Georgetown Hoyas football

{{Short description|Varsity football team of Georgetown University}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=September 2024}}

{{Infobox college football team

| TeamName = Georgetown Hoyas football

| CurrentSeason = 2024 Georgetown Hoyas football team

| FirstYear = {{Start date and age|1874}}{{efn|The team was founded in 1874, but did not play any games that year. They scheduled their first game in the 1881 season ({{Years or months ago|1881}}), against a local high school, but the latter failed to show up for the game and it was considered a Georgetown forfeit win.}}

| Image = Georgetown Hoyas logo.svg

| ImageSize = 120

| AthleticDirector = Lee Reed

| HeadCoach = Rob Sgarlata

| HeadCoachYear = 11th

| HCWins = 35

| HCLosses = 74

| Stadium = Cooper Field

| FieldName =

| StadiumBuilt = 2005

| StadCapacity = 4,418

| StadSurface = Artificial turf

| Location = Washington, D.C.

| NCAAdivision = I FCS

| Conference = Patriot League

| PastAffiliations = MAAC (1993–2000)
SAIAA (1907–1921)

| ATWins = 506

| ATLosses = 416

| ATTies = 32

| BowlWins = 0

| BowlLosses = 2

| BowlTies =

| NatlTitles =

| ConfTitles = 6

| AllAmericans = 18

| uniform = 180px

| FightSong = There Goes Old Georgetown

| MascotDisplay = Jack the Bulldog

| MarchingBand =

| Rivalries = Catholic University (rivalry)

| WebsiteName = GUHoyas.com

| WebsiteURL = https://guhoyas.com/sports/football

}}

The Georgetown Hoyas football team represents Georgetown University in the Division I Football Championship Subdivision level of college football. Like other sports teams from Georgetown, the team is named the Hoyas, which derives from the chant, Hoya Saxa. They play their home games at Cooper Field on the Georgetown University campus in Washington, D.C. Their best season in the recent era was produced in 2011 when the team produced an 8–3 record.

History

{{see also|Georgetown football, 1874–1889}}

{{multiple image

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|image1 = Georgetown vs Marines.jpg

|caption1 = Georgetown versus Quantico Marines in 1923

|image2 = Georgetown Hoyas football players in 2023.jpg

|caption2 = Members of 2023 team

}}

The first football team at Georgetown was formed on November 1, 1874. There were results recorded in the 1881, 1883 and 1884 seasons, but since 1950 Georgetown has only recognized seasons starting with 1887.{{cite web|url=http://www.hoyasaxa.com/sports/hist01.htm |title=Football's Roots At Georgetown |work=HoyaSaxa.com] |date=August 17, 2005 |access-date=February 12, 2010 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110712230050/http://www.hoyasaxa.com/sports/hist01.htm |archive-date=July 12, 2011 }} By the 1940s, Georgetown played in the Orange Bowl, where they lost 14–7 to Mississippi State in 1941.

As the college game became more expensive after World War II, Georgetown's program began to lose money rapidly.{{cite web |title=Salad Days-The end of major college football on the Hilltop|publisher=HoyaSaxa.com |url=http://www.hoyafootball.com/features/1951.htm}} The Hoyas' last successful season was 1949, when they lost in the Sun Bowl against Texas Western.

After a 2–7 season in 1950, Georgetown attempted to salvage its program by softening its schedule, replacing major opponents such as Penn State, Miami, and Tulsa with Richmond, Bucknell, and Lehigh. The program was losing too much money, however, and on March 22, 1951, the university's president canceled the football program.{{cite news| title=Intercollegiate Football Ends at Georgetown| newspaper=Chicago Daily Tribune| date=March 23, 1951| page=B2| url=https://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/chicagotribune/access/503632752.html?dids=503632752:503632752&FMT=CITE&date=Mar+23%2C+1951| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121024102859/http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/chicagotribune/access/503632752.html?dids=503632752:503632752&FMT=CITE&date=Mar+23,+1951| url-status=dead| archive-date=October 24, 2012}}

