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Georgetown Hoyas
*** Shopping-Tip: Georgetown Hoyas
Image:Gtown 2485.gif thumb|right|Jack the Bulldog, the Georgetown Hoyas' mascotThe '''Georgetown Hoyas''' are the athletics teams that officially represent
Georgetown University in
NCAA college sports. Hoyas (the name means "what" or "such") participate in the
NCAA's Division I
Big East Conference in 26 sports and the Division I-AA
Patriot League in
American football football. The men's
basketball team is the school's most famous and most successful program, but Hoyas have acheived some degree of success in a wide range of sports.
Cultural traditions
"What is a Hoya"
The University admits that the precise origin of the term "Hoya" is unknown.
[[http://alumni.georgetown.edu/site/PageServer?pagename=athletics_landing Georgetown University, "What is a Hoya?"]] The official story is that at some point prior to 1920, students well-versed in the classical languages invented the
Greek language Greek ''hoia'' or ''hoya'', meaning "what" or "such", and the
Latin ''saxa'', to form "What Rocks!" Depending on who tells the story, the "rocks" either refer to the baseball team, which was nicknamed the "Stonewalls" after the Civil War, to the stalwart defense of the football team, or to the stone wall that surrounded the campus.
[[http://www.hoyasaxa.com/sports/hoia.htm Hoya Saxa, "What is a Hoya?"]]
In 1920, students began publishing the campus's first regular newspaper under the name ''The Hoya'', after successfully petitioning Rev. Coleman Nevils, S.J., Dean of the College, to change the name of the young paper, which was originally to be known as The Hilltopper. By the fall of 1928, the newspaper had taken to referring to the sports teams (then called the Hilltoppers in reference to Georgetown's geography) as the Hoyas. Dean Nevils's former school,
College of the Holy Cross, also refers to the term "Hoya" in one of its fight songs, as does a third Jesuit school,
Marquette University.
Big East opponents, whose schools tend to have more concrete nicknames, have long used "What's a Hoya?" as a chant to mock Georgetown.
[[http://www.bcheights.com/media/paper144/news/2005/01/31/Sports/Crowd.Shows.Up.For.Winning.Streak-846345.shtml ''The Heights'', "Crowd shows up for winning streak"]] Georgetown fans can take pleasure in knowing that, literally, what ''is'' a Hoya.
Mascot
Image:StubbyTheGeorgetownTerrier.jpg thumb|Stubby, predecessor to the current Jack the Bulldog mascot
Georgetown's nickname is The Hoyas, but its mascot is "Jack the
Bulldog." Among the earliest mascots was a terrier named Stubby, whose name is largely unfamiliar today but was perhaps the most famous dog of his generation. Stubby was discovered by a soldier at the
Yale Bowl, and went on to fight in World War I. He was personally decorated for valor by General
John J. Pershing in a post-war ceremony at the White House. His owner then entered
Georgetown University Law Center Georgetown Law School, and Stubby became part of the halftime show.
[Smithsonian Institution, "[http://americanhistory.si.edu/militaryhistory/collection/object.asp?ID=15 The Price of Freedom: Americans at War -- Stubby]"]
From then on, Georgetown had a live dog as its mascot (most famously Rev. Vincent McDonough,
S.J.'s dog, Hoya) until 1951, when the school joined a growing movement among private schools (most notably the
University of Chicago) to suspend football programs as un-academic. The dog as a symbol lived on, though, and sporadically students would bring pet bulldogs to games. In 1962 the school adopted as its logo a drawing of an English Bulldog named "Jack", sporting a blue and gray cap. In 1979, the university began the tradition of dressing up a student in a blue and gray bulldog costume.
[''[http://www.hoyasaxa.com Hoya Saxa Online]'', "[http://www.hoyasaxa.com/sports/bulldog.htm Georgetown Traditions: Jack The Bulldog]"]
Finally, in 1999, Rev. Scott Pilarz, S.J. revived the tradition of a live bulldog; when he left for the
University of Scranton, Georgetown immediately secured a new bulldog puppy and found another
Society of Jesus Jesuit, Rev. Christopher Steck, S.J., to care for him.
