Where PRUDENTIAL CENTER IN NEWARK, N.J
TV: Peacock with play-by-play from Ed Cohen and analysis from JordanCornette.
Xavier Radio: 55KRC
Seton Hall enters the Jan. 28, 2026 matchup against Xavier as one of the Big East’s most defensively elite and physically tough teams, built around length, rebounding, and a top‑10 scoring defense. Their identity is clear: grind games down, dominate the glass, and rely on AJ Staton‑McCray and a deep frontcourt to control tempo.
Seton Hall wants a slow, physical game.
Xavier prefers more flow and rhythm.
If SHU keeps the game in the 60s, they gain a major advantage
Seton Hall’s frontcourt depth vs Xavier’s smaller lineups.
SHU should dominate the glass — a major swing factor.
Xavier has struggled containing strong, physical wings in Big East play.
Staton‑McCray’s ability to score 15–20 and defend the perimeter is central
Xavier’s best chance is to speed up SHU’s guards and force turnovers.
If Clark handles pressure, Seton Hall stabilizes.
Game is at Prudential Center, where Seton Hall historically plays with more defensive intensity and energy.
This favors SHU in a tight matchup.
The matchup favors Seton Hall if they control tempo and win the glass
🧩 Summary: The Formula for Xavier
To beat Seton Hall’s defense, Xavier must:
Speed the game up
Spread the floor
Use ball screens to hunt matchups
Force SHU into rotations
Win or survive the rebounding battle
Shoot confidently from deep
Apply pressure to disrupt SHU’s rhythm
If Xavier tries to play a slow, physical, half-court game, Seton Hall wins.
If Xavier turns it into a pace-and-space game, the matchup becomes far more favorable
