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American basketball player and coach From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Brian Fish (born December 20, 1965) is an American college basketball coach, most recently serving as head coach for the Montana State Bobcats men's basketball team.[1] Fish is currently the director of player personnel for the University of Georgia Bulldogs basketball team.[2]
Current position | |
---|---|
Title | Executive director |
Team | Oregon |
Biographical details | |
Born | Seymour, Indiana, U.S. | December 20, 1965
Playing career | |
1984–1986 | Western Kentucky |
1986–1989 | Marshall |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
1989–1992 | Marshall (assistant) |
1992–1994 | Kansas State (assistant) |
1994–1996 | Creighton (assistant) |
1996–2002 | TCU (assistant) |
2002–2004 | San Diego (assistant) |
2004–2010 | Creighton (assistant) |
2010–2014 | Oregon (assistant) |
2014–2019 | Montana State |
2019–2022 | Georgia (DPD) |
2022–present | Oregon (Executive Director) |
Head coaching record | |
Overall | 65–92 |
A first-team all-state selection from Seymour High School in Indiana, Fish went on to play college basketball at Western Kentucky and Marshall. He graduated from the latter in 1989.[3][4]
After graduation, Fish served as a graduate assistant at his alma mater under first-year head coach Dana Altman. He would stay on staff with the Thundering Herd until 1992, when he would rejoin Altman at Kansas State from 1992 to 1994, and follow Altman to Creighton where he served as an assistant from 1994 to 1996. Fish joined Billy Tubbs staff at TCU, and served as an assistant coach until 2002. For the following two seasons, Fish was an assistant at San Diego and part of the Toreros' 2003 NCAA Tournament team, until he returned to Creighton for a second stint with the Bluejays. Fish was part of Altman's staff that produced five-straight 20-win seasons, two NCAA Tournament appearances and four NIT appearances. When Altman accepted the head coaching position at Oregon, Fish once again followed him, serving as an assistant coach on the Oregon staff for four seasons.
Fish was named the 22nd head coach in Montana State history on April 1, 2014. After going 65–92 overall through five seasons, the school decided not to renew Fish's contract.[5] Following his departure from Montana State, Fish was hired as part of the staff at the University of Georgia under head coach Tom Crean.[6]
Season | Team | Overall | Conference | Standing | Postseason | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Montana State Bobcats (Big Sky Conference) (2014–present) | |||||||||
2014–15 | Montana State | 7–23 | 4–14 | T–10th | |||||
2015–16 | Montana State | 14–17 | 9–9 | 7th | |||||
2016–17 | Montana State | 16–16 | 11–7 | 6th | |||||
2017–18 | Montana State | 13–19 | 6–12 | 9th | |||||
2018–19 | Montana State | 15–17 | 11–9 | T–4th | |||||
Montana State: | 65–92 (.414) | 41–51 (.446) | |||||||
Total: | 65–92 (.414) |
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