 |
Howard W. Gunlocke (C '34) Rare Book and
Special Collections Room
January· March 2007
Georgetown basketball coaches: All-time
coaching records
“Collegians at Basket-Ball.” Clipping from
The Washington Post, February 6, 1901
This account of an intramural clash between students
in the Georgetown College Prep School (then still housed
on campus) represents the earliest record of basketball
activity found in the Archives. Although the clipping
references plans to form a college team the following
fall, it appears that this did not happen and it was
not until the hiring of Maurice Joyce in 1906 as Physical
Instructor that basketball took hold as a Georgetown
sport.
Maurice Joyce, pictured in Ye Domesday Booke, 1908
Physical Instructor/Basketball Coach,
1906-1911. Five seasons, 32-20 (.615)
A man of many occupations – including circus
performer, U.S. Marshall, and boxing coach to President
Theodore Roosevelt – Maurice Joyce (1851-1939)
is credited with introducing the game of basketball to
Washington. Arriving in D.C. in 1892 as director and
physical instructor for the Carroll Institute, a city-wide
amateur athletic club, Joyce utilized basketball – invented
the previous year by Dr. James Naismith in Springfield,
Massachusetts – as a conditioning tool. Naismith’s
rules stipulated that a basketball team consist of nine
players but Joyce began modifying these rules and dropped
the number of players per side first to seven and then
to five. To increase the pool of potential opponents
for his teams, he worked hard to spread the new sport
throughout the region.
After Georgetown University completed its new Ryan Gymnasium (now incorporated
into the Royden B. Davis, S.J., Performing Arts Center) in 1906, it recruited
Joyce, the preeminent fitness instructor in the region as Physical Instructor.
And, of course, Joyce brought with him his enthusiasm for the game of basketball.
Ryan Gym, photographed prior to 1940
Ryan Gym, a gift of Ida M. Ryan of New York, opened in October 1906 and was
designed to serve a student body of around 250. It was used as a gymnasium
until the opening of McDonough Gym in 1951. Note the elevated running track
around its perimeter which created shooting problems for the basketball players.
A Hoya article of January 10, 1940, reports the track’s removal and notes: “This
structure had long been a hindrance to basketball players . . . as students
know, it was impossible to make a shot from the corner of the court as the
ball was blocked by the overhanging balcony.”
Ryan served as a practice venue for the basketball
squad for 45 years. Home games were moved there in 1914.
Prior to that, home games had been played at a number
of off-campus venues: Washington Light Infantry Armory
(15th & Pennsylvania Avenue, NW); Convention Hall
(5th & K Streets NW); Odd Fellows Hall (8th & D
Streets, NW); and Arcade Rink (3134 14th Street, NW).
The last home game was played in Ryan on February 21,
1931 – a 29-23 loss to the Brooklyn Knights of
Columbus.
Georgetown College Journal, February 1907. Account of
the selection of the first squad and the first varsity
game
Tryouts for the varsity basketball squad were held
in December 1906. A combination of College and Law School
students were selected: William R. Rice, Gerhard Simon;
Richard J. Downey; Harold B. Schumm; George H. Mullins;
William G. Lavelle; C. McDougall Pallen; and John D.
Murray.
The Georgetown Squad defeated its first varsity opponent,
the University of Virginia, on February 9, 1907. The
score was 22-11 in favor of Georgetown. The choice to
play Virginia was possibly a symbolic one. Eighteen years
earlier, in the fall of 1889, the Georgetown football
squad faced and defeated Virginia in its first varsity
game by a score of 34-0.
The game against Virginia was not, however, the basketball squad’s first
game. On January 30, 1907, as reported in The Washington Post, they had faced
and been defeated by the Shamrock basketball team of the Washington City League,
16-14.
Basketball team, 1910-1911
In 1911, for the first time since the introduction
of basketball of Georgetown, varsity letters were awarded
to members of the squad. This action would seem to indicate
that the sport was becoming firmly established on campus.
Indeed, the 1911 yearbook notes that: “Now, that
the five has passed the formative stage and basketball
is finally recognized as an official branch of University
Athletics, we may look forward to a future of excellent
teams and brilliant records.” These sentiments
were in stark contrast to the uncertainties of the two
previous seasons during which the program’s financial
deficits had fueled debates about its sustainability.
The 1910-1911 team easily won the Inter-Collegiate
Championship of the District of Columbia, defeating the
two other contenders, Catholic University and Gallaudet
College.
Frederick J. Rice (LL.B. 1910), pictured
in Ye Domesday Booke, 1909
Seasons Played: 1907-1908 to 1909-1910
Position: Forward
A native of Washington, D.C., and a 1910 graduate of
Georgetown’s Law School, Fred Rice was the University’s
first basketball star. In fact, he transferred from George
Washington University to Georgetown in 1907 after GW
discontinued basketball. In an era of low scoring for
basketball games, his numbers are remarkable. He scored
20 or more points in four of his first seven games and
his 14.9 points per game average was matched by only
one other player in the first 35 years of the sport at
Georgetown. Injuries limited his final season to just
7 games. His 8.8 career score average ranks fifth all
time among Georgetown letterman prior to World War II.
James E. Colliflower (A.B 1906, LL.B. 1910, LL.M. 1911),
pictured in Ye Domesday Booke, 1935
Basketball Coach: 1911-1914, 1921-1922.
Four seasons, 43-20 (.683)
Member, Georgetown Athletic Hall of Fame
(Coaching)
If Maurice Joyce can be credited with establishing
basketball at Georgetown, James Colliflower, a former
player, should certainly be recognized for ensuring it
survived in the face of deficits and squabbles between
the College and the Law School. He retired from coaching
in 1914 to go into business but returned, without salary,
during the 1921-1922 season when then coach John O’Reilly
was incapacitated by illness.
As a student, Colliflower was a forward on the basketball
squad from 1907-1908 to 1909-1910 and was team captain
in 1910.
Honorary Degree citation for James E. Colliflower, 1945
A noted local businessman, Colliflower was active in
civic matters and served as an alumni volunteer. The
University awarded him an honorary Doctorate of Laws
on June 17, 1945. His citation notes:“Year after
year as time went by this devoted son became more widely
known among his associates for the skills he manifested
in the business world and for the integrity and the perseverance
of his devotion to duty both in family and in public
affairs. In the civic activities of this his native city
of Washington, he won a high place in the esteem of all
by his constant sense of the commonweal.”
Cartoon: “Impressions of the Georgetown-Virginia
Basketball Game” by Arthur “Bugs” Baer,
1912
Georgetown played Virginia on January 27, 1912. Attended
by what The Washington Post characterized as “one
of the largest crowds that ever watched a basketball
contest in this city,” Georgetown was victorious,
34 to 16. Several members of the Georgetown squad, Guard
H. Kelly Wetzell, Forward John Martin, Forward Ronayne
Waldron, and Center Bill Campbell are mentioned or depicted
in the cartoon. Virginia had faced Catholic the previous
night and had won that game 34-20.
