3 minute read
All-Americans
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Danny Bob Turner
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3B • 1967 NAIA Second Team
Northwestern State’s first All-American baseball player, winning that honor in 1967. Turner came to Northwestern from Fair Park High School in Shreveport. He won the 1967 Gulf Star Conference batting title as he hit .411 during the regular season and .443 in conference games. Turner played for the 1967 GSC championship team that made the NCAA Midwest Regional. 1967 statistics - 37 hits in 90 at bats, 27 runs batted in , 4 triples, 5 doubles, and 1 home run, 53 total bases. His No. 7 was retired in 2020.
Darryl Woods
Reggie Gatewood
C • 1974
NAIA, NCAA
Second Team
Northwestern’s second All-American selection from New Orleans Redemptorist High School, earned All-American honors during the 1974 season. Woods set an NCAA home run record with 18 in 38 games. He hit one in the NAIA playoffs but only regular season stats count towards a record. Woods was enshrined in the “N” Club Hall of Fame in 1992. 1974 statistics - .376 batting average, 52 RBI, 105 total bases, .840 slugging average and a .984 fielding percentage.
P • 1994
NCBWA Second Team
Reggie Gatewood was named to the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association second-team after guiding Northwestern to its second NCAA Regional appearance. The Mabelvale, Ark., native finished the season 11-3 with a 2.14 ERA. He completed 11 of the 14 games he started and led the team with 101 innings pitched. Gatewood is tied with Eric Barkley for most career shutouts at six and ranks third in wins (21), fourth in winning percentage (.807, 21-5) and fourth in ERA (2.56).
Ryan Anholt Adam Oller
SS • 1998
ABCA Third Team
Shortstop Ryan Anholt is the fifth Northwestern State All-American baseball player. The sweet-swinging, left hander from Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, was a third-team selection by the American Baseball Coaches Association after a solid season in 1998. In 1999, Anholt proved his talent in the classroom, as well as on the field, as he was a thirdteam selection on the prestigious GTE Academic All-America Team. Along with his All-American selections, Anholt was selected Southland Conference Player of the Year, SLC Newcomer of the Year, first team All-Louisiana, and first team All-Region (South Central) after the 1998 season. He finished his career at NSU with a .368 batting average, the second highest in program history.
Adam Oller became the first Demon to earn All-American honors in 17 years and the first NSU pitcher to do so in 22 years. Oller finished the season 8-1 with a 1.23 ERA, which ranked third nationally. A Conroe, Texas, native, Oller tossed 109 2-3 innings, the second-highest total in school single season history. Oller finished his career with the fourth-most career innings (310 1-3) and career starts (43), the sixth-most strikeouts (188), the eighth-most wins (20) and the ninth-highest winning percentage (.745) in school history.
David Fry
1B • 2018 Collegiate Baseball
Magazine Third Team
David Fry became the first Northwestern State position player named to an All-American team in two decades after a remarkable senior season. The Southland Conference Player of the Year and All-Louisiana Hitter of the Year won his second straight team triple crown, batting .327 with 12 home runs and 55 RBIs. Fry set the school single-season doubles record (26) and finished his career as the school’s all-time leader in doubles (74) and at-bats (851) while tying Darryl Woods’ career home run mark of 31. Fry was named the Southland Conference Tournament Most Valuable Player after leading the Demons to the first SLC Tournament title in program history.
Logan Hofmann
P • 2020 Collegiate Baseball Magazine Second Team
A touted junior college transfer who had been a Cape Cod League All-Star, Logan Hofmann lived up to his billing. Making just four starts before the COVID-19 pandemic shut down his lone season at Northwestern State, Hofmann did not allow an earned run in 28 innings, striking out 38 across four starts. He finished 4-0 and led the country in ERA, earning second-team All-American honors from Collegiate Baseball magazine before being drafted in the fifth round of the 2020 Major League Baseball FirstYear Player Draft by Pittsburgh.