Georgetown Hoyas | |||
2011–12 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team | |||
University | Georgetown University | ||
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Conference | Big East Conference | ||
Location | Washington, DC | ||
Head coach | John Thompson III (8th year) | ||
Arena | Verizon Center (Capacity: 20,173) |
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Nickname | Hoyas | ||
Colors | Blue and Gray
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Uniforms | |||
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NCAA Tournament champions | |||
1984 | |||
NCAA Tournament runner up | |||
1943, 1982, 1985 | |||
NCAA Tournament Final Four | |||
1943, 1982, 1984, 1985, 2007 | |||
Conference tournament champions | |||
1975, 1976, 1979, 1980, 1982, 1984, 1985, 1987, 1989, 2007 | |||
Conference regular season champions | |||
1939, 1980, 1984, 1987, 1989, 1992, 2007, 2008 |
The Georgetown University men's basketball team, which, like all sports teams at Georgetown University, is named the Georgetown Hoyas, is a basketball program in the NCAA Division I Big East Conference. Georgetown's first intercollegiate men's basketball team was formed in 1907. John Thompson III, son of the accomplished former coach John Thompson, is the current head coach. The Hoyas historically have been well regarded not only for their team success, but also for generating players that succeed after graduation both on the court, such as Patrick Ewing and Dikembe Mutombo, and off, such as Congressman Henry Hyde and General James L. Jones.
The team won the National Championship in 1984 and has reached the NCAA Tournament Final Four on five occasions. Their most recent trip to the Final Four was in 2007. They have also won the Big East Men's Basketball Tournament seven times, and has also won or shared the Big East regular season title seven times. They have been invited to the NCAA Tournament twenty-seven times and the National Invitation Tournament an additional eleven times.
The Hoyas currently employ a variant of the Princeton offense, a style of play that emphasizes ball movement. The hallmark of the offense is the "backdoor" pass, where a player on the wing suddenly moves towards the basket, receives a bounce pass from a guard on the perimeter, and ideally finds himself with no defenders between him and a layup. Coach Thompson learned the style while serving under then-Coach Pete Carril of the Princeton University Tigers. Using this system, Georgetown has been lauded for excelling by emphasizing offensive efficiency rather than speed of play.[1]
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The Georgetown men's basketball team played its first game February 9, 1907, defeating the University of Virginia by a score of 22–11. In its first 60-some years, the program displayed only sporadic success.[2] Until McDonough Gymnasium opened on campus for the 1950–51 season, the team moved its home court frequently, playing in McKinley Tech High School, Ryan Gymnasium, Uline Arena, and the National Guard Armory.[2]
The team recruited its first All-American, Ed Hargaden, in 1931–32.[2] From 1932 till 1939, the Hoyas played in the Eastern Intercollegiate Conference, earning a share of the conference title in 1939.[3] In 1942, a Hoya went pro for the first time, when three seniors, Al Lujack, Buddy O'Grady, and Don Martin were drafted professionally upon graduation.[2] The next year the team, led by future congressman Henry Hyde, reached new heights by going all the way to the 1943 NCAA championship game. The team's coach, Elmer Ripley, would be inducted into the basketball hall of fame 30 years later.[2]
World War II suspended the program, however, and it was rarely successful over the next three decades, with only two postseason appearances (1952–53 and 1969–70).[2] Top players from that period include Tom O'Keefe, the first Hoya to reach 1,000 career points in 1949–50, and future NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue, who would graduate #2 in Hoya career rebounds in 1962.[2] O'Keefe would later return to coach the team from 1960 until 1966, when the school hired John Magee, who had led Boston College as a player to its first NCAA Tournament bid. Magee led the team to the 1970 NIT, just its third post-season appearance, but a dismal three-win season in 1971-72 led to his dismissal.[4]
John Thompson played two seasons with the Boston Celtics before he achieved local notoriety coaching St. Anthony's High School in Washington, D.C. to several very successful seasons. Thompson was hired to coach Georgetown in 1972, and with new recruits like Merlin Wilson, quickly and dramatically improved the team. Georgetown joined the Eastern College Athletic Conference in 1975 in its South region, and after a 16-9 regular season found itself facing West Virginia in the conference tournament championship. Derrick Jackson's buzzer beater won Georgetown its first tournament championship, and a bid to the 1975 NCAA Tournament.[3] Georgetown repeated as their conference champions the following year, and again in 1979, beating George Washington University and Syracuse University respectively.[5]
Prior to the 1979-80 season, Georgetown joined with six other schools, Providence, St. John's, Syracuse, Seton Hall, Connecticut, and Boston College to found a conference focused primarily on basketball. The Big East Conference provided Georgetown increased competition, and several of its longest rivalries. Facing #3 Syracuse on February 13, 1980, in the final game at Manley Field House, Georgetown star Sleepy Floyd scored two last-second free-throws to snap Syracuse's 57-game home winning streak leading Coach Thompson to declare "Manley Field House is officially closed."[6] They faced Syracuse again three weeks later in the first Big East Tournament Finals, winning 87–81.[5]
The team moved its home arena in 1981 to the Capital Centre in Landover, Maryland to accommodate its growing fan base. That season, in the 1982 NCAA Tournament, the Hoyas reached the finals. In a highly regarded and closely fought contest the Hoyas' Fred Brown threw an errant pass to Tar Heels forward James Worthy that sealed the title for UNC. Two years later, the Hoyas finally won the National Championship in 1984, led by their star Patrick Ewing. Then in 1985, they were one of three Big East teams in the Final Four and narrowly missed a repeat championship by losing to underdog Villanova.
