JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — The crowd stood and applauded career three-pointer No. 505 long after Fletcher Magee and the rest of the Wofford Terriers had run back on defense. That shot, after all, had given Wofford guard Magee the NCAA Division I career record for three-pointers. An appreciation was in order.
When career three-pointer No. 509 dropped through the net, the crowd gasped before screaming. Had that really happened? Had Magee really done that? That shot, after all, had broken Seton Hall’s back and sealed the first NCAA tournament win in Wofford history. It also had defied the imagination.