Sara Scalia didn't shoot a basketball for four days in a row last week, which is the longest she's gone without doing one of her favorite things in life in … "Never," she said.
Seriously? Never longer than four days?
"I can't remember [longer]," she noted.
The Gophers freshman sharpshooter loves to shoot. She's a gym rat. A basketball court is her go-to spot.
Every year for spring break, she made her parents deflate her basketball so it would fit in the suitcase and then pump it up once they got to the hotel because she hated taking days off from shooting. Her basketball traveled with her to Jamaica, Cancun and the Bahamas.
She once played a high school softball tournament in Colorado. Her parents drove 10 miles in between games and paid $20 per day so she could shoot on a rim that was attached to the wall of a racquetball court. That was the only hoop they could find near the softball fields.
"I'm just happy in a gym," Scalia said. "You don't really think about anything else."
The world has a lot on its mind with the COVID-19 pandemic. The gravity of this health crisis puts everything else in perspective. Personal inconvenience brought by self-quarantine is insignificant compared to front-page news that becomes sadder by the day.