Former Penn State assistant Adam Fisher hired to be Temple’s next head coach

Player-favorite assistant will not be part of the new basketball staff under Mike Rhoades at Penn State

With the announcement of Penn State officially hiring [autotag]Mike Rhoades[/autotag] to be the next men’s head basketball coach, the questions about who will be the assistants are the next logical step.

There was some hope and optimism that [autotag]Adam Fisher[/autotag] would be included on the staff. After graduating from Penn State in 2006, he’s racked up an impressive assistant resume under Jay Wright at Villanova, Jim Larranaga at Miami and most recently [autotag]Micah Shrewsberry[/autotag] back at Penn State.

Once a candidate for the head coaching job himself, Fisher had the full backing of the players from this year’s team. The athletic department decided to look elsewhere and eventually hired Rhoades away from VCU.

The optimism that Fisher would still serve on the Penn State staff has ended with Temple reportedly hiring him as their next head coach on Wednesday. Fisher had been a hot name around the country for multiple jobs, so it’s not a surprise that another Pennsylvania school would take a shot on him as their head coach.

It’s been an interesting process for Temple who parted ways with Aaron McKie earlier in the year. There were reports earlier on Wednesday that the Owls were hiring Missouri assistant Charlton Young. However, he eventually turned down the job citing uncertainty with the university leadership.

While lacking head coaching experience, Fisher has been a proven recruiter at both Miami and Penn State. He’s been great at getting Pennsylvania players into whatever program he’s coaching, including five-star prospect and current NBA player Lonnie Walker.

Fisher will become the 19th coach in Temple’s history.

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Long time Penn State assistant signs extension with Fordham

Scratch this former Penn State assistant off the watch list for Penn State’s next head basketball coach.

With the opening for a men’s head basketball coach at Penn State the focus of the athletic department at the moment, many names have been floated on who could and should replace [autotag]Micah Shrewsberry[/autotag].

Assistant coach [autotag]Adam Fisher[/autotag] has been a popular name among the former players. Recently, a report surfaced that Penn State might be eyeing Texas interim head coach Rodney Terry.

Longtime Penn State assistant [autotag]Keith Urgo[/autotag] was highlighted as someone to keep an eye on regarding the open position. Urgo was an assistant for nine years in State College, coaching under [autotag]Pat Chambers[/autotag] for the majority of the time.

In 2021, Urgo left to be the associate head coach of Fordham and was eventually named the head coach for the 2022-23 season after [autotag]Kyle Neptune[/autotag] left for Villanova.

However, rumors about him returning to State College were put to bed on Friday after he signed a long-term contract extension with the Rams that keeps him in the Bronx until at least the 2027-28 season. Urgo led Fordham to a 25-8 record, the second most wins in program history. This earned him Atlantic 10 Conference Coach of the Year honors.

Urgo may have never been a realistic candidate for the job. Even with his past ties to Penn State, he doesn’t have a connection with the current athletic department.

Big picture, this might be a good thing for the program overall. It would have been easy for it to go back to something familiar, such as a past assistant to take over the program. That’s not a shot at Urgo. He proved he has the ability to be a great coach this past season at Fordham.

But this is an opportunity for Penn State’s athletic department to show it is actually committed to building a basketball program by devoting finances and resources to improve the current infrastructure.

This hire has to be the right one, not the easy one.

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Should assistant Adam Fisher be the next basketball head coach?

Adam Fisher has been a hot name to replace Micah Shrewsberry as head coach. Is he the right man for the job?

The announcement of [autotag]Micah Shrewsberry[/autotag] reportedly packing his bags and heading to Notre Dame has caused some ripple effects for the Penn State basketball program.

After a Big Ten championship game appearance and first-round NCAA Tournament victory, the program looked to be on the rise. That momentum escaped the building quickly after the news of Shrewsberry’s departure broke this week.

Now, Athletic Director [autotag]Pat Kraft[/autotag] is tasked with the first big hire of his tenure at Penn State. There have been some great hires and there have been some misses in his previous locations. If Penn State truly ever wants its basketball program to be a serious player in the Big Ten conference, this decision has to be the right one.

With multiple candidates being potential options, maybe the best one is already in State College.

[autotag]Adam Fisher[/autotag] served as the associate head coach under Shrewsberry at Penn State. The Pennsylvania native was an integral part of getting the recruiting classes and transfer players into the program these past two seasons.

There’s been growing support for Fisher to take over the head coaching role. Let’s take a look at his profile to see if the best candidate is already at Penn State.

Penn State’s next move yet another critical one for future of basketball program

Penn State’s next coaching hire will be a big one for AD Pat Kraft as it looks for a new basketball leader

The life of a Penn State basketball fan has been a painful experience for many supporters of the program over the years. And just as it seemed the program was about to hit a turning point in favor of more regular success instead of waiting a decade for a shot at experiencing the NCAA tournament, Penn State once again finds itself at a potential critical fork in the road. The departure of head coach [autotag]Micah Shrewsberry[/autotag], who reportedly agreed to a lengthy contract at Notre Dame after two seasons in Happy Valley, leaves Penn State in a position of need for a head coach who can continue down the path Shrewsberry was paving without having to take a major detour.

