John J. DeGioia (C'79, G'95), longest serving president in Georgetown University history, has announced his resignation.
DeGioia, 67, was hospitalized on June 5 and has not returned to campus since.
The text of the letter reads as follows:
Dear Members of the Georgetown University Community:
I write today to express my gratitude for the opportunity I have had to lead Georgetown over these past 23 years and to share with you the most difficult decision I have ever made: I have informed the Board of Directors that I will be stepping down from my role as the President of Georgetown. While I continue to recover from the stroke I suffered this past June, I will need to devote my energies to my ongoing recovery.
Serving as the President of Georgetown has been the privilege of my lifetime. Going forward, I will transition to serve as President Emeritus and as a member of the faculty. In these and many other ways, I look forward to continuing to advance and support Georgetown's mission and the University community that means so much to all of us. I remain deeply proud of the work we have done together to strengthen the Georgetown community, our nation, and our world.
Each of us is called to a vocation of service. I have had the privilege of holding many roles here at Georgetown and serving in a way that is authentic to my vocation. I have been shaped by the tradition of this community and the values of the Academy and we, as a University community, continue to be guided by these ideals in rich and enduring ways.
Georgetown is a place where we, continuously, rigorously, and collectively, pursue truth. We commit to the formation of our students, to the inquiry of our faculty, and to the common good of our communities. Together, we have worked to ensure Georgetown upholds these commitments and ideals which define us and distinguish universities in our society.
There is another role we play in our world- animated by our mission as a Catholic and Jesuit institution. I am grateful to many who have guided us in this work and who have enlivened our tradition in new ways so that Ignatian spirituality and our Catholic and Jesuit identity are ever more present to our University community.
In many settings over the years, I have shared with you the great hope I have for the future of this University and how we will continue to be ever more true to our mission and purpose. This responsibility is one that each of us shares by virtue of our membership in this community. All of us can find reassurance in knowing that we share in this work together and that, over many generations, we have built the type of community that will enable Georgetown to thrive for years to come.
On behalf of myself and my family, I offer our deepest appreciation for the messages and prayers of support during this time. I look forward to being with you again in the future.
With my deepest gratitude,
Jack
President, Georgetown University
A letter from the Georgetown Board of Directors followed.
Dear Members of the Georgetown University Community:
On behalf of the Georgetown University Board of Directors, and the entire Georgetown University community, I want to express profound gratitude to John J. DeGioia (C'79, G'95) for his lifetime of service to our institution.
It is hard to put in words the depth of Jack's impact at Georgetown. Since first arriving on campus as an undergraduate student in 1975, Jack has spent his entire career at Georgetown and has helped shape every facet of the University. Under Jack's leadership as President over the past 23 years, Georgetown University has grown and flourished as a global leader in higher education. With a deep commitment to academic excellence, research, student formation and its Jesuit and Catholic identity, Jack has helped to position Georgetown as a force for good in the world.
As Jack shared in his letter, this was a very difficult decision for him and his family. We are grateful that Jack will transition to serve as President Emeritus and will continue as a member of our faculty. We will announce plans to celebrate his presidency at a later date and look forward to reflecting on the transformational role that Jack has played in our community over these many years.
The Board wishes to extend its deep appreciation to Jack and the DeGioia family for their legacy of excellence and their commitment to Georgetown.
Earlier today, the Board of Directors authorized a search for Georgetown's next President. I will share more information regarding this process and the formation of a search committee in the weeks ahead. In consultation with Jesuit leadership and our academic and faculty leadership, our intention is to have a new president in place by July 1, 2026.
I would also like to announce that the Board of Directors has appointed Robert M. Groves, Ph.D., to serve as Interim President of Georgetown University, while we search for a new president. Since 2012, he has served with distinction as Executive Vice President and Provost and is the Gerard J. Campbell, S.J. Professor in the Math and Statistics Department, with a secondary appointment in the Sociology Department. Bob will be working to name an Interim Provost in the days ahead.
In addition, the Board has appointed Joseph A. Ferrara (G'96), Ph.D., to serve in a new role as the Senior Vice President and Chief of Staff of Georgetown University. Joe has served as Vice President and President DeGioia's Chief of Staff since 2011, and prior to that he served as Associate Dean for the Georgetown Public Policy Institute (now the McCourt School of Public Policy) and as a member of the faculty.
