George Washington University's NCAA men's basketball team
George Washington Revolutionaries
|
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|
|
University
| George Washington University
|
---|
First season
| 1912?13
|
---|
All-time record
| 1,325?1,109 (.544)
|
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Head coach
| Chris Caputo
|
---|
Conference
| Atlantic 10 Conference
|
---|
Location
| Washington, D.C.
|
---|
Arena
| Charles E. Smith Athletic Center
(Capacity: 5,000)
|
---|
Nickname
| Revolutionaries
|
---|
Student section
| George's Army
|
---|
Colors
| Buff and blue
[1]
|
---|
|
|
|
1993
|
|
1993, 1994, 2006
|
|
1954, 1961, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2014
|
|
1943, 1954, 1961, 2005, 2007
|
|
1954, 1956, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2005, 2006
|
The
George Washington Revolutionaries men's basketball
team represents
George Washington University
in the United States'
capital
,
Washington, D.C.
It plays its home games in the
Charles E. Smith Center
, which is also shared with other
George Washington Revolutionaries
athletic programs. The school's team currently competes in the
Atlantic 10 Conference
. The head coach is
Chris Caputo
. The official dance team for the Revolutionaries is the
GW First Ladies
.
History
[
edit
]
1990s
[
edit
]
Mike Jarvis
was hired as head coach in 1990. Led by future
NBA
player
Yinka Dare
, the Colonials received an at-large bid to the
1993 NCAA tournament
, the Colonials first NCAA Tournament appearance since
1961
. GW advanced to the Sweet Sixteen before losing to the
Fab Five
Michigan
team (which later vacated its wins due to NCAA
rule violations
).
The Colonials would also make NCAA Tournament appearances in
1994
,
1996
, and
1998
under Jarvis. Jarvis would leave the school in 1998 to accept the head coaching position at St. John's.
The school then hired recently fired
Texas
head coach,
Thomas Penders
. Penders would spend three years at GW, before resigning amidst accusations of NCAA rules violations.
[2]
2000s
[
edit
]
GW would then turn to
Karl Hobbs
on May 2, 2001, as head coach. Hobbs, who spent eight years an assistant at Connecticut, led GW to back to the national stage in 2004 after defeating No. 9
Michigan State
and No. 12
Maryland
in back-to-back games to win the 2004
BB&T Classic
. That year, the men's basketball team went on to win the Atlantic 10 West title and the
Atlantic 10 tournament
, earning an automatic bid to the
2005 NCAA tournament
. The team received a No. 12 seed, losing to No. 5 seed
Georgia Tech
in the First Round.
The team began the
2005?06 season
ranked 21st in the
Associated Press poll
, reaching as high as sixth in the polls
[3]
and closed out the year ranked 19th in the nation. With a 26?2 going into the
2006 NCAA tournament
. They received an at-large bid to the Tournament as a No. 8 seed where they came back from an 18-point second-half deficit to defeat No. 9 seed
UNC-Wilmington
. However, in the Second Round, they lost to
Duke
, the top overall seed.
J. R. Pinnock
was drafted in the
2006 NBA draft
and two other Colonials from that team played in the NBA.
Pops Mensah-Bonsu
played for the
Dallas Mavericks
,
Houston Rockets
,
San Antonio Spurs
, and
Toronto Raptors
and
Mike Hall
played for the
Washington Wizards
.
The
2006?07 basketball season
was considered by many
[4]
[5]
to be a rebuilding year for the Colonials after graduating their entire starting front court and losing Pinnock to the NBA. Coach Karl Hobbs and Senior guard Carl Elliott led the team to a 23?8 record, winning the
2007 Atlantic 10 tournament
, once again earning an automatic bid to the
NCAA tournament
. The Colonials were received a No. 11 seed and lost to No. 6-seed
Vanderbilt
.
[6]
The Colonials would struggle the next three years and after finishing the 2010?11 season with a record of 17?14, capped by a disappointing 71?59 overtime loss to
Saint Joseph's
in the
conference tournament
,
[7]
Karl Hobbs was dismissed as head coach.
[8]
2010s
[
edit
]
On May 11, 2011,
Mike Lonergan
, former head coach of
Vermont
, was hired to replace Hobbs.
