DAY Friday Saturday Sunday Tuesday Friday Saturday Sunday Tuesday Friday Saturday Sunday Tuesday Wednesday Friday Saturday Sunday Tuesday Friday Saturday Sunday Friday Saturday Sunday Tuesday Friday Saturday Sunday Tuesday Friday Saturday Sunday Tuesday Friday Saturday Sunday Thursday Friday Saturday Tuesday Thursday Friday Saturday Tuesday Friday Saturday Sunday Tuesday Friday Saturday Sunday Tuesday Friday Saturday Sunday Friday Saturday Sunday Fri.-Mon. Fri.-Mon. Fri.-Tue.
Eric Filia
Junior outfielder
DATE Feb. 14 Feb. 15 Feb. 16 Feb. 18 Feb. 21 Feb. 22 Feb. 23 Feb. 25 Feb. 28 March 1 March 2 March 4 March 5 March 7 March 8 March 9 March 11 March 14 March 15 March 16 March 21 March 22 March 23 March 25 March 28 March 29 March 30 April 1 April 4 April 5 April 6 April 8 April 11 April 12 April 13 April 17 April 18 April 19 April 22 April 24 April 25 April 26 April 29 May 2 May 3 May 4 May 6 May 9 May 10 May 11 May 13 May 16 May 17 May 18 May 23 May 24 May 25 May 30-June 2 June 6-9 June 14-25
OPPONENT TIME Portland 6:00 p.m. Portland 2:00 p.m. Portland 1:00 p.m. Cal State Northridge 6:00 p.m. Cal Poly 6:00 p.m. Cal Poly 2:00 p.m. Cal Poly 1:00 p.m. UC Santa Barbara 6:00 p.m. (ET) 6:30 p.m. Notre Dame% (ET) 6:30 p.m. North Carolina State% (ET) 12:00 p.m. Michigan% Loyola Marymount 6:00 p.m. Waseda Univ. (Japan) (Exhibition) 4:00 p.m. Pepperdine 6:00 p.m. Houston 2:00 p.m. at USC 1:00 p.m. UC Irvine 6:00 p.m. *at California 7:00 p.m. *at California 6:00 p.m. *at California# 2:00 p.m. *Washington State 6:00 p.m. *Washington State 2:00 p.m. *Washington State 1:00 p.m. Long Beach State# 6:00 p.m. *Arizona State 6:00 p.m. *Arizona State 2:00 p.m. *Arizona State 1:00 p.m. at Loyola Marymount 6:00 p.m. at Long Beach State 6:00 p.m. Long Beach State 2:00 p.m. at Long Beach State 1:00 p.m. at Cal State Fullerton 2:00 p.m. *at Arizona# 7:00 p.m. *at Arizona# 7:30 p.m. *at Arizona# 4:00 p.m. *at Utah# 4:00 p.m. *at Utah# 4:00 p.m. *at Utah 12:00 p.m. Loyola Marymount 6:00 p.m. *USC# 6:00 p.m. *USC# 7:00 p.m. *USC 2:00 p.m. at UC Santa Barbara 3:00 p.m. *Stanford 6:00 p.m. *Stanford# 7:00 p.m. *Stanford 1:00 p.m. Cal State Fullerton# 6:00 p.m. *at Oregon State# 7:30 p.m. *at Oregon State# 7:00 p.m. *at Oregon State# 3:00 p.m. at UC Irvine 6:30 p.m. *Oregon# 7:00 p.m. *Oregon# 7:00 p.m. *Oregon# 12:00 p.m. *at Washington 7:00 p.m. *at Washington 7:00 p.m. *at Washington 3:00 p.m. NCAA Regionals TBD NCAA Super Regionals TBD College World Series TBD
* indicates Pac-12 Conference game. % Notre Dame Classic (teams include Michigan, Notre Dame and North Carolina State) # indicates televised game Game times are Pacific unless otherwise indicated.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS General Information Media Information 2013 NCAA Champions Reaching New Heights Player Development Jackie Robinson Stadium Jackie Robinson’s Legacy Gifford Hitting Facility Team USA and UCLA 2014 Season Outlook Roster TV/Radio Roster Coaching Staff Head Coach John Savage Assistant Coach Rex Peters Assistant Coach T.J. Bruce Assistant Coach Jake Silverman Director of Operations Seth Moir 2014 Bruins B-E F-Pi Po-Z 2013 in Review Drafted/Graduated Players 2013 NLI Signees Season Results Season Stats Game-by-Game Capsules Superlatives Pac-12 Review Honors and Rankings Opponents Big League Bruins Bruins in the Majors Bruins Fomerly in the Majors MLB Draft History Bruins in the Minors Records Game-by-Game Results Year-by-Year Summary Starting Lineups Year-by-Year Leaders Single Season, Career Records Miscellaneous Records All-America Selections All-Pac-12 Selections Multiple All-Conference Selections Tradition Year-by-Year History NCAA Tournament History All-Time Postseason Stats UCLA Postseason Records Jersey History All-Time Statistics (since 1975) Baseball Hall of Fame Letterwinners UCLA Administrators
4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 23 24 27 28 29 29
2013 NCAA Men’s College World Series, TD Ameritrade Park
30-33 34-39 40-44 46 48 49 50 52 54 56 58 59
2013 NCAA Champions
64 68 75 76 78 86 88 90 94 96 97 98 99 100 109 111 113 115 117 122 123 125
2013 Championship Rally at Jackie Robinson Stadium
QUICK FACTS Location
J.D. Morgan Center, 325 Westwood Plaza Los Angeles, CA 90024-0044 Athletics Switchboard (310) 825-8699 Central Ticket Office (310) 825-2101 Chancellor Gene Block Director of Athletics Dan Guerrero Sr. Associate Athletic Director (baseball) John Jentz Faculty Athletic Representative Donald Morrison Event Management Dave Martinez Home Field (capacity) Jackie Robinson Stadium (1,820) Press Box Phone (310) 794-8213 Enrollment 39,500 Founded 1919 Colors Blue and Gold Nickname Bruins Conference Pac-12 National Affiliation NCAA Division I
ABOUT THE MEDIA GUIDE Head Coach (Alma Mater) John Savage (Nevada ‘91) Record at UCLA (Years) 324-224 (9 years) Career Record 412-308-1 (12 years) Assistant Coaches Rex Peters, T.J. Bruce, Jake Silverman Director of Operations Seth Moir Baseball SID Mike Leary SID E-mail mleary@athletics.ucla.edu SID Phone (310) 206-7873 SID Fax (310) 825-8664 Web Site www.uclabruins.com 2013 Overall Record 49-17 (NCAA Champions) 2013 Pac-12 Record 21-9 (3rd) Lettermen Returning/Lost 22/7 Conference Championships (Last) 10 (2012) NCAA Tournament Appearances (Last) 19 (2013) College World Series Appearances 5 (‘69, ‘97, ‘10, ‘12, ‘13) NCAA Championships 1 (2013)
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CREDITS: The 2014 UCLA baseball media guide was written and designed by Mike Leary. Photography by ASUCLA Campus Studio (Don Liebig, Scott Quintard and Todd Cheney), Scott James, Carlos Delgado, Scott Chandler, Scott Wu, Larry Goren, Brad Williams, Icon Sports Media and Getty Images. Special thanks to Getty Images, ASUCLA Photography, Andrew Bernstein, the Los Angeles Visitors and Convention Bureau and Don Liebig for their photos in the UCLA Experience, and a special thanks to Brad Williams for his photos from the 2010 College World Series. Also special thanks to Michelle Bishop for her photos from the 2012 College World Series. Photos in the Big League Bruins section courtesy of Major League Baseball, its respective teams and their photographers. Special thanks to Miles Kennedy, the New York Yankees, Jon Willey (Arizona Diamondbacks), Dan Mendlik (Cleveland Indians), Denis Bancroft (Miami Marlins), Larry Babcock (Los Angeles Angels), Juan Ocampo (Los Angeles Dodgers) and Mark Langill (Los Angeles Dodgers).
BRUINS GETTING AIRTIME Having reached the NCAA Tournament in seven of the past eight seasons, the UCLA baseball program has received increased exposure and media attention. Los Angeles has seven local network affiliates or independent television stations, and the baseball program has been broadcast each spring on Fox Sports Network. The Bruins have had 49 televised games the past six years, including 38 nationally televised contests. This season, UCLA will enjoy even more national exposure with 19 televised games between the Pac-12 Networks and ESPN.
Media Outlets Newspapers Los Angeles Times 202 West First St. Los Angeles, CA 90053 (P): 213-237-7145 (F): 213-237-7876 sports.latimes.com Los Angeles Daily News 21860 Burbank Blvd. (Ste. 200) Woodland Hills, CA 91367 (P): 818-713-3600 (F): 818-713-3436 dailynews.com Orange County Register 625 N. Grand Ave. Santa Ana, CA 92711 (P): 714-796-7817 (F): 714-565-6765 ocregister.com
Riverside Press Enterprise 3512 14th St. Riverside, CA 92502 (P): 909-368-9533 (F): 909-368-9029 pe.com
Television
South Bay Daily Breeze 5215 Torrance Blvd. Torrance, CA 90509 (P): 310-540-4201 (F): 310-540-3067 www.dailybreeze.com
ESPN ESPN Plaza Bristol, CT 06010 (P): 860-766-2000
KABC-7 500 Circle Seven Dr. Glendale, CA 91201 (P): 818-863-7677 (F): 818-863-7889
CBS College Sports 85 10th Ave., 3rd Floor New York, NY 10011 (P): 212-342-8700 (F): 212-342-8899
KTTV (Ch. 11)/KCOP (Ch. 13) 1999 S. Bundy Dr. Los Angeles, CA 90025 (P): 310-584-2030 (F): 310-584-2450
MLB Network 40 Hartz Way Secaucus, NJ 07094 (P): 201-520-6400 (F): 201-520-4736
Radio
UCLA Daily Bruin 308 Westwood Plaza Los Angeles, CA 90024 (P): 310-825-2095 (F): 310-206-0906 dailybruin.ucla.edu
Wire and Stats Long Beach Press Telegram 604 Pine Ave. Long Beach, CA 90844 (P): 562-499-1338 (F): 562-437-8914 presstelegram.com
Associated Press 221 So. Figueroa, S 300 Los Angeles, CA 90012 (P): 213-626-1200 (F): 213-346-0200 ap.org
Pasadena Star News San Gabriel Valley Tribune 1210 N. Azusa Canyon Rd. West Covina, CA 91790 (P): 626-962-8811 (F): 626-856-2758 pasadenastarnews.com sgvtribune.com
Sports Ticker (P): 800-766-1899 (F): 800-336-0383 Stats, Inc. (P): 847-585-2100 (F): 800-357-8525
FS West/Prime Ticket 1150 South Olive, Suite 350 Los Angeles, CA 90015 (P): 213-743-7800 (F): 213-763-4633
CBS-2, KCAL-9 4200 Radford Ave. Studio City, CA 91604 (P): 818-655-2400 NBC-4 (Ch. 4) 3000 W. Alameda Ave. Burbank, CA 91523 (P): 818-840-4237 (F): 818-840-3076
KTLA (Ch. 5) 5800 Sunset Blvd. Hollywood, CA 90028 (P): 323-460-5907 (F): 323-460-5333
KLAC 570 (FOX Radio) 3400 W. Olive Ave. #550 Burbank, CA 91505 (P): 818-559-2252 (F): 818-566-6114 or 818-566-6105 KSPN 710 (ESPN Radio) 800 W. Olympic Blvd., Ste. A200 Los Angeles, CA 90015 (P): 310-840-2492 (F): 310-558-5648 uclaradio.com 308 Westwood Plaza Los Angeles, CA 90024 (P): 310-825-9104
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Baseball Media Baseball America 600 S. Duke Street, Box 2089 Durham, NC 27702 (P): 919-682-9635 (F): 919-682-2880 baseballamerica.com Aaron Fitt (college baseball writer) aaronfitt@baseballamerica.com John Manuel (editor) johnmanuel@baseballamerica.com Collegiate Baseball P.O. Box 50566 Tucson, AZ 95703 (P): 520-623-4530 (F): 520-624-5501 collegiatebaseball.com Lou Pavlovich, Jr. (editor) lou@baseballnews.com Perfect Game USA (College) 1808 Indian Lodge Drive Cedar Park, TX 78613 perfectgame.com/college Kendall Rogers, editor (P): 979-229-4092 USA Today 10866 Wilshire #890 Los Angeles, CA 90024 (P): 310-443-8900 (F): 310-443-8923 usatoday.com
Baseball Weekly 1000 Wilson Blvd. 21st Fl. Arlington, VA 22229 (P): 800-872-3410ext.4495 (F): 703-558-4677 baseballweekly.com College Baseball Insider P.O. Box 8235 Richmond, VA 23226 collegebaseballinsider.com USA Baseball Durham Bulls Athletic Park 403 Blackwell Street Durham, NC 27701 (P): 919-474-8721, x. 225 (F): 919-474-8822 Jake Fehling Director, Media Relations
BEST ARE IN THE WEST The West Coast has featured at least one team in the finals of the College World Series in seven of the last 10 seasons. UCLA represented the West Coast in the CWS in 2010 and 2012 before winning the NCAA Championship in 2013. Locally, UCLA faces prominent programs such as Cal State Fullerton, Pepperdine, San Diego State, UC Irvine, UC Riverside, UC Santa Barbara and USC nearly every season. The Bruins have hosted an NCAA Regional the past four years, and advanced to Southern California area Regionals in 2006, 2007 and 2008.
SPORTS INFORMATION
UCLA BASEBALL RADIO NETWORK
Mike Leary enters his second season as the UCLA Baseball Sports Information Director in 2014 and is in his fourth season in the UCLA Sports Information Department. Additionally, he serves as the contact for the men’s soccer program while assisting at other UCLA sporting events. Leary graduated from UCLA in June of 2010, earning a Bachelor of Arts degree in Economics.
John Ramey, Tim Wilhelm will team up too call the action at all UCLA home games and selected road contests in 2014. Live audioo of ballgames is available at uclabruins.com, m, the official web site of the UCLA Athleticss Department. For updated broadcast schedules, visit the Bruins online at uclabruins.com.
MEDIA GUIDELINES CREDENTIALS: All media credential requests should be made, preferably via e-mail, to mleary@athletics.ucla.edu, or by phone as far in advance as possible (no later than 24 hours before game time). Credentials for games and access to coaches and student-athletes are granted to major newsgathering papers, magazines or web sites. PHOTO CREDENTIALS: Credentials will be issued on a pergame basis and must be worn in plain sight at all times. Only credentialed photographers will be granted access to take photos on the field level from the bullpen. TELEPHONES: The press box phone number (for media scoring updates only) is 310-794-8213. Additional phone lines are available on a shared basis in the main press box. Radio positions and additional media seating will be allocated in the press box or adjacent to the broadcast booths, if necessary. RADIO LINES: One telephone line can be made available to the designated radio station of the visiting team. Please make arrangements through the Sports Information Office by e-mailing Mike Leary (mleary@athletics.ucla.edu) well in advance.
HIGH-SPEED INTERNET: The press box is equipped with high-speed, wireless Internet for working media only. Additional high-speed data jacks are not available. INTERVIEWS: Coaches and players are available for postgame interviews outside the clubhouse (third-base side) after a brief cooling down period. Midweek interviews can be conducted before practice (best time, between 12-2 p.m.) or after practice. All interview requests must be facilitated through the Sports Information Office. UCLABRUINS.COM: The official web site of the UCLA Athletics Department, uclabruins.com provides up-to-date results, news, schedules, player biographical information, statistics, in-game scoring and links to audio webcasts. TWITTER/FACEBOOK: Follow UCLA baseball on both Twitter (twitter.com/uclabaseball) and Facebook (facebook.com/ uclabaseball) for the latest in-game updates and news. Leary’s Office Phone: (310) 206-7873 Sports Information Fax: (310) 825-8664 Leary’s E-mail: mleary@athletics.ucla.edu
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ABOUT UCLA’S BASEBALL RADIO CREW John Ramey returns for his fifth season as the UCLA baseball program’s play-by-play broadcaster. Ramey will be joined by Tim Wilhelm (seventh season). Ramey has had the call of many historic Bruins moments over the past four seasons, including the program’s NCAA Championship-clinching win in 2013, the team’s College World Series-clinching wins in 2010, 2012, and 2013, and team victories at Dodger Stadium and Safeco Field. In addition to his work for UCLA, Ramey serves as the play-by-play voice of UC Riverside Men’s Basketball. Ramey also works for a variety of media outlets, including ESPN and Westwood One, and previously with Southern California Public Radio, and KNX 1070 Newsradio in Los Angeles. He also enjoys a career as a singer/songwriter and musician. When not broadcasting, Ramey performs his music throughout Southern California and the West. Wilhelm called nearly every home game and multiple road games for UCLA from 20072009 and returned to the Bruins’ broadcast booth in 2011. He began calling college baseball in 1992, serving as Pepperdine’s play-by-play announcer. He has broadcast 16 NCAA regional tournaments in addition to calling the 1992, 2012 and 2013 College World Series. He has called more than 1,000 games either broadcast on the radio or streamed online. His previous work includes serving as a broadcaster for Big Ten Football Game of the Week (ABC radio) and as a halftime reporter for Pac-10 Basketball Game of the Week (NBC television).
BANNER SEASON UCLA won its first national championship in program history in 2013, defeating Mississippi State in the College World Series Finals by scores of 3-1 and 8-0. The Bruins went a perfect 10-0 in the postseason, becoming the third team in NCAA history to accomplish the feat. UCLA also made history by posting the lowest team ERA in the College World Series’ aluminum bat era (0.80 ERA) and becoming the first team to complete the College World Series without allowing more than one run in each game. En route to their first championship, the Bruins defeated four national seeds, eliminating two of them (No. 5 Cal State Fullerton, No. 1 North Carolina). The Bruins won 49 games in 2013, marking the second-highest single-season win total in school history. UCLA totaled at least 40 wins for the third time in four seasons and for the ninth time in program history.
MOST OUTSTANDING PLAYER
Junior Adam Plutko went 2-0 with a 1.38 ERA in two CWS starts, earning him Most Outstanding Player honors at the College World Series. Plutko served as UCLA’s Friday starter all season, posting a 10-3 record with a 2.29 ERA and 81 strikeouts. Additionally, he finished his three-year career in sole possession of second place on UCLA’s all-time career wins list with 29 victories and seventh on the Bruins’ all-time strikeout list, logging 272 strikeouts. In his last 12 starts, Plutko went 11-1 with a 1.58 ERA. In eight career postseason starts, he went 7-0 with a 0.94 ERA.
REGIONAL SWEEP The Bruins advanced to the NCAA Super Regional round by winning three consecutive games in the NCAA Los Angeles Regional. Adam Plutko pitched seven strong innings and Pat Gallagher posted a three-hit game to lead UCLA past San Diego State, 5-3, in the opening game. The Bruins then overcame a four-run deficit in game two with help from Kevin Williams’ three-run game-tying triple in the sixth inning to defeat Cal Poly, 6-4, to advance to the NCAA Los Angeles Regional finals. In the finals, UCLA met San Diego and earned its third postseason shutout in program history, downing the Toreros, 6-0. Grant Watson, Zack Weiss and David Berg combined to throw a one-hitter against San Diego.
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BRUINS DEFEAT CAL STATE FULLERTON UCLA traveled on the road for a Super Regional for the first time in six years and defeated Cal State Fullerton in two games to advance to the College World Series for the fifth time in school history. The Bruins earned a dramatic 5-3 10-inning win over the Titans in the first game to take a 1-0 lead in the best-of-three series. Sophomore Eric Filia led UCLA with a 4-5 night that included the game-winning RBI in the top of the 10th. Junior Adam Plutko was terrific on the mound once again, pitching seven strong innings and allowing just one unearned run. David Berg picked up the win with three innings in relief. Then in Game 2, the Bruins scored three runs in the bottom of the first to propel them to a 3-0 shutout win over Fullerton. Junior Pat Gallagher hit a tworun single in the bottom of the first to give UCLA the lead while junior Nick Vander Tuig held the Titans scoreless on the mound for 6.1 innings. Freshman James Kaprielian, junior Zack Weiss and Berg then combined to hold the lead for 2.2 innings in relief.
ACE
NUMBER TWO
Junior-right hander Nick Vander Tuig enjoyed an outstanding season on the mound for the Bruins, serving as the team’s Saturday starter all year. The right-hander from Oakdale, Calif. posted a 14-4 record on the season with a 2.16 ERA. He led the Bruins with 93 strikeouts and allowed just 18 walks all season, eighth-fewest in the Pac-12. Vander Tuig’s 14 wins were also tied for the most in the conference and are second-most on UCLA’s all-time single season wins list. Additionally, he threw at least six innings in 17 of his 19 starts and finished his career tied for third with Alex Sanchez (1985-87) on UCLA’s all-time career wins list (27). Vander Tuig appeared in 10 career postseason games, starting seven of them and posting a 6-2 record with a 2.13 ERA. In the 2013 postseason, he went 4-0 with a 1.65 ERA and 19 strikeouts in 27.1 innings pitched.
ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM Four Bruins landed on the All-CWS team, with pitcher Adam Plutko earning Most Outstanding Player honors at the tournament. Joining Plutko on the All-CWS team were pitcher Nick Vander Tuig, shortstop Pat Valaika and outfielder Eric Filia. Vander Tuig also went 2-0 at the CWS, posting a 0.60 ERA and 12 strikeouts in 15 innings pitched. Vander Tuig earned the victory in the championship-clinching game against Mississippi State with a dominating performance, tossing eight shutout innings and striking out six. Filia batted .333 with eight RBI in the CWS, including a career-high five RBI in game 2 of the CWS Finals. Finally, Valaika anchored a UCLA defense that posted a .984 fielding percentage in the CWS while knocking in four runs at the plate.
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THREE CWS TRIPS IN FOUR YEARS The Bruins won a school-record 51 games in 2010, advancing to the College World Series for the third time in school history. UCLA reached the finals of the CWS for the first time ever, falling short against South Carolina in a best-of-three series at Rosenblatt Stadium in Omaha, Neb. Previously, UCLA had not advanced to the College World Series since 1997. The Bruins returned to Omaha in 2012, reaching the College World Series for the second time in three years after going 5-0 in the Regional and Super Regional rounds. In 2013, UCLA won its first ever NCAA Championship, going undefeated in the postseason. Over the last four seasons, UCLA has compiled a school-record 183 victories, ranking first among Pac-12 teams and sixth in the country.
BAUER WINS GOLDEN SPIKES AWARD Trevor Bauer became the first UCLA player to ever win the Golden Spikes Award in 2011, going 13-2 with a 1.25 ERA. He led the nation in strikeouts for the second consecutive year, logging a Pac-12 Conference record 203 strikeouts in a teamleading 136.2 innings. The No. 3 overall draft selection by Arizona in the June 2011 Draft, Bauer finished his UCLA career as the school’s all-time leader in strikeouts (460), wins (34) and innings pitched (373.1). He concluded his junior year by hurling nine consecutive complete games.
COLE, BAUER DRAFTED FIRST, THIRD UCLA right-handers Gerrit Cole and Trevor Bauer were drafted No. 1 and No. 3 overall, respectively, in the June 2011 Draft. That marked the first time since 1978 in which one college baseball program had two players selected in the first three picks (previously, at Arizona State). Cole became UCLA’s first-ever No. 1 MLB Draft selection, getting selected by the Pittsburgh Pirates. Bauer was chosen by the Arizona Diamondbacks. The standout pitching duo was among the best 1-2 punch in the history of college baseball.
DODGERTOWN CLASSIC UCLA and USC initiated the first-ever Dodgertown Classic on Feb. 28, 2010. The crosstown rivals faced each other in the afternoon after Vanderbilt played Oklahoma State at Dodger Stadium in the morning. UCLA won the meeting against USC, 6-1, in 2010. The Trojans blanked UCLA, 2-0, in 2011 before UCLA defeated USC, 7-2, in 2012.
RASMUSSEN DELIVERS Pitching in one of the biggest games in program history, left-hander Rob Rasmussen turned in a herculean effort against Cal State Fullerton on June 13, 2010, in a decisive Game 3 of the NCAA Los Angeles Super Regional. Rasmussen struck out nine batters and limited the Titans to one run and two hits in a complete game victory. The Bruins won, 8-1, to advance to the College World Series for the first time since 1997.
BAUER, COLE SIGN PRO DEALS UCLA’s Trevor Bauer inked a major league contract with the Arizona Diamondbacks on July 25, 2011. He was introduced at a press conference at Chase Field in Phoenix that afternoon. Nearly three weeks later, Gerrit Cole signed a professional contract with the Pittsburgh Pirates at PNC Park. Cole was accompanied by his parents, sister, agent Scott Boras and UCLA head coach John Savage at the press conference.
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IMPRESSIVE FEATS FOR UCLA IN 2010 Aside from advancing to the finals of the College World Series for the first time in program history in 2010, UCLA also established the school and Pac-12 Conference records for single-season strikeouts with 700 in 618.1 innings. Led by Gerrit Cole, Trevor Bauer and Rob Rasmussen, the Bruins’ pitching staff led the country in strikeouts per nine innings (10.2). UCLA finished the year ranked No. 2 in all national polls, the highest top-25 finish in program history. Bauer became UCLA’s first pitcher to ever lead the nation in strikeouts (165). In addition, UCLA finished the year 34 games over .500, the highest total over the .500 plateau in program history.
POSTSEASON SUCCESS Over the last four seasons, UCLA has earned remarkable success in postseason play. In 2010, the Bruins earned the No. 6 national seed in the 64-team postseason bracket, eventually advancing all the way to the finals of the College World Series. 2010 marked the first year since 1986 in which UCLA’s baseball program had hosted a postseason game. In 2011, UCLA won the then-Pac-10 Conference and hosted an NCAA Regional for the second straight season. Then in 2012, the Bruins earned the No. 2 national seed in the tournament, the highest seed that the program has ever received. UCLA won five consecutive games in the NCAA Regional and Super Regional at Jackie Robinson Stadium to earn their second College World Series appearance in three years. The Bruins returned to the College World Series in 2013, winning 10 straight games to earn the program’s first NCAA Championship. Head coach John Savage also became the first coach in school history to lead the Bruins to multiple College World Series appearances.
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UCLA WINS BACK-TO-BACK PAC-12 TITLES The Bruins accomplished something that had never been done in school history in 2012, winning their second straight Pac-12 Championship. UCLA was crowned co-champions with Arizona after sweeping rivals USC in the final series of the year, but the Bruins secured the tiebreak over the Wildcats by virtue of their series victory over the Wildcats earlier in the year. In the final year of the Pac-10 configuration in 2011, the Bruins earned their first outright conference championship since 1986. The Bruins entered the final weekend of the season trailing Oregon State by one game, but won two of their first three games at Arizona State to claim the championship by one game over the Beavers.
UCLA has sent 59 players to the minor leagues since June 2006. In the last eight seasons, 24 Bruins have been selected in the first 10 rounds of the MLB Draft.
JERMAINE CURTIS Undrafted out of high school, Jermaine Curtis was selected in the fifth round of the 2008 draft by the St. Louis Cardinals. As the team’s third baseman, he helped lead UCLA to the postseason in each of his three seasons (2006-2008).
BRANDON CRAWFORD Brandon Crawford was undrafted out of high school and batted .319 in 179 starts for UCLA (2006-2008). Selected by his hometown San Francisco Giants in the fifth round of the 2008 draft, Crawford hit a grand slam in his major league debut (May 27, 2011).
BEAU AMARAL After being drafted in the 45th round of the 2009 draft out of high school by the Diamondbacks, Amaral went on to enjoy one of the most successful careers in UCLA history, before being re-drafted in the 7th round of the 2012 draft by the Reds. He finished his UCLA career as the all-time leader in postseason games played (24, tied with Cody Regis), hits (33) and at-bats (99) while posting the highest batting average by a freshman since 1998, hitting .354 in 2010.
GARETT CLAYPOOL Undrafted out of high school, Claypool starred for the Bruins from 2007-2010, helping lead UCLA to the 2010 College World Series. A 32nd round draft selection as a junior by Oakland in 2009, Claypool chose to return for his senior season. In 2010, he went 8-3 with a 2.29 ERA in 82.2 innings. He was selected in the 11th round of the 2010 draft by the Philadelphia Phillies.
TREVOR BAUER After enrolling at UCLA one season early, Trevor Bauer (2009-11) had the most dominant pitching career in program history. In 2011, he became the school’s first Golden Spikes Award winner after going 13-2 with a 1.25 ERA as a junior. The No. 3 overall draft pick by the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2011, Bauer left UCLA as the program’s all-time leader in wins (34) and strikeouts (460). He set the school’s top single-season strikeout marks with 165 in 2010 and 203 in 2011. DAVID HUFF After transferring to UCLA from Cypress College (2005) via UC Irvine (2004), Huff shined for the Bruins in 2006, going 7-4 with a 2.98 ERA in 128.1 innings. He was chosen as 39th overall draft pick (supplemental first round) by the Cleveland Indians in 2006, making his MLB debut with the organization in 2009.
DAN KLEIN Selected in the 24th round of the 2007 draft by Baltimore, the Orioles re-drafted Klein in the third round of the 2010 draft. That year, the right-hander from Los Alamitos, Calif., flourished as UCLA’s closer. He collected 10 saves and a 1.90 ERA in 39 appearances to lead the Bruins to the College World Series.
