Stanford Baseball
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NCAA Division I Baseball Records
Division I Baseball Records Individual Records .................................................................. 2 Individual Leaders .................................................................. 4 Annual Individual Champions .......................................... 14 Team Records ........................................................................... 22 Team Leaders ............................................................................ 24 Annual Team Champions .................................................... 32 All-Time Winningest Teams ................................................ 38 Collegiate Baseball Division I Final Polls ....................... 42 Baseball America Division I Final Polls ........................... 45 USA Today Baseball Weekly/ESPN/ American Baseball Coaches Association Division I Final Polls ............................................................ 46 National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association Division I Final Polls ............................................................ 48 Statistical Trends ...................................................................... 49 No-Hitters and Perfect Games by Year .......................... 50 2 NCAA BASEBALL DIVISION I RECORDS THROUGH 2011 Official NCAA Division I baseball records began Season Career with the 1957 season and are based on informa- 39—Jason Krizan, Dallas Baptist, 2011 (62 games) 346—Jeff Ledbetter, Florida St., 1979-82 (262 games) tion submitted to the NCAA statistics service by Career RUNS BATTED IN PER GAME institutions -
College World Series Honors
STANFORD BASEBALL Record Book Stanford in the NCAA Tournament Tournament Appearances W L PCT 1953 (1-2; t-5th College World Series) College World Series (1-2) College World Series 16 40 29 .580 College World Series (1-2) June 1 Miami 17, Stanford 3 NCAA District-8 2 4 4 .500 June 11 Michigan 4, Stanford 0 June 2 Stanford 9, Arizona 2 NCAA Regionals 29 81 28 .743 June 12 Stanford 7, Houston 6 June 6 Arkansas 10, Stanford 4 NCAA Super Regionals 8 12 6 .667 June 13 Lafayette 4, Stanford 3 Total Postseason 31 137 67 .672 1986 (3-2; NCAA Regional) 1965 (2-3; District-8 Tournament) NCAA Midwest Regional – Stillwater, Oklahoma (3-2) Most Games: 13 (2008) District-8 Tournament – Stanford, California (2-1) May 22 Stanford 11, Appalachian State 1 San Fernando Valley State 2, Stanford 1 May 23 Stanford 2, Arkansas 0 Fewest Games: 2 (1994, 2010) Stanford 12, San Fernando Valley State 0 May 24 Oklahoma St. 16, Stanford 8 (DH Gm 1) Stanford 11, San Fernando Valley State 6 May 24 Stanford 10, Oregon State 7 (DH Gm 2) Most Wins: 10 (2008) May 25 Oklahoma St. 3, Stanford 0 District-8 Tournament – Pullman, Washington (0-2) Washington State 2, Stanford 1 Fewest Wins: 0 (1994, 2010) 1987 (9-1; College World Series Champions) Washington State 13, Stanford 3 NCAA West I Regional – Stanford, California (4-0) Most Losses: 3 (6x, last: 2008) May 22 Stanford 10, Minnesota 1 1967 (5-3; t-3rd College World Series) May 23 Stanford 12, UC Santa Barbara 5 Fewest Losses: 1 (1987) District-8 Tournament – Stanford, California (0-1) June 2 Fresno State 7, Stanford 3 May -
National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association Oregon
