Farmville, VA | Joan Perry Brock Center | Saturday, January 31 | 3:00 PMÂ
đ Setting the Stage
The Big South has officially turned the page to rematch season, and High Pointâs first test comes in the one building that has haunted them longer than any other.
The Panthers arrive in Farmville riding a glossy 19â4 record, but the shine is cracking. Defensive trend lines are pointing the wrong way, offensive balance is wobbling, and confidence is being propped up more by turnovers forced than stops earned.
Meanwhile, Longwood is wounded but dangerous.
The Lancers are 9â2 at home and perfect in conference play at the Joan Perry Brock Center. Coming off a frustrating loss at USC Upstate that only sharpens their urgency. If High Point is searching for answers, Longwood is searching for blood.
And history is firmly on the home side.
- High Point is 20â18 all-time vs. Longwood but 7-11 in Farmville
- No HPU win in Farmville since January 2018
- The Huss/Clayman era still lacks a winning record against the Lancers, the only Big South team where thatâs the case
That can change Saturday. But nothing about the current trajectory suggests it will be easy.
â° Last Time Out (January 3 â Qubein Center)
High Point 80, Longwood 67
A game that looks comfortable in the box score â and absolutely was not.
- Halftime: HPU 42, Longwood 40
- Game tied early in the second half
- Decided by a 9â0 High Point run sparked by a Terry Anderson steal-and-dunk
What went right:
- Terry Andersonâs career-high 29 points (10â14 FG, 8â8 FT)
- Owen Aquino quietly dominating the interior
- High Point winning the âavalanche momentâ
What went wrong (and was ignored at the time):
- Longwood controlled long stretches
- HPU struggled to create separation without transition chaos
- Longwoodâs physicality bothered HPU far more than the final margin suggests
That win had some disconcerting truths that keeps showing up now.
đĄ Whatâs Changed
This is where the rematch turns ominous.
1. The Defensive Trend Line Is Flashing Red
High Pointâs defense has materially deteriorated since early Big South play.
- Repeated paint breakdowns
- Big men having career nights
- Poor shooting teams consistently looking confident, accurate, and deadly
The Presbyterian game was the clearest warning yet:
- HPU was severely outshot at home
- Gave up constant paint touches
- Could not finish at the rim consistently
- Needed turnovers just to survive despite being a 17.5-point favorite
If not for forced turnovers, that game is a loss on national TV.
2. Road Reality Check
High Pointâs away defensive metrics are among the worst in the country, and the JPB amplifies every weakness:
- Slower rhythm of play
- Fewer transition whistles
- Longer scoring droughts punished harder
This will not resemble the Qubein Center environment.
3. Longwood Has a New Focal Point
In the first meeting, Elijah Tucker was a secondary piece. He is no longer that.
- Longwood is now actively feeding the post
- Tucker and Nziemi have torched opponents on the glass
- HPUâs interior rotations have been slow and foul-prone
This matchup directly attacks High Pointâs current Achilles heel.
âď¸ Key Matchups
đ¨ Paint Control: Owen Aquino vs. Elijah Tucker / Johan Nziemi
This decides everything.
- High Point has been punished inside repeatedly
- Lancerâs bigs thrive on:
- Second chances
- Deep seals
- Contact finishes
If Aquino gets into foul trouble, High Point has no proven interior safety net.
⌝ Perimeter Discipline: Redd Thompson Jr. vs. HPU Closeouts
High Pointâs defensive rotations have been late and lazy.
- Thompson thrives on drive-and-kick gravity
- Longwood doesnât need volume, just rhythm
Another âbad shooting teamâ having a great night would not be surprising anymore.
âł Tempo Control: Rob Martin vs. Jacoi Hutchinson
This is the game within the game.
- Martin wants chaos â kill shots â 90 points
- Hutchinson wants mud â patience â 70 points
At home, Hutchinson has been far more secure with the ball. If he keeps turnovers down, Longwood dictates the game.
âď¸ The Questions Hanging Over HPU
High Point is 19â4 and 7â1 in conference.
For any other Big South team, that would speak for itself.
At High Point, it doesnât.
These are no longer whispers â theyâre unavoidable:
- đ Is this team getting better or worse?
Trend lines and the eye test say worse. - đ¤ˇââď¸ What is Vincent Brady providing on either end of the floor?
His minutes are a growing mystery while more impactful players struggle to find rhythm. - 𼸠Why isnât Chase Johnston playing more during a shooting slump?
High Point desperately needs spacing and has one of the NCAAâs most prolific shooters riding the bench. - đ¤ Cam Fletcherâs wrist â how limited is he really?
His availability may decide whether High Point has a bailout option late in the season.
đŽ Toothsayer Prediction
High Point still has the most dangerous offensive ceiling and the most talented roster in the Big South. That hasnât changed.
What has changed:
- Their margin for error
- Their ability to survive without turnovers
- Their defensive resilience away from home
- Their elite shooting and spacing
Longwoodâs goals are simple:
- Win the paint
- Keep away from any kill shots
- Make this ugly, slow, and physical
This is the most vulnerable High Point has looked all season because of:
- The defensive erosion
- The Farmville drought
- Longwoodâs home dominance
- Panthers shooting variance
- High Pointâs recent reliance on chaos rather than control
If High Point plays to their potential â Panthers escape Farmville with that elusive win.
If Longwood controls the glass and avoids a 10â0 burst â Lancers win outright
Prediction:
Longwood 78, High Point 70
The real question afterward may not be about the result but whether itâs a wake-up call for the coaching staff and roster, or a wake-up call for the fans and their expectations of the season.

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