Richmond features five starters capable of shooting the three, including Justin Harper, who has made 75 of 166 treys for 45.2 percent.

“I know they’re a very good defensive team,” Richmond coach Chris Mooney said of KU. “But I’m not sure if they’ve seen someone like (senior guard) Kevin Anderson. And (senior forward) Justin Harper is a difficult matchup for some teams.”

KU has enough depth at guard to throw a bunch of different looks at the undersized Anderson, Richmond’s second-leading scorer at 16.7 points per game.

But the skill set Harper possesses will make his showdown with the twins as interesting to watch as any on the floor.

“That’s one of the keys,” Richmond sophomore Darien Brothers said. “For them to come out and have to guard our bigs. If we bring them out of their element, it can cause some huge matchup problems.”