NATIONAL COLLEGIATE BASEBALL WRITERS ASSOCIATION (June 17, 2017) ncbwa.com FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Todd Miles, NCBWA ([email protected]) OREGON STATE’S PAT CASEY SELECTED AS 2017 NCBWA NATIONAL COACH OF THE YEAR OMAHA – After leading Oregon State to one of the most dominating seasons in college baseball history, including a trip to the 2017 College World Series, Oregon State’s Pat Casey has been named the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association National Coach of the Year. “Coach Pat Casey has taken OSU to the best record at this point in the season since Texas’ 1975 NCAA championship team finished 59-6,” said NCBWA executive director Bo Carter. “No team has dominated Division I like this in decades, and it speaks of the great coaching ability and leadership of Coach Casey. He definitely deserves this national honor.” The Beavers advanced to the CWS under Casey with an Oregon State single-season record 54 wins (54-4 overall), and set a Pac-12 Conference record for wins, while finishing league play with a 27-3 mark. Casey’s Beavers own the two longest winning streaks in college baseball in 2017 with a 23-game streak and an active 21-game streak. On May 12, Casey became just the 16th active coach to reach 1,000 wins with a four-year program. After opening the season ranked seventh in the NCBWA preseason poll, Casey led the Beavers to 28 wins in their first 29 games including the 23-game win streak. The Beavers moved into the top spot in every national poll in late March and remained the nation’s No. -
Table of Contents Tanford Baseball Has Been Leading the Way for 117 Years
ST AN F ORD B Table of Contents AS E BA tanford Baseball has been leading the way for 117 years. Just Stanford Baseball 2010 LL Ssome of the achievements of the historic college baseball program Team’s Schedule .......................................................... BC Quick Facts .....................................................................2 2010 SE include two College World Series titles, six NCAA Super Regional Sunken Diamond .....................................................16-17 victories, 15 NCAA Regional crowns, 20 conference titles and 2589 Outlook ....................................................................22-23 ASON wins – a total which ranks fifth all-time in the history of Division I Coach Marquess .....................................................24-26 OUTL Coach Stotz ...................................................................27 OO college baseball. Stanford Baseball players are not only leading the Coach Filter/Iglesias ......................................................28 K way on field, they are also leading the way in the classroom and with Player Profiles .........................................................30-52 C their work ethic. Stanford Baseball is the most unique experience in Season in Review oac Review Summary ..........................................................54 H IN college baseball. Stanford is for that individual who wants to achieve G ST 2009 Results .................................................................55 A success through the challenge of both -
1.6.11 Stanford.Indd
GAME #13 Arizona Athle c Media Rela ons RV Arizona at #4/4 Stanford Asst. SID Molly O’Mara [email protected] January 2, 2011 P: 520-621-4283/C: 520-444-1068 8 p.m. MT - Maples Pavilion (7,329) ArizonaWildcats.com 201011 SCHEDULE November Time/Result 12 at Wichita State W, 81-72 OT 15 NORTHERN ARIZONA W, 71-49 18 at Mississippi W, 72-70 22 ARKANSASSPINE BLUFF W, 93-54 26 No. 8/8 Texas A&M$ L, 87-78 27 Bradley$ W, 82-59 December 2 at Nevada L, 79-75 7 at New Mexico W, 84-60 19 NEW MEXICO STATE W, 71-59 21 NORTH TEXAS W, 88-73 28 IONA W, 79-32 31 OREGON* W, 109-94 2010-11 Record: 10-2, 1-0 2010-11 Record: 11-2, 2-0 January Head Coach: Tara VanDerveer Head Coach: Niya Bu s 2 OREGON STATE* W, 67-65 2009-10 Record: 36-2 2009-10 Record: 14-17 6 at No. 4/4 Stanford* 7 p.m. PT 8 at California* 2 p.m. PT ARIZONA’S PROBABLE STARTERS 16 at Arizona State* 3 p.m. MT Name Pos. Ht. Yr. GP/GS PPG RPG APG 20 WASHINGTON* 7 p.m. Shanita Arnold G 5-5 Jr. 13/13 8.1 1.8 6.2 22 WASHINGTON STATE* 2 p.m. Ify Ibekwe F 6-2 Sr. 12/12 15.5 10.3 2.6 27 at USC* 7 p.m. PT Brooke Jackson G 5-8 Jr. 13/13 8.9 3.6 1.3 29 at UCLA* 2 p.m. -
Baseball Coaching Records
