Posted by Kevin Wessel

New Athletic Director Discusses the Road Ahead

It was fitting that Lee Reed was introduced in the ornate and scholarly Riggs Library because he said a number of times that he wants his student-athletes to have academic success. “If one student-athlete does not graduate,” Reed said, “that’s one too many.”

You can view the full press conference here.

After academic success, what are Reed’s goals? Well he didn’t tab anything in particular, rather saying he hopes to “move the university and the athletic program forward. It remains to be seen in what areas that will be.”

Reed spoke about an all-around approach he applied as athletic director at Cleveland State:

“I have a saying that I use quite often, and I think it defines what athletics is about in many ways. Great athletic programs are coach-driven, student-athlete-centered and administration assisted. What that says to me is that every single day at Georgetown University for our 750 student-athletes we will make long-term decisions that are in their best interest — from an academic standpoint, from a social standpoint and certainly from a competitive standpoint.”

Reed will be tasked with figuring out Georgetown’s facilities situation, as a number of teams play games and practice off-campus. The field hockey team cannot play on Kehoe Field, the Multi-Sport Facility (both lacrosses and football) is not complete, and the potential basketball practice facility has not gotten off the ground. Should the practice facility be built outside of McDonough on the tennis courts, men’s and women’s tennis would lose their home.

Here’s Reed’s answer regarding the practice facility:

Obviously a facility that will enhance practice opportunities for our student-athletes is something that is of importance. I need to get here and understand all that has gone on until this point to see where the plan is. I’ve heard about it. I’m excited about it, but there are so many other things that the university has that have put our coaches and student-athletes in a great place. That will be another piece, and that will be a critical piece. I’ll work with our senior management team and the fundraisers in our athletics program and advancement to move forward on raising the money that is necessary to build that facility. So yes, it is critical to us. I’m part of the team. I’m here to join the team and do what I can to bring the resources to our student-athletes and our coaches, as it relates to facilities and other areas.

Another problem for Reed will be resurrecting the football program. The Hoyas were winless in 2009 and have a 5-38 record over the past four years under Head Coach Kevin Kelly. Cleveland State, Reed’s home for the last eight years, did not have a football program.

When I was associate athletics director at Eastern Michigan University, which is a I-A school as you know, obviously I spent seven to eight years there working with the football program. That has been the primary experience that I have had with football. I’m aware of where the [Georgetown] football program is. I can’t wait to sit down with the coaching staff to kind of see where they are. I know it’s important to this community, so we’ll work with our coaching staff and we’ll work with the staff in place now to see what’s going on with the program.

The one thing you have to understand about intercollegiate athletics is it’s more art than science. Understanding what’s necessary and what’s needed to make a program successful is truly an art. It’s not something that you say we need two more things or three more things. It’s making our coaches feel comfortable. Making sure they have enough, that they know they have enough, to be successful. I’m excited for the opportunity to work with our current staff to see how I can help improve Georgetown football.

Ridiculously Early Preseason Top 25 Lists

The national championship was played less than 48 hours ago, but that hasn’t stopped some college basketball writers from cranking out 2010-2011 preseason rankings. Based on lists from Sports Illustrated’s Luke Winn (who went to work on his list Monday night after Gordon Hayward was inches from the greatest shot in tournament history), ESPN’s Andy Katz, and FoxSports’ Jeff Goodman, there could be a title game rematch.

Both Winn and Goodman put Duke at the top spot and rank Butler third, with Michigan State sandwiched in between, and Katz has Duke and Butler second and third with Purdue atop the rankings.

Where is Georgetown? Katz has the Hoyas at No. 7, Winn at 16 and Goodman has them as his first team out of the top 25 rankings. The reason for the discrepancies is Greg Monroe, who is weighing the NBA or returning for his junior season.

