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The '''1942–43 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team''' represented [[Georgetown University]] during the 1942-43 [[NCAA Division I]] [[college basketball]] season. [[Elmer Ripley]] coached it in his seventh of ten seasons as head coach; it was also the fifth and final season of his second of three stints at the helm. The team returned to [[Tech Gymnasium]] &ndash; where Georgetown had played its home games from 1929 to 1940 &ndash; on the campus of [[McKinley Technical High School]] in [[Washington, D.C.]], for its home games.<ref name="homecourt">[http://www.hoyabasketball.com/history/arenas.htm The Georgetown Basketball History Project: Home Courts]</ref> It finished with a record of 22-5 and became the first Georgetown team in history to participate in a post-season tournament, advancing to the final game of the [[1943 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament|1943 NCAA Tournament]] before losing to [[1942–43 Wyoming Cowboys basketball team|Wyoming]].
The '''1942–43 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team''' represented [[Georgetown University]] during the 1942-43 [[NCAA Division I]] [[college basketball]] season. [[Elmer Ripley]] coached it in his seventh of ten seasons as head coach; it was also the fifth and final season of his second of three stints at the helm. The team returned to [[Tech Gymnasium]] &ndash; where Georgetown had played its home games from 1929 to 1940 &ndash; on the campus of [[McKinley Technical High School]] in [[Washington, D.C.]], for its home games.<ref name="homecourt">[http://www.hoyabasketball.com/history/arenas.htm The Georgetown Basketball History Project: Home Courts]</ref> It finished with a record of 22-5 and became the first Georgetown team in history to participate in a post-season tournament, advancing to the final game of the [[1943 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament|1943 NCAA Tournament]] before losing to [[1942–43 Wyoming Cowboys basketball team|Wyoming]].


==Season recap==
The previous season, Georgetown had posted a 9-11 record, after which all but three varsity players had left school for military service in [[World War II]]. For 1942-43, Ripley fielded a young team consisting of three seniors, a junior, and ten sophomores, leading to the team being nicknamed the "Kiddie Korps" at a time when freshmen were ineligible for varsity play under [[National Collegiate Athletic Association]] (NCAA) rules. However, the sophomores were a particularly talented group Ripley had recruited primarily from the [[New York City]] area, and had led the 1941-42 freshman team to a 20-1 record. The 1942-43 team became the first Georgetown team to score 100 or more points in a game when it scored 105 in a victory over [[American Eagles men's basketball|American]] in the season{{'}}s second game, and it upset the [[Marine Corps Base Quantico|Quantico Marines]] on a steal and [[buzzer-beater]] on the road in the ninth game &ndash; according to legend, requiring an armed escort after the game because of the [[United States Marine Corps|Marines]]{{'}} anger at their loss. The team finished the regular season with a record of 19-4, and the NCAA selection committee chose Georgetown over [[Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball|Kentucky]] and [[Duke Blue Devils men's basketball|Duke]] for one of the four [[Eastern United States|Eastern]] bids in the 1943 NCAA Tournament, while the [[National Invitation Tournament]] invited the Hoyas to play in the [[1943 National Invitation Tournament|1943 NIT]] &ndash; the first invitations to a post-season tournament in Georgetown men's basketball history. The Hoyas turned down the more regionally oriented NIT &ndash; at the time as prestigious as the NCAA Tournament &ndash; in order to play in the NCAA Tournament, which included teams from a larger geographic area and would give Hoya basketball true national exposure.<ref name="believe">[http://www.hoyabasketball.com/history/hist13.htm The Georgetown Basketball History Project: Believe It...Or Not]</ref>


The [[1941–42 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team|previous season]], Georgetown had posted a 9-11 record, after which all but three varsity players had left school for military service in [[World War II]]. For 1942-43, Ripley fielded a young team consisting of three seniors, a junior, and ten sophomores, leading to the team being nicknamed the "Kiddie Korps" at a time when freshmen were ineligible for varsity play under [[National Collegiate Athletic Association]] (NCAA) rules. However, the sophomores were a particularly talented group Ripley had recruited primarily from the [[New York City]] area, and had led the 1941-42 freshman team to a 20-1 record.<ref name="believe">[http://www.hoyabasketball.com/history/hist13.htm The Georgetown Basketball History Project: Believe It...Or Not]</ref>
In the tournament quarterfinals at [[Madison Square Garden]], Georgetown faced [[New York University]], which had defeated the Hoyas 16 times in their last 21 meetings dating back to the 1921-1922 season and was the 2-to-1 favorite of New York City sportswriters, but Georgetown won in an upset, 55-36. In the semifinals, the Hoyas were 3-to-1 underdogs to [[DePaul Blue Demons men's basketball|DePaul]] under first-year head coach [[Ray Meyer]] and led by their dominating [[Center (basketball)|center]] [[George Mikan]]. Following Ripley{{'}}s strategy for the game, Georgetown [[Guard (basketball)|guards]] [[Dan Kraus]] and [[Billy Hassett]] kept Mikan busy in the middle while Hoya center [[John Mahnken]] scored with outside shooting, and Georgetown closed to 28-23 when guard Lloyd Potolicchio scored on a 50-foot (15-meter) shot at the buzzer at the end of the first half. The Hoyas pulled ahead in the second half, but Mahnken fouled out with 10 minutes left. Ripley put [[Henry Hyde]], seven inches shorter than Mikan, in to play center. Hyde managed to keep Mikan in check, and Georgetown upset DePaul 53-49, prompting a Hoya fan to shout "[[Ripley's Believe It Or Not!|Believe it or not...by Ripley!]]", a quote which received wide publicity.<ref name="believe"/>


