Eric Curry deemed healthy, but being brought along slowly by Gophers basketball team

September 25, 2019 at 2:50AM
Gophers forward Eric Curry (24) attempted a basket during practice Tuesday. ] Aaron Lavinsky • aaron.lavinsky@startribune.com The Gophers men's basketball team held a practice, as well as a press conference by head coach Richard Pitino, on Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2019 at the University of Minnesota Athletes Village in Minneapolis, Minn.
Gophers redshirt junior forward Eric Curry was cleared for contact after missing 19 games because of knee and foot injuries last season and participated in the first day of practice Tuesday. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)

The Gophers are being careful with redshirt junior big man Eric Curry this fall so he can progress toward making an impact again after two injury-plagued basketball seasons.

Curry, who missed 19 games of the 2018-19 season because of knee and foot injuries, participated in full contact drills in Tuesday's first official practice of the season.

The 6-9 Curry played in 15 games last season. But he sat out the final seven games while having surgery to repair a torn ligament in his right foot. Curry hasn't played a full season since before he missed the 2017-18 season after knee surgery on multiple torn ligaments.

"He's very, very important when he's healthy, but he's missed a lot of time," Gophers coach Richard Pitino said Tuesday. "He did 45 to 50 minutes of noncontact [Monday], and he did some contact. But still we're bringing him along slowly. We'll be able to rev that up every couple weeks."

Curry competed in full contact 3-on-3 drills Tuesday. He boxed out for rebounds. He posted up. He defended the paint and guard ball screens. After scoring on a baseline layup over Drexel transfer Alihan Demir during one sequence, Curry's teammates cheered him on. He ended practice by standing and watching the 5-on-5 session.

When asked if Curry would be ready to play for the Nov. 5 season opener vs. Cleveland State, Pitino said he "would anticipate that."

Curry was the first big man off the bench on the Gophers' NCAA tournament team as a freshman in 2017. He started in place of freshman Daniel Oturu briefly last season after returning from surgery on his previously repaired left knee. But the highlight of Curry's shortened redshirt sophomore season was an 11-point, four-rebound performance in 25 minutes off the bench in a 65-64 victory Jan. 19 vs. Penn State at Williams Arena.

"You want depth," Pitino said. "The stronger you're building a program, you have that. You have versatility and guys who can play multiple positions."

Recovered after Italy

Sophomore guard Gabe Kalscheur and senior forward Michael Hurt were sidelined because of ankle injuries at the end of the Gophers' trip to Italy last month, but both were healthy for the first practice.

Kalscheur led the Gophers with 77 three-pointers last season as a freshman, but he scored several times driving to the basket in Tuesday's scrimmage. He worked on making plays off the dribble this summer.

"Every coach I talk to on the road, he's the first guy they bring up," Pitino said about Kalscheur. "Just how tough he is and how smart he is. Obviously, [he's] a great shooter, so now you have to expand your game."

Minnesota Golden Gophers guard Gabe Kalscheur (22) attempted a shot during Tuesday's practice. ] Aaron Lavinsky • aaron.lavinsky@startribune.com The Gophers men's basketball team held a practice, as well as a press conference by head coach Richard Pitino, on Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2019 at the University of Minnesota Athletes Village in Minneapolis, Minn.
Gabe Kalscheur led the Gophers with 77 three-pointers last season, but will be trying to drive to the basket more this season. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
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about the writer

Marcus Fuller

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Marcus Fuller covers Gophers men's basketball, national college basketball, college sports and high school recruiting for the Minnesota Star Tribune.

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