Statue of Barmore to be erected at TAC
Hall of Fame head coach of the Louisiana Tech Lady Techsters Leon Barmore, who also coached on the high school level at Ruston High, will be immortalized outside the Thomas Assembly Center with a statue, the school announced Tuesday.
Leon Barmore was a fixture inside the Thomas Assembly Center for two decades.
Now the legendary Louisiana Tech women’s basketball coach will be a fixture outside the TAC as well.
Louisiana Tech President Les Guice and Director of Athletics Eric Wood announced Tuesday that the University will unveil a statue honoring the Hall of Fame coach as part of homecoming festivities planned for the weekend of Oct. 22- 23.
The statue will reside on the front steps of the arena where Barmore’s teams dominated opponents – with a record of 300-17 – during his tenure on the Tech sideline.
Tech Athletics partnered with world-renowned sculptor Brian Hanlon to create the tribute. Hanlon has created over 550 public and private art pieces over the past 35 years and is the official sculptor of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.
“Coach Barmore excelled as a student-athlete at Tech and then as a high school basketball coach,” said Guice. “His impact in transforming the Louisiana Tech’s women’s basketball program on a national level was a remarkable accomplishment. He had such a positive influence on the lives of so many Lady Techsters over his three decades coaching; the positive impacts of his leadership will be felt forever.”
Barmore is enshrined in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame (2003), the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame (2003), the Louisiana Tech Athletics Hall of Fame (2003) and the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame (2004).
“Although I am a newcomer to the Tech Family, it’s easy to see the impact that Coach Barmore had on this University and its student-athletes during his 25 years with the Lady Techsters,” said Wood. “I feel blessed to be a part of the celebration and recognition of the Hall of Fame career for a man who brought national championship titles and prestige to Ruston. He is a man who truly understands the word ‘compete.’”
After playing for the Bulldogs during his college career, Barmore joined the Lady Techster coaching staff in 1977 and for the next 25 years helped lead Louisiana Tech to 13 Final Fours, eight national title games and three national titles. He retired in 2002 with an overall record of 576-87, the winningest coach (percentage-wise) in the history of both men’s and women’s college basketball.
“There is no one more deserving of this honor than Coach Barmore,” said Kim Mulkey, who played for Barmore and then coached alongside of him for 15 seasons in Ruston. “The impact he had on Louisiana Tech and the loyalty he showed to his hometown are unparalleled. He is a legend in our profession. I personally benefited from his knowledge of the game as both a player and a coach, and I will always be grateful for his impact on my life.”
Mulkey announced a lead gift on the project during her induction into the Ark-La-Tex Museum of Champions.
During his reign in Ruston, Barmore served as the assistant coach from 1977 through 1982, the co-head coach from 1982 through 1985 and the head coach from 1985 through 2002. He was a part of 24 national postseason tournaments, including national championship appearances in 1979, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1987, 1988, 1994 and 1998 while claiming the national championships in 1981 (AIAW), 1982 (NCAA) and 1988 (NCAA).
Barmore coached 16 Kodak All-Americans, 14 WNBA players, four Olympians and three Wade Trophy winners. He was a nine-time Conference Coach of the Year while leading Tech to a combined 25 conference regular season and tournament titles. He was named the 1988 Naismith National Coach of the Year as well as the 1990 and 1996 USBWA National Coach of the Year. He was the 1990 USBWA co-Coach of the Decade.