The Capital

QUICKLY HAVING IMPACT

Greyhounds get timely lift as Davidsonvi­lle’s Cameron Spencer returns from surgery

- By Edward Lee

As a teammate within the Loyola Maryland men’s basketball program, Santi Aldama has grown to appreciate what Cameron Spencer can bring to the court.

As a roommate of Spencer’s, well, Aldama’s admiration has its limits.

In a six-person suite that also houses sophomores Golden Dike and Daraun Gray and freshmen Wade Jackson and Alonso Faure, Aldama has approached Spencer on several occasions about the amount of time he spends in the bathroom and his habit of filling the trash can with empty water bottles without dumping them in a recycling bin.

“I will take the trash out and bring it back in, and within a day it will be full,” said Aldama, a 6-foot-11, 224-pound sophomore power forward from Spain.

“He sees that I don’t like it, and sometimes he will just do it looking at me so that he can see my face. But I really can’t get mad because I know that he sometimes doesn’t do it on purpose. It’s fun.”

Spencer, a 6-4, 207-pound sophomore shooting guard who grew up in Davidsonvi­lle and graduated from Boys’ Latin, acknowledg­ed how difficult living with him might be for Aldama.

“He might not like me as a roommate,” Spencer said with a smile. “I do some little things that drive him nuts, but that’s just how it is.”

Thankfully for Aldama and the Greyhounds (5-10), Spencer’s on-court contributi­ons outweigh any headaches he might cause for his roommates. In his past three games — all against Patriot League rival Navy — he has averaged 10.3 points and 4.3 rebounds.

In No. 9 seed Loyola’s 76-68 upset of the top-seeded Midshipmen on Saturday in a conference tournament quarterfin­al, he amassed 10 points, seven assists, five rebounds and two steals.

His performanc­e helped the team advance to a semifinal date with No. 4 seed Army (12-8) in West Point, New York, at 5:30 p.m. on Wednesday.

“He’s important in every aspect that we do because he really knows how to play the game offensivel­y and defensivel­y,” coach Tavaras Hardy said. “He sees things, he can pass, he can shoot, he can get guys fired up in understand­ing what is right in those moments, and he’s a competitor.

“All of those things are what we needed, so it’s been good to add that to the team. It’s what we thought we were going to have from the get-go.”

Having Spencer from the start would have been ideal, but offseason hip surgery last summer delayed his participat­ion. Spencer — the younger brother of Pat Spencer, a star lacrosse player for the Greyhounds who played one season of basketball at Northweste­rn — characteri­zed the issue as a “deformity” in which the top of his femur bone was not properly attached to the hip joint. The discomfort began in January 2020 as conference play was underway.

“It was a constant pain, but as I continued to play on it, it would shoot up my hip and pretty much just give out on me,” Spencer said, characteri­zing the sensation as a nine on a scale of one to 10.

“It would shoot up the front of my hip, and it just felt like a knife was hitting me there.”

After a freshman year in which he averaged 10 points, 3.4 rebounds and 3.1 assists, Spencer was scheduled for surgery, but the coronaviru­s pandemic pushed the operation back to June, with a projected recovery time of six to eight months. The process was slow and exasperati­ng.

“The recovery definitely took longer than expected,” he said. “That was the frustratin­g part. … I really just worked my butt off every day to try to get back. I didn’t know when it would be, but I just tried to recover every day and get better so that I could be back out on the floor as soon as possible.”

Spencer sat out the first 12 games during which Loyola went 4-8, including 0-5 from the outset. He chafed at the lack of medical clearance, which did not go unnoticed by Hardy.

“He’s one of those guys that I can look in the eye and I can tell that his drive and determinat­ion are boiling,” he said. “So sometimes you’ve got to calm him down, but in my opinion that’s a good problem to have. I want guys that are fired up like that.”

Spencer returned for the team’s final two games of the regular season, totaling 21 points, eight rebounds, three assists and three steals in back-to-back losses to Navy.

“I feel like I could’ve played better,” he said. “I have pretty high expectatio­ns. I wanted to go out and do well.

“As far as endurance, I didn’t know how my endurance would be, but it has been better than I expected. … Definitely the shooting rhythm isn’t all the way there yet, and that’s to be expected, but I think I’m getting it back game by game.”

Aldama said it is evident Spencer is still not fully healthy but noted that his roommate has not complained or made excuses.

“The way he went about his business with the rehab every day, he just worked to be back out here,” Aldama said. “I know that he’s still not 100%, but he’s still playing at a great level. That’s what we needed from him. … He could have waited another year to be at 100%. He didn’t practice much, but he came and played so we’ve got to be grateful for that.

“He’s already playing at a high level. So he’s going to help us out a lot in these playoffs.”

Spencer’s playing time has increased by eight minutes in each game, and Hardy did not consider limiting his minutes.

“With the things he brings to the table, he has earned the minutes he’s gotten, and they continue to increase based on the three games he’s played,” Hardy said. “I don’t think of him as someone I need to rest. If I need him out there, I’m going to put him out there.

“I don’t have him on any type of restrictio­n or anything like that.”

The seven assists Spencer compiled in Saturday’s win marked a career high, and he was quick to credit teammates for canning their shots and making his numbers look good. But Midshipmen coach Ed DeChellis said Spencer knows how to enhance his teammates.

“I see him being like the floor general and giving the other guys courage with his communicat­ion and talking,” DeChellis said. “He makes plays to help other guys. I think he makes the other guys on the team better. … He understand­s their offense and he makes good decisions.”

The Greyhounds and Black Knights did not meet this winter, but Loyola has not won in West Point since Feb. 6, 2016 — a string of four straight losses. Hardy is hoping that Spencer’s return will prove timely.

“It’s one game at a time, but having him be able to finish the season and play a couple games to get his timing back and getting him fully integrated as we’re competing in this win-or-go-home setting certainly helps,” Hardy said. Spencer is eager to do as much as he can. “I wish we would have had a better record and could have played earlier,” he said. “Unfortunat­ely, that didn’t happen, but at the end of the day you play to do well in the playoffs. So we were able to win the first one, but we want to win a couple more.”

 ?? GILLESPIE/CAPITAL GAZETTE
PAUL W. ?? Loyola Maryland’s Cameron Spencer hits a 3-pointer during a Patriot League quarterfin­al against Navy at Alumni Hall in Annapolis on Saturday.
GILLESPIE/CAPITAL GAZETTE PAUL W. Loyola Maryland’s Cameron Spencer hits a 3-pointer during a Patriot League quarterfin­al against Navy at Alumni Hall in Annapolis on Saturday.

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