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High Point University Baseball Preview 2026

  • Tyler
  • 21 hours ago
  • 9 min read


From Breakthrough to Burden — and Why This Team Is Built to Carry It


High Point baseball enters the 2026 season in unfamiliar territory. Not as the scrappy upstart. Not as the league’s fun story. But as the standard.


A year ago, the Panthers didn’t just have the best regular season in program history, they reset expectations entirely. After winning the Big South tournament and reaching the national stage for the first time in program history in 2024, Hammond’s HPU Panthers built on that success. 


To the tune of 39 wins and a national offensive profile. The 2025 lineup could bludgeon teams into submission with power and impact bats. And yet, for all the fireworks, 2025 also revealed the final ceiling separating great from dominant.


The burden of 2026 is not repeating history. It’s about continuing to build into a nation powerhouse.



👀 A Look Back at 2025


The easy takeaway from 2025 is the headline: 39–19, the most wins in Division I program history, and an offense that sparked fear into the hearts of any who faced them. 

High Point’s offense wasn’t just good for the Big South, it was NATIONALLY ELITE:


  • 1st in Runs Scored (619)

  • 1st in On-Base Percentage (.449)

  • 1st in Slugging Percentage (.607)

  • T-1st in Doubles (149)

  • 2nd in Home Runs (131)

  • 5th in Hits (675)

  • T-5th in Base on Balls (365)


But the deeper truth is more instructive.


That team lived on historic run production because it had to


The pitching staff battled depth issues late. The bullpen was stretched thin by May. Close games demanded perfection from starters and creativity from the staff. 


When the margin tightened, High Point often survived, but rarely comfortably.And they survived until they didn't. A mid-week game against App State earlier in the year and a disappointing series to end the regular season at Winthrop was a harbinger of what was to come in the Big South tournament. An early exit fueled because no lead was safe.

That’s why 2026 matters more than 2025 ever did. 


This season isn’t about topping offensive totals. It’s about building a mid-major powerhouse roster that just wins, even when the runs stop coming in bunches. Good teams win on offense, great programs win in multiple ways and especially with pitching/defense.



🧠 Joey Hammond’s Blueprint: Power First, Depth Always


Head coach Joey Hammond has never hidden his philosophy.

After seven seasons at Wake Forest helping engineer one of the most historic offenses of the BBCOR era, Hammond brought a power-first identity to High Point: one built on damage, discipline, and mental toughness.


The Hammond Hallmarks


1. Elite Offense Without Reckless Abandon

This program hunts impact contact, but not at the expense of plate discipline. Walks matter. Situational hitting matters. Pressure matters. That’s how you lead the nation in RBIs without selling out resulting in strikeouts.

2. Development Over Résumé

Hammond’s 11-year professional career as a utility player informs everything. Versatility isn’t optional, it’s required. Players are cross-trained. Roles are fluid. The lineup stays adaptable.

3. Culture and Experience Beats Talent

In the portal era, Hammond has been selective. He doesn’t chase stats; he recruits mindset. Newcomers aren’t just added, they’re integrated quickly, deliberately, and with intention. Hammond wants older and experienced players at every level.

4. Grit as a Skill

High Point doesn’t blink. That identity carried the Panthers through their first Big South title run and remains the program’s defining trait.

2026 reflects a subtle evolution of that blueprint, not a departure from it.



💪🏻 The Pitching Shift: Where Championships Are Decided


If 2025 was an offensive apex, 2026 is a structural correction.

The Panthers return the rarest commodity in college baseball: a true ace.


Wade Walton and the Rotation Ceiling


Wade Walton enters 2026 as the conference’s preseason Pitcher of the Year for good reason. He’s durable. He attacks the zone. And most importantly he gives you innings, the most valuable currency in modern college baseball.


Behind him, Dylan Story and transfer Ty Brachbill give High Point something it didn’t consistently have late last season: options.


That matters more than ERA.


The Bullpen Is No Longer a Question Mark


Last year, High Point relied heavily on necessity. This year, it’s built on specialization.


Power arms. Matchup looks. Long-relief bridges. Swing-and-miss profiles. The goal isn’t overpowering, it’s about pitching to the moment and sustainability. Starters no longer have to reach the seventh just to protect the bullpen from itself.