The creator of the cartoon, Arthur “Bugs” Baer
(1876-1969), was a journalist as well as cartoonist.
He began his career with the Philadelphia Public Ledger
before working as a sports journalist for the Washington
Times. He came to the attention of William Randolph Hearst
who hired him to work as a columnist for the New York
World. It was estimated that his syndicated column,“One
Word Led to Another,” was regularly read by 15
million people. He was well known as a humorist and reportedly
bestowed the nickname “Sultan of Swat” on
Babe Ruth. Milton Berle once confessed that, when he
needed new material, he would invite Mr. Baer to spend
an hour or so with him at Toots Shor’s bar in New
York City.
Color lithographic basketball poster with hand coloring
by A. Enroth. Published by Eckert Lithographing Company,
1911
It seems probable that this was one of a series of
posters marketed to colleges, with the colors of each
individual school (for Georgetown, naturally, blue and
gray) added by hand. Women did not actually begin playing
basketball at Georgetown until 1952, when the Women’s
Athletic Association was established by a group of Nursing
School students.
Poster for Georgetown vs. Bucknell game, March 13, 1913
Georgetown played its home games at the Arcade Rink
(also known as the Arcadia and the Arcade Auditorium),
3134 14th Street, NW, during the 1911-1912, 1912-1913,
1913-1914 and 1927-1928 seasons.
Basketball schedule, 1913-1914
The Georgetown squad compiled a 10-6 record for this
season, 8-1 at home and 2-5 on the road.
Ronayne (Roy) Waldron (A.B.1914)
Seasons Played: 1910-1911 to 1913-1914
Position: Forward
One of the first “walk-ons” to the Georgetown
program, Waldron was the team’s leading scorer
in 1913 (when he averaged 10.5 points per game) and also
in 1914. He was chosen as captain for these years, the
first Georgetown captain to serve in consecutive seasons.
He ended his playing career with a combined home court
record of 35-5.
John D. O’Reilly, pictured in Ye Domesday Booke,
1923
Basketball Coach: 1914-1921, 1923-1927.
Eleven seasons, 87-47 (.649)
The name of John D. O’Reilly was synonymous with
Georgetown athletics for nearly two decades. Known as
the “Silver Fox,” he oversaw some of Georgetown’s
greatest early triumphs in basketball, including an unprecedented
52 home game unbeaten streak which began in 1918, and
his teams consistently ranked highly among college teams
in the East. As well as serving as head coach for basketball,
he also coached track and baseball.
Illness interrupted his tenure in 1921, when he was hospitalized for “nervous
prostration,” but he returned to coaching in 1923 and headed the basketball
program until 1927 and the baseball and track programs until 1931. In 1930,
he was unanimously elected president of the District of Columbia Association
of the Amateur Athletic Union.
A page-long tribute to him in the 1926 yearbook concludes:
But certainly the ultimate cause of the respectful popularity
in which he is held by every Georgetown man is that instinct
which prompts him to say to his teams: “Go in and
play a hard game; play a winning game if you can; but
at least play a clean and upright game.”
Varsity basketball team, 1914-1915. Featured in a University
calendar, 1914
Season tickets for games in Ryan Gym, 1914-1915 and
1915-1916
Fred Fees (LL.B. 1919, LL.M .1920), pictured in Ye Domesday
Booke, 1920
Seasons Played: 1916-1917 to1919-1920
Position: Guard
Team Captain: 1919
Fees was among Georgetown’s great early stars, despite standing only
5-6. He was the nation’s leading scorer in 1917-18 and on, 2/15/1918,
he became the first Georgetown player to score 30 points in a game, in a 52-25
win over Gallaudet. In all, he played in 47 games and scored 804 points for
a 17.1 per game average. His career total is the highest of any Georgetown
player until 1948 and his career average still ranks as the fourth-highest
overall in GU history.
“Basketball.” Ye Domesday Booke, 1921
Over the previous two seasons, the Georgetown team
had been recognized as one of the finest teams in the
East, having won 22 of 24 games. The 1921 squad, rich
in talent and experience, ended its season with a record
of ten straight wins and three defeats. It amassed a
total of 465 points to its opponents’ 290.
Frederick M. Mesmer (Ph.B. 1930, LL.B. 1933), profiled
in Ye Domesday Booke, 1935
Basketball Coach: 1931-1938. Seven seasons,
53-76 (.411)
Member, Georgetown Athletic Hall of Fame
(Basketball)
Less than two years after his graduation from the College, former player Fred
Mesmer took over coaching responsibilities after the brief, one year tenure
of Coach John Colrick. One of the youngest men to coach a major sport at the
University, he combined his first two years of coaching with attendance at
Georgetown’s Law School. Under Mesmer, the Hoyas won 64 percent of their
home games but only 23 percent of away games and the team managed only two
winning seasons. The highlights of Mesmer’s tenure probably came in 1936
with two victories over a top-ranked NYU squad: one on February 7, which ended
a NYU streak of victories in 46 out of its 47 previous games, and one on December
30 in Georgetown’s first game at Madison Square Garden. Mesmer left coaching
in 1938 to devote himself to his law practice full time.
“
Georgetown Breaks New York Record.” The Hoya, February
12, 1936
With a 36-34 upset victory, Coach Mesmer’s squad
(the Mesmermen, as The Hoya termed them), broke a winning
streak by the Violets that extended over 20 games. New
York was considered the most powerful college team in
the country and this was only their second defeat in
48 games. The game was played on February 7 at Tech High
School before a sold-out crowd of 4,000.
In 1967, Jack Hagerty (Georgetown’s Athletic Director from 1949 to 1969
and head football coach from 1932 to 1948) recalled that, since the evening
that the NYU game was played was also the evening of Georgetown’s Junior
Prom, the NYU basketball group received a written invitation to attend the
Prom as guests of the Junior Prom Committee and arrived with suitcases containing
formal attire. The Hoya noted that the dance which began at 10 PM “was
one of the finest Proms in many years” but failed to mention if any NYU
representatives actually attended.
Georgetown vs. NYU, February 7, 1936
This photo appeared in the 1936 yearbook with the following
caption: Melee under the basket as Harry Bassin, high
scoring guard, tallies two points against NYU’s
crack five.
Harry Bassin (BSS 1938), photographed in 1936
Seasons Played: 1935-1936 to1937-1938
Jersey Number: 84
Position: Guard/Forward
Member, Georgetown Athletic Hall of Fame
(Basketball/Baseball)
Bassin scored in every game during his sophomore season,
including a team high 11 points during the February 7,
1936 upset of NYU, and led all scorers with a 9.0 per
game average. He was named to the first team All-Eastern
Intercollegiate Conference Team for 1937-1938. A first
baseman in baseball, Bassin was signed by the New York
Yankees in 1938 and played in their farm system until
1943.
“
Eastern [Intercollegiate Basketball] Conference
Co-Champions.” Ye Domesday Booke, 1939
Elmer Ripley’s first season back at Georgetown
after a nine year absence ended with the Hoya squad,
captained by Joseph Murphy, tying for the Eastern Intercollegiate
Basketball Conference (EIBC) title with Carnegie Tech.