One of the talented sophomores to join the varsity from the freshman team this season was [[Forward (basketball)|forward]] [[Andy Kostecka]]. In the season{['}}s second game, the 1942-43 squad became the first Georgetown team to score 100 or more points in a game when it defeated [[American Eagles men's basketball|American]] 105-39 &ndash; a margin of victory no Georgetown team would exceed until the [[1986–87 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team|1986-87]] team beat [[Saint Leo Lions|Saint Leo]] 126-51 &ndash; and Kostecka scored a season-high 22 points in the game. He also had strong scoring performances against [[Temple Owls men's basketball|Temple]], [[Catholic University Cardinals|Catholic]], [[Syracuse Orange men;s basketball|Syracuse]], and [[Penn State Nittany Lions men's basketball|Penn State]], and by the middle of the season led the team in scoring and was averaging 15 points per game. At the end of February 1943, Kostecka left school for World War II military service, not to return until [[1946–47 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team|1946-47 season]], but nonetheless was the team{{'}}s second-highest scorer for the year.<ref name="believe"/><ref name="kostecka">[http://www.hoyabasketball.com/features/top100/a_kostecka.htm The Georgetown Basketball History Project: The Top 100: 25. Andy Kostecka]</ref>
Georgetown faced Wyoming, led by center [[Milo Komenich]] and [[Forward (basketball)|forward]] [[Ken Sailors]], in the final, which had a smaller crowd than expected because of the New York City{{'}}s areas focus on [[St. John's Red Storm men's basketball|St. John's]], which won the NIT; it was also the only NCAA championship game in history which was not filmed for posterity. Georgetown led 31-26 with six minutes to play, but Wyoming then scored 11 straight points to take a 37-31 lead. The Hoyas closed to 37-34, but Wyoming finished the game with nine unanswered points to win 46-31 and take the championship. The followng evening, as a fundraiser for the [[American Red Cross]], the finalists of the NCAA Tournament and NIT took part in the [[Sportwriters Invitational Tournament]], in which the two tournament champions, Wyoming and St. John{{'}}s, and the two runners-up, Georgetown and [[Toledo Rockets men's basketball|Toledo]], played each other. Wyoming beat St. John's 52-47 and the Hoyas defeated Toledo 54-40 to close out the season.<ref name="believe"/>


Later in 1943, Georgetown suspended all of its athletic programs for the duration of [[World War II]]. With no basketball team to coach, Ripley left Georgetown to coach at [[Columbia Lions men's basketball|Columbia]], and the collegiate careers of most of Georgetown{{'}}s players came to an end, while a few who retained eligibility left the school to enter military service, planning to return to school and resume basketball after the war.<ref name="believe"/><ref name="coach">[http://www.hoyabasketball.com/coaches/bb-coach.htm The Georgetown Basketball History Project: Head Coaches]</ref>
Sophomore [[Center (basketball)|center]] [[John Mahnken]] also joined the varsity from the freshman team, so impressing the fellow sophomore center Sylvester "Stretch" Goedde that Goedde gave up hope of competing with Mahnken for playing time and left the team after three games to return to his native [[Ohio]] to pursue a [[Minor league baseball|minor-league]] [[baseball]] career. Mahnken scored 25 points against Syracuse and averaged 16 points per game in the later part of the season and 15.4 points per game overall. <ref name="mahnken">[http://www.hoyabasketball.com/features/top100/j_mahnken.htm The Georgetown Basketball History Project: The Top 100: 16. John Mahnken]</ref>


