North Carolina

After two straight losses, UNC rebounds with a home win over Notre Dame

Key Takeaways
Key Takeaways

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  • North Carolina rebounded with a 91-69 home win, after losing 3 of 4.
  • UNC tightened defense, holding Notre Dame to 32% from three and 36% overall.
  • Caleb Wilson paced UNC with 22 points and five assists; Veesaar grabbed 12 rebounds.

Seth Trimble was ready.

When Notre Dame’s Cole Certa drove into the lane and just past Derek Dixon in the opening 30 seconds, the UNC senior guard was already in position to help. He didn’t close out as much as simply leap straight up and let his outstretched arms — and athleticism — do the work. The ensuing block sent Certa’s ball toward the very tunnel the North Carolina team had run out of not too long ago. A defensive stop of that bravado — especially after this rough stretch the Tar Heels have had — felt worthy of a celebration.

North Carolina guard Seth Trimble (7) breaks to the basket against Notre Dame guard Cole Certa (5) in the first half  on Wednesday, January 21, 2026 at the Smith Center in Chapel Hill, N.C.
North Carolina guard Seth Trimble (7) breaks to the basket against Notre Dame guard Cole Certa (5) in the first half on Wednesday, January 21, 2026 at the Smith Center in Chapel Hill, N.C. Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com

And Trimble provided just that. He flexed. He roared. After a week on the West Coast that saw his team, for the most part, defend like “boys” in his eyes, he seemed determined to set the tone early upon the team’s return home.

Message received. No. 22 North Carolina rolled to a 91-69 win over Notre Dame on Wednesday night at the Dean E. Smith Center — a much-needed rebound victory for a squad that had lost three of its last four games.

“I was really proud of them tonight,” UNC coach Hubert Davis said. “We had two really good practices [this week]. Another thing that I was really happy with was just the chatter in the huddles, during timeouts — multiple people talking. I love that. I encourage that.”

Caleb Wilson led the Tar Heels with 22 points on 8-of-11 shooting. He also led the team with five assists and five made free throws (albeit on eight attempts). Henri Veesaar led the way on the boards with 12 rebounds.

North Carolina forward Caleb Wilson (8) soars to the rim on a fast break for a dunk in the second half against Notre Dame on Wednesday, January 21, 2026 at the Smith Center in Chapel Hill, N.C. Wilson lead all scores with 22 points in the Tar Heels’ 91-69 victory.
North Carolina forward Caleb Wilson (8) soars to the rim on a fast break for a dunk in the second half against Notre Dame on Wednesday, January 21, 2026 at the Smith Center in Chapel Hill, N.C. Wilson lead all scores with 22 points in the Tar Heels’ 91-69 victory. Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com

North Carolina (15-4, 3-3 ACC) stretched its early lead to nine points after Wilson flushed home a putback opportunity on a Veesaar drive. Notre Dame coach Micah Shrewsberry called a timeout with eight and a half minutes until halftime. It seemed to have an impact, as the Fighting Irish (10-9, 1-5 ACC) mounted a brief 8-2 run — capped off by a Ryder Frost 3-pointer — to cut their deficit to three.

UNC closed the half on a 16-10 run, 12 of those points coming from Dixon and Wilson.

“I was encouraged at halftime,” Davis said. “We didn’t extend it [the lead], but we didn’t blow it. And I said, OK, let’s take another step... let’s raise our level even more.”

The Tar Heels scored 10 unanswered points out of the break and maintained control for the entire second half — not allowing the Fighting Irish to claw back as so many opponents have this season.

“That’s something that we haven’t done in a while,” Davis said. “And I was very proud and very happy for them.”

Most importantly, North Carolina’s defense looked much improved on Wednesday night.

UNC hasn’t just struggled to defend the perimeter this year — the Tar Heels have been among the nation’s worst in that regard. Since the start of the calendar year, UNC has recorded the fourth-worst opponent 3-point percentage in the nation, per Sportradar. North Carolina has allowed its opponents to shoot 45% in that stretch, or 70 makes on 156 attempts. Only North Dakota, Coppin State and University of Louisiana at Lafayette have managed worse percentages.

But, on Wednesday, North Carolina held the Fighting Irish to 32% from distance and 36% from the field.

“What it really comes down to is effort and little tweaks in the game plan,” junior Jarin Stevenson said. “I feel like coach did a good job tweaking things, making sure they couldn’t get good looks from three.”

Here are some more takeaways from the game:

Tar Heels let it rain

Ten of UNC’s first 11 shots against the Fighting Irish were 3-pointers — and for good reason.

The luck was with the Tar Heels from behind the arc. By the time Jonathan Powell joined the party with 9:39 left to play in the first half, he became the sixth North Carolina player to hit a triple.