This title was Georgetown’s first for league play
since it won the South Atlantic Intercollegiate Association
title in 1912.
Elmer H. Ripley
Basketball Coach: 1927-1929; 1938-1943;
1946-1949. Ten seasons, 133-82 (.619)
Member, Basketball Hall of Fame
Born in the year that basketball was invented (1891),
Elmer Ripley is a legendary figure in the sport and is
known both for his playing and his coaching. As a player,
he was on the American team which won the World Championship
at the 1914-1915 San Francisco World’s Fair, he
won a title with the New York Celtics, and he was voted
one of the ten best pros from 1909 to 1926.
He began his coaching career with Wagner College in 1922. In 1927, Ripley was
hired to coach the Hoyas. He had an immediate impact and his first squad won
12 of its 13 games. He left in 1929 to coach at Yale but returned in 1938.
In 1939, Georgetown won a share of the Eastern Intercollegiate Basketball Conference
(EIBC) and in 1943 they advanced to the NCAA finals. After the University suspended
basketball because of World War II, Ripley moved to Notre Dame where he secured
an NCAA berth in 1946. He then returned to coach at Georgetown until 1949.
Ripley continued his college coaching career after leaving Georgetown for the
third and final time. He also served as the Israeli Olympic team coach in 1956
and the Canadian Olympic team coach in 1960. He was inducted into the Basketball
Hall of Fame in 1973.
“G.U., Practically Out of Garden Tourney, May
Crimp G.W.” Clipping from The Washington Star,
March 1, 1941
The year of 1940-1941 was, without question, an exceptional
one for Georgetown athletics. Hoya teams were nationally
ranked in four sports: football, track, golf, and basketball.
This was the first time that a Georgetown basketball
team had been nationally ranked and the squad did not
disappoint, compiling a 16-4 record. Fifteen of their
twenty games were played on the road and eleven of these
ended in Hoya victories. Hopes were high on campus that
the team would be selected to the Sportswriter’s
Invitational Tournament, now referred to as the National
Invitation Tournament (NIT.) But these hopes were dashed
by a 53-42 defeat at the hands of Fordham on February
28, 1941.
Basketball squad posing with Eastern Regional trophy,
1943
Expectations were not high for the 1942-1943 squad.
All but one member of the previous season’s team
had left for wartime service. That left a team composed
of six sophomores, two freshmen, and only one senior.
There were suggestions that the “Kiddie Korps,” as
the team was known, might not even complete its schedule
and there were certainly no expectations that it would
have a winning season. By the end of the season, however,
the Hoyas were 19-4 and entertaining invitations to both
the NIT and the NCAA tournament. The NCAA bid was accepted
and Georgetown won its way through to the final with
a 53-49 victory over DePaul in the Eastern Regional game
on March 25, 1943. They faced Western Champions, Wyoming,
in the final five days later. The score: Wyoming 46,
Georgetown 34.
The squad pictured includes, on the front row, second from the left, Henry
Hyde, a reserve who played in only 11 games but whose defensive play in the
DePaul game helped Georgetown to the finals. Hyde became an attorney and served
as an Illinois congressman for over 30 years.
NCAA Eastern Regional Basketball Tournament program,
March 25, 1943
This program was signed and donated to the Archives
by Charles D. Dimmock (LL.B. 1924) in 1964. It is inscribed
to Tommie O’Keefe (BSS 1950) who coached Georgetown
from 1960-1966. Note Mr. Dimmock’s comment in reference
to the bruised figure on the cover: “No Hoya ever
wore this expression.”
“Where is Elmer? – In the Spotlight!” Cartoon
by Jim Berryman, cartoonist for The Evening Star, run
in The Hoya, April 7, 1943
This cartoon first appeared on March 29, 1943, the
day before Georgetown met Wyoming in the NCAA final.
Georgetown had not been favored at any point during the
NCAA tournament, as this cartoon indicates. Just before
the tip-off with DePaul in the Eastern Regional game,
one prominent coach was quoted as saying “DePaul
will name its own score.” The Washington Post noted
the following day that the “crunch, crunch, crunch
[sound] Washingtonians heard this morning was the New
York sportswriters, the big-shots coaches, etc., eating
a lot of words after Georgetown’s victory over
DePaul, a real coach’s triumph.”
The cartoonist, Jim Berryman (1902-1971), began his
career as a sports cartoonist. He won a Pulitzer Prize
in 1949 for his political cartoon, "All Set for
a Super-Secret Session in Washington.” His father,
Clifford Berryman, was the creator of the "Teddy
bear" and himself a Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist.
NCAA Basketball Eastern Regionals trophy won by Georgetown,
1943. Displayed courtesy of the Athletics Department
Robert A. Duffey (BSS 1944), pictured in Ye Domesday
Booke, 1943
Seasons Played: 1943-1944
Jersey Number: 13
Position: Guard
Member, Georgetown Athletic Hall of Fame
(Football)
Duffey was a member of the famed Hoya football teams
of the early 1940s, as well as a guard on the basketball
team. He also excelled in the classroom as a student
in the College of Arts and Sciences. After graduation,
Duffey joined the military to fight in World War II.
While in the Army, he wrote back regularly to friends
on campus. In one of his last letters, he said: “My
outfit has been consistently in battle since they landed
on the beach on D-Day. Since I have joined them, we have
met the enemy in France, Belgium, and now in Germany.
We have an opportunity to attend mass at least twice
a week. Last Sunday, mass was held on a German pillbox
made of tons of concrete. These occasions give me hope
and the comfort to do the job that is expected of me
over here.”
Clippings reporting Robert A. Duffey’s death,
December 1944
Robert A. Duffey was killed in combat in Germany in
late 1944. The University's scholar-athlete award is
named in his honor. It is presented annually to the senior
who best embodies the Jesuit educational philosophy of
combining athletic achievement with academic excellence.
Kenneth C. Engles (BSS 1946), pictured in The Hoya,
October 19, 1945
Basketball Coach: 1945-1946. One season,
11-9 (.550)
Engles, the only player-coach in Georgetown's basketball
history, assumed coaching duty for the 1945-1946 season
when Elmer Ripley was unable to return from Notre Dame.
Apart from Engles, who had played forward on the 1940-1941
and 1941-1942 squads, no other Hoya player had varsity
experience and none returned to the team when Ripley
came back as coach the next year.
Letter from Ken Engles to Elmer Ripley, May 3th, 1944
In a letter written to “Rip” (for whom
he had played in the 1940-1941 and 1941-1942 seasons)
from “Somewhere in England,” Engles describes
how, even while serving in the military, he has been
able to continue playing basketball: “. . . our
regimental team won the division championship and ended
the season with thirteen wins and two losses. Scored
21 points in the final play-off game and must of [sic]
had a season average of about 14 points per game.” Staff
Sergeant Engles was awarded the Purple Heart for his
war service.
