
TED FIORE - Head Coach |
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13th Seasons - Seton Hall University |
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Overall - 354-235 (.602) / @ MSU 203-125 (.619) |
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NJAC Record - 104-87 (.544) |
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Phone: 973-655-7608 / fioret@mail.montclair.edu |
Completing his 11th season at the helm of the Red Hawk men’s basketball program in 2007, Ted Fiore arrived in Montclair with an already impressive coaching resume but has only added to it since becoming the 11th head coach in Montclair State history in 1998.
In his nine seasons, Fiore has fashioned an 134-86 record for a .609 winning percentage, which is the second-best among all Montclair State coaches who roamed the sidelines for five or more seasons. In a 17-year career, he has nearly 300 games (295), averaging over 16 wins per season while taking his team to the post-season eight times. In addition, the Red Hawks as a program have had just three players named to the National Basketball Coaches Association All-American Team since 1967 and Fiore has coached two of them - Anthony Peeples (1999) and Gian Paul Gonzalez (2006). Under Fiore's watch, the Red Hawks have also garnered two NJAC Rookie of the Year honors, including the 2007 winner, Charles Miller.
From the moment he stepped onto the sidelines at Panzer Gym, Fiore immediately turned Montclair State into a perennial contender. In his first season, Fiore took MSU to the ECAC Metro Tournament final and followed that up with the 2000 ECAC Championship as his team went 20-8, the first time in 16 years that a Montclair State team had won 20 games in a season. Included in that were MSU’s first trip to the NJAC Tournament in five years, two in-season tournament titles, and an undefeated non-conference mark (the first since the 1969-70 season). Fiore was named the NJAC Coach of the Year.
In 2002, Fiore continued to guide the Red Hawks’ rise as he led Montclair to a 19-9 mark and a 12-6 record in the rugged New Jersey Athletic Conference. The league mark was good enough for first place, giving MSU its first regular-season championship since the 1983-84 season and a home game in the conference playoffs for the first time since that same season. Fiore also recorded the 200th victory of his career as MSU defeated rival William Paterson, 54-51.
The following year, Fiore guided MSU to the most successful season it had seen in over two decades. With a talented cast playing his patented defensive style, Montclair went 23-6 (one win shy of the school record), captured the 2003 New Jersey Athletic Conference championship for the first time since 1982 and earned its first trip to the NCAA Division III Tournament in eight years. Back in the NCAAs for the first time since 1995, Montclair made the most of its opportunity, winning its first two games and reaching the “Sweet 16” before closing out the campaign in the Sectional semifinals. Not since 1984 had MSU played that deep into the month of March.
Before he came to Montclair State, Fiore carved out his own reputation as the head coach of Division I St. Peter’s College in Jersey City, where he ran the Peacocks’ program from 1986-95, compiling a 151-110 mark, placing himself second on the school’s all-time list for coaching victories. Four times during his tenure did St. Peter’s reach the post-season, including two trips to the “Big Dance” (1991 and 1995) otherwise known as the NCAA Tournament. He was named the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference’s (MAAC) Coach of the Year three times and was twice voted the Coach of the Year by the New Jersey Coaches and Sportswriter’s Association and the Metropolitan Sportswriters association.
Called “...one of the best, if not the best, teachers of man-to-man defense in the entire country,” Fiore has published a guide, “Man to Man Defensive Adjustments,” for use by coaches at various clinics throughout the country and has produced a video series entitled “Basketball - Steps to Success,” which has been viewed on New Jersey cable networks.
Before entering the collegiate coaching ranks, Fiore built his overall coaching reputation at Cedar Grove High School and Our Lady of the Valley (now closed) in Orange. In 15 years, Fiore totaled a record of 290 wins and only 78 losses in basketball and 220 wins and just 83 losses as a baseball coach. All totaled, he was 510-161 in two sports, for a high school winning percentage of .760.
Fiore first made his mark in college athletics at Seton Hall University, where he played basketball and starred in baseball. A 1962 graduate and member of the school’s Athletic Hall of Fame, he went on to play two seasons in the Cincinnati Reds organization. In between his stops at St. Peter’s and Montclair State, Fiore was busy on the Fox/Madison Square Garden Network, and with SportsChannel as a college basketball TV analyst. He also worked with Comcast Cable TV and has been an advance scout for the New Jersey Nets and Toronto Raptors of the National Basketball Association (NBA).
The father of five children; daughters Faith Anne, Debby and Dina, and sons Ted and Kevin, Fiore resides in East Hanover, and was the Vice Principal of Pequannock High School until he resigned from that position in 1998 to return to Montclair State.
FIORE AT MSU YEAR-BY-YEAR |
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| Year | Rec | NJAC |
| 1998-99 | 16-11# | 9-9 |
| 1999-00 | 20-8$ | 11-7% |
| 2000-01 | 11-13 | 6-12 |
| 2001-02 | 19-9# | 12-6!% |
| 2002-03 | 23-6&@ | 13-5% |
| 2003-04 | 13-10 | 4-8 |
| 2004-05 | 7-5* | 2-2* |
| 2005-06 | 13-12 | 9-9 |
| 2006-07 | 12-12 | 5-8 |
| 2007-08 | 16-11 | 8-5 |
| 2008-09 | 21-7 | 11-2^ |
| 2009-10 | 12-13 | 4-9 |
| 2010-11 | 20-8 | 8-5 |
| TOTALS | 203-125 | 104-87% |
$
- ECAC Champions |
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MSU MEN'S BASKETBALL COACHES |
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| Ed Ward | 6-7 ( .461) | 2005* |
Ted Fiore |
203-125 (.619) | 1998-Pres. |
Darryl Jacobs |
15-12 (.595) | 1997-98 |
| Jose Rebimbas | 14-8 (.636) | 1995* |
Nick DelTufo |
44-61 (.419) | 1991-97 |
Ollie Gelston |
303-285 (.515) | 1967-91 |
Dave Watkins |
44-32 (.579) | 1964-67 |
Hank Schmidt |
135-122 (.525) | 1954-64 |
George Brown |
18-4 (.818) | 1953-54 |
Alden C. Coder |
113-44 (.720) | 1945-53 |
Raymond Slapp |
10-6 (.625) | 1944-45 |
Chett Pittser |
123-67 (.648) | 1933-34 |
Ernest McCoy |
15-18 (.455) | 1932-34 |
Earl Leslie |
12-16 (.429) | 1931-32 |
Guy Morrison |
8-22 (.267) | 1928-30 |
| * Served as interim coach during the season and was credited with team record |
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