1984-85 Sarasota Stingers program from the Continental Basketball Association

Sarasota Stingers / Florida Stingers

Continental Basketball Association (1983-1986)

Tombstone

Born: 1983 – CBA Expansion Franchise
Moved: July 1986 (Charleston Gunners)

First Game: December 3, 1983 (L 105-97 @ Puerto Rico Coquis)
Last Game: March 16, 1986  (W 114-111 @ Albany Patroons)

CBA Championships: None

Arenas

1983-1985: Robarts Sports Arena (3,700)11983-84 Continental Basketball Association Official Guide

1985-1986: Manatee Civic Center (4,000)21985-86 Continental Basketball Association Official Guide & Register

Marketing

Team Colors:

  • 1983-84: Yellow, Black & Orange31983-84 Continental Basketball Association Official Guide
  • 1985-86: Blue, White & Orange41985-86 Continental Basketball Association Official Guide & Register

Cheerleaders: The Honey Bees

Ownership

Owners:

Attendance

Tilting your mobile device may offer better viewing.

Sources:

  • 1985-86 Continental Basketball Association Official Guide & Register
  • 1999-00 Continental Basketball Association Official Guide & Register (CBA League Averages)

 

STINGERS STUFF

Sarasota Stingers Logo T-Shirt

Fun logo from this short-lived Florida minor league hoops outfit of the mid-1980’s. 
This one comes from Rebound Vintage Hoops, who offer a huge selection of different Continental Basketball Association tees, hoodies, long-sleeved and women’s cut shirts in a wide range of sizes. 

 

When you make a purchase through an affiliate link like this one, Fun While It Lasted earns a commission at no additional cost to you. Thanks for your support!

 

Background

We didn’t borrow any money for this,” Jeffrey Fischer told The Sarasota Herald-Tribune in early 1984, bragging about his new Sarasota Stingers basketball team.  “I took what I considered to be risk capital and invested it.

Technically, this was true.  Fischer, a stockbroker for E.F. Hutton in Sarasota, did not borrow any money to run his Continental Basketball Association expansion franchise in the winter of 1983-84.  He took quite a risk by stealing it from his mostly elderly brokerage clients.  And he got away with it for an entire season before the Securities & Exchange Commission caught up to him in June 1984.

Journeyman basketball coach Bill Musselman briefly helmed teams in the ABA, the NBA and the Western Basketball Association.  A Sarasota resident, Musselman brought the idea of forming a CBA team to Jeffrey Fischer in the summer of 1983. Fischer paid $180,000 to the CBA for his expansion franchise that August.  Musselman signed on as Head Coach and General Manager.

On The Court

On the floor, the Stingers struggled out of the gate.  After a 6-13 start, Fischer forced Musselman’s resignation in January 1984.  Musselman found a local money guy and offered to buy the team from Fischer instead, but scoffed when Fischer asked for $1 million – a 455% premium over what he paid for the team five months earlier. “Does he think we’re a couple of hayseeds?” Musselman fumed to The Sarasota Herald-Tribune.

The Stingers finished the 1983-84 campaign tied for last place in the CBA’s Eastern Division with a 16-28 record.  Three Stingers players – Clay Johnson, Mike Sanders and former Kansas City Kings first round draft pick Kevin Loder earned call-ups to the NBA during the season.

Sarasota Stingers Continental Basketball Association

The Feds Come Calling

For a man making bad bets with stolen money – the Feds would later show that Jeffrey Fischer defrauded his clients of $2.3 million between 1977 and 1984 – Fischer spent a lot of time crowing to the local media about the alleged details of the Stingers’ finances.  His club sold an all-time record of 1,348 season tickets for the 1983-84 campaign.  The Stingers cut off the waiting list of interested investment partners after more than 120 people clamored to get a piece of the Stingers.  He expected to make a 40% annual return on his Stingers investment.  He was preparing to apply for an NBA expansion franchise for Tampa-St. Pete.  None of it was true, but it all made for great press at first.

In June 1984 the authorities caught up to Fischer and froze his assets, which placed the Stingers in limbo throughout the summer.  Fischer’s sole minority investor (out of the 120 allegedly clamoring for a piece of the team) was a guy named Mike Cohn who recruited two new partners and rescued the team in August 1984.   Then he began to sort through the books.