That alone raises the postseason ceiling.



🔌 Life After Simpson, Durschlag, and Others: Rebuilding Without Resetting


Replacing 70 home runs from a roster is never easy. 


Replacing 22 homers from one single player is even more difficult. Replacing an All-American and one of the conference’s most dynamic outfielders is even harder.High Point didn’t just lose Brayden Simpson’s raw power, it also lost Konni Durschlag’s speed, range, and tone-setting presence at the top of the lineup. Together, they represented the emotional and statistical spine of the 2025 offense.


But 2026 isn’t about replacing either player individually.


It’s about redistributing their impact across the lineup.


The Departures That Changed the Shape of the Offense


Simpson was the hammer — the bat that shortened games and punished mistakes.

Durschlag was the accelerant — an elite athlete who pressured defenses, stretched gaps, stole bases, and turned singles into rallies.


Losing both forces a philosophical shift.


High Point no longer builds around a few superstars driving the bus. Instead, it’s constructing an offense that wins by accumulation: longer innings, more disciplined at-bats, and fewer dead spots from top to bottom.


The New Offensive Core


Landen Johnson, the Big South Preseason Player of the Year, becomes the clear centerpiece. The reigning NCAA RBI leader doesn’t need to replace Simpson’s home run total; he needs to anchor the order and punish pitchers forced into mistakes by traffic ahead of him.


Christian Smith assumes the leadership mantle vacated by Durschlag. Smith brings a rare blend of power, speed, and defensive reliability, and his role now extends beyond production, he sets the tone in the outfield and on the bases. He will also need to swing-and-miss less after leading the team in K’s last season.

Around them, High Point leans into depth:

  • Middle-infield stability from Frank Kelly and Jace Kohler

  • Expanded roles for athletic outfielders who can replicate Durschlag’s pressure, if not his exact stat line

  • Catcher and bottom-of-the-order bats capable of extending innings rather than ending them


The result is a lineup that may not match 2025’s headline numbers, but may actually be harder to navigate in close games.


The Strategic Shift


Last year the team was bombs-away up-and-down the order. This year though there might be even more balance if less pop. 


There will be no obvious place for opposing pitchers to hide. No sigh of relief after getting through a part of the order.


High Point’s 2026 offense is designed to:

  • Grind pitch counts

  • Force bullpen decisions earlier

  • Manufacture runs when the long ball stalls


That’s not a step back. It’s a roster maturation.



🧩 Key Players to Know — 2026 High Point Panthers


Championship and record-setting seasons must have pillars just like the Doric ones you’ll see throughout HPU’s beautiful campus.


For High Point in 2026, these are the players who define the floor, raise the ceiling, and determine whether this roster turns expectation into execution.



Landen Johnson — R-Sr., INF


Role: Offensive centerpiece | Middle-order anchor

Why he matters:

Johnson isn’t just the best returning bat in the Big South, he’s the NCAA’s returning RBI King. This year he’s the stabilizer and heart of an entirely new offensive structure. With Simpson and Durschlag gone, Johnson becomes the hitter opposing staffs will dedicate gameplans around. If he continues to produce with runners on and maintains elite on-base discipline, this offense works.



Wade Walton — So., RHP


Role: Ace | Tone-setter | Series equalizer

Why he matters:

Walton gives High Point something few mid-majors have, a returning true Friday-night arm who changes series math. His durability allows the staff to manage the bullpen intelligently, and his ability to pitch deep into games is the single biggest factor in whether late-season fatigue becomes an issue again. In neutral-site and postseason play, Walton is the piece that travels.



Christian Smith — R-Sr., OF


Role: Veteran leader | Two-way impact

Why he matters:

Smith inherits more than production, he inherits responsibility. With Durschlag gone, Smith becomes the emotional and athletic leader of the outfield. He brings speed, power, elite defense, and postseason experience, but his real value is in setting the tempo: aggressive baserunning, clean defense, and professional at-bats in leverage spots.



Ty Brachbill — Jr., RHP


Role: Rotation stabilizer | Bullpen protector

Why he matters:

Brachbill may be the most important addition on the roster. Whether starting or working as a piggyback/long-relief arm, his presence keeps High Point from overexposing the bullpen in April and May. He’s the bridge between dominance and durability, the kind of arm that quietly saves a season by absorbing innings.



