Cole Fisher grew up dreaming of stepping onto a college diamond, and his persistence earned him a spot as a junior walk‑on at the University of Oregon. The promise of a bright athletic future seemed within reach until a routine weight‑lifting accident in February 2025 left him with a spinal cord injury that would alter his path forever.
The impact fractured five vertebrae in his upper back, prompting surgeons to perform a T11‑L3 spinal fusion. After a brief stay at Sacred Heart Medical Center, Fisher spent six weeks at Craig Hospital where intensive therapy helped him regain enough movement to walk with braces and begin the long road toward recovery.
Throughout the grueling rehabilitation, Fisher leaned on his family — his mother Katie and his father Andy — who urged him to keep moving forward. He also found a kindred spirit in Matt Fumo, a fellow spinal‑injury survivor who now competes in triathlons, a testament that life can continue beyond the hospital walls.
A Coach Reborn
When the Hatboro‑Horsham baseball program needed a pitching mentor, Fisher’s father, longtime head coach Andy Fisher, offered his son a place on the staff. The younger Fisher’s appointment sparked mixed feelings in his dad, but the team quickly embraced the former player turned coach, seeing in him a living example of resilience.
Senior pitcher Shane Mills called Fisher “a huge inspiration,” noting how the coach’s story has reshaped the squad’s mindset. The community rallied around him, raising more than $33,000 on GoFundMe — far exceeding the $15,000 target — to support his ongoing therapy and equipment needs.
Though he still wears leg braces and hopes to regain motion in his left foot, Fisher has postponed surgery on his left ankle to focus on rehabilitation. He says the setbacks have sharpened his perspective, making him more grateful for each sunrise and more determined to make the most of every opportunity.
His journey illustrates how a single tragedy can forge unexpected purpose, turning a personal battle into a catalyst for mentorship and community uplift.