1972–73 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team
1972-73 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball | |
---|---|
Conference | Independent |
1972-73 record | 12–14 |
Head coach | John Thompson, Jr. (1st year) |
Assistant coach | Bill Stein (1st year) |
Assistant coach | George Leftwich (1st year) |
Captain | Game captains |
Home arena | McDonough Gymnasium |
The 1972–73 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team represented Georgetown University during the 1972-73 NCAA Division I college basketball season. John Thompson, Jr., coached them in his first season as head coach. The team was an independent and played its home games at McDonough Gymnasium on the Georgetown campus in Washington, D.C.. It finished the season with a record of 12-14 – a significant improvement over the previous season's record – was not ranked in the Top 20 in the Associated Press Poll or Coaches' Poll at any time,[1][2] and had no post-season play.
John Thompson arrives
The 29-year-old Thompson was only the third African-American head coach in the history of NCAA Division basketball and was the first to take charge of a major college basketball program. He had been a star player for Washington, D.C.'s Archbishop Carroll High School and for Providence College, had played for two successful seasons with the Boston Celtics in the National Basketball Association, and then had returned to Washington, D.C., to coach St. Anthony's High School to a record of 122-28 in six seasons.[3]
At Georgetown, Thompson inherited a team that had gone 3-23 the previous season, the culmination of a 25-year stretch of mostly undistinguished basketball at Georgetown. Although the team had appeared in the National Invitation Tournament in 1953 and 1970, between the 1947-48 season and the end of the previous season Georgetown had posted an overall record under .500 and its total of 296 wins during those 25 seasons was the lowest among the 32 Catholic universities playing Division I college basketball in the United States. The team also had had no NCAA Tournament appearances since 1943.[4]
Thompson's arrival heralded the school's rise to the status of a national basketball power; the 12-14 record this season was a significant improvement over the 3-23 finish of the previous year, and the 1972-73 squad was the last Georgetown men's basketball team to finish with a losing record until the 1998–99 season. Georgetown had hired Thompson in the hope that he could guide the Hoyas to an "occasional" National Invitation Tournament (NIT) appearance, but during his 26½ seasons as head coach he would lead the Hoyas to 24 straight post-season tournaments – 19 NCAA Tournaments and five NITs – from the 1974-75 to the 1997-98 seasons, and to the national championship in the 1983-84 season.[3]
Season recap
Thompson's first recruiting class consisted of five players. One of them was center Merlin Wilson, who had played for him at St. Anthony's and followed him to Georgetown to play college basketball. Wilson scored 24 points in the season opener against Saint Francis. At Loyola, the Hoyas outrebounded the Greyhounds 65-33, and Wilson pulled down 24 of Georgetown's rebounds. By mid-season, Wilson was averaging 12 points and 13 rebounds a game, a level of play unknown at Georgetown for many years, and was among the top ten college players in rebounds; a Tampa Tribune columnist wrote that the Hoyas were "a team destined to be one of the next great powers in college basketball"[5] because of Wilson's talent. He scored 25 points and had 17 rebounds and eight blocks against Navy, had a 17-point, 17-rebound performance against Fordham in a big win, and had 15 points and 16 rebounds against St. Mary's in the last home game of the season. He finished the season as the team's leader in scoring and rebounds, and was ranked 14th in the United States with 14.1 rebounds per game.[5]