[9]
The 2011?12 basketball season, Lonergan's first with the Colonials, resulted in a 10?21 record (5?11 in Atlantic 10). By the
2013?14 season
, Lonergan had rebuilt the program and finished third in the Atlantic 10 with a 24?8 record (11?5 in Atlantic 10). The team received an at-large bid to the 2014 NCAA Tournament, its first NCAA Tournament since 2007. They received a No. 9 seed in the East Region and would lose to
Memphis
in the Second Round (formerly known as the First Round).
The Colonials regressed the
following year
, finishing 22?12. They did, however, receive a bid to the NIT where they defeated Pittsburgh before losing in the second round to Temple.
In
2016
, the Colonials again missed the NCAA Tournament and again received a bid to the
NIT
. This time the Colonials would defeat
Hofstra
,
Momouth
, and
Florida
to reach the NIT final four at
Madison Square Garden
. In the NIT semifinal, they defeated
San Diego State
to advance to the championship game. In the championship game, they cruised to the NIT championship with a 76?60 win over
Valparaiso
.
However, the Colonials could not build on their NIT success as the school fired head coach Mike Lonergan on September 16, 2016, after an investigation found him guilty of verbally and emotionally abusing his players.
[10]
[11]
The school named assistant coach
Maurice Joseph
interim coach for the
2016?17 season
. The Colonials finished the 2017 season 20?15, 10?8 in A-10 play and received a bid to the
College Basketball Invitational
where they defeated
Toledo
in the first round before losing to
UIC
.On March 27, 2017, the school removed the interim tag and named Maurice Joseph full-time head coach.
[12]
Joseph was fired after the 2018?19 season. He had an overall 44?57 record (.436) at GW including 21?33 (.389) in the Atlantic 10.
On March 21, 2019, former
Siena
head coach
Jamion Christian
[13]
was hired as the new head coach. Christian accumulated a 29?50 record in three seasons and was let go. On April 1, 2022, longtime George Mason and Miami (FL) assistant Chris Caputo was hired as the new coach.
Postseason
[
edit
]
NCAA tournament results
[
edit
]
The Colonials have appeared in the
NCAA tournament
11 times. Their combined record is 4?11.
Year
|
Seed
|
Round
|
Opponent
|
Result
|
1954
|
|
First Round
|
NC State
|
L 73?75
|
1961
|
|
First Round
|
Princeton
|
L 67?84
|
1993
|
No. 12
|
First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
|
No. 5 New Mexico
No. 13 Southern
No. 1 Michigan
|
W
82?68
W
90?80
L 64?72
|
1994
|
No. 10
|
First Round
Second Round
|
No. 7 UAB
No. 2 Connecticut
|
W
51?46
L 63?75
|
1996
|
No. 11
|
First Round
|
No. 6 Iowa
|
L 79?81
|
1998
|
No. 9
|
First Round
|
No. 8 Oklahoma State
|
L 59?74
|
1999
|
No. 11
|
First Round
|
No. 6 Indiana
|
L 88?108
|
2005
|
No. 12
|
First Round
|
No. 5 Georgia Tech
|
L 68?80
|
2006
|
No. 8
|
First Round
Second Round
|
No. 9 UNC Wilmington
No. 1 Duke
|
W
88?85
OT
L 61?74
|
2007
|
No. 11
|
First Round
|
No. 6 Vanderbilt
|
L 44?77
|
2014
|
No. 9
|
Second Round
|
No. 8 Memphis
|
L 66?71
|
NIT results
[
edit
]
The Colonials have appeared in the
National Invitation Tournament
(NIT) six times. Their combined record is 6?5. They won the NIT championship in
2016
.
CBI results
[
edit
]
The Colonials have appeared in the
College Basketball Invitational
(CBI) two times. Their combined record is 1?2.
