
Nearly neighbors and teammates, Johni Broome, Walter Clayton Jr. share Final Four stage
Advantage, Auburn, which landed Morehead State transfer Johni Broome before the 2022-23 season in a race closely contested by Golden and Florida.
On Saturday night, Broome takes the floor with the Tigers and Golden tries to show him what he's missing.
"We were excited at the opportunity to get him to be a Gator. Obviously because of his success (at Morehead State), was recruited by pretty much every big-time program around," Golden recalled Friday in San Antonio of his early pursuit of Broome. "We were fortunate enough to get in the mix, to get in the final two. I think we did a good job in a short period of time of kind of explaining our vision and kind of introducing him to our staff and kind of what we had going on.
"Bruce had been at Auburn, had been solidified as well. They do a great job as well. He decided to go be a Tiger. Obviously he's had a great career and been really impactful in terms of their success. Knock on wood for us. We've been able to do pretty well also. We'd have been happy to have him. I'm happy for him at Auburn and the success that he's had."
Broome is a central figure in the Final Four as an All-American who impacts the game on both ends of the court. He said the benefit of Morehead State was immense and forced him to grind to improve his lateral quickness, agility and produce numbers that would attract a big-name program or two.
"Certainly benefited from the experience at Morehead, no question," Pearl said Friday. "He's got a combination of an inner confidence and a little bit of a chip on his shoulder. I think the biggest thing is -- he's always been second-guessed. Whether it was out of high school, even in the OVC. Coming to Auburn he wasn't fast enough, quick enough, didn't jump high enough, the game wouldn't translate, his lack of athleticism ... they're wrong."
Transfers are vital for the Southeastern Conference rivals with Florida sporting three double-digit scorers who were Golden imports: Walter Clayton Jr. (Iona), Alijah Martin (Florida Atlantic) and Will Richard (Belmont).
Auburn has its own stash of additions from the transfer portal with Broome, Miles Kelly (Georgia Tech) and Denver Jones (Florida Atlantic) all in vital roles.
"I think valuing guys that have been overlooked, you bring them into a place like Auburn," Pearl said. "Here is the deal. I spoil my kids, but I will slap the rotten right out of them. I spoil my players, but I will slap the rotten right out of them. When you get a guy that is overlooked and you spoil him, he's more appreciative and grateful for the opportunity. He goes to work every single day trying to prove people wrong."
When Broome hits the floor for a second matchup this season with Florida -- the Gators beat Auburn in February -- he'll see a couple of other familiar faces.
One will be a portal win Golden did score, Clayton, who grew up 20 miles away from Broome and then started his college journey under Rick Pitino. He was the MAAC player of the year as a sophomore before Pitino took his current job at St. John's. Clayton said this week he "clicked right away" with Golden, who had the advantage of not being in the role two years earlier and overlooking him.
Both are averaging over 18 points per game in their final college seasons and have everything to do with why their teams are still alive. Golden jumped ahead of Pearl in pursuit of Clayton with an assist from the player's mother, who was eager for her son to play close to home rather than following Pitino to St. John's. So he took one final swing at bringing him to Gainesville.
"I guess one of the benefits of being Jewish is that we don't celebrate Easter," Golden said. "I got a plane that afternoon, flew up, met with Walt on Easter Sunday evening. Me and Coach Korey McCray. Had a great meal talking through everything with him. Before we left that night, he let us know he was going to come home. I think that extra effort, going up there and sitting with him, reconfirming our vision for him, what our program would be like was really important. Obviously, I'm really glad we got on that plane. It was really well worth it."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
16 hours ago
- BBC News
Uno, table tennis and beach - how Miami lifted Chelsea
Chelsea's move to the glamorous surroundings of Miami has been welcomed by squad members and staff. The Blues switched from Philadelphia to a known but unnamed beach resort in Miami for privacy reasons in preparation for the knockout stages. Several sources told BBC Sport that, although their previous base in Philadelphia was perfect - a five-star hotel in the centre of the city - there was increasingly a feeling of cabin fever due to the oppressive record-breaking heatwave that discouraged players from going outside. It remains hot in Miami but players have still gone for walks, coffees and shopping trips while remaining relatively anonymous in their street clothing in slightly cooler temperatures by the coast. They have also held a barbecue night. "Being in Miami is obviously amazing with the beach right there," said defender Levi Colwill. "It is nice just to walk, clear your head a bit. I'd say it is quite chilled. We've got a little card group going on. "You've got the pool, you've got the beach, you've got a lot of things to keep you busy while you're not playing football."There is also a games room, which was already present in Philadelphia, but is proving popular, featuring retro and modern console computer games, card games like Uno, table tennis and basketball facilities. Youngster Josh Acheampong spoke about a table tennis competition for the players, saying: "We did a tournament and Trev [Chalobah] was quite good. Enzo Fernandez and Tyrique [George] are actually also quite good. I'm not the best, but I find it quite fun. It was like a two v two tournament."Summer signing Dario Essugo added: "We play PlayStation, make some things, play Uno, to make the time pass quicker. The team-mates are very good guys and I am happy to be here."Families and friends have also been encouraged to travel and hosted by the club for the latter rounds after few came for the group stage. However, following two days of rest after a win over Benfica, training remains difficult. Chelsea are having morning sessions at Barry University to avoid the worst of the heat, but are still restricted to shorter sessions as they were in Philadelphia. The other downside of a Miami base is travel. Chelsea went north to Charlotte in North Carolina to play Benfica and will return to Philadelphia, where Friday's quarter-final opponents Palmeiras are based, on Thursday night before the game the following Chelsea win their 62nd match of the season, they are expected to set up a new training base near New York. The semi-final and potential final would both be played at the MetLife Stadium just across the Hudson River in East Rutherford, New Jersey.


