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    You are at:Home » Legendary Georgetown coach John Thompson Jr. dies at age 78
    Religion

    Legendary Georgetown coach John Thompson Jr. dies at age 78

    September 2, 202010 Mins Read1 Views
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    By Myron Medcalf, ESPN Staff Writer

      Legendary Georgetown coach John Thompson Jr., known simply as “Big John” throughout college basketball, has died at age 78.

    Thompson, who led Georgetown to the 1984 national championship, built the pro-gram into a juggernaut, taking the Hoyas to three Final Fours in the 1980s while also winning

    seven Big East titles and lea-ding the 1988 United States national team to a bronze medal in the Olympics.

    “We are heartbroken to share the news of the passing of our father, John Thompson, Jr,” the Thompson family said in a statement released by Georgetown. “Our father was an inspiration to many and devoted his life to developing young people not simply on, but most importantly, off the basketball court. He is revered as a historic shepherd of the sport, dedicated to the welfare of his community above all else.

    “However, for us, his greatest legacy remains as a father, grandfather, uncle, and friend. More than a coach, he was our foundation. More than a legend, he was the voice in our ear everyday. We will miss him but are grounded in the assurance that we carry his faith and determination in us. We will cherish forever his strength, courage, wisdom and boldness, as well as his unfailing love.

    “We know that he will be deeply missed by many and our family appreciates your condolences and prayers. But don’t worry about him, be-cause as he always liked to say, ‘Big Ace is cool.’”

    Thompson’s coaching legacy includes the recruitment and development of four players in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame: Patrick Ewing, Alonzo Mourning, Dikembe Mutombo and Allen Iverson.

    “    This is a person that, when I came to college — I was 18 — helped me to grow,” Ewing, the current Georgetown coach, said during Big East media day last October. “Even though my mom and dad were always there, he was always a person I could pick up the phone and call if I had a problem or if I had a question.”

    Thompson, who was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1999, was a pioneer credited with opening the door for a generation of minority coaches./ His national title run in 1984 was the first by a Black head coach and altered the perception of Black coaches.

    Never afraid to speak his mind, Thompson walked off the court in 1989 before a game against Boston College to protest Proposition 42, a NCAA measure that would ban academically ineligible freshmen from receiving scholarships. Thompson said he protested because he believed the proposition aimed to limit opportunities for minority students.

    “I’ve done this because, out of frustration, you’re limited in your options of what you can do in response to something I felt was very wrong,” Thompson told The Washington Post that day. “This is my way of bringing attention to a rule a lot of people were not aware of — one which will affect a great many individuals. I did it to bring attention to the issue in hopes of getting [NCAA members] to take another look at what they’ve done, and if they feel it unjust, change the rule.”

    Born Sept. 2, 1941, Thompson starred for Archbishop Carroll High School in Washington before leading Providence to the 1963 NIT championship and serving as captain for the school’s first NCAA tournament team in 1964.

    The Boston Celtics’ Red Auerbach selected 6-foot-10 Thompson in the third round of the 1964 NBA draft. Thompson was used sparingly as backup to Bill Russell but won championships with the franchise in 1965 and 1966.

    Thompson said Auerbach influenced his coaching style.

    “I’ve never been around a man who managed men in my life any better than Red Auerbach,” Thompson told NBA.com after Auerbach’s death in 2006. “Particularly, the egos he had to deal with, the cross cultures he had to deal with and all the variations in the kinds of people that I saw him be associated with.”

    Thompson’s stint in the NBA ended after two seasons. He had an opportunity to join the Chicago Bulls but chose to pursue an opportunity to work with kids.

    He accepted a post as the head coach at the prestigious St. Anthony Catholic School in Washington in 1966. He was 122-28 during his six-year prep coaching career before Georgetown hired him in 1972.

    The Hoyas had won three games the season before.

    “When I was hired,” Thompson told Sports Illustrated in 1980, “I had a talk with the president [then the Rev. Robert Henle, S.J.]. All that Father Henle said about basketball was that he hoped I could take a team to the NIT every now and then. I thought to myself that I’d eat my hat if I couldn’t do better than that. But I didn’t say anything except,/  ‘Yes, sir, I’ll try,’ because you don’t want to set yourself up.”

    Thompson exceeded those expectations. By 1975, he had led the Hoyas to the NCAA tournament for the first time in 32 years.

    It wasn’t without controversy. A sign in the rafters of McDonough Arena that season read, “Thompson the n—— flop must go.” Georgetown officials removed it. The Hoyas won their next 10 games and earned a trip to the NCAA tournament as Thompson defied his critics.

    Georgetown basketball teams were mostly white before Thompson’s reign. His teams were predominantly Black, which added to the criticism he faced from those who thought he had an issue with white players, an accusation Thompson repeatedly denied.

    Winning became the dominant theme in his career. It all started with Ewing, who dominated college basketball throughout a four-year career that included a national title game in 1982, a national championship in 1984 and another trip to the title game in 1985.

    Dick Vitale tells two stories of John Thompson Jr. and the principles the legendary Georgetown coach instilled in his players.

    After Ewing, Thompson never returned to the Final Four, but players such as Mourning and Iverson extended his legacy.

