George Washington Colonials men's basketball

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George Washington Colonials
2016–17 George Washington Colonials men's basketball team
GeorgeWashingtonColonials.png
University George Washington University
First season 1913
Conference Atlantic 10
Location Washington, DC
Head coach Mike Lonergan (5th year)
Arena Charles E. Smith Athletic Center
(Capacity: 5,000)
Nickname Colonials
Student section Colonial Army
Colors Blue and Buff
         
Uniforms
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Home jersey
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Team colours
Home
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Away jersey
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Team colours
Away
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Alternate jersey
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Team colours
Alternate
NCAA Tournament Sweet Sixteen
1993
NCAA Tournament appearances
1954, 1961, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2014
Conference tournament champions
1943, 1953, 1961, 2005, 2007
Conference regular season champions
1999, 2006

The George Washington Colonials men's basketball team represents George Washington University in the United States' capital, Washington, D.C. It plays its home games in the Charles E. Smith Center, which is also shared with other George Washington Colonials athletic programs. The school's team currently competes in the Atlantic 10 Conference. It qualified for the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament in 2014 for the first time since 2007. The Colonials' head coach is Mike Lonergan.[1]

History

The colors of GW, buff and blue, can be seen on banners on the Foggy Bottom campus.

Mike Jarvis coached GW in the 1990s, and led the team to the NCAA Sweet 16 in 1993, where they were beaten by the Fab Five University of Michigan team (which later vacated its wins due to NCAA rule violations). Jarvis also coached former Colonials Head Coach Karl Hobbs in high school. Former NBA player Yinka Dare also played at George Washington for two years before being drafted in the first round by the New Jersey Nets.

GW's basketball team returned to the national stage in 2004 after defeating No. 9 Michigan State and No. 12 Maryland in back to back games to win the 2004 BB&T Classic. That year, the men's basketball team went on to win the Atlantic 10 West Title and the Atlantic 10 Tournament Title, earning an automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Tournament. The team received a #12 seed, losing to #5 seed Georgia Tech in the first round.

The team began the 2005–06 season ranked 21st in the Associated Press poll, reaching as high as sixth in the polls, and after some tournament success they closed out the year ranked 19th in the nation. They had a record of 26–2 going into the 2006 NCAA Tournament. The 2005–06 team achieved the school's highest ranking in the last 50 years, peaking at #6 in the nation,[2] had been one of the team's best ever, and received an #8 seed in the NCAA Tournament. In the tournament, they came back from an 18-point second-half deficit to defeat #9 seed UNC-Wilmington, but lost to Duke University, the top overall seed, in the second round.

While only one Colonial from the 2005–06 team was drafted in the 2006 NBA Draft, J. R. Pinnock, two other Colonials from that team have played in the NBA. Pops Mensah-Bonsu played for the Dallas Mavericks, Houston Rockets, San Antonio Spurs and Toronto Raptors and Mike Hall played for the Washington Wizards.

The 2006–07 basketball season was considered by many[3][4] to be a rebuilding year for the Colonials after graduating their entire starting front court and losing Pinnock to the NBA. Coach Karl Hobbs and Senior guard Carl Elliott managed to lead the team to a 23–8 record, winning the 2007 Atlantic 10 Tournament in Atlantic City, New Jersey, once again earning an auto-bid to the NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship. The Colonials were placed as a #11 seed, but they lost to #6 seed Vanderbilt University in Sacramento, California 77–44.[5]

After finishing the 2010–2011 season with a record of 17–14 (10–6 in Atlantic 10), capped by a disappointing 71–59 overtime loss to St. Joseph's in the conference tournament,[6] Karl Hobbs was dismissed as head coach.[7] Mike Lonergan, former head coach of the University of Vermont Catamounts, was hired to replace Hobbs.[8]

The 2011–2012 basketball season, Lonergan's first with the Colonials, resulted in a 10–21 record (5–11 in Atlantic 10). By the 2013-14 season Lonergan had rebuilt the program with the team finishing 3rd in the Atlantic 10 Conference with a 24-8 record (11-5 in Atlantic 10). The team qualified for its first NCAA Tournament since 2007 earning a #9 seed in the East Region. Their season concluded with a second round loss to Memphis in the NCAA Tournament.

