1977–78 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team

1977-78 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball
Conference Independent
Ranking
Coaches No. 20
1977-78 record 238
Head coach John Thompson, Jr. (6th season)
Assistant coach Bill Stein (5th season)
Assistant coach Bob Grier (1st season)
Captain Derrick Jackson (1st year)
Home arena McDonough Gymnasium
1977–78 NCAA Division I men's basketball independents standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
#3 DePaul       27 3   .900
#18 Detroit       25 4   .862
Illinois State       24 4   .857
#8 Marquette       24 4   .857
Texas–Pan American       22 4   .846
VCU       24 5   .828
Fairfield       22 5   .815
North Texas State       22 6   .786
Syracuse       22 6   .786
Rhode Island       24 7   .774
Providence       24 8   .750
Utah State       21 7   .750
Georgetown       23 8   .742
#6 Notre Dame       23 8   .742
Holy Cross       20 7   .741
Northeast Louisiana       20 7   .741
UNC Wilmington       19 7   .731
St. Bonaventure       21 8   .724
UNLV       20 8   .714
Virginia Tech       19 8   .704
James Madison       18 8   .692
Maine       17 8   .680
Army       19 9   .679
Dayton       19 10   .655
St. Francis (NY)       16 9   .640
Iona       17 10   .630
William & Mary       16 10   .615
Air Force       15 10   .600
Loyola (IL)       16 11   .593
Mercer       16 11   .593
Oklahoma City       16 11   .593
Boston College       15 11   .577
Butler       15 11   .577
Saint Francis (PA)       15 11   .577
South Carolina       16 12   .571
Siena       13 10   .565
Navy       14 11   .560
Milwaukee       15 12   .556
Niagara       14 12   .538
Northeastern       14 12   .538
Southern Mississippi       13 12   .520
Portland State       14 13   .519
Stetson       14 13   .519
Oral Roberts       13 14   .481
Xavier       13 14   .481
Cleveland State       12 13   .480
Tennessee State       11 12   .478
Catholic       12 14   .462
Georgia Southern       12 15   .444
Northwestern State       12 15   .444
Connecticut       11 15   .423
Old Dominion       11 15   .423
Vermont       11 15   .423
Boston University       10 15   .400
Hardin–Simmons       10 16   .385
Campbell       9 15   .375
Centenary (LA)       10 17   .370
Denver       10 17   .370
Colgate       9 17   .346
East Carolina       9 17   .346
Long Island       8 18   .308
Saint Peter's       8 18   .308
Charleston Southern       8 19   .296
Samford       8 19   .296
Canisius       7 19   .269
Houston Baptist       7 19   .269
New Hampshire       7 19   .269
Wagner       7 19   .269
Evansville       1 3   .250
Fairleigh Dickinson       6 18   .250
Valparaiso       6 19   .240
Robert Morris       4 19   .174
Richmond       4 22   .154
Hawaii       1 26   .037
Rankings from AP Poll

The 1977–78 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team represented Georgetown University during the 1977-78 NCAA Division I college basketball season. John Thompson, Jr., coached them in his sixth season as head coach. An independent, Georgetown played its home games at McDonough Gymnasium on the Georgetown campus in Washington, D.C., and finished the season with a record of 23-8. Knocked out of the ECAC South-Upstate Region Tournament in the semifinals, the team missed an NCAA Tournament bid for the second consecutive season. The Hoyas instead appeared in the 1978 National Invitation Tournament (NIT), their second straight NIT appearance, and finished in fourth place.

Season recap

After going 2-2 to open the season, the 1977-78 Hoyas set a new school record for most consecutive victories, winning 13 games in a row[1] between December 7, 1977, and January 28, 1978. Senior guard and team captain Derrick Jackson led the way, continuing a streak of scoring in double figures begun the previous season that stretched to 44 straight games before ending this year. Early in the season, Jackson surpassed Jonathan Smith as the top Hoya scorer of all time; by mid-season, he had become the first Hoya to score more than 1,500 points in his career.[1]

During the streak, Georgetown played in the ECAC Holiday Festival at Madison Square Garden in New York City, winning both games, one of which was an upset of No. 12-ranked Holy Cross on December 27; sophomore guard John Duren averaged 22 points per game in the two games and was declared the tournament's Most Valuable Player. Duren would go on to score in double figures in 27 of the season's 31 games.[2] In the second game of the tournament, against Alabama on December 29, junior forward Steve Martin scored 18 points.[3]