Harry (Buddy) Jeannette, pictured in 1953
Basketball Coach: 1952-1956. Four seasons,
49-49 (.500)
Alma Mater: Washington & Jefferson, 1938
Member, Basketball Hall of Fame
Buddy Jeannette came to Georgetown following a successful
NBA career both as a player and a coach. From 1938 to
1948, he was considered as the top backcourt player in
professional basketball. In 1947, he became the first
player-coach to win a professional championship with
the Baltimore Bullets of the ABL, a feat he repeated
the next year with the Bullets as part of the newly named
BAA.
Jeannette’s career at Georgetown began strongly, so much so that, on
January 28, 1953, the Top Twenty poll included one vote for Georgetown – the
University’s first national poll vote in the post-war era. His 1952-1953
squad ended the season with a 14-7 record and landed a NIT berth. However,
Jeannette had less success in subsequent seasons, with teams that were depleted
by injuries and suspensions for disciplinary reasons. At one point during the
1953-1954 season, he was asked what he was going to do in the face of his player
misfortunes. “Do?” he responded, “I’ll do the best
I can, that’s all. If they don’t like it, they can find another
boy.” At the end of February 1956, the University announced that it would
not renew his contract.
McDonough Memorial Gym. Dedication ceremonies, pictured
in Ye Domesday Booke, 1952
McDonough Gym opened in December 1951, allowing home
games to be played on campus for the first time since
the 1930-1931 season. The first game played on December
7, 1951 against Fordham, ended with a score of 57-50
in Fordham’s favor.
There had been a pressing need since the 1930s for
a new gymnasium on campus to replace the outdated facilities
in Ryan Gym. Initial plans had placed the new gym next
to the old but that concept was eventually dropped because
of noise, parking, and access issues and an alternative
site, south of the Observatory, was selected. The Gym
is named for Vincent S. McDonough, S.J. who was Director
of Athletics from 1916 to 1928. Father “Mac” was
both revered and feared by students. In addition to serving
as Director of Athletics, he was also Prefect of Discipline
and a student counselor. When asked what he would most
like to honor his 25th anniversary as a priest, he replied, “You
give the boys a new gym and I’ll be happy.” A
few days later, on September 3, 1939, he was found dead
in his room, beside a radio broadcasting news of the
declarations of war by Britain and France.
Letter of invitation to the NIT, March 1, 1953
Georgetown, as was the situation in 1941, needed to
beat Fordham to secure an invitation to the NIT and,
on February 28, 1953, they did just that, by a score
of 74-63. Fordham had gone into the game with a 17-6
record and a berth in the NCAA tournament. By March5,
500 tickets to the NIT first-round game had been sold
and 400 more had been ordered by Georgetown Athletic
Director Jack Hagerty.
“Touch & Go Hoop Season Ends with Bid to Coveted
N.I.T. Games.” Ye Domesday Booke, 1953
Georgetown met Louisville in the first round of the
NIT in front of an audience of 17, 838, including over
1,000 students who came from Georgetown for the game.
The Cardinals proved too strong for the Hoyas and won
by a score of 92-79. Coach Jeannette was quoted in the
local press as saying: “I’d like to say one
thing about my boys – I think they did damned well
getting this far. To me, it was a highly successful season
. . . When I say it was a successful season, I don’t
mean to toot my own horn. I just mean that the boys did
their very best; they gave me everything they had. That’s
all I’d ask of any boy or any ball club.”
NIT team expenses signed by Moderator of Athletics of
Richard C. Law, S.J., 1953
The total cost of taking the team to play at Madison
Square Garden in the first round of the NIT was $644.02.
Warren Buehler (BSS 1957). Ye Domesday Booke, 1955
Home Town/High School: Bayonne, NJ/Sweeney
HS
Seasons Played: 1953-1954 to 1956-1957
Jersey Number: 5
Position: Forward
Height: 6-4
A consistent scorer and rebounder during Hoyas' lean
years in mid-1950's, Buehler had received collegiate
offers from 16 institutions but chose to attend Georgetown.
During the 1953-1954 season, he averaged 18.2 points
per game and set a single season scoring record for a
Georgetown player with 511 points. In 1955, he was awarded
the Francis “Reds” Daly Memorial Trophy which
is given to the most outstanding player on the basketball
team. The leading scorer of the 1950s with a total of
1,134 points, he ranks as 9th all-time in career scoring
average and 15th in career rebound average.
“Warren Buehler scores against Gettysburg as Jack
Nies Watches.” Ye Domesday Booke, 1957
Tom O'Keefe (BSS 1950)
1960-1966: Six seasons, 82-60 (.578)
Alma Mater: Georgetown, 1950
Member, Georgetown Athletic Hall of Fame
(Basketball)
Tom O’Keefe served as freshman basketball coach
for three seasons, before moving up to replace retiring
Tom Nolan as varsity head coach in 1960. Under his leadership,
Georgetown began to win more consistently. He had no
losing seasons but also achieved no post-season bids.
O'Keefe, a part-time coach, returned to business concerns
following the 1966 season. He said he felt he had contributed
to the development of the program by bringing “many
fine lads” to the University. “I shared in
their disappointments when we lost and shared in their
happiness when we won.”
A 1950 graduate of the College, O’Keefe was a
standout player from 1946-1950 and was the first Hoya
to exceed 1,000 points.
Varsity basketball team, 1963-1964
Kneeling, left to right: Seniors Joe Mazelin, Jim Christy,
Captain Chuck Devlin. Standing, left to right: Coach
Tom O’Keefe, Jake Gibbons, Joe Franz, Tom Carroll,
Ed Solano, Dave Philbin, Jim Brown, John Prendergast,
Jim Jones, Owen Gillen, Trainer Joe Kuczo, Manager Dave
Stapleton.
Upset victories over LaSalle, NYU, and #1 ranked Loyola-Chicago
formed the highlights of the 1963-1964 season, the most
successful under Coach O’Keefe. The Hoyas ended
the year with a 15-10 record, the best since 1951-1952.
Varsity basketball scorebook for 1963-1964, open to
December 27 game against Loyola-Chicago
On December 27, 1963, Georgetown faced reigning NCAA
Champions Loyola-Chicago in the opening round of the
Quaker City tournament in Philadelphia. That night, Georgetown
upset a #1 ranked team for the first time, with a 69-58
win. The Hoya termed this victory “near unbelievable.” Coach
O’Keefe stated that: “Beating Loyola was
a tremendous thing for the school. I think it is going
to mean something to Georgetown for years to come. It’s
been a long while since we’ve done anything big
in any sport. After the victory over Loyola, I received
more than 70 telegrams from alumni all over the country – Los
Angeles, New Orleans, Omaha, you name it. Of course,
the big thing to us was the 20-page wire we received
before the Loyola game. It was signed by the entire senior
class.”
Jim Barry (AB 1966). Shifty “Boo” Gets an
Assist, Ye Domesday Booke, 1965
Home Town/High School: Elizabeth, NJ/St.
