One scan of Jason Terry’s résumé and it’s obvious his recruiting credibility is off the charts.
Officially named an ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥ assistant coach Thursday, the former Wildcat star has NCAA and NBA championship rings. Was an NBA lottery pick. Spent 19 years in the league. Earned a total of $108 million. And his jersey hangs on the McKale Center walls.
In short, he’s done the kinds of things that every recruit hopes to have for themselves. As UA coach Sean Miller said in a statement, “his basketball journey is one that so many players dream of.â€
Plus, Terry has strong hometown roots in Seattle, one of the West’s most fertile recruiting grounds, and secondary ones in Dallas, where his peak seasons were spent with the Mavericks.
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But to understand how much Terry might help the ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥ even more in retention — a constant issue for a program that annually turns over half its roster — you have to go back to December of 1996, into the office of then-coach Lute Olson.
Terry had been a starter on the perimeter, along with highly regarded freshman Mike Bibby at point guard and hot-shooting small forward Michael Dickerson. But the ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥â€™ on-court leader, Miles Simon, had become available after missing the fall semester because of academic eligibility.
Somebody had to sit down.

Former Wildcat Jason Terry scored 18,881 points in his 19-year NBA career, in which he played for six teams and made 2,282 3-pointers, the No. 7 mark of all-time.
But before Olson could delicately try to deal with it, Terry walked into his office.
“He sat down on (Olson’s) couch and said ‘I’ll come off the bench,’†said then-UA associate head coach Jim Rosborough. “He certainly could have contested with Miles or Bibby or Michael Dickerson.
“But I think he was smart enough to know he was going to play plenty of time and he was, without question, the best sixth man in the country.â€
The rest of the story is well-documented in ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥ basketball history. The ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥ won the national championship … and Terry averaged a starter’s minutes, 30.5 per game, while also keeping everyone else happy with their roles.
A.J. Bramlett, Terry’s roommate and longtime friend since then, remembered how the two discussed that December evening in their dorm room how it might play out.
“I thought it was a smart decision because we knew our team and our personalities,†Bramlett said.
“Miles wasn’t going to come off the bench and Mike D wasn’t either so he had to make that decision, and it was the right decision.
“The key was he went to coach Olson first and took the initiative.â€
Miller wasn’t available for comment but in a UA-produced video, the ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥ coach called Terry “the epitome of unselfishness†for accepting that sixth-man role in 1996-97.
“He was a big reason why ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥ won the national championship,†Miller said. “I love his passion for the game.â€
Miller also noted that Terry turned from a sixth man into a star as a senior in 1998-99, which is the other story Terry might someday tell current players about how patience can sometimes work to your advantage.
Terry averaged 21.9 points as a senior, becoming an All-American and a player of the year by some media outlets..

Former ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥ Wildcat, Jason Terry, watches the scoreboard as the Wildcat video is played before the start of a game against USC game at McKale Center in Tucson on Feb. 19, 2015. Photo by: Mamta Popat / ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥ Daily Star
“His mindset and the confidence he had in himself was always at a star level,†Bramlett said. “He just made that transition when we needed it.â€
That June, Terry became a lottery pick in the 1999 NBA draft and he kept playing until 2018, after which he coached and ran a Dallas-area girls club team and served as an assistant general manager for the G League’s Texas Legends.
Imagine that: Four years in college — something that is considered a failure in today’s game — turns into an NBA career that’s far longer and more lucrative than many one-and-done players ever have.
Still, in today’s era, talking an NBA prospect into sticking around for four years isn’t likely. ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥ has lost six freshmen to the NBA draft over the past four seasons alone. But maybe Terry can convince a Wildcat or two to look hard at the long term.
“He garners instant respect because of his résumé and what he’s done,†Bramlett said. “Guys are going to listen to him and his message is always positive. He’s shown in his NBA career even in coming off the bench that it can work. It benefited him more than anything.â€
Simply by arriving at ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥, Terry also appears to have put two tense issues with the program behind him.
Terry earned a UA jersey retirement by being named the national player of the year in 1998-99 by Sports Illustrated, CBS and the Basketball Times, but ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥ did not honor him for 16 years after an NCAA investigation found Terry accepted $11,500 from agents while playing for the ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥ as a senior.
The NCAA’s finding prompted ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥ to forfeit $45,363 in NCAA Tournament revenues while vacating its 1999 NCAA Tournament first-round loss to Oklahoma.
In 2000, the school made an agreement with the then-Pac-10 Conference to ban Terry from the UA Sports Hall of Fame, with a provision that his jersey would not be retired.
But about a decade later, on the advice of then-AD Jim Livengood, Rosborough said he traveled to a golf event in Dallas to let Terry know there might be a chance to reverse the agreement if he paid the $45,363.
Terry gave it a shot and repaid the money.
“It came down to the (Pac-10) athletic directors to see how they could get it cleared up,†Rosborough said. “It took a while. But to my knowledge, it wasn’t that Jason didn’t care. I think he felt horrible about the whole thing from the beginning and wanted to get it cleared up but they had the ban on it.â€
By 2015, the same year Terry finished up his UA degree in general studies, the school raised his No. 31 jersey.
But three years later, tensions surfaced between Terry and the UA program for a different reason.
After ESPN reported in February 2018 that Miller discussed a $100,000 pay-for-play scheme, Terry tweeted: “it’s time to clean house and bring home our own bloodlines to carry on Lutes Legacy.
“We have too much pride, too much tradition to allow outsiders to tear down what we built.â€

