After routing Willsboro, the Bolton Eagles travelled to Wells the next day to face the Indians. The court was extremely small, so Bolton had to adjust to the court-size, otherwise they would most likely come out with a losing effort. In the first quarter, Bolton came out firing offensively and defensively. Guards Cody Kober, Ben Gaddy and Luke Shane were able to shake away from the guards and take it into the lane for easy layups. Sophomore Luke Shane started out with 11 of Bolton's 13 points in the 1st quarter. At the end of the first quarter, the score was Bolton 13, Wells 8. After the first quarter, things went downhill fast. Bolton could not run an offensive set and they were getting shunned from the boards. Defense was lackadazical. It looked like a totally different team. In the first quarter, Bolton effectively took the ball to the hoop and run sets, but in the second quarter, Bolton looked like the boys modified squad rather then the boys JV Team in the second and third quarters. Bolton only scored 2 points the whole quarter on a Ben Gaddy jump-shot. Coach Mark Andrekovics was quite disappointed at halftime. The boys were playing with no motivation or heart whatsoever, which is ironic in that the night before, the boys played with heart and fire in their eyes. In the fourth quarter, Bolton tried to come back, but they looked fatigued. The Eagles tied it up at 33-33 with a Luke Shane jump-shot with 1:30 seconds left. Wells was then carelessly fouled by a Bolton defender as they made both foul shots. Bolton could not come back from the defecit as Wells edged out Bolton, 36-33. Luke Shane finished with 17 points, as Cody Kober and Ben Gaddy combined for 13 points. Bolton was a pathetic 9-24 (35%) from the stripe.