One of the more notable games of the regular season came in January 1943 against the [[Marine Corps Base Quantico|Quantico Marines]], a [[United States Marine Corps]] team composed of former college players favored to beat the Hoyas. The Marines led through most of the game, but Georgetown mounted a comeback to close to 52-48 with two minutes left in the game, and Ripley put talented sophomore [[point guard]] [[Dan Kraus]] back into the game. Mahnken used a head fake to open up a shot for himself and then scored to make the score 52-50. The Marines did not score on their next possession, and sophomore Georgetown guard Jim "Miggs" Reily made a set shot to tie the game at 52-52. Kraus then stole the ball from Quantico on the Marines{{'}} final possession; wirth time running out, Ripley shouted "Shoot!", and Kraus scored on a 15-foot (4.6-meter) shot as time expired to give the Hoyas a 54-52 upset win. According to legend, requiring the Georgetown team required an armed escort after the game for protection against Marines angered by the last-second loss.<ref name="believe"/><ref name="kraus">[http://www.hoyabasketball.com/features/top100/d_kraus.htm The Georgetown Basketball History Project: The Top 100: 26. Dan Kraus]</ref>
Georgetown would have no basketball program during the 1943-44 and 1944-45 seasons. After World War II ended in August 1945, the school would resume athletic competition and put together a varsity men{{'}}s basketball team for the [[1945–46 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team|1945-46 season]]. After two years at Columbia, Ripley had committed to coach [[Notre Dame Fighting Irish men's basketball|Notre Dame]] in 1945-46, and those Georgetown players from the 1942-43 team retaining eligibility to play had not yet returned from military service; Ripley and his eligible players from 1942-43 would not return to Georgetown until the [[1946–47 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team|1946-47 season]].<ref name="coach"/>

The team finished the regular season with a record of 19-4, and the NCAA selection committee chose Georgetown over [[Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball|Kentucky]] and [[Duke Blue Devils men's basketball|Duke]] for one of the four [[Eastern United States|Eastern]] bids in the 1943 NCAA Tournament, while the [[National Invitation Tournament]] invited the Hoyas to play in the [[1943 National Invitation Tournament|1943 NIT]] &ndash; the first invitations to a post-season tournament in Georgetown men's basketball history. The Hoyas turned down the more regionally oriented NIT &ndash; at the time as prestigious as the NCAA Tournament &ndash; in order to play in the NCAA Tournament, which included teams from a larger geographic area and would give Hoya basketball true national exposure.<ref name="believe"/>

In the tournament quarterfinals at [[Madison Square Garden]], Georgetown faced [[New York University]], which had defeated the Hoyas 16 times in their last 21 meetings dating back to the 1921-1922 season and was the 2-to-1 favorite of New York City sportswriters, but Georgetown won in an upset, 55-36, with Mahnken scoring 18 points for the Hoyas. In the semifinals, the Hoyas were 3-to-1 underdogs to [[DePaul Blue Demons men's basketball|DePaul]] under first-year head coach [[Ray Meyer]] and led by their dominating [[Center (basketball)|center]] [[George Mikan]]. Following Ripley{{'}}s strategy for the game, Georgetown sophomore guards Dan Kraus and [[Billy Hassett]] kept Mikan busy in the middle while Hoya center Mahnken scored with outside shooting. The plan did succeed in allowing Georgetown to score, but also left Mikan fairly free to score for DePaul at the other end; despite this, Georgetown closed to 28-23 when Hoya guard Lloyd Potolicchio scored on a 50-foot (15-meter) shot at the buzzer at the end of the first half. The Hoyas pulled ahead in the second half, but Mahnken fouled out with 10 minutes left. Ripley put [[Henry Hyde]], seven inches shorter than Mikan, in to play center. Hyde managed to keep Mikan in check, and Georgetown upset DePaul 53-49, prompting a Hoya fan to shout "[[Ripley's Believe It Or Not!|Believe it or not...by Ripley!]]", a quote which received wide publicity.<ref name="believe"/> Hassett, a very reliable passer and outside shooter for the Hoyas, had 11 points in the game.<ref name="believe"/><ref name="mahnken"/><ref name="hassett">[http://www.hoyabasketball.com/features/top100/d_kraus.htm The Georgetown Basketball History Project: The Top 100: 69. Billy Hassett]</ref>

