APSU Sports Information
Brentwood, TN – Longtime Austin Peay State University men’s basketball head coach and athletics director Dave Loos has been elected to the Ohio Valley Conference Hall of Fame and will be officially inducted at the annual OVC Honors Brunch, Friday, June 1st, 2018 at the DoubleTree Hotel in downtown Nashville.
The Ohio Valley Conference Hall of Fame was organized in 1977 with the intent of honoring the coaches, administrators, faculty and staff that have been associated with the OVC for at least five years and provided extensive and outstanding service to the Conference.
With the induction of this year’s class, the membership will reach 83, including 10—Loos, Joe Morgan, Dave Aaron, George Fisher, John Ogles, Dr. Leon Bibb, Joey Haines, Chuck Kimmel, Dr. Gaines Hunt and Dr. Sherry Hoppe—from Austin Peay.
The credentials for “The Dean of Ohio Valley Conference Coaches” are unparalleled. Not only has he all but put the league wins record out of reach—amassing 421 wins during his time in the OVC—and not only is he the only five-time Coach of the Year award winner in league history, the last of his four OVC Tournament championships in 2016 equaled the legendary E.A. Diddle for most in league history.
In 2017, he carved out his last slice of history with his 500th career victory as a collegiate head coach, becoming just the 97th coach with at least 10 years Division I experience to reach that milestone.
Now a member of six Halls of Fame—the OVC, St. Louis Amateur Baseball, University of Memphis M-Club, Missouri Basketball Coaches, Austin Peay and Christian Brothers University—Loos’ name has become synonymous with not only success but APSU athletics as a whole. The Dave Loos Scholarship Fund was established in 2010 for prospective coaches and in 2007, the Dunn Center court was christened Dave Loos Court at Hoppe’s behest.
Loos came to Clarksville on July 14th, 1990 and, although success was not evident overnight, he began to slowly build back Austin Peay into the power it had been during the Lake Kelly era. Following four seasons under Larry Finch at Memphis, Loos engineered a five-win improvement in his first season at the helm, earning the first of five Ohio Valley Conference Coach of the Year honors in the process.
During the Loos era, the head coach showed a knack for keeping talented local players at home—Charles “Bubba” Wells, Trenton Hassell and Drake Reed each won OVC Player of the Year under Loos’ watch, with the latter two Clarksville natives and Wells a 45-minute drive from his native Russellville, KY.
With Wells and Jermaine Savage anchoring the squad in 1996, the Govs won seven of their final eight in the regular season, opened the OVC Tournament with 20-point victories over Eastern Kentucky and Tennessee State and broke through with a thrilling 70-68 win against rival Murray State—on two Reggie Crenshaw free throws with 0.2 seconds left—for the first of four OVC Tournament titles during Loos’ tenure.
The following season, with Wells sidelined for much of the early going with a leg stress fracture, Loos’ charges were able to hold things together until their star returned, then put together a 12-6 OVC mark to bring the first of five OVC regular-season titles accumulated during Loos’ time on the sideline back to Clarksville.
Although Wells and Hassell received scores of individual plaudits, the best Loos teams were hallmarked by tenacious defense. Never was that more evident than the back-to-back 20-win seasons in 2002-03 and 2003-04, where the Governors—led by a core of players including APSU Athletic Hall of Famer Adrian Henning and 1,000-point scorers Anthony Davis, Maurice Hampton and Zac Schlader—took back-to-back regular-season championships and a tournament title in 2003, thanks to center Josh Lewis’ game-saving block against Murray State in the OVC Tournament semifinals and a 63-57 win against Tennessee Tech to take the title.
The Govs followed that up with one of the most dominant regular-season performances in Ohio Valley Conference history. Holding opponents to a program-record 60.5 ppg and 41.1 percent shooting, the Govs marched through the Ohio Valley Conference with a 16-0 record—one of two unbeaten regular seasons in the OVC since the conference expanded to 10 teams in 1996. Despite only Henning and Davis averaging double figures, the Govs reeled off an impressive season and a 13-0 record in the Dunn Center, culminating in a second-round run in the NIT.
2005-06 saw the Govs begin a stretch of six straight seasons with 10 or more wins in conference play, including a regular-season championship in 2006-07 that saw Reed earn his OVC Player of the Year honor and Loos earn his final OVC Coach of the Year accolade. It also began a stretch of three straight seasons that saw the Govs advance to the OVC Championship game, losing on a heartbreaking last-second shot to Eastern Kentucky in Nashville.
Austin Peay broke through again in 2008, posting 24 wins—most in a single-season during the Loos era—and thrashing Tennessee State 82-64 in the OVC title game, which remains the largest margin of victory in the title contest since the turn of the century. Not only did Reed earn the second of three first-team All-OVC honors, Derek Wright earned all-conference and all-tournament honors.
And one can’t forget that Loos’ coaching career tells but half the story of his Austin Peay service. For 16 years, he pulled double duty in two of the most demanding jobs in college sports—head men’s basketball coach and athletics director. During his time as head of the department, Loos ushered women’s soccer onto campus, brought back women’s golf and scholarship football and oversaw not only facility improvements, including plans for the new football stadium, but hanging of OVC Academic Banners in 2002-03 and 2008-09.
Loos will be enshrined this year alongside Dr. Wayne Andrews, former Morehead State President and two-time Chair of the OVC Board of Presidents.