Another major Thompson recruit for his first season as a collegiate head coach was guard Jonathan Smith. Smith, like Wilson, had played for Thompson at St. Anthony's and followed him to Georgetown. Although some observers expected Smith to be a reserve, he quickly emerged as a major force for the Hoyas, scoring a career-high 25 points twice during the season, against Penn State and George Washington. Smith finished the season second on the team only to Wilson in scoring.[6]
Roster
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Roster |
1972–73 schedule and results
Date Time, TV |
Rank# | Opponent# | Result | Record | Site City, State | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Regular Season | |||||||||||
Mon., Nov. 27, 1972 no, no |
Saint Francis | W 61–60 | 1-0 |
McDonough Gymnasium Washington, DC | |||||||
Wed., Nov. 29, 1972 no, no |
at Rutgers | L 83–98 | 1-1 |
College Avenue Gymnasium New Brunswick, NJ | |||||||
Sat., Dec. 2, 1972 no, no |
Wheeling Jesuit | W 58–46 | 2-1 |
McDonough Gymnasium Washington, DC | |||||||
Wed., Dec. 6, 1972 no, no |
St. Bonaventure | W 73–70 OT | 3-1 |
McDonough Gymnasium Washington, DC | |||||||
Sat., Dec. 9, 1972 no, no |
at St. John's | L 68–109 | 3-2 |
Alumni Hall Queens, NY | |||||||
Tue., Dec. 12, 1972 no, no |
No. 2 Maryland | L 73–99 | 3-3 |
McDonough Gymnasium Washington, DC | |||||||
Wed., Dec. 27, 1972 no, no |
vs. Virginia St. Louis Invitational Tournament |
L 58–72 | 3-4 |
Kiel Auditorium St. Louis, MO | |||||||
Fri., Dec. 29, 1972 no, no |
vs. Army St. Louis Invitational Tournament |
W 74–70 | 4-4 |
Kiel Auditorium St. Louis, MO | |||||||
Sat., Jan. 6, 1973 no, no |
at South Florida | L 66–70 | 4-5 |
Curtis Hixon Hall Tampa, FL | |||||||
Mon., Jan. 8, 1973 no, no |
at No. 19 Florida State | L 70–101 | 4-6 |
Tully Gymnasium Tallahassee, FL | |||||||
Sat., Jan. 13, 1973 no, no |
at Connecticut Rivalry |
L 64–78 | 4-7 |
University of Connecticut Field House Storrs, CT | |||||||
Wed., Jan. 17, 1973 no, no |
Randolph–Macon | W 57–56 | 5-7 |
McDonough Gymnasium Washington, DC | |||||||
Sat., Jan. 20, 1973 no, no |
at Holy Cross | L 100–116 | 5-8 |
Worcester Memorial Auditorium Worcester, MA | |||||||
Wed., Jan. 24, 1973 no, no |
St. Joseph's | L 59–70 | 5-9 |
McDonough Gymnasium Washington, DC | |||||||
Sat., Jan. 27, 1973 no, no |
Seton Hall | W 80–62 | 6-9 |
McDonough Gymnasium Washington, DC | |||||||
Wed., Jan. 31, 1973 no, no |
at Loyola Maryland | W 74–59 | 7-9 |
Alumni Gymnasium Baltimore, MD | |||||||
Sat., Feb. 3, 1973 no, no |
at Penn State | L 64–74 | 7-10 |
Recreation Hall State College, PA | |||||||
Wed., Feb. 7, 1973 no, no |
Roanoke | L 57–73 | 7-11 |
McDonough Gymnasium Washington, DC | |||||||
Sat., Feb. 10, 1973 no, no |
vs. Dickinson | W 66–65 | 8-11 |
Alumni Gymnasium Baltimore, MD | |||||||
Wed., Feb. 14, 1973 no, no |
Navy | W 55–52 | 9-11 |
McDonough Gymnasium Washington, DC | |||||||
Sat., Feb. 17, 1973 no, no |
Boston College | W 56–55 | 10-11 |
McDonough Gymnasium Washington, DC | |||||||
Wed., Feb. 21, 1973 no, no |
Fordham | W 77–71 | 11-11 |
McDonough Gymnasium Washington, DC | |||||||
Sat., Feb. 24, 1973 no, no |
at American | L 68–90 | 11-12 |
Fort Myer Gymnasium Fort Myer, VA | |||||||
Tue., Feb. 27, 1973 no, no |
at George Washington | L 78–91 | 11-13 |
Fort Myer Gymnasium Fort Myer, VA | |||||||
Thu., Mar. 1, 1973 no, no |
St. Mary's of Maryland | W 54–43 | 12-13 |
McDonough Gymnasium Washington, DC | |||||||
Sat., Mar. 3, 1973 no, no |
Manhattan | L 64–71 | 12-14 |
McDonough Gymnasium Washington, DC | |||||||
*Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses. |
References
- ↑ sports-reference.com 1972-73 Independent Season Summary
- ↑ sports-reference.com 1972-73 Polls
- 1 2 The Georgetown Basketball History Project: Head Coaches
- ↑ The Georgetown Basketball History Project: A Glimpse Into the Future
- 1 2 The Georgetown Basketball History Project: The Top 100: 17. Merlin Wilson
- ↑ The Georgetown Basketball History Project: The Top 100: 32. Jonathan Smith
- ↑ The Georgetown Basketball History Project: 1970s Seasons
- ↑ The Georgetown Basketball History Project: Records vs. All Opponents
- ↑ sports-reference.com 1972-73 Georgetown Hoyas Schedule and Results
- ↑ 2012-2013 Georgetown Men's Basketball Media Guide, p. 62.