Georgetown faced Wyoming, led by center [[Milo Komenich]] and [[Forward (basketball)|forward]] [[Ken Sailors]], in the final, which had a smaller crowd than expected because of the New York City{{'}}s areas focus on [[St. John's Red Storm men's basketball|St. John's]], which won the NIT; it was also the only NCAA championship game in history which was not filmed for posterity. Although Wyomins{{'}}s defense held Mahnken to six points in the game, Georgetown led 31-26 with six minutes to play &ndash; but Wyoming then scored 11 straight points to take a 37-31 lead. The Hoyas closed to 37-34, but Wyoming finished the game with nine unanswered points to win 46-31 and take the championship. The following evening, as a fundraiser for the [[American Red Cross]], the finalists of the NCAA Tournament and NIT took part in the [[Sportwriters Invitational Tournament]], in which the two tournament champions, Wyoming and St. John{{'}}s, and the two runners-up, Georgetown and [[Toledo Rockets men's basketball|Toledo]], played each other. Wyoming beat St. John's 52-47 and the Hoyas defeated Toledo 54-40 to close out the season.<ref name="believe"/>

The performance of Georgetown{{'}}s young 1942-43 team raised hopes for an extended period of college basketball success for the school. Later in 1943, however, Georgetown suspended all of its athletic programs for the duration of [[World War II]]. With no basketball team to coach, Ripley left Georgetown to coach at [[Columbia Lions men's basketball|Columbia]], and the collegiate careers of many of Georgetown{{'}}s players came to an end. Mahnken served in the military, then pursued a professional basketball career instead of returning to Georgetown. Hassett transferred to [[Notre Dame Fighting Irish men's basketball|Notre Dame]] and completed his college basketball career there.<ref name="believe"/>>ref name="mahnken"/><ref name="hassett"/><ref name="coach">[http://www.hoyabasketball.com/coaches/bb-coach.htm The Georgetown Basketball History Project: Head Coaches]</ref>

Georgetown would have no basketball program during the 1943-44 and 1944-45 seasons. After World War II ended in August 1945, the school would resume athletic competition and put together a varsity men{{'}}s basketball team for the [[1945–46 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team|1945-46 season]]. After two years at Columbia, Ripley had committed to coach [[Notre Dame Fighting Irish men's basketball|Notre Dame]] in 1945-46, and those Georgetown players from the 1942-43 team retaining eligibility to play &ndash; notably Kostecka, Kraus, Potolicchio, and Reilly &ndash; had not yet returned from military service. Georgetown would field a virtually all-walk-on team in 1945-46, and Ripley and his eligible players from 1942-43 would not return to Georgetown until the [[1946–47 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team|1946-47 season]].<ref name="coach"/>


The Hoyas would not appear in a postseason tournament again until the [[1952–53 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team|1952-53 team]] played in the [[National Invitation Tournament]] (NIT) in [[1953 National Invitation Tournament|1953]], and they would not take part in the [[NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament|NCAA Tournament]] again until the [[1974–75 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team|1974-75 team]] played in the [[1975 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament|1975 tournament]]. The 1942-43 team was the only Georgetown men{{'}}s team to win a game in a post-season tournament until the [[1977–78 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team|1977-78 team]]{{'}}s fourth-place finish in the [[1978 National Invitation Tournament|1978 NIT]], and the only one to win a game in the NCAA Tournament until the [[1979–80 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team|1979-80 team]] reached the East Region final of the [[1980 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament|1980 NCAA Tournament]].
The Hoyas would not appear in a postseason tournament again until the [[1952–53 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team|1952-53 team]] played in the [[National Invitation Tournament]] (NIT) in [[1953 National Invitation Tournament|1953]], and they would not take part in the [[NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament|NCAA Tournament]] again until the [[1974–75 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team|1974-75 team]] played in the [[1975 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament|1975 tournament]]. The 1942-43 team was the only Georgetown men{{'}}s team to win a game in a post-season tournament until the [[1977–78 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team|1977-78 team]]{{'}}s fourth-place finish in the [[1978 National Invitation Tournament|1978 NIT]], and the only one to win a game in the NCAA Tournament until the [[1979–80 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team|1979-80 team]] reached the East Region final of the [[1980 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament|1980 NCAA Tournament]].


==Roster==
==Roster==
Sources<ref>[http://www.hoyabasketball.com/players/roster-40s.htm#1943 The Georgetown Basketball History Project: Rosters 1940-41 to 1949-1950]</ref><ref>[http://www.hoyabasketball.com/players/numbers.htm The Georgetown Basketball History Project: Player Directory: Jersey Numbers]</ref>
Sources<ref name="kostecka"/><ref name="mahnken"/><ref name="kraus"/><ref name="hassett"/><ref>[http://www.hoyabasketball.com/players/roster-40s.htm#1943 The Georgetown Basketball History Project: Rosters 1940-41 to 1949-1950]</ref><ref>[http://www.hoyabasketball.com/players/numbers.htm The Georgetown Basketball History Project: Player Directory: Jersey Numbers]</ref>