I would like to thank Bob, Joe and the rest of the senior leadership team who have so ably managed University affairs since Jack's stroke on June 5. The University will continue to operate as it has been over the last five months - with the leadership team working collaboratively and effectively across the University to advance the strategic priorities of the University and to support our community.
Please join me in once again expressing the greatest appreciation to Jack and his family for their deep dedication to the Georgetown University community and to pray for Jack as he continues his recovery.
Sincerely,
Thomas A. Reynolds III (B'74)
Chair, Georgetown University Board of Directors
Empty Seats Everywhere
11/21/24
Wednesday's announced turnout of 2,756 was the third smallest crowd at the downtown arena in Georgetown history.
A social media post eight minutes to game time was even more dire:
Here are the 10 smallest off-campus crowds since 1981:
Date
Opponent
Location
Attendance
11/30/2021
Longwood
Capital One Arena
2,732
11/29/2023
Merrimack
Capital One Arena
2,744
11/20/2024
Mount St. Mary's
Capital One Arena
2,756
3/7/2005
Boston U. (NIT)
MCI Center
2,797
12/12/2023
Coppin St.
Capital One Arena
2,924
12/21/1983
W. Kentucky
Capital Centre
2,958
12/8/2021
UMBC
Capital One Arena
3,021
2/22/2023
St. John's
Capital One Arena
3,076
12/5/1984
St. Leo
Capital Centre
3,084
11/23/2022
American
Capital One Arena
3,267
Georgetown 79, Mount St. Mary's 51
11/20/24 11:10 pm EST
A visibly poor shooting effort by Mount St. Mary's did little to prevent Georgetown from a 79-51 walkover at a near vacant Capital One Arena Wednesday.
The Mountaineers entered the game shooting just under 47 percent this season, and a 1 for 6 start from the field was a harbinger of a long and fruitless night for its offense. The Hoyas led 11-3 at the first media time out, extended to 19-7 on a Micah Peavy three and 25-9 on back to back threes from Jayden Epps. Peavy and Epps accounted for 21 of Georgetown's first 25 points.
At this point, Mount St. Mary's was 4 for 20 from the floor, but took advantage of a five minute Georgetown drought to close to 25-17 at the 5:08 mark. The Hoyas finished 4 for 5 to end the half and carry a 35-22 lead at intermission.
Were it not for religious reprobation, the Mountaineers could have passed for Masons to open the second half, shooting 1 for 10 as the Hoyas were not challenged thereafter. Thomas Sorber scored eight of his 14 points early in the second before leaving for a cramped leg, while Drew Fielder scored all his nine points after halftime. Shooting just 2 for 11 from three point range and 9 of 20 overall, Georgetown did not have the outside shot but did not need it, getting 46 points in the paint.
Despite a 30 point lead in the final 2:52, head coach Ed Cooley did not clear the bench, giving time instead to starters and first level reserves.
Jayden Epps led all scorers with 19 points as the Hoyas put four in double figures. Mount St. Mary's finished shooting a season's low 31 percent and 26 percent from three point range.
For a fan base eager to see signs of Ed Cooley's turnaround strategy for the Georgetown program, Saturday's 21 point loss to Notre Dame brought did little to wake up the echoes for the Hoyas.
Attendance was announced as 8,819, the second largest turnout since 2017 for a non-conference opponent other than Syracuse. The NBC national broadcast and streaming debut on Peacock could potentially be one of Georgetown's largest viewerships of the season, given that only one other game is presently booked on Fox broadcast. Either way, a lot of eyes were on the Hoyas, and it wasn't much to see.
Some statistical rankings for the Hoyas through Saturday's game:
Field goal shooting: 283rd of 355 schools (41.8%)
Field goal defense: 294th (46.2%)
Three point field goals per game: 283rd (6.3)
Three point field goal shooting: 333rd (25.6%)
Three point field goal defense: 339th (40.9%)
Five consecutive home games over the next 13 days will bring those numbers up, but after Saturday, Georgetown is out of sight and out of mind to some fans until they can prove otherwise.
Notre Dame 84, Georgetown 63
11/16/24
In its first appearance on national television this season, Georgetown remains the Not Ready For Prime Time Hoyas.
With its poorest shooting effort of the young season, Georgetown was routed by Notre Dame, 84-63, before a hopeful crowd of 8,819 at spacious Capital One Arena.
