Call & Times

Hall of Famer turned Hoyas into national powerhouse

- By LIZ CLARKE The Washington Post

John Thompson, the Washington native who elevated Georgetown University basketball to national prominence, earned Hall of Fame honors and carved a place in history as the first African American coach to lead his team to the NCAA championsh­ip, has died at 78.

His family announced the death in a statement but did not provide additional details.

Physically imposing at 6-foot-10 and nearly 300 pounds and possessed of a booming bass voice that commanded authority better than a shrill whistle could, Thompson built his teams around similarly intimidati­ng centers such as Patrick Ewing, Dikembe Mutombo and Alonzo Mourning and a physical, unrelentin­g approach to defense.

His most profound contributi­on to the game was his grasp of its power to lift disadvanta­ged youngsters to a better life. He used college basketball - and his stature in the sport – as a platform from which to demand greater opportunit­ies

for Black athletes to gain the college education they might otherwise have been denied.

To Thompson, a basketball scholarshi­p was a vehicle rather than a destinatio­n.

For a youngster like himself, reared in racially segregated Southeast Washington and labeled academical­ly challenged because of undiagnose­d vision problems, basketball was a door that led to opportunit­y.

After a standout career as a center at Archbishop Carroll High School, he went on to graduate from Providence College in Rhode Island with a degree in economics. Later, after a two-year career in the National Basketball Associatio­n, he earned a master’s degree in guidance and counseling at the University of the District of Columbia.

Basketball-as-opportunit­y was a cause Thompson championed throughout his career. When the National Collegiate Athletic Associatio­n in 1989 adopted a propositio­n that would deny financial aid to recruits who failed to meet minimum scores on standardiz­ed college-admission tests, Thompson boycotted two of his own team’s games in protest.

As for the sport itself, Thompson likened it to a fantasy, using the metaphor of a deflated basketball to drive home to his players what their life would ultimately consist of if they didn’t plan for a future beyond the game.

“Don’t let eight pounds of air be the sum total of your existence” was Thompson’s frequent refrain, and the cautionary words were displayed in the lobby of Georgetown’s McDonough Arena, where Hoya teams continued to practice well after he stepped down from coaching in 1999.

Though he reached the pinnacle of his profession in leading Georgetown to the 1984 NCAA championsh­ip with an 84-75 victory over Houston, Thompson bristled at being referred to as the first Black coach to do so - not because he minimized the achievemen­t, but because he felt that claiming the label slighted generation­s of African American coaches who could have accomplish­ed the same had they only been given the chance. On the local level, Thompson transforme­d moribund basketball program at George

a town into one of the nation’s most prestigiou­s, compiling a 596-239 record during his 27-year tenure. Along the way, he broke down barriers between the Jesuit institutio­n in Northwest Washington, long regarded as an exclusive, cloistered enclave, and the predominan­tly African American city at large.

“Coach Thompson should get more credit than he gets for having created diversity at Georgetown, connecting Georgetown to this city and making it clear that Georgetown is not some elite institutio­n sitting off there on the top of a hill,” former NFL commission­er Paul Tagliabue, captain of Georgetown’s 1961-1962 basketball team, told The Washington Post.

On a national level, Thompson was a key figure in launching the Big East Conference in 1979. The league, which was long dominated by Thompson and other coaches such as Jim Boeheim of Syracuse, Jim Calhoun of Connecticu­t and Rollie Massimino of Villanova, was defined by its often bitter, always passionate basketball rivalries.

Six words kick-started the blood feud in the Big East’s inaugural season. They were uttered Feb. 13, 1980, by Thompson during the news conference that followed Georgetown’s 52-50 upset of No. 2-ranked Syracuse in the final planned, regular-season game at Manley Field House, where the Orange boasted a 57-game winning streak. Georgetown trailed by 14 at halftime, but with five seconds remaining, the Hoyas’ Sleepy Floyd hit the free throws that won the game.

“Manley Field House is officially closed,” Thompson famously intoned.

Decades later, as Syracuse prepared to leave the Big East for the Atlantic Coast Conference, Boeheim reflected on the intensity of the rivalry and his affection for Thompson.

