|
Jankovich Coming to SMUModerators: PonyPride, SmooPower
30 posts
• Page 2 of 2 • 1, 2
Re: Jankovich Coming to SMULB is obviously bringing in some talent that can recruit- both nationally and in Texas. Hey JJ are you listening?
Re: Jankovich Coming to SMUhopefully orsini can point out to June that it took coach brown 48 hours to figure out how to pull in two of the best recruiters in the country....so maybe, just maybe we could use more then 1 great recruiter for football?
Re: Jankovich Coming to SMU
I was in no way trying to bash what JJ has accomplished GO MUSTANGS!
Re: Jankovich Coming to SMUFrom SMUMustangs.com:
Tim Jankovich Named Associate Head Coach Jankovich Spent The Past Five Seasons As Head Coach At Illinois State April 26, 2012 DALLAS (SMU) - Tim Jankovich has been named Associate Head Coach for SMU men's basketball, Head Coach Larry Brown announced today. "Tim was highly recommended by Kansas Coach Bill Self, and I am very excited to have him at SMU," stated Brown. "The number and quality of coaches interested in coming to SMU has been tremendous; and to get someone with his experience and success as a head coach is invaluable." Jankovich spent the past five seasons (2007-2012) as the head coach at Illinois State, where his teams went 105-64, and made four NIT appearances (2008, 2009, 2010, 2012). He also won at least 20 games and finished in the top-three in the Missouri Valley Conference in each of the NIT seasons. They advanced to the MVC tournament championship game three times (2008, 2009, 2012), twice falling in overtime. He became the first head coach in MVC history to make the tournament title game in each of his first two seasons. Before arriving at Illinois State, he spent five years as an assistant for Kansas coach Bill Self (one at Illinois and four at Kansas). During that stretch, their teams made five straight NCAA Tournament appearances, two trips to the Elite Eight and laid the foundation for Kansas' National Championship season in 2008. In all, Jankovich has coached teams that have advanced to the postseason in seven-straight seasons, and eight of the last nine years. In Jankovich's four years at Kansas, the Jayhawks compiled a 105-29 (.784) record, won three Big 12 regular season titles (2005, 2006, 2007), a pair of Big 12 tournaments (2006, 2007) and advanced to the NCAA Tournament in each campaign. In his final season at Kansas (2006-07), the Jayhawks went 33-5, and advanced to the Elite Eight for the second time in four years. The Jayhawks finished the season ranked No. 2 in both the final Associated Press and ESPN/USA Today polls. KU finished each season of his tenure ranked No. 16 or better. In his one year as an assistant at Illinois (2002-03), the team finished 25-7, won the Big Ten Tournament and advanced to the second round of the NCAA Tournament. Illinois was ranked No. 11 in the final AP poll. For the past 25-plus years, Jankovich has played a key role in recruiting and player development. He is responsible for having attracted and coached some of the most accomplished recruiting classes in college basketball and has coached 24 current or former NBA players. In addition to working under Self, Jankovich has served as an assistant coach for Eddie Sutton, Jack Hartman, Lon Kruger, Boyd Grant, Gene Iba, Bob Weltlich and Kevin Stallings. Other than Kansas and Illinois, he also served on the coaching staffs at UT-Pan American, Kansas State, Texas, Colorado State, Baylor, Oklahoma State and Vanderbilt. In addition, he served as a head coach for four years at the University of North Texas (1993-97) and two seasons at Hutchinson Community College (1997-99). In his first season as head coach at North Texas (1993-94), his squad that had posted the second-biggest turnaround in the nation that year (from 5-21 to 14-15), and was one win away from an automatic bid into the NCAA Tournament. His team also made the Southland Conference Tournament championship game in 1996. In his fourth season, the Eagles moved to the Big West Conference. In all, his four years at North Texas comprised the second-best winning percentage in school history to that point (53-57, .482). Jankovich guided Hutchinson Community College from 1997-99, going 50-14, posting back-to-back 20-win campaigns and national rankings both seasons. At Vanderbilt (1999-2002), he played a key role in turning around a struggling program and helped lead the Commodores to two NIT appearances in three years (2000, 2002). The core of Jankovich's recruited players at Vanderbilt advanced to the NCAA Sweet 16 in 2004. One of the winningest players in Kansas State history, he was a four-year starter at point guard (one year at Washington State and three years for legendary coach Jack Hartman at Kansas State). In each of his three seasons, at KSU, the Wildcats were ranked in the top-20 and advanced to the NCAA Tournament. Jankovich played in nine NCAA Tournament games, advancing to the 1981 Elite Eight and the 1982 Sweet 16. A three-time academic All-American and honorable mention All-Big Eight player, Jankovich finished his career at Kansas State in the school's top-10 in nine categories, including first in season free-throw percentage (.917) and eighth in career field-goal percentage (.510). In addition, he set the Big Eight Tournament record for single-game assists (14). Jankovich graduated from Kansas State cum laude in 1982 with a 3.63 GPA in business finance and received his master's degree in radio/television in 1985. He and his wife, Cindy, have a son, Michael. PonyFans.com ... is really the premier place for Mustang talk on the Web.
— New York Times https://www.facebook.com/PonyFanscom/ twitter.com/PonyFans https://www.instagram.com/ponyfans_staff/ threads.com/ponyfans_staff
Re: Jankovich Coming to SMUWelcome to the Hilltop- Jank and family.
Re: Jankovich Coming to SMUNice having Bill Self as a free consultant.
Re: Jankovich Coming to SMU
Brown hire is impossible without Coach Jones, he who reversed a terrible program, took us to three bowls after an incredible drought, and restored pride to a University.
Re: Jankovich Coming to SMUI do hope the people in place (Orsini and key donors) realize that they maybe overlooking one of the best coaches at SMU--Tom Mason. He has done more with less than anyone on campus. His defense gets better every year and recruits and colleges have taken notice. He likes SMU and is loyal. A year ago he was heavily solicted by an SEC school to become their DC, this year was recruited to be the HC at Fresno and in December was going to stay and take his chances during the "ASU challenge". He is basically our strongest recruiter, entirely in charge of the defense and number two on June's staff. While we are bidding up the cost of basketball assistants, he shouldn't be taken for granted.
Re: Jankovich Coming to SMUI'm sure a little of the 7-8 Million payout bump will be headed its way.
Re: Jankovich Coming to SMU
Again, I am not putting down JJ or his accomplishments and what he has not only done for the football program but the school in general as far as exposure goes. I am well aware the role he played in bringing LB to SMU. But from a national media standpoint, I believe Brown's hiring is a bigger "splash". That might have been a better word to use than impact. GO MUSTANGS!
Re: Jankovich Coming to SMUAs hard as it is to fathom, I guess you're right. This has been huge.
Re: Jankovich Coming to SMU
A much more reliable and trustworthy consultant than Gay Fatterson.
Re: Jankovich Coming to SMU
It might be a bigger story, but the June Jones hiring was 10 times more significant and important in SMU's history than the Larry Brown hiring. No JJ, no winning football, no bowl games, no Big East, no Larry Brown. JJ got things started. JJ had the guts to come here when not many people of his stature would have come.
Re: Jankovich Coming to SMU
He's not gonna help us any more. ![]()
Re: Jankovich Coming to SMU
Not if you're looking for a Ding Dong.
30 posts
• Page 2 of 2 • 1, 2
Who is onlineUsers browsing this forum: Google [Bot] and 2 guests |
|