Year
|
Round
|
Opponent
|
Result
|
2010
|
First round
|
VCU
|
L 73?79
|
2017
|
First round
Quarterfinals
|
Toledo
UIC
|
W
73?69
L 71?80
|
Coaches
[
edit
]
The
Colonials
have had 27 coaches in its history including two seasons with two head coaches.
|
|
Overall
|
Conference
|
|
Name
|
Years
|
Record
|
Pct.
|
Record
|
Pct.
|
Note
|
J. Kramer
|
1906?08
|
7?12
|
.368
|
|
|
First collegiate basketball team organized in the District of Columbia.
|
No Varsity
|
1909?12
|
|
|
|
|
|
Slitz Schlosser
|
1913?14
|
4?17
|
.190
|
|
|
|
Nathan Dougherty
|
1914?15
|
5?9
|
.357
|
|
|
|
George Colliflower
|
1916?17
|
9?18
|
.333
|
|
|
|
Goesbeck & Murphy
|
1917?18
|
5?6
|
.455
|
|
|
|
No Varsity (
WWI
)
|
1919?20
|
|
|
|
|
|
Brian Morse
|
1921?23
|
16?27
|
.372
|
|
|
|
Jack Dailey
|
1924?25
|
8?14
|
.364
|
|
|
|
James Lemon
|
1926?27
|
12?16
|
.429
|
|
|
|
Maud Crum
|
1928?29
|
13?14
|
.481
|
|
|
|
Joe Mitchell
|
1929?30
|
9?7
|
.563
|
|
|
|
Jim Pixlee
|
1931?32
|
22?9
|
.710
|
|
|
|
Ted O'Leary
|
1933?34
|
26?9
|
.743
|
|
|
|
Jim Pixlee & Logan Wilson
|
1934?35
|
14?6
|
.700
|
|
|
|
William Reinhart
|
1936?42, 1950?66
|
319?237
|
.574
|
|
|
Southern Conference tournament Champions 1954, 1961; NCAA Tournament 1954, 1961
|
Arthur "Otts" Zahn
|
1942?43, 1946?47
|
45?21
|
.682
|
|
|
No Varsity 1944?45 (
World War II
), Southern Conference tournament Champion 1943
|
George Garber
|
1948?49
|
37?15
|
.712
|
|
|
|
Babe McCarthy
|
1966?67
|
6?18
|
.250
|
|
|
|
Wayne Dobbs
|
1968?70
|
31?45
|
.408
|
|
|
|
Carl Slone
|
1971?74
|
54?48
|
.529
|
|
|
|
Bob Tallent
|
1975?81
|
102?84
|
.548
|
|
|
|
Gerry Gimelstob
|
1982?85
|
58?55
|
.513
|
31?33
|
.484
|
1981?82 Season in Eastern Eight Conference, 1982?85 Atlantic 10
|
John Kuester
|
1986?90
|
50?91
|
.355
|
20?52
|
.278
|
|
Mike Jarvis
|
1991?98
|
152?90
|
.628
|
76?52
|
.594
|
NCAA Tournament '93 (Sweet 16), '94, '96, '98;
NIT
'91
,
'95
,
'97
|
Tom Penders
|
1999?2001
|
49?42
|
.538
|
28?20
|
.583
|
NCAA Tournament '99
|
Karl Hobbs
|
2001?2011
|
149?115
|
.564
|
74?70
|
.514
|
NCAA Tournament '05, '06, '07; NIT
'04
;
CBI
'10
;
Atlantic 10 tournament
champions
'05
,
'07
; Atlantic 10 Regular Season Champions '06; National Coach of the Year Finalist 2005?06
|
Mike Lonergan
[14]
|
2011?2016
|
46?45
|
.506
|
23?25
|
.479
|
NCAA Tournament
'14
; NIT
'15
,
'16
(Champions)
|
|
Maurice Joseph
[15]
|
2016?2019
|
44?57
|
.436
|
21?33
|
.389
|
Interim head coach in 2016; named full-time head coach on March 27, 2017
[12]
|
|
Jamion Christian
[16]
|
2019?2022
|
29?50
|
.367
|
17?26
|
.395
|
|
Chris Caputo
[17]
|
2022?present
|
16?16
|
.500
|
10-8
|
.556
|
|
Significant games in Revolutionaries men's basketball history
[
edit
]
GW 97, No. 5
West Virginia
93 ? February 17, 1960
After falling to the Mountaineers earlier in the season, an announced crowd of 6,400 watched the Colonials host
Jerry West
and the nation's fifth-ranked basketball team. Despite giving up 40 points, 13 rebounds and 7 assists to West, GW Athletic Hall of Famer Jon Feldman exploded for a career-high 42 points on 17?25 shooting to stun West Virginia.
