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Karl Fogel

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Karl Fogel
Biographical details
Born (1946-12-06) December 6, 1946 (age 77)
Alma materColby College
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1976–1979Curry
1979–1985Northeastern (assistant)
1986–1994Northeastern
1995–2003Mercyhurst
Head coaching record
Overall270–249
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
4 ECAC North/NAC regular season (1987, 1990, 1991, 1993)
2 ECAC North/NAC tournament (1987, 1991)
Awards
NAC Coach of the Year (1987)

Karl Fogel (December 9, 1946) is a former American college basketball coach at Curry College, Northeastern, and Mercyhurst.[1][2]

Coaching career

[edit]

Fogel's first head coaching job came at Curry College, where he amassed a 33–40 record from 1976 to 1979. In 1979, Fogel joined Jim Calhoun's staff at Northeastern, and was a part of five NCAA Tournament appearances, as well as six regular season conference titles before taking over the head coaching position when Calhoun left for Connecticut. In his first season at the helm, Fogel coached the Reggie Lewis-led Huskies to a 27–7 record an ECAC North regular season and tournament title, and a bid to the 1987 NCAA tournament. Fogel became the first coach in conference history to win the conference tournament and go to the NCAA tournament in his first season on the job.

In his next four seasons at Northeastern, Fogel guided the Huskies to a winning record, including a regular season title during the 1989-90 season, and a regular season and conference tournament title in 1990–91 and an appearance in the 1991 NCAA tournament. In the three seasons that followed, Fogel's record was 34–49 and was subsequently fired and replaced by Northeastern alum Dave Leitao.

After Northeastern, Fogel became the head coach at Mercyhurst, where he stayed until 2003, accumulating an overall record of 106–106.

Upon leaving coaching, Fogel became the athletic director at Westwood High School in Massachusetts, serving in the role until 2011 after being placed on administrative leave following an incident involving the firing of the school's track and field coach.[3]

Head coaching record

[edit]
Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Curry Colonels () (1976–1979)
1976–77 Curry 9–15 N/A N/A
1977–78 Curry 13–11 N/A N/A
1978–79 Curry 11–14 N/A N/A
Curry: 33–40 (.452) N/A
Northeastern Huskies (ECAC North/North Atlantic Conference) (1986–1994)
1986–87 Northeastern 27–7 17–1 1st NCAA Division I First Round
1987–88 Northeastern 15–13 11–7 5th
1988–89 Northeastern 17–11 12–5 3rd
1989–90 Northeastern 16–12 9–3 1st
1990–91 Northeastern 22–11 8–2 1st NCAA Division I First Round
1991–92 Northeastern 9–19 5–9 5th
1992–93 Northeastern 20–8 12–2 T–1st
1993–94 Northeastern 5–22 2–12 8th
Northeastern: 131–103 (.560) 76–41 (.650)
Mercyhurst Lakers (Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference) (1995–2003)
1995–96 Mercyhurst 15–12 11–7 T–4th
1996–97 Mercyhurst 13–13 7–10 5th (South)
1997–98 Mercyhurst 16–11 9–8 T–2nd (South)
1998–99 Mercyhurst 11–15 5–14 7th (South)
1999–00 Mercyhurst 9–17 4–15 7th (South)
2000–01 Mercyhurst 17–10 11–6 3rd (South)
2001–02 Mercyhurst 13–13 6–11 6th (South)
2002–03 Mercyhurst 12–15 4–12 6th South
Mercyhurst: 106–106 (.500) 47–83 (.362)
Total: 270-249 (.520)

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Karl Fogel Coaching Record - College Basketball at Sports-Reference.com".
  2. ^ Writer, Keith Pearson/Staff. "Reidy resigns from boys basketball post".
  3. ^ "Westwood High A.D. On Leave After Track Coach Firing". 10 May 2011.