In their ninth year under head coach Bob Benson, the Hoyas compiled a 3–7 record. Brian Blankenship, Aaron Brown and Scott Pogorelec were the team captains.[1]
This was Georgetown's first year as a football associate member of the Patriot League; the university announced it would switch its football affiliation from the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference to the Patriot League in January 2000, but competed as a Division I-AA independent that season, and did not officially join its new league until 2001.
Despite playing a league schedule, Georgetown was able to arrange matchups with only six of its seven league-mates, missing Colgate. Half of the league consisted of teams the Hoyas had not faced in decades, or at all. Georgetown had scheduled Bucknell on its independent schedule in 2000, and had faced fellow Jesuit colleges Fordham and Holy Cross as non-league opponents almost every year since 1996. But before 2001, Georgetown had last faced Towson in 1970, Lafayette in 1937 and Lehigh in 1925. The matchup between Georgetown and Colgate in 2002 would be the first one ever.
Like most of the Patriot League, Georgetown played just 10 of its 11 scheduled games, after its September 15 matchup, against MAAC member Wagner, was canceled following the September 11 attacks.[2]
^Emerson, Seth (September 2, 2001). "Hoyas Stumble Against Lehigh in Their Patriot League Debut". The Washington Post. Washington, D.C. p. D9 – via ProQuest.
^Hickling, Dan (September 30, 2001). "Hoyas Are Smashed by Rams' Broken Record". The Washington Post. Washington, D.C. p. D10 – via ProQuest. Attendance figure in "Saturday's Summaries". Daily Press. Newport News, Va. September 30, 2001. p. C9.
^Emerson, Seth (November 11, 2001). "Georgetown Defenseless Against Lafayette, Still Winless in Patriot League". The Washington Post. Washington, D.C. pp. D9, D10 – via ProQuest.
^Brewingon, Peter (November 17, 2001). "Hoyas Can't Find Way to Get Past Towson". The Washington Post. Washington, D.C. pp. D12, D14 – via ProQuest.