“There was never a moment in a Syracuse-Georgetown game that somebody took a play off,” Boeheim told The Post. “There were 10 people on the court playing every play; the coaches were coaching every play. We’ve had great games with a lot of teams, but the games you remember are Syracuse-Georgetown.”

With the Hoyas’ 1984 NCAA championsh­ip, Thompson turned Georgetown basketball into a brand that was recognized worldwide, as well as a symbol of pride for countless urban youths throughout the country.

Thompson achieved much of his success by fighting against the grain. He reveled in standing up, speaking out and challengin­g the establishm­ent when it came to causes he believed in. For this, he was criticized from all sides during his coaching career.

Whites faulted him for fielding all-Black squads. Many Blacks faulted him for not doing more for African Americans.

Fiercely loyal to his inner circle, Thompson trusted few in the coaching fraternity and even fewer journalist­s. The secrecy with which he shrouded his players was often interprete­d as evidence that Georgetown basketball had something to hide. It gave rise to a media-coined diagnosis, “Hoya Paranoia,” that Thompson particular­ly disliked.

Other coaches charged that Georgetown, under Thompson, was prone to rough play and fighting. One brawl with the University of Pittsburgh had to be broken up by police.

Much like his teams, Thompson had a game-day persona that could be intimidati­ng. He patrolled the sideline with a signature white towel draped over his shoulder, rarely pleased with the proceeding­s. In a heated game against Syracuse in March 1990, with the Big East’s regular-season title at stake, Thompson was ejected after drawing three technical fouls in a 90-second span.

Asked in a 2013 interview what he recalled about the sequence of events, which included a thunderous foot stomp, a foray onto the court and at least one expletive, Thompson, who had mellowed with age, said with a laugh: “I don’t remember why I was mad. I probably created something to be mad about, to tell you the truth . . . I functioned better when I thought people didn’t like me than I did when I thought they did.”

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John Robert Thompson Jr. was born Sept. 2, 1941, in Washington and was enrolled in Catholic school by his mother, who believed he would benefit from the academic rigor. Unusually tall for his age, he was recruited to play basketball at Archbishop Carroll High School, which he led to three consecutiv­e city championsh­ips, 55 straight victories and an undefeated season his senior year in 1960.

But Washington was a segregated city for much of his youth. Even in church, Thompson had to wait for White parishione­rs to finish their prayers before he could approach the altar.

He enrolled at Providence College, steered once again by his mother’s belief that the priests would look after her son, and led the Friars to the 1963 National Invitation Tournament title and, in 1964, their first NCAA tournament appearance.

On the heels of a stellar college career, setting school records for points, scoring average and field-goal percentage, Thompson was chosen by the Boston Celtics in the third round of the 1964 NBA draft - the year of his college graduation.

He primarily served as a backup to the Celtics’ star center, Bill Russell, during his two seasons in the NBA, in which Boston won back-to-back championsh­ips. Thompson, taking a cue from Russell, learned to keep a distance from the media and his rivals. Weary of the itinerant lifestyle, he chose to retire rather than relocate to Chicago, which chose him in the NBA’s 1966 expansion draft.

Returning to Washington, Thompson took a job as a guidance counselor and started coaching part time at St. Anthony High School, where his teams compiled a 122-28 record.

His hiring as Georgetown’s head coach represente­d a bit of a gamble. Despite having coached at the high school level just seven years, he was chosen over such more establishe­d candidates as Morgan Wootten and George Raveling.

Thompson insisted as a term of his employment that he be given latitude to recruit high school students who wouldn’t otherwise meet Georgetown’s rigorous admission standards. To ensure they had a bona fide chance at academic success, he also negotiated the right to hire Mary Fenlon, a former nun he had worked with at St. Anthony’s, to serve as the Hoyas’ academic coordinato­r. As a result, 75 of the 77 players who stayed at Georgetown for four years under Thompson received their degrees.

Thompson’s close watch on his players’ academic progress was just one aspect of the short rein he kept on his charges throughout their college careers. He required them to travel in coat and tie. He ordered 5 a.m. practices if a player skipped a class. His micromanag­ement of their lives was alternatel­y criticized, praised and cited as cause for suspicion over the years.

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