014–15 (1st Team)

Lee Skinner 2014–15 (2nd Team)

Spencer Collins 2014–15 (3rd Team)

Karl Cochran 2013–14 (1st Team)

Lee Skinner 2013–14 (3rd Team)

Karl Cochran 2012–13 (2nd Team)

Brad Loesing 2011–12 (1st Team)

Kevin Giltner 2011–12 (2nd Team)

Noah Dahlman 2010–11 (1st Team)

Tim Johnson 2010–11 (3rd Team)

Cameron Rundles 2010–11 (3rd Team)

Noah Dahlman 2009–10 (1st Team)

Tim Johnson 2009–10 (3rd Team)

Jamar Diggs 2009–10 (3rd Team)

Noah Dahlman 2008–09 (1st Team)

Junior Salters 2008–09 (3rd Team)

Drew Gibson 2007–08 (3rd Team)

Shane Nichols 2005–06 (3rd Team)

Howard Wilkerson 2005–06 (2nd Team)

Tyler Berg 2004–05 (2nd Team)

Howard Wilkerson 2003–04 (3rd Team)

Lee Nixon 2002–03 (3rd Team)

Mike Lenzly 2002–03 (2nd Team)

Mike Lenzly 2001–02 (3rd Team)

Mike Lenzly 2000–01 (3rd Team)

Ian Chadwick 2000–01 (1st Team)

Ian Chadwick 1999–00 (1st Team)

Ian Chadwick 1998–99 (1st Team)

All–Southern Conference Freshman Team

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Max Klesmit 2020–21

Morgan Safford 2020–21

Sam Godwin 2020–21

Messiah Jones 2019–20

Storm Murphy 2017–18

Nathan Hoover 2016–17

Fletcher Magee 2015–16

Eric Garcia 2013–14

Spencer Collins 2012–13

Karl Cochran 2011–12

Brad Loesing 2008–09

Junior Salters 2006–07

Tyler Berg 2002–03

Justin Stephens 2001–02

Ian Chadwick 1997–98

Southern Conference All–Tournament Team

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Storm Murphy 2020–21 (2nd Team)

Chevez Goodwin 2019–20 (1st Team)

Storm Murphy 2019–20 (2nd Team)

Fletcher Magee 2018–19 (1st Team)

Nathan Hoover 2018–19 (1st Team)

Cameron Jackson 2018–19 (1st Team)

Fletcher Magee 2017–18 (1st Team)

Nathan Hoover 2017–18 (2nd Team)

Cameron Jackson 2018–19 (2nd Team)

Fletcher Magee 2015–16 (2nd Team)

Fletcher Magee 2015–16 (2nd Team)

Lee Skinner 2014–15 (1st Team)

Karl Cochran 2014–15 (1st Team)

Spencer Collins 2014–15 (1st Team)

Karl Cochran 2013–14 (1st Team)

Lee Skinner 2013–14 (1st Team)

Eric Garcia 2013–14 (2nd Team)

Noah Dahlman 2010–11 (1st Team)

Jamar Diggs 2010–11 (1st Team)

Cameron Rundles 2010–11 (1st Team)

Noah Dahlman 2009–10 (1st Team)

Jamar Diggs 2009–10 (1st Team)

Tim Johnson 2009–10 (2nd Team)

Cameron Rundles 2009–10 (2nd Team)

Southern Conference tournament Most Outstanding Player

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  • Noah Dahlman: 2010, 2011
  • Karl Cochran: 2014
  • Lee Skinner: 2015
  • Fletcher Magee: 2019

[18][19][20][21][14]

Individual season records

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Category Record Name Season
Minutes Played 1265 Brad Loesing 2011–12
Minutes Played Per Game 38.3 Brad Loesing 2011–12
Points 751 Fletcher Magee 2017–18
Points Per Game 32.6 Daddy Neal 1952–53
Field Goals Made 274 George Lyons 1963–64
Field Goals Attempted 628 George Lyons 1963–64
Field Goal Percentage (min. 100 made) 72.5 (190–262) Robert Mickle 1984–85
3–Pt Field Goals Made 158 Fletcher Magee 2018–19
3–Pt Field Goals Attempted 377 Fletcher Magee 2018–19
3–Pt Field Goal Percentage (min. 1.5/gm) 47.9 (91–190) Fletcher Magee 2015–16
Free Throws Made 224 Daddy Neal 1952–53
Free Throws Attempted 338 Daddy Neal 1952–53
Free Throw Percentage (min. 2/gm) 93.0 (93–100) Nathan Hoover 2019–20
Rebounds 609 Daddy Neal 1952–53
Rebounds per game 26.5 Daddy Neal 1952–53
Assists 223 Robert Mickle 1983–84
Assists Per Game 8.0 Robert Mickle 1983–84
Steals 107 Wayne Rice 1986–87
Blocked Shots 49 Kenny Hastie 2000–01