The 21 point defeat, Ed Cooley's fourth loss of 20 points or more in his 35 game tenure at the Hilltop, is the largest margin of defeat allowed by Georgetown to a non-conference opponent since 2016.
There was no magic needed for the Fighting Irish in this one. Georgetown's woes were self-inflicted, and in evidence two minutes into the game.
Early field goals from Drew Fielder and Jordan Burks gave the Hoyas a 4-0 led 59 seconds into the game. The two forwards then combined to go one for eight for the remainder of the game.
They were not alone.
With a visible lack of teamwork on both sides of the court, Georgetown's shooting was an early TKO. The Hoyas missed 15 consecutive shots in an eight minute stretch of the first half, allowing Princeton grad transfer Matt Allocco eight straight points and back to back three pointers to carry a 19-3 run. Allocco scored 15 in the first half as neither Jayden Epps nor anyone else on the Georgetown lineup could adjust to the open looks from Allocco to set the course for this game early.
"We had a whole week to prepare for them. I personally thought we were more prepared. Coach thought we were more prepared. We all did." --Jayden Epps
Malik Mack ended the run with a three pointer at the 10:16 mark, and a 9-2 Georgetown run brought the Hoyas within four with 6:28 to play. Allocco and Mack traded three pointers over the next minute, 26-22, but the shooting dried up from outside. Georgetown finished 0 for 6 from its backcourt, with its only points down the stretch coming from Thomas Sorber. The Irish ended the half on a 18-7 run and a 15 point lead, 44-29, shooting 65 percent from the field, with seven three pointers and a sizzling 1.46 points per possession.
Georgetown's first half box score was grim: 26 percent from the field, three of 18 from outside. Beyond Sorber's 12 points inside, the remainder of the team shot 22 percent (7-31) and scored on just 13 of 30 possessions.
After his hot start, Allocco was relatively quiet after halftime, but it opened the door for ND guard Markus Burton. Following a one for five start in the first half, Burton steadied the Irish early in the second half after a 11-4 Georgetown run closed to 50-40 at the 17:25 mark. Notre Dame extended the lead with a 12-3 run over the next six minutes, a run more of Georgetown's doing than is own. The Hoyas missed 11 of its next 12 shots as the Irish increased the lead to 19 midway in the half, 62-43, then scored seven straight behind the shooting of Braeden Shrewsberry and Tae Davis to lead by 24, 69-45 as Ed Cooley's second time out in less than two minutes was of no effect.
"The rout is on," said announcer John Fanta, who has added NBC/Peacock games to his existing Fox schedule.
A four point play from Mack out of the time out was a welcome if insufficient development, 69-49, as Notre Dame matched the Hoyas over the next three minutes, 76-54, with the game out of reach. Georgetown took only one jump shot in the final six minutes, relying on inefficient three point attempts and layups inside to narrow a margin
that never closed within 18.
"Both year two coaches, both year two in the programs. Systematically, I thought their program was ahead of ours." --Ed Cooley
Despite shooting just two for nine from three point range, Notre Dame was largely unchallenged inside the arc during the second half (13 for 19) and finished the game shooting 59 percent overall.
Georgetown's futility starts in its shot selection: 26 of 32 shots after halftime came from just three players: Malik Mack, Jayden Epps, and Micah Peavy, shooting a combined nine for 22 and accounting for half the total minutes played by the entire team. Thomas Sorber, who led the Hoyas in the first half, got just two shots after halftime, and none in the final 8:17, owing to foul trouble. Overall, the Hoyas shot 31 percent for the game, were outrebounded 42-33, and allowed the Fighting Irish 20 assists on 32 field goals.
"It's just one game," said Epps. "We'll bounce back."
Saturday's game versus Notre Dame marks the first nationally broadcast men's college basketball game for NBC Sports in 26 years.
The network, which held the NCAA tournament rights from 1969 through 1981, broadcast between 30-40 games each year through the 1980s, led by announcers such as Dick Enberg, Al McGuire, Marv Albert, Len Berman, and Bob Costas. Georgetown was seen on nine NBC national telecasts between 1981 and 1986.
The rise of ESPN and the consolidation by CBS of contracts with the Big East and other conferences sharply reduced NBC's supply of games, and by the early 1990s its games were largely constrained to a handful of games featuring Notre Dame, then an independent, and little else. By 1998, NBC broadcast just two games that season, a Feb. 21 game at MCI Center between Boston College and Georgetown and Feb. 28 game between Notre Dame and Providence.