Senior Reggie Williams led the Hoyas to both Big East regular season and tournament championships in 1987. Freshman Alonzo Mourning and sophomore Dikembe Mutombo helped win both in 1989. Morning and Mutombo were both excellent shot blockers, Mourning led the nation in 1988-89,[7] and fans created a "Rejection Row" section under the basket.[8] They repeated both championships in 1990 and won the regular season title in 1992. In 1995, Allen Iverson won the Big East Rookie of the Year award.[9] During his two years at Georgetown, Iverson scored a Georgetown record 22.9 points per game.[10]
In 1997, the team moved back into Washington, D.C. with the construction of a new arena in Chinatown. Under Thompson, 26 players were chosen in the NBA Draft, eight in the first round including two players selected first overall, Ewing by the New York Knicks in 1985 and Iverson by the Philadelphia 76ers in 1996. Over the his 27 years, Thompson's Hoyas went an impressive 596–239 (.714), running off a streak of 24 postseason appearances with 20 in the NCAA tournament and four in the NIT.[3] Thompson retired abruptly on January 8, 1999, citing marriage problems, and was replaced by his assistant Craig Esherick.[11]
Craig Esherick coached the Georgetown Hoyas basketball squad from 1999 to 2004. Esherick was a four year player for the men's basketball team from 1974–78 and then the lead assistant coach under John Thompson Jr. from 1981–99. The team finished with a 15–15 record in his first season before losing to Princeton in the first round of the NIT tournament. They improved in 2000 going 19–15 and advanced to the second round of the NIT tournament. After winning the first round game in triple overtime over the University of Virginia, the Hoyas lost in the second round game to the University of California.[12]
In 2001, led by future top 10 NBA Draft pick Michael Sweetney, they made the NCAA tournament after finishing 23–7 in the regular season. In the opening round of the NCAA tournament the 7th seeded Hoyas advanced past the 10 seed Arkansas on a game winning shot at the buzzer by Nat Burton. The Hoyas subsequently beat Hampton University, and then lost to the third seeded Maryland in the Sweet Sixteen.[13]
In 2002, the Hoyas went 19–11, barely missing a NCAA tournament bid. The team rejected a NIT bid because of travel arrangement issues associated with the players' ability to attend classes, causing their first year without a postseason since 1974.[14] In 2003, the Hoyas finished the regular season with a 19–15 record, and accepted a bid to the NIT, where they made it to the finals but lost to Big East rival St. John's.[15] Sweetney was named a second team All American and was drafted with the ninth pick in the NBA Draft by the New York Knicks.[16]
In Esherick's final season, the 2003–04 season, the Hoyas struggled to a 13–15 overall record and a dismal 4–12 Big East record. The 13 wins was the team's fewest since the 1973–74 season and Esherick was fired 5 days after an opening round Big East Tournament loss to Boston College. Georgetown began a national search for a new coach after Esherick's firing that resulted in the hiring of John Thompson III.[17]
On April 21, 2004, John Thompson III was selected as the head coach of the Hoyas. The son of the legendary Hoyas coach took over the position after over a decade at Princeton University. Thompson III was a player for the Tigers from 1984–88, was an assistant coach at Princeton from 1995–2004 and took over as head coach until his move to the Hoyas. Thompson's head coaching stint at Princeton was marked with success as he led the Tigers to three Ivy League Titles, two NCAA tournament appearances and one NIT appearance.[17]
Thompson brought with him an adaptation of the Princeton offense as an offensive philosophy to Georgetown. He had learned it under the tutelage of legendary coach Pete Carril at Princeton and began to adjust the strategy to the more athletic players he would be coaching at Georgetown. Thompson III also immediately brought two new assistant coaches to Georgetown in Robert Burke and Kevin Broadus.[18]
Thompson inherited three players that Esherick had recruited: Jeff Green, Roy Hibbert, and Tyler Crawford. He also brought with him a former Princeton recruit, Jonathan Wallace and saw the return of two major contributors from the previous Georgetown team in Brandon Bowman, Ashanti Cook, and Darrel Owens. The Hoyas jumped out to a surprising 16–6 start in the regular season, and despite a 1–6 finish, the Hoyas exceeded expectations with their 8th place Big East finish and accepted an invitation to the NIT. In the NIT, the Hoyas blew out their first two opponents, Boston University and Cal State Fullerton, but lost in the Quarterfinals to the eventual Champion South Carolina Gamecocks.[19]
The 2005–06 Hoyas were picked to finish 6th in the Big East at the conference media day. The team raced out to an 11–4 record including an 8–2 mark in out of conference play. John Thompson III's first notable win with the team took place on January 21, 2006 in the 16th game of the season when unranked Georgetown upset No. 1 Duke University. This was Georgetown's first win over a No. 1 ranked team in 21 years.[20] The team received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament and advanced to the Sweet Sixteen, where they came the closest out of any team to beating the eventual champion Florida Gators.
