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When
Johnny Jones arrived as a freshman on the
LSU campus in 1980 as an all-state guard
and one of the nations top recruits, he
brought with him the nickname "The
Bullet," which helped make him an instant
hit with Tiger basketball fans.
After all, LSU could already boast having
"Pistol" Pete Maravich in its storied
past. Now, it had "The Bullet."
Jones went on to help lead LSU to one of
the most successful chapters in the
school's basketball history, including an
appearance in the NCAA Final Four in 1981.
But that experience was just the beginning
for Jones, whose lifelong career in
basketball not only includes that trip to
the Final Four, but another Final Four
appearance as an assistant coach, as well
as seven other coaching trips to the NCAA
playoffs and two NIT berths as an
assistant coach.
It was no wonder that Jones' background as
a winner both on the court and from the
sidelines made him the leading choice to
take over the North Texas Mean Green five
years ago.
"The Bullet," who was named as North
Texas' new men's basketball head coach on
April 16, 2001, wasted no time turning the
Mean Green around and making North Texas
the newest success story on his resume.
In his debut at the helm, the 41-year-old
Jones and his staff guided the Mean Green
to a 15-14 overall record -- the program's
first winning season since 1995-96. The
10-3 home record compiled by the Mean
Green was the school's best effort at the
Super Pit in 11 seasons.
The 11-win improvement enjoyed by the Mean
Green (who went 4-24 in 2000-01) tied for
the seventh-best one season turnaround in
the NCAA. And the improvement from that
4-24 record (.143) to 15-14 (.517) marked
the third-best improvement in winning
percentage in the country.
Along the way, the Mean Green also
averaged a conference-leading 78.6 point
per game, improved their scoring defense
by nearly 10 points per game and racked up
a then school-record 99 blocked shots. The
improvements didn't stop there, however,
as Jones led the Mean Green to its best
ever finish in the Sun Belt Conference in
2003-04. That squad went 8-7 in Sun Belt
Conference action, including wins over
both division champions. Along the way to
a third-place finish in the West Division,
Jones picked up his 50th career victory
and has helped North Texas set a winning
standard at the Super Pit as his teams
have posted 42 home wins over the last
five years, the most over a five-year span
since 1973-74 thru 1977-78.
Jones backed up the success of the 2003-04
season by leading North Texas to 14
regular-season wins, tying the program's
most since 1990-91, and to its most
non-conference wins in over 20 years
during both the 2004-05 and 2005-06
seasons.
Jones moved into fifth place for all-time
victories among NT's 16 head coaches in
school history last season while leading
North Texas to its most home victories in
30 years with 11 wins at the Super Pit.
His team also equalled or topped the
previous years squad for total victories
for the fourth time in five seasons.
In each of the last four seasons, North
Texas had its best starts since 1994-95
and in Jones' second year as head coach
the Mean Green won its first
regular-season tournament since 1981 that
included a victory over NCAA Tournament
qualifier Weber State. The 2002-03 start
was even more impressive considering that
it included a season-opening victory over
Southwest Missouri State, breaking a
streak of 25 consecutive season-opening
victories for SMS at Hammons Student
Center and making the Mean Green just the
second team to ever defeat the Bears at
HSC in a season-opening game.
Under his direction, the Mean Green has
consistently put up solid numbers that
reflect the program's rise over the last
four years. That rise includes 63
victories over the last five seasons,
topping the program's win total the
previous five years by 33 victories. Over
the last three years, North Texas has
finished among the top half of the league
in at least six statistical categories and
last year were among the top half in 11.
The Mean Green also led the conference in
steals and rebounds last season, while
ranking second in scoring offense. The
team also were among the elite in the
nation in both steals and scoring, ranking
17th and 32nd, respectively, in the NCAA.
Jones' impact was immediate and instantly
created a solid foundation on which he is
using to build the Mean Green into a
program that is a conference contender on
a yearly basis.
All five seasons at the helm of the Mean
Green, Jones has placed a player on the
All-Sun Belt Conference Team and also
coached the 2005-06 Sun Belt Newcomer of
the Year. Attendance at the Super Pit has
increased since Jones' arrival as well.
Attendance at the Super Pit for the men's
basketball team has grown from an average
of 1,542 in 2000-01 to 3,360 per game.
Jones not only brings a soft-spoken
confidence to the Mean Green, he also owns
a resume that boasts a winning background
that includes stints on the coaching
staffs of two SEC powerhouses and a
three-year tenure at Memphis.
A former four-year letterman at LSU, Jones
spent 17 seasons coaching in the
collegiate ranks before being handed the
reins of the Mean Green.
Before joining the Alabama staff prior to
the 2000-01 season, Jones coached for
three seasons at Memphis, including two
seasons as associate head coach and one as
the Tigers' interim head coach during the
1999-2000 season.
He also coached for 13 seasons at his alma
mater, LSU, serving in the capacities of
assistant coach, administrative assistant
and associate head coach from 1984 to 1997
alongside legendary head coach Dale Brown.
He was the Tigers' associate head coach
from 1994-97.
It was during his tenure at LSU that Jones
earned his stripes as one of the country's
top recruiters. That's the kind of
reputation you earn when you recruit and
coach the likes of NBA superstar and
College Player of the Year Shaquille
O'Neal, two-time All-American Chris
Jackson (now known as Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf)
and former national high school player of
the year Randy Livingston.
Jones' ability as a recruiter is reflected
in the talent he not only helped lure to
LSU, but the players he attracted to
Memphis during his time there. He helped
secure LSU's 1993 recruiting class which
was ranked No. 1 in the nation. And in
1997 at Memphis, Jones also helped
accumulate a JUCO recruiting class that
was ranked No. 1 nationally and was the
cornerstone of an overall class that was
ranked seventh.
Jones, of course, knows what it takes to
be a winner on the court. As a player at
LSU from 1980-84, Jones was a member of
the Tigers' team that played in the Final
Four in 1981. As a coach, Jones has helped
coach teams to the Final Four (1986) and
the Elite Eight (1987), as well as to nine
consecutive NCAA appearances. Two of the
LSU squads he helped coach also captured
SEC championships, in 1985 and 1991.
As an assistant at Memphis in 1998, Jones
helped coach the Tigers to the Conference
USA National Division championship. When
Jones was interim head coach at Memphis in
1999-2000, the Tigers won six of their
final seven games and finished with a
15-16 record while returning just one
starter from the previous season.
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