NBC dropped college basketball after that season, and revives it this week as part of the upcoming Big East contract where it will broadcast 30 games in 2024-25 and 60 games annually on its streaming service, Peacock. Two of these games, Saturday's game with ND and the Providence vs Connecticut game on January 5 will be broadcast on NBC, along with five Big Ten games (three women's, two men's) later this season.
Peacock is a subscription-only streaming service starting at $7.99 per month, with discounts available for military and student users. Georgetown's games on the Peacock platform in 2024-25 are as follows:
01/14: at St. John's
02/23: at Creighton
03/01: MARQUETTE
03/04: VILLANOVA
Georgetown's first home game naionally broadcast on NBC was on January 31, 1982, three weeks ahead of its upset of #4 Missouri at McDonough Gymnasium, also on NBC. Here's the broadcast from the Hoyas' 63-46 win over St. John's before a crowd of 12,934 at Capital Centre:
Georgetown 69, Fairfield 57
11/9/24
A 25 point, nine rebound effort from Thomas Sorber led Georgetown a 69-57 win over Fairfield at Capital One Arena.
Sorber is the first Georgetown freshman with 20+ points in each of his first two games since Othella Harrington did it in games versus St. Leo (20) and Southern-New Orleans (23) in 1992.
Much like Georgetown's prior opponent in Lehigh, Fairfield arrived to Washington after a bad opening loss, a 96-58 rout at Rhode Island which saw the Stags shoot four for 29 from three point range and one of 16 by halftime of that game. And, like Lehigh, Fairfield turned those numbers around quickly, only to see it want after halftime.
Fairfield guard Braden Sparks opened the scoring with a three 31 seconds into the game. By the first media time out, the Stags had collected three three pointers and a 13-5 lead. Two more from outside extended its lead to 19-11. Georgetown tightened its perimeter defense to claw its way back to a lead, but turnovers and poor outside shooting of its own (one for seven from three to start) lengthened the comeback.
Back to back baskets from Micah Peavy and a layup for Julius Halaifonua brought GU its first lead of the game with 6:30 to halftime, 27-25. A pair of Fairfield threes and a layup tied the score at 33 with 32 seconds remaining before Jayden Epps took advantage of lost defensive coverage on the last possession to hit a three as the half expired, 36-33.
Beautiful set play from Ed Cooley here to end the Half
The second half belonged to Sorber and a timely one at that, as GU's backcourt struggled after halftime. Malik Mack and Micah Peavy combined for 15 points in the first half but were a combined zero for seven after it. Both teams struggled in transition after halftime, combining for 11 field goals and 14 turnovers over the first ten minutes of the second half. A better story was found inside, where Sorber scored eight of the Hoyas first 13 points of the half and helped the Hoyas to a 49-41 lead midway in the second. The Stags missed 10 consecutive attempts but the Hoyas were little better, missing seven of eight, maintaining a lead but not pulling away.
A steal and dunk by Jordan Burks put the Hoyas up nine at the six minute mark, 56-47, followed by an Epps drive 36 second later. A Sorber three at the 4:15 gave the Hoyas its first double digit lead of the game, and he scored the next nine points of the game to put it out of reach.
Sorber and Epps combined for 26 of the Hoyas' 33 points after halftime, with the remainder of the team shooting three for 12. The story, however, was defense. The Hoyas forced Fairfield to shoot just 27 percent after halftime, one of nine from three point range and without a basket for the final thee minutes of the game. Georgetown held a net +11 (15-4) in points off turnovers and a +12 (34-22) in points in the paint.
Sorber was a big reason why.
"Thomas is one of the best big men in the country as a freshman, in my opinion," said Jayden Epps. "I don't think anybody can guard him down there, especially when he does what he's supposed to do. He's unselfish and he'll pass it out if they double. So I always tell Coach [Cooley] to look down there and try to get him established to just open up the rest of the game."
"I thought once we settled in that our defense in the second half was elite," said head coach Ed Cooley in post-game remarks. "I thought our guys had a different purpose, a different edge and a different physicality."
For its part, "I thought we shot the ball fairly well and we took some positive steps defensively, but what I'm most proud of is the way that we fought," said Fairfield coach Chris Casey. "Of course, I'm disappointed that we lost, but I am happy with some of the progress that we made today, and now we need to use that as a springboard into the next [game] on Tuesday."