After World War II military service, sophomore guards [[Dan Kraus]], Lloyd Potolicchio, and "Miggs" Reilly and sophomore forward [[Andy Kostecka]] all returned to play on the [[1946–47 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team|1946-47 team]].<ref>[http://www.hoyabasketball.com/players/roster-40s.htm#1947 The Georgetown Basketball History Project: Rosters 1940-41 to 1949-1950]</ref> Junior guard Bob Duffey was [[killed in action]] in [[Germany]] on November 13, 1944, during his World War II service.<ref name="believe"/><ref>[http://www.hoyabasketball.com/history/wartime.htm The Georgetown Basketball History Project: Wartime]</ref>
After World War II military service, sophomore guards [[Dan Kraus]], Lloyd Potolicchio, and "Miggs" Reilly and sophomore forward [[Andy Kostecka]] all returned to play on the [[1946–47 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team|1946-47 team]].<ref>[http://www.hoyabasketball.com/players/roster-40s.htm#1947 The Georgetown Basketball History Project: Rosters 1940-41 to 1949-1950]</ref> Junior guard Bob Duffey was [[killed in action]] in [[Germany]] on November 13, 1944, during his World War II service.<ref name="believe"/><ref>[http://www.hoyabasketball.com/history/wartime.htm The Georgetown Basketball History Project: Wartime]</ref>
Line 92: Line 102:
|[[Andy Kostecka]]
|[[Andy Kostecka]]
|6'3"
|6'3"
|
|200
|[[Forward (basketball)|F]]
|[[Forward (basketball)|F]]
|So.
|So.
Line 101: Line 111:
|Lloyd Potolicchio
|Lloyd Potolicchio
|5'10"
|5'10"
|
|N/A
|[[Guard (basketball)|G]]
|[[Guard (basketball)|G]]
|So.
|So.
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|[[Billy Hassett]]
|[[Billy Hassett]]
|6'1"
|6'1"
|
|180
|[[Guard (basketball)|G]]
|[[Guard (basketball)|G]]
|So.
|So.
Line 119: Line 129:
|[[Henry Hyde]]
|[[Henry Hyde]]
|6'3"
|6'3"
|
|N/A
|[[Forward (basketball)|F]]/[[Center (basketball)|C]]
|[[Forward (basketball)|F]]/[[Center (basketball)|C]]
|So.
|So.
Line 128: Line 138:
|[[Dan Kraus]]
|[[Dan Kraus]]
|6'0"
|6'0"
|
|175
|[[Guard (basketball)|G]]
|[[Guard (basketball)|G]]
|So.
|So.
Line 135: Line 145:
|-
|-
|9
|9
|Sylvester Goedde
|Sylvester "Stretch" Goedde
|6'8"
|6'8"
|
|N/A
|[[Center (basketball)|C]]
|[[Center (basketball)|C]]
|So.
|So.
Line 146: Line 156:
|Bill Feeny
|Bill Feeny
|N/A
|N/A
|
|N/A
|[[Guard (basketball)|G]]
|[[Guard (basketball)|G]]
|So.
|So.
Line 155: Line 165:
|Jim "Miggs" Reilly
|Jim "Miggs" Reilly
|5'6"
|5'6"
|
|N/A
|[[Guard (basketball)|G]]
|[[Guard (basketball)|G]]
|So.
|So.
Line 164: Line 174:
|Lane O'Donnell
|Lane O'Donnell
|N/A
|N/A
|
|N/A
|[[Forward (basketball)|F]]
|[[Forward (basketball)|F]]
|Sr.
|Sr.
Line 173: Line 183:
|Bob Duffey
|Bob Duffey
|N/A
|N/A
|
|N/A
|[[Guard (basketball)|G]]
|[[Guard (basketball)|G]]
|Jr.
|Jr.
Line 182: Line 192:
|Dan Gabbianelli
|Dan Gabbianelli
|N/A
|N/A
|
|N/A
|[[Forward (basketball)|F]]
|[[Forward (basketball)|F]]
|Sr.
|Sr.
Line 191: Line 201:
|Ed Lavin
|Ed Lavin
|N/A
|N/A
|
|N/A
|[[Forward (basketball)|F]]
|[[Forward (basketball)|F]]
|So.
|So.
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|Frank Finnerty
|Frank Finnerty
|N/A
|N/A
|
|N/A
|[[Forward (basketball)|F]]
|[[Forward (basketball)|F]]
|Sr.
|Sr.