Postseason

NCAA tournament results

The Colonials have appeared in the NCAA Tournament 11 times. Their combined record is 4–11.

Year Seed Round Opponent Result
1954 First Round NC State L 73–75
1961 First Round Princeton L 67–84
1993 #12 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#5 New Mexico
#13 Southern
#1 Michigan
W 82–68
W 90–80
L 64–72
1994 #10 First Round
Second Round
#7 UAB
#2 Connecticut
W 51–46
L 63–75
1996 #11 First Round #6 Iowa L 79–81
1998 #9 First Round #8 Oklahoma State L 59–74
1999 #11 First Round #6 Indiana L 88–108
2005 #12 First Round #5 Georgia Tech L 68–80
2006 #8 First Round
Second Round
#9 UNC Wilmington
#1 Duke
W 88–85OT
L 61–74
2007 #11 First Round #6 Vanderbilt L 44–77
2014 #9 Second Round #8 Memphis L 66–71

NIT results

The Colonials have appeared in the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) six times. Their combined record is 6–5. They were NIT champions in 2016.

Year Round Opponent Result
1991 First Round South Carolina L 63–69
1995 First Round Ohio L 71–83
1997 First Round Michigan State L 50–65
2004 First Round Virginia L 66–79
2015 First Round
Second Round
Pittsburgh
Temple
W 60–54
L 77–90
2016 First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Finals
Hofstra
Monmouth
Florida
San Diego State
Valparaiso
W 82–80
W 87–71
W 82–77
W 65–46
W 76–60

CBI results

The Colonials have appeared in the College Basketball Invitational (CBI) one time. Their record is 0–1.

Year Round Opponent Result
2010 First Round VCU L 73–79

Coaches

The Colonials have had 27 coaches in its history including two seasons with two head coaches.

Overall Conference
Name Years Won-Lost Pct. Won-Lost Pct. Note
J. Kramer 1906–08 7–12 .368 First collegiate basketball team organized in the District of Columbia.
No Varsity 1909–12
Slitz Schlosser 1913–14 4–17 .190
Nathan Dougherty 1914–15 5–9 .357
George Colliflower 1916–17 9–18 .333
Goesbeck & Murphy 1917–18 5–6 .455
No Varsity (WWI) 1919–20
Brian Morse 1921–23 16–27 .372
Jack Dailey 1924–25 8–14 .364
James Lemon 1926–27 12–16 .429
Maud Crum 1928–29 13–14 .481
Joe Mitchell 1929–30 9–7 .563
Jim Pixlee 1931–32 22–9 .710
Ted O'Leary 1933–34 26–9 .743
Jim Pixlee & Logan Wilson 1934–35 14–6 .700
William Reinhart 1936–42, 1950–66 319–237 .574 Southern Conference Tournament Champions 1954, 1961; NCAA Tournament 1954, 1961
Arthur "Otts" Zahn 1942–43, 1946–47 45–21 .682 No Varsity 1944–45 (World War II), Southern Conference Tournament Champion 1943
George Garber 1948–49 37–15 .712
Babe McCarthy 1966–67 6–18 .250
Wayne Dobbs 1968–70 31–45 .408
Carl Slone 1971–74 54–48 .529
Bob Tallent 1975–81 102–84 .548
Gerry Gimelstob 1982–85 58–55 .513 31–33 .484 1981–82 Season in Eastern Eight Conference, 1982–85 Atlantic 10
John Kuester 1986–90 50–91 .355 20–52 .278
Mike Jarvis 1991–98 152–90 .628 76–52 .594 NCAA Tournament '93 (Sweet 16), '94, '96, '98; NIT '91, '95, '97
Tom Penders 1999–2001 49–42 .538 28–20 .583 NCAA Tournament '99
Karl Hobbs 2001–2011 149–115 .564 74–70 .514 NCAA Tournament '05, '06, '07; NIT '04; CBI '10; Atlantic 10 Tournament Champions '05, '07; Atlantic 10 Regular Season Champions '06; National Coach of the Year Finalist 2005–06
Mike Lonergan[9] 2011–present 46–45 .506 23–25 .479 NCAA Tournament '14; NIT '15, '16 (Champions)