4-3-97. 10; Olson talks things over with Jason Terry during the NCAA Tournament game against Providence.
However, Terry told a Phoenix radio station in April 2019 that he strongly supported Miller and that “we’re in good hands,†and in August 2019, ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥â€™s basketball program tweeted out a photo of Miller, Terry and women’s golf coach Laura Ianello smiling together at McKale Center.
But while Miller spoke glowingly of Terry in his statement, saying he would “impact and energize our current players as well as our recruiting efforts in a major way,†Miller is also hiring an assistant coach who does not have college coaching experience, something Miller has never done since he took over the ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥ in April 2009.
Terry’s résumé — and references — suggest he can hop over that gap pretty easily.
“There’s no doubt having been there and one that doesn’t qualify you as a great teacher,†says UA radio analyst Ryan Hansen, who was a manager and operations director during Terry’s UA playing days. “But seeing his ability to communicate and relate to teammates, and then at the end of his career with the Milwaukee Bucks, he was a coach on the floor. ...
So “what makes you excited about him is his ability to relate to his peers, his coaches and to his peers as a mentor, to take guys under his wing and say ‘This is a marathon. This is a basketball career. Don’t get so far ahead of yourself. Take these little steps.’
“I think he has the potential to be extremely beneficial to us in a lot of different ways.â€
Gallery: Spring Stars: Some of Southern ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥'s best high school athletes:
Spring Stars: Some of Southern ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥'s best high school athletes, 2019-2020
Rachael Fox

Sahuarita High School senior Rachael Fox, posing for a photo, April 18, 2020, Sahuarita, Ariz. She maintained a winning record for all four years of high school. Before school and sports were cancelled in March, Fox was the Mustangs' top player with an undefeated record.
Dakota Crabtree

Academy of Tucson's Dakota Crabtree, posing for a photo, April 16, 2020, Tucson, Ariz., In four years at AOT, 18-year-old Crabtree has managed to break several school records, starting with the long jump. He set the school record one during the opening meet of his sophomore season, and has gone onto break it every year since.
Leo and Ivan Villa

Leo Villa, left, and twin brother Ivan, senior baseball players at Walden Grove High School in Sahuarita. Ivan Villa is hoping to attend the University of ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥ next year and major in civil engineering. Leo hopes to major in architectural engineering, academics could win out when it comes time to make the choice.
Isabel Cordova

Track and Field senior at Empire High school Isabel Cordova poses for a portrait at Empire High School, 10701 E. Mary Ann Cleveland Way, in Tucson, Ariz., on April 21, 2020. Last year, she took second place in state for javelin (her favorite event) with a throwing distance of nearly 115 feet.
Refugio "Kito" Del Cid