Goodman would likely have the Hoyas much higher, but he says “We’re betting that, ultimately, Greg Monroe leaves Georgetown.” If that is the case, the Hoyas would drop in Katz’s rankings, as he writes: “This could be a reach, but I didn’t get a sense Sunday night that Greg Monroe is definitely gone. If he does come back, the Hoyas will be in with Pitt as the co-favorites in the Big East.”

Winn appears to be hedging his bets by putting Georgetown at 16.

Jon Wilner of the Silicon Valley Mercury News isn’t hedging any bets. He ranks Georgetown No. 1 in his early preseason poll, assuming Monroe will be back. The blog Rush the Court is in love with the Hoyas even if Monroe jumps to the NBA. They have Georgetown at No. 5 and here’s what they have to say:

5. Georgetown- Assuming Monroe goes into the lottery, the Hoyas should still be loaded. The other four starters return and it wouldn’t shock us if Chris Wright and Austin Freeman both contended for Big East Player of the Year.

Here’s where the Big East teams fall in the big three preseason predictions (Winn ranked 25 teams, Katz had 35 and Goodman listed 45):

SI’s Winn ESPN’s Katz Fox’s Goodman
6. Villanova 5. Pittsburgh 7. Villanova
7. Pittsburgh 7. Georgetown 8. Pittsburgh
16. Georgetown 10. Villanova 24. Syracuse
19. Syracuse 11. West Virginia 26. Georgetown
30. Syracuse 28. Louisville
33. Louisville 39. West Virginia
43. Cincinnati

Of course, there’s a reason why these rankings are considered ridiculously early. Even when all of the potential NBA draft entrants declare their intentions, the highly touted high schoolers decide on a school and the offseason injuries get sorted out, the rankings will still be premature.

According to Syracuse’s Jim Boeheim, “premature anything isn’t good” (check the 5:30 mark of his press conference after Cuse beat Georgetown in January). In the preseason rankings right before the 2009-2010 season started, Beoheim’s Orange were 31st, and North Carolina was sixth. So while it’s fun to conjecture in the offseason, these rankings will look much different come next January.

SI’s Winn

ESPN’s Katz

Fox’s Goodman

6. Villanova

5. Pittsburgh

7. Villanova

7. Pittsburgh

7. Georgetown

8. Pittsburgh

16. Georgetown

10. Villanova

24. Syracuse

19. Syracuse

11. West Virginia

26. Georgetown

30. Syracuse

28. Louisville

33. Louisville

39. West Virginia

43. Cincinnati

Monroe Named All-American

Greg Monroe was named a third-team all-American on Monday, joining Roy Hibbert and Jeff Green as John Thompson III players to earn all-American honors.

Monroe also had company from the Big East, as five of the 15 players on the three all-American teams came from the conference. Here is the full list, courtesy of CBS Sports.

All Americans

The Big East also had three honorable mentions — Marquette’s Lazar Hayward, South Florida’s Dominique Jones and Syracuse’s Andy Rautins.

First Team
Player School Ht Wt Yr Key stats
Evan Turner Ohio State 6-7 205 Jr. 20.3 ppg, 9.2 rpg, 5.9 apg, 54.0 fg pct, 1.8 steals (64 first-place votes, 323 points)
John Wall Kentucky 6-4 195 Fr. 16.9 ppg, 4.2 rpg, 6.4 apg, 1.8 steals (62, 319)
Wesley Johnson Syracuse 6-7 205 Jr. 16.0 ppg, 8.4 rpg, 1.9 blocks (45, 280)
Scottie Reynolds Villanova 6-2 190 Sr. 18.5 ppg, 3.3 apg, 39.9 3-pt fg pct, 82.7 ft pct (32, 243)
DeMarcus Cousins Kentucky 6-11 270 Fr. 15.3 ppg, 10.1 rpg, 54.1 fg pct, 1.8 blocks (26, 205)


Familiar Faces in the Final Four

Georgetown is nowhere near the Final Four after bowing out in the first round, but the Hoyas are familiar with four remaining teams. Georgetown has played three of teams, recording wins over Butler and Duke and suffering two losses to West Virginia. Michigan St. is the only one of the group the Hoyas have not played this season.