[18]
GW 111, No. 12
Syracuse
104 (OT) ? November 16, 1994
The Colonials were invited to participate in the pre-season NIT at Manley Field House at Syracuse, and though they gave up a last-second three-pointer to allow the Orangemen to send the game to overtime, the Colonials controlled the extra period to secure the win on national television.
[19]
GW 78, No. 1
UMass
75 ? February 4, 1995
President Bill Clinton
joined the Colonials at Charles E. Smith Center when
John Calipari
and the top-ranked Massachusetts Minutemen came to Washington. Kwame Evans scored 27 points, including his 1,000th and fans rushed the court as the Colonials scored their first-ever upset of a number one team.
[20]
GW 78, No. 18
Xavier
73 ? OT, January 14, 1998
The Colonials hosted
James Posey
and the 18th ranked Musketeers at the Charles E. Smith Center. After trailing most of the game, Xavier took control of the game midway through the second half. GW forward Yegor Mescheriakov sprained his right ankle jumping for a rebound and limped off the court with 16:32 remaining. Without its leading scorer, and with Koul on the bench with four fouls, GW sagged. With GW's offense sputtering, Mike King entered the game and rescued the Colonials. King scored eight straight points and tied the game at 63?63. The clock then showed all zeros and the GW men's basketball team trailed 18th-ranked Xavier 68?66. King, a freshman playing his third collegiate game after achieving academic eligibility, calmly made two free throws - sending the game into overtime and the Smith Center into a frenzy. In the overtime, King continued his heroics scoring 8 of GW's 10 points in OT to a 78?73 win over Xavier.
[21]
GW 77,
Xavier
74 ? February 27, 1999
With the Atlantic 10 West Division Title on the line in the final game of the regular season, the Colonials hosted the Xavier Musketeers. Seniors Shawnta Rogers and Yegor Mescheriakov were playing their final home games. Despite missing a game-winning three with five seconds left Rogers received a pass following a Mike King rebound and broke the 74?74 tie as time expired to win the game and the division. The Colonials would later receive an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament under first-year coach
Tom Penders
.
[22]
GW 96, No. 11
Michigan State
83 ? December 4, 2004
GW 101, No. 12
Maryland
92 ? December 5, 2004
In the 2004 BB&T Championship, the Colonials upset ranked teams on two consecutive days, winning each by at least 9 points. Karl Hobbs guided his team to wins over the Michigan State Spartans and Maryland Terrapins.
Pops Mensah-Bonsu
scored 23 points in the first game and T.J. Thompson poured in 27 against the Terrapins for the Colonials. The next week, the Colonials entered both national polls for the first time in six years.
[23]
GW 76,
Saint Joseph’s
67 ? March 12, 2005
The Colonials clinched their first-ever Atlantic 10 Tournament title in 2005 behind 20 points from Omar Williams. The Colonials were given a 12th seed and faced Georgia Tech in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.
[24]
No. 6 GW 86,
Charlotte
85 (OT) ? March 4, 2006
The sixth-ranked Colonials secured a perfect Atlantic 10 record and Charles E. Smith Center record when Carl Elliott tipped-in an errant Noel Wilmore three-point shot to finish a 26?1 regular season, solidifying the nation's best record, and the best regular season record in Colonials history.
[25]
(8) GW 88, (9)
UNC-Wilmington
85 (OT) ? March 16, 2006
After drawing a surprising 8-seed following its 26?1 regular season campaign and reaching as high as 6th in the nation, the Colonials were sent to take on UNC-Wilmington in nearby Greensboro, North Carolina. Pops Mensah-Bonsu returned from a meniscus injury and helped the Colonials overcome an 18-point second half deficit to take on top-seeded Duke in the second round of the 2006 tournament.
[26]
GW 78, Rhode Island 69 ? March 10, 2007
The Colonials controlled the entire second half in winning their second Atlantic 10 Tournament championship in school history (and second in three years), giving the Colonials their third consecutive NCAA Tournament bid and first time in school history with three consecutive 20-win seasons. The Colonials drew an 11th seed and travelled to Sacramento to play 6th-seeded Vanderbilt.