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GERRIT COLE A first-round draft selection by the Yankees out of high school, Gerrit Cole had a fantastic three-year career for the Bruins (2009-11). Cole finished second on the school’s career strikeouts list (376) and became the first UCLA ballplayer ever selected No. 1 overall in the June MLB Draft, as the Pittsburgh Pirates selected the hard-throwing right-hander first on June 6, 2011. Cole helped lead UCLA to consecutive postseason appearances in 2010 and 2011, including to the finals of the 2010 College World Series.
ROB RASMUSSEN Chosen in the 27th round of the 2007 draft by the Los Angeles Dodgers out of high school, Rasmussen became a second round draft selection by the Florida Marlins in 2010 out of UCLA. He capped his collegiate career with a fantastic junior season, going 11-3 with a 2.72 ERA and 128 strikeouts that year.
JOSH ROENICKE A center fielder and right-hander at UCLA, Roenicke was selected in the 10th round of the 2006 MLB Draft by the Cincinnati Reds as a pitcher. The former two-way star made his major league debut with Cincinnati in 2008. CASEY HAERTHER Selected out of high school in the 34th round of the 2006 draft by San Diego, Haerther enjoyed a stellar three-year career for UCLA (2007-09). He logged career totals of 22 homers and 109 RBI, before being chosen in the fifth round of the 2009 draft by the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.
JEFF GELALICH Jeff Gelalich was selected in the 41st round of the 2009 draft by the Phillies out of high school, but elected to come to UCLA, where he played in 159 games and led the Bruins to the College World Series in 2010 and 2012. The Most Outstanding Player at the 2012 Los Angeles Regional, Gelalich was selected in the supplemental first round (No. 57 overall) of the 2012 draft by the Cincinnati Reds.
UCLA’s Top Draft Selections Since 2006
TYSON BRUMMETT Drafted by San Francisco in the mid-30 rounds of the 2003 and 2004 drafts (high school, junior college), Brummett shined in two years at UCLA (2006-2007). He led the Bruins to consecutive NCAA Regionals and the 2007 Super Regionals before being selected in the seventh round of the 2007 draft by the Philadelphia Phillies. Brummett made his Major League debut with the Phillies this past fall.
HECTOR AMBRIZ After overcoming an injury in 2004, Ambriz thrived for UCLA in 2005 and 2006. He was selected in the fifth round of the 2006 draft by the Arizona Diamondbacks after his redshirt junior season and pitched for the Cleveland Indians throughout 2010.
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Player (Pos.)
High School Draft
UCLA Draft
Gerrit Cole (RHP) Trevor Bauer (RHP) David Huff (RHP) Jeff Gelalich (OF) Brant Rustich (RHP) Rob Rasmussen (LHP) Tim Murphy (LHP) Dan Klein (RHP) Brandon Crawford (INF) Hector Ambriz (RHP) Jermaine Curtis (INF) Casey Haerther (INF) Nick Vander Tuig (RHP) Zack Weiss (RHP) Beau Amaral (OF) Tyson Brummett (RHP) Matt Grace (LHP) Scott Griggs (RHP) Tyler Heineman (C) Gavin Brooks (LHP) Pat Valaika (INF) Trevor Brown (INF/C)
1st round, No. 28 (2008) undrafted 31st, 19th rounds (2003, 2005) 41st round (2009) 47th round (2003) 27th round (2007) 11th round (2005) 24th round (2007) undrafted 28th round (2002) undrafted 34th round (2006) 39th round (2010) 10th round (2010) 45th round (2009) 35th, 38th rounds (2003, 2004) undrafted 33rd round (2009) undrafted undrafted undrafted undrafted
1st round, No. 1 (2011) 1st round, No. 3 (2011) 1st round, No. 39 (2006) 1st round, No. 57 (2012) 2nd round (2007) 2nd round (2010) 3rd round (2008) 3rd round (2010) 4th round (2008) 5th round (2006) 5th round (2008) 5th round (2009) 6th round (2013) 6th round (2013) 7th round (2012) 7th round (2007) 8th round (2010) 8th round (2012) 8th round (2012) 9th round (2009) 9th round (2013) 10th round (2012)
major-league quality net behind home plate, improving sightlines for fans and television crews. Other major improvements have included the addition of 945 chairback seats with cupholders in February 2006. The stadium welcomed a new hitter’s eye, draped above the center field wall, and the Bruins’ scoreboard received a well-deserved face lift.
the third base seats.
Most recently, UCLA added a state-of-the-art video scoreboard in the winter of 2013. The new LED video display features a 15HD pixel layout and measures nearly 17 feet tall by more than 49 feet wide, making it one of the largest video scoreboards in the Pac-12.
Located on the site of old Sawtelle Field, Jackie Robinson Stadium provides one of the most comfortable college baseball settings in the West. The stadium was made possible by a private gift from Hoyt Pardee (UCLA ’41), a classmate of Jackie Robinson. Without Hoyt, the stadium would not be a reality.
In 2011, UCLA added 580 chairback seats to the facility, allowing Jackie Robinson Stadium to seat 1,820 fans on a regular basis. The baseball program added 290 chairback seats above each of the dugouts, replacing grass slopes which had existed since the stadium’s founding in 1981.
At the end of the 1984 season, the second major phase of the stadium’s original construction was completed. A new clubhouse, press box, concessions stand, and permanent restrooms were added. The clubhouse contains training and equipment rooms, a meeting room, offices and the UCLA Baseball Hall of Fame, which displays plaques of all its members.
Jackie Robinson Stadium was dedicated on Feb. 7, 1981 with an exhibition game between the Bruins and the Los Angeles Dodgers that drew 2,500 fans. The facility hosted the 1986 West Coast Conference playoff game between Pepperdine and Loyola Marymount. One week later, the stadium hosted the 1986 NCAA West Regional Tournament. Loyola Marymount, UC Santa Barbara, Hawaii, and UCLA participated in the regional, won by Loyola Marymount. The 1986 West Regional was the Los Angeles area’s first NCAA postseason tournament since the 1978 District 8 Playoffs were hosted at USC’s Dedeaux Field. The 1986 regional championship contest between Loyola Marymount and Hawaii drew a crowd of 1,815.
The main press box is flanked by two broadcast booths and provides ample space for members of the media. Camera positions for television coverage are located atop both dugouts and on the concourse. Controls for the public address system, electronic scoreboard and lighting systems are located in the main press box. The concession is located above the first base seats along with public restrooms. On select weekends, a second concession stand provides food and beverages above
Jackie Robinson, for whom the stadium is named, was the first African-American baseball player to compete in the major leagues when he joined the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947. As a studentathlete at UCLA, Robinson became the Bruins’ first four-sport letterman, playing football, basketball, track, and baseball. A bronze statue of Robinson is located near the concession stand on the concourse level. The statue was dedicated on April 27, 1985, before the UCLA-Arizona State game.
Steele Field at Jackie Robinson Stadium celebrates its 34th season as UCLA’s home baseball facility in the spring of 2014, after having undergone significant renovations since 2006. Jackie Robinson Stadium hosted the NCAA Los Angeles Regional from 2010 to 2013 and the NCAA Los Angeles Super Regional in 2010 and 2012, drawing crowds of over 2,000 fans. Prior to 2010, UCLA had not posted postseason play since 1986.
In January 2009, the facility welcomed a 10,500-square foot hitting complex, named the Jack and Rhodine Gifford Hitting Facility. Midway through the 2008 season, UCLA upgraded its stadium lights, making necessary improvements to meet NCAA standards for hosting an NCAA Super Regional. In January 2008, UCLA installed a state-of-the-art playing surface, a major upgrade made possible by the Steele Foundation. Prior to the 2007 season, the UCLA baseball program installed a
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Jackie Robinson Stadium, the program’s sixth home field, can be accessed via the San Diego Freeway (405) and Wilshire Blvd. Located on Constitution Avenue (west off Sepulveda Blvd.), the stadium is minutes away from the UCLA campus.
UCLA’s Home Fields Moore Field (Vermont Avenue) Campus Diamond (UCLA) Sawtelle Field (VA Grounds) Joe E. Brown Field (UCLA) Sawtelle Field (VA Grounds) Eddy D. Field Stadium (Pepperdine) Jackie Robinson Stadium (VA Grounds)
Years 1920-29 1930-32 1933-38 1939-63 1964-79 1980 1981-Present
Year-by-Year at Jackie Robinson Stadium Year Record Games Year 2013 27-9 36 1996 2012 27-10 37 1995 2011 21-11 32 1994 2010 29-10 39 1993 2009 16-10 26 1992 2008 18-13 31 1991 2007 19-11 30 1990 2006 19-12 31 1989 2005 7-19 26 1988 2004 17-13 30 1987 2003 15-13 28 1986 2002 13-16 29 1985 2001 19-9 28 1984 2000 20-10 30 1983 1999 17-10 27 1982 1998 15-12 27 1981 1997 21-7 28 33 years, 606-388-2 record (.609)
Record 19-11 14-16 14-15 19-11 23-9 13-15 21-10 17-15 14-10 20-6-1 23-12 19-9-1 17-13 17-13 28-10 13-18
Jackie Robinson Stadium Collegiate Firsts First Collegiate Game: .......................................................................................................................................... Feb. 14, 1981 (Pepperdine 9, UCLA 6) First Collegiate Pitch: ............................................................................. strike – UCLA’s Eric Broersma to batter John Damon (Tim Gudin, C). First Strikeout: .............................................................................................................................. UCLA’s Eric Broersma to Pepperdine’s John Damon First Hit: ..................................................................................................................................... Pepperdine’s Ron Dearth off Eric Broersma (2nd inning) First UCLA Hit: ............................................................................................................................. Paul Conley off Pepperdine’s Jon Furman (3rd inning) First Run: ........................................................................................ Pepperdine’s John Wyman (RBI, Alan Ascherl) off Eric Broersma (3rd inning) First UCLA Run: ................................................................... David Montanari (RBI, Lindsay Meggs 3-run double), off Jon Furman (4th inning) First Home Run: .............................. UCLA’s Greg Norman (Mike Gallego at first), off Chapman’s Charlie Deeds (4th inning), 2/18/81 First UCLA Win: ......................................................................................................................................................... Feb. 18, 1981 (UCLA 10, Chapman 3)
Games 30 30 29 30 32 28 31 32 24 26 35 29 30 30 38 31
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Jackie Robinson – Breaking Barriers Major League Baseball’s First African-American Player Jackie Robinson became the first African-American Major League Baseball player of the modern era in 1947. Born January 31, 1919 in Cairo, Ga., Robinson was the first four-sport letterman in UCLA history – football (1939 and 1940), basketball (1940 and 1941), track and field (1940) and baseball (1940). As UCLA’s shortstop in 1940, statistics indicate that baseball was the sport with which he had the most trouble. Robinson batted .097 in CIBA games the one season he played baseball for the Bruins. He excelled at the three other sports, earning All Pac-10 honors in football, being named the West Coast Conference MVP in basketball, and establishing a long jump record. Nevertheless, due to his slick fielding and keen baserunning, fans found Robinson in the starting lineup the majority of the season. As a youngster, his mother (Mallie) moved the Robinson family to Pasadena, Calif., after his father abdandoned the family. After the move, the Robinson family quickly gained recognition for their fantastic athletic abilties, the climax coming during the 1936 Olympics where older brother Mack Robinson received a silver medal in the 200-meter dash behind the legendary Jesse Owens. In 1942, Robinson put athletics on hiatus to enlist in the U.S. Army. In the face of humiliating discrimination, Robinson took his first major step toward dismantling racial barriers. Serving in Texas, Robinson was court-martialed for refusing to move to the back of a military bus. He was eventually acquitted and given an honorable discharge.
This collage (left) hangs on the outfield wall at Jackie Robinson Stadium, paying tribute to UCLA’s first four-sport letterwinner.
Robinson on the Basketball Court Robinson on the Baseball Diamond Robinson played one season on the baseball team (1940), batting just .097 in CIBA (California Intercollegiate Baseball Association) play. In his first game (March 10), he had four hits and stole four bases, including home once.
Robinson on the Track and Field Team Jackie Robinson missed most of the 1940 track and field season while playing on the UCLA baseball team. Robinson won the NCAA title in the broad jump (24-10 1/4) that season after winning the Pacific Coast Conference meet with a leap of 25 feet (photo, above center).
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A two-year letterwinner on UCLA’s basketball team, Robinson led the Southern Division of the Pacific Coast Conference in scoring in 1940, averaging 12.4 points per game in 12 league contests. The four-sport letterwinner also led the Pacific Coast Conference in 1941, averaging 11.1 points pre game in 12 league games. Robinson played both seasons under nine-year head coach Wilbur Johns.
His military career finished, Robinson gave baseball another try. The Kansas City Monarchs of the Negro Baseball League offered him a contract in 1944. Robinson quickly caught the attention of opposing managers, and more importantly, major league scouts. Brooklyn Dodger President Branch Rickey signed him to a minor league contract with a Montreal farm club in 1945. Robinson started the year on a hot streak, quickly earning the respect of the French-Canadian fans in Montreal. He completed the year by winning the International League batting title, hitting .349 in 124 games and leading his team to the championship. His success allowed Rickey to decide that everything was in order for a groundbreaking debut with the Dodgers. Rickey announced that Brooklyn had purchased Robinson’s contract on April 10, 1947. Five days later, Robinson grounded out against Johnny Sain of the Boston Braves, officially recording the first major league at-bat by an African-American. He won the first ever Rookie of the Year Award, an honor the National League renamed in his memory in 1987. During his 10-year career, Robinson compiled a .311 batting average and one National League MVP award, playing in six World Series and six All-Star games. Robinson was the first African-American to win the MVP award and the first to be elected to the Hall of Fame (1962). In 1957, the Dodgers traded Robinson to the New York Giants for pitcher Dick Littlefield and $30,000. Partially in response to this surprising move, Robinson decided it was time to end his playing days. That same year, Jackie was diagnosed with diabetes, a disease that led to his death in 1972. Prior to his passing on June 4, 1972, Robinson’s No. 42 was retired by the Dodgers along with Roy Campanella’s No. 39 and Sandy Koufax’s No. 32. On February 2, 1981, the finishing touches were put on Jackie Robinson Stadium, the current home of the Bruins. The U. S. Post Office issued the “Jackie Robinson Black Heritage” stamp on Aug. 2, 1982, featuring the first baseball player ever depicted on a U.S. stamp. In 1984, President Ronald Reagan acknowledged Robinson’s accomplishments by awarding him the Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian award. In March 2005, Robinson was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal. The award was presented by President George W. Bush to members of Robinson’s family.
Jackie Robinson as a Brooklyn Dodger Jackie Robinson had a remarkable 10-year major league career, playing each season with the Brooklyn Dodgers. Robinson totaled 137 home runs and 734 RBI for Brooklyn, finishing his career with a .311 batting average, 947 runs and 197 stolen bases.
Robinson on the Football Field Jackie Robinson led the nation in punt return average in 1939 and 1940. Robinson averaged 16.5 yards per return in 1939 and followed that effort with 21.0 yards per return in 1940. Robinson’s career average of 18.8 yards per return ranks fourth in NCAA history. In 1940, he led UCLA in rushing (383 yds), passing (444 yds), total offense (827 yds), scoring (36 pts) and punt returns (21.0 ypr). In his two-year career on the gridiron, Robinson rushed for 954 yards (5.9 avg) and passed for 449 yards.
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The UCLA baseball program completed construction of the Jack and Rhodine Gifford Hitting Facility in February 2009 and has taken full advantage of the 10,500-square foot practice complex. The facility was generously funded by the late Jack Gifford and his wife, Rhodine. Jack played baseball at UCLA in the early 1960s before graduating in 1963. UCLA’s hitting facility stands behind the right field fence, extending from the right-field foul pole toward the stadium’s scoreboard in center field. Construction of the facility began in early December 2008, and the project was fully completed by early Februrary 2009.
UCLA’s hitting facility allows natural light and also features interior lighting. The floor consists of high-quality synthetic turf. In all, the complex allows for two 30-x-70-foot cages and three 20-x-60-foot cages, all which feature retractable netting.
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KEY FEATURES OF UCLA’S GIFFORD HITTING FACILITY • Dimensions of the practice complex run 23-feet high, 70-feet wide and 150-feet long • Practice complex features an adjustable interior design, accomodating up to five hitting cages at once • Cages include multiple pitching machines, including those capable of throwing breaking balls • Accomodates room for defensive drills and pitching instruction on the south-facing half of the complex • Spacious tee area within the facility allows for additional hitting drills • State-of-the-art synthetic turf allows position players to practice fielding The Jack and Rhodine Gifford Hitting Facility was “We are very thankful to Jack and Rhodine for their vision with this stateof-the-art hitting facility. This facility has brought a new dimension of player development to our program. Our players and coaches are very excited about having this training facility, one that is among the nicest in the country. The Jack and Rhodine Gifford Hitting Facility is a special place for all Bruins.” – UCLA head coach John Savage
built in less than five weeks, spanning from December 2008 through January 2009. Photos to the right (clockwise from top) show the construction of the hitting facility in December 2008.
Jack and Rhodine Gifford
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UCLA has sent 13 players to play for the USA Baseball National Team a total of 17 times, beginning with the selection of Shane Mack in 1984. Most recently, David Berg led Team USA to a 20-3 record in the summer of 2013, including a five-game sweep of Cuba. Trevor Bauer and Gerrit Cole’s selection in 2009 marked the first time a Bruin had been named to the USA Baseball National Team since 2006, when three-year UCLA starting shortstop Brandon Crawford helped lead Team USA to the 2006 FISU World Championship that summer. UCLA’s student-athletes have not been the only individuals affiliated with Team USA’s National Team. While working as an assistant coach at USC in the summer of 2000, current UCLA head coach John Savage served as an assistant to Mike Gillespie for the USA National Team of collegiate all-stars. UCLA Player David Berg Adam Plutko Gerrit Cole Steve Rodriguez Trevor Bauer Brandon Crawford
Jim Parque is the first UCLA ballplayer to have pitched for the USA National Team and at the College World Series.
Years 2012. 2013 2012 2009, 2010 2010 2009 2006
UCLA Player Josh Karp Jon Brandt Bill Scott Eric Valent Jim Parque Troy Glaus Shane Mack
Years 1999, 2000 1999 1999 1997 1996 1995, 1996 1984
In two summers pitching for the USA National Team, Gerrit Cole went 6-0 with a 0.91 ERA, logging 69 strikeouts and 14 walks in 59.0 innings. He led the USA National Team in innings both summers, appearing in 11 total games (nine starts).
Jim Parque’s National Team Stats YR 1996
ERA 3.30
W-L 1-0
G/GS 15/0
CG SV 0 3
IP 30.0
H 32
R 14
ER 11
BB 11
SO 37
OAV .274
Gerrit Cole’s National Team Stats YR 2009 2010 TOTALS
ERA 1.06 0.72 0.91
W-L G/GS CG SV IP 4-0 6/5 1 0 34.0 2-0 5/4 0 1 25.0 6-0 11/9 1 1 59.0
H 11 24 35
R ER 4 4 4 2 8 6
BB 10 4 14
SO OAV 46 .104 23 .267 69 .179
Troy Glaus’s National Team Stats
Jon Brandt’s National Team Stats YR 1999
ERA 7.12
W-L 1-2
G/GS 9/4
CG 0
YR 1999
AVG .340
GP-GS AB 36-34 141
R 31
SV 0
IP 30.1
H 38
R 28
ER 24
BB 13
SO 26
YR 1995 1996 TOTALS
OAV .314
Bill Scott’s National Team Stats H 48
2B 8
3B 2
HR 9
RBI BB SB-SBA OBP 32 8 4-6 .373
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AVG GP-GS AB .306 35-27 111 .342 35-31 120 .324 70-58 231
R 19 35 54
H 34 41 75
2B 3B 3 0 8 2 11 2
HR 2 15 17
RBI 15 34 49
BB SB-SBA OBP 10 0-1 .369 16 0-0 .423 26 0-1 .396
UCLA head coach John Savage served as pitching coach of the U.S. National Team of collegiate all-stars in the summer of 2000.
Steve Rodriguez’s National Team Stats YR 2010
AVG GP-GS .080 11-8
AB 25
R 2
H 2
2B 3B 0 0
HR RBI BB SB-SBA OBP 0 0 5 1-2 .281
Eric Valent’s National Team Stats YR 1996
AVG GP-GS AB R .345 34-31 119 24
H 41
2B 3B 10 3
Brandon Crawford’s National Team Stats YR 2006
AVG GP-GS .257 23-10
AB 35
R 7
H 9
2B 3B 2 0
HR RBI BB SB-SBA OBP 0 6 3 1-2 .315
Shane Mack’s National Team Stats YR 1984
AVG .287
GP 34
AB 115
R 21
H 33
2B 4
3B 3
HR 4
RBI 14
BB 20
SB 4
Adam Plutko’s National Team Stats YR 2012 Josh YR 1999 2000 TOTALS
ERA 2.63
W-L 0-0
G/GS 3/3
CG 0
SV 0
IP 13.2
H 9
ERA 3.72 2.89 3.00
W-L 0-1 3-0 3-1
G/GS 9/0 7/0 16/0
CG 0 0 0
SV 2 0 2
ERA 3.72 1.82 2.79
W-L 4-2 3-0 7-2
G/GS 7/6 7/6 14/12
CG 0 0 0
SV 0 0 0
IP 36.1 34.2 71.0
H 37 27 64
R 15 12 27
IP 11.2 9.1 21.0
H 13 5 18
R 5 3 8
ER 4 3 7
BB 4 1 5
SO 10 9 19
OAV .277 .147 .171
Trevor Bauer’s National Team Stats YR 2009
ERA 4.67
W-L 1-1
G/GS 5/3
CG 1
ER 4
ER 15 7 22
BB 13 13 26
BB 5
SO 12
Karp’s National Team Stats
David Berg’s National Team Stats YR 2012 2013 TOTALS
R 4
SV 0
IP 17.1
H 13
R 10
ER 9
19
BB 7
SO 24
OAV .213
SO 35 38 73
OAV .276 .216 .240
OAV .188
HR RBI BB SB-SBA OBP 7 34 16 1-3 .413
2013 was an outstanding year for the UCLA Baseball team. The Bruins earned their first NCAA Championship in the program’s 94-year history, setting numerous records along the way. 2014 looks to be an equally exciting year for UCLA, as the Bruins aim to continue the success they enjoyed last season. John Savage enters his 10th year as head coach of the Bruins, leading the program to never before seen heights in his tenure as head coach. Aside from guiding the Bruins to their first championship in school history in 2013, Savage has coached the Bruins to College World Series appearances in three of the last four years, the College World Series Finals in two of the last four (2010 and 2013) and the postseason in seven of the last eight. Last season, the Bruins went a perfect 10-0 in the postseason, posting a 4-0 record against national seeds in the tournament while eliminating two of them (No. 5 Cal State Fullerton, No. 1 North Carolina). During the Bruins’ postseason run, Savage became UCLA’s all-time leader in postseason wins, posting his 27th postseason win in UCLA’s 3-0 win over Cal State Fullerton in the NCAA Super Regionals to pass Gary Adams. At the College World Series, the Bruins’ pitching staff only allowed four runs over five CWS games. In the 67-year-history of the College World Series, only one national champion gave up fewer runs than UCLA, as California allowed three in 1957. The Bruins were also the first team in CWS history to allow one run or less in each of the five games they played. 2014 will undoubtedly provide a new challenge for the Bruins, as they are now the team on everybody’s radar. The success the program has enjoyed over the past four years has brought the team into the conversation among the nation’s elite and the 2014 squad will look to continue to build upon that foundation of success. “This year we have a big target on our back and we’re the hunted,” Savage said. “Now that we’ve won the championship, it puts you in a different light and raises expectations. But we look forward to getting better every day and taking on the challenge of being the team that everybody is trying to beat.” PITCHING The Bruins will have to replace two of the best starting pitchers in school history in right-handers Adam Plutko and Nick Vander Tuig, both of whom were selected in June’s MLB Draft. Vander Tuig and Plutko earned All-Pac-12 honors last season and finished their careers as the winningest pitching tandem in school history, combining for 56 wins. Sophomore James Kaprielian is projected to take the place of Plutko on Friday nights after spending his freshman year in the bullpen. Kaprielian made 34 relief appearances last season, posting a 1.55 ERA, two saves and 53 strikeouts in 40.2 innings pitched en route to earning freshman All-America honors from Perfect Game USA and Collegiate Baseball. He was especially key during the second half of the season, logging a 1.65 ERA in 16 Pac-12 appearances before appearing in six postseason games and allowing only one run in 5.2 innings pitched. This past summer, Kaprielian pitched for the Yarmouth-Dennis Red Sox of the prestigious Cape Cod League, striking out 28 batters in 20 innings while recording a 1.80 ERA.
“With James, everybody saw his abilities last year coming out of the bullpen and again in the Cape Cod League over the summer,” Savage said. “Now he needs to establish himself in our program as a starter and pitch to our style. He’s been a starter his whole career in high school, so starting is nothing new for him, and overall I think he’s more comfortable this year. We look for him to be leading the charge on Friday night. He’s got a power arm and power stuff and that’s what you’re looking for out of your Friday night guy.” Junior Grant Watson is the one holdover from last year’s weekend rotation, as he served as the Bruins’ Sunday starter in 2013. This year, Watson projects to be the Saturday starter, filling the void left by Vander Tuig. Watson went 9-3 with a 3.01 ERA in 2013, striking out 55 batters and walking just 16, the sixth-fewest in the Pac-12. He pitched particularly well in the postseason, winning both of his starts while not allowing a run in 13 combined innings. In addition, Watson was named to the 2013 NCAA Los Angeles Regional All-Tournament Team. “What can you say about Grant Watson,” said Savage. “He’s an 18-game winner, a preseason All-American and has had as good a two-year career as maybe any starter in the history of the school. He established himself on Tuesdays as a freshman and then again on Sundays as a sophomore, and even though he went almost a month and a half without a win last year, I think he learned from that. He’s an underrated athlete, a great competitor and pitched in some huge games last year. He handled San Diego and North Carolina in the Tournament and is a very reliable guy for us.” The last weekend rotation spot is slated to go to sophomore right-hander Cody Poteet. Poteet served as UCLA’s Tuesday starter last season, going 4-4 with a 4.69 ERA in his 11 starts. He also made 18 appearances out of the bullpen for the Bruins, recording a 4-6 record with a 4.84 ERA and 56 strikeouts in total. Poteet spent the summer with the Walla Walla Sweets of the West Coast League, being selected as one of the league’s All-Stars. “Cody got a little taste of starting last year and showed some flashes of what he could do,” Savage said. “He also had some moments this summer with Walla Walla while also being named the best prospect from that league. Cody is a lot like Kaprielian in that he needs to adapt to our style of pitching and get to that dependability mode. He needs to become a six-inning, three earned run guy and just gain that consistency. Him being a fourpitch guy allows us to have more variety on Sundays than most other teams. There aren’t a lot of teams out there that can match up with his pure stuff. But again, he has to go out and pitch and establish himself on Sundays.” Freshmen right-handers Scott Burke and Grant Dyer are currently battling for that final starting spot on Tuesdays. Burke enjoyed an outstanding three-year varsity career at Glendora High School before being selected in the 31st round of the 2013 MLB Draft by the Houston Astros. During his senior season at Glendora, he went 7-3 as a starter with a 2.32 ERA and 79 strikeouts in 60.1 innings pitched. Dyer was a three-year varsity letterwinner at Dana Hills High School in Laguna Niguel, Calif., posting a 6-4 record as a senior in 2013. He also logged a 1.24 ERA and 54 strikeouts in 62 innings pitched.
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“Both Scott and Grant had a really strong finish in the fall,” said Savage. ”Both guys are very young, but we like having young pitchers on Tuesday that we feel are going to be potential weekend guys down the road. Right now we look for both guys to compete to be the guy on Tuesdays.” One of the strengths of this year’s team will again be the bullpen. Returning for his junior season is All-American closer David Berg, who has enjoyed one of the finest two-year careers of any reliever in NCAA history. In 101 career relief appearances, Berg has logged a 12-3 record with a 0.98 ERA and 141 strikeouts. In 2013, he became the first relief pitcher in conference history to win Pac-12 Pitcher of the Year honors and was awarded the NCBWA Stopper of the Year, given out to the nation’s top collegiate relief pitcher. Berg also set the NCAA Division I single-season record for saves last season with 24. Finally, he is UCLA’s all-time record holder for most postseason appearances (17) and saves (6), career saves (25) and has the second-lowest ERA in UCLA postseason history with a 0.98 mark. “David Berg has probably had as good a two years as any reliever that’s ever pitched in college with the appearances, saves, ERA and everything else,” said Savage. “It’s just been an incredible two years for David and we would never be in the position we are now without him. We hope to have that sort of strength in the back of the bullpen again.” Other guys who will be counted upon to play large roles in the bullpen are left-hander Max Schuh and right-handers Jake Ehret and Nick Kern. Schuh and Ehret saw limited action in 2013, but are expected to contribute more in 2014, while Kern will look to see his first collegiate action this season. “Our bullpen has really been as good as our starting pitching over the last four seasons,” said Savage. “We love to establish roles in the bullpen. Right now, Schuh looks to be that seventh inning guy. He’s made great strides this fall and had a good summer in the Northwoods League. Kern probably had one of the best falls of any of our pitchers. He’s another guy who has four pitches and has really improved since the summer. Finally, Jake Ehret really has thrown as hard as anybdoy we’ve had. He’s taken some strides as well and is another guy that could fit into that setup role.” CATCHERS The Bruins appear to be very deep at the catcher position coming into 2014, with junior Shane Zeile returning behind the dish after starting 57 of UCLA’s 66 games last season. Zeile handled a pitching staff that posted a 2.55 ERA and held opponents to a .222 batting average, both the second-lowest marks in the Pac-12. At the plate, he recorded nine doubles and 20 RBI while hitting at a .286 clip in Pac-12 play. “We have tremendous depth at the catching position,” Savage said. “Shane will be back for his second year as a full-time catcher after being one of the main pieces of our team last year. He converted to catcher during this time last year after his injury in the fall of 2012 and has become a big-time player. We really feel his offense is going to improve dramatically this season. He can catch and throw, he can block, and really is one of the better prospects in the Pac-12.”