Whoever becomes the next head coach of the Nittany Lions will have a good amount of work to do right off the bat. Seth Lundy declared for the NBA draft. A pair of players entered the transfer portal. And [autotag]Jalen Pickett[/autotag], [autotag]Andrew Funk[/autotag], and [autotag]Myles Dread[/autotag] are key players departing the program as well. The transfer portal can ease the pressure with the right conversations and decisions being made with the roster, just as Shrewsberry did right from the start of his brief tenure in State College.

But the real work will have to be done on the recruiting trail, which is a bit more difficult to start given the timing of everything. And the possibility Shrewsberry will lure any top targets to South Bend after initially working on them for Penn State is a real possibility to consider.

Ultimately, what Penn State athletics director [autotag]Pat Kraft[/autotag] is tasked with doing is not necessarily finding the big splash hire for the sake of generating headlines, but finding the right coach for the job. Players have already voiced their support for [autotag]Adam Fisher[/autotag], one of Penn State’s top assistant coaches under Shrewsberry and a former assistant at Villanova and Miami. This turns out being the first major hire for Kraft since being named the school’s athletics director in succeeding Sandy Barbour, who brought Shrewsberry to Penn State.

If you need to have some confidence in Kraft’s ability to identify a good coaching candidate, take a look at some of his notable hires at previous stops. He hired Matt Rhule to be the head football coach at Temple in 2013, and it’s pretty safe to say that worked out pretty well for all parties involved. After Rhule left Temple for Baylor, Kraft hired Geoff Collins to keep things going with the OPwls program, resulting in back-to-back winning seasons. He did hire Rod Carey to be Temple’s next football coach after Collins left for Georgia Tech, so 2-1 isn’t too bad.

Kraft’s men’s college basketball coaching hire at Temple, following the resignation of Fran Dunphy, was thought to be a solid hire with Aaron McKie. McKie was an easy pick for the Owls, but he was just let go by Temple after his fourth season on the job with just one winning season. His coaching hire for the Boston College program, Earl Grant, hasn’t quite panned out for the Eagles after two seasons, although they did win three more games this season compared to the previous season. Hooray for progress?

But Penn State has deeper pockets and more to offer with its financial abilities compared to Temple and Boston College. Penn State still has a long way to go to being a regularly competitive college basketball program, but now is the time to change the narrative.

Penn State has dug deep into the pockets of its football program, which is admittedly the lifeblood of the entire athletics department and has been for decades. It has a history of hiring national championship-caliber programs like Cael Sanderson (wrestling) and Russ Rose (women’s volleyball). It has invested heavily in building a men’s ice hockey program from near scratch and has quickly built a budding NCAA contender in just a matter of a handful of years.

Nothing, absolutely nothing, should be standing in the way of Penn State giving Kraft the green light on making the absolute best hire possible and ensuring the next head coach will have the full financial backing to improve facilities, NIL opportunities, and more for the future stability of the basketball program.

Penn State shouldn’t settle for a coach to go through another rebuild that leads to a return to the NCAA tournament a decade from now. It needs a coach who will keep Penn State fielding a competitive roster through recruiting and the transfer portal for years to come. A step back in the 2023-24 season can be understandable, if not anticipated and expected, but it is beyond time to accept mediocrity as the standard for Penn State basketball.

So when Penn State announces who the next head coach will be, don’t expect a big splashy hire. Instead, look to see how the school and its leadership are committed to a long-term vision for the program that doesn’t waste time in turning words into actions.

The time is now, Penn State.

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Penn State basketball assistant invited to top assistant coaching development event

One of Penn State basketball’s new assistants was invited to a top-end assistant coaching event

We are less than three months away until the return of college basketball and there is a certain feel in the air at Happy Valley about the new leadership with the men’s basketball team under new head coach Micah Shrewberry. Shrewsberry has spent time in preparing for his first season as head coach putting together a top-notch coaching staff. One of those new coaches will be taking part in a program designed to develop coaching leaders in the profession.

On Monday, Penn State announced that men’s basketball associate head coach Adam Fisher was selected to take part in the 2021 TopConnect Basketball Virtual Symposium.

The TopConnect symposium identifies the top assistant basketball coaches in the country & connects them with mid-major athletic directors, providing networking and leadership development opportunities.

The 2021 Version of the TopConnect symposium will take place on  Aug. 17-18.

The 2021-22 season will be Fisher’s first season at Penn State under new head coach Micah Shrewberry. Fisher came to Penn State after being with the Miami Hurricanes the previous eight seasons.

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