Dub Jones, One of Oldest NFL and LSU Players, Dies At Age 99
He was not on the list.
William Augustus “Dub” Jones, a living NFL legend running back with the Cleveland Browns in the 1950s and former Tulane great who first played at LSU and was the father of LSU quarterback great Bert Jones, died early Saturday morning at age 99.
Former LSU wide receiver Ben Jones, one of his four sons and seven children, told Tiger Rag Saturday that his father had passed away in Ruston at his home with family.
Jones was born on Dec. 29, 1924, in Arcadia, Louisiana, grew up in Ruston and graduated from Ruston High School in 1942. He is survived by four sons, three daughters, 22 grandchildren, 48 great grandchildren and his wife, the former Schumpert Barnes of Ruston whom he met in junior high school in Ruston. They were married in 1946 and were two years away from their 80th wedding anniversary.
After one season at LSU in 1942, Jones joined the United States Navy and transferred to Tulane to be a part of a Navy training program there and became an All-American and All-Southeastern Conference back for the Green Wave in 1944 as a junior.
After graduating, Jones got a scholarship to attend
Louisiana State University (LSU) in Baton Rouge, where one of his brothers
played football. He stayed there for a year before joining the U.S. Navy as
American involvement in World War II intensified. The Navy transferred him to a
V-12 training program at Tulane University in New Orleans, where he played as a
halfback and a safety in 1943 and 1944.
Jones carried the football for a total of 700 yards of rushing and scored four touchdowns in 1944, his junior year, and was named an All-American and an All-Southeastern Conference player by sportswriters. He trained as a fireman aboard submarines while in the Navy, and in 1945 he played football for a military team at the Naval Submarine Base New London in New London, Connecticut. Before beginning his professional career, he played in the 1946 Chicago College All-Star Game, a now-defunct annual contest between the National Football League champion and a squad of the country's best college players. Led by quarterback and future teammate Otto Graham, the college players beat the Los Angeles Rams 16–0 that year.
The Chicago Cardinals took Jones with the second pick of the first round in the 1946 NFL Draft. He went on to play for the Cleveland Browns from 1948-55 and helped lead them to NFL titles in 1950, ’54 and ’55.
The Dodgers traded for Jones in part to replace Glenn Dobbs – a star tailback in Brooklyn's single-wing offense – because Dobbs was suffering from injuries. Jones himself was hurt early in the 1947 season, however, when he was hit by Bill Willis of the Cleveland Browns. Injuries to his knee, hip and clavicle forced him to sit out for several weeks. He broke his hand when he returned and had to play exclusively on defense for the rest of the season.
Paul Brown, the head coach of the Browns, was impressed with Jones's defensive play for Brooklyn, and traded away the rights to University of Michigan star Bob Chappuis to acquire him in June 1948.[14][20][21] Jones began his career with the Browns as a defensive back, but was switched to halfback early in the 1948 season because his performance on defense wasn't up to Brown's standards.[22] Jones played on offense alongside Graham, the team's quarterback, and star fullback Marion Motley as the Browns won all of their games in 1948 and beat the Buffalo Bills for their third straight AAFC championship. He ended the year with 149 rushing yards on 33 carries.
Over the next two seasons, Jones developed into a star flanker, a position he helped invent. He was both a running threat and a receiver – his tall stature was well-suited to receiving – and helped complement a passing attack that featured the Browns' two main ends, Dante Lavelli and Mac Speedie. Jones often went in motion behind the line of scrimmage before the snap at a time when few players did so, causing confusion and mismatches on defense. He had 312 rushing yards and 241 receiving yards in 1949, when the Browns won another AAFC championship.
Jones came into his own in the 1950 season, when the Browns joined the NFL following the dissolution of the AAFC. Cleveland won the NFL championship against the Rams that year, helped by Jones's skill receiving short passes underneath opponents' coverage. Jones had 31 receptions and 11 rushing and receiving touchdowns in 1950.