[27]
GW 49,
Saint Louis
20 ? January 10, 2008
The Colonials held the Saint Louis Billikens to just 20 points for the entire game, which set the record for the lowest point total since the inception of the
shot clock
in Division I College Basketball. Saint Louis was held to 14.6% shooting for the game, and made only one of nineteen three-point attempts. They had seven points in the first half.
[28]
GW 66,
Memphis
71 ? March 21, 2014
The Colonials drew the Memphis Tigers in the East Regional of the NCAA Tournament. The game was held in Raleigh, NC. The Colonials trailed Memphis for the bulk of the game but had two shots to tie in the final minute that didn't connect leaving them with a loss in their first NCAA Tournament Appearance since 2007.
[29]
GW 73, No. 6
Virginia
68 ? November 16, 2015
Hosting UVA a year after losing 59?42 in Charlottesville, the Colonials held a lead for most of the game and knocked off Virginia for their first win over a top 10 team since defeating UMass 20 years prior. It was the third straight year GW had beaten a ranked team, and a sold-out crowd at the Smith Center stormed the court as GW pulled off the upset. Patricio Garino led GW with 18 points and had many key buckets to spur momentum the Colonial's way.
[30]
(4) GW 76, (1)
Valparaiso
60 ? March 31, 2016
The Colonials made their way through the NIT tournament as a 4 seed by beating 3 higher seeds than them. They won their first National Invitation Tournament and first postseason title starting 3 foreign players and player of the tournament Tyler Cavanaugh. GW set a new school record with 28 wins with this game.
[31]
Notable alumni
[
edit
]
Revolutionaries in the NBA
[
edit
]
- Yuta Watanabe
? Attended GW 2014?18,
Memphis Grizzlies
2018?20,
Toronto Raptors
2020?22,
Brooklyn Nets
2022?23,
Phoenix Suns
2023?24, Memphis Grizzlies 2024?present
[32]
- Tyler Cavanaugh
? Attended GW 2015?17,
Atlanta Hawks
2017?18,
Utah Jazz
2018?19
[33]
- Patricio Garino
? Attended GW 2012?16,
Orlando Magic
2017
[34]
- Pops Mensah-Bonsu
? Attended GW 2002?06, Played in the
NBA
and represented
Great Britain
in the
2012 Olympics
- Mike Hall
? Attended GW 2002?06,
Washington Wizards
2006?07
[35]
- Yinka Dare
? Attended GW 1992?94,
New Jersey Nets
1994?98
[36]
- Mike Brown
? Attended GW 1981?85,
Chicago Bulls
1986?88,
Utah Jazz
1988?93,
Minnesota Timberwolves
1993?95,
Philadelphia 76ers
1995?96,
Phoenix Suns
1996?97
[37]
- Gene Guarilia
? Attended GW 1956?58,
Boston Celtics
1959?63
- Joe Holup
?
Syracuse Nationals
1956?58,
Detroit Pistons
1957?59
[38]
- Corky Devlin
?
Fort Wayne Pistons
1955?57,
Minneapolis Lakers
1957?58
[39]
Other Revolutionaries of note
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
"Athletics logo - George Washington University"
. July 23, 2018
. Retrieved
August 25,
2018
.
- ^
Reports, Wire (April 21, 2001).
"Penders Resigns Under Cloud"
.
Los Angeles Times
.
ISSN
0458-3035
. Retrieved
March 27,
2017
.
- ^
"Yahoo Sports - Sports News, Scores, Fantasy Games"
.
Yahoo Sports
.
- ^
Express: A Publication of The Washington Post
Archived
May 24, 2007, at the
Wayback Machine
- ^
"VandySports.com - GAME DAY REPORT: Vanderbilt vs. George Washington"
. March 15, 2007.
- ^
FOX Sports on MSN ? College Basketball ? Recap
Archived
February 10, 2009, at the
Wayback Machine
- ^
"Patient Saint Joseph's bounces GW from A-10 tourney"
.
Washington Times
. March 8, 2011
. Retrieved
August 26,
2014
.
- ^
"George Washington Colonials fire coach Karl Hobbs - ESPN"
. Sports.espn.go.com. April 25, 2011
. Retrieved
August 26,
2014
.
