Difference between revisions of "Bob Skousen"

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: “He was a tremendous shooter,” said Provo’s Bill Aaron, who saw Skousen play and was on the same LDS mission in Australia. “He was a tremendous missionary for his church. During that time, the average missionary was involved in one or two baptisms a year in Australia. Bob Skousen baptized 60 people into The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.”[https://www.deseret.com/2016/2/19/20582893/remembering-bob-skousen-1939-2016-the-man-whose-byu-scoring-record-was-broken-by-jimmer#bob-skousen-vs-ucla-dec-2-1961]
 
: “He was a tremendous shooter,” said Provo’s Bill Aaron, who saw Skousen play and was on the same LDS mission in Australia. “He was a tremendous missionary for his church. During that time, the average missionary was involved in one or two baptisms a year in Australia. Bob Skousen baptized 60 people into The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.”[https://www.deseret.com/2016/2/19/20582893/remembering-bob-skousen-1939-2016-the-man-whose-byu-scoring-record-was-broken-by-jimmer#bob-skousen-vs-ucla-dec-2-1961]
  
[[Image:Bob_Skousen2.jpg|300px|thumb|Skousen, 35, playing against UCLA on Dec. 2, 1961|right|frame|Courtesy BYU]]
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[[Image:Bob_Skousen2.jpg|300px|thumb|right|frame|Skousen, 35, playing against UCLA on Dec. 2, 1961 Courtesy BYU]]
  
 
''Deseret News'' columnist Dick Harmon said of Skousen, “He lived and played during a time when shooting was an art form, and when you scored a zillion points, it really meant something because there was no 3-point line, nobody got a bonus for distance.”[https://www.deseret.com/2016/2/19/20582893/remembering-bob-skousen-1939-2016-the-man-whose-byu-scoring-record-was-broken-by-jimmer#bob-skousen-vs-ucla-dec-2-1961]
 
''Deseret News'' columnist Dick Harmon said of Skousen, “He lived and played during a time when shooting was an art form, and when you scored a zillion points, it really meant something because there was no 3-point line, nobody got a bonus for distance.”[https://www.deseret.com/2016/2/19/20582893/remembering-bob-skousen-1939-2016-the-man-whose-byu-scoring-record-was-broken-by-jimmer#bob-skousen-vs-ucla-dec-2-1961]
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[[Category:Mormon Life and Culture]]
 
[[Category:Mormon Life and Culture]]
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Skousen, Bob}}

Latest revision as of 18:34, 12 August 2021

Bob Skousen.jpg

Willard Robert “Bob” Skousen Jr. was a Brigham Young University basketball legend. He held the all-time single game scoring record of 47 points for half a century before Jimmer Fredette broke it with 49 in 2009. Skousen’s record-making game was only his second game back from serving a two-year mission to Australia for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He was a member of the Mormon Yankees basketball team while serving his mission. Bill Aaron remembers Skousen scored more than 52 points in one of those games in Australia.

“He was a tremendous shooter,” said Provo’s Bill Aaron, who saw Skousen play and was on the same LDS mission in Australia. “He was a tremendous missionary for his church. During that time, the average missionary was involved in one or two baptisms a year in Australia. Bob Skousen baptized 60 people into The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.”[1]
Skousen, 35, playing against UCLA on Dec. 2, 1961 Courtesy BYU

Deseret News columnist Dick Harmon said of Skousen, “He lived and played during a time when shooting was an art form, and when you scored a zillion points, it really meant something because there was no 3-point line, nobody got a bonus for distance.”[2]

Skousen married Toni Gale and they had four children. He worked as a highway contractor and rancher. He was also a pilot, art collector and dealer, and raised llamas.

Skousen was born on February 9, 1939. He died on February 12, 2016, in Mesa, Arizona.