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    ‘We’re keeping them involved.’ UK women’s basketball details two long-term injuries.

    By Caroline Makauskas,

    3 days ago

    It’s official — Big Blue Nation won’t get to see Kentucky women’s basketball transfers Jordan Obi or Dominika Paurová any time soon.

    Head coach Kenny Brooks confirmed during UK’s annual media day Tuesday that neither Obi nor Paurová will be available in the near future because of injuries suffered this offseason.

    Obi, a graduate transfer from Penn who suffered a lower-leg injury over the summer, will be out “probably until January,” Brooks said. At that point, she’ll be reevaluated to determine if her injury requires additional rehabilitation before returning to action.

    Paurová, a sophomore transfer from Oregon State, hurt her knee while playing in Czechia’s U20 matchup against Iceland on July 14 in the FIBA Women’s EuroBasket. Brooks confirmed Tuesday that she tore an ACL, causing her to miss the 2024-25 season.

    UK Athletics announced that both transfers had sustained unspecified lower-leg injuries at the end of July, but no timeline or further detail about the nature of their injuries had been set until now. However, Brooks did note that Obi and Paurová will “be definitely a big part of our future, which is kind of (giving) us an opportunity as we go into recruiting. We have a cushion because we know that those two will have the opportunity to come back next year and strengthen our team, as well.”

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2li3Ew_0vzJhjWO00
    Jordan Obi, who suffered an unspecified leg injury this offseason, is expected to have a chance to return to the court in January. “I’m not trying to rush anything, especially with an injury, you don’t want to risk re-injury,” she said Tuesday. Ryan C. Hermens/rhermens@herald-leader.com
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1mEnQR_0vzJhjWO00
    Kentucky guard Dominika Paurová, who suffered a season-ending injury this past summer, remains optimistic about her Wildcats career. “I will come back stronger” next year, she said. Ryan C. Hermens/rhermens@herald-leader.com

    The injuries to Obi and Paurová mean Brooks’ first Wildcats squad will enter the season with 11 scholarship players available — guards Georgia Amoore, Tanah Becker, Lexi Blue, Dazia Lawrence, Cassidy Rowe, Saniah Tyler and Gabby Brooks; forwards Amelia Hassett and Teonni Key; and centers Clara Silva and Clara Strack.

    Obi earned 2024 academic All-Ivy League and first-team All-Ivy League honors after a senior season that not only saw her eclipse 1,000 career points, but also serve as the Quakers’ second-leading scorer; The 6-foot-1 Obi averaged 14.8 points, 1.4 blocks and a team-leading 7.7 rebounds per game.

    “She was going to be a really big part of our development,” Brooks said Tuesday. “Fifth-year senior, big, strong guard. Gave us the opportunity to be versatile. We could have played her at the 3, the 4, and she would have been, you know, we could have played big, we could have played small. So she’s going to be out probably until January, and then we’re going to have a reevaluation of her.”

    Obi told the Herald-Leader on Tuesday that her mentality toward rehabilitation has remained the same since her injury.

    “I’m just focused on taking it day-by-day,” Obi said. “I’m not trying to rush anything, especially with an injury, you don’t want to risk re-injury. So yeah, just staying patient, taking it day-by-day, trying to stay engaged as much as I can, cheer on this group as much as I can because obviously I’m not going to be on the floor for at least the first half of the season. So yeah, the mindset’s the same.”

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2chchH_0vzJhjWO00
    Kenny Brooks will enter his first year as Kentucky head coach with 11 healthy scholarship players after confirming Tuesday that Dominika Paurová will miss the entire season and Jordan Obi could sit out as much as half of it because of injuries. Ryan C. Hermens/rhermens@herald-leader.com

    Paurová, who averaged 16.5 minutes per game in her freshman season at Oregon State, contributed 5.5 points, 2.1 rebounds, 1.4 assists and 0.5 steals per contest in the Beavers’ 27-8 season , which culminated in their first Elite Eight appearance since 2018.

    “She would have been a 6-foot guard that would’ve given us experience,” Brooks said. “She went to the Elite Eight last year. I think she was the sixth man on the team, very productive. She also would have given us opportunities to play big, play small, but, you know, both of them have been very active in practice. ... We’re keeping them involved, and they’re both doing extremely well in rehabbing.”

    Paurová told the Herald-Leader she’s looking forward to returning next season.

    “I feel like it will make me stronger,” Paurová said. “I will come back stronger. But I’m just excited for the games to start, to start watching some basketball and spend time with those people.”

    How did SEC women’s basketball teams benefit in the transfer portal? We ranked the classes.

    Which SEC women’s basketball teams brought in the best freshman classes? We ranked them.

    SEC women’s basketball poses new challenge for UK’s Kenny Brooks. ‘We’re different, too.’

    Could UK women’s basketball return to NCAA Tournament this year? Bracketology says yes.

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