The University of Montevallo's second men's basketball coach,
Bill Jones, passed away late Tuesday night after an extended
illness. He was 72.
Visitation is set for 4-8 p.m. on Thursday at Greenview Funeral
Home in Florence. Funeral services will be held at North Wood
Methodist Church in Florence on Friday at 11 a.m.
Jones, the long-time face of University of North Alabama
athletics, began his head coaching career at Montevallo in 1969.
"He was a legend at UNA, and won a national championship there,
but he put the Montevallo program on the map," former UM player
Billy Cannon said.
Jones left Marion Military Institute and joined the Montevallo
staff as an assistant men's basketball coach for inaugural head
coach Leon Davis in 1968 and took over the program the following
year, posting a 13-12 record for the Falcons' first winning season
since it began in 1964.
"Our program was pretty well established when he was here,"
Davis said. "We had the foundation laid when he came and then we've
had pretty big success since."
During his five seasons, he compiled an 85-53 win-loss record
and the second-best win-loss percentage (.616), second to current
UM coach Danny Young.
Jones spoke with Davis at the end of 1974 season about the
opportunity to apply to his alma mater, then known as Florence
State University.
"I told him, 'Bill, this is something you always thought you
wanted to do. You owe it to yourself to go and interview,'" Davis
said.
Jones applied, and the rest was history.
A 1958 graduate of UNA, Jones coached the Lions to a 259-141
record from 1974-1988. During that time, he won an NCAA Division-II
national championship, appeared in four NCAA Final Fours, won three
Gulf South Conference regular-season championships and three GSC
tournament championships,
He became UNA's first full-time athletic director in December
1987 and served in that role until he retired in 1994.
"He had a tremendous reputation every place, but really here in
Florence. He's an icon," said Davis en route to visitation on
Thursday.
Davis and more than a dozen of Jones' players from Montevallo
planned to attend visitation Thursday.
"I consider this just a tremendous personal loss because he was
such a great person and had such a great reputation," Davis said.
Cannon said he spent Wednesday and Thursday on the phone with
former teammates remembering Jones.
"You walked a chalk line with him on the court, but off the
floor he was just as nice of a man ... a fatherly figure," said
Cannon, who remained at Montevallo after his playing days to work
in admissions and now as the director of the Student Activity
Center. "I always admired him. I think as the years pass you
realize that the things that he did that we thought at the time
were so strict or maybe too much discipline were the things that
helped us later in life, and he knew that ... I had a whole career
at Montevallo because of him."
Jones is survived by his wife Joan, sons Kem and Rex, daughter
Pam and grandchildren.