Significant games in Colonials men's basketball history

GW 97, No. 5 West Virginia 93 – February 17, 1960
After falling to the Mountaineers earlier in the season, an announced crowd of 6,400 watched the Colonials host Jerry West and the nation’s fifth-ranked basketball team. Despite giving up 40 points, 13 rebounds and 7 assists to West, GW Athletic Hall of Famer Jon Feldman exploded for a career-high 42 points on 17–25 shooting to stun West Virginia.[10]

GW 111, No. 12 Syracuse 104 (OT) – November 16, 1994
The Colonials were invited to participate in the pre-season NIT at Manley Field House at Syracuse, and though they gave up a last-second three-pointer to allow the Orangemen to send the game to overtime, the Colonials controlled the extra period to secure the win on national television.[11]

GW 78, No. 1 UMass 75 – February 4, 1995
President Bill Clinton joined the Colonials at Charles E. Smith Center when John Calipari and the top-ranked Massachusetts Minutemen came to Washington. Kwame Evans scored 27 points, including his 1,000th and fans rushed the court as the Colonials scored their first-ever upset of a number one team.[12]

GW 77, Xavier 74 – February 27, 1999
With the Atlantic 10 West Division Title on the line in the final game of the regular season, the Colonials hosted the Xavier Musketeers. Seniors Shawnta Rogers and Yegor Mescheriakov were playing their final home games. Despite missing a game-winning three with five seconds left Rogers received a pass following a Mike King rebound and broke the 74–74 tie as time expired to win the game and the division. The Colonials would later receive an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament under first-year coach Tom Penders.[13]

GW 96, No. 11 Michigan State 83 – December 4, 2004
GW 101, No. 12 Maryland 92 – December 5, 2004
In the 2004 BB&T Championship, the Colonials upset ranked teams on two consecutive days, winning each by at least 9 points. Karl Hobbs guided his team to wins over the Michigan State Spartans and Maryland Terrapins. Pops Mensah-Bonsu scored 23 points in the first game and T.J. Thompson poured in 27 against the Terrapins for the Colonials. The next week, the Colonials entered both national polls for the first time in six years.[14]

GW 76, Saint Joseph’s 67 – March 12, 2005
The Colonials clinched their first-ever Atlantic 10 Tournament title in 2005 behind 20 points from Omar Williams. The Colonials were given a 12th seed and faced Georgia Tech in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.[15]

No. 6 GW 86, Charlotte 85 (OT) – March 4, 2006
The sixth-ranked Colonials secured a perfect Atlantic 10 record and Charles E. Smith Center record when Carl Elliott tipped-in an errant Noel Wilmore three-point shot to finish a 26–1 regular season, solidifying the nation’s best record, and the best regular season record in Colonials history.[16]

(8) GW 88, (9) UNC-Wilmington 85 (OT) – March 16, 2006 After drawing a surprising 8-seed following its 26–1 regular season campaign and reaching as high as 6th in the nation, the Colonials were sent to take on UNC-Wilmington in nearby Greensboro, North Carolina. Pops Mensah-Bonsu returned from a meniscus injury and helped the Colonials overcome an 18-point second half deficit to take on top-seeded Duke in the second round of the 2006 tournament.[17]

The Colonials celebrate the 2007 Atlantic 10 Tournament Championship.
After winning the 2007 A-10 Championship

GW 78, Rhode Island 69 – March 10, 2007
The Colonials controlled the entire second half in winning their second Atlantic 10 Tournament championship in school history (and second in three years), giving the Colonials their third consecutive NCAA Tournament bid and first time in school history with three consecutive 20-win seasons. The Colonials drew an 11th seed and travelled to Sacramento to play 6th-seeded Vanderbilt.[18]

