Buccaneer Fieldhouse (âThe Buc Domeâ) | Saturday, 2 PM | Big South Play
đ Setting the Stage
High Point hits the road riding both momentum and expectation.
The Panthers enter Saturday 3â0 in Big South play, winners of 17 straight conference games, fresh off a historic 104â49 dismantling of Gardner-Webb, the largest margin of victory over a Division I opponent in program history and the biggest Big South blowout the conference has ever seen.
HPU winning comfortably isnât something new.
Itâs now the standard.
But this is not a comfortable road trip. Itâs more like choppy waters.
Charleston Southern waits inside one of the most unforgiving environments in the league: Buccaneer Fieldhouse, a sub-1,000-seat pressure cooker where the walls are tight, the rims feel closer, and visiting rhythm is often disrupted early.
High Point is 28â24 all-time against CSU and has won four straight in the series, but is just 8â17 all-time in North Charleston.
This is not about talent parity.
This is about environment, execution, and discipline.
đ´ââ ď¸ Opponent Overview: Charleston Southern
Charleston Southern enters the game with confidence, belief, and a style built to stress the Panthers.
They are:
- Physical and aggressive on the glass
- Comfortable playing through chaos
- Willing to live with variance
- Dangerous when perimeter shooting finds rhythm
CSU is coming off a hard-fought, emotional battle at Winthropâa game that showed both their upside and volatility. They are not elite defensively, but they manufacture extra possessions through rebounding, and in this building, those possessions feel heavier.
This is a team that believes it can punch above its weightâespecially at home, in the second-smallest Division I venue in the nation.
đ§ą Team Identity: What Charleston Southern Is
Charleston Southern under Saah Nimley is built on emotion, tempo, and pressure.
They:
- Play fast and fearless, especially early
- Shoot a high volume of threes (they take and make the third-most nationally)
- Crash the offensive glass aggressively
- Force defenses into scramble situations
- Feed off crowd energy and momentum swings
They are not trying to control games for 40 minutes.
They are trying to break rhythm, steal confidence, and turn runs into avalanches.
When the threes fall and rebounds bounce their way, CSU becomes uncomfortable to play against. When those things dry up, the margin appears quickly.
đ Where the Game Will Be Won
Statistically, HPU has done a strong job defending the three-point line. Opponents are shooting 31.8% from deep against the Panthers, good for the top third nationally in defensive efficiency. Theyâve also been effective at preventing shots altogether, ranking 47th nationally in defensive field-goal attempt rate, indicating a scheme that prioritizes running shooters off the line rather than simply contesting.
Approximately 75% of shots against High Point are classified as contested or highly contested. The Achillesâ heel comes with the remaining quarter of attempts, which tend to be open looks generated after offensive rebounds and kick-outs. HPU ranks 35th-worst nationally in second-chance defense, with many of the open or wide-open threes conceded in these scramble situations.
This is where CSU can hurt High Point and where they can close any talent gap.
đ§Š Key Buccaneers to Know
â Brycen Blaine (6â3 Sr G) â The Engine
Team leader, volume shooter, emotional tone-setter. Comfortable pulling from deep and attacking off movement.
HPU Key: Chase him off the line and make him score through bodies, not rhythm.
â Alâahn Sumler (6â5 Jr G) â The Shot Maker
Confident perimeter scorer who thrives in broken possessions and kick-outs.
HPU Key: Close out under controlâno fly-bys, no bailout fouls.
â Jesse Hafemeister (6â7 Sr F) â The Glass Cleaner
Physical forward who does damage on second chances and interior rebounds.
HPU Key: Finish possessions. No second looks.
â Luke Williams (6â6 Jr F) â The Connector
Facilitates offense, moves the ball, and punishes lapses with timely shots.
HPU Key: Donât let him impact the game without scoring.
Bottom line: CSUâs depth is real enough. Their margin depends on which shooters get comfortable.
đ Matchup Snapshot
For High Point:
- Secure defensive reboundsâone shot must equal one stop
- Disciplined closeouts on perimeter shooters
- Avoid live-ball turnovers in a tight gym
- Absorb the early emotional surge
- Keep the offense flowingâpasses over dribbles
For Charleston Southern:
- Win the offensive rebounding battle
- Turn second chances into kick-out threes
- Speed the game up early
- Let the crowd amplify pressure
- Hang around long enough for variance to matter
This game will not be decided by aesthetics.
It will be decided by control after the first punch.
đ§ Coaching Context
Saah Nimley has installed belief and urgency at Charleston Southern. His teams play like every possession matters and treat every game like a Game 7.
Flynn Claymanâs High Point group, meanwhile, operates from a place of stability. The Panthers are deeper, more versatile, and more comfortable winning in multiple styles. Theyâve already shown the ability to withstand runs, reset, and reassert control.
The question isnât whether CSU will bring energyâthey will.
The question is whether High Point stays composed when:
- Shots donât immediately fall
- Whistles disrupt flow
- The building gets loud
This is a focus test, not a talent test.
đď¸ Keys for High Point
1ď¸âŁ Finish defensive possessionsâCSU is #18 in the nation in total rebounding despite not having elite size, cannot let the Bucs continue possessions after a miss and get open looks off them
2ď¸âŁ Shoot confidently and punish the over-help Nimley teaches
3ď¸âŁ Value the ballâHPU has been elite at forcing turnovers meanwhile CSU is near dead last (#358) in the same statistic
4ď¸âŁ Stay connected defensively through scrambles
5ď¸âŁ Respond calmly when the inevitable run comes
If High Point stays disciplined, this becomes a talent problem Charleston Southern will struggle to solve.
đ§ Context That Matters
- HPU has won 17 straight Big South games
- Panthers are allowing opponents just 31.8% from three
- Open threes typically come via scramble or offensive rebound situations
- CSUâs building historically compresses margins early
- Cam Fletcherâs status remains a storylineâŚhis presence raises the ceiling, but HPU has proven it can thrive regardless. I think the message is pretty clear, buy in or be out.Â
đŽ Toothsayerâs Take
This is the kind of game where those who donât watch closely, or donât know the history, might assume it will be one-sided. Vegas will likely set a large line based on High Pointâs current form and three consecutive double-digit dismantlings of Big South opponents.
I would be hesitant.
This is a true road test against a team that can shoot at an upper-echelon level.
CSU is notably more efficient in the cozy confines of the Buc Dome, shooting roughly 4% better on higher volume at home than away. Conversely, visiting teams often struggle to shoot at their normal clip, especially early, as it takes time to adjust to the depth and sightlines of such a small venue.
Analytics consistently show that teams accustomed to arena-style settings struggle with depth perception at CSU for the first 15â20 minutes. For a High Point team that leans into high-volume shooting, that could mean a slower start in North Charleston.
Charleston Southern will:
- Shoot without fear
- Crash the glass
- Believe the building can carry them
But belief only lasts if possessions are extended.
High Point is deeper.
High Point is cleaner.
High Point is more complete.
CSU will look to extend possessions on the glass. HPU will look to steal more possessions by forcing turnovers. If the Panthers secure rebounds and prevent CSUâs shooters from igniting early confidence, their overall talent wins out.
But it should be close
Prediction:
High Point 84, Charleston Southern 78

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