This verifies two things people have been saying all year.

First, the Hoyas really did play one of the toughest schedules in the country. Their strength of schedule in games before the NCAA tournament was first according to RealTimeRPI.com and third according to Ken Pomeroy. That’s what happens when you play in the Big East and you schedule non-conference games against teams like Butler, Duke, Washington and Temple.

Second, the Final Four shows that Georgetown really could beat anybody this season. Had the Hoyas emerged from the Midwest “Region of Death” (their path would have been beating No. 14 Ohio, No. 6 Tennessee, No.2  Ohio St. and No. 5 Michigan St.), then they would get a rematch with Butler — who had no answer for Greg Monroe in December — in the Final Four. In the potential title game, the Hoyas would have seen Duke (who GU crushed in January) or West Virginia (who needed a kind roll off the iron on a Da’Sean Butler layup to outlast the Hoyas in the Big East final).

The Hoyas’ problem, of course, was consistency. Even if Ohio’s guards did not have the game of their lives and Georgetown did escape the first round, it’s hard to imagine the Hoyas stringing together five more quality games in a row.

So to recap: Georgetown played  a tough schedule and had the potential to beat anyone in the nation. Sure most people already knew that, but it’s nice to have a little more evidence to back it up. Just ask everybody that knew Kansas was the best team in the nation.

Hoyas Add Another Big to Class of 2010

It is still unknown if center Greg Monroe will enter the NBA draft or return for his junior season, but either way the Hoyas have bolstered their frontcourt depth for next season. According to the Washington Post, the Hoyas received a commitment from 6-foot-9 power forward Moses Abraham.

Progressive Christian basketball player Moses Abraham, a 6-foot-9 forward in the Class of 2010, orally committed Thursday to play for Georgetown. Abraham arrived in the United States last November and had been recruited by Indiana, Maryland, Tennessee and UCLA, among others.

Abraham made a two-day official visit to Indiana earlier this week, after which Joe Boncore, Abraham’s adviser, had what he called “a long talk” with Georgetown Coach John Thompson III and former Georgetown Coach John Thompson II. Following that discussion, Abraham chose to commit to the Hoyas.

Abraham, who plays AAU ball for the DC Assault, is a four-star recruit according to Rivals.com and a three-star recruit according to Scout.com.

Georgetown Opponents in the Tournament

Before the tournament, I said that Georgetown was 9-8 in games against teams in the NCAA field. Here’s how those 12 opponents did in the first weekend.

  • No. 1 Syracuse: Beat Vermont and Gonzaga to make the Sweet 16 in the West
  • No. 1 Duke: Beat Arkansas-Pine Bluff and California to make the Sweet 16 in the South
  • No. 2 West Virginia: Beat Morgan St. and Missouri to make the Sweet 16 in the East
  • No. 2 Villanova: Beat Robert Morris and lost in the second round to St. Mary’s
  • No. 3 Pittsburgh: Beat Oakland and lost in the second round to Xavier
  • No. 5 Butler: Beat UTEP and Murray St. to make the Sweet 16 in the West
  • No. 5 Temple: Lost in the first round to Cornell
  • No. 6 Notre Dame: Lost in the first round to Old Dominion
  • No. 6 Marquette: Lost in the first round to Washington
  • No. 9 Louisville: Lost in the first round to California
  • No. 11 Washington: Beat Marquette and New Mexico to make the Sweet 16 in the East
  • No. 11 Old Dominion: Beat Notre Dame and lost in the second round to Baylor

That means the Hoyas’ regular season opponents went 13-7 in the first weekend, and five opponents advanced to the Sweet 16 (with two sets of games between them: Syracuse vs. Butler and West Virginia vs. Washington). Do Georgetown fans root for the five remaining teams to prove how hard a regular season the Hoyas had, or do they root against them out of spite?