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Georgetown Basketball: January 2011 News Archive
Georgetown began January a team in search of itself, struggling past a bad DePaul team and subsequently dropping its next three. It ends January with five straight wins, as Chris Wright scored 24 points and led the Hoyas to a 62-59 win over #15 Louisville at Verizon Center. If Saturday's game with Villanova was a game when both teams were playing at its best, the start to this game was anything but. The two teams combined for 17 points and 15 turnovers in the first seven minutes of the first half, as defensive pressure and poor ball handling rattled both teams. Louisville (17-5, 6-3 B.E.) held its only lead of the first half at 18-17 with 2:35 to play before the Hoyas outscored the Cardinals 5-0 to end the half, capped by a Hollis Thompson three with 40 seconds left to lead 22-18. It was Georgetown's fewest points in a half since the season opener with Old Dominion, as the two teams combined to shoot 16-56 from the field and combine for 19 turnovers. Business began to pick up in the second half. Georgetown pushed the lead to seven early in the half and led by nine on two different occasions in the first eight minutes, successfully forcing the Cardinals into poor shooting sets and helped by efforts in keeping guard Peyton Siva off the ball. Siva, who had scored on 72% of his shots over the last four games and led the Cardinals in its upset at UConn, was scoreless in the first half and had turned the ball over seven times until the 11:15 mark of the game, where he keyed a Louisville run that dropped in three three pointers in just 1:22 to cut the Georgetown lead to four, 45-41. Consecutive turnovers by Henry Sims and Jason Clark led the Cardinals to tie the score with 7:58 to play, and a three pointer by Mike Marra gave the Cards a 54-53 lead at the 6:19 mark, part of a remarkable run where Louisville was 9-11 from the field.
For Louisville, Siva finished just 1-5 from the field, but GU's defensive damage was really done against leading scorer Preston Knowles, who shot 1-8 in the second half and finished with 11 points overall, four below his average. Terrence Jennings got points inside and led the Cardinals late, but the rest of the team was just 8-24 in the second half, including its late game struggles. Here's the Georgetown half of the box score: MIN 2FG 3FG FT REB A PF PTS Starters: Wright 35 8-11 0-3 8-8 5 3 1 24 Clark 31 0-4 0-2 2-2 5 1 1 2 Freeman 35 3-6 2-5 1-2 3 3 2 13 Lubick 22 1-3 0-0 1-3 3 0 1 3 Vaughn 26 4-4 0-0 2-2 5 1 1 10 Reserves: Thompson 23 0-2 2-3 0-0 1 1 1 6 Starks 7 1-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 2 Sanford 2 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 Sims 14 1-1 0-0 0-2 1 2 2 2 Benimon 5 0-0 0-0 0-0 2 0 3 0 Team Rebounds 3 DNP: Dougherty, Caprio, Bowen, Ayegba TOTALS 200 18-33 4-13 14-19 28 11 12 62 Post game articles follow below.
With his 13 points Monday, Austin Freeman now stands among the top ten career scorers in Georgetown history. Congratulations to Austin for joining this select group:
Time is fleeting for any athlete, none more so in college. And when Austin Freeman takes his bow at Senior Day, less than a month from now, Georgetown fans can justly applaud an outstanding college career, with memorable moments that stand the test of time. Such were the moments of Saturday's 69-66 win over #8 ranked Villanova, where Freeman scored 10 points and an assist in the final 12 points in the win, giving Georgetown a crucial mid-season win which brought the Hoyas above .500 in Big East play for the first time since Jan. 3. The 19,914 fans at Philadelphia's Wells Fargo Center expected a close game, and got it. Villanova (17-4, 5-3 B.E.) opened up strong, leading 10-5, as Georgetown shot 5 for 13 in the first ten minutes and no players other than Jason Clark or Austin Freeman were able to score. Consecutive baskets by Freeman gave Georgetown (16-5, 5-4 B.E.) the lead at 13-12, but strong inside play by Villanova's Antonio Pena drove the Wildcats to a 17-13 lead midway during the half. During its upset loss to Providence, Villanova's outside shooting failed them, and so was the case at this point of the game. For the next seven minutes of the half, Villanova missed eight straight shots, seven of which were jump shots, as Georgetown took a lead which would hold throughout the game. Free throws by Freeman regained the lead at 19-17, where Georgetown picked up the pace with consecutive baskets by Markel Starks and Hollis Thompson to go up six, 25-19. The Wildcats closed to three in the final minute, but a key three pointer by Vee Sanford with six seconds in the half added to a lead which would need every point it could get in the second half.