Freshman Dominic Miroglio and sophomores Darrell Miller Jr. and Justin Hazard will all compete for playing time at the catcher spot as well. Miroglio, who was a three-year varsity standout at Bishop O’Dowd High School in Oakland, Calif., was drafted in the 40th round of the 2013 MLB Draft by the Oakland A’s. Hazard and Miller Jr. each saw time behind the plate last year. Miller appeared in 10 games, making three starts at the catcher position, while Hazard made six starts behind the plate while hitting .333. “Right now Justin will be our backup catcher,” Savage said. “He’s a talented guy with a good arm who can also hit well at the plate. With Miroglio and Miller as well, we have four guys who are holding that position down very well right now, so we feel really good about our catching.” INFIELD UCLA will have plenty of experience returning in the infield in 2014. Senior Pat Gallagher returns to man first base after enjoying a great second half of last season. Gallagher hit .274 with 20 runs, seven doubles, one home run and 20 RBI in 2013 while slugging .331. In the postseason, he proved to be one of the Bruins’ best hitters, starting all 10 games and batting .351 with a .405 slugging percentage. Additionally, Gallagher earned Most Outstanding Player honors at the NCAA Los Angeles Regional after going 5-for-9 with four RBI.
Grant Watson has posted a record of 18-5 during his first two seasons in Westwood. The junior from Bakersfield, Calif. tied the school record for most wins by a freshman (9) in 2012 before going 9-3 with a 3.01 ERA as a sophomore in 2013. Watson went 2-0 in two postseason starts last year, not allowing a run in either start, and enters 2014 as a preseason All-American.
“Pat had a really strong second half of last season,” said Savage. “He was the Regional MVP and was really reliable at first. Defensively, I thought he improved tremendously and is really another guy who will improve offensively this year. Overall, I think Shane and Pat had two of the best falls with the bat.” Also looking to earn time at first base will be freshman Luke Persico, who was selected by the Colorado Rockies in the 37th round of last June’s draft out of Great Oak High School in Temecula, Calif. “Pat will be our everyday first baseman along with Luke Persico,” said Savage. “Luke is a right-handed guy who was really brought in to play the outfield, but we’re converting him to an infielder. He’s another guy who has tremendous power and is probably the best, young right-handed hitter in our program.” Senior Kevin Williams returns at second base this season after spending the majority of last season as the Bruins’ designated hitter. After a shoulder injury kept him out for the first half of last season, Williams returned to hit .227 with one home run and 12 RBI. He again is projected to miss the start of the season as he recovers from another shoulder injury.
of falls into the similar role that guys like Brian Carroll and Pat Gallagher played last year. Nevertheless, he needs to step up in his junior year and we think he is more than capable of doing so.” OUTFIELD There looks to be a lot of competition for playing time in the outfield with four guys competing for three spots. With last year’s starting right-fielder Eric Filia out for the season with an injury, sophomore Christoph Bono will be counted on to begin the year as the starter in right. Bono made 55 appearances a year ago mostly as a defensive replacement, and will look to improve upon his offense from last season while continuing to play stellar defense in the outfield.
“We’re looking for Kevin to get back healthy again after he had another setback with an injury,” said Savage, “hopefully by March 1. Kevin’s a very talented defender whose offense we expect to improve as well.”
“Christoph is a tremendous defensive player,” said Savage. “He can really run and throw out there. It’s about him making adjustments at the plate and getting enough contact while also cutting down on his strikeouts, both of which he’s done this fall. He was really reliable in left last year and was a big part of our late game defensive adjustments. We look for him to have a bigger role in 2014.”
In place of Williams, UCLA will turn to sophomores Brett Urabe and Trent Chatterton to fill the void at second base. Chatterton played in 41 games in 2013, posting an on-base percentage of .358 while hitting .257 with 18 runs, four doubles and 10 RBI. Urabe appeared in 25 games last season, mostly off the bench, adding to the Bruins’ depth and providing a nice spark on the basepaths.
In left field, sophomore Ty Moore and freshman Brett Stephens will be competing for the starting job. Moore hit .219 with 10 RBI in 28 games last year after enjoying one of the finest high school careers of anybody in the state of California. At Mater Dei High School in Santa Ana, Calif., Moore was named the 2012 Gatorade State Player of the Year and earned USA Today National All-America honors.
“In addition to Williams, we also have Brett, who is a utility guy who can play all three positions and can really run, and Trent, who is another utility guy who can play all three positions,” Savage said. “While Kevin will be the face of that position, Brett and Trent are both utility type guys who can fill in for him and play second base.”
“Ty Moore is another guy who had a tremendous fall,” Savage said. “He looks to be our DH to start the season but will also see time in the outfield. We still have high expectations for him. Ty had an outstanding high school career and had some growing pains last year, but we look for him to be a force in that DH spot and to be a significant contributor in the outfield.”
After spending the past two seasons as UCLA’s everyday third baseman, junior Kevin Kramer will look to move over to shortstop in 2014. A 2013 honorable mention All-Pac-12 selection, Kramer tied for the team lead in hits last season with 68 while batting .278. Kramer also led the team with 11 multiRBI games and finished second on the squad with 42 RBI.
Stephens, a native of Moraga, Calif., was a two-sport athlete at Campolindo High School, competing in both baseball and football. He had a huge summer for the Wenatchee AppleSox of the West Coast League, hitting .326 in 48 games while being selected to play in the league’s All-Star Game.
“Kramer was a shortstop and a quarterback in high school and was really drafted as a shortstop out of high school,” Savage said. “He played third base very well last season and had a tremendous fall. He has really gotten stronger. Kramer’s yet another guy that I think will be better offensively. He’s one of the best prospects on our team and I think he’s going to feel pretty comfortable playing short.” Taking Kramer’s spot at third will be junior Chris Keck, who is projected to step into a full-time role this season after spending his first two seasons in Westwood as a part-time player. Keck played in 31 games last year, making 22 starts and recording 10 RBI. “Chris Keck is a guy that we are really depending on at third base,” Savage said. “He’s a good prospect with a lot of power offensively and a big arm in the field. Chris has not been an everyday player in his first two years in the program and kind
“Brett Stephens is someone who we really like,” said Savage. “He’s a strong, left-handed hitter who really hits the ball all over the ballpark. He is going to be a very good ballplayer in our eyes.” Back in center field will be senior Brian Carroll, who was one of three players to start every game last season. Spending the majority of the year serving as the Bruins’ leadoff hitter in 2013, Carroll batted .258 with three doubles, two triples, 20 RBI and a .380 on-base percentage. He was especially a terror on the basepaths, leading the Pac-12 with 32 stolen bases in 40 attempts. Additionally, Carroll led the Bruins with 50 runs scored and 14 sacrifice bunts. “We feel that Brian is the best defensive center fielder in the country,” Savage said. “He can go get the ball with anybody and has great leadership skills in center. He’s going to improve offensively as well and really knows his role as the leadoff guy. He knows how to get on base, steal a base and score and we expect big things out of him this season.”
21
THE SCHEDULE UCLA’s 56-game regular season includes 30 Pac-12 Conference games against ten conference opponents. The Bruins open the season with four weekends of non-conference play. UCLA will kick off the season with an eight-game homestand that includes weekend series against Portland and Cal Poly and midweek games vs. Cal State Northridge and UC Santa Barbara. The Bruins will then travel across the country to Cary, N.C. to take part in the Notre Dame Classic from Feb. 28-March 2 at the USA Baseball Complex. There UCLA will meet tough non-conference foes Notre Dame, North Carolina State and Michigan. After the Notre Dame Classic, the Bruins will return home to host Pepperdine and Houston on March 7 and 8 respectively at Jackie Robinson Stadium. UCLA will then take on crosstown rivals USC in a road contest on March 9. As in previous years, the Bruins will play a very competitive midweek schedule, lined with non-conference games against the aforementioned Cal State Northridge and UC Santa Barbara, Cal State Fullerton, Loyola Marymount, Long Beach State and UC Irvine. UCLA will also play a weekend series with Long Beach State from April 4-6. The Bruins will open up Pac-12 play with a three-game series at California from March 14-16. The Bruins face a tough Pac-12 road slate in 2014 that includes trips to Arizona (April 11-13), Utah (April 17-19), Oregon State (May 9-11), and Washington (May 23-25). UCLA will host three-game Pac-12 series against Washington State (March 21-23), Arizona State (March 2830), USC (April 24-26), Stanford (May 2-4) and Oregon (May 16-18). UCLA’s last eight schedules have been ranked among the topfive-most difficult in the country, as ranked by Boyd’s World (strength of schedule ranking service, boydsworld.com). The Bruins’ schedule was ranked No. 1 in 2006 and 2010, No. 2 in 2007 and 2013, No. 3 in 2008 and 2009, No. 4 in 2012 and No. 5 in 2011. In addition, UCLA’s RPI has been ranked in the top-five two of the last four seasons. The Bruins were No. 1 in 2012 and No. 5 in 2010. “We’re challenging ourselves again this season,” Savage said. “We feel we have five really tough non-conference weekends that are going to help us prepare for the Pac-12, as well as the postseason, and help our RPI. The Tuesday games really take care of themselves in Southern California with teams like Fullerton, Northridge, Irvine, LMU, UC Santa Barbara and Long Beach State. Then obviously Pepperdine on the weekend. I think it’s a tremendous home schedule this year. You’ve got USC, Washington State, Oregon, Arizona State and Stanford all coming in for the Pac-12 slate and then Utah, Arizona, Oregon State, Washington and California on the road. The Pac-12 has won the National Championship the last two seasons and I think the depth of the conference is going to make it very difficult this year. We won 21 games last year and finished third and this year I think you may see 19 wins win the league. Overall, it’s a very tough schedule, but we want to play the best schedule possible and we feel that we are doing that again this season.”
2014 ROSTER
ALPHABETICAL ROSTER
NUMERICAL ROSTER No. Name Pos. Yr. 1 3 4 5 7 8 9 10 11 12 16 18 20 21 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 38 40 41 44 45 47 48
Andrew Schmidt Christoph Bono Eric Filia Kevin Williams Kevin Kramer Trent Chatterton Shane Zeile Scott Burke James Kaprielian Grant Watson Nick Kern Kort Peterson Dominic Miroglio Luke Persico Brett Stephens Brian Carroll Chris Keck David Berg Pat Gallagher Justin Hazard Ty Moore Jake Ehret Darrell Miller Jr. Grant Dyer Hunter Virant Cody Poteet Chase Radan Tyler Scott Moises Ceja Keenan Pierandozzi-Howes Brett Urabe Max Schuh Aaron Weimer Tucker Forbes
OF OF OF INF INF INF C/INF RHP RHP LHP RHP OF C INF OF OF INF RHP INF INF OF RHP C RHP LHP RHP RHP OF RHP C INF LHP C RHP
Fr. RS So. Jr. Sr. Jr. So. Jr. Fr. So. Jr. RS Fr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Sr. Jr. Jr. Sr. RS So. So. RS So. So. Fr. So. So. RS Fr. RS So. Fr. RS Fr. So. RS Jr. RS Sr. RS Fr.
B/T Ht.
Wt. Exp. Hometown (Previous School)
No. Name
L/L L/R L/R L/R L/R R/R R/R R/R R/R L/L R/R L/R R/R R/R L/R R/R L/R R/R L/R L/R L/R R/R R/R R/R R/L R/R R/R R/R R/R R/R R/R L/L L/R R/R
165 173 175 195 194 168 191 185 200 181 186 195 195 173 187 178 188 194 230 187 190 201 221 183 171 188 183 212 168 210 165 210 188 220
26 3 10 24 40 8 32 30 4 48 27 28 11 25 16 7 31 20 29 21 18 41 34 35 1 45 38 23 44 33 12 47 5 9
6-1 6-1 6-0 6-0 6-0 5-8 6-1 6-3 6-4 6-0 5-11 6-1 6-0 6-3 6-0 5-10 6-2 6-0 6-2 6-2 6-0 6-3 6-2 6-1 6-4 6-1 6-4 6-2 6-0 6-0 5-10 6-4 5-11 6-9
HS 1V 2V 3V 2V 1V 2V HS 1V 2V RS HS HS HS HS 3V 2V 2V 3V 1V 1V 1V 1V HS 1V 1V RS 1V HS RS 1V 2V 3V RS
Parker, Colo. (Regis Jesuit HS) Palo Alto, Calif. (Palo Alto HS) Huntington Beach, Calif. (Edison HS) Van Nuys, Calif. (Crespi HS) Turlock, Calif. (Turlock HS) Garden Grove, Calif. (Pacifica HS) Valencia, Calif. (Valencia HS) Glendora, Calif. (Glendora HS) Tustin, Calif. (Beckman HS) Bakersfield, Calif. (Centennial HS) Brea, Calif. (Brea Olinda HS) Mountain View, Calif. (St. Francis HS) Oakland, Calif. (Bishop O’Dowd HS) Stevenson Ranch, Calif. (Great Oak HS) Moraga, Calif. (Campolindo HS) San Diego, Calif. (Granite Hills HS) Pleasanton, Calif. (Amador Valley HS) Covina, Calif. (Bishop Amat HS) Reno, Nev. (Reno HS) Tusitn, Calif. (Beckman HS) Mission Viejo, Calif. (Mater Dei HS) San Dimas, Calif. (San Dimas HS) Yorba Linda, Calif. (Servite HS) Laguna Niguel, Calif. (Dana Hills HS) Camarillo, Calif. (Camaraillo HS) Bonita, Calif. (Christian HS) Tustin, Calif. (Mater Dei HS) Novato, Calif. (Marin Catholic HS) Arleta, Calif. (Kennedy HS) Santa Monica, Calif. (Pacifica Christian HS) Huntington Beach, Calif. (Huntington Beach HS) Fresno, Calif. (Edison HS) Fresno, Calif. (Bullard HS) Pebble Beach, Calif. (Stevenson School)
Coaching Staff 22 17 2 19
John Savage Rex Peters T.J. Bruce Jake Silverman
Head Coach (10th season) Assistant Coach (3rd season) Assistant Coach (4th season) Assistant Coach (4th season)
Nevada ’91 Cal State Fullerton ’89 Long Beach State ’04 Cal State Fullerton ’10
BREAKDOWN BY CLASS Freshmen (11) Scott Burke Moises Ceja Grant Dyer Tucker Forbes^ Nick Kern^ Dominic Miroglio Luke Persico Kort Peterson Keenan Pierandozzi-Howes^ Chase Radan^ Andrew Schmidt Brett Stephens ^ redshirt freshman
Sophomores (11) Christoph Bono^ Trent Chatterton Jake Ehret^ Justin Hazard^ James Kaprielian Darrell Miller Jr. Ty Moore Cody Poteet Tyler Scott^ Brett Urabe Hunter Virant ^ redshirt sophomore
Position
David Berg RHP Christoph Bono OF Scott Burke RHP Brian Carroll OF Moises Ceja RHP Trent Chatterton INF Grant Dyer RHP Jake Ehret RHP Eric Filia OF Tucker Forbes RHP Pat Gallagher INF Justin Hazard INF/C James Kaprielian RHP Chris Keck INF Nick Kern RHP Kevin Kramer INF Darrell Miller Jr. C Dominic Miroglio C Ty Moore OF Luke Persico OF Kort Peterson OF Keenan Pierandozzi-Howes C Cody Poteet RHP Chase Radan RHP Andrew Schmidt OF Max Schuh LHP Tyler Scott OF Brett Stephens OF Brett Urabe INF Hunter Virant LHP Grant Watson LHP Aaron Weimer C Kevin Williams INF Shane Zeile C/INF
Pronunciation Guide Christoph Bono Ceja Ehret Filia Kaprielian Miroglio Poteet Radan Schuh Urabe Virant Weimer Zeile
KRIHS-tawf BOH-noh SAY-ha AIR-et fah-LEE-ah kah-PRILL-ee-an mur-ROLL-ee-OH POH-teet RAY-den SHOO yoo-RAH-bee vur-ANT WY-mer ZEE-ill
BREAKDOWN BY STATE, COUNTY Juniors (7) David Berg Eric Filia Chris Keck Kevin Kramer Max Schuh^ Grant Watson Shane Zeile ^ redshirt junior
Santa Clara County (2)
Colorado (1)
Bono, Peterson
Andrew Schmidt
Chatterton, Dyer, Filia, Hazard, Kaprielian, Kern, Miller Jr., Moore, Radan, Urabe
Contra Costa County (1)
Nevada (1)
Los Angeles County (8)
Watson
Seniors (4) Brian Carroll Pat Gallagher Aaron Weimer^ Kevin Williams
California (32) Orange County (10)
^ redshirt senior
Berg, Burke, Ceja, Ehret, Persico, Pierandozzi-Howes, Williams, Zeile
Alameda County (2)
Stephens
Kern County (1) Marin County (1) Scott
Monterey County (1)
Keck, Miroglio
Forbes
Fresno County (2)
Kramer
Schuh, Weimer
San Diego County (2) Carroll, Poteet
22
Stanislaus County (1) Ventura County (1) Virant
Pat Gallagher
RADIO/TV ROSTER
1
9
Andrew Schmidt 6-1, 165 – OF – Freshman
Shane Zeile 6-1, 191 – C/INF – Junior
Bono 3 6-1,Christoph 173 – OF – RS Sophomore 4
5
Kevin Williams 6-0, 195 – INF – Senior
7
Burke James Kaprielian 10 6-3, 185Scott – RHP – Freshman 11 6-4, 200 – RHP – Sophomore 12
Grant Watson
Kern 16 5-11, 186 –Nick RHP – RS Freshman 18
Dominic Miroglio 20 6-0, 195 – C – Freshman 21
27
33
Pat Gallagher 6-2, 230 – INF – Senior
Hunter Virant 6-4, 171 – LHP – Sophomore
Luke Persico
Brett Stephens
Brian Carroll
6-0, 194 – INF – Junior
Chris Keck 6-2, 188 – INF – Junior
Hazard Ty Moore Jake Ehret 28 6-2,Justin 187 – INF – RS Sophomore 29 6-0, 190 – OF – Sophomore 30 6-3, 201 – RHP – RS Sophomore 31
Darrell Miller Jr.
6-0, 187 – OF – Freshman
24
6-0, 181 – LHP – Junior
Kevin Kramer
25
6-3, 173 – INF – Freshman
23
Eric Filia 6-0, 175 – OF – Junior
5-10, 178 – OF – Senior
Cody Poteet Chase Radan Tyler Scott 34 6-1, 188 – RHP – Sophomore 35 6-4, 183 – RHP – RS Freshman 38 6-2, 212 – OF – RS Sophomore 40
Urabe 44 5-10,Brett 165 – INF – Sophomore 45
Max Schuh 6-4, 210 – LHP – RS Junior
47
23
Aaron Weimer 5-11, 188 – C – RS Senior
6-2, 221 – C – Sophomore
Moises Ceja 6-0, 168 – RHP – Freshman
Forbes 48 6-9,Tucker 220 – RHP – RS Freshman
8
Trent Chatterton 5-8, 168 – INF – Sophomore
Kort Peterson 6-1, 195 – OF – Freshman
David Berg
26
6-0, 194 – RHP – Junior
32
6-1, 183 – RHP – Freshman
Grant Dyer
Pierandozzi-Howes 41 Keenan 6-0, 210 – C – RS Freshman
COACHING STAFF
22
Savage is one of eight head coaches in the history of college baseball to have led his team to a College World Series, produced a No. 1 overall MLB Draft selection and coached a Golden Spikes Award winner. Savage is joined in that illustrious circle by former head coaches Skip Bertman (LSU) and Jim Brock (Arizona State) and current head coaches Tim Corbin (Vanderbilt), Augie Garrido (Cal State Fullerton, now at Texas), Jack Leggett (Clemson), Mike Martin (Florida State) and Jim Morris (Miami).
JOHN
SAVAGE
In 2011, the Bruins captured their first outright Pac-10 Conference title since 1986. After hosting an NCAA Regional at Jackie Robinson Stadium, top right-handed pitchers Gerrit Cole and Trevor Bauer were selected No. 1 and No. 3, respectively, in the first round of the 2011 MLB Draft. No college program had seen two of its players selected within the draft’s first three selections since 1978 (Arizona State).
Record at UCLA: 324-224 (9 seasons) Overall Record: 412-308-1 (12 seasons) Through nine seasons as UCLA’s head coach, John Savage has established the Bruins as a national championship contender. He has guided UCLA to the postseason in seven of the last eight seasons, leading the Bruins to the 2013 NCAA Championship. The Bruins’ skipper has also coached the Bruins to College World Series appearances in three of the last four years, and the College World Series Finals in two of the last four (2010 and 2013). Savage’s players have also succeeded in the professional ranks, as 65 Bruins in the last nine seasons have been selected in the MLB Draft. UCLA enjoyed a banner season in 2013 under Savage, winning the program’s first national championship. The Bruins went a perfect 10-0 in the postseason, posting a 4-0 record against national seeds in the tournament while eliminating two of them (No. 5 Cal State Fullerton, No. 1 North Carolina). During the Bruins’ postseason run, Savage became UCLA’s all-time leader in postseason wins, posting his 27th postseason win in UCLA’s 3-0 win over Cal State Fullerton on June 8 to pass Gary Adams. Savage now has a record of 32-14 in the postseason as UCLA’s head coach. At the College World Series, the Bruins’ pitching staff only allowed four runs over five CWS games. In the 67-year-history of the College World Series, only one national champion gave up fewer runs than UCLA, as California allowed three in 1957. The Bruins were also the first team in CWS history to allow one run or less in each of the five games they played. By leading the Bruins to their second straight College World Series in 2013, Savage has become of one just 10 coaches all-time from the Pac-12 to lead their teams to back-to-back College World Series appearances (Frank Sancet, Jerry Kindall - Arizona; Bobby Winkles, Jim Brock - Arizona State; Pat Casey - Oregon State; Mark Marquess - Stanford; Sam Barry, Rod Dedeaux, Mike Gillespie - USC). Savage guided the Bruins to a 49-17 overall record in 2013, marking the second-highest single-season win total in school history. UCLA also matched a school record with 21 conference victories, finishing third in the Pac-12. The Bruins have finished in the top three in the Pac-12 Conference in each of the last eight seasons, the only Pac-12 team to do so. Additionally, Savage coached pitcher David Berg and infielder Pat Valaika to Pac-12 Pitcher and Defensive Player of the Year honors respectively. Berg became the first reliever in the history of the conference to win Pitcher of the Year honors while Valaika became the first UCLA player to win Defensive Player of the Year.
In July 2011, Bauer became UCLA’s first-ever Golden Spikes Award winner, earning a coveted award presented annually by the USA Baseball Federation to the nation’s premier amateur player. Additionally, Bauer became the first player in school history to earn National Player of the Year honors from either Baseball America or Collegiate Baseball. Savage helped UCLA’s 2011 pitching staff post the nation’s third-lowest ERA (2.44), the lowest mark on record in school history. Likewise, the Bruins’ staff finished the year second, nationally, in strikeouts per nine innings (9.8) and hits allowed per nine innings (6.61). In 2010, UCLA logged the nation’s secondlowest ERA (3.00). That year, the Bruins’ staff ranked first in the country in strikeouts per nine innings (10.2) and second in hits allowed per nine innings (7.31). In 2010, Savage helped lead UCLA to its most successful season in school history while the Bruins played the nation’s most challenging schedule, as ranked by Boyd’s World. UCLA set the school record for single-season wins (51) and most wins during the regular season (43) while landing their first-ever national seed (No. 6-seed) in the NCAA Tournament. During the Bruins’ run through the College World
Under Savage’s tutelage, pitchers Adam Plutko and Nick Vander Tuig earned All-Pac-12 honors in 2013 and became the winningest pitching tandem in school history, combining for 56 wins in their three-year careers. Overall, Savage coached a pitching staff that posted a 2.55 ERA and held opponents to a .222 batting average, both the second-lowest marks in the Pac-12. UCLA’s pitchers also allowed the fewest runs in the conference (196) and held opponents to two runs or fewer in half of the Bruins’ games (33 out of 66). Savage also reached a couple of coaching benchmarks in 2013, winning his 300th game at UCLA in the Bruins’ 1-0 victory at Oregon on April 20 and his 400th career game in UCLA’s 5-2 win at USC on May 19. Since 2010, Savage’s teams have won 183 of 257 games played, giving UCLA’s coach a winning percentage of .712. Finally, Savage capped off the 2013 season by being named the National Coach of the Year by Collegiate Baseball, Baseball America, the ABCA and Perfect Game USA. He also saw seven of his players get selected in the 2013 MLB Draft and four be named to the All-Pac-12 team. In 2012, Savage helped UCLA posted a 48-16 mark, culminating in the program’s fourth appearance in the College World Series. UCLA won the Pac-12 co-championship (tied with Arizona), marking the first time in school history that the Bruins had won back-to-back conference titles. UCLA finished with at least 48 wins for the second time in three seasons, and reached the 40-win plateau for the eighth time in school history. In addition, UCLA’s 2012 ballclub hosted the NCAA Los Angeles Super Regional for the second time in three seasons and the NCAA Los Angeles Regional for the third consecutive season. Spearheaded by hitting coach Rex Peters, UCLA raised its batting average by 41 points in 2012. Over the past four seasons, Savage has led UCLA to remarkable heights. In 2012, the Bruins earned the NCAA Tournament’s No. 2 national seed, swept an NCAA Regional at home, and won two games against TCU in the NCAA Los Angeles Super Regional. UCLA won the Pac-12 co-championship in 2012 by winning eight of its final nine Pac-12 games, including a three-game sweep of crosstown rival USC during the final weekend of the regular season. At season’s end, seven players were selected within the first 15 rounds of the MLB Draft. Six Bruins captured All-Pac-12 Team honors, the highest number of selections at UCLA since 1997.
Savage’s Year-by-Year Head Coaching Record Year 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 Career UCLA UC Irvine
School UCLA UCLA UCLA UCLA UCLA UCLA UCLA UCLA UCLA UC Irvine UC Irvine UC Irvine 12 years 9 years 3 years
Record 49-17 48-16 35-24 51-17 27-29 33-27 33-28 33-25 15-41 34-23-1 21-35 33-26 412-308-1 324-224 88-84-1
Pct. .742 .750 .593 .750 .482 .550 .541 .560 .260 .595 .375 .559 .572 .591 .509
Conf. 21-9 20-10 18-9 18-9 15-12 13-11 14-10 13-10 4-20 10-11 8-13 14-10 168-134 136-100 32-34
Pct. .700 .667 .667 .667 .555 .542 .583 .565 .167 .476 .381 .583 .556 .576 .485
Postseason NCAA Champions College World Series (Pac-12 Co-Champions) Los Angeles Regional (Pac-10 Champions) College World Series runner-up Fullerton Regional Fullerton Super Regional Malibu Regional Midwest Regional 1 title, 3 CWS, 4 Super Reg., 8 Reg. 1 title, 3 CWS, 4 Super Reg., 7 Reg. 1 Regional
Savage’s Year-by-Year Assistant Coaching Record Year 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992* Totals
School USC USC USC USC Nevada Nevada Nevada Nevada Nevada 9 years
Record 44-20 36-26 49-17 42-20 30-19 35-18 41-15 28-19-1 43-11-1 348-165-2
Pct. .688 .581 .742 .677 .612 .660 .732 .615 .791 .677
*Nevada maintained an independent affiliation in 1992.
