ST. LOUIS - Saint Louis University mourns
the passing of former Billiken men's basketball head coach Charlie Spoonhour. Spoonhour passed away peacefully at his home
Wednesday morning with his family by his side. He was 72.
Spoonhour coached seven seasons for the Billikens from
1992 to 1999, compiling a 122-90 all-time record and taking the Billikens to
the NCAA Tournament three times.
Prior to being named SLU's head coach, Spoonhour coached
at Missouri State from 1983-92. He also served as head coach at UNLV from
2001-04.
"Charlie Spoonhour was a man of great character and
integrity," University President Lawrence
Biondi, S.J. said. "I will always remember his positive personality, his
energetic spirit and his deep devotion to his players. Coach Spoonhour left an
indelible mark on our basketball program, on our University and on the City of
St. Louis. Spoon was - and forever will be - a Billiken in every sense of the
word. We all will miss him."
"Charlie was truly a great
Billiken," SLU Director of Athletics Chris
May said. "His commitment to his student-athletes, the University community
and the St. Louis region helped energize the program like none other. Charlie
was an unbelievably positive force in the history of our department. We are so
proud that he will forever be associated with Billiken Basketball."
"Charlie Spoonhour will
be remembered by his players and fans most of all for his authenticity,"
Billiken Head Coach Rick Majerus
said. "He was genuinely a great guy who cared about the players and the people
in his life. Charlie was a fantastic coach, a wonderful teacher of the game and
a competitor extraordinaire. He was a 'coaches' coach,' and will be missed by
one and all."
Funeral arrangements are
pending. Fans may sign a guestbook and offer their condolences at SLUBillikens.com.
The department of athletics will share these with the Spoonhour family.
Spoonhour is the third
winningest coach in Billiken basketball history. Hired in 1992, Spoonhour led
the Billikens to the NCAA Tournament in 1994, their first appearance since 1957.
That year, SLU also climbed into the national rankings for the first time in 37
years. The U.S. Basketball Writers Association named him national Coach of the
Year in 1994.
During Spoonhour's tenure, "Spoonball"
was one of the top attractions in college basketball, ranking in the top 10 in
attendance for several seasons. In 1997-98, Saint Louis ranked sixth nationally
in average attendance.
Prior to arriving at Saint
Louis, Spoonhour guided Missouri State to five NCAA Tournaments and two NITs in
nine seasons from 1983 to 1992. He spent eight seasons grooming his talents at
the junior college level at Moberly (Mo.) Junior College (1972-74) and
Southeastern (Iowa) Community College (1975-81). He also served
assistant-coaching stints at Missouri State (1968-72), Oklahoma (1974-75) and
Nebraska (1981-83).