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deweydw
1/7/2008, 03:59 PM
Why would anyone want to leave Hawaii? Well for $1.2 million more a year, wouldn't you?

http://sports.yahoo.com/ncaaf/news?slug=ap-smu-junejones&prov=ap&type=lgns

By JIM VERTUNO, AP Sports Writer
January 7, 2008

AP - Jan 7, 1:56 pm EST
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June Jones is giving up the paradise of Hawaii for the daunting task of trying to restore SMU to football respectability.

Jones, who coached Hawaii to an unbeaten regular season, resisted an emotional plea from Warriors fans as well as the governor and decided Monday to return to the mainland to guide a team that finished 1-11.

He agreed to a 5-year deal with SMU, which will pay him about $2 million a year, agent Leigh Steinberg told The Associated Press.

"He slept on it, finally came to peace and arrived at a decision," Steinberg said. "I think he's exhilarated by the challenge, by the environment."

Steinberg expected SMU to hold an afternoon news conference to introduce their new coach. SMU officials did not immediately respond to a telephone message seeking comment.

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Jones was touched by the outpouring of support from Hawaii fans, including Gov. Linda Lingle, but he was ultimately lured by SMU's facilities and bigger budget. Jones called Hawaii officials Monday to tell them.

Jones spent Sunday in Dallas meeting with SMU officials and the search committee that has been working since late October to hire a replacement for Phil Bennett. As the day went on, more people from Hawaii reached out to Jones, hoping to persuade him to return to the team he's guided to national prominence the last nine years.

Hawaii officials had made an offer of a salary of about $800,000 a year and a commitment to improve its facilities.

"In 30 years representing athletes, I've never seen the emotional reaction from a state like Hawaii," Steinberg said. "There was a flood of e-mails and calls exhorting him to stay."

It wasn't enough, however, to keep the 54-year-old coach from leaving the cool island breezes for the heat of football-crazy Texas and its fertile recruiting ground. His contract puts him on the same pay scale as new Texas A&M coach Mike Sherman ($1.8 million).

Jones went 75-41 at Hawaii, including 4-2 in bowls. His teams finished first in the WAC twice and second two other times.

He ended a 12-year stint in the NFL in the late 1990s to take over a Hawaii program coming off an 0-11 season. He took the team to nine wins the following season, the largest turnaround in NCAA history. With a record passing attack in place, the Warriors became a perennial contender in the Western Athletic Conference. They went 12-0 this season before losing to Georgia in the Sugar Bowl.

SMU might be a bigger challenge because losing is so entrenched for a program that still hasn't recovered from receiving the NCAA's only death penalty.

The once-proud program of Doak Walker, Don Meredith and Eric Dickerson went 0-8 in Conference USA this season. The struggles were compounded by the long, slow hunt for a coach.


AP - Jan 7, 1:35 pm EST
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SMU became the first major college to fire its coach this season when it dumped Bennett after the Mustangs were eliminated from bowl contention. Yet it took 10 weeks to find a replacement. SMU got permission to talk to Jones on Dec. 24.

At SMU, Jones will get more money, a bigger budget and better facilities. He'll also have a larger talent pool to recruit. The trade-off is that he'll also have a lot more local competition. His success at Hawaii and his NFL experience certainly should help.

Jones becomes the fifth coach to lead SMU since it came off the death penalty in 1989. The Mustangs are 58-153-3 in that span, with only one winning season. The death penalty was levied in 1987 because of rampant recruiting violations. The school voluntarily sat out in '88.

Bennett went 18-52 over six seasons, matching the longest tenure and the most wins by any coach since the death penalty. SMU was 6-6 in 2006, which let Bennett keep his job and sparked hope for '07 that never materialized.

He broke into coaching at Hawaii in 1983, then went to the USFL and CFL. He joined the NFL in Houston in 1987, then went to Detroit and Atlanta. He became coach of the Falcons from 1994-96, then joined San Diego as an assistant in 1998. He became the interim coach midway through that season, then left for Hawaii.

AP Sports Writer Jaime Aron in Dallas contributed to this report.

Dio
1/7/2008, 04:13 PM
He must have heard that SMU girls throw dirty leg.

royalfan5
1/7/2008, 04:15 PM
I hope SMU is on Tech's schedule soon.

NYC Poke
1/7/2008, 04:19 PM
Heh.

"No matter what he ever did or no matter how much he won he wasn't going to have the right money or facilities," Colt Brennan, Hawaii's Heisman Trophy finalist quarterback told Schad. "I'm sad to see him go but after just having experienced the Sugar Bowl I understand how this is a business."

Brennan won't be back next season for Hawaii.

"My concern is Hawaii," Brennan said. "I hope it doesn't hurt our program and I don't think it has to. I would personally like to see Hawaii hire Norm Chow. I think he would be a great fit for Hawaii just like coach Jones was."

http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=3184911

I had heard they grow really good weed in Hawaii. This confirms it.

GrapevineSooner
1/7/2008, 05:05 PM
SMU must be starting to ramp up it's 'Pay for Play' program, again. ;)

yermom
1/7/2008, 05:18 PM
that's a lot of money... there are Big 12 coaches that don't make that much

Paperclip
1/7/2008, 05:36 PM
Just driving by it, that stadium looks pretty decent. Anyone been there? Oh, and I just found out today that it's not named for the former president.

PLaw
1/7/2008, 06:10 PM
Yeah, the DMN is saying his package is just under $2MM per year.

June Jones named SMU's football coach

04:48 PM CST on Monday, January 7, 2008
By KATE HAIROPOULOS / The Dallas Morning News
[email protected]

After a night of uncertainty, June Jones and SMU have reached an agreement to make him the school's new football coach, agent Leigh Steinberg said Monday.