24
Conf. 16-8 17-7 21-9 17-13 8-13 12-9 16-5 7-14 ---114-78
Pct. .667 .708 .700 .567 .381 .571 .761 .333 ---.594
Postseason College World Series West Super Regional NCAA Champions South II Regional Final Midwest Regional (Big West Champions) 1 NCAA Championship 2 Super Regionals, 5 Regionals
COACHING STAFF Series, Savage was named the National Coach of the Year by CollegeBaseballInsider.com. UCLA has hosted postseason play at Steele Field at Jackie Robinson Stadium the past four seasons (201013), making the Bruins one of just three programs to host an NCAA Regional in each of the last four years (South Carolina and Virginia). In addition, the Bruins have posted the sixth most wins nationally since 2010 with 183 wins in the last four seasons. In 2011, the Bruins entered the NCAA Los Angeles Regional as the No. 1 seed for the second consecutive year and went 2-2. In 2010, UCLA hosted postseason games for the first time since 1986, defeating Kent State, defending national champion LSU and UC Irvine before hosting an NCAA Super Regional for the first time in program history. At the 2010 NCAA Los Angeles Super Regional, UCLA won the final two games of the series against Cal State Fullerton to secure their third appearance in the College World Series, UCLA’s first berth since 1997. At the College World Series, the Bruins defeated Florida once and TCU twice to advance to the best-of-three finals, before dropping two games to South Carolina. Under Savage’s guidance, UCLA opened 2010 with a 22-0 record, the program’s longest win streak and best start to a season. After finishing second in the Pac10 Conference, a league that sent eight of its 10 teams to the postseason, the Bruins’ pitching staff set the school and Pac-10 record for strikeouts in a season (700). Savage’s work with UCLA’s pitchers has been most evident with the development of a formidable 1-2 punch in right-handers Gerrit Cole and Trevor Bauer. In three seasons at UCLA (2009-11), Bauer established UCLA’s all-time records in strikeouts (460), wins (34) and innings (373.1) and set the program’s top two marks in single-season strikeouts. Bauer logged a nation-leading and Pac-12 record 203 strikeouts in 2011 after having led the country with 165 strikeouts in 2010. Cole served as UCLA’s Friday night pitcher in each of his three seasons (2009-11), logging 376 strikeouts, the second-highest career total in program history and becoming the first pitcher in program history to record at least 100 strikeouts in each of three seasons. Through the last eight years, Savage’s teams have posted the second-most wins (132) and second-highest win percentage (.623) of any Pac-12 team in conference games only. Similarly, UCLA has collected the third-most wins (307) and fourth-highest win percentage (.627) of Pac-12 teams in all games. The Bruins finished in third place in 2006, 2007, 2008 and 2009 before earning a second-place finish in 2010, conference titles in 2011 and 2012, and another third place finish in 2013. Aside from making strides on the field, Savage and his coaching staff have found success on the recruiting trail. Seven of his eight recruiting classes have been nationally ranked in the top-20 by Baseball America. Savage’s first recruiting class at UCLA was ranked No. 5, and that group lived up to its billing by leading the Bruins to three consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances for the first time in school history. His second class was tabbed No. 13, and his third and fourth classes were ranked No. 7. Savage’s fifth recruiting class was tabbed No. 19, while the sixth incoming group was rated No. 3. In the fall of 2012, Savage brought in his most highly regarded recruiting class to date, bringing in the No. 2 ranked class in the country according to Baseball America. Additionally, Savage’s players at UCLA have seen success in the Major League Draft and in professional baseball. Over the last nine seasons (2005-13), UCLA has produced 65 draft selections, including a program-recordtying 12 draft picks in 2006. Nine of Savage’s ballplayers at UCLA have been promoted to the major leagues, including left-hander David Huff (Cleveland), right-handers Josh Roenicke (Toronto), Hector Ambriz (Cleveland), Trevor Bauer (Arizona), Tyson Brummett (Philadelphia), Charles Brewer (Arizona), Gerrit Cole (Pittsburgh) and infielders Brandon Crawford (San Francisco) and Jermaine Curtis (St. Louis). Of those 65 selections, 12 have been chosen within the draft’s first five rounds and 24 through the first 10 rounds. At least one UCLA pitcher from 2006 through 2011 registered at least 100 strikeouts - David Huff (100) in 2006; Tyson Brummett (138) in 2007; Tim Murphy (111) in 2008; Gerrit Cole (104) in 2009; Trevor Bauer (165), Cole (153) and Rob Rasmussen (128) in 2010; Bauer (203) and Cole (119) in 2011. In 2009, Savage led UCLA to a third-place finish in the Pac-10 for the fourth consecutive season. The Bruins went 27-29 with a 15-12 mark in Pac-10 play. That year, UCLA’s pitching staff finished ninth in the nation in strikeouts per nine innings (9.3) and 14th in hits allowed per nine innings (8.79). The team’s success on the mound was fueled by Bauer and Cole, who finished the year as two of the conference’s three freshmen to earn All-Pac-10 team honors. Bauer captured National Freshman Pitcher of the Year honors from Louisville Slugger/Collegiate Baseball and was named a first-team Freshman All-America selection by the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association (NCBWA). Cody Decker became the first Bruin to hit 20 or more home runs under Savage in one season. He finished his senior season with 21 homers, becoming UCLA’s first Pac-10 home run leader since 2002. In 2008, UCLA became the school’s first baseball team to secure a third consecutive trip to NCAA postseason play. The Bruins went 33-27 with a 13-11 Pac-10 record, culminating in an NCAA Regional Final berth at Cal State Fullerton. UCLA’s pitching staff recorded a conference-leading 4.29 ERA in Pac-10 action. Murphy guided the Bruins’ rotation in 2008 and became the first UCLA pitcher to lead the Pac-10 in strikeouts (111) since 1996, when Jim Parque totaled 116 strikeouts. The Bruins’ regular-season schedule featured 26 games against teams that advanced to NCAA postseason play. In 2007, Savage helped UCLA overcome an 8-14 start and record a 33-28 overall record, en route to the program’s first NCAA Super Regional appearance since 2000. The Bruins went 14-10 with a third-place
John Savage’s 26 Major Leaguers NAME Chris Singleton Chris Prieto Andy Dominque Lyle Overbay* Randy Flores Morgan Ensberg Seth Etherton Eric Munson Jason Lane Ron Flores Barry Zito*# Justin Lehr Steve Smyth Mark Prior Brian Bannister Anthony Reyes Sean Tracey Josh Roenicke* David Huff* Hector Ambriz* Brandon Crawford* Trevor Bauer* Tyson Brummett Jermaine Curtis* Charles Brewer* Gerrit Cole*
SCHOOL Nevada Nevada Nevada Nevada USC USC USC USC USC USC USC USC USC USC USC USC UC Irvine UCLA UCLA UCLA UCLA UCLA UCLA UCLA UCLA UCLA
YEARS 1992-93 1993 1994-97 1996-99 1994-97 1995-98 1995-98 1997-99 1998-99 1998-00 1999 1999 1999 2000-01 2000-03 2000-01 2002 2003-06 2006 2003-06 2006-08 2009-11 2006-07 2006-08 2007-09 2009-11
finish in the Pac-10. UCLA won 19 of 23 games midway through the 2007 season, marking the team’s most successful stretch since 1997, when UCLA last advanced to the College World Series. The Bruins’ road to the Super Regionals that season included 29 games against 11 teams that earned NCAA Tournament berths, including 14 contests against teams that advanced to Super Regionals. Backed by three masterful performances from its starting pitchers, UCLA swept the NCAA Long Beach Regional at Blair Field. Brummett came within one out of tossing a complete game in a 7-3 win over Pepperdine, before Murphy recorded the save. Gavin Brooks threw a complete game in a 3-1 victory over Illinois-Chicago, and Murphy went the distance in a 7-4, regional-clinching victory over host Long Beach State. Savage’s tutelage proved instrumental in the development of Brummett, an All-Pac-10 selection, and the emergence of Brooks and Murphy. By season’s end, UCLA landed five players on the All-Pac-10 team, the most selections by any Bruin baseball team since 2000. Freshman outfielder Gabe Cohen secured Co-Newcomer of the Year honors, and Decker earned his first of two All-Pac-10 team selections. The 2007 ballclub earned five consecutive Pac-10 series wins, as UCLA took two of three games against Washington, Arizona and California in addition to road sweeps of Stanford and USC. UCLA faced the second-most difficult schedule in the nation and the No. 1 most challenging non-conference slate, as rated by Boyd’s World. Savage engineered a quick turnaround in 2006, leading the Bruins to a 33-25 overall record and a berth in the NCAA Malibu Regional. UCLA finished third in the Pac-10 that season with a 13-10 conference record. The Bruins faced the toughest schedule in the nation, as rated by Boyd’s World, by playing 27 regular-season games against 10 teams that advanced to NCAA Regionals. The Bruins’ 2006 campaign marked the first year in which UCLA won each of its home Pac-10 series. In just his second year at UCLA, Savage guided the Bruins’ pitching staff to a 3.77 team ERA, the lowest mark by any UCLA ballclub since 1980 (3.55). With the addition of Huff and Brummett to the weekend rotation, the pitching staff recorded six complete games, tied with Stanford for the most in the Pac-10. Three players earned All-Pac-10 team honors, and three Bruins secured honorable mention All-Pac-10 accolades. Much of the college baseball world noticed UCLA’s success in 2006 and aimed their praise toward Savage. Following the 2006 campaign, Savage was named a finalist for the National Coach of the Year award by CollegeBaseballInsider.com, marking the second time he has been labeled a finalist for that award. In July 2006, Baseball America hailed Savage as one of “10 People to Watch in the Future.” The magazine listed the Bruins’ head coach with other distinguished baseball personnel such as New York Mets general manger Omar Minaya, Mets all-star third baseman David Wright and Los Angeles Dodgers assistant general manager Kim Ng. Baseball America lauded Savage for his winning ways: “UCLA has always been viewed as a sleeping giant on the West Coast, and it looks like Savage has the giant stirring.” Prior to taking over the UCLA baseball program in 2005, Savage’s coaching career made stops as a head coach at UC Irvine and as an assistant coach at Nevada and USC. Savage helped lead UC Irvine to the program’s first-ever NCAA Division I Tournament appearance in 2004. His ability to soundly recruit first-class studentathletes and to develop them into highly recognized Division I baseball players led UCLA Athletic Director Dan Guerrero to hire Savage on July 1, 2004, to replace the retired Gary Adams.
The Savage File MLB TEAM Chicago White Sox Los Angeles Angels Boston Red Sox Milwauke Brewers St. Louis Cardinals Houston Astros Cincinnati Reds Detroit Tigers Houston Astros Oakland Athletics Oakland Athletics Oakland Athletics Chicago Cubs Chicago Cubs Kansas City Royals St. Louis Cardinals Chicago White Sox Colorado Rockies Cleveland Indians Cleveland Indians San Francisco Giants Arizona Diamondbacks Philadelphia Phillies St. Louis Cardinals Arizona Diamondbacks Pittsburgh Pirates
* played in the majors in 2013, # 2002 American League Cy Young Award Winner
John Savage’s Head Coaching Milestones • Jan. 29, 2002: • June 4, 2004: • July 1, 2004: • Jan. 29, 2005: • May 10, 2005: • June 2, 2006: • June 19, 2010: • April 20, 2013: • May 19, 2013:
Coach Savage with sons Jack and Ryan, daughter Gabrielle and wife Lisa
first victory: UC Irvine 6, UCLA 4 first postseason appearance: vs. Arizona (Notre Dame Regional) hired as UCLA’s head baseball coach first victory at UCLA: UCLA 7, Cal Poly 4 100th career head coaching victory: UCLA 11, UC Irvine 1 first postseason game at UCLA: UCLA 3, UC Irvine 2 (Malibu Regional) first College World Series game at UCLA: UCLA 11, Florida 3 300th win at UCLA: UCLA 1, Oregon 0 400th career win: UCLA 5, USC 2
CAREER HIGHLIGHTS • Coached UCLA to its first NCAA Championship in program history (2013) • Named the Collegiate Baseball, Baseball America, ABCA and Perfect Game National Coach of the Year (2013) • Became one of 10 Pac-12 coaches all-time to lead their teams to back-to-back CWS appearances (2013) • Became first coach in UCLA history to lead the Bruins to two College World Series (2012) • Coached the first-ever Golden Spikes Award winner (Trevor Bauer, 2011) at UCLA • Produced the school’s first-ever No. 1 MLB Draft selection (Gerrit Cole, 2011) • Led UCLA to its first-ever appearance in the finals of the College World Series (2010) • Helped the Bruins garner their first-ever national seed in the NCAA Tournament (2010) • Guided UCLA’s 2010 program to its longest win streak to program start (22-0 record) • In 2010, UCLA hosted first NCAA Regional since 1986; first Super Regional host ever • Named National Coach of the Year by CollegeBaseballInsider.com at UCLA in 2010 • Helped UCLA produce the national strikeouts leader in 2010 (Trevor Bauer, 165) • In six seasons as UCLA’s head coach, has produced 18 All-Pac-10 Conference selections • Coached UCLA to three consecutive postseason berths for first time in school history • Led the Bruins to the 2007 NCAA Super Regionals at Cal State Fullerton • Tied UCLA’s program record with 12 selections in the 2006 MLB Draft • Finalist for National Coach of the Year by CollegeBaseballInsider.com (UCLA ’06, UCI ’04) • Helped guide UC Irvine to its first-ever NCAA Division I Regional appearance (2004) • Resurrected UC Irvine’s baseball program in 2002 after being hired in July of 2000 • Has coached four pitchers who became first-round selections in MLB Draft • Assisted U.S. National Team as pitching coach in the summer of 2000 • Served as USC’s pitching coach and recruiting coordinator from 1997-2000 • Landed nation’s top-ranked recruiting class at USC in 1999-2000 (Collegiate Baseball) • Earned Collegiate Baseball’s Assistant Coach of the Year honors in 1998 PLAYER HIGHLIGHTS • Sixth-round draft selection in 1983 by the New York Yankees as a senior at Reno HS • Chose to attend Santa Clara University, where he pitched for three seasons (1984-86) • 16th-round draft selection in 1986 by the Cincinnati Reds • Played three years of professional baseball (1986-88)
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COACHING STAFF Coincidentally, Guerrero also hired Savage at UC Irvine three years prior and asked him to re-launch a dormant Anteater baseball program. Savage spent his first season recruiting players and building the foundation for his program that began play in 2002. In their first season, the Anteaters compiled a 33-26 record, and the pitching staff set a school record with 487 strikeouts. Despite injuries to key players the following season, UC Irvine recorded 417 strikeouts and a 3.61 ERA (third in the Big West Conference). In 2004, Savage led UC Irvine to its first-ever appearance in the NCAA Division I baseball tournament. UC Irvine competed at the Notre Dame Regional and finished the year with a 34-23-1 mark. Savage’s pitching staff recorded 483 strikeouts, four shy of the school record, and compiled a 3.69 ERA (second in the Big West). The UC Irvine offense hit at a .288 clip, averaging 5.7 runs per game. That season, Savage coached a myriad of talented athletes, including the Big West Conference Freshman Pitcher of the Year, the Louisville Slugger/Collegiate Baseball Freshman of the Year and the only freshman in the nation to earn All-America first-team accolades from USA Today/Sports Weekly (Blair Erickson). Savage also led UC Irvine to its highest-ever national ranking at the time - a No. 7 spot from Collegiate Baseball in April 2004. Following Savage’s historic 2004 campaign, he was tabbed a finalist for National Coach of the Year honors by CollegeBaseballInsider.com. Three of his players were selected in the 2004 MLB Draft, and a total of 12 athletes signed professional contracts under his tutelage at UC Irvine. As a head coach, Savage compiled a perfect 4-0 mark against UCLA. His UC Irvine squads defeated the Bruins twice in 2002 and twice more in 2004. Prior to taking over the UC Irvine program, Savage served as the pitching coach and recruiting coordinator at the University of Southern California (USC) from 1996-2000. At USC, he helped produce numerous successful athletes, including consecutive Pac-10 Pitcher of the Year selections Seth Etherton, Rik Currier and eventual American League Cy Young Award winner Barry Zito. Ultimately, Savage helped guide Etherton to the 1998 Sporting News National Player of the Year award and was instrumental in his nomination as a Golden Spikes Award finalist. Also under his mentorship was former Chicago Cubs right-hander Mark Prior.
As recruiting coordinator, Savage helped facilitate the Trojans’ top-ranked recruiting class in 1999-2000, as ranked by Collegiate Baseball, and served as an assistant to Mike Gillespie for the USA Baseball National Team of collegiate all-stars in the summer of 2000. That summer, the U.S. National Team tallied a 27-3-1 record and brought home a gold medal from the Haarlem Baseball Week Tournament in the Netherlands. Two years prior, Savage earned Collegiate Baseball’s Assistant Coach of the Year honors in 1998 after his coaching talents helped USC capture the 1998 College World Series Championship. He also helped guide USC to an NCAA Regional title in 1999 and the NCAA Super Regional title at Georgia Tech in 2000. Savage served as an assistant coach at the University of Nevada from 1992-96, helping the Wolf Pack compile a 177-82 record in five seasons. During his tenure at Nevada, the baseball program won the 1994 Big West Conference title and strung together its first back-to-back 35-win seasons in school history. In five seasons as an assistant coach at Nevada, 24 Wolf Pack players signed professional contracts. Savage began his coaching career as the pitching coach for Reno (NV) High School during the 1988-1989 school year. Savage was a sixth-round draft selection of the New York Yankees in 1983, following his senior season at Reno High, but chose to attend Santa Clara University, where he pitched for three seasons. The Cincinnati Reds selected Savage in the 16th round of the 1986 MLB Draft. Savage played two seasons in the Reds’ organization before moving on to help the independent league Salt Lake City Trappers set a professional baseball record with 29 consecutive victories in 1987. Following his professional career, Savage earned his bachelor’s degree in secondary education, with an emphasis in physical education and history, from Nevada in 1991. Savage, 48, and his wife, Lisa, have four children: Julia (18), Jack (16), Ryan (14) and Gabrielle (12).
Savage’s Head Coaching Record vs. Opponents at UC Irvine Arizona Arizona State Baylor Bethune-Cookman BYU Cal Poly California Cal State Bakersfield Cal State Fullerton Cal State Northridge Creighton East Carolina Florida Florida State Fresno State Georgia Gonzaga Hawaii Illinois-Chicago Kent State Long Beach State Loyola Marymount LSU Maryland Miami Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Mississippi State Missouri N.C. State Nebraska Nevada New Mexico North Carolina Notre Dame Oklahoma Oral Roberts Oregon Oregon State Pacific Pepperdine Purdue Rice Sacramento State Saint Mary’s San Diego San Diego State Santa Clara South Carolina Southern Stanford Stony Brook TCU Texas A&M UC Davis UC Irvine UCLA UC Riverside UC Santa Barbara UNLV USC Utah Vanderbilt Virginia Washington Washington State Winthrop Wright State TOTALS
W-L-T 2-7-1 0-1 3-3 0-0 2-1 7-2 5-4 0-0 2-7 2-7 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 3-3 0-0 3-0 3-1 0-0 0-0 6-5 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-1 2-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-0 0-1 0-0 0-0 5-4 5-2 0-0 0-0 2-1 3-0 3-5 3-4 3-2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 -----4-0 4-5 6-3 4-1 2-4 0-0 1-0 0-0 2-6 2-2 0-0 0-0 88-84-1
at UCLA Arizona Arizona State Baylor Bethune Cookman BYU Cal Poly California Cal State Bakersfield Cal State Fullerton Cal State Northridge Creighton East Carolina Florida Florida State Fresno State Georgia Gonzaga Hawaii Illinois-Chicago Kent State Long Beach State Loyola Marymount LSU Maryland Miami Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Mississippi State Missouri N.C. State Nebraska Nevada New Mexico North Carolina Notre Dame Oklahoma Oral Roberts Oregon Oregon State Pacific Pepperdine Purdue Rice Sacramento State Saint Mary’s San Diego San Diego State Santa Clara South Carolina Southern Stanford Stony Brook TCU Texas A&M UC Davis UC Irvine UCLA UC Riverside UC Santa Barbara UNLV USC Utah Vanderbilt Virginia Washington Washington State Winthrop Wright State TOTALS
W-L 17-11 9-18 4-3 2-0 0-0 8-4 16-11 3-1 9-22 10-3 2-0 5-1 1-0 0-1 4-3 3-1 0-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 10-9 3-4 2-0 1-2 1-5 0-0 2-1 3-3 3-0 0-1 4-0 4-2 0-1 1-0 1-0 1-0 2-6 3-0 9-6 10-16 5-4 11-4 2-1 0-1 3-0 3-1 2-1 8-6 0-0 0-2 2-0 13-14 1-0 4-1 0-3 2-1 15-7 -----9-6 7-6 2-0 23-9 6-1 1-0 1-0 20-7 17-10 2-1 3-0 324-224
Overall Arizona Arizona State Baylor Bethune Cookman BYU Cal Poly California Cal State Bakersfield Cal State Fullerton Cal State Northridge Creighton East Carolina Florida Florida State Fresno State Georgia Gonzaga Hawaii Illinois-Chicago Kent State Long Beach State Loyola Marymount LSU Maryland Miami Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Mississippi State Missouri N.C. State Nebraska Nevada New Mexico North Carolina Notre Dame Oklahoma Oral Roberts Oregon Oregon State Pacific Pepperdine Purdue Rice Sacramento State Saint Mary’s San Diego San Diego State Santa Clara South Carolina Southern Stanford Stony Brook TCU Texas A&M UC Davis UC Irvine UCLA UC Riverside UC Santa Barbara UNLV USC Utah Vanderbilt Virginia Washington Washington State Winthrop Wright State TOTALS
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Savage’s Former Pitchers W-L-T 19-18-1 9-19 7-6 2-0 2-1 15-6 21-15 3-1 11-29 12-10 2-0 5-1 1-0 0-1 7-6 3-1 3-0 4-1 1-0 1-0 16-14 3-4 2-0 1-2 1-5 0-1 4-2 3-3 3-0 0-1 4-0 4-2 0-1 1-0 1-0 1-1 2-6 3-1 9-6 10-16 10-8 16-6 2-1 0-1 5-1 3-1 5-6 11-10 3-2 0-2 2-0 13-14 1-0 4-1 0-3 2-1 15-7 4-0 13-11 13-9 6-1 25-13 6-1 1-0 1-0 22-13 19-12 2-1 3-0 412-308-1
what they’re saying... GERRIT COLE – Pittsburgh Pirates 2011 MLB Draft (1st overall pick) “Coach Savage taught me how to become a complete pitcher. He not only improved my game on the field, but also made a huge impact for me working with the mental game away from the field. In my eyes, there isn’t a pitching coach better than him out there.”
TREVOR BAUER – Arizona Diamondbacks 2011 MLB Draft (1st round, No. 3 pick) “Coach Savage was instrumental in my development as a pitcher. He allowed me the freedom to learn through my experiences while providing the proper structure to lead me in the right direction. His knowledge created an environment very conducive to my growth as a player and person.”
DAVID HUFF – Cleveland Indians 2006 MLB Draft (1st round, supplemental) “Everyone that comes into UCLA’s program has talent and athleticism. Coach Savage takes that talent and shapes it into a quality professional ballplayer. He has been very instrumental in my success at the collegiate and professional levels.”
ROB RASMUSSEN – Florida Marlins 2010 MLB Draft (2nd round) “Every pitcher Coach Savage recruits has the ‘stuff’ to be great. He helps young pitchers sharpen their talent, allowing them to improve their game mentally and physically. Baseball is a grind, but he makes sure that you are forming good habits that prepare you to have a successful season.”
HECTOR AMBRIZ – Cleveland Indians 2006 MLB Draft (5th round) “After I missed the 2005 season with an arm injury, Coach Savage really helped me regain my confidence on the mound. He makes it a priority that his players not only succeed in college, but that they also have a chance to excel as professional ballplayers.”
COACHING STAFF
17
REX
PETERS
Assistant Coach (3rd season) Alma Mater: Cal State Fullerton ’89 Hitting/Outfield Coach
Rex Peters enters his third season as an assistant coach for the Bruins in 2014. Peters serves as the Bruins’ hitting and outfield coach and plays a central role in the program’s recruiting efforts. Peters helped lead the Bruins to their first NCAA Championship in program history in 2013. Under the guidance of Peters, UCLA’s hitters continually came up with timely hits in the postseason to help UCLA post a perfect 10-0 record en route to the title. Outfielder Eric Filia enjoyed the greatest success in the playoffs, batting .444 to lead the Bruins. In his first season with the Bruins in 2012, Peters coached UCLA’s hitters to a 41 point raise in batting average from the previous season and helped the Bruins earn a second straight Pac-12 title and College World Series berth. UCLA batters also recorded the fewest strikeouts and strikeouts per game since 1986 under Peters’ direction. In addition, outfielder Beau Amaral was named to the Division I Rawlings Gold Glove Team in 2012 under the guidance of Peters. Prior to coaching at UCLA, Peters spent nine years as the head coach of UC Davis. He guided UC Davis through multiple transitions as the program’s head coach from 2003-2011, helping the Aggies ascend from NCAA Division II status to Division I beginning in 2004. In addition, UC Davis joined the Big West Conference in 2008, earning its first-ever berth as a Division I program in the NCAA Tournament that spring. In nine seasons at the helm of the UC Davis baseball program, Peters helped produce 21 MLB draft selections. Most notably, third baseman Daniel Descalso was selected in the third round of the 2007 MLB draft by the St. Louis Cardinals and made his major league debut with the organization in 2010. In addition, seven UC Davis ballplayers earned ABCA or NCBWA All-Region honors during Peters’ nine-year tenure as head coach. UC Davis compiled a 35-24 record in 2008, winning its first of three games at the NCAA Stanford Regional. The Aggies registered three series sweeps that season and three victories against arearival Stanford. A school-record seven players were selected in the June 2008 MLB Draft. In his second season as head coach at UC Davis (2004), Peters helped the Aggies post a 37-151 record, including a 32-7 mark in the program’s final year with the California Collegiate Athletic Association. While no longer eligible for postseason play as part of its transition to Division I status, UC Davis finished atop the conference standings by better than a seven-game margin. Along the way, the Aggies enjoyed school-record streaks of 16 straight victories and 20 consecutive conference wins. In 2003, Peters guided the Aggies to a 36-24 record and their first NCAA Division II postseason berth since 1995. UC Davis swept through the West Region tournament, highlighted by back-to-back shutout victories, and advanced to the national tournament for only the second time in school history. For his part, Peters was honored as the ABCA/Diamond Sports West Region Coach of the Year. Peters arrived at UC Davis after spending the previous nine seasons as head coach at Chapman University (Orange, Calif.), where he compiled a 248-131-2 overall record. He led the Panthers to three appearances in the NCAA Division III College World Series, including a third-place finish in 2000. Peters set program records as a head coach for most wins and highest winning percentage, having led the Panthers to the NCAA West Regional five times. He was named West Region Coach of the Year on three occasions. Additionally, Peters coached six All-America selections, two Academic All-Americans, nine Academic All-District players and 29 All-Region honorees. Between his nine years at UC Davis and nine seasons at Chapman, Peters collected a 482-396-3 (.549) career record as a head coach. He secured his 400th career victory as a head coach on March 15, 2008, in UC Davis’ doubleheader sweep of Santa Clara. Prior to his 18 years as a head coach, Peters served one season as an assistant coach at Champman under head coach Gary Henderson. He spent the previous four years playing in the Los Angeles Dodgers organization after being drafted by the club in the 24th round of the 1989 MLB Draft. In the minors, he advanced as high as double-A San Antonio. In 1989, his first season in professional baseball, he was named the MVP for the Salem Dodgers. Peters graduated from Cal State Fullerton in 1989 with his bachelor’s degree in physical education. He was an honorable mention All-America selection for the Titans, helping lead them to a third-place finish at the 1988 College World Series. Peters earned his master’s degree in education with an emphasis in physical education from Azusa Pacific in 1994. Peters and his wife, Deborah, have six children and reside in Culver City, Calif., with his son, Jake.
The Peters File CAREER HIGHLIGHTS • Led UCLA to the program’s first NCAA Championship in 2013 • Helped UCLA earn a second straight Pac-12 title and College World Series berth in 2012 • Coached UCLA’s hitters to a 41 point raise in batting average in 2012 • Helped UC Davis transition to NCAA Division I status as the program’s head coach • Coached UC Davis to the NCAA Regional in 2008, its first year in the Big West • Had a program-record seven UC Davis players drafted in June 2008 • Guided UC Davis to a 37-15-1 record in 2004, his second season with the program • In 2003 (first season at UC Davis), led Aggies to first postseason since 1995 • Led UC Davis to the Division II national postseason tournament in 2003 • Through nine seasons as Chapman’s head coach, led team to three Div. III CWS trips • Set program records at Chapman for most coaching wins, highest win percentage • Was named West Region Coach of the Year at Chapman three years • Guided Chapman to five trips to the NCAA Div. III West Regional • Served one season as an assistant coach at Chapman (1993) PLAYER HIGHLIGHTS • Drafted by the Los Angeles Dodgers in 24th round of 1989 MLB Draft • Spent four seasons playing minor league baseball for the Los Angeles Dodgers • Played two seasons under head coach Augie Garrido at Cal State Fullerton (1988-89) • Transferred to Cal State Fullerton after playing two seasons at Orange Junior College
Peters’ Year-by-Year Assistant Coaching Record Year 2013 2012
School UCLA UCLA
Record 49-17 48-16
Pct. .742 .750
Postseason NCAA Champions College World Series
Peters’ Year-by-Year Head Coaching Record Year 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 Career
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School UC Davis UC Davis UC Davis UC Davis UC Davis UC Davis UC Davis UC Davis UC Davis Chapman Chapman Chapman Chapman Chapman Chapman Chapman Chapman Chapman 20 years
Record 18-36 26-29 13-42 35-24 24-32 18-34 27-29 37-15-1 36-24 29-12 37-11 33-12-1 39-5 29-13 31-16 24-16 16-20 10-25-1 579-428-3
Pct. .333 .473 .236 .593 .429 .346 .482 .708 .600 .707 .771 .728 .886 .690 .660 .600 .444 .292 .575
Postseason
NCAA Stanford Regional
NCAA Div. II CWS NCAA Div. III CWS NCAA West Region Finalist NCAA First Round NCAA Div. III CWS
1 title, 2 CWS, 2 Super Reg., 3 Reg.
2
T.J.
