Eric Gentry feeling confident and healthy ahead of Cotton Bowl
Ryan Kartje (LA Times) — Eleven weeks after he burst from the injury tent in Utah on a severely sprained ankle, hopping his way into USC’s defensive huddle for an impassioned, impromptu speech, Eric Gentry said his ailing ankle is finally back to normal.
The USC sophomore linebacker still gutted his way through games against Notre Dame and Utah at the end of the season, never letting on that his ankle sprain was still seriously bothering him. But Gentry acknowledged he wasn’t the same when he returned from a four-game absence.
“[The injury] was way worse than people understood,” Gentry said. “And it was a mental toll, just trying to fight back. It was really hard not being able to play against UCLA. Notre Dame, it was bothering. Utah, it was bothering. Just maybe, like, two weeks ago, it started to feel like I was 100% able to plant off of it and do stuff. I won’t make excuses for the performance or any of that, but getting back the confidence with my ankle is helping me with my play, being able to tackle, being able to burst with speed, stuff like that.”
The injury derailed what began as a bright season for the Arizona State transfer. Doubt crept in soon after.
“I didn’t feel like I was as good as I guess I was before,” he said.
But the last month has been rejuvenating, both for Gentry’s ankle and his confidence. Already, he said, he has formulated a plan for the offseason with strength and conditioning coach Bennie Wylie, one that starts with gaining as much weight as he can.
“It’s really needed this year,” Gentry said of gaining weight.
Whether the plan includes a position change remains to be seen. Shane Lee is returning for another season, and USC has already added All-Big 12 inside linebacker Mason Cobb via the transfer portal. Impressive true freshman Tackett Curtis could also factor in at the position next season, making the depth chart much more crowded at the top.
Gentry has already spoken with both since they signed with USC. In Cobb’s case, he was already familiar with his film.
“Mason is an amazing player, man,” Gentry said. “There’s a lot of talent coming in.”
Gentry rushed off the edge regularly in high school and has the length to potentially be a game-changer in the pass rush. But he’s been focused entirely on inside linebacker since coming to USC.
“I’m a football player, man,” Gentry said. “It doesn’t matter where the coach puts me.”
After more than two months of battling an injury, he’s just happy to be back to normal for the bowl.
Figueroa’s future
Nick Figueroa isn’t sure just yet what his future holds. But after his USC career comes to a close in the Cotton Bowl, the redshirt senior defensive end — and first team Academic All-American — has plenty of options to consider.
He could keep pursuing football, training for a shot with an NFL team. Or he could take the position he’s already got lined up in investment banking, which is slated to start next summer.
Either way, Figueroa has plenty of time to decide on his next steps. He’s already got a trip booked in the coming weeks to decompress in the mountains.
He’s not sure yet what awaits after that. But his final season at USC, he said, had taught him a lot about himself.
“There have been points in my career where maybe I lost confidence or I dealt with injury and the goal was to just be healthy,” Figueroa said. “But I just think you have to keep your goals lofty.”
latimes.com
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