When fans think about the growth of University of Mary athletics—from a single team to nearly twenty programs—they often picture coaches, players, and big wins. But behind the scenes, another kind of architect was quietly laying the foundation.
That architect was Jerry Fischer.
An unwavering believer in the role athletics can play in the life of a university, Fischer spent 35 years at UMary making sure the Marauders had not just teams, but the facilities, resources, and vision needed to thrive.
Fischer’s journey at Mary is a story of steady, long-term commitment.
In those roles, he wasn’t just managing numbers; he was helping steer the entire direction of a growing institution—including its athletics.
When Fischer began his administrative career at Mary, the athletic department was small. Over the decades, he became one of the key figures in its expansion from one team to as many as 19 varsity sports.
His fingerprints are all over Marauder facilities and infrastructure:
Every weight lifted, sprint run, and game played in those spaces is part of Jerry’s legacy.
Fischer’s influence wasn’t limited to bricks and mortar.
He also chaired the committee that studied and ultimately recommended that the University of Mary transition to the NCAA. That decision reshaped the competitive landscape for every Marauder team—past, present, and future.
The move to the NCAA:
Fischer understood that athletics could be a front porch to the university—a visible, dynamic way to express the school’s character, excellence, and community to the world.
For all of his executive responsibilities, Jerry never drifted far from the heart of athletics: the court, the field, and the student-athletes themselves.
Early in his time at Mary:
That combination—administrator, builder, coach, and fan—made him uniquely effective as an advocate for athletics in university leadership circles.
For today’s Marauders and alumni, the athletic experience you know—fields, gyms, lockers, weight rooms, NCAA competition—didn’t appear overnight. It was built, piece by piece, over decades by people like Jerry Fischer who believed:
When we watch a game at UMary today, we’re doing so in spaces and within a competitive structure that Jerry helped make possible.
He didn’t score the touchdowns or hit the game-winners—but without his vision and steady hand, a lot of those moments never happen.