[''[http://www.hoyasaxa.com Hoya Saxa Online]'', "[http://www.hoyasaxa.com/sports/bulldog.htm Georgetown Traditions: Jack The Bulldog]"]
Fight song
Georgetown's fight song is rare among U.S. university fight songs (
St. Olaf College and
Texas A&M University Texas A&M presently, and
University of Wisconsin Wisconsin in the past, being other prominent examples) for mentioning other colleges by name. Specifically, it mentions
Yale University,
Harvard University,
Princeton University,
College of the Holy Cross, the
United States Naval Academy, and
Cornell University, who were all rivals of Georgetown in the early-to-mid 20th century, and mocks their fight songs. In recent years, the Hoyas only play Holy Cross regularly (in football), and many of these schools no longer use the fight songs that Georgetown's song mocks.
"It's been so long since last we met
Lie down forever, lie down
Or have you any money to bet
Lie down forever, lie down!
There goes old...Georgetown
Straight for a...touchdown (or rebound, when sung at basketball games)
See how they...gain ground
Lie down forever, lie down
Lie down forever, lie down!
Rah! Rah! Rah!
Hurrah for Georgetown
Cheer for victory today
'Ere the sun has sunk to rest,
In the cradle of the west
In the clouds will proudly float the Blue and Gray.
We've heard those loyal fellows up at Yale
Brag and boast about their 'Boola-Boola'
We've heard the Navy yell, we've listened to Cornell
We've heard the sons of Harvard tell
How Crimson lines could hold them
'Choo! Choo! Rah! Rah!', dear old Holy Cross
The proud old Princeton tiger is never at a loss
But the yell of all the yells,
The yell that wins the day
Is the 'HOYA, HOYA SAXA!' for the dear old Blue and Gray."
[[http://guhoyas.cstv.com/ Georgetown University Official Athletic Site]]
Men's basketball
Image:Alonzo Mourning Georgetown.jpg thumb|[[Alonzo Mourning, one of the Hoyas' most successful players]]
Titles and banners
The Men's basketball team is the most successful and well-known sports program at the university. They won the
NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship in
1984 in sports 1984 (over the
University of Houston) under coach
John Thompson (basketball) John Thompson, Jr. The Hoyas also reached and lost the Championship game in 1943 (to
University of Wyoming Wyoming),
1982 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament 1982 (to
Michael Jordan's
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill North Carolina), and 1985 (to Big East rival
Villanova University Villanova).
The team was very successful in the early years of the
Big East: it won or tied for the regular-season titles in
1980 in sports 1980, 1984,
1987 in sports 1987,
1989 in sports 1989, and
1992 in sports 1992. The team was even more dominant in the
Big East Men's Basketball Tournament: it won in 1980,
1982 in sports 1982, 1984,
1985 in sports 1985,
1987 in sports 1987, and
1989 in sports 1989.
[[http://www.bigeast.org/schools/gu/bige-gu-body.html Big East Official Georgetown Page]]
Hoyas in the pros
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. Other Hoyas to make the NBA include
Ruben Boumtje-Boumtje,
Sleepy Floyd,
Othella Harrington,
Alonzo Mourning,
Dikembe Mutombo,
Charles E. Smith (basketball) Charles Smith,
Michael Sweetney,
Jahidi White,
Jerome Williams,
Reggie Williams (basketball) Reggie Williams, and
David Wingate.
[[http://guhoyas.cstv.com/ Georgetown University Official Athletic Site]]
Another Hoya player who never sought an NBA career went on to achieve professional sports fame as an executive in another sport.
Paul Tagliabue, who played for the Hoyas in the early 1960s and was one of the leading rebounders in school history
[[http://guhoyas.cstv.com/sports/m-baskbl/spec-rel/gu-m-baskbl-recordsandawards.html#career-rebounds Basketball Record Book, Georgetown University Official Athletic Site]], has been Commissioner of the
National Football League since
1989.
Brendan Gaughan was a walk-on for the Hoyas (he also played football.) Gaughan is a driver in
NASCAR's
Craftsman Truck Series and also raced one season in the
Nextel Cup series.