BRUCE
Assistant Coach (4th season) Alma Mater: Long Beach State ’04 Infield Coach, Third Base Coach T.J. Bruce enters his fourth season as an assistant coach with UCLA in 2014. A former player and assistant coach at Long Beach State, Bruce serves as the infield coach, leads the program’s recruiting efforts and assists with the hitters. Bruce coached UCLA’s defense to a school record .980 fielding percentage, which was good for sixth-best in the entire country. Additionally, Bruce helped coach the Bruins to their first NCAA championship in program history in 2013, helping the team to a 10-0 record in the postseason. In 2012, UCLA’s defense recorded a .976 for the second straight year, matching the second-highest mark in school history. Bruce also helped coach the Bruins to a second straight Pac-12 championship and a College World Series berth for the second time in three years. In eight seasons as a Division I assistant coach, Bruce has made six appearances in NCAA postseason play. As the Bruins’ recruiting coordinator, Bruce also helped bring in the heralded 2012 recruiting class, which was named the No. 2 class in the country by Baseball America. As UCLA’s infield coach in 2011, Bruce helped the Bruins’ defense post a .976 fielding percentage, the second-highest mark in the Pac-10 and 16th-best percentage in the nation. UCLA logged its second-highest fielding percentage (.976) and second-lowest errors total (51) on record in school history. Bruce’s work with UCLA’s infield proved most crucial with the development of shortstop Pat Valaika and second basemen Kevin Williams and Trevor Brown. Valaika, a freshman in 2011, secured the Bruins’ starting shortstop job just three weeks into the season, started all 27 Pac-10 games at that position, and became one of the infield’s greatest assets. Valaika followed up his solid freshman season with an even better sophomore campaign that saw him start 61 of UCLA’s 64 games and become the leader of the infield. As a junior, Valaika became the first UCLA player to ever win the Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Year award, posting a .978 fielding percentage while committing only six errors in 277 chances and leading the conference with 202 assists. Valaika was also named to the Division I Rawlings Gold Glove Team.
T.J. BRUCE
The Bruce File CAREER HIGHLIGHTS • Led UCLA to the program’s first NCAA Championship in 2013 • Helped UCLA earn a second straight Pac-12 title and College World Series berth in 2012 • Led UCLA to the Pac-10 Conference title and an No. 1 NCAA Regional seed in 2011 • Helped UCLA post a .976 fielding percentage, the second-highest mark in the Pac-10 • Coached three Long Beach State teams to No. 1 NCAA Regional seeds (’05, ’07, ’08) • Worked with eventual major league infielders Troy Tulowitzki, Evan Longoria and Danny Espinosa during his five seasons as assistant coach at Long Beach State • Helped Long Beach State capture the 2008 Big West Conference title • In 2005 and 2007, led Long Beach State to a second place finish in the Big West • Led Cerritos College to a postseason appearance and 27-17 record in 2006
Williams and Brown each made just one error at second base in 2011, splitting time at that position through the season’s final 40 games. In 2012, Brown became the most versatile member of the team, seeing time at first base, second base, third base and catcher while committing just four errors all season. Brown was then drafted in the 10th round of the 2012 MLB Draft by the San Francisco Giants. Williams spent the majority of the 2012 season at second base and under Bruce’s guidance became one of the team’s best fielders, posting a .977 fielding percentage. Prior to his arrival at UCLA, Bruce spent five seasons (2005, 2007-10) as an assistant coach at Long Beach State, helping lead the 49ers to NCAA Regional appearances in 2007 and 2008. He served as an undergraduate assistant coach at Long Beach State in 2005, guiding the 49ers to an NCAA Regional berth. Working with the infielders as an assistant coach at Long Beach State, Bruce helped the development of All-Big West Conference selections Troy Tulowitzki (2003-05), Evan Longoria (2005-06), Danny Espinosa (2007) and Devin Lohman (2010). Tulowitzki and Longoria have since enjoyed successful major league careers with the Colorado Rockies and Tampa Bay Rays, respectively.
PLAYER HIGHLIGHTS • Led Long Beach State to the 2004 NCAA Super Regional against Arizona • Played with current Colorado shortstop Troy Tulowitzski at Long Beach State (2004) • Batted .321 in 55 games (53 starts) as a junior at Texas Tech in 2003 • Twice named honorable mention All-Conference at Cerritos College (2001-02)
Bruce spent the 2006 season as an assistant coach at Cerritos College, helping the Falcons advance to the Southern California College playoffs. Cerritos finished the season with a 27-17 record, tied for second place in the competitive South Coast Conference. Two players from that team were selected in the 2006 MLB Draft. Bruce played for Long Beach State as a senior in 2004 after spending his first two seasons (2001-02) at Cerritos College and his junior year (2003) at Texas Tech. In 2004, he helped Long Beach State to an NCAA Super Regional. The 49ers fell one game short of advancing to the College World Series, dropping the best-of-three series to Arizona in a decisive third game that lasted 11 innings. That season, Bruce played alongside current Colorado Rockies shortstop Troy Tulowitzki.
Bruce’s Year-by-Year Assistant Coach Record Year 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 Career Div. I
At Texas Tech in 2003, Bruce batted at a .321 clip, playing in all 55 games (making 53 starts). He belted three home runs, collecting 11 doubles, 38 RBI and 44 runs during his junior campaign. Bruce earned honorable mention All-South Coast Conference acclaim in each of his two seasons at Cerritos College, leading the Falcons to the first round of the Southern California College playoffs both years. He batted .320 as a freshman in 2001 and finished his sophomore year batting .330 with 37 RBI and 28 stolen bases. A three-year baseball letterwinner at St. John Bosco High School, Bruce was twice named to the Long Beach Press-Telegram’s “Dream Team” as a standout shortstop. He earned All-League Most Valuable Player honors as a junior and senior at St. John Bosco, helping lead the Braves to the league championship his senior season. Bruce, 32, resides with his wife, Heather, and their daughters, Rhowan (born Oct. 2009) and Harloe (born June 2011), and son Jaxon (born Oct. 2013) in Lakewood, Calif.
School UCLA UCLA UCLA Long Beach State Long Beach State Long Beach State Long Beach State Cerritos College Long Beach State 9 years 8 years
Record 49-17 48-16 35-24 23-32 25-29 38-21 39-20 27-17 37-22 286-174 259-157
Pct. .742 .750 .593 .418 .463 .644 .661 .613 .627 .622 .623
Postseason NCAA Champions College World Series Los Angeles Regional Long Beach Regional Long Beach Regional So. Calif. College Playoffs Long Beach Regional 1 title, 2 CWS, 2 Super Reg., 6 Reg.
UCLA Baseball Program Staff
Derek Abramson Student Manager
Mariella Trombetta A.D., Academic Admissions Servies
Will Hughes
Student Manager
Kevin Chen
Academic Advisor
Kate Powers
Carl Stocklin
Adam Diaz
Student Manager
Staff Athletic Trainer
Student Athletic Trainer
Don Morrison
Sean Markus
Chris Romo
Faculty Athletic Representative
Equipment Room
28
Field Manager
Ken Ravizza
Sports Psychology
19
JAKE
S SILVERMAN AN AN
Assistant Coach (4th season) Alma Mater: Cal State Fullerton ’10 Catchers, First Base Coach
Jake Silverman begins his fourth season as an assistant coach for the Bruins in 2014. Silverman works with the team’s catchers, assists Coach Savage with the pitching staff, serves as the Bruins’ first base coach and helps run all Bruin baseball camps. In 2013, UCLA’s catchers handled a pitching staff that posted a team ERA of 2.55, which ranked second in the Pac-12 and sixth-best nationally. Silverman coached Shane Zeile to a great season behind the plate, as Zeile posted a .991 fielding percentage in 2013. Zeile was even better in the postseason, committing only one error and handling a pitching staff that allowed 14 runs in 10 games. Silverman also helped coached the Bruins to their first NCAA Championship in program history in 2013. Under the guidance of Silverman in 2012, UCLA’s catchers handled a pitching staff that finished second in the Pac-12 in ERA (3.13) and strikeouts (436). Catchers Tyler Heineman and Trevor Brown combined to throw out 19 of 33 base stealers (57.6 percent) in 64 games while Heineman earned All-Pac-12 honors. Both Heineman and Brown went on to be drafted in the 8th and 10th rounds respectively of the 2012 MLB Draft by the Houston Astros and San Francisco Giants respectively. In addition, Silverman helped coach the Bruins to their second consecutive Pac-12 title and a berth in the College World Series during the 2012 season. Silverman’s work with UCLA’s catchers also paid dividends in 2011, as the team’s catching corps handled a pitching staff that led the conference with 572 strikeouts, the second-highest total in UCLA history, and finished second in the nation in strikeouts per nine innings (9.8). Behind the plate, Steve Rodriguez threw out 22 of 54 attempted base stealers (40.7 percent), catching 410.1 innings in 2011. The three-year starting catcher was selected in the 15th round of the 2011 MLB Draft by the Arizona Diamondbacks. Silverman also worked with Heineman, who did not commit an error in 131 chances. In two seasons as an undergraduate assistant coach at Cal State Fullerton, Silverman helped the Titans advance to the College World Series in 2009 and to the NCAA Super Regional at UCLA in 2010. Additionally, he served as an assistant coach in the summer of 2010 for the Peninsula Oilers of the Alaska Collegiate Summer League. Silverman spent the 2008 season as a catcher at Cal State Fullerton and saw action in one game. Prior to that, he played two seasons (2006-07) at Fullerton College. As a freshman in 2006, he batted .350 in 16 games before seeing action in 14 games (two starts) as a sophomore in 2007. Silverman earned the Art Nunn Award in 2007 for exemplary acts on and off the field. Silverman, 27, prepped at Foothill High School in Tustin, Calif. He graduated with a bachelor’s degree in communications from Cal State Fullerton in 2010.
JAKE SILVERMAN
The Silverman File
Silverman’s Year-by-Year Assistant Coach Record
CAREER HIGHLIGHTS • Led UCLA to the program’s first NCAA Championship in 2013 • Helped UCLA earn a second straight Pac-12 title and College World Series berth in 2012 • Coached UCLA in 2011 to its first outright conference title since 1986 • Served as an undergraduate assistant for Cal State Fullerton in 2009 and 2010 • Helped lead Cal State Fullerton to the College World Series and Big West title in 2009 • Spent summer 2010 as an assistant coach for the Peninsula Oilers (Alaska League) • Played for Cal State Fullerton in 2008, leading the Titans to the NCAA Super Regionals • Two-year letterwinner at Fullerton College (2006-2007)
Year 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 Career
School UCLA UCLA UCLA Cal State Fullerton Cal State Fullerton 5 years
Record 49-17 48-16 35-24 46-18 47-16 225-91
Pct. .742 .750 .593 .719 .746 .712
Postseason NCAA Champions College World Series Los Angeles Regional Los Angeles Super Regional College World Series 1 title, 2 CWS, 3 Super Reg., 5 NCAA Reg.
With the Yankees, Moir was responsible for multiple projects in baseball operations, scouting and video breakdown. He assisted the team’s scouting department, wrote preliminary scouting reports, worked with coaches on player evaluations and compiled data and video to assist with the MLB Draft.
SETH
MOIR
In 2009 and 2010, Moir served in various capacities with the Spokane Indians, a class-A minor league affiliate of the Texas Rangers in the Northwest League. He served as the team’s Director of Stadium Operations through both seasons.
Director of Operations (3rd season) Alma Mater: Montana State ’08
Seth Moir enters his third season as the UCLA baseball program’s Director of Operations in 2014. Moir joined the staff in January 2012 and was an extensive part of UCLA’s 2013 NCAA Championship squad.
Moir, 29, graduated from Montana State in May 2008 with a bachelor’s degree in public relations.
Moir has gained extensive experience working in both baseball operations and scouting the past three years. He spent the 2011 baseball season serving an internship with the New York Yankees at the organization’s Spring Training facility in Tampa, Fla.
29
PLAYER PROFILES
26
DAVID
BERG
RHP • Junior • 6-0 • 194 • R/R Covina, Calif. (Bishop Amat HS)
Notes – Has made 101 appearances in two seasons at UCLA, already good for thirdmost in school history...owns the NCAA single-season record for saves with 24...tied the NCAA record for most appearances in a season with 51 in 2013...became the first reliever in conference history to win Pac-12 Pitcher of the Year and was UCLA’s first recipient of the NCBWA Stopper of the Year Award, given out to the nation’s top relief pitcher...is the only pitcher in UCLA history to lead the conference in ERA in back-toback seasons...enters his junior year at UCLA with a 12-3 record and a 1.18 ERA in 152 innings pitched (all in relief)...is UCLA’s all-time record holder for most postseason appearances (17) and saves (6)...also holds the school record for most career saves (25) and single-season saves (24)...has the second-lowest ERA in UCLA postseason history with a 0.98 mark. 2013 (summer) – Appeared in seven games for the USA Collegiate National Team, posting a 3-0 record...recorded a 2.89 ERA in 9.1 innings pitched...helped the U.S. to a 20-3 record, including a five-game sweep over Cuba...threw a combined two scoreless innings while striking out two in back-to-back games vs. Cuba on July 19 and 20. 2013 – Served as UCLA’s closer for the majority of the year, setting an NCAA singleseason record with 24 saves...also matched the NCAA single-season record for most appearances in a season with 51, increasing his own Pac-12 and school records in the process...became the first UCLA pitcher to lead the Pac-12 in ERA in back-to-back seasons, posting a 0.92 mark...his 0.92 ERA also ranks third on UCLA’s single-season ERA list...became the first reliever in conference history to be named Pac-12 Pitcher of the Year...was also the first UCLA pitcher ever to win the NCBWA Stopper of the Year Award, given out to the nation’s top relief pitcher...captured first-team All-America honors from Baseball America, the NCBWA and Collegiate Baseball as well as second-team All-America acclaim from Perfect Game USA...named to the All-Pac-12 Conference team for the second straight season...secured first-team ABCA All-West Region honors...was a semifinalist for the Golden Spikes Award...overall, posted a record of 7-0 in his 51 relief appearances, logging 24 saves and 78 strikeouts in 78 innings pitched...at one point, did not allow a run from March 30 to May 26, going 37 consecutive innings without giving up a run, the longest streak in the nation that season...finished second in the country in WHIP with a 0.85 mark...allowed the second-lowest opposing batting average (.198) and fewest runs (8) in the Pac-12...recorded a save in seven of UCLA’s final 11 games...helped lead the Bruins to a record of 41-0 when leading after seven innings...led the conference with a 0.75 ERA in Pac-12 games only...went 3-0 with 11 saves in 21 appearances in Pac-12 play, striking out 32 batters in 36 innings...struck out four batters in two innings of relief against Notre Dame on March 8, earning the win in UCLA’s 2-1 extra-inning victory...tied a career-high with four innings pitched on March 15 against Washington, March 30 at Arizona State and April 16 at UC Irvine, earning the wins in the Washington and UC Irvine games...earned Pac-12 Pitcher of the Week honors for the week of April 15-21 after picking up a win and two saves in 7.1 scoreless innings at UC Irvine and Oregon...broke Scott Griggs’ UCLA single-season saves record on May 19 at USC, tossing 1.1 scoreless innings in the Bruins’ 5-2 victory over the Trojans...pitched in all 10 postseason games, going 1-0 with six saves and a 1.93 ERA...broke Gabe Sollecito’s school record for most career saves at the NCAA Fullerton Super Regional on June 8, recording his 22nd career save in UCLA’s 3-0 win over Cal State Fullerton that sent them to the College World Series...recorded three saves in the College World Series, logging a 1.35 ERA in five appearances...recorded the final out in UCLA’s NCAA Championship clinching victory over Mississippi State on June 25, finishing a 3-1 putout at first from Pat Gallagher.
DAVID BERG All-Pac-12 Team honors...had a streak of 18 consecutive appearances (April 28-May 27), during which he went 1-1 with a 1.96 ERA in 23.0 innings, allowing just six runs (five earned) and 17 hits while logging 24 strikeouts and two walks...finished the season having pitched in 25 of UCLA’s final 26 games...tied the school record for most career postseason appearances, pitching in seven playoff games...totaled 13.2 scoreless innings in postseason action, allowing five hits while totaling 12 strikeouts and two walks...posted a 0.00 ERA in 24 appearances at night games, allowing one unearned run and 15 hits in 35.0 innings (28 strikeouts, seven walks)...recorded season-highs with seven strikeouts and 3.2 innings in a relief appearance against Oregon (April 6), allowing no runs and one hit...most critical outing of the season came in the second game of the NCAA Los Angeles Super Regional, logging the save while scattering two hits in three scoreless innings versus TCU to help UCLA clinch its fourth College World Series appearance...had four strikeouts in two scoreless innings in Game 1 against TCU at the NCAA Los Angeles Super Regional. High School – Two-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Bishop Amat High School under head coach Andy Nieto…helped lead Bishop Amat to the CIF Southern Section Division IV title at Dodger Stadium as a senior…captured first-team All-CIF Southern Section Division IV honors as a senior…earned first-team All-Del Rey League acclaim as a senior…went 7-1 with four saves and a 1.05 ERA, logging 59 strikeouts and five walks in 47.0 innings as a senior…limited the opposition to a .145 batting average and .212 on-base percentage as a senior…helped lead Bishop Amat to a 29-4 overall record in 2011…earned Bishop Amat team MVP honors, specializing as a sidearm right-hander out of the bullpen…had a very strong senior season as a middle reliever after having pitched just nine innings as a junior.
2012 (summer) – Recorded two saves in eight games pitched for the USA Collegiate National Team...finished the summer with a 3.72 ERA in 9.2 innings pitched...helped lead the U.S. Collegiate National Team to a third place finish at the Honkbal-Haarlem Baseball Week in Haarlem, The Netherlands, not allowing a run in 5.1 IP in the tournament... Named the No. 20 overall prospect from the U.S. Collegiate National Team by Baseball America. 2012 – Pitched in 50 games, all in relief...established the Pac-12 and UCLA record for single-season appearances (50), one shy of the NCAA Division I all-time single-season record (51, Connor Falkenbach of Florida in 2005)...led the Pac-12 with a 1.46 ERA and .165 opposing batting average...went 5-3 with one save, 63 strikeouts and 17 walks in 74.0 innings...named a second-team All-America selection by Perfect Game USA... earned first-team Freshman All-America honors from Baseball America and second-team Freshman All-America acclaim from the NCBWA...also earned Freshman All-America honors from Louisville Slugger/Collegiate Baseball...was one of two freshmen to secure
Personal – Full name: David Andrew Berg…born March 28, 1993 in Glendora, Calif… David is the younger of Andy and Kathlee Berg’s two children…has one older sister, Amanda…admires New York Yankees pitcher Mariano Rivera…Political Science major. Career Highs Innings - 4.0 (3 times), last at UC Irvine (4/16/13) Strikeouts - 7 vs. Oregon (4/6/12)
David Berg’s Career Stats YEAR 2012 (Fr.) 2013 (So.) TOTALS
ERA 1.46 0.92 1.18
W-L 5-3 7-0 12-3
APP 50 51 101
GS 0 0 0
CG 0 0 0
SHO/CBO 0/2 0/7 0/9
SV 1 24 25
IP 74.0 78.0 152.0
H 42 55 97
R 14 8 22
30
ER 12 8 20
BB 17 11 28
SO 63 78 141
2B 10 6 16
3B 0 0 0
HR 2 2 4
BF 282 300 582
OAV .165 .198 .182
WP 1 2 3
HBP 9 5 14
SFA 0 0 0
SHA 2 6 8
BK 0 1 1
PLAYER PROFILES
3
CHRISTOPH
BONO
OF • RS Sophomore • 6-1 • 173 • L/R Palo Alto, Calif. (Palo Alto HS)
Notes – Joined the UCLA baseball program in January 2012...also played for the UCLA football team as a quarterback in 2011...did not play in any football games in 2011 (redshirt)...strong defender who will look to emerge as a starting outfielder in 2014. 2013 (summer) – Played in 31 games for the Duluth Huskies of the Northwoods League...batted .211 with 23 runs, seven doubles, one triple, 13 RBI and four stolen bases in the regular season...hit .333 in three games in the Northwoods League Playoffs, recording a double, a home run and two RBI...recorded seven multi-run games and six multi-hit games...went 2-5 with two doubles, two RBI and a run in a 12-0 win over the Wisconsin Woodchucks on August 7...Duluth finished in second place in the North Division of the Northwoods League, earning a runner-up finish in the playoffs. 2013 – Played in 55 games, making 15 starts (14 in left field, one in right)...hit .216 with 10 runs, two doubles, two home runs and 10 RBI...slugged .324 while drawing nine walks and posting a .337 on-base percentage...honorable mention Pac-12 All-Academic selection...hit the game-winning walk-off single in the bottom of the 15th inning against Washington on March 16...followed that up with a 2-for-4 performance in game two of the doubleheader, hitting his first career home run in UCLA’s 5-0 win...had a career day on April 27 at Washington State, going 2-for-3 with two runs scored and three RBI, including a two-run home run in the fifth inning...played in all 10 of UCLA’s postseason games, scoring two runs in 12 at-bats while helping the Bruins to the NCAA Championship...made a terrific running catch in left field in UCLA’s 2-1 victory over North Carolina State on June 18, preventing what would’ve been the tying and go ahead runs to score in the bottom of the eighth...went 1-for-1 with a run scored in UCLA’s 8-0 win over Mississippi State in game two of the CWS Finals...entered the majority of games as a defensive replacement in the outfield and did not make an error all season, recording a perfect 1.000 fielding percentage. 2012 (summer) – Played for the Fontanetti A’s of the Far West League, earning allleague honorable mention accolades. 2012 – Redshirted the season. High School – Two-year varsity baseball and football letterwinner at Palo Alto High School under head coaches Erick Raich and Earl Hansen, respectively…as a senior, batted .312 with 20 RBI, 32 runs, 14 stolen bases and a .468 on-base percentage…earned first-team All-Santa Clara Valley Athletic League (SCVAL) acclaim…led Palo Alto to the CIF Central Coast Section Division I title in addition to the SCVAL championship…on the football field, completed 165 of 251 passes for 2,700 yards and 30 touchdowns…named the San Francisco Chronicle’s Peninsula Player of the Year…secured San Jose Mercury News Player of the Year acclaim...named the SCVAL Most Valuable Player…led Palo Alto to the CIF Division I State title…named first-team All-State at the quarterback position by MaxPreps.com after leading Palo Alto to a 14-0 overall record as a senior. Personal – Full name: Christoph Biagio Bono…born October 6, 1992 in Palo Alto, Calif… Christoph is the older of Steve and Christina Bono’s two children…has one younger sister, Sophia…father, Steve, played quarterback at UCLA from 1980-84 and baseball for the Bruins in 1982 (catcher) before enjoying a successful 15-year career in the NFL…both his parents attended UCLA…Economics major. Career Highs At-bats - 6 at UC Irvine (4/16/13) Runs - 3 (two times), last vs. Mississippi State (6/25/13) Hits - 3 (three times), last vs. Cal State Northridge (5/7/13) RBI - 3 at UC Santa Barbara (2/26/13) Doubles - 1 (three times), last vs. North Carolina State (6/18/13) Triples - 1 (two times), last vs. Washington (3/15/13) Stolen Bases - 3 vs. Wright State (3/1/13)
CHRISTOPH BONO
Christoph Bono’s Career Stats YEAR 2013 (R-Fr.) TOTALS
AVG .216 .216
GP-GS 55-15 55-15
AB 74 74
R 10 10
H 16 16
2B 2 2
3B 0 0
HR 2 2
RBI 10 10
TB 24 24
SLG .324 .324
BB 9 9
HBP 5 5
SO 27 27
GDP 1 1
OBP .337 .337
SF 1 1
SH 2 2
SB-ATT 2-4 2-4
PO 47 47
A 1 1
E 0 0
FLD 1.000 1.000
League, making four starts...logged 13 strikeouts in 23.2 innings for the Gems.
10
High School – Three-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Glendora High School (Glendora, Calif.) under head coach Dan Henley...logged a 2.32 ERA during his senior season in 2013, going 7-3 with 79 strikeouts…tossed 60.1 innings while holding opponents to a .207 batting average…drafted in the 31st round of the 2013 MLB Draft by the Houston Astros…competed in the San Gabriel Valley All-Star Game for the Blue team…posted a 3-2 record as a junior in 2012, pitching mostly out of the bullpen, and recording a 2.47 ERA in 28.1 innings pitched...held opponents to just a .256 batting average against him as a junior...went 5-2 with a 3.45 ERA in 11 starts, striking out 24 batters in 50.2 innings pitched as a sophomore in 2011...two-time All-League selection (2011 and 2013).
SCOTT
BURKE
RHP • Freshman • 6-3 • 185 • R/R Glendora, Calif. (Glendora HS)
Notes – Athletic right-hander with great command who enjoyed a great career at Glendora High School...has the ability to contribute in UCLA’s rotation right away in 2014.
2013 MLB Draft 31st Round Selection
2013 (summer) – Pitched in 12 games for the Klamath Falls Gems of the West Coast
Personal – Full name: Scott Michael Burke...born June 2, 1994 in Glendora, Calif... parents are Michael and Cathy Burke...has a sister, Stacey...admires St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Joe Kelly...undeclared major.
31
PLAYER PROFILES
24
BRIAN
CARROLL
OF • Senior • 5-10 • 178 • R/R San Diego, Calif. (Granite Hills HS)
Notes – Has great speed in both the field and on the basepaths...led the Pac-12 in 2013 with 32 stolen bases...great defender who will look to anchor the outfield in center field and continue to make big strides at the top of the lineup. 2013 – Started all 66 games in center field...honorable mention All-Pac-12 and Pac-12 All-Academic selection...spent the majority of the year serving as the Bruins’ leadoff hitter, batting .258 with three doubles, two triples, 20 RBI and a .380 on-base percentage...led the Pac-12 with 32 stolen bases in 40 attempts and 17 hit by pitches...32 stolen bases rank seventh on UCLA’s all-time single-season stolen base list and were the most by a UCLA player in a single season since Dave Roberts had 45 in 1994...also led the team in runs (50) and sacrifice bunts (14)...posted 12 multi-hit games...had back-to-back threehit games against Minnesota (Feb. 17) and Baylor (Feb. 22), scoring two runs against Minnesota and recording a RBI in each game...recorded a career-high three RBI at UC Santa Barbara on Feb. 26...stole a career-best three bases against Wright State on March 1...at one point in the season stole 11 consecutive bases without being caught and reached base in 24 consecutive games...had a career-high eight-game hitting streak from March 3 to March 17...hit .231 with a team-high 20 runs and 13 stolen bases in Pac-12 play...scored three runs at Arizona State on March 30, helping UCLA to a 12-10 extra-inning victory...played in all 10 games in the postseason, hitting .226 with a teamhigh 10 runs and three stolen bases...went 2-for-5 with two runs in game one of the NCAA Fullerton Super Regional at Cal State Fullerton...batted .250 in five College World Series games, scoring six runs and posting a .550 on-base percentage...went 1-for-2 with three runs in UCLA’s 8-0 NCAA Championship clinching win over Mississippi State on June 25...committed only one error in 151 chances in center field, logging a .993 fielding percentage. 2012 (summer) – Played for the Cowlitz Black Bears of the West Coast League, hitting .299 with 19 runs and 19 stolen bases in 31 games played. 2012 – Played in 23 games, making four starts (three as designated hitter, one in right field)...batted .235, going 4-for-17, with two doubles, seven runs and two RBI...posted a .381 on-base percentage...as one of UCLA’s most successful pinch-hitters, going 4-for-8 in pinch-hit duty...went 1-for-1 with a pinch-hit RBI-single against UC Riverside (March 6)... went 1-for-1 with a pinch-hit double at Arizona (April 14). 2011 (summer) – Played in 39 games for the Wisconsin Woodchucks…batted .207 with two doubles, 11 RBI and 22 runs…Wisconsin went 24-46, tied for seventh place in the league’s South Division. 2011 – Played in 15 games, making four starts (three as designated hitter, one in right field)…batted .167, going 3-for-18 with two RBI and two runs…registered his first collegiate hit as a pinch-hitter in a victory over San Jose State (Feb. 27)…went 1-for-1 in pinch-hit duty in a win against Saint Mary’s (March 12)…went 1-for-2 with one RBI against San Diego State (April 19)…drew a bases-loaded walk in a win at Pepperdine (May 3). High School – Two-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Granite Hills High School under head coach James Davis…did not play baseball as a senior (2010), recovering from a knee injury sustained playing football…earned first-team All-CIF Division I, All-Grossmont South League honors and All-East County acclaim as a junior…was voted All-East County’s “Most Improved Player”…voted his teammates and coaches as Granite Hills’ Most Valuable Player in 2009…led high school team in batting average (.429) and led the Grossmont League in stolen bases (25) and runs scored (40) during his junior campaign…also was
BRIAN CARROLL two-year varsity football letterwinner under head coach Randy Dewitt…secured first-team All-Grossmont South League accolades at defensive back as a junior (2008) and senior (2009)…was named a first-team All-East County selection at defensive back as a junior… recorded 103 tackles and had five interceptions in eight games during his junior season (returned one interception 104 yards for a touchdown)…earned East County “Rookie of the Year” honors as a junior and was voted the team’s most valuable player…as a senior, was named a first-team All-East County selection at defensive back…recorded 94 tackles in eight games…on offense, caught 14 passes for 206 yards and three touchdowns… played summer baseball for the San Diego Gamers in 2009. Personal – Full name: Brian Alton Carroll…born Dec. 31, 1991 in El Cajon, Calif…Brian is the older of Donald and Christine Carroll’s two sons…has one younger brother, Jeremy… Political Science major. Career Highs At-bats - 6 at UC Irvine (4/16/13) Runs - 3 (two times), last vs. Mississippi State (6/25/13) Hits - 3 (three times), last vs. Cal State Northridge (5/7/13) RBI - 3 at UC Santa Barbara (2/26/13) Doubles - 1 (three times), last vs. North Carolina State (6/18/13) Triples - 1 (two times), last vs. Washington (3/15/13) Stolen Bases - 3 vs. Wright State (3/1/13)
Brian Carroll’s Career Stats YEAR 2011 (Fr.) 2012 (So.) 2013 (Jr.) TOTALS
40
AVG .167 .235 .258 .251
GP-GS 15-4 23-4 66-66 104-74
AB 18 17 244 279
R 2 7 50 59
H 3 4 63 70
2B 0 2 3 5
3B 0 0 2 2
HR 0 0 0 0
RBI 2 4 20 24
TB 3 9 70 79
SLG .167 .353 .287 .283
BB 2 3 31 36
HBP 2 1 17 20
SO 8 5 38 51
GDP 0 0 6 6
OBP .318 .381 .380 .376
SF 0 0 0 0
SH 2 3 14 19
SB-ATT 1-1 1-3 32-40 34-44
PO 9 4 146 159
A 0 0 4 4
E 0 0 1 1
FLD 1.000 1.000 .993 .994
High School – Three-year varsity baseball letterwinner for Kennedy High School in Granada Hills, Calif. under head coaches Manny Alvarado and Andy Rodriguez…made 11 appearances (five starts) for Kennedy as a senior in 2013...went 6-1 with a 0.66 ERA in 64 innings pitched…struck out 68 batters while walking just 12…tossed six complete games as well…hit .444 in 45 at-bats in 2013, scoring 14 runs and recording 19 RBI…2013 first-team All-Valley Mission League selection...also earned 2013 Los Angeles All-City and Scholar Athlete honors.
