Long-Time Michigan State Coach Richard Fetters Dies at 98

Former Michigan State University men’s swimming coach Richard Fetters died on Saturday, June 1, in Indianapolis, Indiana.  He was 98 years old.

Fetters first became a head coach for the Spartans in 1962, under Charles McCaffrey, and was promoted to head coach in 1970. His tenure came at the tail end of the golden years of the program: the Spartans placed in the top 10 at NCAAs 5 times while he was an assistant, and were a consistent presence at the national championship meet during his tenure as head coach.

Fetters retired from the program in 1988 after 26 years with the Spartans and moved with his wife, Dorothy, to Beaufort, South Carolina. There he started the Paris Island Masters Swim Team which would eventually become Beaufort Masters. He coached that team for 22 years and led them to a triple of Masters state championship titles (long course, short course meters, short course yards) 14 years in a row.

Full biography below, courtesy Michigan State Athletics:

Coach Fetters was born in South Bend, Indiana, and served in the U.S. Coast Guard and Navy during WW II.  He served in the Pacific Theater and piloted TBF Avenger torpedo bombers.  After the war he earned a bachelor’s degree from the University of Notre Dame and a master’s degree from Indiana University.

His coaching career started at South Bend Riley High School, where he coached for six years.  His Riley swimmers were team state champions in 1956 and 1957.  After a two-year stint coaching at Fort Lauderdale High School in Florida, he moved his family back north to Royal Oak, Michigan where he coached at Royal Oak Kimball High School and founded the Royal Oak Penguins Swim Club.

Beginning in 1962, Fetters proudly wore the Green and White as coach for the Spartans, first as an assistant under Charles McCaffrey and then as head coach beginning in 1970.  He also founded the Spartan Swim Club.  Career highlights at Michigan State included 19 individual Big Ten Conference champions, four Big Ten relay champions, 51 individual All-American swims, 16 relay All-American swims, and five individual National Champions.

Ken Walsh, a member of the MSU Athletics Hall of Fame, Olympian, and former world record holder, said of Fetters, “Coach Fetters was one of those remarkable coaches that made you want to do it!!  We all knew that he was with us 100% on every lap in practice, and that if we maintained the pace he planned for us, then we could succeed.”

After spending 26 years at MSU, Fetters and his wife, Dorothy, retired to Beaufort, South Carolina.  He started the Paris Island Masters Swim Team which later became the Beaufort Masters.  He coached this team for 22 years, winning all three South Carolina Masters state championship meets (long course, short course meters, short course yards) 14 years in a row.

Richard Fetters’ coaching career spanned 60 years and he was inducted into the South Bend Riley High School Athletic Hall of Fame, the Indiana High School Swimming and Diving Hall of Fame, and, in 2014, the American Swimming Coaches Association Hall of Fame.  But given all those honors one of his biggest thrills was getting to coach all six of his sons, including three as Spartans.

He was married to Dorothy for seventy-one years, and she preceded him in death in March 2018.  He is survived by 5 of 6 sons: Pete (Boyne City, MI), John (Tucson, AZ), Paul (Falls Church, VA), Joe (Brownsburg, IN), Matt (Bethesda, MD) and also three grandchildren; and five great grandchildren.

Those desiring to make contributions in his honor can contribute to the Michigan State University men’s swimming team or the Richard Fetters Scholarship fund through the Spartan Fund.

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About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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