“We were able to just swing into the open three,” Veesaar said. “Or draw two. They were doubling Caleb the whole game so he was able to pass it out — we got open [shots] from there.”

After a brief lull, UNC hit five of its last seven shots in the first half and entered the locker room with a nine-point lead.

North Carolina guard Jonathan Powell (11) launches a three-point shot in the first half against Notre Dame on Wednesday, January 21, 2026 at the Smith Center in Chapel Hill, N.C.
North Carolina guard Jonathan Powell (11) launches a three-point shot in the first half against Notre Dame on Wednesday, January 21, 2026 at the Smith Center in Chapel Hill, N.C. Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com

Three-point shooting has been a major difference in the Tar Heels’ ACC losses. SMU, Stanford and Cal combined to outscore North Carolina 132-81 from 3-point range. UNC averaged nine triples across those three games.

But against the Fighting Irish, that trend flipped. The Tar Heels still had over 18 minutes to play by the time Dixon sank the ninth triple of the night. And they weren’t done. Two more 3-pointers — back-to-back treys by Kyan Evans and Stevenson — stretched UNC’s lead to 22 points, at which point North Carolina was shooting 50% from distance.

The Tar Heels’ percentage dipped as the game dragged on and more reserves took the floor. But UNC finished with 13 triples — its highest single-game mark this year. Eight different North Carolina players hit a three, tying a program record set earlier this season against East Carolina.

Jaydon Young earns the start

After playing a season-high 20 minutes in a win over Wake Forest on Jan. 10 — and a combined 20 minutes in UNC’s West Coast swing last week — Young earned his first start as a Tar Heel on Wednesday.

Young played eight minutes in the first half, recording an early 3-pointer and subbing out with 15 minutes until halftime. He re-entered at the 9:06 mark and missed a triple, committed an out-of-bounds turnover and foul before he was subbed out again.

North Carolina guard Jaydon Young (4) lines up a three-point shot in front of his teammates, against Notre Dame guard Logan Imes (2), in the second half on Wednesday, January 21, 2026 at the Smith Center in Chapel Hill, N.C.
North Carolina guard Jaydon Young (4) lines up a three-point shot in front of his teammates, against Notre Dame guard Logan Imes (2), in the second half on Wednesday, January 21, 2026 at the Smith Center in Chapel Hill, N.C. Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com

The second half went much worse. Young recorded three fouls in less than two minutes and was subbed out with 18 minutes to play, shaking his head as he walked down the bench. He returned later but didn’t score again, finishing with three points on four shot attempts.

Wednesday marked the third different starting lineup we’ve seen from the Tar Heels in the last three games. After rolling out an Evans-Stevenson-Trimble-Veesaar-Wilson lineup against Wake Forest and Stanford, Davis subbed in Dixon for Evans against California. On Wednesday, Young replaced Stevenson as a starter.

“The only reason that I went that way to start the game is I felt like that group played the best against Cal,” Davis said. “I felt like that group played the closest... in terms of effort and energy.”

If Young’s performance and Davis’ comments on Wednesday are any indication, there will likely be some more tweaks made to that starting rotation.

Dixon continues to impress

Dixon had another standout performance against Notre Dame in his second start as a Tar Heel — recording 11 points on 4-of-5 shooting to finish as the third-highest scorer behind Veesaar and Wilson. Wednesday night marked the fourth time this season Dixon has recorded three or more treys. Evans also had three triples against Notre Dame.

Dixon recorded his first start in UNC’s loss at California on Saturday, in which he tied his career-high with 14 points, timely shotmaking and three assists.

North Carolina coach Hubert Davis talks with guard Derek Dixon (3) in the first half against Notre Dame on Wednesday, January 21, 2026 at the Smith Center in Chapel Hill, N.C.
North Carolina coach Hubert Davis talks with guard Derek Dixon (3) in the first half against Notre Dame on Wednesday, January 21, 2026 at the Smith Center in Chapel Hill, N.C. Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com

“As I said before, I thought Derek did a really nice job [with] his poise and his confidence out there,” Davis said at his Monday night radio show. “Obviously, he can really shoot the basketball. I thought he got us into our offense and made really good plays... I was really happy with what Derek did against Cal.”

Dixon said after the win over Notre Dame that the emphasis in recent practices has been on defense — “defense, defense, defense, 3-point defense” — but also pride.

“Just taking pride in our defense,” Dixon said Wednesday. “You know, when we play like we should, we’re a really good defensive team. And we showed that tonight.”

This story was originally published January 21, 2026 at 9:06 PM.

SS
Shelby Swanson
The News & Observer
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