The teams combined for 35 turnovers, 19 in the second half.
The meeting between the schools was the first since 2006, when Ed Cooley was a first year coach at Fairfield.
The guests will also be recognized during halftime of Saturday's game versus Fairfield.
Honoring our history and building toward the future. Excited to welcome back the NCAA Championship 1984 team in the David & Greaten Welch Gym!#HoyaSaxapic.twitter.com/vc3rJS1vd4
A combined 40 points from newcomers Micah Peavy and Thomas Sorber steered the Georgetown Hoyas to a 85-77 win over Lehigh in the season opener Wednesday at McDonough Gymnasium.
Expectations were low in some quarters for Lehigh (0-2), who shot 2 for 17 from three point range following its 90-46 loss to Northwestern on Monday. Such thoughts were soon discarded as the Engineers shot five for five from outside over the first seven minutes of the first half, building an early 32-24 lead.
Guards Cam Gillus and Kevin Higgins combined for 28 first half points as Lehigh withheld a pair of Georgetown runs to lead 39-34 entering the final four minutes of the first half, whereupon Micah Peavy scored the last eight of a 10-0 run to give the Hoyas a 44-39 lead at the break.
Peavy scored 18 of his 20 points in the first half, one where Lehigh missed six of its final seven from there to end the half, but held the Hoyas to just two for nine from outside.
The game stayed close through much of the second half. Back to back baskets from Sorber pushed the Georgetown lead to 50-42 thee minutes into the second half, but the Engineers scored on three consecutive layups and a free throw to close to 50-49 with 14:37 remaining.
Following a quiet first half of his own, Jayden Epps scored the next ten points as Georgetown regained the lead a the 11:24 mark, 58-54, but Lehigh remained a worthy opponent. Following an exchange of free throws at the 6:24 mark, Georgetown's lead was only three, 70-67, before Sorber led the Hoyas on an 11-1 run to put the game out of reach, 81-68, with 1:23 remaining.
Georgetown shot only 37 percent from the field after halftime but picked up 13 second chance points, many from Sorber's defensive intensity. Lehigh stayed close with just five turnovers after halftime, but its shooting failed late, missing eight of its final 10 attempts in an otherwise solid effort, with 10 threes on the evening.
Four players accounted for 72 of Georgetown's 85 points, and 37 of its 41 points after the break. Georgetown fared poorly from the three point line, shooting 3 for 13 after the break and 5 for 22 overall.
Lehigh was led with a combined 44 points from Gillus and Higgins.
Wednesday's game at McDonough Gymnasium fell short of a sellout at its downsized capacity of 2,200, but students got a taste of what the building was like a generation ago, when over 4,000 in the building made it a formidable home court advantage.
Attendance was announced at 2,008, with open seating appearing below the foul lines. The game was one of two home games moved on campus this season, with a Nov. 26 game versus Wagner being the other.
A total of 733 attended the opener of the doubleheader as the Georgetown women's team defeated a non-NCAA team, Virginia University of Lynchburg, 88-31, in Georgetown's first men's/women's doubleheader since 2004. It was the first game for the Dragons since February 2023, as that school did not field a team last season.
I’d rather see the Hoyas play their early games in McDonough to a sold out crowd than in an empty feeling Cap One Arena. Also it builds the habit of going to the games.
Continuing a tradition dating to the 1958-59 season, special coverage of the men's basketball season opener can be found in the latest issue of The HOYA.
Regular and timely coverage of the Hoyas has proven difficult in the post-COVID world for the newspaper, as some athletic events appearing on its web site do not arrive until as many as 10 days after they were held.
The season preview does not look favorably upon the Hoyas' 2024-25 non-conference schedule.
"As for the schedule, Georgetown's nonconference slate is rather underwhelming," it writes. "The Hoyas will open their season Nov. 6 with a matchup against Lehigh University. In an exciting and unexpected turn of events, both that game and the Nov. 26 game against Wagner College will be played on campus at McDonough Arena. Georgetown will also face University of Notre Dame again after defeating them in overtime last season. They end their nonconference schedule with their Big 12-Big East Battle matchup against West Virginia University Dec. 6, then travel to Syracuse to take on the rival Orange Dec. 14, two solid tests before Big East play."
