Ronald "Popeye" Jones, however, did his work on the hardwood as a player in the NBA for 11 years and now as an assistant coach with the Indiana Pacers. While a basketball fan, it was a different sport that called to the younger Jones.
As a child living in Denver, Colorado with his parents and two brothers, Seth and his family would go to Avalanche games. The Jones boys - Seth has an older brother, Justin, and younger brother, Caleb - fell in love with the speed and physicality of the hockey they were watching as the Avalanche were one of the NHL's elite teams in the late-1990s and early-2000s.
"(In hockey), you're always on your toes," Jones said. "When you're younger and you get to see all that, it's pretty exciting."
So Jones' father, who was playing with the Nuggets at the time, sought advice on how to start his sons in hockey. He consulted someone who worked in the same building he did: Avalanche superstar Joe Sakic.
As the story goes, Sakic advised Popeye to put his sons into skating classes before dropping them into hockey, so that's precisely what he did.
After skating lessons, the boys advanced into playing and, for them, it became about more than just having fun on the ice. Each of them realized hockey was something they really wanted to do, but figuring out the positions they each preferred would take a little bit of time.
Seth started as a center but moved to defense within the first year he was on a team. And though his family was moving between Colorado and Texas as his father's coaching career progressed, all three Jones boys got to practices, games and tournaments and were able to keep playing thanks to their mother, Amy.