Sam Jones
Enshrined: As a player on April 30, 1984
Born: June 24, 1933 in Laurinburg, NC
Height: 6-foot-4
Weight: 200 pounds
High
School:
Laurinburg (NC) Institute (1947-51)
High School Playing Highlights:
Four-year letter winner
All-Conference (1951)
All-State (1951)
College:
North Central College (Durham, NC) (1953-57)
College Playing Highlights:
Four-year letter winner
Scored 1,770 points playing for Hall of Fame coach John McLendon
Three-time All-Conference
Enshrined in NAIA Hall of Fame (1962)
Pro:
NBA Boston Celtics (1957-69)
Pro
Playing Highlights:
All-NBA Second Team (1965-67)
Five-time NBA All-Star (1962, 1964-66, 1968)
Led Boston in scoring in 1963 (19.7 ppg), 1965 (25.9) and 1966 (23.5)
Produced four consecutive seasons averaging 20 points or better (1965-68)
Member of 10 championship teams (1959-66 and 1968-69)
Owns Boston's fourth best single-game scoring output (51 points vs.
Detroit on Oct. 29, 1965)
Tallied 15,411 points (17.7 ppg) in his 12-year career
Scored 2,909 points in 154 playoff games (18.9 ppg), 15th best in history
Originally claimed by the Minneapolis Lakers, but returned to college
upon completion of military service, and therefore voided NBA rules
NBA 25th Anniversary Team (1970)
NBA 50th Anniversary Team (1996)
College Coaching:
Federal City College (1969-73)
North Carolina Central (1974)
Bio:
At
six-foot-four, Sam Jones was the prototype of the tall guard who could
run the floor, bang the boards and had a rangy offensive game that gave
opponents fits. One of the "Jones Boys" in Boston, Sam teamed with K.C.
in the Celtics backcourt to create havoc in NBA arenas around the country.
Jones favored an unorthodox but highly effective "bank shot" that became
the muscle behind his and Boston's 10 NBA championships, including eight
in a row (1958-66). As a collegian, Jones was an offensive firehouse scoring
1,770 points while playing for Hall of Fame coach John McLendon at all-black
North Carolina College. Jones wasn't a collegiate All-America and was a
relative unknown, but that didn't sway Red Auerbach, who drafted Sam in
the first round of the 1957 draft. Jones didn't disappoint the Boston faithful.
His 12-year NBA career included five All-Star Game appearances, 871 regular
season games and 154 playoff games. Considered one of the NBA's most prolific
graceful shooters, Jones scored 15,411 points (17.7 ppg), plus 2,909 (18.9
ppg) more in the playoffs. Considered one of the fastest NBA guards with
superb court vision and savvy, Jones led the Celtics in scoring three times,
averaging a career-high 25.9 points in 1965. An extremely popular player,
in 1970 Jones was selected to the NBA Silver Anniversary Team (1970), a
composition of the greatest NBA stars of the league's first 25 years. He
later would be named one of the top 50 players in history when the NBA
celebrated its 50th Anniversary in 1996.
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