Peter's Prep
Seasons Played: 1962-1963, 1964-1965,
1965-1966
Jersey Number: 4
Position: Forward
Height: 6-6
Member, Georgetown Athletic Hall of Fame
Jim “Boo” Barry was Georgetown’s
leading scorer and rebounder for the 1962-1963 and 1964-1965
seasons and was the Daly MVP Award winner in 1963 and
1965. Fourth in all-time scoring average, he holds the
record for most points scored in a single game (46).
“All-Americans.” Profile of Jim Barry, bottom
right. Basketball Yearbook [1964]
Notice also the photograph and profile of another All-American
from Providence (right-side column, second down) who
was later to contribute greatly to the Georgetown basketball
program.
“Barry’s 46 Snaps Losing Streak.” The
Hoya, March 4, 1965
On February 27, 1965, Jim Barry set a school scoring record with 46 points
against Fairleigh Dickinson – the record remains unbroken. Georgetown
won the game 91-70 and ended a seven-game losing streak.
Jack Magee
1966-1972: Six Seasons, 69-80 (.466)
Alma Mater: Boston College, 1959
After a 56 day-search in 1966, thirty-year old Jack
Magee, assistant to Boston College coach Bob Cousy, was
hired as basketball coach. Magee brought the Hoyas back
into the national spotlight with a 1970 NIT bid. The
record for the 1969-1970 season was 18-7, the Hoyas best
regular season record since 1946-1947. Magee said that
he saw “possibilities of being a better team [in
subsequent seasons]. You don’t anticipate people
getting worse.” However, the program went into
a free fall and, in 1972, compiled a 3-23 record, a performance
that The Hoya described as “incredible horror show.” Magee
contended that the school did not spend enough money
to remain competitive in major-league basketball and,
with his performance under scrutiny by the athletic advisory
board, resigned.
NIT bid, 1970. Clippings from Washington papers, March
3, 1970
With an 18-7 record, the 1969-1970 Hoyas were only the third squad in Georgetown
history to go into a post-season tournament. Official confirmation of the bid
came from Andrew Laska, a member of the NIT selection committee and father
of Georgetown Guard Michael Laska
On 12/18/1969, Georgetown had played Jacksonville University at Swisher Gym.
Play was halted in the first half, when in near riot conditions and after two
bench-emptying fist fights, Coach Magee kept his team off the court. With Georgetown
trailing #18 Jacksonville, 41-26, the game was declared a forfeit win for Jacksonville.
Two months later, the NCAA ruled it an “interrupted game,” helping
Georgetown secure the NIT bid with only six losses.
NIT program, 1970
Georgetown vs. LSU in NIT first round, March 15, 1970.
Ye Domesday Booke, 1970
Pete Maravich (# 23 ) is pictured in the left side
photograph with his trademark droopy socks. Pictured
from the Hoya squad: # 34 Mike Laska; #42 Mike Laughna;
and #44 Art White.
The Hoyas were selected to play the Pete Maravich-led
LSU Tigers in the NIT. Although Maravich had scored 1304
points that season (more than any Georgetown player had
scored in their career), the Hoyas refused to be intimidated
by him. A banner displayed at a McDonough Gym pep rally
two days before the game expressed this sentiment: “Pistol
Pete is a paper tiger.” The combination of a special
defense (the triangle tracer), a 28 point effort by Art
White, and an impressive defensive performance by Mike
Laska, enabled Georgetown to hold Maravich to only twenty
points (his average was 44.2.) But LSU eked out an agonizing
(for Hoya fans) 83-82 victory.
Coach Magee in Action. Ye Domesday Booke, 1970
Prior to the LSU game Coach Magee was quoted in The
Washington Post as saying: “I’m trying to
be lovable. I want everyone to feel sorry for us.” He
did go on to add: “We don’t anticipate looking
bad; we anticipate winning. I think we can beat them.
Eight other teams did, didn’t they?”
Charlie Adrion (BS 1970)
Home Town/High School: Hillsdale, NJ/Don
Bosco Prep
Seasons Played: 1967-1968 to 1969-1970
Jersey Number: 54
Position: Center
Height: 6-8
Member, Georgetown Athletic Hall of Fame
Adrion was elected team co-captain for the 1969-1970
season. He was the winner of the Daly MVP Award in 1969
(despite missing the last five games of that season after
suffering torn cartilage in his right knee) and in 1970.
The leading scorer in 1968, he was also the leading rebounder
in 1968 and 1969. He is in the top 10 for all-time scoring
average and career rebound average and holds the record
for most rebounds in a game, 29. This record came in
a December 2, 1968 game against American. Adrion’s
40 point, 29 rebound effort helped the Hoyas to a 85-78
win and stands as one of the great performances in Georgetown
history.
Adrion scoring his 1000th point in a game against Rutgers,
February 14, 1970. Pictured in The Hoya, February 19,
1970
After the game which Georgetown won 69-68 to keep their
NIT hopes alive, Adrion commented: “We thought
Rutgers would be more like NYU. We didn’t expect
63 percent shooting. Our defense, though, wasn’t
what it should have been.” Adrion scored 14 points
in the game and did admit to being “a little on
edge” due to his closeness to the 1000 point mark. “I
wanted to get it over with.”
“Georgetown Selects Thompson Head Basketball Coach.” News
from Georgetown University, 3/13/1972
A seven-member screening committee chaired by Charles
Deacon, then president of Hoyas Unlimited and acting
director of admissions, reviewed more than 50 applications
before recommending Coach Thompson who was only the seventh
African American hired as a head basketball coach at
a predominantly white college.
Coach Thompson had won several championships as a player,
including the 1963 NIT Championship with Providence College.
As a professional player, he was a member of two world
champion Boston Celtic teams. He began his coaching career
at St. Anthony’s High School in Northeast D.C.
John Thompson at the March 14, 1972 press conference
to announce his appointment as basketball coach. Also
pictured, Dean of Admissions Charles Deacon and University
President R. J. Henle, S.J.
Fr. Henle introduced Coach Thompson by saying: “John
has proven ability as a coach, manager, inspirer, and
leader of young people. He is a man of high personal
ideals any man would be proud to work with. It is important
for Georgetown that we attain an excellent program which
is consistent with our academic ideals.”
Winning shot in ECAC South final, March 8, 1975
An 18 foot shot by freshman Derrick Jackson (#22) with
two seconds left gave the Hoyas an improbable 62-61 win
over host West Virginia in the ECAC South final. The
unexpected chance to win came when West Virginia missed
a foul shot with 10 seconds to go. Hoya Ed Hopkins grabbed
the rebound and tossed a half-court pass to Bill Thomas,
who spotted Jackson open to the left of the basket. Jackson
faked a West Virginia defender before making the winning
shot.
The ECAC-South title entitled the Hoyas to their first
NCAA bid in 32 years. It would be the first of 20 NCAA
appearances under Coach Thompson. The Georgetown squad
was a young one – there were no seniors on the
roster and of Thompson’s top ten players, four
were freshmen and two were sophomores.