MOISES
CEJA
RHP • Freshman • 6-0 • 168 • R/R Arleta, Calif. (Kennedy HS)
Notes – Athletic right-hander who had a strong senior season at Kennedy High School in Granada Hills, Calif...has the ability to come in right away and contribute out of the bullpen.
Personal – Full name: Moises Salvador Ceja...born August 17, 1995 in Sylmar, Calif... parents are Juan and Guadalupe Ceja...has two brothers, Juan and Nestor...admires former Major League pitcher Pedro Martinez...undeclared major.
32
PLAYER PROFILES
8
TRENT
CHATTERTON N
INF • Sophomore • 5-8 • 168 • R/R Garden Grove, Calif. (Pacifica HS)
Notes – Very versatile infielder that can play multiple positions...looks to play a much larger role in the Bruin infield in 2014 after seeing considerable time as a freshman in 2013. 2013 (summer) – Hit .200 with six runs, a double and seven RBI in 20 games for the Bellingham Bells of the West Coast League...went 2-4 with four RBI in a 10-3 win over the Cowlitz Black Bears on July 7...Bellingham finished in third place in the North Division of the WCL. 2013 – Played in 41 games, making 30 starts (25 at second base, five at designated hitter)...batted .257 with 18 runs, four doubles, 10 RBI...posted an on-base percentage of .358 and nine multi-hit games...in his second career game, went 2-for-3 with three runs against Minnesota on Feb. 16...followed that up with a 3-for-5 performance on Feb. 17 that included two runs and two RBI...had three-hit games at UC Santa Barbara on Feb. 26 and at Arizona State on March 30...scored a career-high four runs at Arizona State on March 30, helping UCLA to a 12-10 extra-inning victory...went 2-for-4 with two RBI and a run against Cal State Fullerton on April 2...made one pinch-hit appearance in the College World Series, appearing against North Carolina State on June 18.
TRENT CHATTERTON to the Empire League title...four-time All-Empire League selection (2009-12) and threetime All-CIF selection (2010-12)...three-year team captain (2010-12). Personal – Full name: Trent Steven Chatterton...born March 24, 1993 in Orange, Calif... parents are Tom and Dolly Chatterton...has an older sister, Devin, and a younger sister, Drew...admires New York Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter...intends to be a Communication Studies major.
High School – Four-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Pacifica High School (Garden Grove, Calif.) under head coach Mike Caira ... hit .363 with 24 runs, six doubles, two triples and 15 RBI as a senior (2012)...named to the Orange County All-Star Game and to the Los Angeles Times All-Star Team in 2012...led Pacifica to the 2012 CIF Division II Championship with a walk-off RBI single in the title game against Aliso Niguel...also led Pacifica to the the Empire League Championship in 2012 ... batted .430 with seven doubles, three triples, three home runs, 29 runs and 16 RBI as a junior (2011)...slugged .667 and posted a .513 on-base percentage as well...hit .408 with seven doubles, 18 runs and 26 RBI as a sophomore (2010)...posted a .372 batting average with 22 runs, five doubles, one triple, one home run and 17 RBI as a freshman (2009), leading Pacifica
Career Highs At-bats - 5 vs. Minnesota (2/17/13) Runs - 4 at Arizona State (3/30/13) Hits - 3 (3 times), last at Arizona State (3/30/13) RBI - 2 (4 times), last vs. Cal State Fullerton (4/2/13) Doubles - 1 (4 times), last vs. Cal State Fullerton (4/2/13) Stolen Bases - 1 (2 times), last vs. Oregon State (4/5/13)
Trent Chatterton’s Career Stats YEAR 2013 (Fr.) TOTALS
AVG .257 .257
GP-GS 41-30 41-30
32
AB 105 105
R 18 18
H 27 27
2B 4 4
3B 0 0
HR 0 0
RBI 10 10
TB 31 31
SLG .295 .295
HBP 5 5
SO 16 16
GDP 1 1
OBP .358 .358
SF 1 1
SH 2 2
SB-ATT 2-2 2-2
PO 39 39
A 64 64
E 5 5
FLD .954 .954
starts) as a senior in 2013, logging a 1.24 ERA and 54 strikeouts in 62 innings pitched… held opponents to a .208 batting average against him as a senior while tossing four complete games and walking only eight batters…2013 first-team All-Sea View League selection…2013 team MVP for Dana Hills HS…starting pitcher in the All-Sea View League All-Star Game…started six games for Dana Hills as a junior in 2012, going 2-3 with a 3.43 ERA and 28 strikeouts…recorded a 5.19 ERA in 10 appearances (four starts) as a sophomore, posting a 2-3 record with 17 strikeouts…competed for club team Renegades Baseball…led Renegades to the Connie Mack World Series Championship, USA Premier Championship and Gates Field Championship.
GRANT
DYER
RHP • Freshman • 6-1 • 183 • R/R Laguna Niguel, Calif. (Dana Hills HS)
Notes – Projectable right-handed pitcher who enjoyed a great four-year high school career at Dana Hills High School...has the ability to contribute from the bullpen as a freshman and has a bright future in UCLA’s program.
Personal – Full name: Grant Everett Dyer...born July 31, 1995 in Newport Beach, Calif... parents are Michael and Dianne Dyer...has an older brother, Garrett...admires former Major League pitcher Greg Maddux...undeclared major.
High School – Three-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Dana Hills High School (Dana Point, Calif.) under head coach Tom Faris...posted a 6-4 record in 12 appearances (11
30
BB 12 12
batter he faced in the top of the 15th inning...pitched a career-high 1.2 innings on May 7 vs. Cal State Northridge, now allowing a run.
JAKE
2012 – Redshirted the season.
EHRET
High School – Two-year varsity baseball letterwinner at San Dimas High School under head coach Mike Regan…selected in the 37th round of the 2011 MLB Draft by the Florida Marlins…went 4-1 with a 2.72 ERA and one save as a senior (2011), totaling 53 strikeouts and 12 walks in 56.2 innings…batted .360 with two home runs, 14 doubles, 22 RBI and 26 runs scored during his senior season…captured first-team All-Valle Vista League honors as a utility player during his senior season…helped lead San Dimas High School to the 2011 Valle Vista League championship.
RHP • RS Sophomore • 6-3 • 201 • R/R San Dimas, Calif. (San Dimas HS)
Notes – Projectable right-hander who can throw three pitches for strikes...saw his first collegiate action in 2013 and will play a larger role in the UCLA bullpen in 2014.
2011 MLB Draft 37th Round Selection
Personal – Full name: Jacob Ryan Ehret (pronounced AIR-et)…born March 18, 1993 in San Dimas, Calif…Jake is the youngest of Scott and Sandra Ehret’s three children…has one brother, Scott, and one sister, Krista…admires the late Mickey Mantle, a New York Yankees outfielder and Hall of Famer…Political Science major.
2013 (summer) – Appeared in six games for the Bellingham Bells of the West Coast League, making one start...posted a 1-3 record with seven strikeouts in 11.1 innings pitched...earned the win on July 14 vs. Cowlitz, tossing 3.2 innings without allowing an earned run and striking out two...Bellingham finished in third place in the North Division of the WCL.
Career Highs Innings - 1.2 vs. Cal State Northridge (5/7/13) Strikeouts - 1 vs. Washington (3/16/13)
2013 – Appeared in five games, all in relief...pitched 3.1 innings, logging a 16.20 ERA and one strikeout...earned the win against Washington on March 15, striking out the only Jake Ehret’s Career Stats YEAR 2013 (R-Fr.) TOTALS
ERA 16.20 16.20
W-L 1-0 1-0
APP 5 5
GS 0 0
CG 0 0
SHO/CBO 0/0 0/0
SV 0 0
IP 3.1 3.1
H 7 7
R 6 6
33
ER 6 6
BB 1 1
SO 1 1
2B 2 2
3B 0 0
HR 0 0
BF 19 19
OAV .438 .438
WP 0 0
HBP 1 1
SFA 0 0
SHA 1 1
BK 1 1
PLAYER PROFILES
4
ERIC
FILIA
OF • Junior • 6-0 • 175 • L/R Huntington Beach, Calif. (Edison HS)
Notes – Talented left-handed hitter who can hit with power to all fields and possesses above-average tools across the board...played in every game in 2013 and was the Bruins’ leading hitter in both the regular season and the postseason...will miss the entire 2014 season with an injury. 2013 (summer) – Played in five games for the Yarmouth-Dennis Red Sox of the prestigious Cape Cod League...recorded one hit in 15 at-bats as his summer was cut short due to a shoulder injury...Yarmouth-Dennis finished in fourth place in the East Division of the CCL, falling to the Chatham Anglers in the first round of the playoffs. 2013 – Played in all 66 games, making 63 starts (all in right field)...led the team in batting average (.281) and on-base percentage (.387)...tied for the team lead in hits (68) and doubles (14)...scored 42 runs and recorded 33 RBI while stealing nine bases... led the team with 20 multi-hit games (16 two-hit games, three three-hit games and one four-hit game)...went 3-for-6 with three RBI and three runs in the second game of the season against Minnesota...hit .236 with 18 runs and 14 RBI in Pac-12 play...scored two runs and posted three RBI against California on March 24, leading UCLA to a 10-2 win...enjoyed a 12-game hit streak from April 30 to May 19...at one point in the season, reached base in 21 consecutive games...hit .339 and slugged .400 during the final 32 games of the season...also posted an on-base percentage of .431 over the final 32 games...was UCLA’s leading hitter in the postseason, starting all 10 games and batting .444 with eight runs, 11 RBI and a .500 slugging percentage...went 5-for-13 in the NCAA Los Angeles Regional, knocking in two runs and scoring four more...was named to the NCAA Los Angeles Regional All-Tournament Team...went 4-for-5 with the game-winning RBI in the top of the 10th in UCLA’s 5-3 win over Cal State Fullerton in game one of the NCAA Fullerton Super Regional...batted .333 in five College World Series games, logging eight RBI...was responsible for both of UCLA’s runs in the CWS opener vs. LSU, hitting a sacrifice fly and reaching on an error to give UCLA a 2-1 win over the Tigers... scored two runs in the Bruins’ 4-1 win over North Carolina that sent UCLA to the CWS Finals...in the CWS Finals, went a combined 4-for-6 in the two games against Mississippi State, knocking in a combined seven runs...recorded five RBI in the NCAA Championship clinching game against the Bulldogs on June 25, the fourth-most RBI ever recorded in a single postseason game in UCLA history...was named to the All-CWS Team...did not commit an error in right field all year, posting a perfect 1.000 fielding percentage. 2012 (summer) – Led the Wisconsin Woodchucks of the Northwoods League with a .383 batting average and six home runs in 39 games...scored 32 runs and registered 37 RBI and 24 stolen bases as well...named to the Northwoods League Post-Season AllStar Team...named the No. 10 overall prospect from the Northwoods League by Baseball America. 2012 – Played in 20 games, making 14 starts (13 as designated hitter, one in left field)...batted .245 with one double, eight RBI and six runs...recorded a .355 on-base percentage and stole three bases in three attempts...recorded at least one hit in each of his first seven games, opening his collegiate career batting 10-for-24 (.417) with seven RBI in those contests...went 4-for-7 with one run in a doubleheader against Arizona State (March 18)...went 2-for-4 with two runs and two RBI in UCLA’s 16-0 win at Utah (March 30)...went 2-for-2 with one stolen base in the Bruins’ 6-2 win in the series finale at Arizona (April 15). 2011 (summer) – Played in 34 games for the Wenatchee Apple Sox of the West Coast Collegiate League…batted .294 with two home runs, 15 RBI and 15 runs…was selected to play in the league’s All-Star Game…Wenatchee went 39-15 overall, finishing in first place in the league’s East Division. High School – Four-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Edison High School under
ERIC FILIA head coach Steve Lambright…named Sunset League MVP as a junior (2010) and coMVP as a senior (2011) with teammate Christian Lopes…secured first-team All-CIF Southern Section Division I honors as a senior…captured first-team Orange County Register All-County accolades as a junior and senior…led Edison to three consecutive Sunset League titles (2009, 2010, 2011)…named team MVP as a freshman, junior and senior…concluded high school ranking seventh all-time in CIF history with 156 hits… batted .351 with 60 total bases, 33 hits and 27 runs as a senior…earned second-team All-CIF Southern Section Division I honors as a junior…batted .391 as a junior (2010), totaling seven home runs and 17 RBI with a .491 on-base percentage…first-team Orange County Register All-County, first-team Cal-Hi Sports All-State underclassman as a junior ... batted .354 as a sophomore (2009), collecting three home runs, eight doubles, 17 RBI and 23 runs…secured second-team All-Sunset League accolades and led Edison to the 2009 CIF Southern Section Division I title game as a sophomore…batted .500 as a freshman (2008), tying a school record held by Jeff Kent for single-season batting average…set single-season school records during his freshman year for most hits (53) and at-bats (106)...named Sunset League Rookie of the Year in 2008…batted .700 at the USA Baseball National Championship in 2008...named to the Team USA 16-U Trial Team…competed on the Babe Ruth gold medal-winning team at the Tournament of the Stars in Cary, N.C…named to Team USA’s National Team Trial squad in 2009 and 2010… played for the Milwaukee Brewers Blue Team at the 2010 Area Code Games in Long Beach, Calif…selected to the Angels Elite and New York Yankees scout teams in the fall of 2009 and 2010. Personal – Full name: Eric Robert Filia…born July 6, 1992 in Carlsbad, Calif…Eric is the son of Mike Filia and Kristin Snyder…has two younger brothers, Michael Filia and Marc Filia…admires former Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver Hines Ward…History major. Career Highs At-bats - 6 (two times), last at UC Irvine (4/16/13) Runs - 3 (four times), last vs. San Diego (6/2/13) Hits - 4 at Cal State Fullerton (6/7/13) RBI - 5 vs. Mississippi State (6/25/13) Doubles - 2 (two times), last at Washington State (4/27/13) Triples - 1 vs. California (3/24/13) Home Runs - 1 vs. Minnesota (2/16/13) Stolen Bases - 2 vs. Washington (3/15/13)
Eric Filia’s Career Stats YEAR 2012 (Fr.) 2013 (So.) TOTALS
AVG .245 .281 .275
48
GP-GS 20-14 66-63 86-77
AB 53 242 295
R 6 42 48
H 13 68 81
2B 1 14 15
3B 0 1 1
HR 0 1 1
RBI 8 33 41
TB 14 87 101
SLG .264 .360 .342
TUCKER
FORBES
RHP • RS Freshman • 6-9 • 220 • R/R Pebble Beach, Calif. (Stevenson School)
Notes – Tall, durable right-handed pitcher who redshirted in 2013...will look to make an impact out of the bullpen in 2014. 2013 (summer) – Pitched in 11 games, making one start, for the New Bedford Bay Sox of the New England Collegiate League...tossed 11.2 innings, posting a 1-1 record with 10 strikeouts...earned the win on July 16 vs. the Mystic Schooners by throwing a scoreless inning of relief...New Bedford finished sixth in the Eastern Division of the NECL. 2013 – Redshirted.
34
BB 7 32 39
HBP 2 11 13
SO 8 22 30
GDP 2 4 6
OBP .355 .387 .381
SF 0 2 2
SH 1 10 11
SB-ATT 3-3 9-16 12-19
PO 5 120 125
A 0 2 2
E 0 0 0
FLD 1.000 1.000 1.000
High School – Four-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Stevenson School (Pebble Beach, Calif.) under head coach Paul Wilcox...posted an 8-3 record with 71 strikeouts in 72 innings pitched as a senior in 2012...started the 2012 season 7-0 and recorded nine complete games, never throwing more than 100 pitches in any of them...also batted .444 and recorded 33 RBI and 40 hits as a senior at Stevenson...named the 2012 Monterey County Player of the Year...earned Mission Trail Athletic League Pitcher of the Year honors in 2012...three-time All-Mission Trail Athletic League selection (2010-12) and two-time All-County selection...went 4-4 with 73 strikeouts in 61 innings, posting three shutouts as a junior in 2011...posted a 5-2 record with 38 strikeouts during his sophomore year in 2010...went 4-1 with 34 strikeouts in 39 innings as a freshman in 2009...also earned three varsity letters in basketball and water polo...two-time All-League selection in basketball. Personal – Full name: James William Tucker Forbes...born July 28, 1993 in San Francisco, Calif...mother is Alex Forbes...has a sister, Maddie...admires Kevin Durant, Lance Armstrong, Michael Jordan and Roberto Clemente...undeclared major.
PLAYER PROFILES
27
PAT
GALLAGHER R
INF • Senior • 6-2 • 230 • L/R Reno, Nev. (Reno HS)
Notes – Can hit for power and to all fields from the left side of the plate...was named the Most Outstanding Player of the 2013 Los Angeles Regional...strong, durable player who is coming off a big postseason in 2013. 2013 – Played in 56 games, making 48 starts (all at first base)...hit .274 with 20 runs, seven doubles, one home run and 20 RBI...slugged .331 while posting an on-base percentage of .368...recorded 10 multi-hit games...matched a career-high with three RBI against Minnesota on Feb. 17...hit his first career home run vs. Wright State on March 3...batted .225 in 23 Pac-12 games with nine runs and five RBI...recorded a career-high four hits at Stanford on May 26...started all 10 games in the postseason, batting .351 with a .405 slugging percentage and seven RBI...earned Most Outstanding Player honors at the NCAA Los Angeles Regional after going 5-for-9 with four RBI...went 3-for-4 with two RBI and a run in UCLA’s 5-3 win over San Diego State in the opening game of the NCAA Los Angeles Regional...logged another two RBI in the Bruins’ 6-0 win over San Diego on June 2...went 2-for-4 with two RBI in game two of the NCAA Fullerton Super Regional at Cal State Fullerton on June 8...batted .250 in five College World Series games, recording hits in four of the five games...finished the season logging at least one hit in 10 of UCLA’s final 11 games...recorded a .991 fielding percentage at first base, committing only five errors in 554 chances...recorded the final out in UCLA’s NCAA Championship clinching game vs. Mississippi State on June 25, assisting on a 3-1 putout with David Berg. 2012 (summer) – Hit .192 with two homeruns, 12 RBI and 22 runs in 38 games for the Thunder Bay Border Cats of the Northwoods League. 2012 – Played in 14 games, making four starts (three at first base, one as designated hitter)...batted .100 with five RBI and three walks...went 1-for-2 with a career-high three RBI in UCLA’s 9-1 victory over Long Beach State (Feb. 28)...went 1-for-3 with two RBI in a 12-4 win against Cal State Northridge (April 17). 2011 (summer) – Played in 45 games for the Bellingham Bells of the West Coast Collegiate League…batted .213 with two home runs, three doubles, 15 RBI and five runs… Bellingham went 21-32, finishing third in the league’s East Division. 2011 – Played in 11 games, serving primarily as a pinch-hitter…batted .083, going 1-for12 with one RBI-double…went 1-for-1 with a pinch-hit RBI-double in his collegiate debut against San Francisco (Feb. 20). High School – Three-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Reno High School under head coach Pete Savage…named Nevada’s All-North 4A Player of the Year as a senior (2010), in addition to earning first-team honors…batted .505 with 18 home runs, 12 doubles, 56 RBI, and 46 runs in 97 at-bats as a senior…captured ABCA/Rawlings All-America acclaim and All-Region 8 honors as a senior…selected to the 2010 Baseball America High School
PAT GALLAGHER All-America team…earned first-team All-Northern High Desert League honors as a first baseman his junior year (2009)…batted .371 with nine home runs, eight doubles, 40 RBI and 25 runs in 105 at-bats as a junior… helped lead Reno to a 33-4 overall record in 2009, including a perfect 18-0 mark in High Desert League play…secured first-team All-State and All-Sierra League accolades as a sophomore (2008)…batted .345 with six home runs, 14 doubles, 46 RBI and 28 runs his sophomore season…helped lead Reno High School to the Northern Region Championship in 2008 and 2010…selected to Lasorda Elite Games and Colorado Rockies Scout Team in the fall of 2009…batted over .350 in each of four summer seasons playing for the Reno Knights…posted a career-high .513 batting average in the summer of 2010 on the Reno Knights summer team. Personal – Full name: Patrick Harry Gallagher…born September 4, 1991 in Reno, Nev… Pat is the younger of John and Lori Gallagher’s two sons…has one older brother, John… History major. Career Highs At-bats - 6 vs. Washington (3/15/13) Runs - 2 (two times), last vs. Minnesota (2/16/13) Hits - 4 at Stanford (5/26/13) RBI - 3 (two times), last vs. Minnesota (2/16/13) Doubles - 2 vs. Oregon State (4/5/13) Home Runs - 1 vs. Washington (3/16/13)
Pat Gallagher’s Career Stats YEAR 2011 (Fr.) 2012 (So.) 2013 (Jr.) TOTALS
AVG .083 .100 .274 .246
GP-GS 11-0 14-4 56-48 81-52
AB 12 20 175 207
R 0 0 20 20
H 1 2 48 51
2B 1 0 7 8
3B 0 0 0 0
HR 0 0 1 1
RBI 1 5 20 26
TB 2 2 58 62
SLG .167 .100 .331 .300
BB 0 3 20 23
HBP 0 0 7 7
SO 4 8 45 57
GDP 0 0 1 1
OBP .083 .208 .368 .338
SF 0 1 2 3
SH 0 0 7 7
SB-ATT 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-1
PO 0 29 516 545
A 0 4 33 37
E 0 0 5 5
FLD .000 1.000 .991 .991
2012 – Redshirted the season.
28
JUSTIN
HAZARD
INF/C • RS Sophomore • 6-2 • 187 • L/R Tustin, Calif. (Beckman HS)
Notes – Versatile infielder who can also play behind the plate...will add depth to both UCLA’s infield and catching corps in 2014. 2013 (summer) – Played in 22 games for the Duluth Huskies of the Northwoods League...hit .231 with six runs, three doubles and eight RBI...went 2-3 with a run and a RBI in a 15-6 win over the Wisconsin Woodchucks on July 31...posted a 1-3 game on July 26, scoring two runs and drawing two walks in an 11-7 win over the Thunder Bay Border Cats...Duluth finished in second place in the North Division of the Northwoods League, earning a runner-up finish in the playoffs. 2013 – Played in 14 games, making six starts (all at catcher)...batted .333 in 21 at-bats, recording two runs and a RBI...slugged .381 and logged an on-base percentage of .400... posted multi-hit games against Washington on March 16 and Cal State Northridge on May 7...had the game-winning RBI on May 5, hitting a walk-off sacrifice fly against Utah in the bottom of the ninth. 2012 (summer) – Hit .164 in 19 games for the Cowlitz Black Bears of the West Coast League.
High School – Four-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Beckman High School under head coach Kevin Lavalle...batted .402 with one home run, 15 doubles, 23 RBI and 33 hits as a senior (2011)...helped lead Beckman to the CIF Southern Section Division III championship as a senior...guided Beckman to the Pacific Coast League title during his senior campaign...finished his three-year baseball career with a .403 batting average, 10 home runs, 35 doubles and 89 RBI...earned first-team All-Pacific Coast League honors as a sophomore, junior and senior...secured first-team all-city honors as a senior and first-team All-CIF Division III accolades as a junior...captured the Pacific Coast League Sportsmanship Award as a senior...named Beckman’s offensive player of the year in 2010 and defensive player of the year in 2009...was invited to play in the 2011 Orange County All-Star High School Seniors game...batted .404 with seven home runs, 13 doubles, 39 RBI and 21 runs as a junior (2010)...was also a two-year varsity football letterwinner (quarterback) at Beckman High School. Personal – Full name: Justin Sarni Hazard...born Sept. 9, 1993 in Chicago, Illinois...Justin is the older of Jon and Shellyn Hazard’s two children...admires Minnesota Twins catcher Joe Mauer...intends to major in Business-Economics. Career Highs At-bats - 4 vs. Washington (3/16/13) Runs - 1 (two times), last at USC (5/19/13) Hits - 2 (two times), last vs. Cal State Northridge (5/7/13) RBI - 1 vs. Utah (5/5/13) Doubles - 1 vs. Washington (3/16/13)
Justin Hazard’s Career Stats YEAR 2013 (R-Fr.) TOTALS
AVG .333 .333
GP-GS 14-6 14-6
AB 21 21
R 2 2
H 7 7
2B 1 1
3B 0 0
HR 0 0
RBI 1 1
TB 8 8
SLG .381 .381
35
BB 3 3
HBP 0 0
SO 4 4
GDP 0 0
OBP .400 .400
SF 1 1
SH 1 1
SB-ATT 0-0 0-0
PO 46 46
A 5 5
E 0 0
FLD 1.000 1.000
PLAYER PROFILES
11
JAMES
KAPRIELIAN N
RHP • Sophomore • 6-4 • 200 • R/R Tustin, Calif. (Beckman HS)
Notes – Talented right-hander who had a strong freshman season out of the bullpen in 2013...looks to move into the rotation in 2014 and make an immediate impact as a starter.
2012 MLB Draft 40th Round Selection
2013 (summer) – Appeared in five games for the Yarmouth-Dennis Red Sox of the prestigious Cape Cod League, making three starts...logged a 1.80 ERA in 20 innings pitched, recording 28 strikeouts...competed in the Cape Cod League All-Star Game... started one game in the CCL playoffs, striking out nine batters in five innings in a nodecision...struck out seven batters in five innings in his first start against the Chatham Anglers on July 8, not allowing a run...Yarmouth-Dennis finished in fourth place in the East Division of the CCL, falling to Chatham in the first round of the playoffs. 2013 – Appeared in 34 games, all in relief...earned freshman All-America honors from Louisville Slugger/Collegiate Baseball and Perfect Game USA (second team)...posted a 1.55 ERA and two saves in 40.2 innings pitched...1.55 ERA ranks as the 10th-lowest single-season ERA in UCLA history...struck out 53 batters and allowed an opposing batting average of .141 as well...recorded saves at Baylor on Feb. 22 and 24, striking out a combined six batters in two innings pitched...posted a 1.65 ERA in 16 Pac-12 relief appearances, fanning 19 in 16.1 innings pitched...struck out a career-high five hitters at Arizona State on March 29 and at Cal State Fullerton on May 14...pitched 3.1 scoreless innings on May 7 vs. Cal State Northridge, striking out three...appeared in six games out of the bullpen in the postseason, giving up one run in 5.2 innings pitched while striking out seven...did not allow a hit in his six postseason appearances.
JAMES KAPRIELIAN ranked No. 75 on Baseball America’s top 500 2012 MLB Draft eligible player list...2012 USA Today and Louisville Slugger first-team All-American selection...2012 Beckman High School and Pacific Coast League Athlete of the Year...two-time All-CIF Division III and firstteam All-Orange County selection (2011-12)...named the CIF Southern Section Division III Player of the Year as a junior (2011)...went 11-1 with a 0.92 ERA, 80 strikeouts, four saves, nine complete games and five shutouts during his junior season...earned three victories in CIF Southern Section Division III playoff games as a junior, hurling shutouts in his first two playoff wins while leading Beckman to the 2011 CIF Division III Southern Section Championship...went 10-0 with a 1.70 ERA in 57.2 innings as a sophomore (2010)...named the Pacific Coast League Pitcher of the Year three times (2010-12)... also earned All-Pacific Coast League honors and Irvine News All-City honors three years in a row (2010-12), getting named the Irvine News All-City MVP in 2011...was also a threeyear letterwinner in football as a wide receiver, linebacker and safety under head coach Ken Mushinski...2012 All-CIF Division III selection...also earned All-Pacific Coast League and All-City honors in football in 2012.
