Georgetown Hoyas
Georgetown Hoyas | |
---|---|
Washington Nationals Youth Academy | |
Soccer stadium | Shaw Field |
Lacrosse stadium | Cooper Field |
Rowing venue | Thompson's Boat Center |
Sailing venue | Washington Sailing Marina |
Other venues | Yates Field House |
Mascot | Jack the Bulldog |
Nickname | The Hoyas |
Fight song | There Goes Old Georgetown |
Colors | Blue and gray[1] |
Website | guhoyas |
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The Georgetown Hoyas are the
The team name is derived from the mixed Greek and Latin chant "Hoya Saxa" (meaning "What Rocks"), which gained popularity at the school in the late nineteenth century. The name "Hoyas" came into use in the 1920s. Their mascot is an anthropomorphic bulldog. Most teams have their athletic facilities on the main campus of Georgetown University. The men's basketball team plays most of their home games at the Capital One Arena in downtown Washington, D.C., and the baseball team plays at Capital One Park in Tysons, VA. Lee Reed took over as the school's athletic director in April 2010.
Traditions
The word "Hoya"
The university says that the precise origin of the term "Hoya" is unknown.[3] At some point before 1893, and likely before 1891, students versed in classical languages combined the Greek hoia or hoya, meaning "what" or "such", and the Latin saxa to form Hoya Saxa!, or "What Rocks!"[4][5] This cheer may either refer to the stalwart defense of the football team, or to the baseball team, which was nicknamed the "Stonewalls", or to the actual stone wall that surrounds the campus.[6] Father William McFadden, S.J., campus Jesuit and the team's in-house announcer at the Capital One Arena, has disputed the Greek and Latin origin, suggesting the classical words were retroactively applied to a nonsensical cheer.[5]

After World War I, the term "Hoya" was increasingly used on campus, including for the newspaper and the school mascot. In 1920, students began publishing the campus's first sports newspaper under the name The Hoya, after successfully petitioning the Dean of the college to use it instead of the proposed name, The Hilltopper. "Hilltoppers" was also a name sometimes used for the sports teams.[3] By the fall of 1928, the newspaper had taken to referring to the sports teams as the Hoyas. This was influenced by a popular half time show at football games, where the mascot, a dog nicknamed "Hoya," would entertain fans.[7]
Georgetown's unique team name has caused opponents to mock Georgetown with chants including "What's a Hoya?"
Mascot
Georgetown's nickname is The Hoyas, but its mascot is "
In 1964, the school permitted exhibition football games to resume, and students financed the purchase of a young
In 1999,
Colors
Blue and gray are the official colors of Georgetown University and its athletic teams. The colors are an important reminder of the school's past. During the
The basketball and lacrosse teams use gray as their primary color in home jerseys, with blue in away jerseys. White is also frequently used as an accent to these colors, and is actually the main color in the football and baseball teams' away jerseys and the soccer team's home jerseys. Campus spirit groups often encourage students to "bleed Hoya blue," a slogan used on teeshirts and bumper stickers sold to fans.[16] Fans are generally encouraged to wear gray to home games, and sellouts are referred to as a "gray out."[17] Though various shades are used, the primary ones suggested by the school's identification policy are pantone 409 and pantone 282, which is the same shade as Oxford Blue.[14]
Fight song
The Georgetown Fight Song, known as "There Goes Old Georgetown", is actually an amalgamation of three songs, only the oldest of which, 1913's "The Touchdown Song", contains the lyric "here goes old Georgetown". Students combined a version of "The Touchdown Song" with "Cheer for Victory", written in 1915, and "The Hoya Song", written in 1930, both of which are included in their entirety.[18] The authors of these songs, and of the combined version, are unknown.[19]
Georgetown's fight song is rare among U.S. university fight songs for mentioning other colleges by name.[citation needed] Specifically, it mentions Yale University, Harvard University, Princeton University, College of the Holy Cross, the United States Naval Academy, and Cornell University, who were all rivals of Georgetown in the early to mid-20th century, and mocks their fight songs. In recent years the Hoyas only play Cornell and Holy Cross regularly (in football), and many of these schools no longer use the fight songs that Georgetown's song mocks.[20]
Sports sponsored
Men's sports | Women's sports |
---|---|
Baseball | Basketball |
Basketball | Heavyweight crew |
Heavyweight crew | Lightweight crew |
Lightweight crew | Cross country |
Cross country | Field hockey |
Football | Golf |
Golf | Lacrosse |
Lacrosse | Soccer |
Soccer | Softball |
Swimming and diving | Squash |
Tennis | Swimming and diving |
Track and field† | Tennis |
Track and field† | |
Volleyball | |
Co-ed sports | |
Sailing | |
† – Track and field includes both indoor and outdoor. |
Georgetown University fields 29 varsity level sports teams; 13 men's teams, 15 women's teams, and one co-ed team. Intercollegiate sports include (inaugural season in parentheses):
- Men's: (1891)
- Women's: basketball (1960), crew (1975), cross country (1976), field hockey (1960), golf (2001), lacrosse (1975), soccer (1991), softball (2005), squash (2021), swimming and diving (1975), tennis (1960), track and field (1976), and volleyball (1960)
- Coed: sailing (1937)[21][22]
Baseball

