Steve Fairchild | |
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Sport(s) | Football |
Biographical details | |
Born | June 21, 1958 |
Place of birth | Decatur, Illinois |
Playing career | |
1976-1977 1978-1980 |
San Diego Mesa CC Colorado State |
Position(s) | Quarterback |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
1982-1983 1984-1985 1986 1987-1989 1990-1992 1993-1996 1997-2000 2001-2002 2003-2005 2006-2007 2008-2011 |
SD Mesa CC (OC/QB/WR) Ferris State (OC/QB/RB) San Diego State (TE) New Mexico (OC/QB) San Diego State (QB) Colorado State (QB) Colorado State (OC) Buffalo Bills (RB) St. Louis Rams (OC/QB) Buffalo Bills (OC) Colorado State |
Head coaching record | |
Overall | 16–31 |
Bowls | 1–0 |
Statistics | |
College Football Data Warehouse |
Steve Fairchild (born June 21, 1958 in Decatur, Illinois) is the former head coach of the football team at Colorado State University.
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Fairchild initially attended and played football for San Diego Mesa Community College, where he was named an All-American. In 1978, he transferred to Colorado State University, where he played quarterback until 1980. He split playing time with Keith Lee for his first two seasons, and was red-shirted in 1979. In his final year playing with the team, he was the full-time starter and scored 15 touchdowns while throwing for 2,573 yards.[1]
After graduating from CSU, Fairchild returned to San Diego Mesa Community College where he held the head coaching job for a number of years. From 1986 through 1993, Fairchild held assistant coaching jobs at University of New Mexico and at San Diego State University.[1] In 1993, he returned to Colorado State University, where he served as quarterbacks' coach until 1996,[2] after which he was promoted to offensive coordinator.[1] During his time as an assistant coach at Colorado State, the team won a total of five conference titles.[2]
In 2001, Fairchild was hired by the Buffalo Bills to serve as running backs' coach. He left for the St. Louis Rams in 2003 where he served as an assistant offensive coordinator for three seasons, before returning to the Bills in 2006 for a season-and-a-half as the offensive coordinator.
In December 2007, Colorado State University announced that Fairchild would be returning to his alma mater to serve as head coach. Fairchild succeeded Sonny Lubick, under whom he had previously been an assistant.[2] During Fairchild's tenure as an assistant, CSU had been a mid-major power, but upon his arrival their fortunes had slipped, as the program went 17-31 in Lubick's final four years.
CSU surprised in its first year under Fairchild. After a 38-17 loss to Colorado in his debut, Fairchild won his first game with CSU, a home victory over Sacramento State 23-20 thanks to a Ben DeLine field goal. The Rams followed that up with a 28-25 win over Houston one week later. However, CSU would lose 5 of their next 7 games, including tight home losses to conference powers TCU (13-7) and BYU (45-42). CSU rallied to win their final two games, with their 31-20 victory at Wyoming securing their sixth win and a berth in the New Mexico Bowl. Underdogs to Fresno State, CSU won a 40-35 thriller for their first bowl victory since the 2001 New Orleans Bowl. The star of the game (and most of the season) was senior RB Gartrell Johnson, who ran for a career high 285 yard and added 90 receiving yards. His 375 total yards were the most for one player in bowl history. He ran for two touchdowns, the final being a game winning 77-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter. Johnson would be named first team all-MWC following the season. Fairchild became the first coach in CSU history to post a winning season in his first year with the program.
Despite graduating Johnson and several other seniors, 2009 started much the way 2008 ended. The Rams opened the season September 6 at arch-rival Colorado. With a bevy of returning starters, and the game being played in Boulder for the final time (both schools had agreed to play the next decade's worth of games at Invesco Field at Mile High Stadium), the Buffs were heavy favorites. However, CSU led from start to finish, beating Colorado 23-17, marking their first victory at Folsom Field since 1986. Following home victories over Weber State and Nevada, the 3-0 Rams appeared headed to postseason yet again. However, the season would derail quickly. Following a 42-23 loss at ranked-BYU, the Rams dropped a 31-29 decision at Idaho followed by 24-17 home defeat to Utah. They were the first of four losses that would come by seven points or less. The Rams would not win another game for the rest of the season. A loss to previously winless New Mexico (29-27) assured CSU of a last place finish, and a 17-16 home defeat to Wyoming the day after thanksgiving not only cost the Rams the Bronze Boot (and their first home loss to Wyoming in 12 years), but made CSU just the 3rd team in Mountain West Conference history to go winless in conference play (Wyoming having done so in 2000 and 2001). 2010 was just as miserable as they had the same record (3-9) as the previous year, but had frequent blowouts, concluding their season with a 44-0 drubbing by rival Wyoming in the Border War. Wyoming hadn't won a single conference game until that dominating win over Colorado State. He is currently considered to be on the coaching hot seat if improvements aren't shown next season. 2011 was no better as CSU's inability to beat lowly opponents such as UNLV and San Jose State led to a third straight 3-9 record in Fairchild's 4th and final season. It was no surprise in Fort Collins when his firing was announced on December 4, 2011, one day after losing to the Wyoming Cowboys in the Border War for the third consecutive year.
Year | Team | Overall | Conference | Standing | Bowl/playoffs | Coaches# | AP° | ||
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Colorado State Rams (Mountain West Conference) (2008–present) | |||||||||
2008 | Colorado State | 7–6 | 4–4 | 5th | W New Mexico | ||||
2009 | Colorado State | 3–9 | 0–8 | 9th | |||||
2010 | Colorado State | 3–9 | 2–6 | T–6th | |||||
2011 | Colorado State | 3–9 | 1–6 | T–6th | |||||
Colorado State: | 16–33 | 7–24 | |||||||
Total: | 16–33 | ||||||||
#Rankings from final Coaches' Poll. °Rankings from final AP Poll. |
Fairchild graduated from Colorado State University in 1980 with a degree in economics.[1]
Sporting positions | ||
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Preceded by Bobby Jackson |
St. Louis Rams offensive coordinator 2003-2005 |
Succeeded by Greg Olsen |
Preceded by Tom Clements |
Buffalo Bills offensive coordinator 2006-2007 |
Succeeded by Turk Schonert |
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