Fischer’s boasts to the media – and his own partner – were fabrications.  Of the CBA record 1,300 season tickets Fischer claimed, Cohn could only account for 300 actual paid tickets.  Robarts Sports Arena was routinely papered with free tickets and the club lost about $200,000.  Even the NBA expansion papers that Fischer showed to Cohn turned out to be “forgeries…a figment of his imagination“, Cohn told The Sarasota Herald-Tribune.

1985-86 Florida Suncoast Stingers pocket schedule from the Continental Basketball Association

Final Seasons & Departure

Reorganized in the front office, the Stingers continued to struggle on the court in their second season.  The club finished in 7th (last) place in the East with a 21-27 record.  After the 1984-85 season, the Stingers moved 15 minutes north up Interstate 75 to the Manatee Civic Center in Palmetto, Florida.  The club played one final season in the winter of 1985-86 under the name “Florida Stingers” at the 3,900-seat Manatee.  The Stingers averaged 1,096 per games during their lone season in Palmetto and once again finished out of the playoff hunt with a 21-27 record.

In July 1986, new ownership purchased the franchise and relocated the team to Charleston, West Virginia for the 1986-87 CBA season.

Aftermath

Fischer pled guilty to three counts of fraud in April 1985. A judge sentenced him to four years in federal prison.  In the early 1990’s he re-surfaced in Central Florida running QMC, a medical billing company.  In 1996, he was convicted of swindling a tax-payer funded county hospital out of $1.2 million, which he used in large part to squander on risky stock trades.5Bryant, Purvette A. “Trial begins in hospital fraud case”. The Sentinel (Orlando, FL). July 16, 1996 Fischer received a five-year sentence in the QMC case.

Bill Musselman had great success in his next two CBA coaching stops with the Tampa Bay Thrillers and Albany Patroons.  He leveraged his CBA track record to return to the NBA, where he was named the first head coach of the Minnesota Timberwolves when that expansion franchise began play in 1989.  Musselman coached the T-Wolves for their first two seasons of existence. Musselman suffered a stroke following a pre-season game in October 1999 while serving on the Portland Trail Blazers coaching staff. He died due of heart and kidney failure in May 2000 at the age of 59.

Voices

Magic Johnson and I are both from Michigan. He told me a story that he had vouched for me to be chosen for a call up to the Lakers during their run to the NBA title in 1985. It was between Don Collins, Chuck Nevitt and myself. And they ended up choosing Chuck Nevitt, who was a big 7′ 6″ guy to back up Kareem. And Chuck Nevitt played something like three minutes in 10 or 12 games at the end of the season and all through the playoffs. He got a ring and made about $275,000 or $300,000. Just that close, the choice could have been me.”

– Kevin Loder, Forward 1983-84 (2011 FWiL Interview)

“At that particular time they were trying to create a large critical mass <of teams> in the CBA.  Let’s just say there was not a lot of scrutiny about the background checks, if you will, of where and how someone makes their money.

At any rate, players were removed from that.  We just assumed that whoever was a part of <ownership> was capable of delivering.  That kind of thing happened overseas as well and so those were common place stories when you were playing in these leagues that were not the NBA.  Stability was in the NBA.

– Kevin Loder

 

“Bill Musselman was a no-nonsense guy.  He was very intense and he played to win.  He put his best players out there on the floor and he expected them to play hard for him.  Bill Musselman and I got along great and I really miss him.  He was a guy that was definitely a gift to the game and he was a winner.

– Kevin Loder

 

Sarasota Stingers Shop

Stingers Women’s Cut Logo T from Rebound Vintage Hoops

 

OUR FAVORITE STUFF

Continental Basketball Association
Logo T-Shirt

This Old School Shirts release is strictly for the hardcore hoop heads. 
Before the NBA had the G-League, it had the CBA with teams stretched from Puerto Rico to Honolulu. During the CBA’s 1980’s and 90’s heyday, the league provided a launching pad for future NBA All-Stars such as John Starks and  Michael Adams as well as coaching legends Phil Jackson and George Karl. 
 
When you make a purchase through an affiliate link like this one, Fun While It Lasted earns a commission at no additional cost to you. Thanks for your support!

 

 

 

In Memoriam

Head Coach Bill Musselman (Stigers ’83-’84) died on May 5, 2000 of heart and kidney failure after a series of ailments.  He was 59. New York Times obituary.

 

Downloads

2011 FWiL interview with former Stingers player Kevin Loder

 

Links

Continental Basketball Association Media Guides

Continental Basketball Association Programs

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