The Wildcats needed to catch fire, and for 51 seconds in ESPN's blackout, they made the most of it. Seven seconds after the Freeman free throws, Wayns drove for a layup, 61-55, whereupon Jason Clark lost the ball at midcourt and Corey Stokes let loose with a three, 61-58. On GU's next possession, Wright was stripped of the ball by Pena, and Wright fouled Wayns as he was going for the basket. Wayns hit both free throws and the game was very much in doubt. But here comes Austin. With 2:01 to play, Freeman got the ball but was denied inside; falling back, he picked up his own rebound and laid it in, by itself a remarkable play, but the first of two superlative efforts to come. Georgetown went up three, but was forced to foul Corey Fisher, who sank two free throws to close to one with 1:15 left. The next possession was ever more crucial. With a press enveloping Chris Wright and the shot clock winding down, Wright swung the ball to Freeman in the left corner, who let up a long jumper with three seconds on the shot clock that rallied the Hoyas, now up three. (A subsequent official's review correctly confirmed the shot as a two pointer, not three.) Villanova was back at the line and scored on both, 65-64, with 34 seconds left. Georgetown was hounded in the backcourt and appeared to be close to losing the ball. As four Hoyas were struggling to get the ball over the half court, Freeman saw differently--literally. In a bold move, Freeman saw Lubick flying down the court unopposed, and his court length pass was a strike to Lubick at the foul line, adding a thundering dunk to quiet the crowd and go back up three, 67-64. Wayns opted for a quick two with 17 seconds and fouled Freemen with the Hoyas up one. Freeman, a perfect 6-6 from the line to date, sank two more, 69-66. Villanova's final possession saw Pena launch a three that rattled away (the Cats' first miss from the field since the 5:28 mark) , and Dominic Cheek's desperation attempt with time running out was no good as well. For a moment, just a moment, the otherwise laconic Freeman let loose with a smile at game's end. "Austin Freeman in most situations is unflappable,” said coach John Thompson III. “The last three minutes of the game were only indicative of what he’s done the last four years. They're running, trapping and making it hard to do what you want to do, so you put the ball in his hands because good things happen.” Freeman's heroics do not detract from a true team effort in this one--10 points from Clark, nine from Vaughn, eight from Lubick, an unsung five points and five rebounds from junior Henry Sims in 17 minutes, and a six assist effort from Chris Wright despite going scoreless for only first time in almost two years. The Hoyas shot 52% on the game, 19 assists in 24 field goals, and 16-17 from the line. In the Big East, there is no time to sit back and dwell on any game. From 17-4 Villanova on Saturday, meet 17-4 Louisville, entering Verizon Center Monday night winners of four of its last five including a double OT win at Connecticut. Rest assured that Austin Freeman will be the center of Louisville's attention as well. Here's the Georgetown half of the box score: MIN 2FG 3FG FT REB A PF PTS Starters: Wright 32 0-3 0-0 0-0 4 6 4 0 Clark 28 2-4 2-4 0-0 4 1 4 10 Freeman 36 8-15 2-4 8-8 4 6 2 30 Lubick 29 4-4 0-0 0-0 2 3 2 8 Vaughn 23 1-3 0-0 7-7 3 1 3 9 Reserves: Thompson 19 1-1 0-1 0-0 3 1 0 2 Starks 6 1-1 0-2 0-0 1 1 1 2 Sanford 2 0-0 1-1 0-0 0 0 3 3 Sims 17 2-3 0-0 1-2 5 0 2 5 Benimon 8 0-0 0-0 0-0 2 0 0 0 Team Rebounds 5 DNP: Dougherty, Caprio, Bowen, Ayegba TOTALS 200 19-34 5-12 16-17 33 19 19 69 Additional coverage follows below.
Austin Freeman's 30 point effort against Villanova is the fourth 30 point game of his career, a number matched by only eight players in Georgetown history:
Freshman forward Aaron Bowen underwent shoulder surgery Thursday and will be out of action for the remainder of the season, per a release at GUHoyas.com. Bowen has averaged one point per game in seven games this season and has not played since Dec. 18. Georgetown will request a medical redshirt with the NCAA.
Jason Clark's 16 points rallied 21st ranked Georgetown past St. John's, 77-52, the Hoyas' third straight win en route to a .500 record in Big East conference play. Clark was strong early in the game, as Georgetown's offense seemed refreshed by the eight day layoff since defeating Seton Hall on Jan. 18, but its zone defense was not. St. John's (11-8, 4-5 B.E.) matched each Georgetown basket in the first eight minutes of the game, and seemed comfortable with the holes in the Georgetown defense, picking up a number of inside baskets and taking a 16-14 lead on a Justin Burrell basket and foul. Coach John Thompson III made the move to a man to man defense and the game quickly turned.
