Georgetown's most celebrated player — three-time All-American and national champion under John Thompson.
Patrick Aloysius Ewing was born in Kingston, Jamaica in 1962 and moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts at 11. Georgetown University recruited him under coach John Thompson and he became the defining player of a programme that transformed into a national power around his presence. He won the national championship in 1984, being named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player. Georgetown reached the title game three times in his four years (1982, 1984, 1985 — losing in 1982 and 1985). He was named the Big East Player of the Year three times and won the Naismith Award in 1985. He was a three-time consensus All-American. He averaged 15.3 points and 9.2 rebounds per game — statistics that understated his defensive impact. His combination of shot-blocking, interior scoring and the intimidating presence he brought to every game transformed Georgetown into the defining programme of the 1980s. He won Olympic gold with the USA at Los Angeles 1984. New York Knicks selected him first overall in the 1985 NBA Draft via the inaugural draft lottery. His Georgetown career — three championship game appearances and one title — made him the face of Big East basketball's golden era.
National Championship (1984)
Career Honours
- National Championship (1984)
- Big East Player of Year 3x
- Naismith Award (1985)
- Tournament MOP (1984)