As of the wee hours of this morning, Jones was torn between staying at Hawaii and taking on the SMU reclamation project.

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But Jones and SMU have agreed to a five-year deal worth just short of $2 million a year. The deal is funded by boosters and will easily make Jones the highest-paid coach in Conference USA. Jones will be introduced at a news conference at 3 p.m. (CT).

"When he woke up this morning, he was at peace and felt great about the decision to come to SMU," Steinberg said.

Jones, who arrived in Dallas early Sunday morning, met with SMU officials Sunday even while Hawaii made a late surge to sway him to stay. Hawaii came back with an enhanced offer, and passionate fans and even the governor called to intervene.

But after 70 days of searching for a new coach and plenty of drama, SMU got its splash hire. Jones, an offensive specialist, led Hawaii to a 12-1 record and a BCS bowl this season.

One of the most downtrodden programs in the Bowl Subdivision, SMU lured Jones, 54, away from an island where he could probably be elected governor.


AP
June Jones led Hawaii to 12 victories and a BCS bowl berth this season. Steinberg said Jones was on the phone back to the islands late into the night. But Jones was impressed with SMU's on-campus facilities, his meeting with SMU president R. Gerald Turner, the support of boosters "and the singular vision and commitment from the top to the bottom," Steinberg said.

Jones reportedly sent a letter to friends announcing his intention to resign from Hawaii on Saturday before he left for Dallas. The letter reportedly listed several reasons why Jones wouldn’t return to the school, centering on issues the athletic department had failed to deal with.

But Hawaii's late-hour push addressed the school's commitment to facilities and the program's infrastructure for the first time, causing Jones pause. As of late Sunday, Steinberg’s thought was "someone was going to be horrendously disappointed," Steinberg said.

"In 33 years of working in this field, I've never seen anything like that torrent of emotion. At the end of the day, he’s left the program in tremendous shape and left a legacy that can be passed on."

Jones went 76-41 in nine seasons at Hawaii, where he played quarterback and started his coaching career as a graduate assistant.

Since returning as head coach in 1999, he immediately resurrected the program, which went 0-12 in 1998. Hawaii went 9-4 in Jones' first season, the best turnaround in NCAA history.

But facilities and resources at Hawaii never improved with the team. Hawaii inexplicably waited until Thursday to make its initial offer to extend Jones’ contract, which expires June 30.

Jones will face another rebuilding job, one that some critics have labeled hopeless. SMU has had two non-losing seasons since 1989, when the program came back from the "Death Penalty." SMU is the only C-USA program that hasn't been to a bowl since 2002. Its last bowl appearance was in 1984.

The Mustangs were 1-11 this season after going 6-6 in 2006. The athletic department has run in the red for years and attendance has ranked near the bottom of C-USA.

Second-year athletic director Steve Orsini took his time replacing Phil Bennett, who was fired after almost six seasons on Oct. 28. Orsini repeatedly stated that it took time to pursue quality candidates, and that he was aiming high. He raised some $10 million from boosters toward the new coach. Bennett made about $500,000 a year.

Jones and Steinberg received permission from Hawaii to explore other options shortly before Christmas. Discussions with SMU intensified after Hawaii ended its season with a 41-10 loss to Georgia in last Tuesday's Sugar Bowl.

Jones is leaving his beloved, laid-back island culture for the stately homes of University Park and landlocked Dallas. Jones has coached in Texas before – for the USFL's Houston Gamblers and the Houston Oilers in the 1980s.

Jones spent 12 years in the NFL, including stints as head coach of the Atlanta Falcons and the San Diego Chargers. He turned down an opportunity to remain with the Chargers to take the Hawaii job for considerably less money in December 1998.

Jones is known for his prolific run-and-shoot offense that helped quarterback Colt Brennan become a Heisman finalist this season and former quarterback Timmy Chang to claim the all-time NCAA passing record. Hawaii's offense ranked third in the Bowl Subdivision this season, averaging 512.1 yards per game.

Jones survived a serious car accident in 2001, in which he suffered a torn aorta, and has said that he is lucky to be alive.

Other known candidates during SMU's lengthy search included former Miami coach Larry Coker, former Texas A&M coach Dennis Franchione and former Detroit Lions offensive coordinator Mike Martz. Rick Neuheisel acknowledged at least indirect contact before accepting the UCLA job. Former Navy coach Paul Johnson visited SMU in early December before taking the Georgia Tech job days later. Louisville coach Steve Kragthorpe had to hold a press conference in November to dismiss rumors he would leave for SMU.

SMU was the first Bowl Subdivision school to make a coaching change and the last remaining school to make a hire, before Jones' move opened the Hawaii position.

PLaw
1/7/2008, 06:10 PM
So, $2mm for June at SMU. Maybe, the ponies should invest facilities, too?

Jimminy Crimson
1/7/2008, 06:45 PM
Goooo red!
Goooo blue!
Goooo Mustangs!
S-M-U!

bluedogok
1/7/2008, 09:57 PM
Just driving by it, that stadium looks pretty decent. Anyone been there? Oh, and I just found out today that it's not named for the former president.
We went to the Tech-SMU game up there on Labor Day, it is a real nice facility for a stadium of its size. Much nicer than the old Ownby Stadium where they played when they came back from the death penalty.


So, $2mm for June at SMU. Maybe, the ponies should invest facilities, too?
They have been, it suprised me how much they had already done and are still working on campus. A big change from the SMU-TCU game that I went to in 1992.

Makes me wonder how good the recruiting class and underclassmen at Hawaii are, maybe he saw the future without a Colt Brennan or Timmy Chang.

tomtom
1/7/2008, 11:04 PM
he will never be a BCS bowl game at SMU.

bluesmagoo
1/7/2008, 11:36 PM
Probably got island fever.