"I've said it before, it doesn't matter [who starts]," Thompson said. "Nate was out there and Hollis wasn't for the first time, but I thought they both played pretty well." Thompson was diplomatic about the change. "Coach knows what he's doing," he said. "When he tells you you're not starting, it's for the best of the team, then whatever is for the best of the team I'm going to support." Julian Vaughn's nine points and eight rebounds does not go unappreciated, as his defensive stands helped stop a number of St. John's drives that could have turned the momentum. Instead, the Redmen struggled all evening as the inside became off limits, thanks to Vaughn and a team effort on both sides of the floor. The Georgetown motion offense was back in full force, with 12 assists on 15 first baskets and 21 assists in its 26 field goals for the game. The Hoyas shot 51% from the field (26-51), 50% from three (9-18), and held a 39-30 advantage on the boards. Limited by heavy snowfall in the Washington area, a crowd of only 7,160 attended the game, the fewest at a Verizon Center Big East game since a Jan. 17, 2006 game with South Florida. A pair of top 25 opponents await the Hoyas this weekend, Saturday at #8 Villanova and Monday hosting #23 Louisville. "We don't necessarily look at the standings," said Clark. "We watch some games on TV, but we're focused on what we have to do. If we take care of what we have to do we'll be fine." Here's the Georgetown half of the box score: MIN 2FG 3FG FT REB A PF PTS Starters: Wright 32 3-10 1-2 0-0 3 6 3 9 Clark 27 2-2 3-3 3-6 5 2 2 16 Freeman 31 2-5 3-8 1-1 1 2 0 14 Lubick 21 2-5 0-0 2-3 6 2 3 6 Vaughn 26 3-3 0-0 3-4 8 4 1 9 Reserves: Thompson 18 3-4 2-2 3-3 6 1 1 15 Starks 11 0-1 0-1 0-0 2 2 0 0 Sanford 3 0-0 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 0 Dougherty 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 Sims 10 2-2 0-0 0-0 2 2 2 4 Benimon 13 0-1 0-1 2-2 3 0 2 2 Caprio 2 0-0 0-0 2-2 0 0 0 2 Ayegba 4 0-0 0-0 0-2 1 0 1 0 Team Rebounds 2 DNP: Bowen TOTALS 200 17-33 9-18 16-23 39 21 15 77 Post game coverage follows below.
Is Wednesday's game a big one? History would say so. A generation ago, Georgetown-St. John's was the among the two big rivalries on the Hoyas' annual schedule, and when the two schools met on Jan. 26, 1985, #2 St. John's ended #1 Georgetown's 29 game win streak in a 66-65 win before 19,035 at Capital Centre. Georgetown opened the 1984-85 season as the nation's top ranked team, but erased all doubts when it destroyed #2 DePaul 77-57 in mid-December, and talk of a possible undefeated season was on. The loss of Fred Brown, Gene Smith and sophomore Michael Graham (under a one year suspension by coach John Thompson) began to impact the Hoyas in December, where a late season tournament in Puerto Rico led to a pair of narrow wins, including a 61-56 win over North Carolina A&T. A pair of overtime scares followed the Hoyas into January, with an 82-80 win over Boston College and a 52-50 nail-biter over Villanova in which Ed Pinckney finished just 2-9 in the two point loss. Before a national audience on CBS, Georgetown met St. John's, 14-1 and tied at #2 in the Associated Press poll with Southern Methodist. The Redmen were no stranger to Capital Centre, having defeated Georgetown in each of the prior two seasons in Landover on the back of senior All-American Chris Mullin. Mullin averaged 27.4 ppg in the last five meetings with Georgetown, including a 33 point effort in St. John's 75-71 win at Capital Centre on Feb. 21, 1984, Georgetown's last loss heading into the game. St. John's coach Lou Carnesecca returned to some old tricks in defending Georgetown in the game. Two years earlier, Carnesecca had inserted 6-4 forward Kevin Williams to pester, harass, and (some would say) hack Ewing at every turn, hoping for some quick fouls and otherwise disrupt play. Ewing finished that game 4-14 from the field and the Redmen won by nine, 76-67. Williams had graduated by 1985 but the strategy was back in force--drop two and three men around Ewing to help center Bill Wennington and force the action outside. Ewing got into early foul trouble as St. John's took a surprising 40-30 lead into intermission despite shooting only 33% from the field. The key to the game for St. John's was junior college transfer Walter Berry. A high school All-American at New York's Ben Franklin HS in 1982, Berry quit school and hoped a GED would admit him to St. John's, but the NCAA ruled him ineligible, whereupon he retreated to junior college in Pasadena, TX. Berry joined the Redmen in the fall of 1984 and was a major factor in this game, scoring 14 points, 13 rebounds, and holding Georgetown's Reggie Williams to 1-6 from the field. Berry, who would follow Ewing as National Player of the Year in 1986, had declared that he wasn't intimidated by the Georgetown center and the numbers reflected it. St. John's shot over 60% in the second half. "The Redmen watched an enormous lead ebb from a high of 18 points with 10:46 left, to 13 at 8:48, to eight at 2:35, to three at :19, to one at :05, at which time, in the most intelligent play of the game, Mullin cradled the ball in the safety of out-of-bounds after the Hoyas' final basket," wrote Sports Illustrated. "There would be no more ebbing only because there would be no more time. Had the game lasted another five minutes, Georgetown might have won by 15." "I've been through this before with Georgetown," said Carnesecca. It's not always enough to be up by 18. Thank God we