MEET CHRIS JONES

Thursday night in Estevan was the first public speaking appearance by new Saskatchewan Roughriders V.P of Football, General Manager & Head Coach Chris Jones.  It was the annual Estevan Bruins fundraising dinner and the Voice of the Bruins, Jeromy Corrigan, was on hand and sent us the audio.

Jones did a Q & A with Rider Radio host Michael Ball, and here’s a transcript of what was said:

Q:  What’s your approach to coaching and how did it come to be almost all of your staff from Edmonton joined you in Saskatchewan for 2016?

CJ:  We don’t have staff meetings to have staff meetings.  We have very few staff meetings.  Our time is too valuable and we know what we gotta get done.  Day 1, Day 2 , Day 3, everybody knows their job responsiblities and go out and get the job done.  When we take the field, we hit the ground running.  So basically I told them ‘the rumour on the street is there could be an opportunity for us so raise your hand if you’re interested in going’.  And they all raised their hand and I said ‘okay let’s roll’.

Q:  How will you balance being Defensive Coordinator and Head Coach?

CJ:  It’s just a matter of balancing your time and having a clear vision of exactly what you expect out of your staff and your personnel people and players.  You treat ’em with the utmost respect and you demand exactly what you want and you don’t settle.

Q:  You’re going to live in a hotel?

CJ:  I go to work at 3:00 am until 7:00 pm and I work seven days a week.  There ain’t no real reason to have an apartment where you gotta play electrical and cable bills and stuff like that.  All my towels are in my locker at work and I only got a few black shirts and a few pairs of jeans.  The people (at the hotel) know you and I got two little girls.  They stay down South at our place on the Tennessee/Alabama line and my wife’s a school teacher with only a few years left until retirement.  They come up to visit and the hotel people get to know everything about them.  That’s the way we do it.

Q:  You’re based out of the South?

CJ:  I stay down there in the off-season and then every single weekend but one, I’ll be travelling to the minicamps from Miami to Tampa, and go home.  Tomorrow I got a 6:45 am flight to Houston and I’ve got three quarterbacks who we’ll meet with.  Then a workout and then I’ll head to Dallas.  So it’s a little bit of a busy schedule.

Q:  How was Chris Jones as a football player?

CJ:  Slow.  Physical.  I liked to fight.  I enjoyed Alan May’s talk before me here actually!  I was raised in an all-black project and my mama made $6000/year.  I weighed 113 lbs in the ninth grade so I had to fight my way out of a lot of situations.  That’s where I’m from, you know?

Q:  How did you get to Canada?

CJ:  It’s strange man.  Paul Jones, who’s been in the league with Edmonton for years, would come by our school and I’d tell him ‘this guy’s pretty good’ or ‘that guy’s pretty good’.  He saw that I had a decent eye for talent and I said ‘there’s not an internship for white guys in the NFL so Paul why don’t you get me an internshp in Edmonton?’  He did and I went up there in 1999 and there were guys like Rob Brown and Doug Pederson.  They had no money to hire me so I had to run down to Mobile with $100 in my pocket.  I was doing a home visit for Tennessee Tech and got a call from Paul Jones.  Long story short, Don Mathews approached me and offered me a job.  Told me to call Jim Popp.

I drove up to Montreal and stopped in a place called Watertown, New York.  I was driving in the snow and never had before.  I stopped for a pee and there was a sign over the urinal that said, “Life Is A Journey, Not A Destination”.  I thought I’d better get back in the car and keep going!  Ended up in Quebec where nobody told me all the signs are in French and you can tell I don’t speak French.

Q:  What’s the key to finding good Canadian football players?

CJ:  There’s two different ways to find them.  I try to work them out as much as I possibly can.  Speaking of the Americans first, basically I’m evaluating everything they do from the moment they sign those sheets.  Do they look me in the eye?  I ask for their email and see how many actually put it on there like I asked them to do.  If he’s looking around talking and I can’t stand being around him for 2-3 hours, why would I bring him up for seven months?  My house payment and car payment depend on this!  My two girls’ college degrees depend on it.  Some of our guys have unsavoury pasts but I can tell after I work ’em out whether or not they can play for us.

