ryas- Karpfinan THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, December 28, 1984 -2 _lineman from Farmington Harrison. Fisher says Wauldron is the first athlete from Harrison he's tried to _place. Although Fisher has gotten scholarships for students from many schools in the tri-county area, he says he has worked the longest with Ferndale, Hazel Park, Clawson, Oak Park, Detroit Cass Tech and Detroit Pershing. He has dropped schools from time to time due to lack of cooperation or other reasons, but picks up others. The same goes for colleges. If a coaching contact, for instance, moves on, Fisher switches his placement ef- forts to the new school if that coach was cooperative. Currently, he says, there are nine football colleges be'ne- fiting from Fisher's efforts: Richmond, ,Villanova, Mississippi, Cincinnati, Alabama, Arkansas Tech, Fairmont , (W. Va.) State, Western New Mexico and the University of Louisiana. ' Those schools received football infor- mation. Some other schools, though, have been targeted for non-football athletes. Houston, and William and .Mary, have awarded grants-in-aid to several area girls basketball players. "Coaches from Ohio State are coming up here to talk to Heather Meyer of Berkley," relates Fisher, speaking of a cross country runner. She had nobody recruiting her and she's the fourth best in the state. Now Rice, Penn State, Alabama, Ge6rgia and Ohio State are interested." After Heather's coach, Sherry ,Amos, told Fisher about her, he started passing the information on to some of his contacts — as well as to schools where "I didn't know their coaches from Adam." Fisher went to Central High School in Detroit, then enlisted in the Army, spending five years as a parat- rooper, much of the time in Germany. When he got out he went to Georgia for a year on a baseball scholarship, then to the University of Detroit to finish his college education, majoring in business. His wife, Rebecca, is a graduate psychology student at Wayne State University. They have two children, Randy, a freshman at Southield- Lathrup, and Lisa, a seventh grader at Birney Middle School. Randy is a wrestler. Although Fisher hasn't in- cluded wrestlers in his scholarship searches, that will change in three years when he looks to match his son with the right college. "Then that may be it," he says. "I'll probably keep doing this for about three more years." Recruiting can be a touchy thing. Just ask any of the nation's colleges which have been sanctioned by the National Collegiate Athletic Associa- tion for recruiting violations. The NCAA has plenty of restrictions, but since Fisher doesn't charge for his services he has far fewer restrictions than he would otherwise have "I'm in direct contact with the enforcement (officials) of the NCAA," he explains, "and if there's a gray area I call them direct." Fisher begins calling high schools in September to learn about players, asking coaches what athletes might be capable of competing on the college level. He'll occasionally watch games or practices and spot athletes that way, but mostly his information comes from phone conversations. "I had a coach call me up and ask what scale I used to rate or judge an athlete," Fisher relates. "I don't have one. I've taken a second string football player and gotten him a full ride." The prime qualifications? "Desire and heart," he insists. "I learn if they have it by just talking to a kid. I tell kids when you get to college you have to go and give 120 percent or you're not going to make it — in the classroom or in the sport. "If a kid is 5-10, 185 and playing tackle in high school and runs a 5.1 40 (yard dash), I can't do anything for him. He's got to have something going for him physically and speed wise . . "I have the means and I have the capabilities to help young men or women out. I'm not saying I'll call schools for all of them. Sometimes they'll call me and I'll recommend schools for them to call. I'm doing a lot of that now. I'm not doing anything coaches can't do." A few years ago, Fisher says, 25 percent of the Tulane women's basket- ball team were sent to the Louisiana university by Fisher: Sue Owens of Southfield-Lathrup, Theresa Heike of Royal Oak Dondero and Sara Heiderdr of Berkley. He likes to try to place girls because he says they are more over- Continued on Page 46