Sophomore forward Craig "Big Sky" Shelton scored 25 points against Maryland in the second game of the year, but suffered a broken wrist early in the season and missed five games. After returning to action, he scored 20 or more points eight times during the last 19 games of the year, finishing the season with an average of 14.1 points per game.[4]

Senior center Ed Hopkins scored 29 points against North Carolina Central.[5] Junior forward Al Dutch's free-throw shooting prowess helped Georgetown in two big wins over Seton Hall and Manhattan, but otherwise he had a difficult season, averaging only 5.0 points and 3.8 rebounds per game. Thompson announced the following summer that Dutch would take the 1978-79 season off for personal reasons and return to the team for the 1979-80 season.[6]

A highlight of the regular season was the visit of No. 17-ranked Detroit led by Terry Duerod, John Long, and Terry Tyler, and coached by Dick Vitale to McDonough Gymnasium on February 11, 1978. Detroit had a record of 19-1 and the longest winning streak in the nation at the time and was averaging 93.5 points per game, while Georgetown had just dropped out of the Top 20 entirely plunging from No. 14 the week before thanks to a pair of losses to begin the month. Shelton played an outstanding defensive game and scored 20 points, while Steve Martin scored 22 and Ed Hopkins pulled down a career-high 16 rebounds. Although the Hoyas trailed with less than a minute to play, they came back to tie the game and then Shelton dunked over Tyler to give Georgetown an 82-80 lead. The Hoyas upset Detroit 83-82.[3][4][5][7]

Eleven days later, George Washington visited McDonough. After the Colonials scored to take the lead with two seconds left to play, Thompson put senior reserve guard Craig Esherick into the game. Esherick caught the inbounds pass at halfcourt and put up a 40-foot (12-meter) shot that scored as time expired to tie the game and force overtime. Esherick's shot was arguably the greatest of the 1970s for the Hoyas, and Georgetown went on to win in overtime, 78-77.[7]

Although retaining its status as an independent, Georgetown was in its fourth season as a member of the Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC), a loosely organized sports federation that held three regional post-season Division I basketball tournaments in 1978 for independent Eastern colleges and universities similar to the end-of-season conference tournaments held by conventional college basketball conferences, with each tournament winner receiving an at-large bid to the 1978 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament. Georgetown had won the ECAC South Region Tournament in 1975 and 1976 to secure an NCAA bid; this year the Hoyas participated in the ECAC Upstate-South Region Tournament as a heavy favorite to win a third ECAC regional title. However, just before the opening tip of the first game of the tournament, a semifinal contest against Virginia Commonwealth, Derrick Jackson was rushed to the hospital with what was thought to be an attack of acute appendicitis but turned out to be a duodenal ulcer. The illness brought his senior season to an end, and the Hoyas sorely missed him in the game; although Duren scored 23 points, Virginia Commonwealth beat Georgetown 88-75. Jackson ended the season with a school-record 88% free-throw shooting percentage for the year that has yet to equalled, and a 49% field-goal and 77% free-throw shooting percentage for his career. He had been the school's leading scorer in three seasons.[1][2]

The ECAC Tournament loss meant that the Hoyas missed an NCAA Tournament bid for the second year in a row. Georgetown instead accepted an invitation to the 1978 National Invitation Tournament (NIT), its second consecutive NIT appearance. In the first round, played at Virginia, the Hoyas fell behind the Cavaliers, but Duren scored 22 points and had 11 assists and Georgetown came back to tie the game and force overtime. With seconds left in overtime and the game tied 68-68, senior guard Mike Riley managed to draw an offensive foul on a Virginia inbounds pass, then sank both his free throws to give Georgetown a 70-68 win.[7] The 1977-78 squad thus became the first Georgetown men's basketball team to win a game in either the National Invitation Tournament or NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament since the 1942-43 team advanced to the final of the 1943 NCAA Tournament.

Georgetown next beat Dayton in the second round, with Duren scoring 17 points and Steve Martin shooting 10-for-10 from the free-throw line and scoring 18. The Hoyas faced North Carolina State in the semifinal. Duren had a 26-point game, Shelton scored 25, and Esherick again scored on a last-minute shot to tie the game as the clock expired and force overtime. Georgetown was leading 85-84 in overtime with almost no time left and on the brink of going to the first NIT final in school history when North Carolina State's Clyde Austin scored on a 40-foot (12-meter) last-second shot to give the Wolfpack an 86-85 win. The Hoyas had to settle for an appearance in the third-place game against Rutgers, which Georgetown lost for a fourth-place finish despite John Duren's 23-point effort.[2][7] During the NIT, Craig Shelton had shot 61 percent from the field and averaged 16 points and nine rebounds per game.[3][4]

Unranked in the Associated Press Poll at the end of the year, the Hoyas were ranked No. 20 for the season in the Coaches' Poll. They would not play in the NIT again until the 1992-93 season. During each of the 14 intervening seasons, Georgetown would receive an NCAA Tournament bid.