Baseball senior at Desert View High school Refugio "Kito" Del Cid poses for a portrait at Jacobs Park, 3300 N. Fairview Ave., in Tucson, Ariz., on April 21, 2020. With the quarantine in effect, Del Cid's been pitching and hitting ground balls against the wall in his back yard in an effort to stay in playing shape and keep baseball alive in his life. He says his teammates and this season– even in its shortened state– were his favorite part of high school.
Cheyenne Hudson and Laneya Wright

Marana softball players Cheyenne Hudson (pitcher and shortstop) and Laneya Wright (centerfielder) stand for a portrait at Marana Heritage River Park, on April 24, 2020. Laneya Wright and Cheyenne Hudson started playing softball on the same club team a decade ago as little girls, growing up together on the fields.
Ethan Lee

Rincon/University High School junior tennis player Ethan Lee on April 26, 2020. A member of Rincon's tennis team for the past three years, Lee was state champion last year for men's singles, after taking the runner-up spot his freshman year. Always one for a challenge, Lee was considering pursuing a state championship in doubles tennis this spring, before the season was cut short.
Kaitlyn Rendon

Flowing Wells High School junior Kaitlyn Rendon at Jacobs Park in Tucson, Ariz., on April 26, 2020. Rendon plays on FWHS's soccer, track and field and cross country teams as well as on FWHS ROTC rifle team. She has a 3.9 unweighted GPA and is ranked 10th in her class. She's also president of her school's Interact Club, and a member of several others, including National Honor Society.
Preston Gibbons

Mountain View High School senior volleyball outside hitter Preston Gibbons on May 1, 2020. Gibbons is ranked seventh in his class at Mountain View and will be attending the University of ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥ in the fall.
Alyssa Lopez

Canyon del Oro High School senior Alyssa Lopez, shown on April 29, 2020, was the school's No.1 tennis player. Several months ago, Lopez started working as a gymnastics coach for kids at Heart and Soul Gymnastics. While the gym is closed because of COVID-19, Lopez has been creating at-home workout videos for the kids.
Kristiana Watson

Amphitheater High School senior Kristiana Watson says the things she misses most about the season cancellation are losing a chance to play with her cousin and her final year of being coached by her mother on the Panthers’ softball team.
Jesse Avina

Sierra Vista Buena High School javelin thrower Jesse Avina is planning to join the Air Force after he earns his four-year degree. He’ll start this fall by enrolling at Paradise Valley Community College. He will be on the Paradise Valley track and field team.
Amya Legarra

Canyon del Oro senior pitcher Amya Legarra was 8-0 with a 2.39 ERA and three complete games when the season was halted. She plans to move to Logan, Utah, this summer, and will soon be majoring in human movement science and playing softball for Utah State University.
Candice Pocase

Santa Rita High School junior track athlete Candice Pocase on April 24, 2020. "In my 20 years of coaching, Candice is one of the most hardworking, dedicated, coachable and fun athletes that I have had the honor to coach," said Luis Blanco, who is also Pocase's track coach. "The words 'no' and 'can't' are not in her athletic vocabulary.
Emily Flowers

Emily Flowers, a sophomore at Catalina Foothills High School, won a state championship last year and hopes to play at a Division I school someday. Before the coronavirus hit, Flowers was training six days a week at the Smith-Perry Tennis Academy and an academy run by UA tennis coaches. She’s trying to ensure that her game is impacted as little as possible by the change in routine.
Briana Garcilazo

Briana Garcilazo, a senior at Rio Rico High School. Softball is something of a family tradition, as both of her sisters also play. Garcilazo, a pitcher, first baseman and outfielder on Rio Rico’s team, will be continuing her career in college, signing on to play with Mesa Community College next year.
Leo Felix

Leo Felix, senior at Douglas High School, poses for a portrait at 15th Street Park, E. 15th st., in Douglas, Ariz., on May 5, 2020. Felix, outfielder for the Douglas High School Baseball team, is graduating in the top 10% of his class and plans to continue his baseball career in college. "I'm definitely going to try to play somewhere, and I'm going to continue my studies in college," said Felix, adding that he plans to major in business.
Abigail Russell

Salpointe Catholic’s Abigail Russell will next compete for the UA beach volleyball team. She also played the indoor version for the Lancers. When Russell was 10, she discovered volleyball and fell in love. Her brief flirtation with track, dancing and everything else was over.
061321-tuc-spt-springstars-p4