BASEBALL COACHING RECORDS All-Divisions Coaching Records 2 Division I Coaching Records 4 Division II Coaching Records 7 Division III Coaching Records 10 ALL-DIVISIONS COACHING RECORDS In statistical rankings, the rounding of percentages and/or averages may Coach, Team(s) Years Won Lost Tied Pct. indicate ties where none exists. In these cases, the numerical order of the 41. *John Vodenlich, Edgewood 1998- 19 606 226 1 .728 rankings is accurate. Ties counted as half won, half lost. 99, Wis.-Whitewater 2004-20 42. Bill Holowaty, Eastern Conn. St. 45 1,412 528 7 .727 1969-13 WINNINGEST COACHES ALL-TIME 43. Loyal Park, Harvard 1969-78 10 247 93 0 .726 44. Judson Hyames, Western Mich. 15 166 62 2 .726 1922-36 Top 50 By Percentage 45. *Tim Scannell, Trinity (TX) 1999-20 22 709 268 0 .726 (Minimum 10 years as a head coach at an NCAA school; 46. John Flynn, Providence 1924-25, 10 147 55 2 .725 includes all victories as coach at a four-year institution.) 27-34 Coach, Team(s) Years Won Lost Tied Pct. 47. Skip Bertman, LSU 1984-01 18 870 330 3 .724 48. Gene Stephenson, Wichita St. 36 1,768 675 3 .723 1. Robert Henry Lee, Southern U. 12 172 35 0 .831 1978-13 1949-60 49. Carl Lundgren, Michigan 1914-16, 20 302 111 20 .721 2. Don Schaly, Marietta 1964-03 40 1,438 329 13 .812 18-20, Illinois 21-34 3. John Barry, Holy Cross 1921-60 40 619 146 5 .807 50. -
CWS Series Records
CWS Series Records Individual Batting ................................................................... 2 Individual Pitching ................................................................. 2-3 Individual Fielding .................................................................. 3-4 Team Batting ............................................................................. 4 Team Pitching ........................................................................... 4-5 Team Fielding ........................................................................... 5 2 CWS Series Records 1.250 (20-16), Mark Kotsay, Cal St. Fullerton, 4 games, 1995 Batting - Individidual 1.250 (20-16), Kole Calhoun, Arizona St., 4 games, 2009 1.200 (18-15), Scott Schroeffel, Tennessee, 4 games, 1995 1.176 (20-17), Danny Matienzo, Miami (FL), 4 games, 2001 HIGHEST BATTING AVERAGE (mINIMUM 15 AT BATS) *.714 (10-14), Jim Morris, Notre Dame, 4 games, 1957 MOST RUNS BATTED IN .611 (11-18), John Gall, Stanford, 4 games, 1999 17, Stan Holmes, Arizona St., 6 games, 1981 .600 (9-15), Robin Ventura, Oklahoma St., 4 games, 1986 13, Robb Gorr, Southern California, 6 games, 1998 .588 (10-17), Jay Pecci, Stanford, 4 games, 1997 12, Russ Morman, Wichita St., 5 games, 1982 .588 (10-17), Danny Matienzo, Miami (FL), 4 games, 2001 12, Todd Walker, LSU, 5 games, 1993 .571 (12-21), Steve Pearce, South Carolina, 5 games, 2004 11, Bob Horner, Arizona St., 5 games, 1978 .563 (9-16), Mark Standiford, Wichita St., 4 games, 1988 11, Martin Peralta, Arizona St., 6 games, 1988 .563 (9-16), -
A Summer Wildfire: How the Greatest Debut in Baseball History Peaked and Dwindled Over the Course of Three Months
The Report committee for Colin Thomas Reynolds Certifies that this is the approved version of the following report: A Summer Wildfire: How the greatest debut in baseball history peaked and dwindled over the course of three months APPROVED BY SUPERVISING COMMITTEE: Co-Supervisor: ______________________________________ Tracy Dahlby Co-Supervisor: ______________________________________ Bill Minutaglio ______________________________________ Dave Sheinin A Summer Wildfire: How the greatest debut in baseball history peaked and dwindled over the course of three months by Colin Thomas Reynolds, B.A. Report Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of the University of Texas at Austin in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts The University of Texas at Austin May, 2011 To