1971–72 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team

1971-72 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball
Conference Independent
1971-72 record 323
Head coach John Magee (6th year)
Assistant coach Ed MacNamara (1st year)
Assistant coach Don Weber (1st year)
Captain Mike Laughna (1st year)
Home arena McDonough Gymnasium

The 1971–72 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team represented Georgetown University during the 1971-72 NCAA Division I college basketball season. John Magee coached them in his sixth and final 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 3-23 and therefore 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.

Season recap

Forward Art White, thought at the time to have been the greatest player in Georgetown history, had left the team at the end of the previous season because of academic difficulties, and he sat out this season entirely.[3][4] Magee's relationship with his players had begun to unravel the previous year, when the 1970-71 team had followed up the 1969-70 team's appearance in the 1970 National Invitation Tournament with a disappointing performance that Magee blamed on the players including the once highly regarded White although he reserved praise for then-junior forward Mike Laughna. In all, Georgetown lost all but two of its top nine scorers from the 1970-71 season.[5]

Magee's relationship with his players continued to deteriorate this year, but that and the loss of scorers were not the 1971-72 squad's only problems. Athletic director Robert Sigholtz had committed the Hoyas to a schedule that included only 10 home games and forced the team to play nine straight road games between December 13, 1971, and January 22, 1972. Magee, working in the last year of his contract with no sign of the university offering an extension, openly feuded with Sigholtz over this schedule and over whether or not Sigholz had provided Magee with an adequate recruiting budget, which totaled only $5,140. After Laughna, now a senior and the team's captain, said in an interview with The Washington Post that Georgetown did not seem to spend very much of the revenue it earned from the basketball team on the basketball program itself, Sigholtz responded with an ineffective late-season news conference that failed to address Laughna's comments and deflected criticism onto Magee, blaming him for the unfavorable schedule and for not using fully the recruiting tools he had available to him. Observers took away little more than the impression that the Georgetown athletic department was deeply troubled.[5]

Under these difficult circumstances, Mike Laughna put in a creditable performance on the court during the otherwise dismal season, with 25 points and 11 rebounds at Texas, 22 points and 12 rebounds three days later at San Francisco, and 24 points and 15 rebounds against George Washington, He passed Jim Barry as the top scorer in Georgetown history on March 4, 1972, during a loss at Boston College in the final game of the season and of his collegiate career, and finished with 1,234 career points. Despite his efforts, the team won only one game each in December, January, and February.[5]

The 1971-72 team's .115 winning percentage was the worst in Georgetown men's basketball history and well below the previous worst of .238 set by the 5-16 team of 1930-31. Magee resigned two weeks after Sigholtz's news conference after a six-year tenure as head coach which saw two winning seasons and one post-season tournament appearance. Sigholtz resigned nine days after Magee.[5][6]

Although it was not known at the time, the 1971-72 season brought a 25-year stretch of mostly undistinguished basketball at Georgetown to an end. Although the team had appeared in the National Invitation Tournament in 1953 and 1970, between the 1947-48 season and the end of this 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. The arrival of John Thompson, Jr., as head coach the following season, however, would begin Georgetown's rise to the status of national basketball power.[3]

Roster

Source[5][7][8]

# Name Height Weight (lbs.) Position Class Hometown Previous Team(s)
10 Paul Robinson 6'6" N/A F So. New York, NY, U.S. DeWitt Clinton HS
12 Tim Lambour 5'8" N/A G So. Altoona, PA, U.S. Bishop Guilfoyle HS
22 Rick Kentz 6'1" N/A G So. Summit, NJ, U.S. Delbarton School
24 Vince Fletcher 6'1" N/A G Jr. New York, NY, U.S. DeWitt Clinton HS
30 Mike Geoghegan 6'4" N/A F Jr. Cincinnati, OH, U.S. St. Xavier HS
32 Ron Lyons 6'8" N/A C So. Philadelphia, PA, U.S. Northwest College (Wyoming)
34 Tom McBride 5'10" N/A G Jr. South Lake, NJ, U.S. Staunton Military Academy (Staunton, VA)
40 Tom Dooley 6'5" N/A F So. Rumson, NJ, U.S. Rumson-Fair Haven Regional HS
42 Mike Laughna 6'7" 210 F Sr. North Caldwell, NJ, U.S. Saint Benedict's Preparatory School
44 Don Willis 6'1" N/A G So. Hyattsville, MD, U.S. DeMatha Catholic HS
52 Mark Mitchell 6'8" N/A C Sr. Chicago, IL, U.S. Loyola Academy
54 Mark Edwards 6'5" N/A F Jr. Hyattsville, MD, U.S. DeMatha Catholic HS

