UNC basketball rolls past NCCU. What we learned about the Tar Heels
AI-generated summary reviewed by our newsroom.
- UNC overcame early sloppiness to beat N.C. Central and extend in-state streak
- Caleb Wilson produced first career 20-point double-double and led offense
- N.C. Central’s zone and UNC turnovers slowed pace, forcing more halfcourt sets
Jonathan Powell turned and signaled for a timeout, giving Hubert Davis a chance to draw something up for the last play of the first half. Something to give the Tar Heels a bit of satisfaction as they headed to the locker room after what had been a slapdash showing in the opening period.
When play resumed, Kyan Evans surveyed N.C. Central’s 2-3 zone. He drove to the heart of the defense, kicking the ball to Powell in the corner. Airball. Henri Veesaar did his best to corral the ball as it bounced below him on the hardwood, multiple Eagles swarming in the process. He hit the floor, rolling. NCCU’s half-court heave at the buzzer flew over the backboard.
The sloppy sequence pretty much defined the early play for UNC against NCCU on Friday night at the Smith Center — a game that saw the loudest cheers from the crowd emerge due to a Crumbl cookies promotion. The Tar Heels found enough for a 97-53 win, marking its 51st consecutive win against in-state, non-ACC teams. But, for the second straight game since defeating Kansas on Friday and losing senior guard Seth Trimble to a left forearm injury on Sunday, UNC stalled early and pulled far away by the end.
Freshman Caleb Wilson once again led the way for North Carolina, finishing with 21 points on 7-of-8 shooting and 13 rebounds for his first career 20-point double-double. Wilson had 17 points and nine rebounds in the first half alone.
“I tried to be as efficient as I could today,” Wilson said, “and it worked... it was a great game, but it’s on to the next.”
Senior forward Ramondo Battle II led the Eagles with 14 points off the bench.
Here’s what we learned from UNC’s game against N.C. Central:
North Carolina stalls against zone, slow pace of NCCU
After UNC went up by 10 points — following a Powell fast-break three-pointer midway through the first half — the Eagles were able to slow down the Tar Heels’ pace with its zone defense.
North Carolina was forced to take more time in its half-court sets and, on the other end, NCCU proved willing to wind the shot clock as much as possible on offense. The Eagles dictated the pace and, as a result, cut their deficit to as little as six points with just under four minutes remaining in the opening half.
“From an offensive standpoint, they were taking us one-on-one, milking time off the clock,” Davis said. “And then when it was 15, 10 seconds on the shot clock, they were trying to take us. And I just felt, throughout the entire game, we just got better — one-on-one defense, our ball screen attack. Our switches were better. We were boxing out better.”
While Wilson still had his way on offense, Veesaar was limited to just four points in the first half on three shot attempts. Reserve forward Zayden High recorded just one basket off the bench. Junior Jarin Stevenson was held scoreless from the field in the opening frame, with three of his four shots coming from beyond the arc.
The Tar Heels’ 10 first-half turnovers did little to help their cause. North Carolina cleaned that up, recording no turnovers after halftime.
Shooters need to shoot — Evans included
The Colorado State transfer who’s emphasized his ability to do both — to facilitate the offense and knock down shots himself — hasn’t shown that consistently through four games.
His debut — a 15-point, 5-assist showing against Central Arkansas — was impressive. Evans’ 12 second-half points against Kansas came at a critical time and showed his resilience.
But then, in UNC’s 89-74 win over Radford on Tuesday, Evans only took one field goal attempt in 24 minutes on the court. Evans racked up five assists in that contest, and was already up to five dimes by halftime on Friday night. But he once again failed to produce much of own offense against the Eagles.
Evans shot two-of-five from the field against N.C. Central and made just one 3-pointer. He did, though, dish out a season-high seven assists.
And that, if you ask the players, may be a testament to the unselfishness of this team.
“Those guys want to win. They don’t care about their own stats,” freshman guard Derek Dixon said. “So that’s something [Davis] has always harped on at practice — always ‘good to great.’ So we’re just doing that out there on the court. I feel like we’re moving the ball really well, getting some really good shots.”
Powell, Dixon combine for 18 off the bench
While Powell’s former school was dismantling No. 15 Duke women’s basketball — a game West Virginia managed to win on Friday night despite playing only five Mountaineers for much of the game following a scuffle and subsequent ejections — this WVU transfer recorded a season-high nine points.
Powell is one of several backcourt players who should see more time in the upcoming weeks due to Trimble’s absence. Against NCCU, he showed the aggression on offense Davis had predicted in the offseason with his quick release and ability to draw fouls.
The wing also used his length to pull down four boards in 19 minutes — the most minutes out of any bench player on Friday.
Dixon impressed off the bench as well. The Virginia native recorded a season-high nine points on three-of-five shooting from deep. All of his points came in the second half.
“Derek is someone who’s very confident in his game and obviously can shoot the basketball,” Davis said. “But I think he’s done a nice job handling the ball and defending and getting our team into the offense. And he has so much room to improve as well. Four games into his career, I’m really impressed.”
This story was originally published November 14, 2025 at 11:19 PM.