Career
He is credited with inventing an early version of the zone defense used in modern basketball. During his coaching career, he amassed an overall record of 226 wins and 143 losses. As a student athlete at the University of Pennsylvania, Jourdet played on the football and basketball teams.
He lettered in basketball from 1910-1911 to 1912-1913, while in football he lettered from 1910 to 1912.
As a senior during the 1912 season, Jourdet was named a football All-American. The reason for his extended absence as Penn basketball"s head coach between 1920 and 1930 was summed up by The Pennsylvania Gazette in its December 3, 1920 issue, which said Jourdet "on account of a business transfer to another part of the country, has been obliged to give up coaching." He transferred to Kentucky and became engrained in both high school and college basketball there.
Jourdet even officiated some of the University of Kentucky men"s basketball games. From 1949 to 1959, Jourdet worked in a state liquor store in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
In mid-August 1959, he was admitted to the Samuel G. Dixon Tuberculosis Hospital.
On August 31, he jumped out of the third story window of the hospital, ending his life. The coroner declared it a suicide. Jourdet was 70 years old at the time of his death.