ECAC South Championship program, 1975
NCAAs. Ye Domesday Booke, 1975
Pictured from the Hoya squad: #22 Derrick Jackson;
#52 Ed Hopkins; #12 Mike Riley; #34 Mike MacDermott;
and #14 Bill Lynn
Georgetown faced Dan Roundfield and the Central Michigan
Chippewas in opening round play in the Alabama Coliseum,
Tuscaloosa, on March 15. Their dream of advancing to
the Midwest Regional semifinals ended with a hotly disputed
foul call made at the buzzer. With the score tied, Central
Michigan converted two free throws to win 77-75. Afterwards
Coach Thompson said: “I told my kids to keep their
heads up. We had a good season.”
Men’s basketball team, 1975-1976
Kneeling L-R: Assistant Trainer Doug Huffman, Head
Trainer Steve Gundersen, Mike MacDermott, Bill Thomas,
Craig Esherick, Mike Riley, Derrick Jackson, Jon Smith,
Manager Mike Jenifer, Manager Norm Washington, Assistant
Coach Bill Stein and Assistant Coach Dwight Datcher.
Standing L-R: Greg Brooks, Mark Gallagher, Tom Scates,
Garry Wilson, Ed Hopkins, Bill Lynn, Felix Yeoman, Al
Dutch, Steve Martin, Merlin Wilson and Head Coach John
Thompson
This squad ended their season with a 21-7 record and
earned Georgetown’s second straight NCAA bid, firmly
establishing Georgetown as a rising basketball power.
Merlin Wilson (AB 1976)
Home Town/High School: Washington, DC/St. Anthony HS
Season Played: 1972-1973 to 1975-1976
Jersey Number: 44
Position: Center
Height: 6-9
Merlin Wilson was the first major recruit of the John
Thompson-era. Coached by Thompson at St. Anthony’s,
he (along with team mate Jonathan Smith), was named as
a senior to The Washington Post’s All-Metropolitan
Squad. After he signed to Georgetown, Coach Thompson
commented: “He’s an exceptionally mobile
big man. He’ll be the key person in the pivot and
he makes an outlet pass on the fast break as well as
anyone I’ve seen and that includes the pros.”
“Merlin Wilson: The Key to Georgetown’s
Future.” Georgetown University Basketball, 1973-1974
Merlin Wilson demonstrating his leaping ability. Georgetown
University Basketball, 1973-1974
Wilson ranks second all-time in career rebounds and
first in rebound average (11.4) and is one of only three
Georgetown players to average in double figures for scoring
and rebounding. His statistics are even more remarkable
in light of the fact he played his final two years with
debilitating back trouble which made it hard for him
to raise his arms.
People’s Republic of China Center, Mu Tieh-chu,
photographed before an exhibition game between the Chinese
national team and Georgetown, November 16, 1978
After President Nixon and Premier Chou En-lai signed
the Shanghai Communique in 1972, exchanges between China
and the U.S. developed in the fields of science, medicine,
trade, culture, and even sports. The National Committee
on U.S. China Relations (NCUSR) facilitated official
exchanges under the framework of the Shanghai Communique
and co-sponsored a five game tour of the U.S. by the
men’s and women’s Chinese basketball teams
in 1978.
In their fourth U.S. game, the Chinese defeated the
Hoyas, 75-69. Mu Tieh-chu, listed by the Chinese at 7
feet 2 inches but estimated to be somewhat taller, was
dubbed “The Great Wall of China” by U.S.
players.
“Hoyas Move to Capital Centre.” Georgetown
Basketball, 1981-1982
On July 21, 1981, it was announced that Georgetown
would play 12 home games of its 1981-1982 season at the
Capital Centre in Landover, Maryland, a venue that could
accommodate over 19,000. McDonough Gym, by contrast,
could seat 4,400. To ensure that students could easily
attend the games at the Cap Centre, all student season
ticket holders were eligible for a free bus shuttle service
to and from Landover.
The Georgetown Voice noted in a September 2, 1981 editorial that; “Of
course, there are drawbacks [to the move]. One can no longer wander out of
Lauinger five minutes before a game, but the increased attention from the national
press would have made it impossible for many students to get a seat at McDonough
at all. Thanks to seven straight winning seasons and 1981 recruitment that
is unsurpassed anywhere, the whole country is expecting a lot from Georgetown
and everybody is already watching.”
NCAA Final Four Souvenir Program, 1982
The Hoyas advanced to the 1982 NCAA finals in authoritative
fashion. They overwhelmed second-seeded and #4-ranked
Oregon State in the Western Regional Final, shooting
74.4 percent from the field (29 for 39) – a shooting
mark that is a Georgetown single game record and is the
third best in NCAA tournament history – and winning
69-45. They then faced and defeated Louisville in a superbly
played semi-final, 50-46, and, on March 29, 1982, played
North Carolina in the Louisiana Superdome, in what some
have called the greatest of all NCAA finals.
NCAAs. Ye Domesday Booke, 1982
Georgetown players pictured: on the left, against Louisville,
#33 Patrick Ewing, # 20 Fred Brown and #32 Eric Smith;
and on the right, against North Carolina, #21Eric (Sleepy)
Floyd, #33 Patrick Ewing, #40 Mike Hancock and #32 Eric
Smith.
“He Passes, And Flunks. Case of Mistaken Identity
Costs Georgetown Dearly.” Los Angeles Times, March
30, 1982
With 16 seconds remaining in the final, North Carolina took a 63-62 lead on
a Michael Jordan basket. The Hoyas had one last chance to win. However, Guard
Fred Brown threw a pass that was intercepted by Tar Heel James Worthy and the
game was over. Coach Thompson responded by hugging the disconsolate Brown.
Interest in playing for Georgetown soared after the championship game, with
many potential players stating that the reason they wanted to play for Georgetown
was the way that Coach Thompson had treated Brown. Brown came to see the pass
as “a blessing in disguise.” He was quoted in an April 3, 1988
Washington Post article as saying: “When I threw that pass away, it afforded
me the opportunity to realize that people still supported me, that life went
on . . .”
1982 NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Championship,
second place team, commemorative award
Three days after losing the championship game, the
team returned to campus where they were met by a cheering
crowd of between 3,500-5000 fans. Coach Thompson addressed
the crowd and said: “In order for any program to
be successful, it has to have some community spirit,
and you reflect that today . . .” He later commented: “We
fell a little short of our season goal – the national
title – but it was a fantastic season. Our kids
aren’t losers and they have nothing to feel bad
about. They worked hard all year and that’s all
a coach can ask of his players.”
Awarding of President’s Medal to Coach Thompson
in Gaston Hall, April 24, 1982. Photograph and citation
“ . . . His classroom is first of all a basketball
court and his subject a game. But the real tools of his
trade are the blending of fifteen young people into a
working unit, the jazz-like improvisation which his game
demands, the discipline required to work body and mind
together into a dance as intricate as any ever invented
by the mind of man, and finally the beauty of the body’s
movement which must condition the soul. It is a teaching
as old as the games of Greece, and its goal is the hard
moral base of citizenship . . .”
