Found this via footballscoop posted on SI.com
Q&A with former SMU coach June Jones
Before he surprisingly resigned as SMU’s coach in early September, June Jones revived a program decimated by the NCAA’s death penalty in 1987 by taking the Mustangs to their first bowl game in 25 years, the first of a school-record four straight. The 61-year-old recently spoke with The Inside Read about why he resigned, how he views his tenure at SMU and the proliferation of wide-open offenses.
When you resigned, you cited unspecified personal reasons. Are you OK?
I’m fine. I had a couple of issues, just I hadn’t been sleeping. I was trying to run the whole thing, get everything right. I just kind of had a couple of weird things happen, but that was just because I hadn’t been sleeping.
Why hadn’t you been sleeping?
I don’t know. I haven’t slept much anyway. When I worked for the [Houston] Oilers I slept from 3 o’clock to 7 o’clock in the morning. It was nonstop. You get kind of like that. So, I’ve been living that way for almost 20 years and then all of a sudden started sleeping about an hour every night. That kind of was a bad deal. But all in all, I’m fine. I got no issues. I look forward to the next year somewhere.
You clearly still want to coach.
Oh yeah. I want to coach probably five to eight more years. I don’t know where. I’ve had a couple of calls, but nothing really is going to spring until the end of November or first of December. So, we’ll see what happens … I’ve had a lot of time, already a month. I’m bored already. Just anxious to see what’s out there at the end of the season.
How do you view your time at SMU?
Well, we became relevant again. We went to four bowls in four years and we were like three plays away from going five years in a row. They got some issues at SMU that they’ve got to overcome, and I don’t know if they will ever overcome them. But I know one thing, what we did was miraculous and I’m not looking back on it in any other way than that.
What were those issues?
All the things that I’ve said before, they’ve got to help the kids. They’ve got to get some tutors, academics more toward the student-athletes. They’ve made strides in that area, but they’ve got to go a lot further … The campus is unbelievable. It’s just a tough gig. It will be tough for the next guy, too.
What have you been up to since you left SMU?
I was in Hawaii for a week. But I’ve been up in Oregon. I have a place up in Oregon (about an hour outside of Portland towards Mt. Hood) where I grew up and my kids and grandkids are up there. So I’ve just been kind of hanging with them.
So is your next job as a head coach or assistant?
I would think that it would be a head job. It will probably not be a big‑time school but I don’t really care. I just go do my thing somewhere. Somebody is going to be losing forever and want another guy to come in and maybe get them winning again.
• ELLIS: Who leads the Heisman Trophy race following Week 9?
What do you still want to accomplish?
For me, it’s just about the kids and the energy to win and to do it the way that we do it, playing exciting football. It’s always been about the kids that I’ve had, like watching Emmanuel [Sanders when he scored three touchdowns in the Denver Broncos’ win vs. San Diego] was unreal. To think that I kicked him off the team [at SMU], talked to him to come back in and he thanks me for it every day. Those types of things are what I live for.
Football is as wide open offensively as it’s ever been. Do you take pride in that with your in the Run ‘n’ Shoot roots?
Everybody is doing what we started. I enjoy watching Peyton [Manning] and I enjoy watching [Tom] Brady because they’re running kind of basically what [Ted] Marchibroda and what Mouse [Davis] and I ran. I really enjoy that. Everything’s cyclical. I’m watching Stanford play. I’m watching Arkansas play. It’s amazing how nobody can stop a power-I anymore because they are playing these spread teams. That’s been kind of interesting to me. Really the thing that’s still winning in the National Football League is what Peyton, Brady and Belichick does. That’s been consistent and I don’t see that changing. I think in college football, you’re always going to have a little bit more now probably of a quarterback that can run a little bit more. But I still think you have to win the game with that guy that can play under center and be a passer, not a runner.
Q&A with former SMU coach June Jones
Before he surprisingly resigned as SMU’s coach in early September, June Jones revived a program decimated by the NCAA’s death penalty in 1987 by taking the Mustangs to their first bowl game in 25 years, the first of a school-record four straight. The 61-year-old recently spoke with The Inside Read about why he resigned, how he views his tenure at SMU and the proliferation of wide-open offenses.
When you resigned, you cited unspecified personal reasons. Are you OK?
I’m fine. I had a couple of issues, just I hadn’t been sleeping. I was trying to run the whole thing, get everything right. I just kind of had a couple of weird things happen, but that was just because I hadn’t been sleeping.
Why hadn’t you been sleeping?
I don’t know. I haven’t slept much anyway. When I worked for the [Houston] Oilers I slept from 3 o’clock to 7 o’clock in the morning. It was nonstop. You get kind of like that. So, I’ve been living that way for almost 20 years and then all of a sudden started sleeping about an hour every night. That kind of was a bad deal. But all in all, I’m fine. I got no issues. I look forward to the next year somewhere.
You clearly still want to coach.
Oh yeah. I want to coach probably five to eight more years. I don’t know where. I’ve had a couple of calls, but nothing really is going to spring until the end of November or first of December. So, we’ll see what happens … I’ve had a lot of time, already a month. I’m bored already. Just anxious to see what’s out there at the end of the season.
How do you view your time at SMU?
Well, we became relevant again. We went to four bowls in four years and we were like three plays away from going five years in a row. They got some issues at SMU that they’ve got to overcome, and I don’t know if they will ever overcome them. But I know one thing, what we did was miraculous and I’m not looking back on it in any other way than that.
What were those issues?
All the things that I’ve said before, they’ve got to help the kids. They’ve got to get some tutors, academics more toward the student-athletes. They’ve made strides in that area, but they’ve got to go a lot further … The campus is unbelievable. It’s just a tough gig. It will be tough for the next guy, too.
What have you been up to since you left SMU?
I was in Hawaii for a week. But I’ve been up in Oregon. I have a place up in Oregon (about an hour outside of Portland towards Mt. Hood) where I grew up and my kids and grandkids are up there. So I’ve just been kind of hanging with them.
So is your next job as a head coach or assistant?
I would think that it would be a head job. It will probably not be a big‑time school but I don’t really care. I just go do my thing somewhere. Somebody is going to be losing forever and want another guy to come in and maybe get them winning again.
• ELLIS: Who leads the Heisman Trophy race following Week 9?
What do you still want to accomplish?
For me, it’s just about the kids and the energy to win and to do it the way that we do it, playing exciting football. It’s always been about the kids that I’ve had, like watching Emmanuel [Sanders when he scored three touchdowns in the Denver Broncos’ win vs. San Diego] was unreal. To think that I kicked him off the team [at SMU], talked to him to come back in and he thanks me for it every day. Those types of things are what I live for.
Football is as wide open offensively as it’s ever been. Do you take pride in that with your in the Run ‘n’ Shoot roots?
Everybody is doing what we started. I enjoy watching Peyton [Manning] and I enjoy watching [Tom] Brady because they’re running kind of basically what [Ted] Marchibroda and what Mouse [Davis] and I ran. I really enjoy that. Everything’s cyclical. I’m watching Stanford play. I’m watching Arkansas play. It’s amazing how nobody can stop a power-I anymore because they are playing these spread teams. That’s been kind of interesting to me. Really the thing that’s still winning in the National Football League is what Peyton, Brady and Belichick does. That’s been consistent and I don’t see that changing. I think in college football, you’re always going to have a little bit more now probably of a quarterback that can run a little bit more. But I still think you have to win the game with that guy that can play under center and be a passer, not a runner.