The Georgetown Hoyas
are the athletics teams that officially represent Georgetown University in college sports. The school is located in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington, D.C. and was founded in 1789. Part of the NCAA's Division I, the Hoyas field 27 varsity level sports teams, most of which participate in the Big East Conference, with the exception of the Division I-AA Patriot League in football and ECAC men's lacrosse. The rowing and sailing teams also participate in east coast conferences. The Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team is the school's most famous and most successful program, but Hoyas have achieved some degree of success in a wide range of sports.
The team name is derived from the mixed Greek and Latin chant, "Hoya Saxa," which gained popularity in the 1870s. The name Hoyas came into use in the 1920s. Most teams have their athletic facilities on the main campus of Georgetown University. The men's basketball team plays most of their home games at the Verizon Center in downtown Washington, D.C. and the baseball team plays at Shirley Povich Field in Cabin John, Maryland. The school's athletic director position is currently vacant, after Bernard Muir left Georgetown to become the athletic director at the University of Delaware on May 11, 2009.
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GEORGETOWN HOYAS TICKETS
EVENT | DATE | AVAILABILITY |
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Georgetown Hoyas vs. Coppin State Eagles Tickets 12/28 | Dec 28, 2024 Sat, 12:00 PM | | Georgetown Hoyas Women's Basketball vs. Maryland Eastern Shore Hawks Tickets 12/28 | Dec 28, 2024 Sat, 7:00 PM | | Georgetown Hoyas Women's Basketball vs. Xavier Musketeers Tickets 12/30 | Dec 30, 2024 Mon, 7:00 PM | | Georgetown Hoyas vs. Xavier Musketeers Tickets 1/3 | Jan 03, 2025 Fri, 8:00 PM | | Marquette Golden Eagles vs. Georgetown Hoyas Tickets 1/7 | Jan 07, 2025 Tue, 7:00 PM | |
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Traditions
"What is a Hoya?"
The University admits that the precise origin of the term "Hoya" is unknown.
[1] The official story is that at some point before 1920, students well-versed in the classical languages combined the
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.
[2]
thumb in 1923
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. This was influenced by a popular half time show, where the mascot, a dog nicknamed "Hoya," would entertain fans.
[3] 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 and other opponents, whose schools tend to have more concrete nicknames, have long used "What's a Hoya?" as a chant to mock Georgetown.
[4] Marquette University, whose
fight song is "Ring Out, Ahoya!" will often taunt the Georgetown basketball team with the phrase "Wring out a Hoya."
Harrison High School, located in Kennesaw, Georgia, is the only other institution in the country licensed to share this name. However,
Georgetown Preparatory School, which separated from the University in 1927, uses the name "Little Hoyas" for its sports teams and shares the University's blue and gray color scheme.
Mascot
Georgetown's nickname is The Hoyas, but its mascot is "Jack the
Bulldog." Among the earliest mascots was a Pitbull 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 the
trenches of
World War I in France. He was promoted to
Sergeant for his actions in combat and awarded a special medal by General
John J. Pershing in a post-war ceremony. His owner then entered
Georgetown Law School, and Stubby became part of the halftime show.
[5]
From then on, Georgetown had a live dog as its mascot. Rev. Vincent McDonough,
SJ's dog, Jazz Bo, nicknamed Hoya is likely a cause of the teams adopting the name. In 1951, the school joined a growing movement among private schools, such as the
University of Chicago, and suspend the football program as un-academic. The dog as a symbol lived on, though, and sporadically students would bring pet bulldogs to games. In 1962, as the school revived the football team and adopted as its logo a drawing of a Bulldog sporting a blue and gray cap, students financed a new bulldog named Lil Nan's Royal Jacket, but went by Jack.
In 1977, the university began the tradition of dressing up a student in a blue and gray bulldog costume, replacing the live bulldog.
[6] In 1999, Rev.
Scott R. Pilarz, S.J., with the help of the Hoya Blue fan club, revived the tradition of a live bulldog; when Pilarz left for the
University of Scranton (taking Jack with him), Georgetown immediately secured a new bulldog puppy and found another
Jesuit, Rev. Christopher Steck, S.J., to care for him.
