Fairfield Stags baseball
Fairfield Stags | |
---|---|
2024 Fairfield Stags baseball team | |
Founded | 1951 |
University | Fairfield University |
Head coach | Bill Currier (13th season) |
Conference | MAAC |
Location | Fairfield, Connecticut |
Home stadium | Alumni Baseball Diamond (Capacity: 1,000) |
Nickname | Stags |
Colors | Red[1] |
NCAA Tournament appearances | |
2016, 2021 | |
Conference tournament champions | |
1977, 2016 | |
Regular season conference champions | |
1983, 1991, 1993, 1997, 2016, 2017, 2021, 2022, 2023 |
The Fairfield Stags baseball team is the
History
Fairfield fielded its first varsity baseball team in 1951, winning 7 of 12 games. The Stags, coached by Don Cook, made the first of three straight trips to the ECAC New England Tournament in 1977, defeating defending champion University of Maine. The team was MAAC South Champions in 1983, 1991, 1993, 1995 and 1997. In 2016, Fairfield won the MAAC regular season and tournament championships to advance to the Lubbock Super Regional of the 2016 NCAA Division I baseball tournament.
Individually, Anthony Hajjar was named a 2010 Louisville Slugger Freshman All-American; Peter Allen was named to the 2008 Brooks Wallace Player of the Year Watch List following his program record setting season in 2007 in which he was ranked nationally in doubles, batting average, and slugging percentage; and Mike Pike was named a 1993 Mizuno Freshman All-American.[2]
Head coaches
Years | Coach | W-L-T | Pct. |
Joe Yabrosky | 1951–56 | 26–28 | .481 |
James Hanrahan | 1957 | 1–11 | .083 |
Frank Feroleto | 1958–63 | 24–50–3 | .331 |
Jack Redway | 1964–65 | 4–31–1 | .125 |
Don Cook | 1966–84 | 235–273 | .463 |
John Slosar | 1985–2011 | 441–597–7 | .425 |
Bill Currier | 2012–present | 285–245 | .538 |
Awards
Academic All-Americans
All-Americans
All-Northeast
NEIBA All-Stars
|
League Player of the Year
League Rookie of the Year
League Coach of the Year
|
All-Time statistic leaders
Career batting leaders
Single season batting leaders
Longest hitting streaks
|
Career pitching leaders
Single season pitching leaders
No-hitters
|
Stags in the MLB draft
The following Stag players were selected in the
Player | Year | Round | Team | Position |
Trey McLoughlin | 2021 |
16 | New York Mets | RHP |
Justin Guerrera | 2021 |
20 | New York Mets | SS |
Austin Pope | 2019 |
15 | Arizona Diamondbacks | RHP |
Gavin Wallace | 2017 |
15 | Pittsburgh Pirates | RHP |
Mike Wallace | 2015 |
30 | Pittsburgh Pirates | RHP |
Mark Bordonaro | 2012 |
25 | Seattle Mariners | RHP |
Rob Gariano | 2010 |
36 | San Diego Padres | RHP |
Ryan Holsten | 2001 |
22 | Arizona Diamondbacks | RHP |
Drew Larned | 1998 |
23 | Boston Red Sox | C |
James Manias | 1996 |
25 | Tampa Bay Rays | LHP |
William Albino | 1982 |
20 | Cincinnati Reds | OF |
Alberto Zappala | 1982 |
30 | Minnesota Twins | INF |
Ron Carapezzi | 1981 |
31 | Cincinnati Reds | 3B |
Keefe Cato | 1979 |
2 | Cincinnati Reds | RHP |
Mike Behudian | 1979 |
14 | Texas Rangers | 2B |
Frank Gill | 1977 |
12 | Boston Red Sox | 2B |
Robert Kownacki | 1976 |
8 | Los Angeles Dodgers | SS |
Michael Yates | 1973 |
23 | Atlanta Braves | RHP |
Thomas Finch | 1971 |
14 | Minnesota Twins | C |
Stan Norman | 1970 |
26 | Cincinnati Reds | OF |
See also
References
- ^ Fairfield University Visual Standard Manual (PDF). July 1, 2017. Retrieved August 13, 2017.
- ^ Fairfield University Athletics Archived 2011-07-10 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ http://www.fairfield.edu/x18852.html#jcato. Retrieved 2007-12-08.
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(help)[dead link] - ^ Rob Gariano selected by San Diego Padres in MLB Draft
External links