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THE TURNING POINT NO ONE SAW COMING — Hubert Davis Reveals the Hidden Adjustment That Unlocked UNC’s Win Over St. Bonaventure

 

 

The North Carolina Tar Heels walked into their Fort Myers Tip-Off opener with confidence, but what unfolded in the first half against St. Bonaventure was anything but comfortable. The Bonnies came ready to punch, scrap, and shove their way into a grinding contest, and for 20 minutes, they succeeded. UNC’s perfect record looked fragile. The pace favored St. Bonaventure, the turnovers were piling up, and the Heels were constantly being bumped off their spots.

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By halftime, North Carolina’s lead was only two. And for anyone watching, it was clear: something had to change.

 

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Then came the second half.

 

A second half where UNC suddenly ignited.

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A second half where the physicality flipped completely.

A second half that felt like the Heels had unlocked a new gear.

 

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But according to Hubert Davis, that shift wasn’t luck. It wasn’t random. And it didn’t come from a fiery halftime speech or some last-minute tactical overhaul.

 

It came from one hidden adjustment — one that he says changed everything.

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And that’s exactly what this article breaks down: the moment UNC took control, the players who tilted the game, and the deeper reason behind the Tar Heels’ 85–70 win that sent them into Thursday’s showdown against No. 11 Michigan State with a perfect 6–0 record and a whole lot of momentum.

 

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THE PHYSICALITY PROBLEM — AND HOW UNC FLIPPED IT

 

If the first half exposed UNC’s flaws, the second half revealed their solutions.

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Hubert Davis didn’t sugarcoat it: St. Bonaventure brought far more physicality than UNC early on. And for a team that has prided itself on toughness this season, that was an uncomfortable reality.

 

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“In the first half, we had 11 turnovers,” Davis said. “I thought we were much stronger and handled the physicality much better in the second half.”

 

Those 11 turnovers weren’t just mistakes — they were self-inflicted momentum killers. Every time UNC tried to push ahead, the ball slipped away, a drive ended in contact without a finish, or the spacing collapsed. The Bonnies played tight, aggressive defense and forced Carolina out of rhythm.

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But then came what Davis revealed as the true turning point:

 

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The moment UNC stopped trying to evade the physicality and decided to match it.

 

In the second half, UNC committed only two turnovers. The paint scoring jumped from 12 points in the first half to 36 for the game, meaning they nearly tripled their early production in just 20 minutes.

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“I felt around the rim, we were dunking everything,” Davis said. “If we didn’t finish strong or dunk, we got fouled. We got to the free throw line.”

 

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It wasn’t tactical—it was emotional. UNC got tougher. They embraced contact, didn’t flinch, and made sure every possession had force behind it. And the scoreboard responded.

 

DEREK DIXON AND KYAN’S SECOND-HALF TAKEOVER — THE UNSUNG HEROES

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Every game has its stars, but some games have heroes you don’t see coming.

 

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Against the Bonnies, the energy shift didn’t begin with RJ Davis. It didn’t begin with Harrison Ingram. It began with Derek Dixon and Kyan — the duo that Hubert Davis says completely changed the flow of the game.

 

“I thought the huge difference was not only Derek, but also Kyan,” Davis said. “Just the play and the leadership from both of them.”

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The defining moment? When Evans went into foul trouble.

 

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Suddenly, Derek Dixon had to carry minutes — and not just survive them. He had to stabilize UNC’s entire backcourt rhythm.

 

And he did it.

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Dixon hit a massive corner three. He drove with control. He made plays for himself and his teammates. He played what Davis called “some of the best minutes he’s played all year.”

 

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Meanwhile, Kyan stepped into a leadership role most freshmen aren’t ready for. Davis said he hit “big 3s,” facilitated the offense, and became UNC’s most reliable transition passer during the second half run.

 

“He’s our best passer,” Davis said. “Best facilitator. Pitching the ball ahead in transition.”

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When UNC needed calm, they provided calm.

When UNC needed pace, they provided pace.

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When UNC needed fearlessness, they provided fuel.

 

The physicality change started the fire, but Dixon and Kyan poured gasoline on it.

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THE CALEB WILSON BALANCE QUESTION — WHEN TO ATTACK AND WHEN TO TRUST

 

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Every great scorer eventually learns the art of balance.

 

For Caleb Wilson, the battle is internal:

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When do you attack with aggression?

When do you pass up a contested shot?

When do you trust the team over your instincts?

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Hubert Davis addressed it directly — and honestly.

 

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“I think there’s a balance with the entire team,” he said. “I felt like our shot selection wasn’t very good in the first half.”

 

That, Davis said, was another reason the Bonnies stayed close early. UNC wasn’t just giving the ball away—they were taking shots that didn’t reflect the team’s identity. One-pass jumpers. Rushed drives. Shots that were open enough, but not good enough.

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At halftime, Davis didn’t simplify the message.

He sharpened it.

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“It’s not just getting a shot,” he said. “It’s getting good shots every possession.”

 

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Wilson, like several teammates, adjusted beautifully in the second half. He played within the rhythm, traded tough shots for better ones, used the spacing UNC created, and became a more complete offensive contributor.

 

That’s the growth Davis wants — not talent, but discipline.

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And against St. Bonaventure, that discipline unlocked the offense UNC needed.

 

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WHAT THIS WIN REALLY MEANS — AND WHY IT SETS THE STAGE FOR MICHIGAN STATE

 

Some wins look clean.

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Some look gritty.

Some look messy.

This one looked like a team learning exactly who it is — and who it can be.

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UNC showed:

 

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They can take a punch.

 

They can adjust.

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They can turn a physical battle into their advantage.

 

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They can rely on more than just stars to win.

 

They can fix flaws in real time.

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Those traits matter — because Michigan State will test them even harder.

 

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But if Carolina takes the second-half version of itself into that matchup?

 

They won’t just survive.

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They’ll be ready to make a statement.

 

 

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The 85–70 win wasn’t about the score.

It wasn’t about stats.

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It wasn’t even about staying undefeated.

 

It was about a team discovering its edge — and a coach revealing the adjustment that unlocked it.

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Hubert Davis didn’t just celebrate the victory.

He explained the blueprint.

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A blueprint that starts with toughness, grows through discipline, and is powered by unexpected heroes.

 

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And if UNC continues to play the way they did in that second half?

 

This season might be far more special than anyone realizes.

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