Revision as of 04:13, 19 February 2014

{{{year}}} [[{{{team}}} football]]

The 1942–43 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team represented Georgetown University during the 1942-43 NCAA Division I college basketball season. Elmer Ripley coached it in his seventh of ten seasons as head coach; it was also the fifth and final season of his second of three stints at the helm. The team returned to Tech Gymnasium – where Georgetown had played its home games from 1929 to 1940 – on the campus of McKinley Technical High School in Washington, D.C., for its home games.[1] It finished with a record of 22-5 and became the first Georgetown team in history to participate in a post-season tournament, advancing to the final game of the 1943 NCAA Tournament before losing to Wyoming.

Season recap

The previous season, Georgetown had posted a 9-11 record, after which all but three varsity players had left school for military service in World War II. For 1942-43, Ripley fielded a young team consisting of three seniors, a junior, and ten sophomores, leading to the team being nicknamed the "Kiddie Korps" at a time when freshmen were ineligible for varsity play under National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) rules. However, the sophomores were a particularly talented group Ripley had recruited primarily from the New York City area, and had led the 1941-42 freshman team to a 20-1 record.[2]

One of the talented sophomores to join the varsity from the freshman team this season was forward Andy Kostecka. In the season{['}}s second game, the 1942-43 squad became the first Georgetown team to score 100 or more points in a game when it defeated American 105-39 – a margin of victory no Georgetown team would exceed until the 1986-87 team beat Saint Leo 126-51 – and Kostecka scored a season-high 22 points in the game. He also had strong scoring performances against Temple, Catholic, Syracuse, and Penn State, and by the middle of the season led the team in scoring and was averaging 15 points per game. At the end of February 1943, Kostecka left school for World War II military service, not to return until 1946-47 season, but nonetheless was the team's second-highest scorer for the year.[2][3]

Sophomore center John Mahnken also joined the varsity from the freshman team, so impressing the fellow sophomore center Sylvester "Stretch" Goedde that Goedde gave up hope of competing with Mahnken for playing time and left the team after three games to return to his native Ohio to pursue a minor-league baseball career. Mahnken scored 25 points against Syracuse and averaged 16 points per game in the later part of the season and 15.4 points per game overall. [4]

One of the more notable games of the regular season came in January 1943 against the Quantico Marines, a United States Marine Corps team composed of former college players favored to beat the Hoyas. The Marines led through most of the game, but Georgetown mounted a comeback to close to 52-48 with two minutes left in the game, and Ripley put talented sophomore point guard Dan Kraus back into the game. Mahnken used a head fake to open up a shot for himself and then scored to make the score 52-50. The Marines did not score on their next possession, and sophomore Georgetown guard Jim "Miggs" Reily made a set shot to tie the game at 52-52. Kraus then stole the ball from Quantico on the Marines' final possession; wirth time running out, Ripley shouted "Shoot!", and Kraus scored on a 15-foot (4.6-meter) shot as time expired to give the Hoyas a 54-52 upset win. According to legend, requiring the Georgetown team required an armed escort after the game for protection against Marines angered by the last-second loss.[2][5]

The team finished the regular season with a record of 19-4, and the NCAA selection committee chose Georgetown over Kentucky and Duke for one of the four Eastern bids in the 1943 NCAA Tournament, while the National Invitation Tournament invited the Hoyas to play in the 1943 NIT – the first invitations to a post-season tournament in Georgetown men's basketball history. The Hoyas turned down the more regionally oriented NIT – at the time as prestigious as the NCAA Tournament – in order to play in the NCAA Tournament, which included teams from a larger geographic area and would give Hoya basketball true national exposure.[2]

In the tournament quarterfinals at Madison Square Garden, Georgetown faced New York University, which had defeated the Hoyas 16 times in their last 21 meetings dating back to the 1921-1922 season and was the 2-to-1 favorite of New York City sportswriters, but Georgetown won in an upset, 55-36, with Mahnken scoring 18 points for the Hoyas. In the semifinals, the Hoyas were 3-to-1 underdogs to DePaul under first-year head coach Ray Meyer and led by their dominating center George Mikan. Following Ripley's strategy for the game, Georgetown sophomore guards Dan Kraus and Billy Hassett kept Mikan busy in the middle while Hoya center Mahnken scored with outside shooting. The plan did succeed in allowing Georgetown to score, but also left Mikan fairly free to score for DePaul at the other end; despite this, Georgetown closed to 28-23 when Hoya guard Lloyd Potolicchio scored on a 50-foot (15-meter) shot at the buzzer at the end of the first half. The Hoyas pulled ahead in the second half, but Mahnken fouled out with 10 minutes left. Ripley put Henry Hyde, seven inches shorter than Mikan, in to play center. Hyde managed to keep Mikan in check, and Georgetown upset DePaul 53-49, prompting a Hoya fan to shout "Believe it or not...by Ripley!", a quote which received wide publicity.[2] Hassett, a very reliable passer and outside shooter for the Hoyas, had 11 points in the game.[2][4][6]

