Patrick Ewing will ‘bounce back’ after firing

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Tom Thibodeau believes Knicks legend Patrick Ewing will “bounce back” from his firing Thursday at Georgetown.

Thibodeau was an assistant coach on the Knicks during Ewing’s final seasons with the franchise as a player, and they worked closely together as assistants under Jeff Van Gundy in Houston from 2004-07.

“It’s unfortunate, but Patrick is, in my eyes, he’s an all-time great, if not the greatest Knick of all time. And obviously working together with him, not only is he a great coach, he’s an even better person. So it’s disappointing,” Thibodeau said before the Knicks’ 122-117 loss to the Kings. “I thought he had some great moments there. I know it was very meaningful to him.

“But Patrick will be fine. He’s, like I said, I’ve worked with him, so I know he’s a great coach. But he’s a great person. He’s a dear friend. And so he’ll bounce back and good things will be coming in the future for him.”


Tom Thibodeau argues with officials during the Knicks’ 122-117 loss to the Kings.
AP

The 60-year-old Ewing was fired Thursday after the Hoyas posted a combined record of 13-50 over the past two seasons, including 7-25 this year.

In six years at his alma mater, the 11-time NBA All-Star center finished with a record of 75-109.

“The thing about Patrick is as a coach the only thing you can control is what you put into it. I know how much he put into it,” Thibodeau said. “Sometimes there’s things that occur that you have no control over. No matter what happens it doesn’t change his love for that school and what that means to him.

“The initial disappointment of not being there anymore, that’s normal human nature. But he’ll bounce back. I know how strongly he feels about the school, how much appreciation he has for the time that he was there. And he’ll still be involved with Georgetown. It’s a great school. He’ll move forward. He’ll be fine.”

Thibodeau added that “the state of college basketball is in flux right now,” citing the transfer portal and NIL (Name, Image, Likeness) compensation as “changing the dynamics of college basketball tremendously.”

“I think you have to look at, OK, obviously when you have success, you don’t do that by yourself either,” Thibodeau added. “You share in that and then when something doesn’t work, it’s not any one particular person, you have to share in that and say there’s a lot of factors that go into this.”

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Georgetown loses to Villanova, sets Big East losing-streak record

WASHINGTON — Caleb Daniels made six 3-pointers and scored 20 points, Brandon Slater added 14 points and Villanova beat Georgetown 73-57 on Wednesday night to extend the Hoyas’ regular-season conference losing streak to 25 games.

The Georgetown loss broke a tie with DePaul for the longest regular-season losing streak in Big East Conference history. The Hoyas went 0-19 in the conference last season while going 6-25 overall, including a 21-game losing streak. The Hoyas also lost their final regular-season Big East game in 2020-21, before going on a surprising four-game run at Madison Square Garden in New York to claim the conference tournament title.

“It’s not how many times you get knocked down, it’s how many times you get up,” Georgetown coach Patrick Ewing said. “It’s all about getting up. There’s going to be streaks in every sport.”

The Game was tied at 35-all in the first half. Then Daniels made three 3-pointers in the opening seven minutes of the second half to help Villanova build a 48-41 lead. Slater added another 3-pointer at 10:56 to give the Wildcats the first double-digit lead of the game at 53-43.

Patrick Ewing
AP

Georgetown made just two of its first 14 shots after the break as Villanova pulled away. The Hoyas shot just 21 percent in the second half.

Freshman Mark Armstrong scored a season-high 14 points and classmate Cam Whitmore had 10 points and eight rebounds for Villanova (8-7, 2-2).

“We got a young team, we got guys that we know are going to be playing their best basketball by the end of the season,” Villanova coach Kyle Neptune said. “Credit to those two guys (freshmen). I thought Mark was really good tonight, especially defensively, and then Cam, same thing; came out and gave us a lot of energy.”

Jordan Riley scored 12 points and Akok Akok had 11 points and 10 rebounds for Georgetown (5-11, 0-5). Primo Spears, Georgetown’s leading scorer at 16 points per game, was held to eight points on 3-of-12 shooting.

Georgetown has lost six straight games to drop its record to 73-95 in Ewing’s loss-filled stint at his alma mater, including 26-68 in the Big East.

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