Rachel Banham was cleared to go nuts on a basketball court last week for the first time in nearly 10 months. She celebrated like a bull in a china shop.
Sunday's practice, her first at full contact, featured many bruises and several stunned scout players, some of them having gotten knocked over by the Gophers' fifth-year senior, who missed most of last year after a December knee injury.
"They were like 'Whoa, what's going on?' " Banham remembered Tuesday. " 'You can do this?' "
"And I'm like 'Yeah. I can.' "
With the season opener just over a month away, Banham is back, and with the program's career scoring record within her reach, plans to be stronger, tougher and yes, more aggressive than ever.
Banham, who tore her ACL in a Dec. 10 game at North Dakota, watched last season as the Gophers, relying heavily on senior forward Shae Kelley and All-America sophomore center Amanda Zahui B., charged to their first NCAA tournament in six years without her.
But both Zahui B. and Kelley departed for the WNBA in April, and the Gophers will need Banham more than ever to avoid taking a step backward, even if they occasionally have to tell their ambitious returner to "settle down."
"We're expecting probably a stronger, more talented Rachel than she's been since she's been here," coach Marlene Stollings said. "I expect this to be her best year as a Gopher."