Jones continued to excel in 1951, scoring 12 touchdowns and amassing a career-high 1,062 yards from scrimmage. He tied an NFL record in a November 25 game by scoring six touchdowns - 4 rushing, 2 receiving - in a 42–21 win over the Chicago Bears, a single-game record he shares with Ernie Nevers (1929), Gale Sayers (1965), and Alvin Kamara (2020). The Browns finished the season with an 11–1 win–loss record and advanced to the championship game, but lost this time to the Rams. Jones came in second in the NFL in touchdowns scored and was named to the Pro Bowl, the league's all-star game. He was also selected by sportswriters as a first-team All-Pro. "Dub has the speed, the guts and the know-how of a great player," Paul Brown said at the time, calling him "the most underrated player in the league."
Jones still holds the record for most touchdowns in a game with six against the Chicago Bears on Nov. 25, 1951, that was tied by the Bears’ Gale Sayers in 1965 against San Francisco and by the Saints’ Alvin Kamara against Minnesota in 2020. Jones was an All-Pro in 1951 and played in the Pro Bowl in 1951 and ’52.
He was an assistant coach with the Browns from 1963-68 before retiring from football and focused on a lumber business with his sons in Ruston that he had started in the 1950s.
Jones spent seven years working at his business in Ruston after leaving the Browns. He worked briefly as a special instructor for the Houston Oilers and an occasional advisor to college programs in Louisiana, but otherwise was out of football. He returned to the Browns as an assistant coach, however, in March 1963 after Paul Brown was fired by team owner Art Modell. Blanton Collier, Brown's long-time deputy, became head coach and put Jones in charge of the receivers. Jones and Collier had been close during his playing days, and Collier considered him an astute student of the game.
Under Collier, Jones supervised the offensive backfield and the ends, but was also the Browns' offensive play-caller. He directed the team from the press box on Collier's behalf because Collier was hard of hearing and could not do so himself. The Browns won their first six games at the beginning of Jones's coaching career in the 1963 season, although a late slump cost them a spot in the championship game. The team regrouped the following year, ending with a 10–3–1 win–loss–tie record and winning the NFL's eastern division. Cleveland went on to win the championship game against the Baltimore Colts in 1964. The Browns advanced to the championship game again the following year, but lost to the Green Bay Packers. During his tenure as a coach, Jones was the primary position coach for running backs Jim Brown and Leroy Kelly, both of whom are members of the Pro Football Hall of Fame. He also coached receiver Paul Warfield, another hall of fame member who helped propel the Browns to the 1964 championship.
Jones stayed with the Browns until early 1968, when he quit and was replaced by Nick Skorich. The Browns had offered him a part-time coaching job but made clear that he could not stay on as offensive coordinator; Jones declined the reduced role. After leaving the Browns, Jones moved back to Ruston and did occasional scouting for the team at the nearby Grambling State University. He was also a volunteer coach of receivers on Grambling's football team. Later in life, he worked for his son Tom's general contracting business in Ruston.
“He was still riding his horse into his early 90s,” Ben Jones said Saturday. “His mind was very sharp, and he had and uncanny memory. I would say it was only about 18 months ago that he started slipping.”
Jones could recently recount key details of games he played in with the Browns.
“He could remember games, people, plays, exactly what happened on plays,” Ben Jones said. “He was an unbelievable guy and a great father and grandfather.”
Career history
As a player:
Miami Seahawks (1946)
Brooklyn Dodgers (1946–1947)
Cleveland Browns (1948–1955)
As a coach:
Cleveland Browns (1963–1968)
Career highlights and awards
3× NFL champion (1950, 1954, 1955)
2× AAFC champion (1948, 1949)
First-team All-Pro (1951)
2× Pro Bowl (1951, 1952)
Cleveland Browns Legends
First-team All-SEC (1944)
Career NFL statistics
Rush attempts: 540
Rush yards: 2,210
Receptions: 171
Receiving yards: 2,874
Touchdowns: 41
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