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Both Gach is back and the Utes hope he returns to form quickly - Salt Lake Tribune

A lot has transpired in those 37 days — for the Utes and for this dynamic sophomore guard.

His team remain winless on the road in Pac-12 play, but continues to play lights out at home, where they are 10-1 and hosting UCLA on Thursday evening (8:30 p.m., Fox Sports 1). Some of those road losses were blowouts, some of those home wins were exhilarating.

A right knee injury kept Gach from some of them. He missed four games across nine days, from Jan. 30 at UCLA to Feb. 8 vs. Cal. He’s back in the starting lineup, back addressing questions from reporters and that means he’s talking about what kept him out and what it means going forward.

“Those games, I just decided to take off, rest my knee, do the treatment that I needed so I could get back,” Gach told The Salt Lake Tribune. “I needed to start getting better and I’m back now.

“I still have to do treatment, but I feel good right now. I don’t think it was anything that was going to keep me out for a long time.”

When exactly this knee injury occurred or when it was diagnosed is unclear, but Gach played 26 minutes in a 76-64 win over Washington State on Jan. 25. On Jan. 30 at USC, Gach warmed up, but did not play. He did the same Feb. 2 at UCLA, saying Tuesday that his normal lateral movement and explosiveness were not there.

Gach had an MRI in the early going, his summation of that being the bones in the knee were tender. He said there is no ligament or structural damage.

This knee injury could be the byproduct of Osgood-Schlatter disease, which Gach says he suffered from between eighth grade and his sophomore year of high school. Osgood-Schlatter, which cost Gach three weeks at one point in his high school career, causes knee pain in growing adolescents, and is generally associated with growth spurts. Early in Gach’s teenage years, he shot up five or six inches and currently stands 6-foot-6.

“I feel like I’m getting back,” Gach said. “When I was out for two weeks, I didn’t even really play basketball, so I’m trying to get my mojo back, my confidence back, trying to be aggressive whenever I get a chance to be.”

Before the injury, Gach was already mired in a horrid offensive slump. In the five games before the injury, Gach averaged 4.2 points on 21.6% shooting, while hitting 2-for-22 from 3-point range.

Those figures are far lower than Gach averaged in some big games earlier this season. In three of Utah’s best wins this season, at Nevada, vs. Minnesota, and vs. then-No. 6 Kentucky in Las Vegas, Gach averaged 18.3 points on 52.9 percent shooting and 47 percent from 3-point range.

And beyond those stats, when Gach is at full strength, he is one Utah’s two-best perimeter defenders, the other being Timmy Allen.

As the Utes’ season continues to have radical peaks and valleys, it isn’t breaking news that this team could use a healthy Gach with the Pac-12 tournament three weeks away. So what does he need to do to return to form?

“There’s one answer to that, get in the gym,” Gach said. “Get the reps in, get the mental toughness up.

“I’ve had some ups and downs. Had some bad games, had some good games against Nevada, Minnesota, Kentucky. I need to do better for this team. To get where we want to be, we need guys to perform up to their capabilities, and that includes me.”

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Both Gach is back and the Utes hope he returns to form quickly - Salt Lake Tribune
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