Emmanuel Corral, 18, is looking forward to running for Pima College in the fall.
Anjolee Aguilar-Beaucage

Softball player Anjolee Aguilar-Beaucage poses for a portrait at Salpointe Catholic High School on May 7, 2020. ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥â€™s 2019 All State Catcher and Defensive Player of the Year, Aguilar-Beaucage plans to continue her softball career at Grand Canyon University like her older sister.
Ryan Zuniga

Ryan Zuniga is hoping to follow his cousin’s footsteps and earn a college scholarship. Keith Zuniga played at Bethune-Cookman and was a 35th-round selection of the Miami Marlins, though he did not sign.
Shelby Thompson

Softball player Shelby Thompson of Ironwood Ridge High School on May 12, 2020.Â
"Shelby... took giant steps from a freshman year, when she pitched less than 10 innings, to her senior year when was expecting to pitch in her third straight State Championship game," said softball coach David Martinez. "Shelby worked extremely hard on improving her whole person, from her mental toughness to her physical strength. Shelby is our leader and has been incredible in that role."
Gabrianna Gonzalez

Gabrianna Gonzalez, 18, is a discus thrower on the track and field team at Cholla High School. She plans to attend the University of ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥ in the Fall. May 14, 2020.Â
Gonzalez is one of Cholla's few three-sport female athletes. She also competed in volleyball and basketball.
Of the three sports, track is her favorite. So much so that she passed up on the opportunity to graduate early in order to make a run at state.
061321-tuc-spt-springstars-p7

Former Sabino High School standout Sydney Gray played at Nebraska as a true freshman before suffering a knee injury that required surgery. She has been rehabbing daily ever since.
Bryan Cruz

Bryan Cruz joined the Amphitheater High School volleyball team in 2018 after moving back to Tucson from Cucurpe, Sonora.
“First and foremost, he is a true student-athlete,†said Amphi volleyball coach Mike Frederick, who believes Cruz is one of the best volleyball players in the region. “He may be the most underappreciated player in the city. … But to us, he is everything. Not only is he our leader on the court but off the court as well.â€
Angel Addleman

Senior basketball and track and field athlete Angel Addleman at Palo Verde High School, 1302 S. Avenida Vega, in Tucson, Ariz. on May 19, 2020. Addleman will play basketball at Pima Community College.
With the track season halted early and Addleman's brief musical career behind her — she spent two years performing in the folk group Copper Wren with her sisters and some friends — Addleman found herself with some time to fill during the quarantine. But unlike some athletes who require specialty equipment or teammates to train, Addleman was able to wing it.
Blaise Biringer

Blaise Biringer, 18, on the softball field at Cienega High School on May 11, 2020. Biringer plans to attend the University of Mississippi on a softball scholarship.
Prior to the shutdown, Biringer was selected to play for the Mexican National team this summer in the inaugural Triple Crown International Challenge. She was also selected by Premier Gold Fastpitch to represent the Mountain Region as an All-American (on a roster that includes fellow Spring Stars Anjolle Aguilar-Beaucage, Sydney Gray, Amya Legarra, Carlie Scupin and Kristiana Watson.)
Cameron Fimbres

Cameron Fimbres, Pueblo High School senior volleyball player, at Silverbell Crossroads Park, on May 15, 2020. Fimbres will be going to McKendree University in southern Illinois.
"My favorite memory of high school would have to be volleyball," Fimbres said. "It's either my escape from stress and stuff or where I could show off to friends, but sophomore year was also very fun. I got to play with my brother before he graduated and it was probably my team's best year."
Gerardo Grijalva

Gerardo Grijalva, 17, plays pitcher and first base for the Sunnyside High School baseball team. He will be returning to Sunnyside in the Fall as a senior.
While Grijalva would love to play college in baseball after he graduates, preferably at University of ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥ or UCLA, he's also focused on his future career as a robotic engineer.
"I heard that robotic engineering has a lot of math in it, and most people don’t like math, but that’s one of my best subjects in school," Grijalva said. "Right now, really don’t have an idea of where I might go, but I for sure know that I really want to play baseball in college at the next level."