had that cushion." With SMU upset by Texas Tech the same day, it was now St. John's at #1, symbolized by a lucky sweater worn by Carnesecca in each of his last five wins. For a month or so in 1985, the Redmen were the toast of college basketball. Georgetown shot just 40% (27-67) from the field and 50% (11-22) from the line--not unexpected in a season where the Hoyas made just 62% from the line in Big East play, but disheartening nonetheless. Ewing finished with 15 rebounds but only nine points, while Williams was 1-6 against the Redmen and 2-11 two nights later in a 65-63 loss at Syracuse. From the upsets of that three day weekend, Georgetown went on to win its next 17. As Ken Denlinger of the Washington Post foretold in the game recap: "For all the fuss, this was a get-acquainted game for both teams. In a month, they will met again. Very likely, they will meet after that, in the Big East tournament. And possibly once more, in the NCAA tournament." They did, and Georgetown won all three by double digits. Here's the box score from that game. ST. JOHN'S MIN FG FT REB A PF PTS Starters: Moses 27 2-5 2-3 0 1 3 6 Mullin 40 7-12 6-8 8 3 1 20 Glass 29 4-7 3-4 3 2 3 11 Berry 26 5-9 4-5 13 2 5 14 Wennington 38 2-6 4-5 6 0 3 8 Reserves: Jones 13 1-4 0-0 3 0 2 2 Jackson 13 1-1 1-1 2 2 2 3 Rowan 8 1-2 0-2 1 0 1 2 Stewart 6 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 0 DNP: Bross, Shurina, Comegy Team Rebounds 2 TOTALS 200 23-67 20-28 38 10 20 66 GEORGETOWN MIN FG FT REB A PF PTS Starters: Jackson 30 5-10 2-4 2 2 1 12 Wingate 25 7-14 2-3 3 1 5 16 Martin 36 5-12 0-2 6 0 4 10 Williams 19 1-6 0-0 0 0 3 2 Ewing 32 3-7 3-6 15 1 4 9 Reserves: McDonald 23 2-7 4-7 4 3 3 8 Floyd 1 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 0 Broadnax 14 4-6 0-0 0 0 2 8 Highsmith 2 0-1 0-0 1 0 2 0 Mateen 6 0-2 0-0 3 0 0 0 Dalton 12 0-1 0-0 2 0 2 0 DNP: Lockhart Team Rebounds 3 TOTALS 200 27-67 11-22 39 7 26 65
Austin Freeman (C'11) was named Big East Player Of The Week for his efforts against Rutgers. Additional details follow in this link to GUHoyas.com.
"To say the Hoyas saved their season along the Turnpike might be a stretch. But not by much."--Washington Post When it's March, and the Georgetown Hoyas are sorting out post-season plans, it may be worth looking back to the last four minutes of an 80-75 win at Seton Hall to remind everyone how thin the margin is to be among the eight Big East schools that are NCAA contenders, versus the eight standing on the outside. A gutty comeback kept afloat a struggling, albeit #23 ranked, Georgetown Hoyas team, battling back from a six point deficit with under 3:00 to play, to earn an important win at Seton Hall, raising its conference record to 3-4 entering an eight day break. The Hoyas took a pounding in a second half that could have knocked out the season, yet the Hoyas came back off the canvas to outscore the Pirates 13-2 in the final three minutes of the game.
With a tie score, Hazell launched up an unforced three that went wide, and in the mix Wright got the ball and was fouled. Wright hit the first but missed the second, giving Georgetown a tenuous lead at 74-73. The Pirates went inside on its next possession, with senior Eniel Polynice missing a layup with 27 seconds left to take the lead. Freeman was fouled immediately thereafter off the rebound and hit both, 76-73, but the Pirates weren't done. On its next possession, a wild exchange around the basket, found Theodore open in the corner, but he narrowly stepped into two point territory to hit the basket, which closed the lead to one but did not tie it, 76-75. Wright was quickly fouled with eight seconds left, making two, 78-75, before Georgetown called its final time out of the game and its first in nearly 12 minutes. The decision was made to foul Theodore instead of letting him launch another three. "“It’s the first time I’ve ever done it,” Thompson said, adding "Julian promised me he’d get the rebound." Theodore, an 82% free throw shooter entering the game, missed the one and one again, Vaughn got the rebound, and Wright closed it out with free throws, 80-75. "We were talking about how we were going to defend the final eight seconds and when 'foul the ball handler' came up I said I’d get the rebound if he missed, and [Coach] trusted me and I got it," Vaughn said. Two missed foul shots. A three that stepped into a two. A missed layup, any of which could have legitimately turned the tide for the Pirates. In the Big East, there is just no room for error. Four Seton Hall starters accounted for 69 of the team's 75 points. Robinson led the Pirates with 21, Theodore 17, Pope 16, and Hazell 15. For Georgetown, Freeman led all scorers with 28, 17 from Wright and 14 from Hollis Thompson. Georgetown's 52% shooting was nearly overwhelmed by 15 turnovers and a defense that allowed the Pirates, ranked last in the Big East in scoring, to get 44 of its points inside and shoot 55% in the second half. Here's the Georgetown half of the box score: MIN 2FG 3FG FT REB A PF PTS Starters: Wright 37 4-6 1-5 6-8 6 6 1 17 Clark 34 3-5 0-3 2-2 6 3 2 8 Freeman 35 7-9 3-4 5-5 5 3 2 28 Thompson 26 3-3 2-4 2-4 3 1 2 14 Vaughn 31 5-10 0-0 1-2 6 2 2 11 Reserves: Starks 7 0-1 0-1 0-0 1 0 2 0 Sims 9 0-1 0-0 0-2 0 1 2 0 Benimon 3 0-2 0-0 0-0 2 0 1 0 Lubick 18 1-1 0-0 0-0 4 2 1 2 DNP: Sanford, Dougherty, Bowen, Caprio, Ayegba Team Rebounds 3 TOTALS 200 23-38 6-17 16-23 36 18 15 80 Post game coverage follows below.
How did the teams fare from the field at each four minute break?