In 1962, Georgetown allowed its students to start a football program as an exhibition-only club sport. New games began in 1964, with their first match drawing 8,000 spectators to see the Hoyas host another university with an unofficial program, New York University (NYU).{{cite news| newspaper=The New York Times| url=https://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=FB0E16F739591B7A93C0AB178AD95F408685F9| date=November 22, 1964| title=Georgetown Returns to Football And Crushes N.Y.U. Club, 28–6| page=S6}} Varsity football resumed in 1970 at what later became known as the Division III level. In 1976, Georgetown began an annual rivalry game with the Catholic University Cardinals for the Steven Dean Memorial Trophy. The competition ended in 1993, when Georgetown moved into the Division I Football Championship Subdivision because of NCAA legislation forbidding Division I or II schools from playing football in lower divisions.{{citation needed|date=November 2011}}

In 1993, the team joined the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference, a mostly Catholic conference on the East Coast. With eight wins, the team won the conference championship outright in 1997, and were co-champions in 1998 with nine wins.

In 2001 the team joined the Patriot League, with the lowest football budget in the league. In 2012, the Patriot League transitioned to 60 full scholarships but Georgetown remained non-scholarship, further hurting its competitiveness in that conference. The Hoyas have posted just one winning season since 2000, an 8–3 record in 2011, just prior to the Patriot League's decision to add scholarships. Head coach Kevin Kelly was named the conference Coach of the Year.{{cite news |url= http://blog.georgetownvoice.com/2011/11/23/georgetown-football-receives-patriot-league-honors/ |title= Georgetown football receives Patriot League honors |work= The Georgetown Voice |first= Tim |last= Shine |date= November 23, 2011 |access-date= November 28, 2011}}

=Classifications=

=Conference memberships=

Stadiums

File:Multi-Sport Field.jpg.]]

Georgetown has played football at various on-campus intramural fields. From 1891 until 1893, the stadium known as Boundary Field played host to Georgetown football. From 1921 until 1950, Griffith Stadium played host to Georgetown football.

Currently, the Hoyas play at Cooper Field, previously called Multi-Sport Field, which was upgraded from Harbin Field in 2003. Construction on Cooper Field was sidelined for 15 years until it was completed in 2020. The facility opened in the fall of 2021 with capacity for 4,418.

D.C. Cup Rivalry Game

The Hoyas had a brief cross-town rivalry with Howard University for a title known as the DC Mayor's Cup (awarded by the mayor of Washington). Three games were held (2008, 2009 and 2011).{{cite news |url=http://www.cbssports.com/collegefootball/gamecenter/recap/NCAAF_20090926_HOW@GTOWN |title= Howard 14, Georgetown, D.C. 11 – NCAA Football – CBSSports.com Live GameCenter |date= September 26, 2009 |access-date= October 1, 2009}} The series has Georgetown leading 2–1–0 following their 2011 victory. The series was slated to resume in 2019 but Howard discontinued the series to sign a series instead with Maryland.{{cite news|last=Kilgore|first=Adam|title=Why was Howard playing at UNLV anyway? It wasn't just college football business as usual.|url=https://www-washingtonpost-com.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/www.washingtonpost.com/amphtml/news/sports/wp/2017/09/08/why-was-howard-playing-at-unlv-anyway-it-wasnt-just-college-football-business-as-usual/|newspaper=The Washington Post|date=September 8, 2017|access-date=October 9, 2017}}

Conference championships

The Hoyas have won six conference championships, highlighted by a run of four conference championships in seven years, although Georgetown went 78 years without a conference championship, in part due to not being part of a conference from 1921 to 1993.

