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Assistant Coach Jake Morton
SIXTH YEAR AT JSU
THE MORTON FILE
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BORN: April 21, 1969 HOMETOWN: Bowie, Md.
FAMILY
CHILDREN: Sons, Jalen and Josh Daughter, Catherine Alexis
EDUCATION
HIGH SCHOOL: Gonzaga College HS (Washington, D.C.) COLLEGE: University of Miami – General Studies, ‘93
PLAYING CAREER
Europe: 1993-95 (Pro) University of Miami: 1988-93 Gonzaga College High School: 1985-88
COACHING CAREER
2016-present: JSU, Assistant Coach n 17-18 CBI Tournament Semifinal Appearance n 16-17 NCAA Tournament n 16-17 OVC Tournament Championship 2014-16: Coppin State, Assistant Coach 2012-13: Western Kentucky, Director of Basketball Operations 2011-12: Western Kentucky, Assistant Coach n 12-13 NCAA Tournament n 12-13 Sun Belt Tournament Championship n 11-12 NCAA Tournament n 11-12 Sun Belt Tournament Championship 2007-11: Miami, Assistant Coach n 07-08 NCAA Tournament 2004-07: James Madison, Assistant Coach 2000-04: St. Francis, Assistant Coach 1999-00: Bowie State, Assistant Coach
The Gamecock coaches
ASSISTANT COACH Jake Morton
Jake Morton joined Ray Harper’s staff in 2016, who he coached under at Western Kentucky, after serving the previous two seasons at Coppin State as an assistant coach. A veteran to the Division I coaching ranks, Morton brings experience to JSU from CSU, WKU, James Madison and his alma mater of Miami. Morton is part of a coaching staff that has averaged 20 wins per year since arriving in Jacksonville and twice broken the record for the program’s Division I single-season wins mark. Over the past five seasons, Jacksonville State has tallied 98 wins and appeared in the Ohio Valley Conference Tournament each year. JSU was one of only three OVC programs to qualify for the league’s postseason in each of the last five years the Gamecocks spent in the conference. Morton helped guide the Gamecocks to a programbest 24 wins in 2018-19, breaking Jacksonville State’s single-season wins total for a second year in a row. It marked the first time the program logged three straight seasons with 20-or-more wins since joining the Division I ranks. In addition, the 201819 season set a record-low for losses. Prior to the season, a JSU team had never finished a year with single-digits in the loss column. Along with the rest of the staff, Wade helped JSU navigate a difficult year in 2020-21 with the challenges that came from Covid-19. With limited preseason and even in-season interaction due to contact-tracing, JSU put together another strong year with an 18-9 record, reaching the semifinals of the OVC tournament. The Gamecocks dispatched OVC foe Murray State in all three meetings, winning at home, on the road and in overtime in the opening round of the OVC tournament in Evansville, Indiana. In 2017-18, JSU scored a then-record 23 wins with Morton’s guidance. The Gamecocks qualified for their second national postseason tournament with a berth in the College Basketball Invitational. Jax State claimed wins over Canisius and Central Arkansas in the first and quarterfinal rounds, respectively, en route to its first ever wins in a major postseason tournament. His first season at Jacksonville State saw the program earn its first Division I title, first appearance in the NCAA Tournament and first 20-win season since 2003. After being picked deadlast in the OVC Preseason Poll, the Gamecocks rattled off consecutive wins over Southeast Missouri, Belmont and UT Martin as the No. 4 seed to win the OVC Championships title. JSU went on to play Louisville in the First Round of the NCAA Tournament in Indianapolis at Bankers Life Fieldhouse. He spent the 2014-15 and 2015-16 seasons on the sidelines at Coppin State under head coach Michael Grant. With Morton on staff, the Eagles ranked among the national leaders in 3=point shooting, turnovers forced and offensive rebounding. He went to CSU from Western Kentucky, where he coached under Harper in the 2011-12 and 201213 seasons, taking both of those Hilltopper teams to the NCAA Tournament. His first season in Bowling Green saw Harper take over the program midway through the season and turn the season around, rallying to win the Sun Belt Tournament and then defeating Mississippi Valley State in the First Round of the NCAA Tournament. Morton was at his alma mater in Coral Gables from 2008-11, when he helped the Hurricanes to three 20-win seasons and three postseason berths, including a win in the 2008 NCAA Tournament. Before returning to his alma mater, Morton worked three seasons as an assistant coach at James Madison under head coach Dean Keener from 200507. Prior to joining the JMU staff, Morton was an assistant coach at St. Francis (Pa.) from 2001-04 and spent the 1999-2000 campaign at Division II Bowie State. Morton graduated from Miami in 1993 with a degree in general studies. As a player for the Hurricanes, he tallied 909 points, 245 rebounds and 194 assists from 1988-93. His name is scattered throughout the Hurricane record books, as he ranks ninth in Miami history in three-pointers (136), 10th in three-pointers attempted (390) and 14th in career three-point field goal percentage (.349). During the 1989-90 season, Morton recorded a team-high 45 steals while averaging 11.0 points per game as a sophomore. That same season, he garnered the team’s “Hustle Award” at the end of the season – an honor he would earn again following the 1991-92 season – and was named the team’s defensive player of the year three separate times. Following his playing career at Miami, Morton went on to play professionally in Israel for six years. Morton’s coaching career began in New York, where he served as a counselor and coach at the Five-Star Basketball Camp, which included future collegiate and NBA stars such as Lebron James, Carmelo Anthony and Chris Paul. He has three children: daughter Alexis and sons Jalen and Joshua.