Austin Freeman scored 25 points as Georgetown began its long climb back up the 2010-11 Big East standings, winning at Rutgers 74-65. Georgetown needed a strong opening on the road and got it, scoring the first eight points of the game. Senior Jonathan Mitchell, who had scored 45 points in Rutgers' two prior meetings with Georgetown, scored the Scarlet Knights' first five points but was not a major factor thereafter, going 2-9 the rest of the game. Of greater impact was center Gilvydas Biruta, who was left out of the starting lineup by Rutgers coach Mike Rice for his play versus Connecticut, but who played a big role in the first half in keeping Rutgers (10-7, 1-4 B.E.) close.
"We basically won the second half, but what we did [earlier] stopped us from winning the game," said Rutgers forward Dane Miller to the Newark Star-Ledger. "No one ever lost confidence," Wright said after the game in response to the preparation to end GU's worst start in Big East play in 12 years. "We just weren’t putting the ball in the basket. We feel good about ourselves.” And more work remains to be done. The schedule continues in New Jersey, with the Hoyas traveling north to Newark to meet Seton Hall on Wednesday. Here's the Georgetown half of the box score: MIN 2FG 3FG FT REB A PF PTS Starters: Wright 35 2-4 3-5 2-3 2 0 2 15 Clark 32 4-4 1-6 2-2 2 1 1 13 Freeman 37 2-6 4-6 9-9 9 4 1 25 Thompson 20 1-5 2-3 0-0 2 0 4 8 Vaughn 31 1-3 0-0 2-2 5 2 2 4 Reserves: Starks 7 0-1 1-2 0-0 0 0 1 3 Sims 8 1-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 2 Benimon 5 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 1 0 Lubick 25 1-2 0-0 2-3 4 2 2 4 DNP: Sanford, Dougherty, Bowen, Caprio, Ayegba Team Rebounds 5 TOTALS 200 12-26 11-22 17-19 30 9 14 74 Post game coverage follows below.
With his 25 point effort versus Rutgers, Austin Freeman (C'11) becomes the 14th Georgetown player to reach 1,500 points in his college career. Here's a list of those players and where Freeman's name now rests among the best of the Hoya greats over the years:
Despite being the victim of an assault and home invasion, former All-American Charles Smith (C'89) is the unlikely target of Prince Georges Country officials, who indicted Smith Tuesday on two counts relative to drugs found in the house when Smith was shot twice in the chest during a home invasion on Oct. 21, according to the Montgomery County Gazette. The investigation regarding Smith's assailant has not produced a suspect, according to the paper.
Contrary to claims in the blogosphere Wednesday, Allen Iverson has not retired from pro basketball, according to the Associated Press. A lesion has appeared on Iverson's leg which requires surgery, according to Iverson's business manager, Gary Moore. "It has to be removed and tested to see if it's benign or not," said Moore. "Once that's removed, Allen is going to look to rehabilitate his leg because the doctors tell him he'll be out four to six weeks, He's hoping to be able to play in the [Turkish League] playoffs." "People need to know that Allen is and always has been a fighter," Moore said. "He's got a battle ahead of him."
Georgetown's poor start in Big East play marks only the second time in the Big East era that Georgetown has started with a 1-4 record after the first five games of conference play. In 1998-99, the Hoyas lost its first four conference games under John Thompson before he resigned and eventually dropped to 1-7 under Craig Esherick before splitting the remaining 10 games and finishing 6-12 in the conference. Georgetown finished 15-16, its first losing season in 27 years. How do these two seasons's Big East statistics compare to date?
"Preparation beat desperation."--Pittsburgh Tribune-Review Georgetown continued its march to the bottom of the Big East standings in yet another round of poor results from seniors Chris Wright and Austin Freeman, trailing by 17 at the half to #5 Pittsburgh and never recovered, 72-57. The loss marked Georgetown's third straight and the worst record in conference play in 12 years. The game was close in the first five minutes, but really not much more than that. Georgetown opened the scoring with a Jason Clark three pointer, whereupon he did not make a basket the rest of the game. The Hoyas proceeded to miss five of its next six but suffered when Chris Wright committed two fouls within seven seconds of each other and spent much of the rest of the half on the bench. Georgetown only trailed by four when the team's lack of focus was exposed at the free throw line. It began when freshman Nate Lubick, entering the game shooting 7-8 from the line in Big East play, missed two free throws, and the Georgetown defense took a leave of absence, giving up consecutive layups to trail by six, 13-7, then watched as Pitt guard Ashton Gibbs went to work on Georgetown's increasingly porous perimeter defense. Off the 12 minute media time out, guard Travon Woodall fed Gibbs for an open three, 16-7. After a pair of Henry Sims free throws, Woodall fed Gibbs again, 19-9. Two missed layups by Georgetown later, Woodall and Gibbs hit for the hat trick and the Hoyas were down 22-9, scoring just three field goals in the first 11 minutes of the game.