Georgetown faced Wyoming, led by center Milo Komenich and forward Ken Sailors, in the final, which had a smaller crowd than expected because of the New York City's areas focus on St. John's, which won the NIT; it was also the only NCAA championship game in history which was not filmed for posterity. Although Wyomins's defense held Mahnken to six points in the game, Georgetown led 31-26 with six minutes to play – but Wyoming then scored 11 straight points to take a 37-31 lead. The Hoyas closed to 37-34, but Wyoming finished the game with nine unanswered points to win 46-31 and take the championship. The following evening, as a fundraiser for the American Red Cross, the finalists of the NCAA Tournament and NIT took part in the Sportwriters Invitational Tournament, in which the two tournament champions, Wyoming and St. John's, and the two runners-up, Georgetown and Toledo, played each other. Wyoming beat St. John's 52-47 and the Hoyas defeated Toledo 54-40 to close out the season.[2]

The performance of Georgetown's young 1942-43 team raised hopes for an extended period of college basketball success for the school. Later in 1943, however, Georgetown suspended all of its athletic programs for the duration of World War II. With no basketball team to coach, Ripley left Georgetown to coach at Columbia, and the collegiate careers of many of Georgetown's players came to an end. Mahnken served in the military, then pursued a professional basketball career instead of returning to Georgetown. Hassett transferred to Notre Dame and completed his college basketball career there.[2]>ref name="mahnken"/>[6][7]

Georgetown would have no basketball program during the 1943-44 and 1944-45 seasons. After World War II ended in August 1945, the school would resume athletic competition and put together a varsity men's basketball team for the 1945-46 season. After two years at Columbia, Ripley had committed to coach Notre Dame in 1945-46, and those Georgetown players from the 1942-43 team retaining eligibility to play – notably Kostecka, Kraus, Potolicchio, and Reilly – had not yet returned from military service. Georgetown would field a virtually all-walk-on team in 1945-46, and Ripley and his eligible players from 1942-43 would not return to Georgetown until the 1946-47 season.[7]

The Hoyas would not appear in a postseason tournament again until the 1952-53 team played in the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) in 1953, and they would not take part in the NCAA Tournament again until the 1974-75 team played in the 1975 tournament. The 1942-43 team was the only Georgetown men's team to win a game in a post-season tournament until the 1977-78 team's fourth-place finish in the 1978 NIT, and the only one to win a game in the NCAA Tournament until the 1979-80 team reached the East Region final of the 1980 NCAA Tournament.

Roster

Sources[3][4][5][6][8][9]

After World War II military service, sophomore guards Dan Kraus, Lloyd Potolicchio, and "Miggs" Reilly and sophomore forward Andy Kostecka all returned to play on the 1946-47 team.[10] Junior guard Bob Duffey was killed in action in Germany on November 13, 1944, during his World War II service.[2][11]

Sophomore center-forward Henry Hyde later became a 16-term United States Congressman from Illinois, representing the state's 6th Congressional District in the United States House of Representatives from 1975 to 2007.[12]

# Name Height Weight (lbs.) Position Class Hometown Previous Team(s)
3 John Mahnken 6'9" C So. West New York, NJ, U.S. Memorial High School
4 Andy Kostecka 6'3" 200 F So. Bloomfield, NJ, U.S. Saint Benedict's Preparatory School
5 Lloyd Potolicchio 5'10" N/A G So. Staten Island, NY, U.S. Curtis HS
6 Billy Hassett 6'1" 180 G So. New York, NY, U.S. La Salle Academy
7 Henry Hyde 6'3" N/A F/C So. Chicago, IL, U.S. St. George HS
8 Dan Kraus 6'0" 175 G So. New York, NY, U.S. DeWitt Clinton HS
9 Sylvester "Stretch" Goedde 6'8" N/A C So. Vaughnsville, OH, U.S. Vaughnsville HS
10 Bill Feeny N/A N/A G So. New York, NY, U.S. N/A
11 Jim "Miggs" Reilly 5'6" N/A G So. New York, NY, U.S. St. Peter's Boys HS
12 Lane O'Donnell N/A N/A F Sr. Washington, DC, U.S. Gonzaga College HS
13 Bob Duffey N/A N/A G Jr. N/A N/A
15 Dan Gabbianelli N/A N/A F Sr. Weehawken, NJ, U.S. Weehawken HS
16 Ed Lavin N/A N/A F So. N/A N/A
17 Frank Finnerty N/A N/A F Sr. Montclair, NJ, U.S. Blair Academy

1942–43 schedule and results

Sources[13][14][15]