The 2006–07 season marked the centennial of Hoya hoops, which was celebrated by honoring some of the team's most famous alumni at the Georgetown-Marquette game on February 10, 2007. The team's freshmen were DaJuan Summers, Jeremiah Rivers, and All-American Vernon Macklin. Besides juniors Green, Hibbert, and Wallace, other regular players are Tyler Crawford, Jessie Sapp, and Patrick Ewing, Jr. The Hoyas won their first regular-season Big East Championship since 1992 and defeated the Pittsburgh Panthers to win their first Big East Tournament Championship since 1989. Jeff Green was named the Big East Player of the year and the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.
In the NCAA tournament's first weekend, the Hoyas defeated Belmont and Boston College. The Hoyas' games in the second weekend were some of the closest and most-watched contests of the tournament. The Hoyas defeated Vanderbilt on a last-second bank shot by Jeff Green, then beat North Carolina in the Regional Final when their defense caused North Carolina to suffer an improbable collapse in which UNC missed 22 of their final 23 field goal attempts.[21] The Hoyas then advanced to the 2007 Final Four where they fell to an Ohio State team led by Greg Oden.
The 2007–08 Hoyas finished with a regular season record of 27–5, and again won the conference regular season title on March 8, 2008. They lost to the University of Pittsburgh in the conference championship game.[22] This placed them as a number two seed in the 2008 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament, where they lost their second round game. After the season, Roy Hibbert, Jonathan Wallace, and Patrick Ewing, Jr. all graduated, while Vernon Macklin and Jeremiah Rivers both transferred from the school.[23]
The Hoyas began their 2008 season ranked #22 AP/#18 ESPN, based equally on the reputations of their two upperclassmen, DaJuan Summers and Jessie Sapp, and their recruiting class, led by Greg Monroe.[24] The Hoyas were highly successful in non-conference games (9–2) and saw their ranking rise as high as #9. However, college basketball's toughest strength of schedule eventually wore down a team that was also one of the youngest.[25] The Hoyas were 7–11 in Big East play for a 12th-place finish, followed by a first-round loss in the Big East tournament, the worst record in Thomson's five years at the helm.
In 2009–10, the team finished the season 23–11, and 10–8 in Big East play. They advanced to the championship game of the 2010 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament before losing to West Virginia. They received an at–large bid to the 2010 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament, earning a 3 seed in the Midwest Region, where they were upset by 14 seed Ohio in the first round. Greg Monroe entered the NBA Draft as a sophomore and was selected by the Detroit Pistons. The 2010-11 team was lead by Austin Freeman and Chris Wright, both now seniors. The team scored multiple early wins over ranked teams, including an overtime win at #9 Missouri, but their stumbles at the end of the season coincided with Wright breaking his hand and missing three games. The team received an at-large bid, but lost in their first game of the 2011 NCAA Tournament to eventual Final Four team Virginia Commonwealth.[26]
Prior to the 2011–12 season, the Hoyas made a goodwill trip to China for several matches with local teams. U.S. Vice President Joe Biden attended their first game, a win over the Shanxi Zhongyu Brave Dragons. Their second game, against the Bayi Rockets, however ended in a brawl, causing the team to leave the court while Chinese fans threw garbage and debris.[27] Georgetown won their final game, against the Liaoning Dinosaurs, without incident.[28]
Season | Coach | Overall | Conference | Standing | Postseason | ||||
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Georgetown Hoyas (Big East Conference) (2005–present) | |||||||||
2005–2006 | John Thompson III | 23–10 | 10–6 | T-4th | NCAA Sweet 16 | ||||
2006–2007 | John Thompson III | 30–7 | 13–3 | 1st | NCAA Final Four | ||||
2007–2008 | John Thompson III | 28–6 | 15–3 | 1st | NCAA 2nd Round | ||||
2008–2009 | John Thompson III | 16–15 | 7–11 | 11th | NIT 1st Round | ||||
2009–2010 | John Thompson III | 23–10 | 10–8 | 7th | NCAA 1st Round | ||||
2010–2011 | John Thompson III | 21–11 | 10–8 | 8th | NCAA 2nd Round | ||||
Under John Thompson III: | 159–70 | 72–48 | |||||||
Total: | 1521-947 |
Big East Regular Season Champion Big East Regular Season & Big East Tournament Champion |
2010–11 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Kenya Hunter
Roster |
One class of 2012 player has signed a letter of intent with Georgetown:
One other has made a verbal commitment to Georgetown:[29]
The Hoyas have an excellent history of preparing players for the NBA. Two Hoyas were the NBA first overall draft picks: Patrick Ewing in 1985 and Allen Iverson in 1996. Alonzo Mourning was the second overall pick in the 1992 draft.[30]
Several Hoya basketball players are famous purely for their off-court accomplishments:
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