Wofford guard Fletcher Magee set the NCAA Division I career 3-point record on Thursday night, surpassing Oakland’s Travis Bader, as the Terriers advanced in the NCAA tournament for the first time in school history.
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Magee was 0-for-11 on contested 3-pointers, an area in which he had success against Seton Hall, going 6-for-11. Though Magee said Kentucky did a good job on him, he did not necessarily think the Wildcats played him any differently than his other opponents.
“I’ve shot the shots I got tonight against every team in the SoCon, every other team I’ve played,” Magee said. “They were no harder. I just didn’t shoot it well. Some of them felt good and were short, some of them felt good and were long and some of them were just off. It’s just what happens.”
In the first round of the NCAA tournament against Seton Hall on Thursday night, Magee set the Division I career 3-point record after making seven 3-pointers against the Pirates. He ends his Wofford career with 509 3-pointers.
His previous career-worst game without a 3 came earlier this season in an 0-for-9 showing at Kansas on Dec. 4, a game Wofford lost 72-47, its lowest point total of the season. It was the fourth time in his four-year career he failed to make a 3.
What hurt the most on Saturday was knowing how close the Terriers played Kentucky, and the thought that just a few shots going in could have made the difference.
“The ride that we’ve been on — just doesn’t seem right to end on a game going 0-for-12 from 3 when if I go 3-for-12 we win the game,” Magee said. “I just don’t understand how that happens. I’m sure I won’t really get over it for a while. Sometimes that’s how the game goes.”
“If I would have played a little bit below average, we still would have beat Kentucky,” he added. “It was just a horrible performance from me, and we lost.”
Magee, known for his ability to take and make shots from any angle, said he felt his shot was a little off at the start of the game. But in the second half, he felt good about the shots he took, and thought if he could just make one, they would all start falling. So did the coaching staff, who never wavered in their belief that he would get going. They’ve seen him make too many 3s — like he did with his clutch performance in the opening round — to start going away from him.
“It’s athletics, it’s hard to understand,” Wofford coach Mike Young said. “The baseball player that goes 4-for-5, knocks four home runs the day before and goes 0-for-5 and three strikeouts and he’s in a rut. It’s athletics. It happens. I know how much he puts into it and how devastated he is, but we’ll get him through that in a hurry. He’s an all-timer.”
To his credit, Magee not only answered every question during his post-game press conference, he answered every question in the open locker room afterward, owning his performance.
“It hasn’t really hit me about what all just happened,” he said. “I’m still in shock.”
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