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Steve Yoder

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American former college basketball coach (born c. 1939)
Steve Yoder
Biographical details
Born (1939-11-01)November 1, 1939 (age 85)
Playing career
Basketball
c. 1960Illinois Wesleyan
Baseball
1959–1962Illinois Wesleyan
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
Basketball
1962–1964Glen Ellyn JH (IL) (assistant)
1964–1967Plymouth HS (IN) (assistant)
1967–1973Plymouth HS (IN)
1973–1975Furman (assistant)
1975–1976Penn HS (IN)
1976–1977Ball State (assistant)
1977–1982Ball State
1982–1992Wisconsin
2014–2017Houston (dir. of operations)
Administrative career (AD unless noted)
2000–2003Indiana Pacers (scout)
2003–2011New York Knicks (scout)
Head coaching record
Overall205–227 (college)
Tournaments0–1 (NCAA Division I)
2–2 (NIT)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
2MAC regular season (1981, 1982)
MAC tournament (1981)
Awards
2× MAC Coach of the Year (1981, 1982)

Stephen Kent Yoder (born November 1, 1939) is an American formercollege basketball coach. He served as the head men's basketball coach atBall State University from 1977 to 1982 and theUniversity of Wisconsin–Madison from 1982 to 1992, compiling career college basketball coaching record of 205–227. Yoder most recently served as director of operations for theHouston Cougars men's basketball team.[1]

Background

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Yoder is a native ofPlymouth, Indiana and 1958 graduate of Plymouth High School. He attended thenNAIA-memberIllinois Wesleyan University on a basketball and baseball scholarship winning four letters in baseball and two in basketball before graduating in 1962. He received his master's degree fromUniversity of Saint Francis, then called Saint Francis College, inFort Wayne, Indiana in 1970.

Career

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He started his coaching career atGlen Ellyn, Illinois junior high school, and in 1965 took an assistant's position in basketball at Plymouth, Indiana. He became head coach at Plymouth in 1967 and proceeded to guide the school to three conference titles, three sectional crowns, a pair of regional titles, and two finishes among the top ten teams in state rankings over a six-year period. Yoder was named Indiana's District One Coach of the Year in 1973 and he then accepted a job as assistant coach atFurman University. He returned to Indiana in 1975 as head coach at Mishawaka'sPenn High School. He then became assistant basketball coach atBall State University in 1976 and a year later became head coach at the school.

Yoder was head coach at Ball State from 1977–78 to 1981–82, compiling a record of 77–62. He was named theMid-American Conference Coach of the Year for both the 1980–81 and 1981–82 seasons. The 1980–81 Ball State team shared the MAC title with three other schools and gained an NCAA tournament berth by winning the conference's post-season tournament. Ball State compiled an overall 17–11 record during the 1981–82 season including a 12–4 conference record that gave them the MAC championship. The Cardinals lost toNorthern Illinois University 79–75 in overtime in the MAC post-season tournament title game with the winner advancing to the NCAA meet.

In 1982, he left forUniversity of Wisconsin–Madison, where he coached the Badgers until 1992. He compiled a record of 128–165 and led the Badgers to theNational Invitation Tournament in 1988–89 and 1990–91 – the Badgers' first postseason appearances in over 40 years. For his accomplishments in coaching the 18–12 NIT team in 1988–89, Yoder was named Kodak District XI Coach of the Year by theNational Association of Basketball Coaches as well as Midwest Coach of the Year byBasketball Times. Yoder was forced to resign in February 1992, effective after the season.[2]

After coaching, he became a scout with theIndiana Pacers and later theNew York Knicks.

Awards

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Yoder is a member of the Ball State University Hall of Fame (2001) and the Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame (2020).

Head coaching record

[edit]

College

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Statistics overview
SeasonTeamOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
Ball State Cardinals(Mid-American Conference)(1977–1982)
1977–78Ball State10–156–10T–7th
1978–79Ball State16–119–74th
1979–80Ball State14–157–9T–4th
1980–81Ball State20–1010–6T–1stNCAA Division I first round
1981–82Ball State17–1112–41st
Ball State:77–6244–36
Wisconsin Badgers(Big Ten Conference)(1982–1992)
1982–83Wisconsin8–203–1510th
1983–84Wisconsin8–204–1410th
1984–85Wisconsin14–145–139th
1985–86Wisconsin12–164–149th
1986–87Wisconsin14–174–148th
1987–88Wisconsin12–166–127th
1988–89Wisconsin18–128–106thNIT second round
1989–90Wisconsin14–174–14T–8th
1990–91Wisconsin15–158–107thNIT second round
1991–92Wisconsin13–184–149th
Wisconsin:128–16550–130
Total:205–227

      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

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  1. ^Former Coach Steve Yoder Joins Men's Basketball Staff. Houston Cougars: Men's Basketball, April 9, 2014. Retrieved April 10, 2014.
  2. ^Hernandez, Rob (February 25, 1992)."Big Ten coaches denounce forced departure".Wisconsin State Journal. p. 30. RetrievedNovember 15, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.

External links

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# denotes interim head coach

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