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Alex Spanos left the responsibility to guide the team and the family’s other holdings to his oldest son. There wasn’t a family vote or climatic meeting about Los Angeles.
SOURCES: Northwestern is set to promote Alex Spanos to director of sports performance for football, replacing Jay Hooten. Spanos, a player and fan favorite, has been in the Wildcats’ strength ...
Alexander Gus Spanos, Chargers owner and Spanos family patriarch, passed away peacefully surrounded by his loved ones on Tuesday morning. He was 95. The embodiment of the American dream, Alex’s legacy ...
The U7’s did have their share of highlights though as the entire lineup put up good swings against the same pitching machine ...
It is with heavy hearts that the Spanos family announces the death of Alexander Gus Spanos, founder of A.G. Spanos Companies and owner of the Chargers NFL Franchise. Alex passed away peacefully ...
Northwestern strength coach Alex Spanos continues to be a staple on the Wildcats’ sideline, with his polo shirts and hype man antics. Expect more of the same at the Big Ten championship.
Alex Spanos was born on Sept. 28, 1923, in Stockton, California. One of six children, Spanos built a billion-dollar fortune in real estate and construction.
Well, the secret is out on the Wildcats’ sports performance coaches — especially Alex Spanos. During Saturday’s romp over Minnesota at wind-whipped Ryan Field, Big Ten Network cameras kept ...
By 1994, Alex Spanos was ready to hand the daily operations to Dean Spanos as CEO and president. That same year, the Chargers reached their only Super Bowl.
Alex Spanos was Greatest Generation-hardened steel Totally self-forged. He had a daily regimen and stuck to it. And yet there was a softness to him, especially when it came to family, where there ...
STOCKTON, Calif. (AP) — Alex Spanos, the son of Greek immigrants who used a self-made fortune from construction and real estate to buy the Chargers in 1984, died Tuesday. He was 95. The Chargers ...
Chargers owner Alex Spanos, a plain-spoken, self-made billionaire from Stockton who bought a majority stake in the NFL football club in 1984, died Tuesday morning, the team announced. He was 95.