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Henrico middle school teacher, basketball coach Cameron Jones dies in a car accident at age 29

Henrico middle school teacher, basketball coach Cameron Jones dies in a car accident at age 29

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Cameron Jones was a sight to behold on the basketball court.

“You would’ve thought he had springs in his legs,” former teammate Christian Kirchman said. “I’ve seen him dunk on 7-footers.”

Jones, a Roanoke native and former standout at Radford University, died late last week at the age of 29.

He died from injuries sustained in a car accident in the Richmond area, his mother, Angela Jones, said Monday night in a phone interview. She was informed of his death in the early hours of Saturday morning.

Cameron lived and worked in the Richmond area. He was a sixth-grade English teacher at Elko Middle School in Henrico County. He also coached the school’s boys basketball team.

“I saw a huge change in my basketball team’s attitude, their grades, as a result of his coaching them,” Elko Middle School principal Herman Mizell said Tuesday. “Many of our kids would come in wanting to be athletes; they forget about the student part. But that’s what Mr. Jones emphasized, student-athlete, because he went to Radford and played basketball. He could share his experiences with the students and that made the difference.”

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Cameron grew up in Roanoke with his mother, Angela, and his older brother, Chris.

“He was my best friend,” his mother said.

“He was like my counselor, the voice in my head,” his brother said. “My best friend.”

Cameron played basketball as a kid because of his big brother.

“I played basketball, he played basketball. He followed everything I did,” Chris said.

Cameron was a junior reserve on the Patrick Henry (Roanoke) team that made the 2010 Group AAA state semifinals.

“He was just a really good person, had a great heart,” Esworthy said. “He really loved basketball.

“He was a joy to coach. He was fun to be around.”

“Cam [was] funny, always joking, always putting a smile on somebody’s face,” Kirchman said. “Always somebody you wanted to be around.”

After shining for Patrick Henry, Cameron spent a postgraduate year at Massanutten Military Academy in Woodstock for academic reasons.

“Super talented,” said former Massanutten coach Chad Myers, now an assistant at New Mexico State. “We had seven Division I players on that [2011-12] team and I thought he was our third-most talented guy. … Long, athletic, young kid that played inside a little bit in high school but was really a perimeter player.”

While at Massanutten, Jones signed with NCAA Division I member Kennesaw State. But he wound up playing for Brunswick Community College in North Carolina instead of Kennesaw for academic reasons.

“I started to take school more seriously [at Brunswick],” Cameron told The Roanoke Times in a 2016 interview. “I left there with a 3.0 [GPA] — think it was a 2.9, actually. It helped me mature, that’s what I say Brunswick did for me.”

Cameron did so well at Brunswick that he wound up signing with Radford.

Then-Radford coach Mike Jones (no relation to Cameron) saw him score 42 points and make six 3-pointers in a Brunswick game.

“I’ve never gone to see a recruit and been more excited about a young man after watching him play,” Mike Jones, now the coach at UNC Greensboro, said in a phone interview.

Cameron averaged 8.5 points and 17.9 minutes off the bench as a Radford junior guard in the 2014-15 season. He made 45 3-pointers for a Radford team that won 22 games.

The 6-foot-4 Cameron ranked seventh in the Big South in scoring as a senior starter in the 2015-16 season, with an average of 14.9 points. He earned All-Big South honorable mention.

“Just a joy to be around,” Mike Jones said. “A phenomenally talented player.”

Cameron ranked sixth in the Big South as a senior with 75 3-pointers.

“He was as talented an offensive player as I’ve ever coached,” Mike Jones said. “When I was at Georgia, we didn’t have players that were more talented than him offensively. When I was at VCU, he was more talented than any of those guys.

“He could score at all three levels. Had he been with us for four years, I think he would’ve been a 2,000-point scorer.”

He played professionally in Denmark and in the Czech Republic after his college career concluded.

Although he majored in communications at Radford, he became a teacher.

“The kids worked for him. They loved him,” Mizell said. “Kids will work for you if they like you.”

Cameron had a 3-year-old daughter, Kehlani.

“He was the best dad,” Angela said.