    “He was one of a kind,” Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim, a fierce rival for many years in the Big East, said Monday. “There aren’t that many. He brought a presence to the game that nobody does, has. He was a great coach, but he was also a role model for a lot of coaches — white coaches and Black coaches.”

    Thompson, who stalked the sideline with his patented white towel, not only led his players on the floor. He also protected them off the court.

    On a 1989 episode of ABC’s “Nightline,” Thompson said he had confronted notorious drug kingpin Rayful Edmond III after learning the local cocaine ringleader had befriended some of the Georgetown players, including Mourning and John Turner. Edmond, a known figure in the city who attended many Georgetown games and frequented a popular nightclub where he met some of the Hoyas, was arrested later that year for his role in a drug trafficking operation and eventually sentenced to life in prison. Turner was dismissed from the team that year and was later arrested on drug charges, which were ultimately dropped.

    Thompson also stood by Iverson, who spent four months in jail for his alleged role in a brawl at a bowling alley before his senior year of high school. Thompson was criticized for his allegiance to Iverson, whose sentence was ultimately overturned by an appeals court due to insufficient evidence. But the talented guard won Big East Rookie of the Year honors and led the program to an Elite Eight during his second and final season at the school.

    Iverson thanked Thompson for “saving my life” in an Instagram post Monday, adding that he hopes that he always made his college coach proud.

    Mutombo, who played for Thompson at Georgetown from 1988 to 1991, also honored his college coach in an Instagram post, calling him a “mentor, great teacher, hero and a father figure.”

    Thompson suddenly resigned midway through the 1998-99 season amid problems in his marriage. Two years earlier, he had filed for divorce from his wife, Gwen.

    He was surrounded by his team, which had lost its first four Big East games that season, when he made the announcement about his resignation.

    Thompson never returned to coaching. He finished with a career record of 596-239.

    ‘’You know that I’m going through a problem with my marriage right now,’’ Thompson said at the time. ‘’I owe it to my family to address that. I would be irresponsible if I didn’t address that.’’

    Assistant coach Craig Esherick took over until 2004, when John Thompson III accepted the job as the coach of the program his father had built. The younger Thompson led Georgetown to a Final Four berth in 2007 but was fired in 2017 after a mediocre stretch.

    Thompson Jr. called Ewing, his former star, about the opening and told him to “toss his name into the hat.” Ewing, then an associate head coach with the Charlotte Bobcats, said he hadn’t thought about the job until Thompson called.

    Big John didn’t just run Georgetown basketball.

    He was Georgetown basketball.

    Thompson’s survivors include his sons, John Thompson III and Ronny Thompson, and daughter Tiffany Thompson.

    Cliff Robinson,” the team said in a statement. “… His personality and energy were unmatched, and his contributions on the court were unmistakable, helping the Trail Blazers into the playoffs each of his eight seasons with the team. … We extend our heartfelt condolences to Cliff’s family and loved ones. Uncle Cliffy will be greatly missed by the Trail Blazers and all of Rip City.”

    Robinson also played for the Phoenix Suns, Detroit Pistons, Golden State Warriors and New Jersey Nets. He made the 1994 NBA All-Star Game and was named to two NBA All-Defensive second teams while averaging 14.6 points and 4.6 rebounds in 1,380 career games — the 13th-most in NBA history.

    “Clifford was the consummate professional who loved the game and played with an incredible sense of both joy and intensity during his outstanding 18-year career,’’ the Warriors said in a statement.

    Miami Heat coach Erik Spoelstra, who grew up in the Portland area and went to college at the University of Portland, was still trying to process the news of Robinson’s passing after Saturday’s practice.

    “I can’t believe it,” Spoelstra said. “It’s shocking to me because I was in college and just right after college, so I’m not that much younger than the players on the Portland Trail Blazer team. And if you just look at that team, there’s four players that are not with us anymore. Starting with Drazen Petrovic, [Jerome] Kersey, [Kevin] Duckworth, and now Cliff Robinson. I’m shocked, I’m stunned, all you can do is send your prayers and condolences to the Robinson family.”

    A moment of silence was held for Robinson, as well as Arizona coach Lute Olson and actor Chadwick Boseman, before the start of the NBA playoff game between Milwaukee Bucks and Orlando Magic.

    Robinson, a native of Buffalo, New York, was the centerpiece of Calhoun’s early teams at UConn from 1985-89, helping guide the Huskies from the bottom of the Big East to the 1988 NIT championship.

    “He averaged five points as a freshman and I remember I told him, ‘You have two choices: I can kick you out if you keep doing what you do, or I’m going to watch you play a lot of years in the NBA,’” Calhoun told The Associated Press. “He chose the latter, which was good.”

    UConn added Robinson’s No. 00 on the wall at Gampel Pavilion as an original member of the Huskies of Honor.

    “He was our first great player,” Calhoun said. “He gave legitimacy to the program. As a player coming in, here’s this guy playing on TV for the Trail Blazers, watching him play, watching UConn being mentioned. You could not pay for the exposure that he gave us.”

     

    Legendary Georgetown coach John Thompson Jr
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    Carma Lynn Henry Westside Gazette Newspaper 545 N.W. 7th Terrace, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33311 Office: (954) 525-1489 Fax: (954) 525-1861

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