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| Joe Aillet | |
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Position: Coach |
| Member Biography | |
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Joe Aillet was one of the most revered men in Louisiana
history. He had a humble beginning, as a member of a
train load of orphans shipped from New York City to take up
residence in New Orleans. He was raised by a Catholic priest
and throughout his career was known as a scholarly, religious
person, and an athletic person. He graduated from Southwest
Louisiana in 1927 with a strong athletic record and went into
coaching. He quoted Shakespeare and the classics, was an
outstanding public speaker, and emphasized good academic
standards for all the athletes he coached. He became
Louisiana Tech's head coach in 1940 and was on the job
through 1966, except for 1943, when the school had no team.
He helped form the Gulf States Conference in 1948, and his
football teams won eight of the first 12 championships. His
best player was Mickey Slaughter, three-time All-Conference
quarterback 1960-1962, and he recruited Terry Bradshaw,
who played for his successor. His coaching record was 152-
85-8, and he served as Louisiana Tech Athletic Director
1940-1970. He died on December 28, 1971. His memory
lives at the school in Ruston, Louisiana, with the Joe Aillet
Stadium and the Joe Aillet Scholastic Award.
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