"We've got to bounce back, go to practice tomorrow and head out on the road and get two against two very good teams," said senior center Julian Vaughn. Yes, wins against Rutgers and Seton Hall and a home win over the St. John's Redmen "could" get the Hoyas to .500 for a Jan. 29 game at Villanova, but the way this team has been playing, a 1-7 record is not out of the question either, which could literally capsize the season for a team ranked #9 just two weeks ago. Which team will it be? Here's the Georgetown half of the box score. MIN 2FG 3FG FT REB A PF PTS Starters: Wright 26 2-4 1-2 7-8 2 4 3 14 Freeman 35 3-8 2-5 0-1 2 1 2 12 Clark 25 0-0 1-4 2-4 4 0 3 5 Thompson 23 1-2 0-5 0-0 3 0 3 2 Vaughn 29 5-9 0-0 3-6 7 0 3 13 Reserves: Starks 11 0-2 0-2 0-0 0 0 3 0 Sanford 7 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 2 0 Sims 14 2-3 0-0 2-2 5 0 4 6 Benimon 11 1-1 0-0 0-2 1 0 1 2 Lubick 19 0-1 1-2 0-2 5 0 2 3 DNP: Dougherty, Bowen, Caprio, Ayegba Team Rebounds 3 TOTALS 200 14-30 5-20 14-25 32 5 26 57 Post game coverage follows below.
Wednesday's Washington Post has a feature story on rising high school star Mikayla Venson. If the name is a little familiar, her father has a Georgetown connection. Better known in his Georgetown days as Michael Tate, Michael Venson played one year at GU (1989-90) before transferring to James Madison. His daughter Mikayla practices daily under his father's tutelage. "She shows the kind of flair and poise and skill set that could elevate her to the status of one of the top point guards to come out of the area," said Oakton Coach Fred Priester.
When Chris Wright and Austin Freeman are on their game, there's no telling how far the Georgetown Hoyas can go. When they are not on their game, there's no telling how far down the standings they will go. Georgetown turned in its worst effort of the season, committing 18 turnovers, including four of its final five possessions in a horrid 65-59 loss to West Virginia, driving the formerly #13 ranked Hoyas to the bottom third of the Big East conference standings. Both teams were, to put it kindly, inconsistent. Georgetown opened on a 5-0 run to begin he game, only to see West Virginia score 12 of the next 14. Junior Casey Mitchell provided most of the team's scoring output, hitting his first three shots of the game while the rest of his team shot 1-5. Georgetown answered with a 10-1 run on its own, led by jumpers from Hollis Thompson and Jason Clark to give the Hoyas a 19-13 lead with 8:52 in the half. Despite the fact that the Mountaineers had missed eight consecutive shots, a Kevin Jones jumper kept WVU to within four, 19-15, and Georgetown had failed to distance itself from its opponent during the roughest offensive stretch of the game for West Virginia. The Georgetown lull was imminent. Two jason Clark baskets were the only field goals over the final 8:52 of the half, as three baskets by WVU tied the score with 4:46 to play and its last three possessions of the half were good, giving WVU a 29-25 lead and a 14-4 run to end the half. Georgetown outshot West Virginia 52% to 40%, but coughed up nine first half turnovers and allowed eight offensive rebounds by the Mountaineers. Off Georgetown's last time out, Clark picked up a third turnover, and WVU added two free throws to close it out, 65-59. "We had the one possession where Chris dropped it to Julian and it went out of bounds," coach Thompson recalled. "Jason went in the lane and whatever happened there happened there. Third possession we tried to get an isolation for Austin on the side, I thought he was fouled, but we ended up losing that one. We had chances, we had opportunities, but it did not work out the way we wanted them to." It bears repeating that Georgetown made two baskets in the final eight minutes, but it wasn't like WVU was tearing up the nets, either. In the final 8:00, West Virginia made only three, but connected on 7-9 from the line while Georgetown took only three foul shots down the stretch. Once again, Georgetown out-shot West Virginia in the second half (48%-40%) and once again, nine second half turnovers proved its undoing. Freeman finished with 11 points in the half but Wright was unable to to do anything in the second. Wright made his only basket of the half 53 seconds into the period and missed his last five for the game. Casey Mitchell led all scorers with 28 points, accounting for 17 of the Mountaineers' 36 points after halftime. Despite shooting 3-12, Truck Bryant had seven big points for the Mountaineers when their shots weren't falling. For the Hoyas, Jason Clark turned in a strong effort with 7-10 from the field and 16 points, but the three late turnovers was a notable stain upon an otherwise strong effort. Georgetown was beaten badly on the offensive rebounds, 15-4. Four of the five starters had none whatsoever. "You go through twenty or thirty seconds of a good defense without the understanding that the possession ends when you get the ball instead of when the shot is taken," Thompson said. "That is something that needs to be addressed." Thompson tried to be upbeat, but knows the hill to climb is not getting easier with #5 Pittsburgh due on Wednesday. "We're the same group of guys who were in there two or three weeks ago and now we just have to find out how to get back there." And soon. Here's the Georgetown half of the box score: MIN 2FG 3FG FT REB A PF PTS Starters: Wright 35 2-6 1-7 2-2 3 2 2 9 Clark 31 6-8 1-2 1-1 5 1 2 16 Freeman 33 1-2 2-6 3-4 2 1 4 11 Thompson 20 3-3 0-1 0-0 3 0 5 6 Vaughn 29 2-3 0-0 0-0 3 3 2 4 Reserves: Starks 8 1-2 1-1 0-0 0 1 1 5 Sanford 3 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 Sims 11 1-1 0-0 2-2 1 0 1 4 Benimon 7 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 Lubick 23 1-2 0-0 2-2 3 2 3 4 Team Rebounds 3 DNP: Dougherty, Bowen, Caprio, Ayegba TOTALS 200 17-27 5-17 10-11 23 10 20 59 Post game coverage follows below.