Although English bulldogs named Jack have appeared along the sidelines of Georgetown basketball times during various seasons since 1962, the 1977-78 season was the first in which a human in a bulldog costume portrayed Jack the Bulldog. Originated by Georgetown freshman Pat Sheehan, who was Jack for four seasons before graduating in 1981,[note 1] the human Jack the Bulldog has been a fixture at Georgetown games ever since.[8]

Roster

Source[1][2][3][4][5][6][9][10]

Senior guard Craig Esherick would later serve as an assistant coach for the Hoyas from 1982 to 1999 and as head coach from 1999 to 2004. Senior guard Mike Riley would later serve as a Hoya assistant coach from 1982 to 2004.

# Name Height Weight (lbs.) Position Class Hometown Previous Team(s)
10 Craig Esherick 6'3" N/A G Sr. Silver Spring, MD, U.S. Springbrook HS
12 Mike Riley 5'8" N/A G Sr. Washington, DC, U.S. United States Navy
20 Steve Martin 6'4" 175 F Jr. New Orleans, LA, U.S. St. Augustine HS
22 Derrick Jackson 6'0" 180 G Sr. Wheaton, IL, U.S. Wheaton Central HS
24 Lonnie Duren 6'1" N/A G So. Washington, DC, U.S. Augusta Military Academy (Fort Defiance, VA)
25 Al Dutch 6'7" 190 F Jr. Washington, DC, U.S. Archbishop Carroll HS
33 Craig "Big Sky" Shelton 6'7" 210 F So. Washington, DC, U.S. Dunbar HS
34 Terry Fenlon 6'2" N/A G So. Washington, DC, U.S. Mount St. Mary's University
42 Felix Yeoman 6'7" N/A F/C Sr. Washington, DC, U.S. St. Anthony's HS
44 John Duren 6'3" 150 G So. Washington, DC, U.S. Dunbar HS
51 Mike Frazier 6'7" N/A F So. Cleveland, OH, U.S. University School
52 Ed Hopkins 6'9" 225 C Sr. Baltimore, MD, U.S. Edmondson-Westside HS
55 Tom Scates 6'11" N/A C Jr. Alexandria, VA, U.S. St. Anthony's HS, (Washington, DC)

Rankings

Source[11][12]

The 1977-78 squad was only the second team in Georgetown men's basketball history to be ranked in the Associated Press Poll, and the first one to be ranked since the 1952-53 team's No. 20 ranking for a week in January 1953.[11][13] It also ended the season ranked No. 20 in the Coaches' Poll, becoming the first Georgetown men's basketball team in history to finish a season with a national ranking.[12]

Ranking Movement
Legend: ██ Improvement in ranking. ██ Decrease in ranking. ██ Not ranked the previous week. RV=Others receiving votes.
Poll Pre Wk 1 Wk 2 Wk 3 Wk 4 Wk 5 Wk 6 Wk 7 Wk 8 Wk 9 Wk 10 Wk 11 Wk 12 Wk 13 Wk 14 Wk 15 Final
AP 20 17 19 16 14 18 18 17
Coaches [note 2] 15 12 15 14 11 15 15 16 14 20 [note 2]

1977–78 schedule and results

Sources[14][15][16][17][18]

Date
time, TV
Rank# Opponent# Result Record Site (attendance)
city, state
Regular Season

Sun., Nov. 27, 1977
no, no
vs. Navy
Tip-Off Tournament
W 7156  1-0
Capital Centre (4,500)
Landover, MD

Mon., Nov. 28, 1977
no, no
vs. No. 14 Maryland
Tip-Off Tournament
L 8791  1-1
Capital Centre (6,500)
Landover, MD

Wed., Nov. 30, 1977
no, no
Dickinson W 5033  2-1
McDonough Gymnasium (1,600)
Washington, DC

Sat., Dec. 3, 1977
no, no
at St. Bonaventure L 6771  2-2
Reilly Center (5,319)
Olean, NY

Wed., Dec. 7, 1977
no, no
Wagner W 9665  3-2
McDonough Gymnasium (1,468)
Washington, DC