2012 (summer) – Tallied 30 strikeouts, two saves and a 1.73 ERA in 11 games (4 starts) for the Wenatchee Applesox of the West Coast League...recorded 10 strikeouts and a 1.64 ERA in the playoffs, leading the Applesox to their third league title in four years and fifth overall...named the No. 3 overall prospect from the West Coast League by Baseball America. High School – Three-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Beckman High School (Irvine, Calif.) under head coach Kevin Lavelle...selected in the 40th round of the 2012 MLB Draft by the Seattle Mariners...posted a career record of 33-3 with a 0.96 ERA, 250 strikeouts and 23 complete games at Beckman...went 12-2 with a 0.84 ERA, striking out 112 batters in 83.1 innings pitched and recording 10 saves during his senior season...threw two no-hitters against Woodbridge High School and University High School as a senior...
Personal – Full name: James Douglas Kaprielian...born March 2, 1994 in Laguna Hills, Calif...parents are Douglas and Barbara Kaprielian...has a sister, Alison...admires former UCLA standout and Baseball Hall of Famer Jackie Robinson...undeclared major. Career Highs Innings - 3.2 at Cal State Fullerton (5/14/13) Strikeouts - 5 (two times), last at Cal State Fullerton (5/14/13)
James Kaprielian’s Career Stats YEAR 2013 (Fr.) TOTALS
ERA 1.55 1.55
25
W-L 0-0 0-0
APP 34 34
GS 0 0
CG 0 0
SHO/CBO 0/1 0/1
SV 2 2
IP 40.2 40.2
H 19 19
R 12 12
ER 7 7
BB 24 24
SO 53 53
2B 2 2
3B 2 2
HR 0 0
BF 169 169
OAV .141 .141
WP 10 10
HBP 5 5
SFA 0 0
SHA 5 5
BK 1 1
(March 10), going 2-for-4 with one double and one run...went 1-for-1, scoring one run after a key pinch-hit single in a ninth-inning rally at Oregon State (April 22)...went 1-for-2 with one RBI in UCLA’s 7-2 series-opening victory at California.
CHRIS
KECK
INF • Junior • 6-2 • 188 • L/R Pleasanton, Calif. (Amador Valley HS)
Notes – Has the ability to hit for power from the left-side of the plate and possesses a strong arm in the infield...will look to play a much larger role in the infield in 2014. 2013 (summer) – Played in 17 games for the La Crosse Loggers of the Northwoods League...batted .219 with nine runs, two doubles, one triple, three home runs and 14 RBI...posted a three RBI game on July 14 against the Wisconsin Woodchucks...went 2-4 with a run and three RBI in an 11-5 win over Alexandria Blue Anchors on August 7...La Crosse finished in second place in the South Division of the Northwoods League. 2013 – Played in 31 games, making 22 starts (11 at first base, 11 at designated hitter)...hit .186 with nine runs, three doubles, a triple, a home run and 10 RBI...drew 13 walks and slugged .300...recorded two RBI against Minnesota on Feb. 16, drawing two walks and scoring a run as well...went 2-for-4 with a run and a RBI against Washington on March 17...went 2-for-3 with a double, hist first career home run, a career-high four RBI and two runs vs. Arizona on May 12...made one pinch-hit appearance in the College World Series, appearing against North Carolina State on June 18. 2012 – Played in 28 games, making 10 starts as the designated hitter...batted .293, going 12-for-41, with three doubles, five RBI and three runs...drew 15 walks, compiling a .354 on-base percentage...was among the team’s most effective pinch-hitters, going 6-for-16 (.375) in that role...had a season-high two hits in UCLA’s 7-6 win at Georgia
High School – Three-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Amador Valley High School under head coach Lou Cesario...appeared in the Connie Mack World Series in 2009 and 2011...won the home run derby at the 2011 Connie Mack World Series...batted .462 with four homers, three triples, 26 RBI, 26 runs and 30 walks as a junior (2010)... secured East Bay Athletic League MVP honors as a junior, posting a .609 on-base percentage that year...earned “triple crown” honors in the East Bay Athletic League as a junior (batting average, home runs, RBI)...helped lead Amador Valley to its first-ever CIF North Coast Section title in 2010...played for the Milwaukee Brewers White Team at the 2010 Area Code Games in Long Beach, Calif....competed in the Connie Mack League for the Danville Hoots Baseball Club. Personal – Full name: Chris Charles Keck...born Sept. 2, 1992 in Castro Valley, Calif... Chris is the youngest of Paul and Cynthia Keck’s four children...has two older brothers, Paul and Willie, and one older sister, Candace...admires Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim outfielder Josh Hamilton...History major. Career Highs At-bats - 4 (seven times), last at Stanford (4/26/13) Runs - 2 vs. Arizona (5/12/13) Hits - 2 (three times), last vs. Arizona (5/12/13) RBI - 4 vs. Arizona (5/12/13) Doubles - 1 (six times), last at Stanford (5/26/13) Triples - 1 vs. Arizona (5/12/13) Home Runs - 1 vs. Arizona (5/12/13)
Chris Keck’s Career Stats YEAR 2012 (Fr.) 2013 (So.) TOTALS
AVG .293 .186 .225
GP-GS 28-10 31-22 59-32
AB 41 70 111
R 3 9 12
H 12 13 25
2B 3 3 6
3B 0 1 1
HR 0 1 1
RBI 5 10 15
TB 15 21 36
SLG .366 .300 .324
36
BB 4 13 17
HBP 1 0 1
SO 7 10 17
GDP 0 1 1
OBP .354 .306 .323
SF 2 2 4
SH 1 0 1
SB-ATT 0-0 0-0 0-0
PO 2 104 106
A 0 9 9
E 0 0 0
FLD 1.000 1.000 1.000
PLAYER PROFILES
16
NICK
KERN
RHP• RS Freshman • 5-11 • 186 • R/R Brea, Calif. (Brea Olinda HS)
Notes – Talented right-handed pitcher who redshirted in 2013...is expected to make a much bigger impact out of the bullpen in 2014. 2013 – Pitched in nine games for the Santa Barbara Foresters of the California League... struck out 18 batters in 10 innings pitched, posting a 0.50 WHIP...Santa Barbara earned a runner-up finish in the California League. 2013 – Redshirted.
7
High School – Three-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Brea Olinda High School (Brea, Calif.) under head coaches Mike Baker (2010) and Matt Sorenson (2011-12)...went 5-2 with a 1.22 ERA, 87 strikeouts and three saves in 74.2 innings pitched as a senior (2012)...held opponents to just a .177 batting average against him and led the Century League in strikeouts...also batted .349 with 14 RBI and 11 stolen bases as a senior... slugged .518 with a .486 on-base percentage in 2012...hit .314 with 16 runs and 12 RBI as a junior (2011)...posted a .526 slugging percentage and stole 12 bases in 13 attempts as a junior as well...pitched in seven games, striking out nine in seven innings pitched...logged a .342 batting average as a sophomore, scoring 13 runs and recording 10 RBI...three-year team captain (2010-12) and two-time All-Century League selection (2010, 2012)...two-time Brea Olinda MVP (2011-12). Personal – Full name: Nick Bryant Kern...born September 27, 1994 in Fullerton, Calif... parents are John and Katie Kern...has an older brother, Tyler, and a younger brother, Christopher...admires boxing legend Muhammad Ali...intends to be a physiological science major.
KEVIN
KRAMER
INF • Junior • 6-0 • 194 • L/R Turlock, Calif. (Turlock HS)
Notes – Started all 66 games in 2013...athletic, left- 2011 MLB Draft handed hitter who excelled at third base in both 2012 and 25th Round Selection 2013 and will be counted on once again to anchor the left side of the infield...above-average hitter who tied for the team lead in hits a year ago. 2013 (summer) – Batted .192 in 11 games for the Orleans Firebirds of the prestigious Cape Cod League...recorded four runs, two doubles and two RBI in 26 at-bats...Orleans finished second in the Eastern Division of the Cape Cod League, earning a runner-up finish in the Playoffs. 2013 – Started all 66 games at third base...honorable mention All-Pac-12 selection... finished second on the team with a .278 batting average...tied for the team lead in hits with 68...recorded 41 runs, 11 doubles, two triples, three home runs and 42 RBI...drew 30 walks, was hit by 14 pitches and slugged .376 while posting an on-base percentage of .382...led the team with 11 multi-RBI games...posted 17 multi-hit games...batted .286 in Pac-12 play, scoring 19 runs and logging four doubles, two home runs, 14 RBI and a .398 on-base percentage...went 6-for-11 with seven RBI in the opening series against Minnesota...recorded a three-hit game vs. Wright State on March 1, logging two RBI, two stolen bases and a run...went 1-for-2 with a double, a RBI and three runs vs. Wright State on March 3...scored three runs, hit his first career home run and recorded three RBI at Arizona State on March 30, helping UCLA to a 12-10 extra-inning victory over the Sun Devils...posted three straight two-hit games from April 23 to April 27...enjoyed a 13-game hitting streak from April 30 to May 19, recording eight multi-hit games during that stretch...at one point in the season, reached base in 21 straight games...had three RBI games vs. UC Irvine on April 30 and Arizona on May 12...posted a 3-for-5 day with a home run and three RBI vs. Arizona on May 12...went 3-for-5 with two runs and two RBI in UCLA’s 5-2 win at USC on May 19...started all 10 postseason games, hitting .200 with three runs and four RBI...recorded hits in six of the 10 postseason games...batted .250 in five College World Series games...went 2-for-2 with a run and a RBI in the NCAA Championship clinching win over Mississippi State on June 25. 2012 (summer) – Hit .339 with five homeruns and 21 RBI for the La Crosse Loggers of the Northwoods League...recorded a .529 batting average with four RBI and a stolen base in the playoffs, leading the Loggers to the Northwoods League title. 2012 – Played in 44 games, making 35 starts (29 at third base and four at second base)...batted .281 with five doubles, 13 RBI and 18 runs...hit at a .316 clip in Pac12 ballgames, going 12-for-38 with four runs and three RBI (16 games, 11 starts)...led the Bruins with a .385 batting average in all eight postseason games, going 10-for-26 with three doubles, three runs and five RBI...posted a .429 on-base percentage in the postseason...was UCLA’s leading hitter at the College World Series, batting .375 (3-for-8) with one double, two runs, one RBI and two walks...opened the season as a candidate for the starting position at second base but emerged midway through the year as UCLA’s everyday starting third baseman...batted .170 through UCLA’s first 36 games, before closing the season with a team-high .351 batting average (26-for-74, 13 runs) in UCLA’s final 28 contests...had a key two-run double in UCLA’s 6-3 win at Cal State Fullerton (May 15)...had a season-high three hits in the Bruins’ 4-2 win at Washington to sweep a threegame Pac-12 series (May 13), going 3-for-3 with one run...went 5-for-11 (.455) with one double, one RBI and two runs in three NCAA Regional contests...went 2-for-2 with two walks, one double, two runs and one RBI in UCLA’s 9-1 win over Stony Brook in the opening game of the College World Series (June 15). High School – Three-year varsity baseball and football letterwinner at Turlock High School under head coaches Mark DelaMotte and James Paterson, respectively…selected in the 25th round of the 2011 MLB Draft by the Cleveland Indians…batted .350 with two homers, six doubles, 30 RBI and 39 runs as a senior (2011)…was a three-time first-team
KEVIN KRAMER All-Central California League selection (2009, 2010, 2011)…batted .460 with seven home runs, five triples, 11 doubles, 30 RBI and 47 runs as a junior (2010)…named the Stanislaus District’s Athlete of the Year in 2010-11…led Turlock to the CIF Sac-Joaquin Section title game in 2010, collecting three home runs in the playoffs…played for the Milwaukee Brewers White Team at the 2010 Area Code Games in Long Beach, Calif…. helped lead the USA Baseball U-16 Team to the gold medal in Taiwan during the summer of 2009…served as starting quarterback for Turlock’s football team in 2009 and 2010… earned Central California League MVP honors as a quarterback during his senior season (2010)…passed for 1,037 yards and 15 TDs and rushed for 1,119 yards and 16 TDs as a senior…led Turlock to an 8-3 record and CIF Sac-Joaquin playoff berth in 2010 after going 0-10 in 2009…twice secured first-team All-Central California League honors on the football field, including district offensive MVP one season. Personal – Full name: Kevin Lowell Kramer…born Oct. 3, 1993 in Turlock, Calif…Kevin is the youngest of Glenn and Maureen Kramer’s three sons…has two older brothers, Michael and Steven…admires Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim outfielder Josh Hamilton and New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady…History major. Career Highs At-bats - 5 (10 times), last at USC (5/19/13) Runs - 3 (three times), last vs. Arizona (5/12/13) Hits - 3 (five times), last at USC (5/19/13) RBI - 3 (six times), last at USC (5/19/13) Doubles - 1 (16 times), last at Stanford (5/25/13) Triples - 1 (two times), last vs. UC Irvine (4/30/13) Home Runs - 1 (three times), last vs. Arizona (5/12/13) Stolen Bases - 2 vs. Wright State (3/1/13)
Kevin Kramer’s Career Stats YEAR 2012 (Fr.) 2013 (So.) TOTALS
AVG .281 .278 .279
GP-GS 44-35 66-66 110-101
AB 121 245 366
R 18 41 59
H 34 68 102
2B 5 11 16
3B 0 2 2
HR 0 3 3
RBI 13 42 55
TB 39 92 131
SLG .322 .376 .358
37
BB 7 30 37
HBP 6 14 20
SO 19 47 66
GDP 3 2 5
OBP .351 .382 .372
SF 0 4 4
SH 6 12 18
SB-ATT 1-2 9-18 10-20
PO A 39 67 52 129 91 196
E 9 9 18
FLD .922 .953 .941
PLAYER PROFILES
31
the 34th round of the 2012 MLB Draft by the Philadelphia Phillies...hit .385 during his senior season at Servite...batted .500 with two home runs, four triples, five doubles and 17 RBI during his junior season (2011)...listed by the Los Angeles Times as one of the area’s top juniors heading into the 2011 season...played at the 2011 Area Code Games for the Milwaukee Brewers Area Code Team at Blair Field in Long Beach, Calif... competed for the RBI All-Stars at the USA Baseball Tournament of Stars (June 2011) at the National Training Complex in Cary, N.C...hit .325 during his sophomore season at Servite in 2010...three-time All-Trinity League selection (2010-12)...was a two-time All-CIF Southern Section selection and was named a 2012 Rawlings All-American.
DARRELL
MILLER JR.
C • Sophomore • 6-2 • 221 • R/R Yorba Linda, Calif. (Servite HS)
Notes – Strong, right-handed hitter who will add depth to UCLA’s catching corps in 2014...expected to play a larger role in 2014 after seeing some action as a freshman in 2013.
2012 MLB Draft 34th Round Selection
2013 (summer) – Played in five games for the Lakeshore Chinooks of the Northwoods League...scored two runs in 15 at-bats for the club...Lakeshore finished in first place in the South Division of the Northwoods League, falling to the Madison Mallards in the first round of the playoffs. 2013 – Played in 10 games, making six starts (three at catcher, three at designated hitter)...hit .143 with a run a double and three RBI...drew two walks and posted a .235 on-base percentage...went 1-for-3 with two RBI against Minnesota on Feb. 16...posted a 1-for-2 game with a run, a RBI and a double vs. Minnesota on Feb. 17. High School – Four-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Servite High School (Anaheim, Calif.) under head coaches Dave Lawn (previous) and Jeff Sears (current)...selected in
Personal – Full name: Darrell Keith Miller Jr...born September 29, 1993 in Fullerton, Calif...parents are Darrell and Kelly Miller...father, Darrell Miller Sr., runs the MLB Urban Youth Academy in Compton, Calif. and played five seasons in the Major Leagues with the California Angels (1984-1988) as a catcher and outfielder...uncle is Reggie Miller, who played basketball at UCLA for four seasons (1984-87) before enjoying an 18-year Hall of Fame career in the NBA with the Indiana Pacers...aunt is Cheryl Miller, who starred on the women’s basketball team at the USC (1983-86) and played professional basketball...has a younger sister, Nicole, and a younger brother, Cameron...admires Major League catcher Mike Napoli...undeclared major. Career Highs At-bats - 3 vs. Minnesota (2/16/13) Runs - 1 vs. Minnesota (2/17/13) Hits - 1 (two times), last vs. Minnesota (2/17/13) RBI - 2 vs. vs. Minnesota (2/16/13) Doubles - 1 vs. Minnesota (2/17/13)
Darrell Miller Jr.’s Career Stats YEAR 2013 (Fr.) TOTALS
20
AVG .143 .143
GP-GS 10-6 10-6
AB 14 14
R 1 1
H 2 2
2B 1 1
3B 0 0
HR 0 0
RBI 3 3
TB 3 3
SLG .214 .214
DOMINIC
MIROGLIO O
C • Freshman • 6-0 • 195 • R/R Oakland, Calif. (Bishop O’Dowd HS)
Notes – Enjoyed an outstanding four-year career at Bishop MLB Draft O’Dowd High School...former two-sport athlete in high 2013 40th Round Selection school who will push for playing time in 2014. 2013 (summer) – Batted .264 in 32 games for the Walla Walla Sweets of the West Coast League…logged 11 runs, four doubles, 13 RBI and one stolen base for Walla Walla. High School – Three-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Bishop O’Dowd High School (Oakland, Calif.) under head coach Chris Kyriacou...drafted in the 40th round of the 2013
29
TY
MOORE
OF • Sophomore • 6-0 • 190 • L/R Mission Viejo, Calif. (Mater Dei HS)
Notes – Will push for a starting job in 2014 after seeing time as a part-time player in 2013...athletic left-handed hitter who can hit to all fields.
2012 MLB Draft 25th Round Selection
2013 (summer) – Played in 20 games for the Newport Gulls of the New England Collegiate League...batted .203 with six runs, four RBI and four stolen bases...hit .333 in the NECL Playoffs, posting a RBI and a stolen base...went 2-4 with two RBI in a 6-3 win over the Keene Swamp Bats on July 22...had a seven-game hitting streak from July 1217...Newport finished in first place in the Eastern Division of the NECL, earning a runnerup finish in the NECL Playoffs. 2013 – Played in 28 games, making 19 starts (17 in left field, one in right field, one at designated hitter)...batted .219 with 10 runs, four doubles, a triple and 10 RBI...went 3-for-6 with two doubles, two runs and two RBI against Minnesota on Feb. 16...scored three runs in a 2-for-3 performance at UC Santa Barbara on Feb. 26, logging two RBI as well...went 1-for-2 with a career-best three RBI vs. Wright State on March 3...posted a multi-hit game vs. Arizona on May 12, going 2-for-4 with a RBI...made one pinch-hit appearance in the College World Series, getting a critical single to lead off the eighth inning vs. LSU on June 16, which led to the winning run in that inning. 2012 (summer) – Hit .309 with 36 runs and 20 RBI for the Wenatchee Applesox of the West Coast League...recorded a .316 batting average with six runs and five stolen bases in the playoffs, leading the Applesox to their fifth West Coast League title...selected to the West Coast League All-Star Game.
BB 2 2
HBP 0 0
SO 5 5
GDP 1 1
OBP .235 .235
SF 1 1
SH 0 0
SB-ATT 0-0 0-0
PO 18 18
A 6 6
E 1 1
FLD .960 .960
MLB Draft by the Oakland A’s…batted .421 during his senior year at Bishop O’Dowd, scoring 25 runs and recording 13 RBI and a .521 on-base percentage…served as Bishop O’Dowd’s team captain in 2013…2013 Louisville Slugger and Rawlings/Perfect Game Pre-Season All-American…competed at the 2012 Area Code Games at Blair Field in Long Beach, Calif...hit .600 with two doubles and four RBI for the Oakland A’s at the 2012 Area Code Games...2012 Bay Area World Series Most Outstanding Player...ranked No. 281 on Perfect Game USA’s list of Top 500 2013 High School Prospects...batted .375 as a junior at Bishop O’Dowd (2011) with 13 runs, 12 RBI and a .444 OBP...2012 All-Northern California CBCA selection...hit .256 as a sophomore, recording 13 RBI and 10 runs... named to the North Coast Section CIF Scholastic Championship Baseball Team in 2010 and 2011...three-time All-HAAL selection (2010-12)...also played quarterback at Bishop O’Dowd for three years under head coach Hardy Nickerson, leading the team to the NCS Semifinals in 2010 and 2011...was named the 2011 Hayward Area Athletic League Offensive Player of the Year and competed at the Elite 11 Quarterback Competition in 2011…played for club team EJ Sports Warriors as well. Personal – Full name: Dominic Okun Miroglio...born March 10, 1995 in Oakland, Calif... parents are Joel and Naomi Miroglio...has an older sister, Gabriella, and a younger sister, Elena...admires St. Louis Cardinals catcher Yadier Molina...undeclared major. High School – Four-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Mater Dei High School (Santa Ana, Calif.) under head coach Burt Call...selected in the 25th round of the 2012 MLB Draft by the New York Yankees...named the Gatorade California State Player of the Year and earned USA Today All-America honors in 2012 after hitting .406 with 23 RBI and 10 stolen bases...also pitched for the Monarchs, going 12-2 with a 0.83 ERA and 71 strikeouts in 67.1 innings pitched during his senior season...Two-time Orange County Player of the Year by the Orange County Register...earned first-team All-CIF Southern Section Division I honors as a junior and senior and second-team honors as a sophomore... Louisville Slugger National All-American selection and Trinity League MVP during his junior and senior seasons...batted .510 with three home runs, 13 doubles, 37 RBI, 39 runs and a school-record 51 hits in 30 games as a junior...logged a .581 on-base percentage and a .750 slugging percentage as a junior...also excelled on the mound, going 10-2 with a 3.16 ERA, 55 strikeouts and five complete games in 75.1 innings as a junior...guided Mater Dei to 24-6 overall record, including a 13-2 league mark to win the Trinity League title, as a junior in 2011...batted .413 with one home run, nine doubles 21 RBI and 18 runs in 30 games as a sophomore, leading Mater Dei to the CIF Championship...as a pitcher, went 1-1 with four saves and a 2.29 ERA in 36.2 innings, logging 28 strikeouts and 11 walks...named most valuable player in leading his travel team, Team Marucci, to the championship of the Perfect Game WWBA Tournament in Jupiter, Fla., in Oct. 2011... selected to USA Baseball’s 18U National Team Trials Roster in June 2011. Personal – Full name: Ty Richard Moore...born July 26, 1993 in Irvine, Calif...parents are Roger and Tammara Moore...father, Roger, played college baseball at Cal State Dominguez Hills...has an older brother, Chance...admires New York Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter...intends to be a Political Science major. Career Highs At-bats - 6 vs. Minnesota (2/16/13) Runs - 3 at UC Santa Barbara (2/26/13) Hits - 3 vs. Minnesota (2/16/13) RBI - 3 vs. Wright State (3/1/13) Doubles - 2 vs. Minnesota (2/16/13) Triples - 1 vs. Wright State (3/1/13)
Ty Moore’s Career Stats YEAR 2013 (Fr.) TOTALS
AVG .219 .219
GP-GS 28-19 28-19
AB 73 73
R 10 10
H 16 16
2B 4 4
3B 1 1
HR 0 0
RBI 10 10
TB 22 22
SLG .301 .301
38
BB 7 7
HBP 2 2
SO 20 20
GDP 3 3
OBP .301 .301
SF 1 1
SH 0 0
SB-ATT 0-1 0-1
PO 39 39
A 0 0
E 1 1
FLD .975 .975
PLAYER PROFILES
21
Jim Ozella before transferring to Great Oak High School in the fall of 2012...ranked No. 125 on Perfect Game USA’s list of Top 500 2013 High School Prospects...drafted in the 37th round of the 2013 MLB Draft by the Colorado Rockies...2013 California Rawlings First-Team All- American...competed for the Milwaukee Brewers at the 2012 Area Code Games at Blair Field in Long Beach, Calif...hit .267 with three home runs, 22 runs, 18 stolen bases and 12 RBI as a junior at Hart High School in the spring of 2012...batted .395 with a .448 OBP, 21 runs, 12 stolen bases, 17 RBI and five doubles as a sophomore (2010)...started all 27 games as a freshman in 2009, posting a .278 batting average with 17 runs and 14 RBI...two-time All-Foothill League selection.
LUKE
PERSICO
INF • Freshman • 6-3 • 173 • R/R Stevenson Ranch, Calif. (Great Oak HS)
Notes – Strong, athletic infielder who is expected to push for immediate playing time as a freshman.
2013 MLB Draft 37th Round Selection
2013 (summer) – Hit .213 with 10 runs, six doubles, one triple, nine RBI and five stolen bases in 29 games for the Walla Walla Sweets of the West Coast League
Personal – Full name: Luke Giancarlo Persico...born October 4, 1995 in Tarzana, Calif... parents are Saverio Persico and Gwenn Fincher...admires New York Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter...intends to major in political science.
High School– Earned three letters in baseball at Hart High School under head coach
18
KORT
PETERSON
OF • Freshman • 6-1 • 195 • L/R Mountain View, Calif. (St. Francis HS)
Notes – Tall, strong left-handerd hitter who enjoyed a great four-year career at St. Francis High School in Mountain View, Calif...will add depth to UCLA’s outfield in 2014 while looking to earn playing time right away. High School– Three-year varsity baseball letterwinner at St. Francis High School (Mountain View, Calif.) under head coach Mike Oakland...ranked No. 70 on Perfect Game USA’s list of Top 500 2013 High School Prospects and No. 155 Perfect Game USA’s list of the top 300 prospects eligible for the 2013 MLB Draft...also ranked as the third-best outfielder from the state of California by Perfect Game USA...as a senior at St. Francis, hit .367 with 42 runs scored, five home runs, 22 RBI and 15 stolen bases…also recorded three doubles, two triples and a .570 OBP…2013 first-team All-West Catholic League
41
selection…second-team Rawlings All-American…first-team All-State selection in 2013 … led St. Francis to the CIF Central Coast title in 2013…competed for the Oakland A’s at the 2012 Area Code Games in Long Beach, Calif...participated in the 2012 Perfect Game National Showcase in Minneapolis, Minn...also competed in the 2012 USA Baseball Tournament of Stars in Cary, N.C., playing for the American Legion team...batted .382 with 32 RBI, five home runs, 17 RBI and a .458 OBP as a junior in 2012...did not commit an error in the outfield in 2012 or 2013, posting a perfect 1.000 fielding percentage...2012 first-team West Catholic Athletic League selection...also played football for St. Francis… competed for club team NorCal Baseball. Personal – Full name: Kort Henry Peterson...born April 29, 1994 in Santa Cruz, Calif... parents are Jeff and Karen Peterson...Stepmother is Julee Peterson...has a twin brother, Eric, and a younger sister, Bryn...father Jeff played baseball at California...brother Eric is also a current member of the California baseball team...admires Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim first baseman Albert Pujols...undeclared major.
High School – Four-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Pacifica High School (Santa Monica, Calif.) under head coach Julian Chavez, playing catcher, shortstop and pitcher... three-time All-CIF selection...three-year team captain...hit .509 with three home runs and 32 RBI as a freshman in 2009...batted .426 with five home runs and 31 RBI as a sophomore in 2010...led Pacifica to a runner-up finish in the CIF playoffs in 2011...also earned three letters in basketball at Pacifica under head coach Kevin Kelsey.
KEENAN
P PIERANDOZZI-HOWES
C • RS Freshman • 6-0 • 210 • R/R Santa Monica, Calif. (Pacifica Christian HS)
Notes – Served as one of UCLA’s bullpen catchers in 2013...will continue to add depth to UCLA’s catching corps in 2014.
Personal – Full name: Keenan Pierandozzi-Howes...born August 6, 1993 in Santa Monica, Calif...parents are Keith Howes and Nancy Pierandozzi...admires Seattle Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson and Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim outfielder Mike Trout... intends to major in business economics.
2013 – Redshirted the season...served primarily as UCLA’s bullpen catcher.
CURRENT BRUINS, SELECTED IN PREVIOUS MLB DRAFTS
SCOTT
JAKE
JAMES
BURKE
EHRET
KAPRIELIAN KRAMER MILLER JR. MIROGLIO MOORE
KEVIN
DARRELL
DOMINIC
2013 Draft 2011 Draft 2013 Draft 2012 Draft 2011 Draft 2012 Draft 40th Round 37th Round 31st Round 40th Round 25th Round 34th Round Houston Astros Miami Marlins Seattle Mariners Cleveland Indians Philadelphia Phillies Oakland A’s
TY
LUKE
CODY
PERSICO POTEET
ANDREW
TYLER
SCHMIDT SCOTT
HUNTER
KEVIN
VIRANT
WILLIAMS WILLIAMS
KEVIN
2012 Draft 2013 Draft 2012 Draft 2013 Draft 2011 Draft 2010 Draft 2013 Draft 2012 Draft 25th Round 37th Round 27th Round 38th Round 41st Round 41st Round 29th Round 11th Round New York Yankees Colorado Rockies Washington g Nationals New York Yankees Texas Rangers Houston Astros Los Angeles Dodgers Miami Marlins
39
PLAYER PROFILES
34
CODY
POTEET
RHP • Sophomore • 6-1 • 188 • R/R Bonita, Calif. (Christian HS)
Notes – Strong, durable right-handed pitcher who has three above-average pitches...served as UCLA’s midweek starter in 2013 and will look to contribute more as a starter in 2014.