Baseball is Georgetown's oldest sport, with the first recorded game taking place in 1866, and the team formally organized and sanctioned in 1870. In 1899, Georgetown took the intercollegiate baseball world by storm, winning 18 of 20 games against college teams, beating national powers Princeton and Yale three times each and Virginia twice. The Hilltoppers reached the pinnacle of college baseball when they were acclaimed intercollegiate national champions at season's end.
Upon their triumphant return from their northern trip at the conclusion of that year, the championship team was escorted from the train station to Georgetown in a torchlight parade led by a carriage of top university officials and included students on horseback, alumni, students from the three schools, and the college band. They were greeted with fireworks once back on campus. The Hoyas have no appearances in the
Basketball

The Georgetown University men's basketball team is the most well-known Hoya program. Georgetown's first intercollegiate men's basketball team was formed in 1907.
The women's basketball also plays in the Big East Conference, and are coached by James Howard. The team was first formed in 1970, and joined the Big East in 1983. They play their home games on campus at
Football

The football team at Georgetown was first formed on November 1, 1874, with the earliest recorded games dating to 1887.
In 1964, Georgetown allowed its students to start a football program as an exhibition-only club sport.
Golf
The men's golf team has won four
Lacrosse
Both the men's and women's lacrosse teams have been highly competitive in recent years, both in conference and tournament play. A men's lacrosse team was first organized in 1951, and entered Division 1 play in 1970.[22][44] The team played in the Eastern College Athletic Conference until the 2010 season, when the Big East Conference created a men's league. The men's team made the NCAA Tournament each season from 1996 to 2007, reaching the Final Four in 1999.[45]
The women's
Rowing
The men have won 7 national championships at the Intercollegiate Rowing Association Regatta, the most recent being the men's varsity lightweight fours with coxswain on June 1st, 2024. The first national championship win was in 1991 with the varsity heavyweight fours with coxswain.

Under the guidance of Head Coaches Jim Granger, Kendall Mulligan, Ethan Shoemaker, Abbey Wilkowski, and Coach Emeritus Tony Johnson, Georgetown competes as a member of the top leagues in American rowing, the Eastern Association of Rowing Colleges and Eastern Association of Women's Rowing Colleges. Georgetown's four crew teams have seen success in recent years, including trips to the Henley Royal Regatta and entry into the Eastern Sprints for the men's heavyweight and lightweight teams and second-in-the-nation finishes for both men's and women's lightweight teams.[47][48] Many Georgetown oarsmen and -women have gone on to represent the United States on national and Olympic teams.[49] The lightweight women's team has earned bronze medals at Women's Eastern Sprints in the Lightweight Women's Varsity 8+ in 2013 and the Lightweight Women's Varsity 4+ in 2015. The LW8+ crew earning bronze in 2013 was later named Row2k Crew of the Week.[50]
The university rents space in Thompson Boat Center, though it has ongoing plans to build a new boathouse closer to campus.
Sailing
The sailing team competes in the
Soccer

The men's soccer team was organized in 1952, and won a national championship in 2019.[64] That year was their second national title game, having been runners up in 2012, with nine total NCAA Tournament appearances. They play in the Big East Conference, and have won the conference tournament four times and the regular season seven times.[65] They are coached by Brian Wiese, and play their home games on campus at North Kehoe Field.[66] The women's soccer team began play in 1991, have been coached by Dave Nolan since 1999, and share the same home field. The women's team has been to the NCAA Tournament twice, in 2007 and 2010, when they advanced to the quarterfinals.[67]
Six players from the men's soccer team have played professionally for
Tennis
Georgetown University has both men's and women's varsity tennis teams.
Track and field

