Amboy’s ‘Tank’ knew early that sideline was his destiny

Chatting with Coach Jones

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Gary "Tank" Jones has been on the Amboy sideline since 1976. He started as defensive coordinator and became head coach in 1994.
Gary "Tank" Jones has been on the Amboy sideline since 1976. He started as defensive coordinator and became head coach in 1994. (Kali Blackburn/Special to SVM)
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Gary Jones is your prototypical old-school football coach. And his is a year-round vocation that was long foreseen.

Back in 1968, when the eighth-graders at Amboy Junior High School were asked what they want to be when they grow up, Jones wrote "football coach"  at the top of his sheet.

He took over as the Clippers' defensive coordinator in 1976, immediately after his playing days ended with the exchange of a physical education degree at Eureka College. Having taken over as head coach in 1994, suffice to say he's drawn more X's and O's than a lifelong hopeless romantic.

He's seen fans threaten to storm the field and riot when shady calls went against the Clippers, and personally ordered said fanatics off the field. Talk about a far cry from the 18-year-old who threw a punch and triggered a melee after the Clippers lost the Blackhawk Conference-title game 22-20 to Oregon.

"We got thrown out of the conference for that, but anyway ..." Jones said. "Put it this way: I wouldn't want a player of mine to do what I did. That type of thing, it's something you look back on and you go, 'That was kind of stupid.' But at the time … yeah, I thought it was the right thing to do."

"Tank," as Jones has been affectionately known since his high school coach, Don Fritz, gave him the nickname, has seen and done it all, including helping direct the Clippers to their lone state title in 1984.

So it should come as little surprise that he began a conversation in his cramped coach's quarters Thursday afternoon with some serious next-level analysis while breaking down the Clippers' Class 2A quarterfinal matchup with Mercer County.

His knee-jerk response to a gameday forecast that calls for temperatures in the upper-60s?

"I just hope it's windy," he said.

Well played, coach. No defensive scheme would slow down the Golden Eagles' outstanding passing game like a blustery day.

It's that sort of matter-of-fact common sense that makes players want to run through walls for Jones, even if there was a certain period of skin-thickening.

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