Henri Veesaar leads UNC to 85-70 win against St. Bonaventure. What we learned about the Tar Heels.
Published in Basketball
FORT MYERS, Fla. — Just last week, North Carolina men’s basketball held a players-only meeting to address what they felt was a lackluster performance against Navy.
By halftime on Tuesday night — this time facing St. Bonaventure in Fort Myers, Fla. — it appeared the Tar Heels might be heading for another postgame accountability talk. A double-digit lead had given way to a tied game late in the first half. Luka Bogavac, slowing down the tempo with a chance to add one more bucket before the half, turned the ball over with a carry.
The whistle blew. Hubert Davis didn’t say anything. The coach just turned and put his hands on his hips. He folded his arms, paced the baseline. Davis then maintained a straight face as he lumbered off the floor and into the locker room.
The coach must’ve saved his words for the halftime talk, because as soon as play resumed, the Tar Heels were off and running — en route to a comfortable 85-70 win over St. Bonaventure.
Arizona transfer Henri Veesaar led the way for North Carolina with a career-high 24 points on 9-for-14 shooting. Caleb Wilson added 20 points — half of them coming from the free-throw line.
North Carolina is now 6-0 to start the season. The last time the Tar Heels started the season with six straight wins? 2016-17.
Here’s what we learned:
St. Bonaventure with far more looks from the field
When Veesaar took a look at the box score following UNC’s win over Navy last week, there was one glaring stat that first caught his eye.
“I think they have more shots than us,” Veesaar said, pouring over the sheet to confirm his suspicion. “Oh no. Yeah, they have more shots than us. So, like, that’s not good. We should definitely get more.”
To be specific, UNC attempted 56 shots compared to 59 for Navy.
Against St. Bonaventure, the gap was even worse. The Bonnies recorded 37 attempts to just 25 for UNC in the opening half. By the end, St. Bonaventure had taken 15 more shots.
The Bonnies got far more contribution from their bench (19 to 11 points for UNC) and took advantage of the Tar Heels’ defensive lapses — particularly in the first half — to cut baseline and find easy looks around the basket.
Bonnies’ physicality a good tune-up for Michigan State
St. Bonaventure has established itself as a threat to high-major opponents in recent years. Tuesday night showed why.
The Bonnies excel at blocking shots, entering the contest against the Tar Heels averaging 5.8 blocks per game and a 16.8 block percentage — both top-25 marks nationally. That physicality down low and length at the rim made life difficult for UNC’s frontcourt, limiting some of the easy lob opportunities the Tar Heels have been able to rack up in recent games.
St. Bonaventure also made North Carolina work on the glass. Despite the final stat line — UNC outrebounded SBU, 40-31 — the Tar Heels had to hustle for nearly every rebound.
There were plenty of loose ball scrambles with multiple bodies, or moments where the ball was ripped straight from an opposing player’s hands. All of this as a result of a highly physical Bonnies team that tested the Tar Heels and will prove a valuable tune-up ahead of North Carolina’s matchup with Michigan State on Thursday.
Wilson is at his best when the game comes to him
After recording nine points in the first eight minutes of the game, Wilson went cold from the floor.
The typically efficient freshman was just 2 for 7 before halftime, with five of his points coming from the free-throw line. The second half was a bit better, with Wilson sinking 3 of 6 from the floor.
Wilson appeared to force shots at times through heavy traffic, or opt for challenging turnarounds and fadeaway jumpers
Wilson’s 38.4% clip on Tuesday night is his second-lowest field-goal percentage in a game this season. His lowest mark came against Radford on Nov. 11, when he shot 30.8% from the field on 13 shot attempts.
That said, the Atlanta native was effective when he attacked the rim and drew fouls. Wilson finished 10 for 10 from the charity stripe and made up over a third of the team’s free-throw tries.
The Tar Heels rank top-30 in the nation and second in the ACC in free-throw attempts per game.
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