It was pretty cool playing at the Verizon Center, the arena that also hosted the
10) February, 6, 2010 Villanova 90 Georgetown 103
We start off with the blizzard game from this past season. Friday afternoon, Washington DC was hit by a debilitating blizzard that canceled all bus services and in conjunction with an additional storm on Tuesday night, would cause the federal government and Georgetown University to suspend activity for almost a week. Nevertheless, that Saturday, we had a home game against Villanova and thousands of Georgetown students, myself included, trekked across state lines in a foot of packed snow to catch the Rosslyn metro. I remember that Friday night, I had brought an unopened bottle of beer to the courtyard to take part in a snowball fight. The next morning when I left for the game, I remembered that I had brought the bottle out and forgot about it. Disappointed that I had carelessly lost a bottle, I nonetheless went to the spot where I had left it. I reached through 8 inches of snow and lo and behold, my beer was still there chilling. I drank it across the Key Bridge and it was the best beer I have ever had. My parents also showed up for this game. The crowd, though sparse because of the travel difficulties, nonetheless brought it and I thought we played as well as we did all season, shooting the lights out of the ball. The only game all season where we reached triple digits, Austin Freeman and Jason Clark had 25 and 24 points apiece.
9) December 29, 2008 Georgetown 74 Connecticut 63
This is the only game on the list here which I did not view, and also the only game from our junior year (we went 16-15 that year, which is still stunningly horrendous). It was over winter break and I was in New York visiting my brother. I was actually called with an offer of an extra ticket, and I regret turning it down. Nonetheless, we beat an undefeated UConn
8) January 21, 2008 Syracuse 62 Georgetown 64 (OT)
A lot of people have probably forgotten about this game. I remember it well though, as the game where we learned how good Syracuse's Johnny Flynn was, and how good shutdown defenders the famous sons Jeremiah Rivers and
7) March 9, 2007 Notre Dame 82 Georgetown 84 (Madison Square Garden)
And now we get to the good games. This was our freshman year in the Big East semifinals and I was lucky enough to be at Madison Square garden to watch in person. The #1 seed that year, we had polished off Villanova the previous day with a 22-0 run to start the game. Notre Dame proved feisty though, shooting very hot in the first half and leading by 13 at one point. We managed to close the halftime deficit to 2 and kept it close the entire second half.
6) January 30, 2010 Duke 77 Georgetown 89
Duke @ Georgetown was the most highly anticipated basketball game in Washington, DC all season, surpassing all Wizards games. In fact, it might have been the most nationally recognized sporting event in the capital. In the Verizon Center's first sellout of the year,
5) January 12, 2008 Connecticut 69 Georgetown 72
During a rare UConn down year, we had a lot of confidence walking into this game. Unperturbed, A.J. Price and Brookline's own Jeff Adrien held UConn close all game and Hasheem Thabeet, while unable to control Roy Hibbert, did manage to block 5 shots. The game was tied at 69 on Georgetown's final possession and our offense kinda broke down. Thabeet drifted off of Hibbert and clogged up the lane, daring anyone to drive. So instead, Hibbert chilled behind the 3 point line. When he received the ball there, without hesitation he fired it right at the basket and found nothing but net. It was a classic, "Oh no, OH YES" moment. Roy Hibbert had never even attempted a college 3 pointer (he would finish his career 2 for 2) but always had confidence in his stroke and never wavered. We went nuts beyond belief when he made that shot and UConn had absolutely no answer.
4) January 9, 2010 Connecticut 69 Georgetown 72
Its not your eyes. This is not Deja Vu. We beat UConn by the same score again, and this time they were ranked. I booked my flight back from winter break for January 8th in order to attend this game. That turned out to be a terrific decision to start off a terrific semester. A few days before dorms were even opened, the attendance was relatively sparse and it didn't look good early. UConn turned a 20-19 advantage into 34-19 and we were down at the half 40-25 only because Chris Wright scored 4 unanswered in the last minute. Austin Freeman had only 5 points at the half. However, he turned the second half into his own block party, scoring 28 points in a mix of layups, 3 pointers, putbacks, off balanced jumpers and any other method of putting ball in hoop imaginable. UConn went cold and scored only 29 in the second half, or 1 point more than Austin. The final 40 seconds of the game though were crazy and unusually uninterrupted. Down by one, Jerome Dyson missed a contested layup but UConn got the rebound. They missed a three and got the rebound again. However Chris Wright stole the ball with 13 seconds left. Instead of holding onto the ball and getting fouled, he foolishly dribbled ahead and lost the ball. Luckily the ball bounced to the man of the day, Mr. Austin Freeman, who alertly found Greg Monroe underneath the basket for an easy layup. Game, set match. Freeman was already my favorite player beforehand, but that game cemented his greatness.
3) January 26, 2008 Georgetown 58 West Virginia 57
The only true road game on this list, it is also the closest Georgetown got to a buzzer-beating win during our career. West Virginia had a strong
2) March 23, 2007 Vanderbilt 65 Georgetown 66
In East Rutherford, NJ, second seeded Georgetown faced off sixth seed Vanderbilt in a Sweet Sixteen game for the ages. Vandy, who gave eventual national champion Florida its first loss of the season, shot its threes well in the first half and led 32-24. SEC player of the year Derrick Byars led them with 17 points and 5 assists. Though Roy Hibbert shot 5 for 10 with 12 points and 10 rebounds, he struggled on defense and fouled out with almost 4 minutes left. We were left to rely on Jeff Green, who once against stepped it up, going 7 for 11 for the game. Still Vandy took a 65-64 lead with 17 seconds to play. That's when Jeff Green did his magic and according to bitter fans in Nashville, traveled on his way to the basket. Here at Georgetown though, we just marveled at Jeff Green's nimble feet as he took the Steps of God and squeezed between two defenders in a spin move, took the most off balanced shot and banked it in with 2.5 seconds to play. This is undoubtedly the best move and basket of our four years at Georgetown.
My own experience watching this game was interesting. I was part of an Ultimate trip to Long Island and we were driving on Friday night as this game was being played. We had all sworn not to look for the score or talk to anyone about the game because it was being taped for us at our destination. However at around 9pm just about everyone in our car got a text message, so I figured something was up. Still, the suspense remained on the delayed viewing and we were enjoyed our unique experience of what would be the second best game of our Georgetown career. Which brings us to...
1) March 25, 2007 Georgetown 96 North Carolina 84
Well we didn't have to wait long for the best game. I think most readers will have seen this one coming. The game that took Georgetown to its first Final Four in 2 decades and singlehandedly defining our freshman year is undoubtedly #1. UNC was also #1 and though they had 6 losses coming into the game, they were a juggernaut. The group of Wayne Ellington, Ty Lawson, Deon Thompson, Marcus Ginyard and the detestable Tyler Hansbrough would win a national championship 2 years later, and they were aided that year by
So that is our Georgetown basketball career. All told we went 87-39, had four players drafted for the
1 comment:
You left out the most important minute of play in your number 8 game (Syracuse 2008). You remember that minute. So does Andy Rautins...
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