1971–72 schedule and results

Sources[9][10][11][12]

Date
Time, TV
Rank# Opponent# Result Record Site
City, State
Regular Season

Sat., Dec. 4, 1971
no, no
at Boston University L 93103  0-1
Case Gymnasium 
Boston, MA

Tue., Dec. 7, 1971
no, no
No. 14 St. John's L 67107  0-2
McDonough Gymnasium 
Washington, DC

Sat., Dec. 11, 1971
no, no
Loyola Maryland W 8266  1-2
McDonough Gymnasium 
Washington, DC

Mon., Dec. 13, 1971
no, no
at No. 5 Maryland L 4679  1-3
Cole Field House 
College Park, MD

Mon., Dec. 27, 1971
no, no
vs. No. 2 Marquette
Milwaukee Invitational Tournament
L 4488  1-4
Milwaukee Arena 
Milwaukee, WI

Tue., Dec. 28, 1971
no, no
vs. Wisconsin
Milwaukee Invitational Tournament
L 6282  1-5
Milwaukee Arena 
Milwaukee, WI

Thu., Jan. 6, 1972
no, no
at Louisiana State L 7192  1-6
LSU Assembly Center 
Baton Rouge, LA

Sat., Jan. 8, 1972
no, no
at Texas L 7078  1-7
Gregory Gymnasium 
Austin, TX

Tue., Jan. 11, 1972
no, no
at San Francisco L 76100  1-8
War Memorial Gymnasium 
San Francisco, CA

Thu., Jan. 13, 1972
no, no
at Pacific L 73105  1-9
University Gymnasium 
Stockton, CA

Tue., Jan. 18, 1972
no, no
at Randolph–Macon L 7273  1-10
Crenshaw Gymnasium 
Ashland, VA

Sat., Jan. 22, 1972
no, no
at Seton Hall L 7298  1-11
Walsh Gymnasium 
South Orange, NJ

Thu., Jan. 27, 1972
no, no
William & Mary W 8578 OT 2-11
McDonough Gymnasium 
Washington, DC

Sat., Jan. 29, 1972
no, no
Holy Cross L 8385  2-12
McDonough Gymnasium 
Washington, DC

Tue., Feb. 1, 1972
no, no
American L 7582 OT 2-13
McDonough Gymnasium 
Washington, DC

Thu., Feb. 3, 1972
no, no
at Connecticut
Rivalry
L 8189  2-14
University of Connecticut Field House 
Storrs, CT

Sat., Feb. 5, 1972
no, no
Penn State L 6263  2-15
McDonough Gymnasium 
Washington, DC

Thu., Feb. 10, 1972
no, no
Assumption L 8390  2-16
McDonough Gymnasium 
Washington, DC

Sat., Feb. 12, 1972
no, no
Rutgers L 5872  2-17
McDonough Gymnasium 
Washington, DC

Mon., Feb. 14, 1972
no, no
at Navy L 6670  2-18
Halsey Field House 
Annapolis, MD

Wed., Feb. 16, 1972
no, no
at St. Joseph's L 7081  2-19
Palestra 
Philadelphia, PA

Sun., Feb. 20, 1972
no, no
Hofstra W 10997  3-19
McDonough Gymnasium 
Washington, DC

Thu., Feb. 24, 1972
no, no
at Manhattan L 7286  3-20
Madison Square Garden 
New York, NY

Sat., Feb. 26, 1972
no, no
at Fordham L 78106  3-21
Rose Hill Gymnasium 
Bronx, NY

Tue., Feb. 29, 1972
no, no
George Washington L 8388  3-22
McDonough Gymnasium 
Washington, DC

Sat., Mar. 4, 1972
no, no
at Boston College L 6978  3-23
Roberts Center 
Chestnut Hill, MA
*Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses.

References

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