Steve Fisher

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For the footballer, see Steve Fisher (footballer).
Steve Fisher

Title Head coach
College San Diego State
Sport Basketball
Born March 24, 1945 (1945-03-24) (age 63)
Place of birth Flag of the United States Herrin, Illinois
Career highlights
Championships
NCAA Division I Tournament Championship (1989)
NIT Tournament Championship (1997)
MWC Tournament Championship (2002, 2006)
MWC Regular Season Championship (2006)
Playing career
1965–1967 Illinois State
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1971–1979
1979–1982
1982–1989
1989–1997
1998–1999
1999–present
Rich East HS
Western Michigan (asst.)
Michigan (asst.)
Michigan
Sacramento Kings (asst.)
San Diego State

Steve Fisher (born March 24, 1945 in Herrin, Illinois, U.S.) is a basketball coach currently at San Diego State University.

Fisher attended Illinois State University, where he helped lead the Redbirds to the 1969 Division II Final Four. After school, he became a high school coach in Park Forest, Illinois. In 1979, he accepted an assistant coaching position at Western Michigan University. In 1982, he moved to Ann Arbor, Michigan and took another assistant job at the University of Michigan.

[edit] Coaching career

In 1989, during the final week of the regular season, Michigan head coach Bill Frieder agreed to take the coaching job at Arizona State University. Though Frieder intended to coach Michigan through the end of the 1989 NCAA tournament, athletic director Bo Schembechler ordered Frieder to leave immediately and hired Fisher as interim coach, declaring that "a Michigan man will coach Michigan." Once Frieder had announced his employment at another school, he obviously was no longer a "Michigan man."

Initially, Fisher was not expected to retain the position after the season. However, Fisher led the Wolverines to an improbable NCAA championship that season, thanks to a strong performance by forward Glen Rice. Schembechler hired him as the school's permanent head coach a week after the championship game. Michigan credits the 1988-89 regular season to Frieder and the NCAA tournament to Fisher.

In 1991, Fisher signed one of the most talented incoming freshman classes of all time. High school stars Chris Webber, Jalen Rose, Ray Jackson, Jimmy King, and Juwan Howard all signed with Fisher and Michigan, forming what became known as the "Fab Five". Together, they helped lead the Wolverines to the national title game in their freshman year, only to lose to Duke. As sophomores, they again reached the title game, this time losing to North Carolina. In that game, Webber was called for a technical foul with 11 seconds remaining in the game when he signaled for a timeout, yet the Wolverines were out of timeouts.

After the title-game loss to the Tar Heels, Webber went pro; Rose and Howard followed a year later. The Wolverines never reached the same heights again. While they reached the postseason each of the next five seasons and won the 1997 National Invitation Tournament, they never advanced further than the Final Eight in the 1994 NCAA Tournament.

In October 1997, Michigan fired Fisher as a result of an off-court scandal (see section below).

Fisher was out of coaching for the 1997-98 season before taking a job as an assistant with the Sacramento Kings.

In 1999, Fisher took over as coach of a San Diego State program that had suffered losing records in 13 of the previous 14 years. In the season before he arrived, the Aztecs had won just four games, but within two seasons Fisher had brought the team up to a .500 record, and led them to a 21-12 record and an NCAA Tournament appearance in year three of his regime.

[edit] Ed Martin scandal

See also: University of Michigan basketball scandal

In 1996, Michigan star Maurice Taylor suffered a car accident on his way from a party in Detroit. One of his teammates, Robert Traylor, was in the car and suffered a broken arm, ending his season. Also in the car was high school phenom Mateen Cleaves, who ultimately went to rival Michigan State. When it was revealed that Taylor had visited Ed Martin, a retired Ford electrician and Michigan booster, the school launched an investigation. After the investigators questioned Fisher's role in arranging complimentary tickets for Martin, Fisher was fired a week before practice was to start for the 1997-98 season.

Later, additional facts surfaced surrounding Fisher's stint with the Wolverines that damaged his reputation. In 2002, an indictment unsealed in a Detroit federal court charged Ed Martin with running an illegal gambling operation and money laundering. Additionally, it claimed that Martin gave Webber $280,000 in illicit loans while Webber was in high school and college, with another $336,000 allegedly going to three other former Wolverine players - Taylor, Robert Traylor and Louis Bullock. Martin ultimately pleaded guilty, but died in February 2003.

As a result of the revelations, Michigan imposed its own sanctions on the basketball program in 2002. Michigan vacated its two Final Four games from the 1992 NCAA Tournament and its standing as the tournament's runner-up. It also vacated the entire 1992-93 season, as well as every game from 1995-96 to 1998-99. Michigan also withdrew from postseason consideration for the 2002-03 season, and removed the banners hanging in Crisler Arena that commemorated the 1992, 1993, 1996 and 1998 NCAA tournaments, the 1998 Big Ten tournament title and the 1997 NIT title. All four players' records have been officially removed from Michigan's record books, and Traylor had to vacate his most valuable player award in the 1997 NIT. The move came because the payments may have compromised the four players' amateur status. The NCAA accepted Michigan's sanctions, and additionally placed the school on probation until 2006. It also ordered Michigan to disassociate itself from the four players until 2012.

While the discoveries have not impacted Fisher's career with San Diego State (and no new allegations have occurred in conjunction with that program), they have caused his reputation to be tarnished in the eyes of some, as is true for other coaches whose schools were found guilty of major NCAA rules violations. However, Fisher denied any knowledge of the Martin misconduct. The NCAA ultimately faulted Fisher for allowing Martin access to his players (though his ties to Michigan dated to the Frieder era), but otherwise cleared him of wrongdoing.[1]

[edit] Coaching record

Season Team Overall Record Conference Record Postseason
1988-89 Michigan 6-0* --- National champion*
1989-90 Michigan 23-8 12-6 NCAA 2nd Round
1990-91 Michigan 14-15 7-11 NIT 1st Round
1991-92 Michigan 25-9^ 11-7 NCAA Championship Game^
1992-93 Michigan 31-5^^ 15-3 NCAA Championship Game
1993-94 Michigan 24-8 13-5 NCAA Elite Eight
1994-95 Michigan 17-14 11-7 NCAA 1st Round
1995-96 Michigan 20-12^^ 10-8 NCAA 1st Round
1996-97 Michigan 24-11^^ 9-9 NIT Champion
1999-00 San Diego State 5-23
2000-01 San Diego State 14-14
2001-02 San Diego State 21-12 NCAA 1st Round
2002-03 San Diego State 16-14 NIT 2nd Round
2003-04 San Diego State 14-16
2004-05 San Diego State 11-18
2005-06 San Diego State 24-9 13-3 NCAA 1st Round
2006-07 San Diego State 22-11 NIT 2nd Round
2007-08 San Diego State 20-13 9-7 NIT 1st Round|
Overall record at Michigan: 184-82 (.692)&
Overall record at San Diego State: 147-130 (.520)

*Fisher served as interim coach during the 1989 NCAA tournament after Bill Frieder resigned. Michigan credits the 1988-89 regular season to Frieder and the NCAA tournament to Fisher.

^Michigan vacated its two 1992 Final Four games and its status as tournament runner-up. Official record is 24-9.

^^Entire season, including postseason tournament appearances, later vacated by the school.

& Record includes games subsequently vacated by the school.