Recent years
-
2006: 19-8 regular season, NCAA Sweet 16
-
2005: 16-11 regular season, NIT quarterfinals
-
2004: 13-14 regular season, no postseason
-
2003: 14-13 regular season, NIT championship game
-
2002: 17-10 regular season, declined NIT
-
2001: 23-6 regular season, NCAA Sweet 16
-
2000: 15-13 regular season, NIT second round
-
1999: 13-14 regular season, NIT first round
Current team
The current coach is Thompson's son,
John Thompson III, who took over from
Craig Esherick. John Thompson III's first notable win with the team took place on
January 21,
2006 in sports 2006 when unranked Georgetown upset No. 1 Duke University. This was Georgetown's first win over a No. 1 ranked team in 21 years. An interesting item of trivia is that the last time the Hoyas beat a number one ranked team, John Thompson Jr. was coaching and
Patrick Ewing was playing. In their win against Duke, John Thompson III was coaching and
Patrick Ewing, Jr. was sitting on the bench (as a
redshirt transfer sophomore).
[''Washington Post'', Jan. 22, 2006, Page E-1, "[http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/01/21/AR2006012100759.html Hoyas KO the Big 1]"]
The Hoyas currently employ their own variant of the
Princeton offense, a slow, cerebral style of play that is very rare in the modern college game. The hallmark of the offense is the "backdoor" pass, where a player on the wing suddenly moves in towards the basket, receives a
bounce pass from a guard on the perimeter, and (if done correctly) 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. Georgetown has been lauded in the sports media for destroying the "warped stereotype" that "African American kids don't want discipline" as well as for proving that the typically brawny Georgetown team can excel by emphasizing offensive efficiency rather than defense.
[[http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/03/22/AR2006032202551.html "Princeton Offense Keeps Hoyas on the Move"], ''Washington Post'', Mike Wise, March 23, 2006; Page E12.]
2006-07 season
The Hoyas have one of the NCAA's best recruiting classes for next season. Joining the Hoyas will be
DaJuan Summers (Owings Mills, Md./McDonogh),
Vernon Macklin (Hargrave Military Academy) and
Jeremiah Rivers (Winter Park, Fla.). Summers, a 6-8 power forward, was named the Baltimore City Player of the Year. Rivers participated in USA Basketball's Youth Development Festival as well as the NBA Players' Association Top 100 camp.
[[http://guhoyas.collegesports.com/sports/m-baskbl/spec-rel/011906aac.html Hoyas Incoming], GUHoyas.com] Macklin has been named a
McDonald's All-American.
[[http://rivalshoops.rivals.com/content.asp?CID=516519 2006 McDonald's All-Americans at Rivals.com]]
Women's lacrosse
The women's
lacrosse team has been particularly strong in recent years. The Lady Hoyas reached the
NCAA Women's Lacrosse Championship final in both 2001 and 2002. They play their home games on Multi-Sport Facility ("Harbin Field"), which is surrounded on two sides by dormitories, to respectably large crowds. In 2005, their first season under new coach Ricky Fried, the team went 13-5 and made the NCAA Tournament for the 8th straight year.
[''Hoya Saxa Magazine'', January 2006 issue] As of April 4,
2006 in sports 2006, the Hoyas are 7-1 and ranked #3 in the nation.
[[http://guhoyas.cstv.com/sports/w-lacros/spec-rel/040406aab.html "No. 3 Georgetown Women's Lacrosse Faces Beltway Rival No. 7 Maryland on Wednesday Night"], Georgetown University Women's Lacrosse, April 4, 2006]
Football
In the
1940s, Georgetown had one of the better college football teams in America. As the college game became more expensive, however, Georgetown refused to make the expensive investments that other Catholic universities like
University of Notre Dame Notre Dame made to maintain a top-notch program.
In 1941, Georgetown played in the
Orange Bowl (game) Orange Bowl, where they lost 14-7 to
Mississippi State University Mississippi State. They also played in the 1950
Sun Bowl against
University of Texas at El Paso Texas Western. Texas Western, now known as the University of Texas at El Paso (more commonly UTEP), won the game by a score of 33-20.
Jim Ricca (football) "Big Jim" Ricca, an NFL
defensive end and
offensive lineman, graduated in 1949 and was the last Hoya to make the NFL.
