Eddie Jordan (basketball)

Eddie Jordan

Jordan in January 2007
Personal information
Born (1955-01-29) January 29, 1955
Washington, D.C.
Nationality American
Listed height 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Listed weight 170 lb (77 kg)
Career information
High school Archbishop Carroll
(Washington, D.C.)
College Rutgers (1973–1977)
NBA draft 1977 / Round: 2 / Pick: 33rd overall
Selected by the Cleveland Cavaliers
Playing career 1977–1984
Position Shooting guard
Number 30, 15, 5
Coaching career 1997–present
Career history
As player:
1977 Cleveland Cavaliers
19771980 New Jersey Nets
19801983 Los Angeles Lakers
1983 Wyoming Wildcatters (CBA)
1984 Portland Trail Blazers
1984 Los Angeles Lakers
As coach:
1986–1988 Boston College (assistant)
1988–1991 Rutgers (assistant)
19921997 Sacramento Kings (assistant)
19971998 Sacramento Kings
19992003 New Jersey Nets (assistant)
20032008 Washington Wizards
2009–2010 Philadelphia 76ers
2012–2013 Los Angeles Lakers (assistant)
2013–2016 Rutgers
Career highlights and awards

As player:

As coach:

Career NBA statistics
Points 3,414 (8.1 ppg)
Rebounds 788 (1.9 rpg)
Assists 1,595 (3.8 apg)
Stats at Basketball-Reference.com

Edward Montgomery Jordan (born January 29, 1955) is a retired American professional basketball player and the former head coach of the Rutgers Scarlet Knights men's basketball team. He formerly served as head coach of the Philadelphia 76ers, Washington Wizards, and Sacramento Kings in the National Basketball Association (NBA).

Basketball career

College career

Jordan attended Rutgers University from 1973–1977, from 1984–1985, and again starting in 2013. He studied physical education, but never graduated.[1][2][3] Jordan helped lead the school to the 1976 NCAA Final Four, during which he was named East Regional MVP. At Rutgers, Jordan acquired the nickname "Fast Eddie."[4] In his senior season, Jordan was named honorable mention All-America, while setting Rutgers' all-time career records in assists (585) and steals (220).

NBA career

Early NBA career

Jordan was selected by the Cleveland Cavaliers in the second round of the 1977 NBA draft (33rd overall), and was acquired by the New Jersey Nets halfway through his rookie season. Jordan tied Norm Nixon (Los Angeles Lakers) for the lead in total steals with 201 in 1978–1979,[5] and was second in total steals, 223, in 1979–80 (behind the New York Knicks' Micheal Ray Richardson with 265).[6]

Later NBA career

Jordan played for the Los Angeles Lakers during the 1980–81 season, and was a member of the 1982 NBA World Championship team. He played for the Lakers for four years and then played briefly with the Portland Trail Blazers. Jordan retired from the NBA after the 1983–84 season. Over his seven-year NBA career, Jordan averaged 8.1 points, 3.8 assists and 1.82 steals per game.

Coaching career

NCAA

After retiring from the NBA in 1984, Jordan was a volunteer assistant at Rutgers University under his former college head coach, and his eventual Wizards' assistant, Tom Young. Jordan followed Young to Old Dominion University as a part-time assistant as before and subsequently obtained an assistant coaching position at Boston College under Jim O'Brien in 1986. He also became an assistant coach at Rutgers in 1988.

NBA

Kings

In 1992, Jordan became an assistant coach with the Sacramento Kings, and remained an assistant for five seasons. Jordan was promoted to head coach on March 20, 1997 during the final fifteen games of the 1996–97 regular season and remained the head coach during the 1997–98 season, during which he compiled a 33–64 record as the Kings' head coach. Jordan was fired after the 1997–98 season.

Nets

Jordan joined the New Jersey Nets coaching staff on March 17, 1999 and served as the lead assistant for four seasons. While in New Jersey, Jordan helped guide the squad to consecutive Atlantic Division and Eastern Conference Championships in 2002 and 2003.

Wizards

2003–06

Later that year, Jordan signed a four-year contract worth a little more than $3 million per year with the Washington Wizards and was introduced as head coach of the team on June 19, 2003.

Washington finished with a 25–57 record during Jordan's inaugural season as head coach. The following year, Jordan helped guide the Wizards to a 20-game improvement in 2004–05. Only the Chicago Bulls and Phoenix Suns experienced a greater improvement in total wins from the previous year.