Coach Thompson's comments on the weekly Big East media conference call were posted Thursday to the Hoya Insider blog. On the 1-2 start, Thompson remarked: "This league is rough. We start off three games in and we're 1-2 in the league. We had a tough stretch to start with a Wednesday, Saturday, Monday and two of those games on the road. It's a long, long season, so you can't get too down even though you are down because it's an unforgiving league. We've got a few days off to rest and we have a tough West Virginia team on Saturday. You have to play well to win against them." "League play, stating the obvious, you play the first part of the season to get to this. We are in the toughest basketball conference in the country. You have to be motivated, prepared and excited every night because every team and coach we play is good."
Senior Austin Freeman is among 30 players on the mid-season list for the John R. Wooden Award. A national ballot of 20 will be presented to voters in March, with the award to follow in April. Other Big East players on the list included Marshawn Brooks (Providence), Rick Jackson (Syracuse), Kemba Walker (Connecticut), and Brad Wanamaker (Pittsburgh).
And in this week's "sour grapes", or more accurately, "sour citrus" department, a Syracuse fan blog is complaining that its often unruly fan base won't have free rein to fill Verizon Center for the teams' Feb. 26 game. Last year's game featured a number of incidents of unsportsmanlike behavior among Syracuse fans following the 75-71 Orangemen win on Feb. 18, 2010. As this site remarked last year, "If a season ticket holder at the Carrier Dome is caught selling his seats to Georgetown fans at mid-court, you know what he is next year? A former season ticket holder. Selling the best seats in the house to opposing fans should no longer be tolerated as a course of doing business." "We have been in contact with Verizon Center Group Sales as late as this morning," writes the blog. "They indicated to our Club representative that when tickets are released that we will be the only group that will get tickets, and those tickets will be ready the day they are released. They just don’t know when that will be." Note: Tickets are still available to Georgetown season ticket holders and mini-plan holders through the ticket office and they are encouraged to order seats prior to January 14. Order early and often. In contrast, Orangemen fans are protesting the requirement of a membership to the Hoya Hoop Club to get tickets, which the blog calls a "dubious plot". Writes the blog, "We don’t feel it is in the best interest of the [Syracuse Alumni] Club to “donate” at least $2500 to the Georgetown Athletic Department to get “blocks” of tickets as small as 2 together."
For many years Dwayne Bryant (B'90) was the head basketball coach at Georgetown Prep, helping develop the talents of such players as Roy Hibbert and, more recently, Markel Starks. Last year, Bryant left Prep and talks to the Bethesda Patch about his new role as athletic director at Stone Ridge, a Montgomery County girls school. "Being the boys basketball coach at Prep, I ran a program and was responsible for every level of the program. It was a lot like running a mini athletic program," Bryant said. "And I've always said, sports are sports. Competitors are competitors. Anyone who laces them up or puts it on, when they step on the athletic field or the athletic court, they're competing to win, whether it's female or male." "The more success we have, the more opportunities we have to be seen, the more publicity our athletes can get, the more light will be shed on, 'Yes, you can be a great athlete and a great student,'" he said. "And you can come to a school like Stone Ridge and be a great success."
A few thousand miles east, Allen Iverson (ex'98) is settling into the first of a two year contract playing professional basketball in Turkey. Despite averaging an uncharacteristic 3.5 points a game, the 35 year old guard told Philadelphia Magazine he is enjoying his stay there and has not, according to some reports, squandered his fortune. "I would be a damn fool to blow that much money and have five kids to take care of," Iverson said. "One thing I do have, and I can say, is that I do have money. A lot.” As to rumors about excessive drinking, Iverson also says otherwise. "How is it a problem for me?," he responds. "I don't remember getting any DUIs or going to jail for getting drunk in public. I've never been reprimanded or anything, with any team or anything like that, because of any drinking.” His favorite spot in Istanbul? TGI Friday's restaurant, according to the magazine. “I'm not like I was when I was in Philly, when I was 21, ” Iverson said. “I didn't have five kids. I didn't have the responsibilities I have now.”
Another off night for Georgetown's guards cost the Hoyas its second game within the last six days, a 61-58 loss to St. John's before 8,897 at Madison Square Garden Monday night. The shooter's flu bit the Hoyas early, with no production from its three leading scorers. Austin Freeman hit the first basket of the game for Georgetown, and none thereafter in the half. Chris Wright did not have a basket until the last ten seconds of the half and Jason Clark was scoreless as Hollis Thompson and Henry Sims kept the Hoyas afloat early. Thompson and Sims were a combined 7-9 from the field, with the remaining Hoyas 1-7 as Georgetown lost an early lead and missed five straight midway through the first half, as the Redmen went on a 15-2 run interrupted only by a pair of free throws by Nate Lubick. St. John's use of man to man defense seemed to tire the Hoya guards and its passing suffered, with many Georgetown possessions running at or near the end of the shot clock. Wright's lone basket of the half closed the period with the Redmen holding a 32-26 lead, with 14 of its points coming off nine Georgetown turnovers.
