Daily Pilot Athlete of the Week: Greg Perrine
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Barry Faulkner
Impressive, cool and largely unaffected, Newport Harbor High senior
Greg Perrine blended well with his surroundings when the Sailors boys
basketball team ventured to Alaska last week.
The 6-foot-1 point guard, who worked tirelessly to recover from a torn
ACL that required July 31 reconstructive surgery and sidelined him for
the first seven games, scored 43 points in three games, including a
season-high 17 in a semifinal loss.
Perrine’s performance, which helped the Tars finish third, earned him
all-tournament recognition. It also earned him Daily Pilot Athlete of the
Week honors.
More importantly, it signaled a return to consistency, after weeks of
readjustment, heading into Wednesday’s Sea View League opener at Aliso
Niguel.
“I think he’s about 85% of where he was before the injury and he gets
a couple percentage points better each game,” said Newport Harbor Coach
Larry Hirst, who is relieved to have his floor leader back for the
Sailors’ Sea View title quest.
“More than his scoring (in Alaska), there was a play when he made a
steal near the sideline and he had to jump off his (right) injured leg to
save the ball. He did it without hesitation and I looked at my coaches on
the bench and I think we all thought ‘OK, he’s back.’ ”
Perrine scored 14 points in his first game back Dec. 12, a nonleague
home win over Edison. He also compiled six assists, three steals, three
rebounds and one blocked shot. But, the encouraging debut soon gave way
to uncertainty as his body reacted to the rigor of competing at full
speed.
“He was sore in muscles he didn’t even know he had,” Hirst said.
Perrine scored 12 points combined the next six games, all the while
approaching the mental and physical fitness he had before the injury.
Both elements presented extreme challenges.
“The hardest thing about coming back was the mental aspect of knowing
I could do things again that I used to do,” Perrine said. “I was very
tentative jumping off of and landing on my right leg.”
Perrine said shuffling, knees bent in his defense stance, was also
initially awkward, but he believes he is close to 90% of the player he
was.
“The doctors said (recovery) would take four to six months,” Perrine
said. “I came back in a little more than four, but it’s a little more
than five months right now.”
The return of Perrine’s scoring touch is a welcome sight, though
Hirst’s appreciation for his returning second-team all-league performer
has always transcended the box score.
“He does all the obvious things, like running our offense, shooting
and passing,” Hirst said. “But he also does all the intangibles that you
can only appreciate if you really follow basketball. He’s usually our
second-leading rebounder, our second-best defender and he just gives a
calm to everything we do.”
The latter reference includes his unspoken extension of what Hirst
wants from his team in key situations.
“(Perrine) just always know where I want to go and what I want to do
on the court,” Hirst said. “He not only knows which plays I want to run,
but he knows the percentages on where to go with the ball. He’s going to
get us the highest percentage to be successful on any given play.”
Hard-nosed determination, readily apparent when Perrine protects the
ball, attacks the basket or sinks a crucial free throw late in the game,
was a key to his successful rehabilitation.
“I went to rehab three times a week for four months and I think I
missed one appointment,” Perrine said. “There were people around me who
were really down after I got hurt, but I always tried to stay positive.
Coming back and playing really motivated me. When I would have to sit and
watch my teammates practice and play games, it really motivated me to go
work as hard as I could to try to get back on the court.”
Perrine said the Alaska tournament has given him the confidence he has
lacked.
“I think I can go out and play and do everything I used to do.”
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