On April 11, 2005 Jordan won his 100th career game as a head coach, and improved his career record to 103-158. During the 2004–05 regular season, Jordan's second with the Wizards, he led the team to a 45–37 record, which was the franchise's best season since 1978–79. The record established a new record for wins in a season at Verizon Center, earned the team a five seed in the Eastern Conference, and was the Wizards' first playoff berth since the 1996–97 season. The Wizards played the fourth seeded Chicago Bulls and won the series four games to two. The team rallied from a 0–2 deficit to win the series with four consecutive wins. It was the team's first postseason series win since 1982.

2006–07

In the 2006–07 season, Jordan guided the Wizards to a third straight playoff berth for the first time since 1988. Jordan won the Coach of the Month award for December, guiding Washington to a 12–4 record during that month. Jordan coached the Eastern Conference All-Stars at the NBA All-Star Game on February 18 in Las Vegas, the first coach from the franchise since Dick Motta in 1978–79.

2007–08

In the 2007–08 season Jordan led the Wizards to a fourth straight playoff berth despite beginning the year 0–5. The Wizards were eliminated in the first round by the Cleveland Cavaliers for the third straight year.

Jordan was fired as head coach of the Washington Wizards on November 24, 2008 after a 1–10 start. At the time of his firing Jordan was the longest tenured coach in the Eastern Conference and as their coach he guided the Wizards to four straight playoff appearances, advancing only once. He compiled a regular season record of 197–224. The 197 victories rank third all-time in franchise history.[7]

Sixers

2009–2010

Jordan was officially introduced as the head coach of the Philadelphia 76ers on June 1, 2009.[8]

On Thursday, April 15, Jordan was fired by the 76ers after one season.[9] Later that month, it was reported that Jordan had been one of the leading candidates for the head coaching vacancy at his alma mater, Rutgers, but had pulled out of the running to continue to seek a new coaching job in the NBA.[10]

Lakers

In 2012, Jordan was hired as an assistant coach with the Los Angeles Lakers.[11] Jordan was brought in primarily to assist head coach Mike Brown in installing the Princeton offense.

Rutgers

On April 18, 2013, it was reported that Rutgers would name Jordan head coach, replacing fired head coach Mike Rice.[12][13] On April 23, 2013, Rutgers officially announced the hiring of Eddie Jordan as the 18th head coach of the men's basketball program.[14][15][16]

In three years as coach of the Scarlet Knights, which included their transition from the American Athletic Conference to the Big Ten Conference, Jordan finished each season with twenty or more losses and the 2015–16 season was the worst of the three. Rutgers finished with twenty-five losses, sixteen of which were in conference; a victory against Minnesota in their final regular season game prevented the Scarlet Knights from finishing winless in Big Ten play and broke a thirty-two game conference losing streak. Jordan's final game was on March 9, 2016 as the Scarlet Knights lost to Nebraska in the opening round of the Big Ten tournament; Rutgers announced his firing the next day. His overall record was 29-68, with an 8-46 record on conference play.

Head coaching record

NBA

Legend
Regular season G Games coached W Games won L Games lost W–L % Win-loss %
Post season PG Playoff games PW Playoff wins PL Playoff losses PW–L % Playoff win-loss %
Team Year G W L WL% Finish PG PW PL PWL% Result
Sacramento 1996–97 1569.4006th in Pacific Missed Playoffs
Sacramento 1997–98 822755.3295th in Pacific Missed Playoffs
Washington 2003–04 822557.3056th in Atlantic Missed Playoffs
Washington 2004–05 824537.5492nd in Southeast1046.400 Lost in Conf. Semifinals
Washington 2005–06 824240.5122nd in Southeast624.333 Lost in First Round
Washington 2006–07 824141.5002nd in Southeast404.000 Lost in First Round
Washington 2007–08 824339.5242nd in Southeast624.333 Lost in First Round
Washington 2008–09 11110.091(fired)
Philadelphia 2009–10 822755.3294th in Atlantic Missed Playoffs
Career 600257343.428 26818.308

College

Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Rutgers Scarlet Knights (American Athletic Conference) (2013–2014)
2013–14 Rutgers 12–21 5–13 7th
Rutgers Scarlet Knights (Big Ten Conference) (2014–present)
2014–15 Rutgers 10–22 2–16 14th
2015–16 Rutgers 7–25 1–17 14th
Rutgers: 29–68 (.299) 8–46 (.148)
Total: 29–68 (.299)

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

Personal life

Jordan and his wife Charrisse have two children, son Jackson and daughter Skylar. Jordan also has three sons: Justin, Eddie II and Paul. Charrisse Jordan was appointed President of "Behind the Bench," a non-profit organization developed by the National Basketball Wives Association, which raises funds and awareness for charities that benefit women and children. Charisse is one of the stars of the television series The Real Housewives of Potomac.

See also

References

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