Written by President Timothy S. Healy, S.J., the citation
contains changes added in his hand.
“Georgetown Beats Houston for the NCAA Title.” Sports
Illustrated, April 9, 1984
On April 2, 1984, Georgetown met Houston in the National
Championships in the Seattle Kingdome. The 84-75 Georgetown
victory was a triumph of teamwork, domination, and intimidation.
Making use of his team’s remarkable depth, Coach
Thompson was able to keep sending in fresh players and
Houston was unable to counter them. Five Hoyas scored
in double figures: Reggie Williams scored 19; David Wingate16;
Michael Graham 14; Michael Jackson 11; and Patrick Ewing
10. Ewing also led the team in rebounding with nine boards
and was named the tournament MVP. Houston Center Akeem
Olajuwon commented after the game: “They do everything
a great team should do. They don’t care who takes
the shots, who scores. That’s the difference. They
aren’t a selfish team.”
NCAA semi-final and final tickets, March 31 and April
2, 1984
1983-1984 Hoya squad posing at season’s end with
the NCAA Championship trophy. Photograph by Fred J. Maroon
“Sweater Game.” Georgetown vs. St. John’s,
February 27, 1985. Madison Square Garden
St. John’s had beaten Georgetown earlier in the
season, costing the Hoyas their top position in the polls.
This rematch, therefore, between the #1 ranked Redmen
and #2 Hoyas was highly anticipated. St. John’s
head coach, Lou Carnesca, attributed the success of his
24-1 team to a “lucky” sweater which he always
wore to games and the power of the sweater was much hyped
in the New York press. Before the February 28 game, Coach
Thompson was greeted with a appreciative roar from the
St. John's crowd when he opened his jacket to reveal
a t-shirt with an identical pattern to Carnesca’s
sweater. Whether boosted by Coach Thompson’s apparel
or not, the game ended in a 85-69 Hoya victory. Patrick
Ewing scored 20 points and had nine rebounds and six
blocks, while Reggie Williams posted 25 points, seven
rebounds and six assists.
“Patrick Ewing, Georgetown”
Arguably Georgetown's greatest living athlete, Ewing
holds Georgetown career records for most rebounds, most
free throws attempted, most blocked shots, and most games
played. He is second all time in scoring with 2184 points.
Coach Thompson summed his play up by saying: “He
[Ewing] can rise to the occasion, lifting the entire
team by his effort.”
Patrick Ewing (AB 1985)
Home Town/High School: Cambridge, MA/Rindge & Latin
HS
Seasons Played: 1981-1982,1982-1983,1983-1984,1984-1985
Jersey Number: 33
Position: Center
Height: 7-0
National Player Of The Year, 1985
Consensus All-America, 1983, 1984, 1985. 2nd Team All-America, 1982
Big East Player Of The Year, 1984, 1985
First team All-Big East, 1983, 1984, 1985
Second team All-Big East, 1982
Big East Defensive Player Of The Year, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985
In 1985, Ewing graduated and was the first choice in the NBA draft. The New
York Knicks made him the highest paid rookie with a contract that was to pay
$16 million over five to eight years. On the Sunday after the draft, the Knicks
received 1,000 ticket requests. Ewing spent 15 years with Knicks. He averaged
22.8 points and 10.4 rebounds with the team, becoming their all-time leading
scorer with 23,665 points. He also set team records for most games played (1,039),
most rebounds (10,759), most steals (1,061), and most blocked shots (2,758.)
Ewing the Olympian: Big East Conference 1984-1985 Media
Guide (pictured with Chris Mullen of St. John’s)
and Inside Sports, June 1992 (depicted far left with
his teammates)
In 1983-1984, Ewing endured nearly ten months of continuous
basketball: pre-season practice; regular season play;
NCAA tournament; Olympic tryouts and practice; and Olympic
play at the LA Games. When he won Olympic gold as a member
of the Bobby Knight coached U.S. team, he became only
the sixth American to win both the NCAA and the Olympics
in the same year, the others being: Kansas’ Clyde
Lovellete (1952); San Francisco’s Bill Russell
and K.C. Jones (1956); Ohio State’s Jerry Lucas
(1960) and Indiana’s Quinn Buckner (1976). Asked
in 1985 what accomplishment made him proudest, he answered: “Fulfilling
the promise I made to my mother and graduating from Georgetown
University.”
In 1992, at the Barcelona Games, Ewing won a second
Olympic gold medal as part of the “Dream Team,” the
first U.S. Olympic basketball team to include NBA players.
He is the only Hoya to win two Olympic golds.
Citation for Honorary Degree awarded to John Thompson,
April 19, 1986
Like Coach Colliflower in 1945, Coach Thompson was
awarded an honorary degree in 1986, the same year he
was selected as Olympic coach for the U.S. men’s
basketball team. The citation notes that he was honored
for “ . . . intelligence and integrity, for making
Georgetown proud in victory and defeat (but mostly in
victory!) . . .”
“John Thompson’s Protest: The Academic Background” by
[GU President] Timothy S. Healy, S.J. Georgetown Magazine,
Winter 1989
On January 14, 1989, Coach Thompson staged a protest
over changes to freshman eligibility rules that had been
approved at the NCAA convention. He walked off the court
just before the Hoyas' home game against Boston College
and then refused to coach the team's next game at Providence.
The changes to the eligibility rules meant that athletic
scholarships would be denied to freshmen who failed to
qualify for athletic eligibility under the academic standards
of proposition 48 (which required incoming freshmen to
have a 2.0 average on a 4.0 scale and a minimum score
of 700 on the SAT.). Before the rule change, such players
could have scholarships but could not play as freshmen.
Coach Thompson explained that: “This is my way
of brining attention to a rule a lot of people were not
aware of – one which will affect a great many individuals.
I did it to bring attention to the issue in the hopes
of getting [NCAA members] to take another look at what
they’ve done, and if they feel it unjust, change
the rule.” His protest focused national attention
on issues of economic and educational discrimination.
The NCAA membership reversed the rule change at its 1990
convention.
Mary Fenlon, pictured in Georgetown Today, November
1973
One of the first academic coordinators in the nation,
Miss Fenlon was the first person Coach Thompson hired
when he came to Georgetown. She worked for 27 years and
retired in July 1999, six months after the Coach. While
she was at Georgetown, 97 percent of the players who
stayed at the school for four years graduated. Miss Fenlon
characterized her job in this way: “It’s
just common sense. It’s just making sure that,
because we are asking the students to spend so much time
in practice, traveling and at games, that we check to
make sure they are doing what they should academically.
Because we create so many distractions we need to balance
them and refocus the student athletes on education. That’s
what they’re here for.”
Patrick Ewing has commented that: “Miss Fenlon played a major role in
my development. When a kind word was needed, she said it, but if a strong word
was needed she said that too. She was like a mother in some ways–she
cared enough to tell you what you needed to hear, not just what you wanted
to hear.”
