1910–11 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team

1910–11 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball
Conference Independent
1910–11 record 137
Head coach Maurice Joyce (4th year)
Captain Frank Schlosser (1st year)
Home arena Arcade Rink

The 1910–11 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team represented Georgetown University during the 1910-11 Intercollegiate Athletic Association of the United States (IAAUS) college basketball season. Maurice Joyce coached the team in his fourth and final season as head coach.[1] Georgetown was an independent and for the first time played its home games at the Arcade Rink, also known as the Arcadia and as the Arcade Auditorium, in Washington, D.C.,[2] except for an early game played on the Georgetown campus at Ryan Gymnasium. It finished the season with a record of 13-7.

Season recap

Junior forward-center Frank Schlosser led the team in scoring for the third straight year. He had his best season, playing in 19 games and scoring a career-high 247 points and averaging a career-high 13.0 points per game. His 26 points against Catholic was a school record for scoring in a single game, and he broke it later in the season with a 28-point performance against Gallaudet.[3]

Freshman forward Ronayne "Roy" Waldron was an undergraduate walk-on in an era when the varsity program centered on Georgetown University Law School students. He who was called up to the varsity to play in seven games as a reserve, otherwise playing on the Collegians, an undergraduate team that played against local teams in the Washington, D.C., area and once beat the varsity team in an intramural game this season. He scored a total of 44 points and averaged 6.2 points per game in his seven varsity games. Over the next three seasons, he would become one of the top offensive producers of the early years of Georgetown basketball.[4]

The team's 13-win total was the highest in Georgetown men's basketball history. It would not be equalled until the 1919-20 team finished at 13-1, and it would not be exceeded until the 1940-41 team won 16 games.

Joyce retired from coaching at the end of the season, having posted an overall record of 34-22 during his four seasons as head coach. He had introduced the new sport of basketball to the Washington, D.C., area in 1892, introduced basketball to Georgetown in 1906, and founded the Georgetown men's basketball program for its first season in 1906-07. He had become the Hoyas' first head coach in the 1907-08 season, the year which saw Georgetown's first great team win the mythical "Champions of the South" title.[1][3][5]

Roster

Sources[6][7]

Georgetown players did not wear numbers on their jerseys this season. The first numbered jerseys in Georgetown men's basketball history would not appear until the 1933-34 season.[8]

Name Height Weight (lbs.) Position Class Hometown Previous Team(s)
John Bariscillo N/A N/A F Jr. Asbury Park, NJ, and
Washington, DC, U.S.
Georgetown Preparatory School
(North Bethesda, MD)
Billy Cogan N/A N/A G Grad. Stud. Washington, DC, U.S. Georgetown Preparatory School
(North Bethesda, MD)
Lemoyne Graham N/A N/A F So. N/A N/A
Ed Heiskell N/A N/A G Fr. Washington, DC, U.S. N/A
Gus King N/A N/A F N/A N/A N/A
Dutch Lamberton N/A N/A C N/A N/A N/A
Bill Martin 5'8" N/A F So. Washington, DC, U.S. Georgetown Preparatory School
(North Bethesda, MD)
J. Louis Monarch N/A N/A G Jr. Boston, MA, U.S. Boston College HS
Frank Schlosser N/A N/A C Jr. Washington, DC, U.S. United States Army
Ronayne "Roy" Waldron N/A N/A F Fr. Greensboro, PA, U.S. N/A

1910–11 schedule and results

Sources[9][10][11][12]

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 against Baltimore City College, Baltimore Medical College, Staunton Military Academy, and the Washington YMCA all counted as part of Georgetown's won-loss record for 1910-11. 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.[13]

Maryland State College was the future University of Maryland.[9]

Date
Time, TV
Opponent Result Record Site
City, State
Regular Season

Sat., Dec. 3, 1910
no, no
Baltimore Medical W 2624 3OT 1-0
Ryan Gymnasium 
Washington, DC

Thu., Dec. 8, 1910
no, no
at St. John's (N.Y.) L 3566  1-1
N/A 
New York, NY

Fri., Dec. 10, 1910
no, no
at Columbia L 1249  1-2
N/A 
New York, NY

Fri., Jan. 6, 1911
no, no
New York University L 1629  1-3
Arcade Rink 
Washington, DC

Sat., Jan. 14, 1911
no, no
at Gallaudet W 6633  2-3
N/A 
Washington, DC

Tue., Jan. 17, 1911
no, no
Catholic W 5419  3-3
Arcade Rink 
Washington, DC

Sat., Jan. 21, 1911
no, no
at Loyola Maryland W 3415  4-3
Arcade Rink 
Washington, DC

Wed., Jan. 25, 1911
no, no
Gallaudet W 499  5-3
Arcade Rink 
Washington, DC

Sat., Jan. 28, 1911
no, no
at Baltimore Medical L 2836  5-4
N/A 
Baltimore, MD

Wed., Feb. 1, 1911
no, no
Catholic W 5118  6-4
Arcade Rink 
Washington, DC

Fri., Feb. 3, 1911
no, no
at Virginia L 1938  6-5
Fayerweather Gymnasium 
Charlottesville, VA

Sat., Feb. 4, 1911
no, no
at Staunton Military Academy L 1822  6-6
N/A 
Staunton, VA

Sat., Feb. 11, 1911
no, no
at Navy L 1865  6-7
Dahlgren Hall 
Annapolis, MD

Wed., Feb. 15, 1911
no, no
Maryland State W 3123  7-7
Arcade Rink 
Washington, DC

Fri., Feb. 17, 1911
no, no
Virginia W 3523  8-7
Arcade Rink 
Washington, DC

Sat., Feb. 18, 1911
no, no
at St. John's (Md.) W 2918  9-7
N/A 
Annapolis, MD

Tue., Feb. 21, 1911
no, no
Baltimore City College W 5021  10-7
Arcade Rink 
Washington, DC

N/A
no, no
Loyola Maryland W 2317  11-7
Arcade Rink 
Washington, DC

Wed., Mar. 8, 1911
no, no
Washington YMCA W 2422 OT 12-7
Arcade Rink 
Washington, DC

Thu., Mar. 16, 1911
no, no
at Washington YMCA W 2421  13-7
YMCA Hall 
Washington, DC
*Non-conference game. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 4/11/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.