Georgetown has been nationally successful in both cross country and track and field.
NCAA team championships
Georgetown has won 3 NCAA Division I team national championships.[84]
- Men's (2)
- Basketball(1): 1984
- Soccer(1): 2019
- Women's (1)
- Cross Country(1): 2011
- see also:
NCAA individual championships
Georgetown has won 23 NCAA Division I individual national championships:
- Golf – Men – 2 NCAA national championships – Maurice McCarthy Jr. (1928) and John Burke (1938)
- Cross Country – Men – 1 NCAA national championship – Charles Capozzoli (1952)
- Track and Field – Outdoor – Men – 8 NCAA national championships
- Track and Field – Outdoor – Women – 1 NCAA national championship
- Track and Field – Indoor – Men – 6 NCAA national championships
- Track and Field – Indoor – Women – 5 NCAA national championships
Georgetown has also won 1 NCAA Division 2 individual national championship:
- Tennis – Women – 1 NCAA national championship – Suzanne Kuhlman (1983)
Club teams
Georgetown University fields numerous club sports teams.[85] They range from club versions of varsity sports, such as tennis or basketball, to sports for which there is no varsity equivalent, such as men and women's Water Polo Clubs or Ultimate Frisbee. The university began supporting club teams in 2000.[86] Though other teams exist, such as the Georgetown University Croquet Society,[87] the Club Sports Board at Georgetown supports eleven men's club teams, ten women's, and three co-ed teams (year founded in parentheses):
- Men's: boxing (2008), cycling, ice hockey, basketball, lacrosse (1995), rugby (1967), soccer, ultimate frisbee, volleyball, water polo (1993), triathlon (2005)
- Women's: squash (2008), water polo, basketball, field hockey, lacrosse, rugby (2000), soccer (2001), ultimate frisbee, volleyball, boxing
- Co-ed: equestrian, racquetball (2007), tennis (2004), climbing (2010)
Boxing
The men's and women's boxing teams compete as part of the United States Intercollegiate Boxing Association. The women's boxing team won the 2019 USIBA national championship.[88]
Rugby
The Georgetown University Rugby Football Club is the intercollegiate men's rugby union team that represents Georgetown in the USA Rugby Division II competition. It was founded in the spring semester of 1967 by former members of the Washington, D.C., Rugby Football Club, including graduate student Michael Murphy.[89] In 2005, Georgetown's first reached the Final Four of the USA Rugby Collegiate Division II National Tournament. The "Hoya Ruggers" again reached for the semifinals in 2009 in Palo Alto, California, and have had an undefeated 2009–10 season.[90]
A women's rugby team was founded in 2000, and plays in Division II in the Potomac Rugby Union (PRU).[91] They have won the PRU championship four consecutive times from 2006 to 2009. They have also been invited to the Mid-Atlantic Rugby Football Union tournament three times, and were runners-up in 2006–07.[92]
Ice hockey

Georgetown's ice hockey team plays in the
Athletic directors
After Bernard Muir left the position as the Director of the Athletic Department on May 11, 2009, a year long search for a replacement began. Dr. Daniel R. Porterfield, Senior Vice President for Strategic Development, served as Interim Director of Athletics beginning June 3, 2009, until Lee Reed took the position on April 15, 2010.[96][97]
Name | Years[22] |
---|---|
Charles R. Cox | 1914–1920 |
Vincent S. McDonough | 1920–1924 |
Lou Little | 1924–1930 |
H. Gabriel Murphy | 1930–1941 |
Rome F. Schwagel | 1941–1942 |
Joseph T. Gardner | 1942–1943 |
John J. Kehoe | 1943–1944 |
Jack Hagerty | 1946–1947 |
Rome F. Schwagel | 1947–1949 |
Jack Hagerty | 1949–1969 |
Robert H. Sigholtz | 1969–1972 |
Francis X. Rienzo | 1972–1994 |
Joseph C. Lang | 1994–2004 |
Adam Brick | 2004–2005 |
Bernard Muir | 2005–2009 |
Daniel R. Porterfield | 2009–2010 |
Lee Reed | 2010–present |
In popular culture
With the rise of Georgetown's men's basketball team in the 1980s, the Hoyas became increasingly associated with the Black community in the United States and in the Washington, D.C., area in particular.[98] Consequently, Georgetown came to be referenced in work by African-American artists, including Spike Lee's She's Gotta Have It,[99] Outkast's Aquemini [100] and Jay-Z's Kingdom Come.[101]
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External links