GW 49, Saint Louis 20 – January 10, 2008
The Colonials held the Saint Louis Billikens to just 20 points for the entire game, which set the record for the lowest point total since the inception of the shot clock in Division I College Basketball. Saint Louis was held to 14.6% shooting for the game, and made only one of nineteen three-point attempts. They had seven points in the first half.[19]

GW 66, Memphis 71 – March 21, 2014
The Colonials drew the Memphis Tigers in the East Regional of the NCAA Tournament. The game was held in Raleigh, NC. The Colonials trailed Memphis for the bulk of the game but had two shots to tie in the final minute that didn't connect leaving them with a loss in their first NCAA Tournament Appearance since 2007.[20]

GW 73, No. 6 Virginia 68 − November 16, 2015
Hosting UVA a year after losing 59-42 in Charlottesville, the Colonials held a lead for most of the game and knocked off Virginia for their first win over a top 10 team since defeating UMass 20 years prior. It was the third straight year GW had beaten a ranked team, and a sold out crowd at the Smith Center stormed the court as GW pulled off the upset. Patricio Garino led GW with 18 points and had many key buckets to spur momentum the Colonial's way. [21]

(4) GW 76, (1) Valparaiso 60 - March 31, 2016
The Colonials made their way through the NIT tournament as a 4 seed by beating 3 higher seeds than them. They won their first National Invitation Tournament and first postseason title starting 3 foreign players and player of the tournament Tyler Cavanaugh. GW set a new school record with 28 wins with this game.[22]

Notable alumni

Colonials in the NBA

Other Colonials of note

References

  1. GW Names Mike Lonergan As Head Men's Basketball Coach – GEORGE WASHINGTON OFFICIAL ATHLETIC SITE
  2. Streaking Colonials seek 11th straight win, host Dayton – NCAA Basketball – Yahoo! Sports
  3. Express: A Publication of The Washington Post
  4. VandySports.com – Game Day Report: Vanderbilt vs. George Washington
  5. FOX Sports on MSN – College Basketball – Recap
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  8. George Washington hires Vermont's Mike Lonergan as coach - ESPN
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  10. West Virginia at George Washington
  11. http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/USAToday/access/55269266.html?dids=55269266:55269266&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&type=current&date=Nov+17,+1994&author=Mel+Antonen&pub=USA+TODAY+(pre-1997+Fulltext)&desc=George+Washington+stuns+Syracuse+111-104+in+OT&pqatl=google[dead link]
  12. Colonials knock off UMass – Baltimore Sun
  13. GW topples Xavier, takes A-10 West title – Sports
  14. GW Men's Basketball Back in the Top 25 After Six-Year Absence: No. 21 AP; No. 25 USA Today/Coaches Poll – GEORGE WASHINGTON OFFICIAL ATHLETIC SITE
  15. Colonials Win First-Ever A-10 Tournament Title, Defeating Saint Joseph's 76–67 – GEORGE WASHINGTON OFFICIAL ATHLETIC SITE
  16. Colonials Hold Off 49ers In Overtime, 86–85
  17. George Washington Advances Past UNC Wilmington In OT, 88–85 – GEORGE WASHINGTON OFFICIAL ATHLETIC SITE
  18. George Washington Wins A-10 Championship With 78–69 Decision Over URI – GEORGE WASHINGTON OFFICIAL ATHLETIC SITE
  19. Colonials Roll All Over St. Louis, 49–20 – GEORGE WASHINGTON OFFICIAL ATHLETIC SITE
  20. NCAA tournament: GW can’t get over the hump in loss to Memphis Washington Post
  21. George Washington Stuns No. 6 Virginia "Washington Post"
  22. G. Washington beats Valpo behind tourney MOP Tyler Cavanaugh"ESPN"
  23. Pops Mensah-Bonsu NBA & ABA Statistics | Basketball-Reference.com
  24. Mike Hall NBA Statistics
  25. Yinka Dare NBA & ABA Statistics | Basketball-Reference.com
  26. Mike Brown NBA & ABA Statistics | Basketball-Reference.com
  27. Joe Holup NBA & ABA Statistics | Basketball-Reference.com
  28. Corky Devlin NBA & ABA Statistics | Basketball-Reference.com
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External links