Steve Tappmeyer (born June 9, 1957) served 21 seasons as basketball coach of the Northwest Missouri State University Bearcats men's basketball team. Tappmeyer was the longest serving coach for the school and had the most wins (407–208 (.662)). He served as the head coach for the University of Missouri–St. Louis Tritons from 2010 to 2013.[1]

Steve Tappmeyer
Biographical details
Born (1957-06-09) June 9, 1957 (age 67)
Gerald, Missouri, U.S.
Alma materEast Central College
Southeast Missouri State
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1986–1988East Central College
1989–2009Northwest Missouri State
2010–2013Missouri-St. Louis
Head coaching record
Overall499–287

Early years

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Tappmeyer was born in Gerald, Missouri, attended East Central Junior College where he played basketball. He was an honorable-mention All-conference as a sophomore.

He transferred to Southeast Missouri State University after his sophomore season in 1978. He averaged 16.3 points and was an honorable-mention All-MIAA as a junior.[2]

Coaching career

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East Central College

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Tappmeyer was a basketball assistant at Northwest Missouri State University from 1981 to 1985. He was the basketball head coach at East Central College from 1986 to 1988, where he had a 62–32 record in three seasons and was named the 1986 MCCAC Coach of the Year.

Northwest Missouri State University

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In the fall of 1988, he was hired as the Northwest Missouri State University head basketball coach. From 1998 to 2008, his teams won 19 or more games. His teams reached the NCAA Division II playoffs in 1998, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2007 and 2008 (accounting for all but one of Northwest's post-season NCAA Division II appearances). It was in Elite 8 in 2002 and 2004. His teams won the regular season MIAA in 1998, 2002, 2007 and 2008. They won the MIAA post-season tournament in 1989, 2002, 2004 and 2008.

Tappmeyer finished as the school's all-time leader in wins with 408 victories. He won seven MIAA Championships, three regular season titles and four conference tournament titles. He qualified to the NCAA Tournament ten times, with two appearances ending in berths to the Elite Eight (2002 and 2004)..

He had a streak of 11 straight seasons with 19 or more wins and his teams surpassed 22 wins in 9 of his final 12 years. He was a four-time MIAA Coach of the year and the 2001 South Central Region Coach of the Year. His teams had a record of 143 wins and only 25 losses at the school's Bearcat Arena during his final 12 seasons. Additionally, he also was the head tennis coach at Northwest for a brief time.

In 2014, he was inducted into the Northwest Missouri State M-Club Hall of Fame. In 2017, he was inducted into the MIAA Hall of Fame.

Year W L MIAA Reg Season MIAA Tournament Post Season
1989 21 9 #
1990 14 13
1991 12 15
1992 16 12
1993 14 13
1994 18 10
1995 13 14
1996 19 7
1997 11 16
1998 23 7 * Playoffs
1999 19 10
2000 22 8 Playoffs
2001 25 6 Playoffs
2002 29 3 * # Semifinals (Elite 8)
2003 22 9 Playoffs
2004 29 5 # Semifinals (Elite 8)
2005 19 11
2006 22 10 Quarterfinals
2007 24 7 * Playoffs
2008 24 8 * # Playoffs
2009 12 15

University of Missouri-St. Louis

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Tappmeyer was the basketball head coach at the University of Missouri-St. Louis from 2010 to 2013. In 2010-11, the team posted a 16-11 overall record, including a 10-8 Great Lakes Valley Conference record, the first winning GLVC mark in program history.

In 2011-12, he coached the school to a 19-9 record, its most wins since the 1990-91 campaign. The team finished with a 13-5 Great Lakes Valley Conference record, while winning the West Division title. The school began the league schedule with a 6-0 record for the first time in program history and those six wins were part of a 10-game win streak, the second longest in program history. Tappmeyer also guided USML to their first-ever GLVC Tournament victory, a 71-60 win against Drury in the quarterfinals. He was named Co-GLVC Coach of the Year and the NABC Co-Midwest Region Coach of the Year.

In 2012-13, he finished with a 17-10 overall record, including a 10-8 Great Lakes Valley Conference record.

On April 23, 2013, he announced his resignation, due to what he called burnout. He accomplished a winning season in each of his three campaigns, which had not been done in the school since the first four years of the basketball program existence (starting in 1966-67). He posted a 52-30 (.634) overall record at UMSL. In 2012-13, the team finished with a 17-10 overall record, including a 10-8 Great Lakes Valley Conference record. In 24 years as a Division II basketball head coach, he had a 460-238 (.660) overall record.

Year W L GLVC Reg Season GLVC Tournament Post Season
2010 16 11
2011 19 9
2012 17 10

Owensville High School

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Tappmeyer, moved to Owensville, Missouri to help take care of an ailing family member. From 2013 to 2014, he was the Athletic Director at Owensville High School. In 2015-16, he guided the girls basketball team to a Class 4 third-place finish, before announcing his retirement at the end of the season.

Maryville University

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In 2020 Tappmeyer came out of retirement to be an assistant coach for the Maryville Saints at Maryville University in suburban St. Louis. The head coach for the team is Jesse Shaw who had been a player for Tappmeyer 2001-2005 at Northwest Missouri during Tappmeyer's most successful stint at the university when his teams twice made it to the Elite 8.[3]

References

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  1. ^ Earl Austin Jr – UMSL tabs Steve Tappmeyer as new head coach Archived 2011-07-10 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Northwest Missouri State University Men's Basketball Record Book – nwmissouri.edu – Retrieved September 25, 2000
  3. ^ "Together again: Shaw, Tappmeyer join forces to coach at Maryville".