This weekend absolutely sucks.
NC State has announced that Terry Henderson is expected to miss a minimum of 6-8 weeks after suffering torn ligaments in his right ankle during NC State’s season opener on Friday night.
Henderson underwent x-rays and an MRI during the game, and his status will be continually evaluated and monitored by the NC State sports medicine staff and team physicians.
Henderson, a 6-5 redshirt junior from Raleigh, suffered the injury just seven minutes into Friday’s game, which was his first in an NC State uniform. He sat out the 2014-15 season after transferring from West Virginia.
Henderson was projected to play a significant role for the Wolfpack this season. He averaged 11.7 points per game as a sophomore at WVU in 2013-14.
“Obviously, this is a big blow to Terry and to our team,” head coach Mark Gottfried said. “I feel bad for Terry. He worked extremely hard to get ready for this year. Our team has to adjust, and we will need some young players to step up.
Henderson is expected to ease the blow of the premature loss of Trevor Lacey this season. His athleticism and length were expected to improve Mark Gottfried’s historically pedestrian defense while his shooting ability was to help balance the floor on offense.
#NCStateShit
More from Rush The Court:
Coming off a surprising trip to the Sweet Sixteen a year ago and returning a promising young nucleus, there was a lot of optimism surrounding NC State as it tipped off its 2015-16 campaign in Raleigh last evening. So positive were the feelings around how head coach Mark Gottfried had reinvigorated the program during his four-year tenure, the school rewarded him with a lucrative contract extension on season’s eve. And that is exactly where all the good news came to an end. The Wolfpack proceeded to get blitzed by William & Mary, allowing 51 first-half points before falling by a score of 85-68 in a very disappointing performance. The Tribe shot 52 percent from the floor while holding the Pack to a 38 percent clip, racing out to a big early lead that eventually extended to 23 and controlling the game from tip to buzzer. It was an awful start to the season for a team that has made the NCAA Tournament in all four of Gottfried’s years at the helm, and the news has since worsened.
Terry Henderson, the presumptive replacement for Trevor Lacey on the perimeter, suffered torn ligaments in his right ankle during the loss and is now expected to be sidelined for six to eight weeks. The 6’5” junior guard, who was seeing his first official Wolfpack action last night after transferring from West Virginia, was held scoreless in seven minutes. In his two years in Morgantown, Henderson proved to be a fearless and capable sniper, connecting on 89 three-point field goals despite never being a focal point of the offense. As a sophomore, he averaged 11.7 points per game as the third wheel in a dynamic backcourt alongside Juwan Staten and Eron Harris. Gottfried, who is looking to replace Lacey as well as Ralston Turner from last year’s club, was counting on Henderson to replace a significant portion of their departed production. The Raleigh native seemed to be the perfect fit to complement a point guard in Cat Barber who excels at beating the defense off of the bounce.
With the loss of Henderson for up to two months, it is now likely that heralded freshman Maverick Rowan will slide into the vacant starting position on the wing. The 6’7” rookie proved to be far from timid in his collegiate debut, firing up 15 shot attempts and making six of them in his 34 minutes on the floor. More scoring responsibility will also land in the lap of Caleb Martin, but if the opener was any indication, he appears ready to handle the challenge, draining five triples on his way to a team-high 21 points.
While this certainly was not the way Gottfried wanted his team to get out of the gates this season, Friday night’s loss was to a team that returned four starters from last season’s CAA regular season champions.
The news regarding Henderson is far more concerning, however, as it will really weaken the Wolfpack’s perimeter depth — not a strength to begin with — and puts additional pressure on Barber — forced into playing all 40 minutes — to create the majority of the offense for his teammates.