BBC News
a day ago
- BBC News
Hetmyer helps Orcas down Unicorns in MLC
Shimron Hetmyer blasted an unbeaten 78 off 37 balls as Seattle Orcas continued their recent Major League Cricket revival with a four-wicket win over San Francisco Orcas lost their opening five matches in MLC and reacted by sacking Matthew Mott as coach while Heinrich Klaasen stepped down as then they are unbeaten as they chased down 169 for victory in the first match of this year's tournament at Central Broward Park in had spearheaded both of his side's two previous wins with knocks of 97* and 64 and was the key man again after the Orcas had slipped to West Indies batter clubbed seven sixes and four fours in a brutal knock as the Orcas got home with three balls to seamer Xavier Bartlett finished the pick of the Unicorns bowlers with 2-14 while former England quick Liam Plunkett claimed USA batter Sanjay Krishnamurthi hit four sixes as he top scored for the Unicorns with 41 off 28 balls while Jake Fraser-McGurk made 35 off 22 deliveries as they posted Ayan Desai led the way for the Orcas with the ball as he took 3-32 while South Africa's Gerald Coetzee was the most economical of the night with his four overs costing Unicorns are second place in the standings - level on points with leaders Washington Freedom having played a game more - while the Orcas are fourth.


Reuters
a day ago
- Reuters
Edward Cabrera, Marlins blank Twins to win 8th straight
July 2 - Edward Cabrera pitched seven scoreless innings and Kyle Stowers hit his 14th home run as the host Miami Marlins won their eighth straight game, defeating the Minnesota Twins 2-0 on Tuesday night. It's the Marlins' longest win streak since they moved to Miami in 2012. The franchise record for the longest win streak is nine games, which has been accomplished five times -- most recently in 2008. Cabrera (3-2) pitched one of the best games of his career, allowing just two hits and one walk, striking out six. He threw 93 pitches, 58 of them for strikes, and induced a lot of weak contact. He retired 12 straight batters from the third inning to the seventh before a Willi Castro infield single. It was the longest outing by a Marlins pitcher this year. Anthony Bender pitched a perfect eighth of Miami and Ronny Henriquez pitched the ninth, earning his fourth save of the season. Henriquez started his MLB career with the Twins in 2022, but he was waived by Minnesota in February and the Marlins claimed him. Joe Ryan (8-4) took a tough-luck loss. After allowing Stowers' homer in the second inning, Ryan retired 13 straight batters until Xavier Edwards' infield single in the sixth. Ryan finished with five hits, no walks and one run allowed in his seven innings. Twins third baseman Royce Lewis returned from a hamstring injury and went 1-for-3 with a double in his first game since June 13. Stowers homered to lead off the second inning. The dinger came after Stowers trotted to first base on what appeared to be a hit-by-pitch. The Twins challenged the call and won the video review as the ball hit the handle of Stowers' bat. Two pitches later, he made it 1-0. Cabrera faced his biggest jam in the seventh as Castro singled and Matt Wallner drew a two-out walk. But Cabrera pumped his fist after striking out Brooks Lee on three pitches. The final pitch in that sequence was a swinging strike on a changeup low and outside the strike zone. In the eighth, Miami's Jesus Sanchez launched a two-out, 411-foot triple that banged high off the wall in center. Minnesota intentionally walked Otto Lopez, but Nick Fortes spoiled the strategy, lofting an opposite-field, RBI single that landed just inside the right-field line. --Field Level Media