[[http://www.thehoya.com/features/012304/features3.cfm "Glory Days: The Past, Present and Future of Hoyas Turned Professional Athletes] The Hoya, January 23, 2004]
Perhaps the football team's most accomplished athlete was
Al Blozis, who would play for the NFL's
New York Giants before being killed in action in
World War II. Blozis's great athletic accomplishments, however, came in
shotput and
discus. He set the world indoor record for the shotput, throwing it 56 feet 4.5 inches in 1941. He was the national indoor and outdoor shotput champion in both 1942 and 1943.
[[http://www.thehoya.com/features/012304/features3.cfm "Glory Days: The Past, Present and Future of Hoyas Turned Professional Athletes] The Hoya, January 23, 2004]
Other sports
Hoyas have excelled in a wide range of sports over the years:
*Three players from the men's soccer team have played professionally for
Major League Soccer: Phil Wellington (drafted in
1996 MLS Inaugural Player Draft#Round 11 1996), Brandon Leib (
1997 MLS College Draft#Round 3 1997), and Eric Kvello (
1999 MLS College Draft#Round 3 1999)
*The sailing team finished
2005 in sports 2005 ranked #1
[Georgetown University Sailing [http://guhoyas.collegesports.com/sports/c-sail/spec-rel/120205aaa.html], Dec 2 2005] in the [http://www.collegesailing.org/rankings.asp ICSA Sailing World College Rankings]. As of March 2006, they are now #6.
Andrew Campbell has led the sailing team to the three singlehanded national championships
[Georgetown University Sailing [http://guhoyas.collegesports.com/sports/c-sail/recaps/112005aaa.html], Nov 2 2005] and a second place finish in the Inter-Collegiate Sailing Associaion (ICSA) championships in
Hood River, Oregon. He was named male sailing athlete of the year in 2002 and 2005.
[Georgetown University Sailing [http://guhoyas.collegesports.com/sports/c-sail/spec-rel/010406aaa.html] Jan 4 2006]
Administration
Athletic directors
Since July 1,
2005 in sports 2005, the Director of the Athletic Department has been
Bernard Muir. The former directors since the title's creation in 1914 are Charles R. Cox (1914-1920), Rev. Vincent S. McDonough (1920-1924), Louis Little (1924-1930), H. Gabriel Murphy (1930-1941), Rome F. Schwagel (1941-1942, 1947-1949), Joseph T. Gardner (1942-1943), Rev. John J. Kehoe (1943-1944), John L. Hagerty (1946-1947, 1949-1969), Robert H. Sigholtz (1969-1972), Francis X. Rienzo (1972-1999), Joseph C. Lang (1999-2004), and Adam Brick (2004-2005).
[''Hoya Saxa Magazine'', January 2006 issue]
List of sports
Intercollegiate sports include (inaugural season and current coach in parentheses)
[''Hoya Saxa Magazine'', January 2006 issue]
*Men's:
baseball (1860, Pete Wilk),
basketball (1907,
John Thompson III),
crew (1876, Tony Johnson),
cross country (1924, Ron Helmer),
American football football (1887, Kevin Kelly),
golf (1925, Tommy Hunter),
lacrosse (1951, Dave Urick),
soccer (1952),
swimming and
diving (1949, Bethany Bower),
tennis (1920), and
track and field (1891, Ron Helmer)
*Women's:
basketball (1960, Terri Williams Fluornoy),
crew (1975, Tony Johnson),
cross country (1976, Ron Helmer),
field hockey (1960, Laurie Carroll),
golf (2001, Connie Isler),
lacrosse (1975, Ricky Fried),
soccer (1991, Dave Nolan),
softball (2005, Pat Conlan),
swimming and
diving (1975, Bethany Bower),
tennis (1960),
track and field (1976, Ron Helmer), and
volleyball (1960, Arlisa Hagan)
*Coed:
sailing (1937, Mike Callahan)
References
External Links
-
Big East Official Georgetown Page
-
Georgetown University Official Athletic Site
-
HoyaSaxa.com Basketball
-
HoyaSaxa.com Football
-
Georgetown section in the ''
Washington Post'' website
{{Big East Conference}}
{{Patriot_League}}
Category:Georgetown Hoyas basketball
Category:College athletic programs
*** Shopping-Tip: Georgetown Hoyas