
Photo: File:Martell Webster Jarrett Jack.jpg: Keith Allison derivative work: Chrishmt0423 / CC BY-SA 3.0 (source: Wikimedia Commons)
My Take
I have a soft spot for the players who become coaches, the ones whose real legacy is what they pass on rather than what they scored. Jarrett Jack's path tells the story: four high schools across three states before Georgia Tech, then a long NBA grind as a steady guard, and now an assistant's role with the Pistons. That résumé reads like resilience. He was never the franchise face, but the journeyman point guard who can read a locker room often becomes the better teacher. I find that arc quietly admirable, the kind of basketball mind that builds a team's foundation without ever needing the headline.
Overview
Jarrett Matthew Jack (born October 28, 1983) is an American professional basketball coach and former player and an assistant coach for the Detroit Pistons of the National Basketball Association (NBA). He attended four high schools in North Carolina, Maryland and Massachusetts before playing collegiately at Georgia Tech.
Summary adapted from Wikipedia, licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0.
1. Profile
- Name (English)
- Jarrett Jack
- Name (Japanese)
- ジャレット・ジャック
- Reading
- じゃれっと・じゃっく
- Born
- October 28, 1983 (age 42)
- Zodiac / Chinese zodiac
- Scorpio / Boar
- Origin
- Fort Washington, Maryland, United States
- Blood type
- Private
- Height
- 189 cm
- Agency
- Private
- Occupation
- basketball player / basketball coach
2. Background
- Elementary school
- Private
- Junior high
- Private
- High school
- St. Vincent Pallotti High School
- University
- Private
3. Relationships
- Spouse
- Private
- Children
- Private
- Parents
- Private
- Siblings
- Private
4. Personality
Motto
Private
6. Links
Basketball player — see all → · Basketball coach — see all → · More people from United States →
7. About this entry
Tags
- Last updated
- 2026-06-02
Facts are limited to publicly available information up to 2024; non-public items are marked "Private / Unknown". English text is machine-assisted (facts translated by Sonnet, "My Take" written by Opus 4.8). The Japanese page is the source of record.