Fight song
Georgetown's fight song is rare among U.S. university fight songs for mentioning other colleges by name. (
Illinois's "
Oskee Wow-Wow,"
St. Olaf College's "
Um Yah Yah", and
Texas A&M's "
Aggie War Hymn" are other prominent examples.) 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 Cornell and Holy Cross regularly (in football), and many of these schools no longer use the fight songs that Georgetown's song mocks.
Colors
Blue and gray are the official colors of Georgetown University and its athletic teams. The colors are an important reminder of the school's past. During the
American Civil War, blue was commonly used in northern, Union, uniforms, while gray was used in southern, Confederate, uniforms. These colors were introduced by the rowing team in 1876. These student athletes deemed Blue and Gray "appropriate colors for the [Boat] Club and expressive of the feeling of unity between the Northern and Southern boys of the College." Girls from neighboring
Georgetown Visitation sewed the original uniforms together for the team.
[7] The basketball and
lacrosse teams use gray as their primary color in home jerseys, with blue in away jerseys. White is also frequently used as an accent to these colors, and is actually the main color in the
football and
baseball teams' away jerseys and the
soccer team's home jerseys. Campus spirit groups often encourage students to "bleed Hoya blue," a slogan often used on shirts.
[8]
Men's basketball
The Georgetown University men's Basketball team is perhaps the most well-known Hoya program. Georgetown's first intercollegiate men's basketball team was formed in 1907.
John Thompson III, son of the accomplished Hoyas coach
John Thompson, is the current head coach. The Hoyas historically have been well regarded not only for their team success, but also for their ability to generate players that after graduation succeed both on the court (such as
Patrick Ewing) and off (such as
Paul Tagliabue and
Henry Hyde). The team has reached the
NCAA Tournament Final Four 5 times, has won the
Big East Tournament 7 times, and has won or shared the Big East regular season title 7 times.
Rowing
Rowing at Georgetown has a distinguished history. Indeed, Georgetown's current University Colors have their origin in the founding of the university's Boat Club in 1876. The colors were enshrined on a blue and gray banner, emblazoned with the Latin "Ocior Euro," or "Swifter Than the Wind," which the girls of
Georgetown Visitation School presented to the Boat Club. From the start Georgetown's rowing team raced against the likes of
Yale,
Dartmouth,
Harvard,
Penn,
Cornell and
Wisconsin. The team was however suspended from 1909 to 1920 due to lack of interest before being revived.
[9]
Today, under the guidance of Tony Johnson, now Director of Rowing and Varsity Heavyweight Coach, Georgetown still competes as a member of the top league in American rowing, the Eastern Association of Rowing Colleges. With the addition of a men's lightweight team in 1963, a women's team in 1975, and a women's lightweight team in 1996, Georgetown's four crew teams have seen success in recent years, including trips to the
Henley Royal Regatta for the men's heavyweight and lightweight teams and second-in-the-nation finishes for both men's and women's lightweight teams.
[10] [11] Many Georgetown oarsmen and -women have gone on to represent the United States on national and Olympic teams,
[12] and a new boathouse is scheduled to be completed in the near future.
[13]
Georgetown Crew has seen a bit of a revival in recent years beginning in 2000 when such rowers as Noah Bergman and Spencer Scheffy, and coxswain Alex Taft entered the Men's Heavyweight Varsity Squad. The successes have lead to entry into the Eastern Sprints rowing league.
Men's rugby
thumb
The Georgetown University Rugby Football Club is the intercollegiate men's
rugby union team that represents Georgetown in the
USA Rugby league.
Women's lacrosse
The women's
lacrosse team has been particularly strong in recent years, winning 6 consecutive Big East titles. 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.
Football
thumb
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
Notre Dame made to maintain a top-notch program.
In 1941, Georgetown played in the
Orange Bowl, where they lost 14–7 to
Mississippi State. They also played in the 1950
Sun Bowl against
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.
