Ex-Cajuns coach: San Francisco offers better chance to win
SAN FRANCISCO –– Jessie Evans stood at a podium at the University of San Francisco on Thursday and explained why he’s leaving his job at Louisiana to assume the same position at the University of San Francisco: He thinks he has a better chance to win.
“One of the reasons I’m here is the tradition at the university,” Evans said. “They’ve won national championships, and we’ve got to get it done again.”
The Dons haven’t won the NCAA title since
Bill Russell led the team to back-to-back championships in 1955 and 1956, but Evans believes he has a better chance of competing for that prize in San Francisco than he did in Lafayette.
The college would not disclose the terms of Evans’ new contract, beyond saying it is a multi-year deal. Evans’ annual salary at UL Lafayette was $170,000. It’s believed USF will pay Evans a base salary of more than $200,000.
In seven years of coaching the Ragin’ Cajuns, Evans compiled an overall record of 132-81, with a
Sun Belt Conference mark of 77-32.
Last year, UL Lafayette finished 20-9, and with a 12-3 league record won it’s first regular-season Sun Belt Conference title.
The Ragin’ Cajuns were a No. 14 seed in the NCAA Tournament, where they lost their first-round game to North Carolina State.
At USF, Evans takes over a program that went 139-123 with one NCAA Tournament appearance in nine seasons under head coach Phil Mathews. Mathews was fired after this past season in which the Dons went 17-14, but finished fourth in the West Coast Conference with a record of 7-7.
Evans doesn’t plan to waste a lot of time rebuilding.
“When I went to Louisiana we had just completed a national title run at the University of Arizona,” said Evans, whose nine years as an assistant coach for Lute Olson culminated with the Wildcats’ NCAA championship in 1997.
To help him reach his goal, Evans said he’d like to bring Cajun assistant coach Jimmy Williams with him to San Francisco.