my parents, Lyn & Terry, without whom, none of this would be possible. Thank you. A Summer Wildfire: How the greatest debut in baseball history peaked and dwindled over the course of three months by Colin Thomas Reynolds, M.A. The University of Texas at Austin, 2011 SUPERVISORS: Tracy Dahlby & Bill Minutaglio The narrative itself is an ageless one, a fundamental Shakespearean tragedy in its progression. A young man is deemed invaluable and exalted by the public. The hero is cast into the spotlight and bestowed with insurmountable expectations. But the acclamations and pressures are burdensome and the invented savior fails to fulfill the prospects once imagined by the public. He is cast aside, disregarded as a symbol of failure or one deserving of pity. It’s the quintessential tragedy of a fallen hero. The protagonist of this report is Washington Nationals pitcher Stephen Strasburg, who enjoyed a phenomenal rookie season before it ended abruptly due to a severe elbow injury. -
Stanford Cardinal (4-3 • 2-2 Pac-12) Oregon State Beavers (4-2 • 1-2 Pac-12) October 25, 2014 • 12:30 P.M. (PT) Stanford S
Athletic Communications • Arrillaga Family Sports Center • 641 Campus Drive • Stanford, Calif. • 94305 • GoStanford.com Senior Assistant Athletic Director • Kurt Svoboda [head coach, support staff] • c. 650.223.5809 • [email protected] • @ksvoboda Assistant Director • Alan George [student-athletes, assistant coaches] • c. 574.340.3977 • [email protected] • @treeSIDjorge Assistant Director • Brett Moore [statistics, credentials, web site] • c. 309.212.6367 • [email protected] • @moorebrett Stanford Cardinal (4-3 • 2-2 Pac-12) Stanford Schedule and Results 4-3 overall • 2-2 Pac-12 Oregon State Beavers (4-2 • 1-2 Pac-12) October 25, 2014 • 12:30 p.m. (PT) Date Opponent Time • Result 8.30 UC Davis [Pac-12 Network] .......................... W, 45-0 Stanford Stadium (50,424) • Stanford, Calif. 9.6 No. 14/14 USC [ABC] .................................. L, 10-13 9.13 Army [Pac-12 Network] ................................ W, 35-0 9.27 at Washington [FOX] ............................... W, 20-13 Television • Live national broadcast on ESPN2 with Bob Wischusen (play-by-play), Matt Millen (analyst) 10.4 at No. 9/8 Notre Dame [NBC] .................... L, 14-17 and Jeannine Edwards (sideline). 10.10 Washington State [ESPN] ......................... W, 34-17 10.18 at No. 17/18 Arizona State [ESPN] ............ L, 10-26 Radio • Live coverage on Stanford’s flagship station – KNBR 1050 AM – with Scott Reiss ’93 (play-by-play), 10.25 Oregon State [ESPN2] ........................... 12:30 p.m. Todd Husak ’00 (analyst) and John Platz ’84 (sideline). The broadcast begins one hour before kickoff with 11.1 at Oregon [FOX] ...................................... 4:30 p.m. the Cardinal Tailgate Show and conclude with the post-game Cardinal Locker Room Report. -
Winter League AL Player List
American League Player List: 2020-21 Winter Game Pitchers 1988 IP ERA 1989 IP ERA 1990 IP ERA 1991 IP ERA 1 Dave Stewart R 276 3.23 258 3.32 267 2.56 226 5.18 2 Roger Clemens R 264 2.93 253 3.13 228 1.93 271 2.62 3 Mark Langston L 261 3.34 250 2.74 223 4.40 246 3.00 4 Bob Welch R 245 3.64 210 3.00 238 2.95 220 4.58 5 Jack Morris R 235 3.94 170 4.86 250 4.51 247 3.43 6 Mike Moore R 229 3.78 242 2.61 199 4.65 210 2.96 7 Greg Swindell L 242 3.20 184 3.37 215 4.40 238 3.48 8 Tom Candiotti R 217 3.28 206 3.10 202 3.65 238 2.65 9 Chuck Finley L 194 4.17 200 2.57 236 2.40 227 3.80 10 Mike Boddicker R 236 3.39 212 4.00 228 3.36 181 4.08 11 Bret Saberhagen R 261 3.80 262 2.16 135 3.27 196 3.07 12 Charlie Hough R 252 3.32 182 4.35 219 4.07 199 4.02 13 Nolan Ryan R 220 3.52 239 3.20 204 3.44 173 2.91 14 Frank Tanana L 203 4.21 224 3.58 176 5.31 217 3.77 15 Charlie Leibrandt L 243 3.19 161 5.14 162 3.16 230 3.49 16 Walt Terrell R 206 3.97 206 4.49 158 5.24 