In the 1990s, four players in particular (three centers
and a guard) symbolized Georgetown basketball: Dikembe
Mutombo (who played 1989-1991); Alonzo Mourning (1989-1992);
Othella Harrington (1993-1996); and Allen Iverson (1995-1996.)
All four went on to have careers in the NBA
Dikembe Mutombo (BSLA 1991), profiled in the Georgetown
University Basketball Media Guide, 1990-1991
Mutombo came to Georgetown from the Congo and majored
in linguistics and diplomacy. As a senior, he was an
honorable mention All-America and also the winner of
the Daly MVP Award. After graduation, he went to the
NBA where he played for Denver, Atlanta, Philadelphia,
New Jersey, New York and, currently, for Houston. He
was the NBA’s first four-time recipient of the
NBA Defensive Player of the Year award (1995, 1997, 1998,
2001.) Identified in 2005 by FOXSports.com as the most
generous professional athlete, he is noted for his humanitarian
work, including the building of a hospital in his homeland. “Because
of the NBA, I’ve got a lot of doors open to me.
So I have to let a lot of people in,” he has said.
Alonzo Mourning (AB 1992), featured on the cover of
the Georgetown Basketball Official Game Program, 1991-1992
Mourning was invited to 1988 Olympic trials and was
a Consensus All-America in 1992, Big East Player of The
Year also in 1992, Big East Defensive Player of the year
in 1989, 1990, and 1992, and All-Big East in 1990 and
1992. He led the nation as a freshman with 169 blocks,
still a team record. In a 13-year NBA career, he has
appeared in 736 games and has made 643 starts. He has
averaged 18.3 points, 9.1 rebounds, 2.90 blocks, 1.3
assists and 32.6 minutes while shooting 52.6 percent
from the floor, 24.7 percent from three-point range and
69.9 percent from the foul line. He has scored in double
figures on 630 occasions. On June 20, 2006, his eights
points, six rebounds and five blocks helped the Miami
Heat win the NBA Championship.
He formed “Zo’s Fund For Life” during
the 2000-2001 season in an effort to raise money for
kidney research. On December 19, 2003, he had kidney
transplant surgery. Like Mutombo, he has been recognized
for community work. Among his awards, the National Urban
League’s Outstanding Community Service Award in
2003, the NBA Good Guy Award from The Sporting News in
2002, and USA Weekend Magazine’s 9th Annual Most
Caring Athlete Award in October of 2001 (shared with
Andre Agassi.)
Othella Harrington (AB 1996), featured in the Georgetown
University Men’s Basketball Media Guide, 1995-1996
Harrington was a Parade H.S. All-American in 1992 and
Big East Rookie of the Year in 1993. He ranks as Georgetown’s
5th all-time career scorer (1,839 points) and 4th all-time
rebounder (983). He started all 132 games of his Georgetown
career and shot 55 percent or better from field for all
four seasons. As a senior, he helped the Hoyas reach "Elite
Eight" of NCAA Tournament. Drafted by the Houston
Rockets as the 30th pick in the 1996 NBA draft, Harrington
has played with the Vancouver Grizzlies, New York Knicks,
and the Chicago Bulls. He signed with the Charlotte Bobcats
on July 19, 2006.
Allen Iverson, pictured in Ye Domesday
Booke, 1996
At Georgetown, Iverson started 66 of 67 career games.
He was selected as the Big East Defensive Player of the
Year and led the team in scoring for both of his seasons.
As a freshman, he was named the Big East Rookie of the
Year after averaging a team-leading 20.4 points and 4.5
assists. As a sophomore, he led the Hoyas in scoring
(25.0 ppg), assists (4.7 apg) and steals (3.35 spg) and
was named First Team All-America by the Associated Press.
He holds the record for most points and steals in a single
season and also for career scoring average. He was the
first player picked in the 1996 NBA draft.
After ten seasons with Philadelphia, he is considered by many to be among the
greatest guards of his generation. He has career averages of 28.0 points (3rd
all-time in NBA history), 6.1 assists, 4.0 rebounds and 2.34 steals per game
in 41.7 minutes. Named the 2001 NBA MVP, he has scored 19,115 career points
and ranks 39th among the all-time NBA scoring leaders. He has led the NBA in
scoring four times (30.9 ppg in 2004-05, 31.4 ppg in 2001-02, 31.3 ppg in 2000-01
and 26.8 ppg in 1998-99) and in steals for a record three-straight seasons
(2.74 in 2002-03, 2.80 in 2001-02 and 2.51 in 2000-01.) He had a NBA high 225
steals in 2002-03, setting a single-season franchise record.
Verizon Center, featured in Georgetown Men’s Basketball
Media Guide, 2006-2007
In 1997, the Hoyas moved to their new home, the 20,600
seat MCI Center, now named the Verizon Center. The MCI
Center opened on December 2, 1997. The following night,
the Hoyas lost to Villanova, 73-69. When asked about
the facility after the game, Coach Thompson said: “I
love it. We loved it so much we watched it the whole
game.”
“The John Thompson, Jr. Years.” Chart from
Georgetown Men’s Basketball Media Guide, 2006-2007
After 26 and a half seasons, John Thompson resigned as head men’s basketball
coach in January 1999. He had led Georgetown teams to 20 NCAA Tournaments,
seven Big East Championships, three Final Four Appearances, and one National
Championship. At the press conference to announce the resignation, held in
McDonough Gym on January 8, Georgetown University President Leo J. O’Donovan,
S.J., commented: “When we think of John Thompson, the word vision comes
to mind because John built a men’s basketball program that is second
to none. The word excellence comes to mind because John demanded nothing less
of himself and his student-athletes on and off the court. The word commitment
comes to mind. John Thompson never swayed from his dedication as an educator,
his love of basketball and his desire not only to win but more importantly
to shape young men into winners in life. But there is one word that will always
resonate in my mind, and that is integrity. He is a man whose beliefs are not
for sale and whose advocacy of those beliefs is a welcome change for American
Society. He is a large-hearted leader who sees the link between basketball,
education, opportunity and justice.” In 1999, he was inducted into the
Basketball Hall of Fame.
John Thompson III, featured in 2006-2007 Hoya Gameday
When John Thompson III followed his father’s
career path to become head men’s basketball coach
at Georgetown in 2004, he and his father joined 18 other
sets of fathers and sons who have both coached at the
collegiate level. In addition, John Thompson III and
his brother, Ronny, a former Georgetown player and assistant
coach and now coach at Ball State, are one of only 11
pairs of brothers who have become college coaches.
2006-2007 Georgetown Hoyas, featured in the Basketball
Media Guide
A familiar number and name, #33 Patrick Ewing, Jr.
is the son of former Georgetown and NBA great Patrick
Ewing. He transferred from Indiana University and sat
out the 2005-2206 season due to NCAA rules.
Sports Illustrated. Basketball Preview,
November 20, 2006
Return to top |
 |