Celtics legend KC Jones passes away at age 88 taken at BSJ Headquarters (Celtics)

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Days after the Celtics honored one franchise legend in Tommy Heinsohn at the TD Garden in the regular season opener, the Celtics lost another. K.C. Jones passed away at age 88 on Christmas day. The team honored him with a moment of silence before the game, releasing this statement about the Hall of Fame point guard and coach.

Where K.C. Jones went, winning was sure to follow. K.C. – his given name – was a twelve-time NBA champion as player and coach, a two-time NCAA champion, and a Gold medal-winning Olympian and Hall of Famer. In NBA history, only teammates Bill Russell and Sam Jones have more championship rings during their playing careers. K.C. along with Russell, Clyde Lovellette, Jerry Lucas, Quinn Buckner, Earvin “Magic “Johnson and Michael Jordan, are the only players in history to achieve basketball’s “Triple Crown” – winning an NCAA Championship, an NBA Championship and an Olympic Gold Medal. His number 25 has hung from the rafters since 1967.


K.C.’s coaching career was similarly illustrious. He was named to lead the Celtics in 1983, beginning what is one of the most remarkable head coaching runs the NBA has seen. K.C. helmed the Celtics for two of the most memorable seasons in the team’s rich history, first leading the team to a championship in 1984 over the Lakers during a peak of that storied rivalry. Two seasons later, he led what many consider the greatest team in NBA history, the 1986 Champion Boston Celtics. These were the highlights of an astonishing four consecutive seasons in the NBA Finals, one of the most impressive and beloved Celtics eras.


K.C. also demonstrated that one could be both a fierce competitor and a gentleman in every sense of the word. He made his teammates better, and he got the most out of the players he coached. Never one to seek credit, his glory was found in the most fundamental of basketball ideals – being part of a winning team. The Celtics family mourns his loss, as we celebrate his remarkable career and life.


Danny Ainge also spoke about Jones' impact on the organization before the game. Here are a few highlights from that interview.


On his coaching: K.C. was a great coach to play for. He was a class act, and everybody knew that. And yet he had a competitive edge that was fierce. And so you wanted to do all you could to please K.C. as a coach, but he had this gentleness and a kindness that at the right time he knew what to say. But he was a great leader of men. We went four years in a row to the Finals with K.C., and won the championship twice. And he was just a joy to be around, not just in winning, but like I said, a class act and a guy that was a pleasure to be around and I looked at him as a mentor and a friend, and much more than a coach.



On Jones' gift: "I think his gift was, there was a genuine yes to him, a sincerity that was -- there was no phoniness and no, you know like, he wasn't seeking that attention, he was, he really wanted the attention of the players. We all knew that he cared deeply about us as people, cared about the Celtics traditions. But he really didn't seek that attention. I think the players appreciated that in him. But he also stood up for some pretty strong personalities. We had some moments in our four years with K.C. where he gave a challenge, stood up, toe to toe with some of the stars on our team and I think that, you know, he always had that respect because of that. He didn't have to do it very often, he didn't do it very often but when, when it was time to take a stand, K.C.would go toe to toe with even the Hall of Fame players on our team."


A story that stood out to him about K.C.: "Oh there was many. I could go on all day telling lots of stories but there's some funny stories, actually just to celebrate K.C. today. I know he's been in a rough place the last few years and he's in a better place today. But yeah, I have all happy thoughts of K.C. and my time with one of my favorite stories I've told before, you know, we all have different versions of this but as I remember we were in New Jersey for a game, we're playing Brooklyn tonight, and he was standing by the wall with Jimmy Rogers drawing on the player's scouting report up on the chalkboard. Larry was down underneath the table tying K.C.'s shoe strings together. And after the chalkboard was done, K.C. stumbled out into the middle of the floor and he just received it so well.  I mean he just took it on and how it was intended and didn't get mad or angry and the whole team laughed and went out and played the game. He was just a real guy, and he knew what to say you'd been through it all as a player and as a coach, playing on a team at high expectations. So that's what we were in his four years of coaching in the finals every year. Anyway, he did a fantastic job of coaching. More than that, like I said he was a friend and a mentor, we he cared deeply about us as people."


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