219 4.24 17 Chris Bosio R 182 3.36 235 2.95 133 4.00 205 3.25 18 Mark Gubicza R 270 2.70 255 3.04 94 4.50 133 5.68 19 Bud Black L 81 5.00 222 3.36 207 3.57 214 3.99 20 Allan Anderson L 202 2.45 197 3.80 189 4.53 134 4.96 21 Melido Perez R 197 3.79 183 5.01 197 4.61 136 3.12 22 Jimmy Key L 131 3.29 216 3.88 155 4.25 209 3.05 23 Kirk McCaskill R 146 4.31 212 2.93 174 3.25 178 4.26 24 Dave Stieb R 207 3.04 207 3.35 209 2.93 60 3.17 25 Bobby Witt R 174 3.92 194 5.14 222 3.36 89 6.09 26 Brian Holman R 100 3.23 191 3.67 190 4.03 195 3.69 27 Andy Hawkins R 218 3.35 208 4.80 158 5.37 90 5.52 28 Todd Stottlemyre -
LINE DRIVES the NATIONAL COLLEGIATE BASEBALL WRITERS NEWSLETTER (Volume 48, No
LINE DRIVES THE NATIONAL COLLEGIATE BASEBALL WRITERS NEWSLETTER (Volume 48, No. 3, Apr. 17, 2009) The President’s Message By NCBWA President Joe Dier NCBWA Membership: With the 2008-09 hoops season now in the record books, the collegiate spotlight is focusing more closely on the nation’s baseball diamonds. Though we’re heading into the final month of the season, there are still plenty of twists and turns ahead on the road to Omaha and the 2009 NCAA College World Series. The NCAA will soon be announcing details of next month’s tournament selection announcements naming the regional host sites (May 24) and the 64-team tournament field (May 25). To date, four different teams have claimed the top spot in the NCBWA’s national Division I polls --- Arizona State, Georgia, LSU, and North Carolina. Several other teams have graced the No. 1 position in other national polls. The NCAA’s mid-April RPI listing has Cal State Fullerton leading the 301-team pack, with 19 teams sporting 25-win records through games of April 12. For the record, New Mexico State tops the wins list with a 30-6 mark. As the conference races heat up from coast to coast, the NCBWA will begin the process for naming its All- America teams and the Divk Howser Trophy (see below). We will have a form going out to conference offices and Division I independents in coming days. Last year’s NCBWA-selected team included 56 outstanding baseball athletes, and we want to have the names of all deserving players on the table for consideration for this year’s awards. -
12 Stanford Student-Athletes Who Earned Conference Athlete of the Year Honors in 2008-09
S T A N F O R D A THLETICS A Tr a d i t i o n o f E x c e l l e n c e 121 NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship award winners, including five in 2008-09. 111 National Championships won by Stanford teams since 1926. 90 Stanford student-athletes who earned All-America status in 2008-09. 80 NCAA Championships won by Stanford teams since 1980. 48 Stanford-affiliated athletes and coaches who represented the United States and seven other countries at the 2008 Summer Olympics held in Beijing, China. 33 Consecutive years Stanford teams have won at least one national championship. 31 Stanford teams that advanced to postseason play in 2008-09. 20 Different Stanford teams that have won at least one national championship. 15 Consecutive Learfield Sports Directors’ Cups. 14 Stanford teams that finished ranked in the Top 10 in their respective sports in 2008-09. 12 Stanford student-athletes who earned conference Athlete of the Year honors in 2008-09. 10 Stanford student-athletes who earned Academic All-America recognition in 2008-09. 6 Stanford teams that earned perfect scores of 1,000 in the NCAA’s Academic Progress Report Rate in 2008-09. 6 Regular season conference championships won by Stanford teams in 2008-09. 4 Pac-10/Toyo Tires Scholar Athletes of the Year Awards in 2008-09. 3 National Freshman of the Year honors in 2008-09. 3 National Coach of the Year honors in 2008-09. 2 National Player of the Year honors in 2008-09. 2 National Championships won by Stanford teams in 2008-09 (men’s gymnastics, women’s rowing).