[18]

Individual career records

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Category Record Name Seasons
Games Played 138 Cameron Jackson 2014–19
Games Started 132 Spencer Collins 2012–16
Points 2521 George Lyons 1962–65
Points Per Game 23.3 Daddy Neal 1950–53
Field Goals Made 877 James Blair 1980–83
Field Goals Attempted 1799 Greg O'Dell 1988–92
Field Goal Percentage (min. 300 made) 66.4 (583–878) Robert Mickle 1982–85
3–Pt Field Goals Made 509 Fletcher Magee 2015–19
3–Pt Field Goals Attempted 1169 Fletcher Magee 2015–19
3–Pt Field Goal Percentage (min. 100 attempts) 43.5 (509–1169) Fletcher Magee 2015–19
Free Throws Made 515 James Blair 1980–83
Free Throws Attempted 721 James Blair 1980–83
Free Throw Percentage (min. 200 attempts) 90.8 (393–433) Fletcher Magee 2015–19
Rebounds 1500 Daddy Neal 1950–53
Rebounds per game 19.8 Twitty Carpenter 1955–58
Assists 582 Antoine Saunders 1984–87
Assists Per Game 5.5 Antoine Saunders 1984–87
Steals 289 Wayne Rice 1984–87
Blocked Shots 137 Stephon Blanding 1987–90

[18]

Individual single game records

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Category Record Name Opponent Date
Points 57 Daddy Neal Erskine 1952–53
Field Goals Attempted 40 Daddy Neal Erskine 1952–53
Field Goal Made 25 Daddy Neal Erskine 1952–53
3–Pt Field Goals Attempted 19 Fletcher Magee Chattanooga
Samford
2/17/18
1/24/19
3–Pt Field Goals Made 11 Seth Chadwick
Fletcher Magee
Mercer
Chattanooga
2/15/97
2/17/18
Free Throws Attempted 24 Daddy Neal Charleston 1/24/53
Free Throws Made 22 Daddy Neal Charleston 1/24/53
Rebounds 40 2–Tied
Assists 15 Antoine Saunders Allen 2/18/87
Steals 9 John Hawkins Gardner–Webb 1/9/95
Blocked Shots 5 3–Tied

[18]

References

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  1. ^ Wofford College Athletics Brand Book 2023. January 1, 2023. Retrieved February 2, 2023.
  2. ^ "Wofford Schedule, Scores, Results". basketball.realgm.com. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  3. ^ a b "Wofford Terriers Index". Sports Reference. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  4. ^ "Richardson Indoor Stadium". Wofford College. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  5. ^ "Reaction To Basketball Win Over UNC". Wofford College. December 21, 2017. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  6. ^ Staats, Wayne (March 22, 2019). "Wofford's Fletcher Magee breaks NCAA DI record for career 3-pointers". NCAA. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  7. ^ "The Lou Henson National Player of the Year Award". www.louhenson.com. College Insider. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  8. ^ "2018-19 AP Polls". Sports Reference. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  9. ^ "Jay McAuley - Head Men's Basketball Coach - Staff Directory". Wofford College. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  10. ^ "Wofford vs. North Carolina - Game Summary - December 15, 2019". ESPN. December 15, 2019. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  11. ^ "ETSU defeats upset-minded Wofford 72-58 to win SoCon title". USA TODAY. Associated Press. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  12. ^ "Men's Basketball Withdraws From The Basketball Classic". Wofford College. March 18, 2022. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  13. ^ "2010 All-America Team". Archived from the original on 2012-10-12. Retrieved 2010-04-05.
  14. ^ a b c d "Wofford Awards". basketball.realgm.com. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  15. ^ "Brad Loesing Named First Team Academic All-America". Wofford College. February 23, 2012. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  16. ^ "Brad Loesing Named Academic All-District". Wofford College. February 2, 2012. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  17. ^ "Brad Loesing Named Academic All-District". Wofford College. February 3, 2011. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  18. ^ a b c d "2009–10 Wofford Men's Basketball Media Guide" (PDF). Wofford College. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  19. ^ "Wofford Wins Southern Conference Championship". Southern Conference. March 8, 2010. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  20. ^ "SoCon Media Selects All-Conference Team". Southern Conference. March 3, 2011. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  21. ^ "Southern Conference men's basketball tournament Awards". basketball.realgm.com. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
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