The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Georgetown fires John Thompson III after another losing year

- By Howard Fendrich

WASHINGTON >> John Thompson III was fired as Georgetown’s basketball coach Thursday after two consecutiv­e losing seasons at the school his father led to a national championsh­ip.

Thompson said in a statement released by agent David Falk that he was “honored” to have been the Hoyas’ coach and proud of what his players have “accomplish­ed on the court and how they are thriving since leaving Georgetown.”

“Georgetown Basketball has been a part of my life since 1972,” Thompson’s statement said, referring to the year his father took over as the Hoyas’ coach, “which makes this moment even more impactful, but I look forward to my next chapter.”

School president John DeGioia told Thompson on Thursday he would not be brought back next year at a basketball program strongly associated with his last name.

“Our tradition of excellence as a university will forever be inextricab­ly linked with John and his family,” DeGioia said in a statement. “We are committed to taking the necessary steps to strengthen our program and maintainin­g the highest levels of academic integrity and national competitiv­eness.”

Thompson, known as “JT3,” was Georgetown’s head coach for 13 seasons, including a run to the Final Four in 2007 with future NBA players Jeff Green and Roy Hibbert on the roster. But he went a combined 29-36 the past two years, with some of those defeats punctuated by crowd chants of “Fire Thompson!”

What had once been unimaginab­le — a Thompson being sent away from Georgetown — became a topic of conversati­on among the team’s fans as the losses mounted.

When the subject was broached with Thompson after a defeat against defending national champion Villanova, a team spokesman jumped in to say: “Leave it to game-related questions, please.”

The search for a replacemen­t will be led by former NFL Commission­er Paul Tagliabue, vice chair of Georgetown’s board of directors, and athletic director Lee Reed.

The Hoyas’ 14-18 record this season included six losses in a row to finish and marked the team’s worst winning percentage since the 1950s. They went 15-18 a year ago, losing seven of their last eight games.

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