according to Boynton....oh well....
FORT WORTH, Texas — Mike Boynton believes an injury that left his Oklahoma State basketball team with six scholarship players available for the second half of Wednesday’s loss to TCU was the case of a young player still learning his body.
After playing 46 seconds in Saturday’s loss to Kansas State because of a back strain, freshman forward Duncan Demuth upped that mark to 58 seconds Wednesday. In Demuth’s minute of the floor, the Horned Frogs outscored OSU by five.
“I think he’s better,” Boynton said. “I think it may be a little more psychological now than truly physical, but we’ll continue to monitor him. Obviously, I’m always gonna be mindful of — I can’t tell the kid how he feels, so I don’t wanna try to do that. I do want him to understand there’s a difference between being injured and having to need medical attention, and being sore or having some aches and pains, which is a part of the process through the college basketball season.”
FORT WORTH, Texas — Mike Boynton believes an injury that left his Oklahoma State basketball team with six scholarship players available for the second half of Wednesday’s loss to TCU was the case of a young player still learning his body.
After playing 46 seconds in Saturday’s loss to Kansas State because of a back strain, freshman forward Duncan Demuth upped that mark to 58 seconds Wednesday. In Demuth’s minute of the floor, the Horned Frogs outscored OSU by five.
“I think he’s better,” Boynton said. “I think it may be a little more psychological now than truly physical, but we’ll continue to monitor him. Obviously, I’m always gonna be mindful of — I can’t tell the kid how he feels, so I don’t wanna try to do that. I do want him to understand there’s a difference between being injured and having to need medical attention, and being sore or having some aches and pains, which is a part of the process through the college basketball season.”