- ^
"George Washington hires Lonergan as coach"
.
ESPN.com
. May 6, 2011.
- ^
"Source: Lonergan fired by George Washington"
. September 17, 2016
. Retrieved
September 17,
2016
.
- ^
"GW NAMES MIKE LONERGAN AS HEAD MEN'S BASKETBALL COACH"
. Archived from
the original
on March 12, 2012
. Retrieved
May 6,
2011
.
- ^
a
b
"GW names Maurice Joseph full-time men's basketball coach"
.
Washington Post
. Retrieved
March 27,
2017
.
- ^
"Jamion Christian leaves Siena for George Washington job"
. WNYT.com. Archived from
the original
on March 22, 2019
. Retrieved
March 21,
2019
.
- ^
"2012-13 George Washington Colonials Roster and Stats | College Basketball at"
. Sports-reference.com. Archived from
the original
on January 2, 2015
. Retrieved
2014-08-26
.
- ^
"GW NAMES MAURICE JOSEPH INTERIM HEAD COACH OF MEN'S BASKETBALL"
. GWSports.com
. Retrieved
November 16,
2016
.
- ^
"GW NAMES Jamion Christian HEAD COACH OF MEN'S BASKETBALL"
. GWSports.com
. Retrieved
March 21,
2019
.
- ^
"Chris Caputo Named GW Men's Basketball Head Coach"
. GWSports.com
. Retrieved
April 1,
2022
.
- ^
"West Virginia at George Washington"
. Archived from
the original
on October 2, 2011.
- ^
Antonen, Mel (November 17, 1994).
"George Washington stuns Syracuse 111-104 in OT"
.
USAToday
. Archived from
the original
on October 26, 2012.
- ^
"Colonials knock off UMass"
. February 5, 1995.
- ^
"Colonials, King rule 18th-ranked Xavier"
. January 15, 1998.
- ^
"GW topples Xavier, takes A-10 West title ? Sports"
. Archived from
the original
on January 25, 2013.
- ^
"GW Men's Basketball Back in the Top 25 After Six-Year Absence: No. 21 AP; No. 25
USA Today
/Coaches Poll ? GEORGE WASHINGTON OFFICIAL ATHLETIC SITE"
. Archived from
the original
on July 25, 2011
. Retrieved
March 27,
2010
.
- ^
"Colonials Win First-Ever A-10 Tournament Title, Defeating Saint Joseph's 76-67"
.
- ^
"Colonials Hold Off 49ers In Overtime, 86-85"
.
- ^
"George Washington Advances Past UNC Wilmington In OT, 88-85"
.
- ^
"George Washington Wins A-10 Championship With 78-69 Decision Over URI"
.
- ^
"Colonials Roll All Over St. Louis, 49-20"
.
- ^
NCAA tournament: GW can’t get over the hump in loss to Memphis
Washington Post
- ^
George Washington Stuns No. 6 Virginia
"Washington Post"
- ^
G. Washington beats Valpo behind tourney MOP Tyler Cavanaugh
"ESPN"
- ^
"Yuta Watanabe Stats"
.
Basketball-Reference.com
. Retrieved
February 18,
2019
.
- ^
"Tyler Cavanaugh Stats - Basketball-Reference.com"
.
Basketball-Reference.com
.
- ^
"Patricio Garino Stats - Basketball-Reference.com"
.
Basketball-Reference.com
.
- ^
"Mike Hall Stats - Basketball-Reference.com"
.
Basketball-Reference.com
.
- ^
"Yinka Dare Stats - Basketball-Reference.com"
.
Basketball-Reference.com
.
- ^
"Mike Brown Stats - Basketball-Reference.com"
.
Basketball-Reference.com
.
- ^
"Joe Holup Stats - Basketball-Reference.com"
.
Basketball-Reference.com
.
- ^
"Corky Devlin Stats - Basketball-Reference.com"
.
Basketball-Reference.com
.
- ^
"Knicks Add to Coaching Staff"
.
NBA.com
. September 3, 2014
. Retrieved
September 8,
2014
.
- ^
Odeven, Ed (April 13, 2018).
"Yuta Watanabe reflects on successful hoop career at George Washington"
.
The Japan Times
.
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