Georgetown is ninth in its Big East men's pre-season power ranking, third for the women's team.
Whatever Happened To...
11/4/24
As many as 18 former players from Georgetown are still active in college basketball, and some have been frequent guests in the transfer portal. Where are they now?
Denver Anglin (2022-23): Played one season at Georgetown, averaged 1.4 ppg. Transferred to Southern Methodist for the 2023-24 season, but was a medical redshirt. Transferred to Rice for the 2024-25 season.
D'Ante Bass (2022-23): Played one season at Georgetown, averaged 0.3 ppg. Transferred to Alabama State for the 2023-24 season, but was a medical redshirt last season.
Tyler Beard (2021-22): Played one season at Georgetown, averaged 2.9 ppg. Transferred to Pacific for the 2022-23 season, averaged 6.8 ppg. Transferred to Cal State-Northridge for the 2024-25 season.
T.J. Berger (2020-21): Played one season at Georgetown, averaged 1.3 ppg. Transferred to San Diego for the 2021-22 season, averaged 3.1 ppg. Transferred to Lafayette for the 2022-23 season, averaged 7.7 points per game, was a medical redshirt last season but has returned to Lafayette as a senior.
Jalin Billingsley (2021-22): Played one season at Georgetown, averaged 2.1 ppg. Transferred to Eastern Michigan for the 2022-23 season, averaging 6.8 ppg through two seasons.
Wayne Bristol (C'24) (2022-24): A transfer from Howard, he played two seasons at Georgetown, averaged 3.4 ppg. Exercising a graduate transfer option at Hampton for the 2024-25 season.
Rowan Brumbaugh (2023-24): Played one season at Georgetown, averaged 8.3 ppg.
Transferred to Tulane for 2024-25 season.
Kobe Clark (2020-22): Played two seasons at Georgetown, averaged 0.8 ppg.
Transferred to Southeast Missouri State for 2022-23 season, averaging 6.2 ppg through two seasons.
Supreme Cook (2023-24): A transfer from Fairfield, he played one season at Georgetown, averaged 10.5 ppg. Transferred to Oregon for 2024-25 season but is presently injured.
Bradley Ezewiro (2022-23): A transfer from LSU, he played one season at Georgetown, averaged 4.3 ppg. Transferred to Saint Louis for 2023-24 season, averaged 12.0 ppg. Transferred to Alabama-Birmingham for the 2024-25 season.
Dante Harris (2020-22): Played two seasons at Georgetown, averaged 10.0 ppg. Transferred to Virginia and sat out the 2022-23 season. Averaged 2.5 ppg in 2023-24, entered the transfer portal but later returned to Virginia. Reclassified as a walk-on in 2024-25 but is not on the current roster.
Collin Holloway (2020-22): Played two seasons at Georgetown, averaged 7.2 ppg. Transferred to Tulane for 2022-23 season, averaged 9.6 ppg over two seasons. Transferred to Samford for the 2024-25 season.
Brandon Murray (2022-23): A transfer from LSU, he played one season at Georgetown, averaged 13.7 ppg. Transferred to Mississippi for 2023-24 season, averaged 4.3 ppg. Transferred to McNeese State for the 2024-25 season.
Ryan Mutombo (C'24) (2022-24): Played three seasons at Georgetown, averaged 3.2 ppg. Exercising a graduate transfer option at Georgia Tech for the 2024-25 season, pursuing a master's degree in management.
Jordan Riley (2021-23): Played two seasons at Georgetown, averaged 4.2 ppg. Transferred to Temple for 2023-24 season, averaged 11.9 ppg over two seasons. Transferred to East Carolina for the 2024-25 season.
Jamari Sibley (2020-21): Played one season at Georgetown, averaged 1.2 ppg. Transferred to Texas-El Paso for the 2021-22 season, averaged 9.6 ppg. Transferred to Southern Utah in 2022-23, averaging 4.5 ppg through two seasons.
Primo Spears (2022-23): A transfer from Duquesne, he played one season at Georgetown, averaged 16.0 ppg. Transferred to Florida State for 2023-24 season, averaged 10.6 ppg. Transferred to Texas-San Antonio for the 2024-25 season.
Dontrez Styles (2023-24): A transfer from North Carolina, he played one season at Georgetown, averaged 12.8 ppg. Transferred to North Carolina State for the 2024-25 season.