Sat., Dec. 10, 1977
no, no
Xavier of Louisiana
Hoya Invitational Tournament
W 10868  4-2
McDonough Gymnasium (2,178)
Washington, DC

Sun., Dec. 11, 1977
no, no
Georgia
Hoya Invitational Tournament
W 6660  5-2
McDonough Gymnasium (3,079)
Washington, DC

Sun., Dec. 18, 1977
no, no
at St. Joseph's W 6155 2OT 6-2
Palestra (1,856)
Philadelphia, PA

Tue., Dec. 27, 1977
no, no
vs. No. 12 Holy Cross
ECAC Holiday Festival
W 7965  7-2
Madison Square Garden (16,411)
New York, NY

Thu., Dec. 29, 1977
no, no
vs. Alabama
ECAC Holiday Festival
W 8373  8-2
Madison Square Garden (11,006)
New York, NY

Tue., Jan. 3, 1978
no, no
No. 20 North Carolina Central W 10765  9-2
McDonough Gymnasium (2,895)
Washington, DC

Sat., Jan. 7, 1978
no, no
No. 20 St. John's W 7261  10-2
McDonough Gymnasium (3,859)
Washington, DC

Wed., Jan. 11, 1978
no, no
No. 20 Navy W 5653  11-2
McDonough Gymnasium (2,200)
Washington, DC

Sat., Jan. 17, 1978
no, no
No. 17 South Carolina W 4743  12-2
McDonough Gymnasium (3,495)
Washington, DC

Wed., Jan. 18, 1978
no, no
No. 19 at Seton Hall W 7069  13-2
Walsh Gymnasium (3,200)
South Orange, NJ

Wed., Jan. 25, 1978
no, no
No. 16 American W 7268  14-2
McDonough Gymnasium (3,532)
Washington, DC

Sat., Jan. 28, 1978
no, no
No. 14 New England College W 8030  15-2
McDonough Gymnasium (1,851)
Washington, DC

Wed., Feb. 1, 1978
no, no
No. 14 at Boston College L 7681  15-3
Roberts Center (3,300)
Chestnut Hill, MA

Sat., Feb. 4, 1978
no, no
No. 14 at Loyola (Illinois) L 6568 OT 15-4
Alumni Gym (3,052)
Chicago, IL

Mon., Feb. 6, 1978
no, no
No. 14 Stonehill W 7755  16-4
McDonough Gymnasium (968)
Washington, DC

Sat., Feb. 11, 1978
no, no
No. 17 Detroit W 8382  17-4
McDonough Gymnasium (4,500)
Washington, DC

Thu., Feb. 16, 1978
no, no
No. 18 at Manhattan W 8180  18-4
Madison Square Garden (10,630)
New York, NY

Sat., Feb. 18, 1978
no, no
No. 18 St. Peter's W 5538  19-4
McDonough Gymnasium (2,841)
Washington, DC

Wed., Feb. 22, 1978
no, no
No. 18 George Washington W 7877 OT 20-4
McDonough Gymnasium (4,500)
Washington, DC

Sat., Feb. 25, 1978
no, no
No. 18 Holy Cross W 7761  21-4
McDonough Gymnasium (4,500)
Washington, DC

Sun., Feb. 26, 1978
no, no
No. 18 at Fordham L 5963  21-5
Rose Hill Gymnasium (N/A)
Bronx, NY
ECAC Upstate-South Region Tournament

Wed., Mar. 1, 1978
no, no
No. 17 vs. Virginia Commonwealth
Semifinal
L 7588  21-6
Charles E. Smith Athletic Center (N/A)
Washington, DC
National Invitation Tournament

Wed., Mar. 8, 1978
no, no
at Virginia
First Round
W 8078 OT 22-6
University Hall (8,500)
Charlottesville, VA

Tue., Mar. 14, 1978
no, no
at Dayton
Second Round
W 7162  23-6
University of Dayton Arena (13,458)
Dayton, OH

Sun., Mar. 19, 1978
no, no
vs. North Carolina State
Semifinal
L 8586 OT 23-7
Madison Square Garden (N/A)
New York, NY

Tue., Mar. 21, 1978
no, no
vs. Rutgers
Third Place
L 7285  23-8
Madison Square Garden (N/A)
New York, NY
*Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses.

Notes

  1. Sheehan went on to a banking career in New York City and died in an automobile accident on November 9, 2013.
  2. 1 2 No Coaches' Poll this week.

References

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