Slats Gill

Slats Gill (1901-1966)

Teams coached: Oregon State Beavers
Oregon State record: 599-393 (.604)
Overall record: 599-393 (.604)

Career Accomplishments:

  • NCAA National Championships:  0
  • NCAA Tournament Appearances:  6  (1947, 1949, 1955, 1962, 1963, 1964)
  • NCAA Tournament Sweet Sixteen:  3  (1955, 1962, 1963)
  • NCAA Tournament Final Four:  2  (1949, 1963)
  • NIT Championships:  0
  • NIT Appearances:  0
  • PCC Regular Season Champion:  5  (1933, 1947, 1949, 1955, 1958)

Awards:

  • Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame (inducted 1968)
  • National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame (inducted 2006)

Coaching Career (head coach, unless noted):

1928-1964 Oregon State
1926-1928 Oregon State (frosh)

Slats Gill Facts

  • Amory Tingle Gill
  • Born May 1, 1901
  • Died April 5, 1966
  • Hometown: Salem, Oregon
  • Alma Mater: Oregon Agricultural College (BA, 1924)
  • Played baseball and basketball at Salem HS (OR) and went on to play at Oregon Agricultural (now Oregon State) from 1921-24
    • Named All-PCC (Pac-12) First Team twice (1922, 1924), playing for head coaches R. B. Rutherford and Robert Hager
  • Started his coaching career at the HS level in Oakland, CA in 1924 before returning to Corvallis to work at OAC in 1925
  • Became freshmen head coach in 1926, doing so for two years before becoming the head coach of the varsity team in 1928
    • Coached the Aggies/Beavers for 36 seasons, winning 599 games (60%) during that tenure
    • Won the PCC regular season title five times and reached the NCAA Tournament six times, including trips to the Final Four in 1949 and 1962
    • Also served as the school’s head baseball coach from 1932-37, compiling an overall record of 56-70 (.444)
    • The Beavers’ home arena on campus is named Gill Coliseum (opened 1949) in his honor
    • Retired from coaching in 1964 and became the athletic director at OSU
      • Hired assistant coach Paul Valenti to take over for him and hired Dee Andros as the Beavers’ football coach (and later OSU AD himself)
  • Had a minor stroke in March 1966 and while hospitalized in Corvallis, his health took a turn and he passed away at age 64
  • Inducted into the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame, in addition to the two major HOFs listed above
  • Along with his wife, Helen, had one daughter and one son

Slats Gill Coaching Tree