词条 | Jon Jaques |
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| image = | caption = | name = Jon Jaques | position = Assistant coach | height_ft = 6 | height_in = 7 | weight_lbs = 220 | league = Ivy League | team = Cornell Big Red | number = | nationality = American-Israeli | birth_date = | birth_place = Los Angeles, California | high_school = Harvard-Westlake (Los Angeles, California) | college = Cornell (2006–2010) | draft = Undrafted | draft_year = 2010 | draft_team = | career_start = 2010 | career_end = 2011 | years1 = 2010–2011 | team1 = Ironi Ashkelon | cyears1 = 2011–2012 | cteam1 = Stevens Tech (assistant) | cyears2 = 2012–2013 | cteam2 = Columbia (graduate assistant) | cyears3 = 2013–present | cteam3 = Cornell (assistant) | awards = }} Jonathan David "Jon" Jaques is an American-Israeli[1] assistant men's basketball coach for Cornell University. He played college basketball for Cornell University, and played professionally for Ironi Ashkelon in Israel. Early and personal lifeJaques's was born and raised in Brentwood in Los Angeles, California, and is Jewish.[2][3] His father is Doug Jaques, and his sister Clara was starting goalkeeper for the Washington University soccer team in St. Louis, where she was the all-time shutouts leader with 12 in one game.[4][5] He attended Hebrew school, and had a bar-mitzvah.[3] For high school, he attended and played basketball at Harvard-Westlake School in Los Angeles.[6][7] He is interested in a career in sports journalism.[3] He has written a college basketball blog called "Blue Chips" for Slam Magazine, and written for The Quad, The New York Times online college sports blog.[8] College basketball careerHe attended Cornell University (Biology; '10), and played basketball for four seasons for Cornell's Big Red men's basketball team, three of them with Ivy League Championship teams.[9][4] In 2009-10 he was team tri-captain and played in 31 games (7th-most in the Ivy League), and had 42 three-point field goals (10th in the league) as he led the league in three-point percentage at 47.2%, and also won the Men's Basketball Rebounder Award.[2][10][9][7] Professional basketball careerAfter graduating from Cornell, Jaques made aliyah by moving to Israel, and signed with Ironi Ashkelon in Ligat HaAl, the top division of Israeli basketball.[11] For 2011-12, he was an assistant basketball coach of the Ducks at Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, New Jersey.[9] For the 2012-13 season he joined the Columbia University Lions men's basketball team as a graduate manager while attending the Mailman School of Public Health.[9] He is assistant men's basketball coach for Cornell University.[12] References1. ^Jon Jaques Basketball Player Profile, Elitzur Ironi Ashkelon, Cornell, News, Artzit stats, Career, Games Logs, Best, Awards - eurobasket 2. ^1 [https://www.sports-reference.com/cbb/players/jon-jaques-1.html "Jon Jaques College Stats" | College Basketball at Sports-Reference.com] 3. ^1 2 The Great Rabbino: Interview: Former Cornell Star Jon Jaques 4. ^1 [https://www.dailynews.com/2010/03/24/painter-harvard-westlake-grad-jaques-helps-cornell-to-sweet-16/ PAINTER: Harvard-Westlake grad Jaques helps Cornell to Sweet 16 – Daily News] 5. ^ 6. ^[https://basketball.realgm.com/player/Jon-Jaques/Summary/9455 Jon Jaques Player Profile, Cornell, NCAA Stats, Game Logs, Bests, Awards - RealGM] 7. ^1 Cornell's Jon Jaques - from benchwarmer to star - Men's College Basketball - ESPN 8. ^Hurley Announces 2011-12 Men’s Basketball Coaching Staff (CNBNEWS.NET/Gloucester City) 9. ^1 2 3 Jon Jaques Bio - Columbia University Lions 10. ^MEN’S BASKETBALL | Jon Jaques ’10 Joins the Cornell Coaching Staff | The Cornell Daily Sun 11. ^{{cite news |title=From the Sweet 16 to the obscurity of pro basketball in Israel |first=Jon |last=Jaques |url=http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2011/writers/the_bonus/03/22/israel.hoops/ |newspaper=Sports Illustrated |date=24 March 2011 |accessdate=9 April 2011}} 12. ^[https://hoopdirt.com/cornell-staff-update/ "Cornell staff update"] External links
17 : Living people|American emigrants to Israel|American expatriate basketball people in Israel|American Jews|Jewish men's basketball players|Columbia Lions men's basketball coaches|Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health alumni|Cornell Big Red men's basketball coaches|Cornell Big Red men's basketball players|Stevens Tech Ducks coaches|Harvard-Westlake School alumni|Israeli Jews|Ironi Ashkelon players|People from Brentwood, California|Sportspeople from Los Angeles|American men's basketball players|Year of birth missing (living people) |
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