On its final series, Hardy blew past Clark again, but his shot was wide. Brownlee got past Vaughn for the offensive rebound for the tip-in and the lead, 59-58. Down the court, Freeman's shot missed badly and Clark's offensive rebound failed when he stepped on the end line. After a quick foul with three seconds left, Hardy sank two free throws thereafter for the 61-58 outcome. Georgetown opened the half with four field goals in the first four minutes of the second half, and finished with four in the final eight minutes. Here's the Georgetown half of the box score: MIN 2FG 3FG FT REB A PF PTS Starters: Wright 37 2-2 1-7 0-0 1 4 2 7 Freeman 36 1-5 1-5 1-1 4 2 0 6 Clark 30 2-5 0-1 3-3 7 1 4 7 Thompson 26 4-6 2-4 2-3 7 0 2 16 Vaughn 26 3-5 0-0 2-2 5 1 4 8 Reserves: Sanford 3 1-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 1 2 Sims 15 3-3 0-0 1-2 3 0 3 7 Benimon 3 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 1 0 Lubick 24 0-1 0-0 5-6 4 3 3 5 Team Rebounds 4 DNP: Starks, Dougherty, Bowen, Caprio, Ayegba TOTALS 200 16-28 4-17 14-17 35 11 20 58 Post game coverage follows below.
This was the 10th time in the last 25 years between the schools that a game has been by three points or less. St. John's owns an astounding 9-1 record in these games, and an unbeaten 6-0 in close finishes at Madison Square Garden:
Gone are the days of big crowds at Madison Square Garden for the Redmen, at least as recent games with Georgetown have been. Here's a review of Garden attendance by games in the SJ-Georgetown series since 1982, with sellouts in bold.
Austin Freeman and Jason Clark scored 21 points as Georgetown had to fight past DePaul, 86-75, at Verizon Center Saturday. DePaul entered the game with a 14 game Big East losing streak in Big East play and it showed early, as the Blue Demons missed seven of its first eight shots and fell behind 11-3 in the first five minutes of the game. Freshman Brandon Young keyed a DePaul comeback that cut the lead to three midway in the first half, and the Hoyas could not quite shake the Demons thereafter. Despite shooting only 37% for the half, DePaul stayed close at the line and trailed 36-29 at the break. Unlike games earlier this season where Georgetown was able to pick up a spurt from its backcourt or the three point line, neither was in play in the second half, as DePaul was able to cut off Georgetown's outside shot while being much more successful inside. Much of this came from freshmen Cleveland Melvin and Brandon Young, whose efforts in the second half were outstanding. Melvin scored six early points to cut the lead to seven, then converted consecutive Jason Clark turnovers into baskets that cut the Georgetown lead to an uncomfortable one at 51-50 with 14:00 to play. Georgetown needed a boost to its confidence and found it in senior Chris Wright. Wright, who was shut out in the first half, was fouled on the next play from three point range and sank three straight free throws to get the lead to 54-50, as Georgetown managed just one field goal over a five minute period but held back the Demons at the line. The DePaul freshmen made a second run midway in the half. Keyed by a pair of assists from Young and a pair of jumpers from Melvin, DePaul took the lead down to three before Wright answered the bell a second time. Wright drove for three layups in a 1:08 ruin that extended the lead back to nine, 66-57, only to see the Blue Demons score six of the next eight to close to five, 68-63. Wright fed Austin Freeman for e three pointer with 6:44 to play, to go up eight, and found Freeman at the 4:20 mark to go back up 11. Georgetown held DePaul to one field goal for over four minutes as layups from Jason Clark, Austin Freeman, and Henry Sims pushed the Hoyas ahead by 15 before bringing in reserves. "I guess we got stops when we had to coming down the stretch," said coach John Thompson III. "Every win is not going to be pretty. To say this was not an ugly win would be an understatement, but every league win is a damn good win, so we'll take it." Georgetown shot 58% for the second half, but needed every bit of that against a team that was not prepared to fold as previous DePaul teams were known to do. DePaul's press proved effective in the first half, but their shooting failed late. But as its freshmen begin to develop, that will come in time, and the long DePaul losing streak will come to an end. But at least it didn't end at Georgetown. Here's the Georgetown half of the box score: MIN 2FG 3FG FT REB A PF PTS Starters: Wright 36 5-10 0-2 7-10 1 7 1 17 Freeman 35 5-7 3-5 2-2 6 4 3 21 Clark 31 9-12 0-3 3-5 4 1 3 21 Thompson 25 1-3 1-2 2-2 5 1 1 7 Vaughn 24 2-5 0-0 5-6 10 1 4 9 Reserves: Starks 8 0-3 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 0 Sanford 4 0-0 1-2 0-0 0 1 0 3 Sims 11 2-3 0-0 0-1 7 1 5 4 Benimon 14 1-1 0-0 0-0 2 1 1 2 Ayegba 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 Lubick 11 1-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 2 2 DNP: Dougherty, Bowen, Caprio TOTALS 200 26-45 5-14 19-26 36 17 20 86 Post game coverage follows below.
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