Freeman, Hoyas Off to Healthy Start

Big East Play to Be Test for Freshman

"He's a heady player, and he's very smart," Georgetown's Jonathan Wallace said of teammate Austin Freeman, above. (By Nick Wass -- Associated Press)
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By Camille Powell
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, January 5, 2008; Page E03

Nothing, it seems, has fazed Georgetown guard Austin Freeman thus far in his college basketball career.

At Midnight Madness, the freshman from DeMatha was the second player introduced to the screaming capacity crowd, and he confidently pointed to the fans before breaking into a dance. Against No. 2 Memphis at raucous FedEx Forum last month, Freeman came off the bench to lead the Hoyas with 14 points, making 6 of 9 shots. And against Fordham earlier this week, he made his first career start and scored 12 points while making 4 of 6 shots.

Now, with the seventh-ranked Hoyas set to begin Big East play today at Rutgers, it is time to see if Freeman really is as unflappable as he seems.

"We'll see," Georgetown Coach John Thompson III said. "I think so. I hope so. We're at the important part of the season now."

The Hoyas are coming off their first outright regular season Big East championship since 1989, and they were picked as this season's co-favorites, along with Louisville.

But there is a lot of uncertainty as conference play begins. Georgetown (10-1) and No. 10 Marquette (11-1) appear to be the two best teams right now; both are deep, balanced and experienced, and both currently have healthy rosters -- something of a rarity among the top teams.

Pittsburgh Coach Jamie Dixon is considering adding walk-ons from the football team to bolster a No. 13 Panthers squad that has lost three players, including starters Mike Cook (season-ending knee injury) and Levance Fields (fractured foot, out eight to 12 weeks), to significant injuries. Louisville (9-4), which has plummeted out of the national rankings, finally is at full strength after welcoming back senior David Padgett, a preseason all-Big East forward-center who recovered quickly from a broken kneecap, and senior forward Juan Palacios.

No. 17 Villanova, which doesn't have a senior on its roster, currently is playing without its leading rebounder, 6-foot-10 sophomore Casiem Drummond (stress fracture in his right ankle). Syracuse lost junior guard Eric Devendorf, a preseason all-conference pick, to a season-ending knee injury, and against St. John's on Wednesday, the Orange started three freshmen for the first time in Jim Boeheim's 32-year tenure as coach. Providence (9-4) was blown out at Marquette on Thursday, but the Friars were missing two of their top guards.

"It's still the Big East," Thompson said. "The teams are still deep, and you still have a league that has arguably -- maybe not arguably -- the best coaches, who are used to making adjustments and adaptations. . . . As I look around the league, the landscape is still scary."

That sentiment was reinforced during the first three days of Big East competition. Only two teams entered conference play with losing records -- Cincinnati at 5-7 and DePaul at 4-7 -- and both of them recorded upsets in their respective Big East openers. Cincinnati, which finished last in the league with just two conference wins last season, edged host Louisville, 58-57, and DePaul beat Villanova, 84-76.

"I think you've seen in the first couple of games in conference play -- and I say it every year, but it's true -- everybody can beat everyone, regardless of what preseason rankings are, regardless of what projections are at this point," Thompson said. "You have to come prepared. Everything is heightened."

At least Freeman and the Hoyas are coming in having played well recently. Georgetown was very sharp in the first eight minutes of its 82-55 win over Fordham, and junior guard Jessie Sapp is coming off perhaps the best game of his career.


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