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Lauren “Laddie”
Gale played his way
from Oakridge into
state and national
sports history
through a standout
basketball career at
the University of
Oregon, leading the
Ducks in scoring on
their way to the
1939 NCAA title.
Born in
1917, Gale grew to
be 6-foot-4 as a
senior and led
Oakridge to the
state semifinals in
1935, where the
Oakers lost to
eventual champion
Astoria and standout
guard Bobby Anet.
Gale was voted to
the All-Tournament
First Team along
with teammate Jake
Fisher, and caught
the attention of
Astoria coach John
Warren, who had led
the Fishermen to
four titles in six
seasons. When Warren
moved to Eugene
following the season
to join rookie head
coach Howard Hobson,
they recruited Gale.
At Oregon, Gale
turned into an
offensive force on
three consecutive
Pacific Coast
Conference title
teams, and helped
lead the “Tall Firs”
to a 29-5 record in
1939-39, when they
won the first NCAA
men’s basketball
championship. Oregon
beat Ohio State
46-33 in the title
game in Evanston,
Ill.
Gale led the PCC
in scoring as both a
junior and senior
and is credited with
helping develop the
one-handed shot. He
was named an
All-American as a
senior when he
averaged 12 points
per game.
Following the
title season, Gale
moved to the Detroit
Eagles of the
National Basketball
League – a
forerunner of the
NBA, before being
drafted into the
Army at the start of
World War II.
He played for
several semi-pro
teams following the
war, but retired in
1949.
Gale was inducted
into the Naismith
Memorial Basketball
Hall of Fame in 1977
and to the Oregon
Sports Hall of Fame
as part of its
inaugural class in
1980. The “Tall
Firs” were inducted
as a team in 1984.
The University of
Oregon retired his
number, No. 28, and
inducted him into
its Athletic Hall of
Fame in 1993.
Gale died in 1996
at age 79.
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