Las Vegas Review-Journal

Sweet memories of Lou Pisani

Bueckers scores 31 in overtime win

- RON KANTOWSKI Contact Ron Kantowski at rkantowski@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0352. Follow @ronkantows­ki on Twitter.

Aword that over the years has gradually become part of my vocabulary is “kudos.” Lou Pisani, a longtime local coach, scout, volunteer and sage observer of baseball who died Saturday at age 93, is the one responsibl­e.

A lot of baseball people named Lou are obligatori­ly referred to as “Sweet.” As in “Sweet” Lou Johnson and “Sweet” Lou Piniella and “Sweet” Lou Whitaker.

Lou Pisani was “Sweets” Lou, plural. He would hand out chocolate bars and sticks of gum and hard candy to those he encountere­d at the diamond.

When we first met, he gave me Kudos, uppercase, as in the granola bar covered in chocolate. Like the confection itself, the term stuck.

Sweets Lou was a volunteer assistant at UNLV then under longtime Rebels coach Fred Dallimore. During the summertime, he had the same title with the Las Vegas 51s.

Coach Lou — the nickname by which most reverently referred to him — spent 30 years at Las Vegas High and coached the Wildcats to three state championsh­ips before finishing his prep coaching career at Bishop Gorman. He was inducted into the Southern Nevada Sports Hall of Fame in 2005.

“Just a wonderful, wonderful guy, ” Las Vegas Aviators president Don Logan said. “Good family man. He cared about kids. He cared about our game.”

Proud of pinstripes

Logan said nothing made Pisani prouder than putting on a baseball uniform.

When he was a bird dog scout for the San Francisco Giants, the visiting Phoenix Firebirds would invite him to hit fungoes or pitch batting practice at Cashman Field.

“When the Rebels would play on Saturday afternoon and we were playing a night game, he’d show up at the ballpark in his uniform,” Logan recalled.

Though Pisani was not under contract at UNLV, Dallimore insisted on taking him on selected trips much to the dismay of the UNLV athletic bean counters.

He’d then explain what Coach Lou meant to the Rebels. Like the one season he still was coaching high school ball and UNLV’S uniforms were late in arriving. Coach Lou offered the Rebels use of Las Vegas High’s new baseball duds, which had “LV” on the caps and were similar in color.

“He always found a way to contribute to our success in some capacity,” Dallimore said. “I always had a special place in my heart for Lou because he loved the game. And he was willing to give something back to the game that was so good to him.”

Line drives in boxscores

Coach Lou was a Navy veteran who played baseball for Pete Newell, the legendary college basketball coach, at the University of San Francisco and minor league ball in Canada. He met his wife, Rosemary, who died in 2015, at USF; they were married for 63 years. They helped found Our Lady of Las Vegas Catholic parish and had three daughters — Veronica, Juliana and Lyndalou, and a son named Lou who answered to Sam. They had a full lineup card with 14 grandkids and seven great grandchild­ren.

“Did you know that dad once saved a young man’s life?” eldest daughter Veronica asked Monday as the sisters played pepper with the telephone, handing it back and forth to share stories about Coach Lou.

The young man was named Stephen Fleming. He was 15 years old when coach discovered his unresponsi­ve body at the bottom of the deep end of the Dula municipal swimming pool. It was Coach Lou who performed CPR.

The young man became an orthodonti­st in Las Vegas. Years later when single mom Juliana’s four kids required braces, Dr. Fleming did the honors at a greatly discounted price.

As they often say in the game he loved, these are the kind of things that sometimes don’t show up in the boxscore. But let the record show that Lou Pisani, a sweet man known for handing out Kudos at the ballpark, probably was the one who deserved them the most.

STORRS, Conn. — Paige Bueckers scored 31 points, including her team’s final 13, to lead No. 2 Connecticu­t to a 63-59 overtime victory Monday over top-ranked South Carolina.

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

The freshman scored all of her team’s nine points in overtime, including a 3-pointer that bounced high off the back of the rim before dropping in to give the Huskies (14-1) the four-point margin with 10 seconds left.

The Gamecocks’ Zia Cooke and Destanni Henderson missed 3-pointers in the final seconds.

Aliyah Boston had 17 points and 15 rebounds for South Carolina (152), which overcame a seven-point deficit in the fourth quarter.

■ No. 10 Arizona 79, No. 11 Oregon 59: At Eugene, Ore., Cate Reese scored 25 points on 11-for-14 shooting for the Wildcats. Sam Thomas scored 14 points and Trinity Baptiste and Aari Mcdonald each added 13 points as the Wildcats (12-2, 10-2 Pac-12) shot 50.8 percent. Nyara Sabally scored 17 points to lead the Ducks (12-4, 9-4).

MEN

■ No. 1 Gonzaga 82, Brigham Young 71: At Provo, Utah, Jalen Suggs scored 24 points on 10-for-18 shooting to lead the Bulldogs (19-0, 10-0 WCC). Drew Timme added 20 points and 13 rebounds. Alex Barcello led the Cougars (15-5, 6-3) with 20 points.

■ No. 4 Ohio State 73, Maryland 65: At College Park, Md., Kyle Young and Duane Washington Jr. each scored 18 points for the Buckeyes (16-4, 10-4 Big Ten). Aaron Wiggins scored 17 points and Eric Ayala had 13 for the Terrapins (10-10, 4-9).

■ Kansas 78, No. 23 Oklahoma State 66: At Lawrence, Kan., David Mccormack scored all but two of his 23 points after halftime, Marcus Garrett added 17 for the Jayhawks (13-7, 7-5 Big 12). Cade Cunningham finished with 26 points but shot 7 -for-18 for the Cowboys (12-6, 5-6).

MOUNTAIN WEST

■ San Diego State 85, San Jose State 54: At San Diego, Jordan Schakel scored 23 points, hitting four 3-pointers and making all nine of his free throw to lead the Aztecs (14-4, 8-3 Mountain West). Jalen Dalcourt had 13 points for the Spartans (5-12, 3-10).

 ??  ?? Lou Pisani, left, and Matt Williams at the Southern Nevada Sports Hall of Fame’s 2005 induction ceremony at the Cox Pavilion.
Lou Pisani, left, and Matt Williams at the Southern Nevada Sports Hall of Fame’s 2005 induction ceremony at the Cox Pavilion.
 ?? Las Vegas Review-journal file ?? Lou Pisani’s baseball memorabili­a was on display at the Cox Pavilion in 2005 when the longtime coach and volunteer was inducted into the Southern Nevada Sports Hall of Fame.
Las Vegas Review-journal file Lou Pisani’s baseball memorabili­a was on display at the Cox Pavilion in 2005 when the longtime coach and volunteer was inducted into the Southern Nevada Sports Hall of Fame.
 ??  ??
 ?? David Butler The Associated Press ?? Connecticu­t’s Paige Bueckers shoots against South Carolina’s Zia Cooke in Monday’s matchup of the two top-ranked teams in women’s college basketball.
David Butler The Associated Press Connecticu­t’s Paige Bueckers shoots against South Carolina’s Zia Cooke in Monday’s matchup of the two top-ranked teams in women’s college basketball.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States