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Wilson’s Season Is Slipping Away : Back Injury May Force Pepperdine Guard to Redshirt His Junior Season

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Every morning for the past two months, Marty Wilson has climbed out of bed knowing he wouldn’t be playing basketball that day.

The pain in his back, caused by a pair of protruding disks in his spine, makes it difficult for him to bend over and put on a pair of socks. Or tie his shoelaces.

Yet every afternoon, he walks from his dorm room to Firestone Fieldhouse on the Pepperdine campus in Malibu for basketball practice. There, the pain is even greater.

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The 6-5 junior is a reluctant spectator as his Pepperdine teammates prepare for another game.

“It’s frustrating to sit and watch the guys practice,” he said. “I’m not the kind of guy who wants to just sit and watch. Not to be out there, especially in the games, really hurts.”

Wilson figured to be Pepperdine’s starting point guard this season. The former Ventura County Player of the Year from Simi Valley High was the only experienced backcourt player returning for the Waves.

“This was his time to play,” Pepperdine Coach Jim Harrick said.

On Monday, Wilson told Harrick he would like to redshirt, which would give him two more years of eligibility. Harrick would still like Wilson back this season if possible.

“I want to do what’s best for Marty, but the team comes first,” he said. “We’ve got 16 games left, and if he can come back and help us, we want him back in there.

“Marty has some experience, and that is the key factor we’re missing. Plus he’s a marvelous defender, a good rebounder, he’s mentally tough and a team leader. Those are things we desperately need on this team.”

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A final decision on Wilson’s status will be made next week after further tests have been made.

Wilson first noticed the back pain after an aerobic workout Oct. 14, the day before practices began. Eager to get his junior season under way, he continued his aerobics and weight-training.

Three weeks later, Wilson scored 11 points in the first half of an intrasquad scrimmage. But during intermission, he felt his back again tighten up. He played in the second half but hasn’t practiced or played since.

X-rays showed the displaced disks in Wilson’s spine. The injury does not require surgery, so his only option was rehabilitation.

Instead of practicing, Wilson would spend his afternoons stretching, sitting in a Jacuzzi and hanging upside down from an inverted bar, therapy meant to relieve pressure on the spine. The original prognosis for full recovery was three to six weeks.

That was eight weeks ago.

“I didn’t think he’d be out this long, and I don’t think Marty did either,” Harrick said. “We all anticipated him coming right back.”

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Wilson might not be back at all. He already has missed 12 games, and even if he were to get immediate medical clearance to play, he said it would take him two weeks to get into shape. By that time, Pepperdine will have played five more games.

And Wilson said his back isn’t getting much better.

“I’m doing as much therapy as I can, and it seems to get better every once in a while,” he said.

The program that was 48-14 with Wilson on the bench the past two years is 4-8 with him in the stands. Including Wilson, Because of Wilson’s injury and graduation, Pepperdine has lost its top four guards from last season--and it shows. The Waves are averaging four more turnovers a game than they did last season.

Wilson, who played about eight minutes a game for two seasons, is a veteran compared to Pepperdine’s other guards. Jim Harrick Jr., the coach’s son, is the only other guard with major college experience, and he only recently has played much. The other guards are a pair of community college transfers and a redshirt freshman.

“Our whole offense is dictated by where the guard goes,” Harrick said. “There are a tremendous amount of decisions to make, and we’re asking a lot of young kids to do that.” Said Harrick Jr., who played at Newbury Park High: “It’s not our inexperience as much as it is we haven’t played together. Marty knows where people like to get the ball. We want him to come back, but we can’t wait for him.”

Harrick doesn’t want to jeopardize Wilson’s health, but he believes the 6-5 floor leader could make an impact. With the West Coast Athletic Conference holding a postseason tournament for the first time, Harrick said Wilson still has time to make a final decision.

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“We’ve got a lot of time to get healthy and ready,” Harrick said. Wilson, who would only like to get his season started, is accustomed to waiting at Pepperdine.

As a freshman, he was the first guard off the bench. Wilson appeared in all 32 games as Pepperdine was 23-9 and lost in the first round of the NCAA Tournament to Duke.

Wilson averaged about 10 minutes a game in relief of Dwayne Polee, a third-round draft pick of the Clippers who is playing in Australia, and Jon Korfas, who is playing professionally in Greece.

The following year, Polee and Korfas were back. But so was Grant Gondrezick, a redshirt senior coming off knee surgery. More bad news for Wilson.

Like Wilson, Gondrezick was a 6-5 guard who played good defense and rebounded. But he also had a state-of-the-art jump shot and two years of seniority on Wilson.

Wilson wanted to redshirt, but the day before the season started, Gondrezick’s knee hadn’t recovered. Harrick needed Wilson as insurance but not much else. Wilson played only 109 minutes in 23 games as Pepperdine was 25-5 and returned to the NCAA Tournament.

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Said Gondrezick, a fourth-round draft choice playing his rookie season in the NBA for the Phoenix Suns: “Marty was in a bad situation. But when he did play, he played well.

“Then last year, I came back but my status was questionable. I tell you, practice every day at the guard spots was a war. I had to prove myself over again because I was the forgotten man. So Marty was battling for my time, I was battling for Jon and Dwayne’s time and they were battling to keep their time.

“We only went with three guards, so Marty didn’t get any time. He never got a legitimate chance.”

That was supposed to come this year.

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