DALLAS (AP) – Staying at Hawaii would have been the easy choice for June Jones. It was the challenge of rebuilding a tattered football program that led him to take the coaching job at Southern Methodist, which stumbled to a 1-11 record this season.

“Where you are now excites me because the only way is up, and I am good at going up,” Jones said Monday.

The introduction of Jones at a booster-packed press conference ended the nation’s longest college coaching search this year. It had been 70 days since Phil Bennett was dismissed with four games left in the season.

School officials hope Jones can bring some of Hawaii’s run-and-shoot magic, which produced 43 points per game, an undefeated regular season and a BCS bowl berth this year. They were also impressed by Jones’ ability to resuscitate Hawaii, which went 0-12 before he arrived in 1999 and won nine games.

Jones’ decision to leave Hawaii came after an extraordinary bidding war that even involved the governor of Hawaii. Leigh Steinberg, Jones’ agent, said the coach accepted a five-year deal worth about $2 million per year.

He said Hawaii offered about $1.6 million per year.

“In 30 years representing athletes, I’ve never seen the emotional reaction from a state like Hawaii,” Steinberg said. “There was a flood of e-mails and calls exhorting him to stay.”

Besides more money, Jones will be in the middle of the rich Texas recruiting base, and he’ll get better facilities. SMU recently built a new brick-faced stadium and a modern training center.

“There’s absolutely no comparison,” Jones said. At Hawaii, “the office that I sat in was the same office that Dick Tomey used in 1986. The carpet was the same … You’re talking about the NFL and a Pop Warner team.”

A handful of SMU players met Jones after Monday’s press conference. The coach said he had watched tape of some SMU games and the Mustangs were “close to turning the corner.” But he declined to predict how many games they’ll win next season.

Jones would have faced a rebuilding process even had he stayed at Hawaii. The Warriors, who suffered a 41-10 thrashing by Georgia in the Sugar Bowl, will lose quarterback Colt Brennan, who finished third in the Heisman voting, and leading receiver Davone Bess, who is skipping his senior season to enter the NFL draft.

Still, the Warriors are the only football show in Honolulu, which helped turn Jones and Brennan into celebrities in paradise.

By contrast, SMU is nearly invisible in the area, overshadowed by the Dallas Cowboys and better college programs at Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Tech and TCU. The Mustangs play in Conference USA, which according to popular power ratings is even weaker than Hawaii’s league, the Western Athletic Conference.

Jones said, however, that recruiting for SMU will be easier than at Hawaii, where distance made mainland parents reluctant to send their kids. He added that many Texas high schools now run spread offenses featuring the passing game, just like his run-and-shoot.

“It’ll be fun to watch, and we’ll attract the players to come play in our offense,” he said. “I know there are a lot of players within 30 miles of this campus.”

Jones, who turns 55 next month, had a record of 75-41 with Hawaii, including 4-2 in bowl games. His teams finished first in the WAC twice and second two other times. He went to Hawaii after 12 years in the NFL, including stints as head coach at Atlanta and San Diego.

Bennett was the fourth coach to lead SMU since it came off the death penalty in 1989. The Mustangs are 58-153-3 and have had only one winning season in that span.

Bennett’s departure was announced Oct. 28, with four games left in the season, and that was just the beginning of the long hunt for a replacement.

Athletic Director Steve Orsini pursued Navy coach Paul Johnson, but he took the opening at Georgia Tech instead. Recently fired Texas A&M coach Dennis Franchione and former Miami coach Larry Coker were among those rumored to be in the running.

While the SMU search dragged on, Navy found a replacement for Johnson in one day and Texas A&M replaced Franchione in three days.

“We took our time. We did it right,” Orsini said. “We have to fill up Ford Stadium.”

SMU got permission to speak with Jones last month. Jones said he watched as many coaching jobs came open and were filled, but the only schools that intrigued him were SMU and Duke.

“Hawaii will always be my home,” he said. “The opportunity here surpasses everything … I just really believe this is the time for me to move on.”

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AP sports writer Jim Vertuno in Austin contributed to this report.

AP-ES-01-07-08 1911EST

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