After a lengthy battle with cancer, University of Florida
women's track and field coach Tom Jones died Wednesday
morning in Gainesville. He was 62. Jones followed his passion for track for more than 35 years
with head coaching stops at Florida (1992-07), Arizona State
(1988-92), Texas-El Paso (1984-88) and North Carolina
State (1978-84). During his head coaching career, Jones
led his athletes to 335 All-America honors and his teams
won 12 conference titles and two national championships.
Jones was honored as the NCAA Coach of the Year three
times and was a conference coach of the year on nine
occasions, including seven times in the Southeastern
Conference.
Under his watch, 23 school records were set at Florida and
Jones guided Maicel Malone to the American record in the
400m that endured for 19 years (51.05). He also led the
1991 Arizona State 4x400m that broke the American record
(3:29.77).
"Tom gave his heart and soul to coaching and mentoring
his athletes," Florida athletics director Jeremy Foley said.
"I'm at a loss for words how to describe what he's meant to
the University of Florida. You can measure what he
accomplished on the track - all the SEC titles and the
All-Americans he coached. What you can't measure is the
quality of the individuals, the student-athletes that Tom
helped to shape and mold into tremendous people. No one
did that better than Tom." Foley named women's track and
field Associate Head Coach Steve Lemke as the interim
head coach.
Jones oversaw the Florida women's track and field program
for nearly half of its existence as he served as the head
coach for 15 of the program's 35 seasons. Hired prior to the
1992 cross country season, Jones guided 71 athletes to
245 All-America honors on the track, while his teams posted
15 top-10 finishes at the NCAA Indoor and Outdoor
Championships. Under Jones, Florida turned in its highest
NCAA finishes of second in 2003, 2004 and 2005, all at the
indoor championships.
Jones led his squads to six Southeastern Conference titles
(1997 indoor & outdoor, 1998 outdoor, 2002 indoor, 2003
outdoor, 2004 indoor), while helping his athletes claim 77
SEC individual or relay titles. He was named the NCAA
Women's National Indoor Coach of the Year in 1997 and
2002, and the NCAA Outdoor Coach of the Year in 1997.
Many Olympians honed their skills under Jones' guidance
as well. At Florida, he coached 2004 Olympians Novlene
Williams (Jamaica) and Tiandra Ponteen (St. Kitts) among
others. While at Arizona State, he tutored Nigerian Olympian
Ime Akpan, Lynda Tolbert (USA) and eventual 1996 U.S.
gold medal 4x400m participant Maicel Malone. In his stint at
UTEP, Jones oversaw two-time Bahamas Olympian Norbert
Elliott, U.S. Olympian Cynthia Henry, the Netherlands
Olympian Frans Maas and Canadian Olympian Linda
McCurdy. While at North Carolina State Jones saw athletes
John Crist (USA) and Augustin Young (Jamaica) participate
in the 1984 Olympics.
In addition to his enormous success on the track, Jones
also guided the Gators to unparalleled success in the
classroom. In his tenure as head coach, athletes under
Jones' watch were named to the Southeastern Conference
Academic Honor Roll 224 times, including at least 20
athletes in each of the last six years. Florida was honored
as the 2003 U.S. Track and Field and Cross Country
Association's All-Academic Team of the Year. In the first two
NCAA Graduation Success Rate reports, the Florida
women's track and field team had perfect GSRs of 100
percent in both the fall of 2005 and 2006.
Jones is survived by his wife of 30 years, Sandy, his sons,
Chris and Sean, daughter-in-law Kate, grand-daughters
Sarah and Abby, and Terry Stanley. Services for Jones will
be determined on Thursday.