With the Canadians what we do is, of course we have the Canadian Draft and the Canadian players have come so far from when I first got up here in 2002.  The first combine I went to was in Montreal and the players were like our high school players in the States.  But the League has done such a great job of organizing the combine now.  I wish I had a picture to show you how far they’ve come but there’s now a lot of 4.4 40’s and a lot of bench rep guys in the 20’s.  It’s really fun to see how it continues to come along.

Q:  What’s it take to win in the CFL?

CJ:  You’ve gotta have a good quarterback and good Canadian content.  If that’s the case and you have a little bit of defense, you’re gonna win.  If you have a whole lotta defense, you’re gonna win a lot.

Q:  What do you think of the Riders’ Canadians?

CJ:  You always have to rebuild so you’re always looking where your players will come from and who’s going to back them up?  We’re looking at centre, guard and a few receivers.  Also the safety and nose tackle spots.  That’s probably where we’ll target.

Q:  What about Rob Bagg?

CJ:  I’ve done a lot of investigating and I like guys that are good in the locker room and put the football team first.  He’s a guy that does that, according to everybody I’ve talked to.  I’ve asked players over the phone who the leaders are and his name kept coming up every time.  Then when I met with Darian, and Jeremy O’Day who wants to win more than anybody in the organization, Bagg’s name came up there too.

Q:  Dressler and Chick.  They’re good guys in the locker room …

CJ:  That’s one of the toughest things ever.  I’ve had to cut some of the players closest to me over the years like Ed Philion and Tim Strickland, and actually all the best ones I’ve had I’ve eventually had to cut them.  That’s never an easy thing.  When you have an organization as proud as this one and you have those guys who’ve done so much, that was a very tough decision and it led to a lot of sleepless nights.  Unfortunately with the ecomonics of the game, the numbers just didn’t fit.

Q:  Did you try to negotiate with them?

CJ:  About four or five guys were making a third of the salary.  That’s the case.  They give you so much money to work with and these people around here are working people like me.  Just do the math.  You can’t pay the electric bill and the water bill and not pay the cable bill.  They’ll turn it off.  You can’t put an entire football team together if you’re paying too much in one area.  That’s just the facts of life.  It doesn’t matter if it’s the quarterback or anyone else.  We did what we could do and in today’s world, I tried to re-sign a Canadian kid the other day and talked to him on the phone and his agent called and said not to talk to the player until they get the contract.  The agents are controlling this thing now, more than the kids know.  And they shut doors, unfortunately.

Q:  Have you spoken to Chick and Weston?

CJ:  I talked to John at length the day prior.  And then Weston, last night flying in he was sitting right next to me in the last row so we got to talk.  He was in his street clothes so I didn’t recognize him at first but I recognized his voice.  He said ‘Coach here’s your bag’, and I recognized his voice.  We talked the whole way over from Calgary and we talked about his workout program.  He’s welcome to work out with our guy.  That’s how we operate.  He’s got some years left in the tank so good luck.  This was just a business decision.

Q:  What was Don Mathews’ influence on you?

CJ:  I owe a tremendous amount to Don.  He’s forgotten more about football than I know.  He and Bill Parcells are guys I bounce things off of.  He’s not in very good health right now, by the way.  That first year in Montreal he had me watching so much film.  He asked me who I liked and I said honestly only #75 and this big old #78 who turned out to be Adriano Belli.  We cut everybody else and the next year we won the Grey Cup.

Q:  What’s the story with Bill Parcells?

CJ:  Well, Paul Jones again, he said he knows Bill Parcells and I asked him to get me up with him.  I happened to be doing a workout down in West Palm Beach, which is five minutes from Jupiter where he lives.  We went to Hurricanes Bar & Grill and had breakfast of all things.  We had breakfast, then drank coffee, drank coffee, drank coffee, and then ate lunch.  We spent six hours together in all.  I just wrote down tons of notes and a lot of the things we do are similar to what he and Don gave me.  I’ve had the good fortune of being around all these good folks.

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Anonymous
Anonymous
8 years ago

Better keep living outta your suitcase and in hotels Jones, because purty soon you are gonna be gone, gone, gone, and Murphy along with you.

Edmund in Edmonton…..

Anonymous
Anonymous
8 years ago
Reply to  Anonymous

Spurned and very bitter still spewwing rejected man love.