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=Georgetown Hoyas|Year|Conference|Coach|Overall record|Conference record}}
1912South Atlantic Intercollegiate Athletic AssociationFrank Gargan8–15–0
1915South Atlantic Intercollegiate Athletic AssociationAlbert Exendine7–22–0
1917South Atlantic Intercollegiate Athletic AssociationAlbert Exendine7–12–0
1919South Atlantic Intercollegiate Athletic AssociationAlbert Exendine7–32–0
1997Metro Atlantic Athletic ConferenceBob Benson8–37–0
1998†Metro Atlantic Athletic ConferenceBob Benson9–26–1

† denotes co-championship.

Bowl games

Georgetown competed in two major bowl games, including a New Year's Day bowl game.

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

!style="background:#011e41; color:white;" |Bowl

!style="background:#011e41; color:white;" |Date

!style="background:#011e41; color:white;" |Opponent

!style="background:#011e41; color:white;" |Result

align="center"

| Orange Bowl

January 1, 1941Mississippi StateL 7–14
align="center"

| Sun Bowl

January 1, 1950Texas WesternL 20–33

Polling

Georgetown was ranked in the AP Poll while a member of the Major College Division.

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

!style="background:#011e41; color:white;" |Season

!style="background:#011e41; color:white;" |Poll(s)

!style="background:#011e41; color:white;" |Rank

align="center"

| 1940

AP Poll13

Alumni

Perhaps the football team's most accomplished athlete was Al Blozis, who played for the NFL's New York Giants before being killed in action in World War II. Blozis's great athletic accomplishments, however, came in shot put and discus. He set the world indoor record for the shot put, throwing it 56 feet 4.5 inches in 1941. He was the national indoor and outdoor shot put champion in both 1942 and 1943.

"Big Jim" Ricca, an NFL defensive end and offensive lineman, graduated in 1949 and was the last Hoya to play in an NFL game.{{cite news |url= http://www.thehoya.com/features/012304/features3.cfm |title= Glory Days: The Past, Present and Future of Hoyas Turned Professional Athletes |work= The Hoya |date= January 23, 2004 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20071024043757/http://www.thehoya.com/features/012304/features3.cfm |archive-date= October 24, 2007 |access-date= December 18, 2009}}

Jim Schwartz, former head coach of the NFL's Detroit Lions, was a four-year letterman at linebacker. He received Distinguished Economics Graduate honors and earned numerous honors in 1988, including Division III CoSIDA/GTE Academic All-America, All-America, and team captain.

In 2007, the Washington Redskins made Alex Buzbee a reserve player, becoming the first Georgetown player on an NFL team since Ricca retired in 1956.{{cite news |url= https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/07/AR2007080701838.html |title= For Redskins Rookie, Slogan Is Hoya Sacks |first= Katie |last= Carrera |newspaper= The Washington Post |date= August 8, 2007 |access-date= July 21, 2008}} In 2010, Buzbee joined the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Football League.

Comedian and actor Jim Gaffigan was a wide receiver at Georgetown in 1985{{cite web |title=Yes, comedian Jim Gaffigan played football at Georgetown |url=https://www.nbcsports.com/washington/georgetown-hoyas/yes-comedian-jim-gaffigan-played-football-georgetown |website=NBCSports.com}} after briefly playing at Purdue.{{cite web |title=Comedian Jim Gaffigan once walked-on to a Big Ten football team |url=https://www.foxsports.com/stories/college-football/comedian-jim-gaffigan-once-walked-on-to-a-big-ten-football-team |website=FoxSports.com}}

Nick Alfieri, former Hoyas linebacker who had over 300 tackles in his Georgetown career, played professionally in the German Football League for several seasons.

Players in the NFL draft

{{main|List of Georgetown Hoyas in the NFL draft}}

Future non-conference opponents

Announced schedules as of February 17, 2025.{{cite web| title=Georgetown Hoyas Football Future Schedules|publisher=FBSchedules.com| url=https://fbschedules.com/ncaa/georgetown/|access-date=February 17, 2025}}

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{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=Georgetown Hoyas|2025|2026|2027|2028|2029|2030|2031}}
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Notes and references

{{Notelist}}

{{Reflist|30em}}