The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Ewing out at Georgetown

- By Kareem Copeland

WASHINGTON — Georgetown has announced that Patrick Ewing will no longer serve as head men’s basketball coach, the university announced Thursday evening. A national search for his replacemen­t has begun.

Ewing’s career at his alma mater comes to an unceremoni­ous end after six seasons with a 75-109 record. The Hoyas (7-25, 218) finished in last place in the Big East and endured a 29-game losing streak in conference games that spanned two seasons. Their season ended with an 80-48 loss to Villanova in the first round of the Big East tournament on Wednesday.

The Hoyas ended the 2021-22 season with a 6-25 record while suffering a program-worst 21-game losing streak, including becoming the first team in Big East history to go 0-19 in conference play.

“I am very proud to be a graduate of Georgetown University,” Ewing said in a statement. “And I am very grateful to President DeGioia for giving me the opportunit­y to achieve my ambition to be a head basketball coach. It is particular­ly meaningful to me to be in charge of the basketball program at my alma mater. I wish the program nothing but success. I will always be a Hoya.”

Ewing enacted massive changes to the roster and coaching staff during the offseason with hopes of altering the spiraling program. The five top scorers from the 2021-22 season left the program and 10 players from that roster are no longer with the team. Nine newcomers joined the team and recruiting website 247Sports ranked the Hoyas’ seven-player transfer class fourth in the nation.

The Hoyas hired Kevin Nickelberr­y from LSU and named him associate head coach, Pat Baldwin came in from Wisconsin Milwaukee and fellow assistant Clinton Crouch was promoted. Longtime assistant Louis Orr, who recently passed away after battling cancer, was moved off the bench and named special assistant to the head coach.

“Patrick Ewing is the heart of Georgetown basketball,” Georgetown President John J. DeGioia said in a statement. “I am deeply grateful to Coach Ewing for his vision, his determinat­ion, and for all that he has enabled Georgetown to achieve. Over these past six years, he was tireless in his dedication to his team and the young men he coached and we will forever be grateful to Patrick for his courage and his leadership in our Georgetown community.”

Ewing returned to Georgetown as, arguably, its most famous alum looking to resurrect the program after years of mediocrity, but things only got worse. John Thompson III took the program to eight NCAA Tournament­s in 13 seasons, but Georgetown made the tournament just once in six seasons under Ewing. The Hoyas went on an unexpected run to win the 2021 Big East Tournament to earn that bid. That was the highlight of Ewing’s tenure and he was given a three-year extension afterward, according to multiple reports.

“I’ve taken responsibi­lity as the head of this program for last year’s season,” Ewing said at media day before the season. “When you don’t accomplish the things that you set out for, changes have to be made. Changes were made both on my staff and also with the players . . . . You have to make changes when things don’t go well. And I think that the guys that we have brought in have done a great job so far in trying to get us back to where we need to get to.”

How the partnershi­p between Ewing — the coach — and Georgetown would play out seemed to be a delicate situation. Ewing led the most successful run in program history as a player and always had a strong relationsh­ip with beloved iconic coach John Thompson Jr., who died in August 2020. Thompson III was vastly more successful and was fired after his only two losing seasons, just two years after advancing to the second round of the NCAA tournament.

Athletic Director Lee Reed released a statement March 2, 2022, that acknowledg­ed “high standards and expectatio­ns” and the “disappoint­ment of a difficult season.”

“In this ever evolving landscape of college athletics we are committed to Coach Ewing,” Reed wrote, “and we are working with him to evaluate every aspect of the men’s basketball program and to make the necessary changes for him to put us back on the path to success for next year.

“Coach Ewing’s dedication as well as his success in last year’s Big East Tournament is a testament to his leadership. This gives us confidence that he can strengthen our program going forward.”

Reed put out another statement on Jan. 4, 2023, before the Hoyas lost their Big East record setting 25th consecutiv­e conference loss.

“We recognize this is a challengin­g and frustratin­g time for the men’s basketball team and our fans,” Reed said in a statement. “Coach Ewing understand­s that it is imperative to get the program back on track and no one is more committed than he is to making that happen.”

Ewing responded after the loss that, “I’m here to be the head coach at Georgetown until the president or the board decides for me to move on. But until that time — a friend of mine sent me a quote today: ‘It’s not how many times you get knocked down, it’s how many times you get up.’”

The Georgetown job was Ewing’s first as head coach on any level after angling for that position in the NBA for years. He was an assistant in the league for 15 years before being hired in April of 2017.

Ewing was a three-time consensus all-American at Georgetown and led the program to the 1984 national championsh­ip, being named Most Outstandin­g Player of that tournament. He was the No. 1 overall selection by the New York Knicks after the first NBA draft lottery. The accolades piled up during 17 NBA seasons as he was part of the Olympic gold medal winning Dream Team and was recently named to the league’s 75th anniversar­y team.

The past several years were rife with issues surroundin­g the program, though some were beyond Ewing’s control. The 201920 season ended with seven consecutiv­e losses as five players transferre­d between December 2019 and May 2020. Those transfers included leading scorer Mac McClung and 2018-19 Big East freshman of the year James Akinjo. The Hoyas lost top rebounder and No. 2 scorer Qudus Wahab to crosstown rival Maryland via transfer before the 2021-22 season, before he transferre­d back before the start of the 2022-23 season.

The pandemic was particular­ly harsh on the program. Ewing tested positive twice, including what he called a scary battle that left him hospitaliz­ed in May 2020. Six games were postponed or canceled in 2020-21. Four straight games were canceled last season, starting Dec. 22, and the Hoyas never won another regular season game.

There was hope coming off the Big East Tournament title and a recruiting class ranked No. 16 in the nation by recruiting site 247Sports, including fivestar McDonald’s allAmerica­n Aminu Mohammed and four-star Ryan Mutombo, son of former Georgetown star Dikembe Mutombo. Mohammed led the team in scoring and rebounding and was named to the Big East all-freshman team before heading to the NBA.

None of that was enough to mitigate the free fall of 2021-22 and Ewing’s eventual departure.

“One thing I take from this, the toughest battle is given to the toughest soldiers to handle,” Mohammed said before the 2022 tournament. “Not too many people can be in a situation like this and still be able to go out there and compete. I think we go out there every time and try to get a win. We give it our all and we never stop playing.

“That’s what it takes. Because it’s easy for somebody to be down, but it’s hard to get up. That’s the most important thing.”

 ?? John Minchillo/Associated Press ?? Georgetown has announced that Patrick Ewing will no longer serve as head men’s basketball coach, the university announced Thursday evening. A national search for his replacemen­t has begun.
John Minchillo/Associated Press Georgetown has announced that Patrick Ewing will no longer serve as head men’s basketball coach, the university announced Thursday evening. A national search for his replacemen­t has begun.

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