Christopher Evans
8 years ago

Great interview! The more I hear from Jones, the more I like him and his coaching/management style.

Anonymous
Anonymous
8 years ago

Man, the trolls have seriously ruined this place.

Keith Pottruff
8 years ago

Someone in Edmonton is bitter…

Anonymous
Anonymous
8 years ago

Chris Jones oozes professionalism and class. We have NEVER had a staff like this one.

2016 – the inaugural year of professional football in Saskatchewan.

w
w
8 years ago

Arrogant.
Will he have as much class as Dressler and Chick when he gets his take it or leave it when things go south by season 2?

Tim from Kansas
Tim from Kansas
8 years ago

Hi Rider fans. There is a new spring football league starting up this year called Major League Football (MLFB). I know many of these leagues have come and gone and I have no opinion on whether this will succeed. This is what I've heard so far: – There will be 8 teams this year, with plans to add 5 more next year– Each team will go to camp Feb 15 with 80 players, about 45 make the roster. Draft started Wed, I think it wraps up today.– They made players sign contracts in advance, they had to sign to be… Read more »

Anonymous
Anonymous
8 years ago

Tim,While it may appear that this new league is a great deal for players, any player with half a brain will ask himself "yes I have signed a contract for $XXXX per game, but is this team/league going to have enough money to actually pay me?" I can name at least four football leagues (WLF, USFL, WLAF and XFL, in addition to other leagues that tried to start up whose names I can no longer recall. The common thread in all these leagues is that they all failed within a few seasons, and players were left without salaries. GMs and… Read more »

Larry
Larry
8 years ago

Real good to hear the comments from CJ….what a strong work ethic.
Looking forward to the future!

Anonymous
Anonymous
8 years ago

I love the edmonton guys on here. Just shows how we stole all their thunder from there Grey Cup win.

GO GET EM JONES

Anonymous
Anonymous
8 years ago

Good Job Michael Ball! Enjoyed this read tells a lot about Chris Jones……a lot more than all these negative Nellies….I loved John Chick and Weston Dressler, who will always be Riders no matter what they do anywhere else. Hopefully we can get Ted Laurent and Justin Capicciotti with the opened up Cap Space. We now have Shawn Lemmon at less than John Chick. I don't like the trade but if it comes I understand. Go Riders! Go Chris Jones! Go John Murphy! Go Jeremy O'Day.

Anonymous
Anonymous
8 years ago

wheres that scrubby guys column?

Anonymous
Anonymous
8 years ago

I too enjoy the 'out-of-towners' who have found a home in this comment section; be they bitter Bomber fans, Eskimo fans, and Redblack fans (especially the fellow who is still bitter that Ottawa could not resurrect their Rough Riders again and therefore believes that there is now no longer a Rider Nation – only his beloved R Nation LOL)

Anonymous
Anonymous
8 years ago

This is better than Scruffy's crap!!

Anonymous
Anonymous
8 years ago

LDC Score Bombers 39 Riders 8
Dressler 9 receptions 175 yds 2 TD

Anonymous
Anonymous
8 years ago

Or perhaps……. LDC Score Riders 39 Bombers 8 Shawn Lemmon with 3 QB Sacks and Ted Laurent 3 QB Sacks…….BDC Riders 48 Bombers 0 in defensive annihilation. Read it here first!

Dick Rubnutz
Dick Rubnutz
8 years ago

What a great interview with Chris Jones. We're lucky to have him and John Murphy on our side. Can't wait for the season to get going

Go Riders!!!

Anonymous
Anonymous
8 years ago

Seems unlikely Dressler would get 175 yards and 2 td's…when last year he averaged just over 58 yards per game and had a total of 6 td's in 16 games

Anonymous
Anonymous
8 years ago

Unreal how we had to put up with Hopson's amateur hour for so long and now we have a guy that knows how to build a winner. Jones comes back to speak at a charity dinner and then he's right back out there talking to new players. All Taman did was sit in the office and count the rail cars crawling past the stadium. And only one scout out trying to make the team better. No wonder we had no depth.

Speaker Ryan

Anonymous
Anonymous
8 years ago

Glad to see a agent stand up for his players against Jones crap that he dishes out. Can guarantee that Jones does not have a players best interests at heart otherwise he would not have any problem dealing with the players agents.