After a 2–7 season in 1950 which included losses to the likes of Penn State, Miami, and Maryland, Georgetown discontinued the sport, which was revived in 1964 by students. Its first game drew 8,000 to campus against
New York University (NYU). Varsity football resumed in 1978 at the
Division III level. Today, Georgetown plays at the Division I-AA level (due to NCAA legislation forbidding Division I or II schools from playing football in lower divisions), competing in the
Patriot League and perennially plays against
Ivy League schools.
"Big Jim" Ricca, an NFL
defensive end and
offensive lineman, graduated in 1949 and was the last Hoya to play in an NFL game.
[14] In 2007, the
Washington Redskins made
Alex Buzbee a reserve player, becoming the first Georgetown player on an NFL team since Ricca retired in 1956.
[15]
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.
Other sports
Hoyas have excelled in a wide range of sports over the years:
- Five players from the men's soccer team have played professionally for Major League Soccer: Phil Wellington (drafted in 1996), Brandon Leib (1997), and Eric Kvello (1999), Dan Gargan 2004 (Selected 43rd overall in the 2005 MLS Supplemental Draft), Jeff Curtin 2005 (1st round draft Pick #14 overall). Ricky Schramm, who played on the 2006 Hoyas, was drafted in the 3rd round by DC United.
- The sailing team finished 2005 ranked #1 [16] in the . As of April 2008, they are now #4. Andrew Campbell has led the sailing team to the three national championships [17] 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. [18]
- The University is also home to the Georgetown University Croquet Society, a nationally competitive croquet team. [19]
- The men and women's track and field teams practice off-campus at Duke Ellington Track in neighboring Burleith, and are frequently ranked among the top ten programs in the nation.
Administration
Athletic directors
Since May 11, 2009, the Director of the Athletic Department position has been vacant, with Dr. Daniel Porterfield, Senior Vice President for Strategic Development, serving as Interim Director of Athletics.
[20] 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), Adam Brick (2004–2005), and Bernard Muir (2005–2009).
[21]
List of sports
Intercollegiate sports include (inaugural season and current coach in parentheses)
- Men's: baseball (1860, Pete Wilk), basketball (1907, John Thompson III), crew (1876; 1958, Tony Johnson), cross country (1924, Pat Henner), football (1887, Kevin Kelly), golf (1925, Tommy Hunter), lacrosse (1951, Dave Urick), soccer (1952, Brian Wiese), swimming and diving (1949, Steven Cartwright [22]), tennis (1920, Gordon Ernst), and track and field (1891, Pat Henner)
- Women's: basketball (1960, Terri Williams Fluornoy), cross country (1976, Pat Henner), 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, Steven Cartwright
), tennis (1960, Gordon Ernst), track and field (1976, Pat Henner), and volleyball (1960, Arlisa Hagan)
- Coed: sailing (1937, Mike Callahan)
References
- Georgetown University, "What is a Hoya?"
- Hoya Saxa, "What is a Hoya?"
- Georgetown University
- ''The Heights'', "Crowd shows up for winning streak"
- Smithsonian Institution, "The Price of Freedom: Americans at War -- Stubby"
- ''Hoya Saxa Online'', "Georgetown Traditions: Jack The Bulldog"
- Georgetown Traditions: The Blue & Gray
- In Search of Hoya Spirit
- GU Athletics Roared in the 20s
- "Men's Crew Places Second at Lightweight National Championship" GUHoyas.com
- "Georgetown Women's Lightweight Crew Completes Best Season in Program History" GUHoyas.com
- "Groom Wins Olympic Rowing Trials" GUHoyas.com
- "Build the Boathouse"
- "Glory Days: The Past, Present and Future of Hoyas Turned Professional Athletes ''The Hoya,'' January 23, 2004
- For Redskins Rookie, Slogan Is Hoya Sacks
- Georgetown University Sailing [1], Dec 2 2005
- Georgetown University Sailing [1], Nov 2 2005
- Georgetown University Sailing [1] Jan 4 2006
- Sam Sweeney, "The Empire Strikes Back: Hoya Croquet", ''The Georgetown Voice,'' 3 May 2007.
- http://guhoyas.cstv.com/genrel/060309aab.html
- ''Hoya Saxa Magazine'', January 2006 issue
- http://guhoyas.cstv.com/sports/c-swim/mtt/cartwright_steven00.html