It was common practice at this time for colleges and universities to include non-collegiate opponents in their schedules, with the games recognized as part of their official record for the season, and the games played against United States Army teams from Aberdeen Proving Ground and Fort Lee, a United States Navy team from Norfolk Naval Base, and a United States Marine Corps team from Marine Corps Base Quantico therefore counted as part of Georgetown's won-loss record for 1942-43. It was not until 1952, after the completion of the 1951-52 season, that the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) ruled that colleges and universities could no longer count games played against non-collegiate opponents in their annual won-loss records.[16]

Date
time, TV
Opponent Result Record Site (attendance)
city, state
Tue., Dec. 8, 1942
no, no
Western Maryland W 75–34  1-0
Tech Gymnasium (N/A)
Washington, DC
Thu., Dec. 10, 1942
no, no
at American W 105–39  2-0
Clendenen Gymnasium (N/A)
Washington, DC
Mon., Dec. 14, 1942
no, no
Aberdeen Proving Ground W 48–39  3-0
Tech Gymnasium (N/A)
Washington, DC
Fri., Jan. 1, 1943
no, no
Scranton W 58–43  4-0
Tech Gymnasium (N/A)
Washington, DC
Sat., Jan. 2, 1943
no, no
St. Bonaventure W 56–41  5-0
Tech Gymnasium (N/A)
Washington, DC
Wed., Jan. 6, 1943
no, no
George Washington W 55–41  6-0
Tech Gymnasium (N/A)
Washington, DC
Fri. Jan. 8, 1943
no, no
at Camp Lee W 49–31  7-0
Camp Lee Gymnasium (N/A)
Petersburg, VA
Sat., Jan. 9, 1943
no, no
at Norfolk Naval Base L 42–57  7-1
Norfolk Base Gymnasium (N/A)
Naval Station Norfolk, VA
Mon., Jan. 11, 1943
no, no
at Quantico Marines W 54–52  8-1
Quantico Gymnasium (N/A)
Marine Corps Base Quantico, VA
Wed., Jan. 13, 1943
no, no
Temple L 51–52  8-2
Tech Gymnasium (N/A)
Washington, DC
Sat., Jan. 16, 1943
no, no
Catholic W 71–45  9-2
Tech Gymnasium (N/A)
Washington, DC
Wed., Jan. 20, 1943
no, no
Loyola Maryland W 68–42  10-2
Tech Gymnasium (N/A)
Washington, DC
Sat., Jan. 23, 1943
no, no
at Army W 54–35  11-2
Hayes Gymnasium (N/A)
West Point, NY
Mon., Feb. 1, 1943
no, no
Syracuse W 65–38  12-2
Tech Gymnasium (N/A)
Washington, DC
Thu., Feb. 4, 1943
no, no
Penn State W 51–35  13-2
Tech Gymnasium (N/A)
Washington, DC
Thu., Feb. 11, 1943
no, no
Fordham W 52–39  14-2
Tech Gymnasium (N/A)
Washington, DC
Sat., Feb. 20, 1943
no, no
at Maryland W 46–36  15-2
Ritchie Coliseum (N/A)
College Park, MD
Mon., Feb. 22, 1943
no, no
at St. John's L 43–65  15-3
Madison Square Garden (N/A)
New York, NY
Sat., Feb. 27, 1943
no, no
at Temple W 46–40  16-3
Philadelphia Convention Hall (N/A)
Philadelphia, PA
Mon., Mar. 1, 1943
no, no
at George Washington W 53–30  17-3
Tech Gymnasium (N/A)
Washington, DC
Wed., Mar. 3, 1943
no, no
at Colgate W 73–59  18-3
Huntington Gymnasium (N/A)
Hamilton, NY
Thu., Mar. 4, 1943
no, no
at Syracuse W 47–46  19-3
Archbold Gymnasium (N/A)
Syracuse, NY
Sat., Mar. 6, 1943
no, no
at Penn State L 37–55  19-4
Recreation Hall (N/A)
State College, PA
NCAA Tournament
Wed., Mar. 24, 1943
no, no
vs. New York University
Quarterfinal
W 55–36  20-4
Madison Square Garden (N/A)
New York, NY
Thu., Mar. 25, 1943
no, no
vs. DePaul
Semifinal
W 53–49  21-4
Madison Square Garden (14,085[2])
New York, NY
Tue., Mar. 30, 1943
no, no
vs. Wyoming
Final
L 34–46  21-5
Madison Square Garden (13,206[2])
New York, NY
Sportswriters Invitational Tournament
Wed., Mar. 31, 1943
no, no
vs. Toledo W 54–40  22-5
Madison Square Garden (N/A)
New York, NY
*Non-conference game. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses.

References