Dylan Story — Jr., RHP


Role: Swing piece | Matchup weapon

Why he matters:

Story’s role flexibility gives the coaching staff options. Whether he starts, relieves, or attacks specific matchups, his raw stuff allows High Point to tailor game plans series-to-series. If he consistently delivers quality innings, the Panthers’ pitching depth goes from solid to elite.



Frank Kelly — Jr., INF


Role: Defensive glue | Inning extender

Why he matters:

Kelly may not lead the team in headlines, but he leads it in stability. With significant roster turnover, his ability to control the middle infield, turn clean outs, and keep innings alive at the plate is critical. Championship teams need players who don’t give anything away, Kelly fits that profile.



Mark Salicco — R-So., RHP


Role: Bullpen weapon | Swing-and-miss specialist

Why he matters:

Salicco represents the philosophical shift in the bullpen. Where last year relied on contact management, 2026 demands strikeouts in traffic. If Salicco can consistently miss bats in high-leverage spots, the late-inning equation changes entirely for High Point.



Justin Ruiz — Jr., C


Role: Power from the catcher spot | Staff handler

Why he matters:

Ruiz gives the Panthers something rare, offensive upside behind the plate without sacrificing stability. His ability to control the run game, manage a deep pitching staff, and provide bottom-of-the-order power helps lengthen the lineup in ways that don’t show up in box scores. Three Hillier was an important piece to last year’s lineup, Ruiz has to take that mantle over now.



Freshman to Watch: Nic Lembo — Fr., OF


Role: Early-impact wildcard

Why he matters:

Every season has one freshman who forces the staff’s hand, last year it was Jace Kohler, this year it could be Lembo. Nic has the bat speed and confidence to impact games early, and if he earns consistent reps, it adds another dimension to an already deep outfield group.



The Big Picture


High Point doesn’t rely on one or two players to carry them in 2026.

It relies on roles being executed at a high level — innings absorbed, at-bats extended, and pressure applied relentlessly.

These are the players who make that possible.



4️⃣0️⃣ The Road to 40: Why the Margin Is Thin


Forty wins has never happened here. It won’t happen accidentally.

The math is unforgiving but possible:

  • Dominate early non-conference home series

  • Win every Big South series

  • Avoid midweek fatigue traps

  • Steal one or two résumé wins from ACC/SEC foes


Key games/stretches: 

  • at Florida

  • The North Carolina Big Boys

    • At UNC

    • Vs Duke

    • Home/Away against Triad rival Wake Forest

  • Opening Big South play at Upstate

  • Measuring sticks against other top-tier Carolina mid-majors

    • Charleston

    • UNCW

    • Campbell


These matchups aren’t just pivotal to reach 40 wins, they’re about proof of this program’s arrival.


⚾️ The Conference Reality: No Free Weekends


The Big South has never been deeper at the top.


USC Upstate Spartans returns championship pedigree and elite middle-order bats. Winthrop Eagles bring draft-level talent and athleticism. Radford’s two-way star Breckin Nace looms as a Player of the Year disruptor.


Being ranked at the top of the conference means High Point won’t sneak up on anyone - that will be a big test in a tough Big South.


And then there’s Asheville.


🏟️ Asheville Awaits: A Subtle Advantage


The Big South Tournament’s move to McCormick Field quietly favors teams with balance, power, and depth.


High Point finishes the regular season at UNC Asheville, a logistical gift. Acclimation matters. Pitching depth matters. Experience matters. Power in higher altitudes matters.


Those are the Panthers’ advantages.



🔮 Final Verdict: The Burden Is the Point


The best teams don’t chase last year’s numbers. They chase sustainability.


High Point enters 2026 with:

  • The league’s best returning arm

  • A deeper, more intentional bullpen

  • An offense built to punish up-and-down the lineup 

  • A coaching staff that understands when to evolve


This isn’t a victory lap season.

It’s a proof-of-concept season.


If the Panthers reach 40 wins and/or return to the College World Series, it won’t be because they scored more.

It’ll be because they finally needed less.


And that’s how programs cross the final threshold.This team may not have the highlights or power of last year’s squad but it might be better positioned to win the BSC championship and get back on the Road to Omaha. 


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