2012 MLB Draft 27th Round Selection
2013 (summer) – Made six starts for the Walla Walla Sweets of the West Coast League...went 3-2 with a 3.78 ERA and 27 strikeouts in 38 innings pitched...competed in the West Coast League All-Star Game...voted the All-Star Game’s top prospect by MLB scouts...earned WCL Player of the Week Honors on July 8 after throwing seven scoreless innings and striking out 11 in a 5-0 win over the Klamath Falls Gems on July 5...recorded another win on July 18 vs. the Cowlitz Black Bears, giving up two runs in seven innings pitched while striking out six...Walla Walla finished in first place in the North Division of the West Coast League, falling to the Wenatchee AppleSox in the WCL Divisional Series.
CODY POTEET and 112 strikeouts in 66.2 innings pitched for the Bulldogs in 2012...ranked No. 189 on Baseball America’s top 500 2012 MLB Draft eligible player list...earned first-team All-East County and first-team All-Eastern League accolades as a third baseman following his junior season...played in the 2011 Perfect Game All-American Classic at Petco Park (San Diego)...selected to USA Baseball’s 18U National Team Trials Roster in June 2011... selected to compete for (but not travel with) USA Baseball’s 18U National Team at the 2011 COPABE `AAA’ 18U Junior Pan American Championships in Cartegna, Colombia (Nov. 17-27, 2011)...went 9-1 on the mound as a freshman at Christian (2009), posting a 1.56 ERA with 78 strikeouts and 32 walks...batted .394 as a freshman, totaling nine home runs, eight doubles, 31 RBI and 26 runs in 32 games...earned MaxPreps.com All-America honors as a freshman, in addition to securing first-team All-East County accolades that season...pitched in the summer of 2009 for the USA Baseball U14 National Team in Guatemala...also lettered in basketball at Christian in 2010, playing guard under head coach Kelvin Starr.
2013 – Made 29 appearances, including 11 starts...served as UCLA’s midweek starter in his freshman year, going 4-6 with a 4.84 ERA and 56 strikeouts...went 4-4 as a starter, logging a 4.69 ERA in his 11 starts...allowed a .227 opposing batting average against him, good for seventh-best in the Pac-12...appeared in 13 conference games, going 0-1 with a 4.15 ERA...earned his first collegiate win on Feb. 26 at UC Santa Barbara, pitching five innings while allowing two runs...threw 3.1 scoreless innings in relief on March 15 vs. Washington, helping UCLA to a 3-2 extra-inning win over the Huskies...tossed five shutout innings vs. Hawaii on April 9, earning his second collegiate win...pitched a career-high six innings vs. UC Irvine on April 30, picking up the win and striking out five...matched that career-high in innings pitched on May 21 vs. UC Santa Barbara, allowing one run on one hit in six innings pitched while earning the victory.
Personal – Full name: Cody Austin Poteet...born July 30, 1994 in San Diego, Calif... parents are Michael and Robin Poteet...has a brother, Michael, and a sister Skylar... admires Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim outfielder Josh Hamilton and NFL quarterback Tim Tebow...intends to be a Political Science major.
High School – Three-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Christian High School (El Cajon, Calif.) under head coach Michael Mitchell...selected in the 27th round of the 2012 MLB Draft by the Washington Nationals...batted .509 with 55 hits, 13 doubles, 20 stolen bases, 23 RBI and 45 runs as a junior in 2011, pitching 17.2 innings that season...broke school records with 55 hits and a .509 batting average in 2011...did not play for Christian in 2012, instead competing for club team ABD Bulldogs ... went 10-1 with a 2.10 ERA
Career Highs Innings - 6.0 (two times), last vs. UC Santa Barbara (5/21/13) Strikeouts - 5 vs. UC Irvine (4/30/13)
Cody Poteet’s Career Stats YEAR 2013 (Fr.) TOTALS
ERA 4.84 4.84
35
W-L 4-6 4-6
APP 29 29
GS 11 11
CG 0 0
SHO/CBO 0/1 0/1
SV 0 0
IP 70.2 70.2
H 57 57
R 42 42
ER 38 38
BB 31 31
SO 56 56
2B 11 11
3B 0 0
HR 3 3
BF 304 304
OAV .227 .227
WP 7 7
HBP 9 9
SFA 2 2
SHA 11 11
BK 0 0
High School – Two-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Mater Dei High School (Santa Ana, Calif.) under head coach Burt Call...went 1-0 with a 0.84 ERA, 29 strikeouts and three saves in 15 games (1 start) as a senior (2012)...held opponents to just a .198 batting average against him as a senior in 2012...Named Mater Dei’s Pitcher of the Year in his senior season...helped Mater Dei win the 2012 National High School Invitational in Cary, N.C., pitching three innings in the 3-2 championship win over Harvard-Westlake... pitched in three games as a junior, striking out five in five innings pitched.
CHASE
RADAN
RHP • RS Freshman • 6-4 • 183 • R/R Tustin, Calif. (Mater Dei HS)
Notes – Redshirted in 2013 after enjoying a great career at prestigious Mater Dei High School...enters 2014 looking to make an impact out of the bullpen for the Bruins. 2013 (summer) – Appeared in 12 games for the Bellingham Bells of the West Coast League...posted a 2-0 record with a 3.91 ERA, 11 strikeouts and one save in 23 innings pitched...earned the win on July 6 vs. the Cowlitz Black Bears, pitching two scoreless innings in relief...Bellingham finished in third place in the North Division of the West Coast League.
Personal – Full name: Chase Matthew Radan...born June 29, 1994 in Anaheim, Calif... parents are Dave and Tammy Radan...has an older sister, Elle, and two younger sisters, Tara and Emma....admires former UCLA standout and Baseball Hall of Famer Jackie Robinson...Undeclared major.
2013 – Redshirted.
1
under head coach Mike Anderson...drafted in the 38th round of the 2013 MLB Draft by the New York Yankees…hit .425 with 10 runs scored, 10 RBI, two doubles and one triple as a senior in 2013…did not commit an error as a senior…batted at a .315 clip with 25 runs and 17 RBI as a junior in 2012…led Regis Jesuit to back-to-back league titles in 2012-13…2012 first-team All-Aurora League selection…played at the 2012 Area Code Games in Long Beach, Calif., competing for the Cincinnati Reds squad…also played club baseball, playing for the Colorado Rockies Scout Team…helped lead scout team to a 25-3 record.
ANDREW
SCHMIDT
OF • Freshman • 6-1 • 165 • L/L Parker, Colo. (Regis Jesuit HS)
Notes – Enters his freshman season after excelling at Regis Jesuit High School in Colorado...athletic left-handed hitter with the ability to push for playing time in 2014.
Personal – Full name: Andrew Jesse Schmidt...born February 10, 1995 in Fullerton, Calif...parents are William and Linda Schmidt...has a younger brother, Matthew...admires Colorado Rockies third baseman Nolan Arenado...intends to major in Business Economics.
2013 MLB Draft 38th Round Selection
High School – Two-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Regis Jesuit HS in Aurora, Colo.
40
PLAYER PROFILES
45
North Division of the Northwoods League, earning a runner-up finish in the playoffs. 2013 – Appeared in 12 games, all in relief...served primarily as a left-handed specialist, not allowing a run in 2.1 innings pitched...struck out the only batter he faced on March 1 vs. Wright State and on April 9 vs. Hawaii...allowed only one hit in his 12 appearances... honorable mention Pac-12 All-Academic selection. High School – Three-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Edison High School (Fresno, Calif.) under head coach Cliff Rold...also earned two varsity letters in football (2008-09), playing quarterback under head coach Tim McDonald...helped lead Edison to the 2008 Baseball Section title and the 2009 Football Section title. Personal – Full name: Maxwell Namath Schuh...born March 13, 1992 in Fresno, Calif... parents are Mark and Mary Schuh...has three brothers: Charlie, Beaux and Trevor...both parents and brothers Charlie and Beaux attended UCLA...Political Science major. Career Highs Innings - 0.1 (seven times), last vs. Hawaii (4/9/13) Strikeouts - 1 (two times), last vs. Hawaii (4/9/13)
MAX
SCHUH
LHP • RS Junior • 6-4 • 210 • L/L Fresno, Calif. (Edison HS)
Notes – Joined the UCLA baseball program in the fall of 2012...also played for the UCLA football team as a quarterback from 2010-11...did not play in any football games in either 2010 (redshirt) or 2011...served as integral part of UCLA’s bullpen last season and will look to do the same in 2014. 2013 (summer) – Pitched in 12 games for the Duluth Huskies of the Northwoods League...went 0-1 with a 2.07 ERA and 11 strikeouts in 13 innings pitched...appeared in two games in the Northwoods League Playoffs, striking out a batter in one inning pitched... did not allow a run in nine of his 12 appearances...Duluth finished in second place in the Max Schuh’s Career Stats YEAR 2013 (R-So.) TOTALS
ERA 0.00 0.00
38
W-L 0-0 0-0
APP 12 12
GS 0 0
CG 0 0
SHO/CBO 0/0 0/0
SV 0 0
IP 2.1 2.1
H 1 1
R 1 1
TYLER
SCOTT
OF • RS Sophomore • 6-2 • 212 • R/R Novato, Calif. (Marin Catholic HS)
Notes – Joined the UCLA baseball program in January 2011 MLB Draft 2012...also plays for the UCLA football team as a wide 41st Round Selection receiver...did not play in any football games in 2011 (redshirt) or 2012...appeared in four football games in 2013, making one catch. 2013 – Played in six games, making one start in right field...batted .111 in nine at-bats, hitting a two-run single at Baylor on Feb. 24...drew walks against USC on March 10 and Hawaii on April 9, scoring a run vs. Hawaii in that same game. 2012 – Redshirted the season.
ER 0 0
BB 4 4
SO 2 2
2B 0 0
3B 0 0
HR 0 0
BF 13 13
OAV .143 .143
WP 1 1
HBP 1 1
SFA 1 1
SHA 0 0
BK 0 0
High School – Three-year varsity baseball and two-year varsity football letterwinner under head coachs Tim Grayson and Mazi Moayed, respectively, at Marin Catholic High School… selected in the 41st round of the 2011 MLB Draft by the Texas Rangers…led Marin Catholic to a 24-4 record, including a 16-2 league mark, as a senior (2011)…went 3-for-4 with a two-run homer in a 10-1 victory over McKinleyville, guiding Marin Catholic to the 2011 CIF North Coast Section Division IV title…played in the outfield and at third base…on the football field, had 41 carries for 234 yards and six touchdowns as a junior (2009)… also recorded 13 catches for 465 yards and seven touchdowns that season. Personal – Full name: Tyler Justin Scott…born May 16, 1993 in Greenbrae, Calif… Tyler is the oldest of Charles and Marcy Scott’s three children…has two younger sisters, Dominique and Mariah…father, Charles, played eight seasons of minor league baseball, pitching primarily in the Cleveland Indians’ organization…undeclared major. Career Highs At-bats - 3 vs. USC (3/10/13) Runs - 1 vs. Hawaii (4/9/13) Hits - 1 at Baylor (2/24/13) RBI - 2 at Baylor (2/24/13)
Tyler Scott’s Career Stats YEAR 2013 (R-Fr.) TOTALS
23
AVG .111 .111
GP-GS 6-1 6-1
AB 9 9
R 1 1
H 1 1
2B 0 0
3B 0 0
HR 0 0
RBI 2 2
TB 1 1
SLG .111 .111
BRETT
STEPHENS
OF• Freshman • 6-0 • 187 • R/R Moraga, Calif. (Campolindo HS)
Notes – Athletic left-handed hitter who enjoyed a terrific summer in the West Coast League...adds depth to UCLA’s outfiled and will push for immediate playing time. 2013 (summer) – Batted .326 in 48 games for the Wenatchee AppleSox of the West Coast League...batting average was good for 11th-best in the entire West Coast League… recorded 25 runs, 13 doubles, one triple, four home runs, 23 RBI and 10 stolen bases… logged three hits and two runs in four playoff game…competed in the West Coast League
44
BRETT
URABE
INF• Sophomore • 5-10 • 165 • R/R Huntington Beach, Calif. (Huntington Beach HS)
Notes – Very versatile player who can play multiple positions defensively...played a key role off the bench in 2013 and is expected to make a bigger impact in 2014. 2013 (summer) – Played in 26 games for the Victoria HarbourCats of the West Coast League...hit .284 with six runs, five doubles, two RBI and five stolen bases...went 1-2 with a double, a run scored and a RBI in a 4-3 win over the Bellingham Bells on August 11... Victoria finished in fourth place in the North Division of the WCL. 2013 – Played in 25 games, making five starts (four in left field, one as the designated hitter)...hit .083, recording one hit in 12 at-bats...scored four runs and logged four RBI..... drew six walks and stole a base as well...only hit of the season was a solo home run against Oregon State on April 7.
BB 2 2
HBP 0 0
SO 3 3
GDP 0 0
OBP .273 .273
SF 0 0
SH 0 0
SB-ATT 0-0 0-0
PO 0 0
A 0 0
E 0 0
FLD .000 .000
All-Star Game…recorded 20 multi-hit games for Wenatchee. High School – Four-year baseball letterwinner at Campolindo High School (Moraga, Calif.) under head coach Max Luckhurst...hit .416 with three home runs as a junior in 2012...2012 first-team All-Diablo Foothill Athletic League selection...ranked No. 421 on Perfect Game USA’s list of Top 500 2013 High School Prospects...named a first-team ESPN All-State underclass selection in 2012...competed for the Oakland A’s at the 2012 Area Code Games in Long Beach, Calif...played travel ball with the Danville Zoots in the summer of 2012...batted .311 with 19 runs and nine RBI as a freshman in 2010... three-time all-league selection in baseball and four-time scholar athlete selection...led Campolindo to four straight NCS Division II baseball titles (2010-13)...also quarterbacked Campolindo High School to the 2011 NCS Division III championship in football and a runner-up finish in the Division III State Championship...earned three varsity letters in football under head coach Kevin Macy. Personal – Full name: Brett Patrick Stephens...born March 18, 1995 in Pasadena, Calif... parents are Mark and Kimberly Stephens...father Mark played football at California...has an older brother, Tommy, and a younger brother, Jack...admires Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Matt Kemp...intends to major in Business Economics. High School – Three-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Huntington Beach High School (Huntington Beach, Calif.) under head coach Benji Medure...hit .325 with 18 runs, 28 RBI and seven home runs as a senior (2012)...earned second-team All-Orange County accolades and first-team All-Sunset League honors in 2012...batted .271 as a junior (2011) with 16 runs scored...also stole eight bases in eight attempts in 2011...posted a .286 batting average in 2010 as a sophomore, tallying 10 RBI and 15 runs with a .405 on-base percentage...also competed for the Nitro and Trombly Club Baseball team. Personal – Full name: Brett Philip Urabe...born Nov. 23, 1993 in Fullerton, Calif...parents are Phil and Sheryl Urabe...has one older brother, Ryan, two older sisters, Michelle and Melissa, and a twin brother, Matt...admires New York Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter... chose to attend UCLA because of its education, location and caliber of baseball...intends to be a Psychology major. Career Highs At-bats - 2 (four times), last vs. Oregon State (4/7/13) Runs - 1 (three times), last vs. San Diego State (5/31/13) Hits - 1 vs. Oregon State (4/7/13) RBI - 1 (four times), last vs. Long Beach State (4/23/13) Home Runs - 1 vs. Oregon State (4/7/13) Stolen Bases - 1 vs. Loyola Marymount (4/14/13)
Brett Urabe’s Career Stats YEAR 2013 (Fr.) TOTALS
AVG .083 .083
GP-GS 25-5 25-5
AB 12 12
R 4 4
H 1 1
2B 0 0
3B 0 0
HR 1 1
RBI 4 4
TB 4 4
SLG .333 .333
41
BB 6 6
HBP 1 1
SO 4 4
GDP 0 0
OBP .400 .400
SF 1 1
SH 3 3
SB-ATT 1-2 1-2
PO 2 2
A 1 1
E 2 2
FLD .600 .600
PLAYER PROFILES
2013 – Appeared in five games, all in relief...did not allow a run in 3.1 innings of work...struck out one batter against Washington on March 15, throwing 0.2 scoreless innings in relief.
and 56 strikeouts in 50 innings as a junior (2011)...named a Perfect Game All-American in 2011...two-time Pacific View League and All-County Pitcher of the Year (2011-12)... threw a perfect game against arch rival Rio Mesa High School during his junior season... compiled a string of 33 consecutive batters retired in March 2011...at the plate as a junior, batted .456 with two home runs, 41 hits and 15 RBI...was an honorable mention all-Pacific View League selection as a sophomore in 2010...batted .246 with one home run, 10 doubles and 14 RBI in 28 games as a freshman (did not pitch as a freshman)... ranked No. 19 in Perfect Game USA’s list of the top 300 prospects eligible for the 2012 MLB Draft...ranked No. 53 on Baseball America’s top 500 2012 MLB Draft eligible player list...listed by Baseball America as one of the top 20 prospects at the 2011 Perfect Game National Showcase...selected to USA Baseball’s 18U National Team Trials Roster in June 2011...selected to compete for USA Baseball’s 18U National Team at the 2011 COPABE `AAA’ 18U Junior Pan American Championships in Cartegna, Colombia (Nov. 17-27, 2011).
2012 (summer) – Made six starts for the Walla Walla Sweets of the West Coast League… Went 3-2 with a 2.25 ERA and 36 strikeouts in 44 innings pitched…selected to the West Coast League All-Star Game... named the No. 2 overall prospect from the West Coast League by Baseball America.
Personal – Full name: Hunter Austin Virant...born January 22, 1994 in Camarillo, Calif... parents are John and Karen Virant...has a brother, Jonathan, and an older sister, Katie... admires Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Cliff Lee...intends to be a Geography/Environmental Studies major.
High School – Four-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Camarillo High School (Camarillo, Calif.) under head coach Richard Jaquez...went 8-3 with a 0.94 ERA during his senior season (2012), logging 105 strikeouts and just 26 walks in 66.2 innings pitched... earned first-team All-CIF and All-State honors as a senior...went 6-1 with a 1.54 ERA
Career Highs Innings - 1.0 (two times), last at UC Santa Barbara (2/26/13) Strikeouts - 1 vs. Washington (3/15/13)
33
HUNTER
VIRANT
LHP• Sophomore • 6-4 • 171 • R/L Camarillo, Calif. (Camarillo HS)
Notes – Strong, athletic left-hander who contributed out of the bullpen last season...can throw four pitches for strikes and will look to be an impact pitcher in 2014.
2012 MLB Draft 11th Round Selection
Hunter Virant’s Career Stats YEAR 2013 (Fr.) TOTALS
ERA 0.00 0.00
12
W-L 0-0 0-0
APP 5 5
GS 0 0
CG 0 0
SHO/CBO 0/0 0/0
SV 0 0
IP 3.1 3.1
H 2 2
R 1 1
ER 0 0
BB 4 4
SO 1 1
2B 0 0
3B 0 0
HR 0 0
BF 17 17
OAV .167 .167
WP 1 1
HBP 1 1
SFA 0 0
SHA 0 0
BK 0 0
GRANT
WATSON
LHP • Junior • 6-0 • 181 • L/L Bakersfield, Calif. (Centennial HS)
Notes – Tied the school record for most wins by a freshman (9) in 2012...talented lefthander with great command who served as UCLA’s Sunday starter in 2013...has the ability to throw four pitches for strikes...2012 Freshman All-America selection. 2013 – Went 9-3 in 18 appearances (17 starts), posting a 3.01 ERA as UCLA’s Sunday starter...struck out 55 batters and surrendered only 16 walks, sixth-fewest in the Pac-12... posted a 4-2 record with a 5.01 ERA in Pac-12 play...threw six scoreless innings in his season debut vs. Minnesota, striking out a career-high eight batters and allowing two hits... went 5-0 with a 1.13 ERA through his first six starts, walking only three batters...did not allow an earned run in seven innings pitched against Wright State on March 3 to earn his second straight win...went 4-0 in his final four starts of the season...earned back-to-back wins at USC and Stanford on May 19 and May 26, pitching five innings in each game...in the postseason, made two starts and went 2-0 while not allowing a run in either game...earned the victory against San Diego at the NCAA Los Angeles Regional on June 2 by pitching seven shutout innings and allowing one hit while fanning five...was named to the NCAA Los Angeles Regional All-Tournament Team...pitched again at the College World Series on June 21 vs. North Carolina, throwing six scoreless innings and striking out three to help send UCLA to the CWS Finals. 2012 – Made 35 appearances, including 15 starts...had a successful freshman season, serving as the Bruins’ midweek starting pitcher, in addition to making three weekend starts (all against Pac-12 teams) and 20 relief appearances...went 9-2 with a 4.45 ERA, logging 46 strikeouts and 34 walks in 89.0 innings...tied the school record for single-season wins by a freshman (9), a feat also accomplished by Pete Janicki in 1990 and by Trevor Bauer in 2009...captured freshman All-America honors from Louisville Slugger/Collegiate Baseball... was named Pac-12 Pitcher of the Week after going 2-0 in three appearances the week of March 12-18...in midweek ballgames, went 6-0 with a 2.67 ERA, registering 22 strikeouts and 14 walks in 54.0 innings (.250 opposing batting average)...as a starting pitcher, went 8-1 with a 3.76 ERA (15 starts)...out of the bullpen, went 1-1 with a 6.86 ERA (20 apperances)... threw a season-high six innings in six games...allowed one and five hits in six innings in UCLA’s 6-2 win at UC Irvine (May 22), helping the Bruins finished the season with a perfect 11-0 record in all midweek games...scattered two hits in six scoreless innings in the Bruins’ 2-1 victory at Long Beach State (May 1)...registered four strikeouts and no hits in 2.1 scoreless innings of relief against Stanford (April 27)...allowed one run and six hits in six innings as the starting pitcher, earning the victory at Utah (April 1)...limited USC to one run and seven hits in six innings in a non-conference game at Dodger Stadium (March 13), securing the win in a 7-2 decision at the third annual Dodgertown Classic...scattered two hits in 5.1 scoreless innings against UC Riverside (March 6).
walks in 62.1 innings during his senior season…batted .351 with two home runs, 16 RBI, 26 hits and a .442 on-base percentage as a senior…helped lead Centennial to the Valley Section championship game, as the team posted a 23-5 overall record during his senior year…named Pitcher of the Year by the Bakersfield Californian following his senior season…captured AllSouthwest Yosemite League Pitcher of the Year acclaim as a senior…earned second-team All-State accolades from Cal-Hi Sports as a senior…went 7-3 with a 2.09 ERA, one save and three complete games in 15 appearances as a junior (2010)…registered 77 strikeouts and 32 walks in 63.2 innings during his junior year…played for the ABD Bulldogs under head coach Mike Spiers in 2009 and 2010…competed for the Southern California NTIS Team which participated in the 18U USA Baseball tryouts…went 4-2 with two saves and a 2.88 ERA in 13 appearances as a sophomore (2009)…recorded 53 strikeouts and 21 walks in 48.2 innings during his sophomore season…as a basketball player, averaged 20.5 points per game as a senior, earning first-team all-area honors.
High School – Three-year varsity baseball and basketball letterwinner at Centennial High School under head coaches Randy Roberts and Alex Lee, respectively…went 9-1 with a 2.02 ERA and two saves in 13 appearances as a senior (2011)…recorded 74 strikeouts and 18
Career Highs Innings Pitched - 7.0 (four times), last vs. San Diego (6/2/13) Strikeouts - 8 vs. Minnesota (2/17/13)
GRANT WATSON
Personal – Full name: Grant Joseph Watson…born July 2, 1993 in Bakersfield, Calif…Grant is the younger of Stacy and Kelly Watson’s two sons…Geography/Environmental Studies major.
Grant Watson’s Career Stats YEAR 2012 (Fr.) 2013 (So.) TOTALS
ERA 4.45 3.01 3.72
W-L 9-2 9-3 18-5
APP 35 18 53
GS 15 17 32
CG 0 0 0
SHO/CBO 0/1 0/2 0/3
SV 0 0 0
IP 89.0 92.2 181.2
H 94 93 187
R 52 36 88
42
ER 44 31 75
BB 34 16 50
SO 46 55 101
2B 18 7 25
3B 0 2 2
HR 3 2 5
BF 388 382 770
OAV .286 .266 .276
WP 3 6 9
HBP 4 6 10
SFA 6 3 9
SHA 15 8 23
BK 0 1 1
PLAYER PROFILES went 26-16 overall, finishing second in the New York Collegiate League’s East Division.
47
AARON
2010 – Redshirted.
WEIMER
C • RS Senior • 5-11 • 188 • L/R Fresno, Calif. (Bullard HS)
Notes – Moved behind the plate in 2011 after having played infield in high school...adds depth to UCLA’s catching corps. 2013 – Played in one game, serving as a pinch-hitter against Long Beach State (April 23)...went 0-for-1...once again served as a valuable member of the team as UCLA’s bullpen catcher...traveled with the team on every road trip and was part of the team’s 27-man postseason roster. 2012 – Did not play in any games, but served as a valuable member of the team as UCLA’s bullpen catcher...traveled with the team on every road trip and was part of the team’s 27-man postseason roster. 2011 – Played in one game, serving as a pinch-hitter in his collegiate debut against Cal State Bakersfield (May 14)…went 0-for-1…served primarily as UCLA’s bullpen catcher in 2011. 2010 (summer) – Played in 16 games (11 starts) for the Oneonta Outlaws of the New York Collegiate League…batted .233 with one double, two RBI, five runs and six walks…Oneonta
High School – Three-year varsity baseball and football letterwinner at Bullard High School under head coaches Chad Thronhill and Don Arax…earned first-team All-Metro League baseball honors as a sophomore, junior and senior…batted .402 as a senior (2009), totaling 39 hits, two home runs, 32 RBI and a .546 OBP…secured first-team All-City honors...was chosen to play in the City/County All-Star Game as a senior…second-team All-Central Valley selection as a senior, earning Bullard Team Co-MVP honors…guided Bullard to the Metro League title in each of three varsity seasons…batted .481 as a junior (2008) with 37 hits, 27 runs, 18 RBI and a .545 OBP…earned the Bullard Scholar-Athlete Award as a junior and sophomore…batted .393 as a sophomore (2007), registering 39 hits, 25 runs, 19 RBI and a .585 OBP…three-year starter on the football team, playing safety and wide receiver…firstteam All-Metro League selection as a senior (2008) and first-team All-City selection…served as defensive captain as a junior and senior, earning the Coaches’ Award his senior year… named the Defensive Player of the Week on three occasions in three seasons…earned firstteam All-Metro League football honors as a senior (2008) and first-team All-City accolades. Personal – Full name: Aaron Wade Weimer…born April 5, 1991 in Fresno, Calif…Aaron is the older of Arnie and Gwen Weimer’s two children…has one younger sister, Rebekah… admires Boston Red Sox second baseman Dustin Pedroia…Sociology major.
Career Highs At-bats - 1 (2 times), last vs. Long Beach State (4/23/13)
Aaron Weimer’s Career Stats YEAR 2011 (R-Fr.) 2012 (R-So.) 2013 (R-Jr.) TOTALS
AVG .000 .000 .000 .000
5
GP-GS 1-0 0-0 1-0 2-0
AB 1 0 1 2
R 0 0 0 0
H 0 0 0 0
2B 0 0 0 0
3B 0 0 0 0
HR 0 0 0 0
RBI 0 0 0 0
TB 0 0 0 0
SLG .000 .000 .000 .000
BB 0 0 0 0
HBP 0 0 0 0
SO 1 0 0 1
GDP 0 0 0 0
OBP .000 .000 .000 .000
SF 0 0 0 0
SH 0 0 0 0
SB-ATT 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0
PO 0 0 0 0
A 0 0 0 0
E 0 0 0 0
FLD .000 .000 .000 .000
Collegiate League…batted .228 with one home run, three triples, three doubles, seven runs and 11 RBI…Walla Walla went 26-28, finishing second in the league’s East Division.
KEVIN
WILLIAMS
INF • Senior • 6-0 • 195 • L/R Van Nuys, Calif. (Crespi HS)
Notes – Left-handed batter who can hit to all fields and has shown the ability to perform as an everday player on the infield...very athletic player who brings experience to the infield.
2010 MLB Draft 41st Round Selection
2013 – Played in 42 games, making 36 starts (34 at 2013 MLB Draft designated hitter, two at second base)...batted .227 with one 29th Round Selection home run, 15 runs, four doubles, a triple and 12 RBI...drew 14 walks while slugging .297 with a .317 on-base percentage...missed the first half of the season while recovering from a shoulder injury...recorded seven multi-hit games and two multi-RBI games...hit .206 in 23 Pac-12 games, scoring nine runs and logging five RBI...went 2-for-4 with a double and two runs vs. California on March 24...belted his only home run of the season vs. Oregon State on April 5...posted back-to-back multi-hit games on May 5 vs. Utah and May 7 vs. Cal State Northridge...enjoyed a seven-game hitting streak from May 5 to May 18...started all 10 postseason games, batting .242 with three runs and five RBI...hit the game-tying triple in the top of the sixth vs. Cal Poly at the NCAA Los Angeles Regional, recording three RBI to help lead UCLA to a 6-4 come-from-behind victory...stole a career-best two bases on June 16 vs. LSU at the College World Series...went 2-for-4 with a RBI in UCLA’s 4-1 win over North Carolina that sent the Bruins to the CWS Finals...posted a 1-for-3 night with a double and a run in UCLA’s NCAA Championship-clinching win over Mississippi State in game two of the CWS Finals...selected in the 29th round of the MLB Draft by the Miami Marlins but did not sign. 2012 (summer) – Played for the Brewster Whitecaps of the prestigious Cape Cod League, hitting .211 with two home runs and 7 RBI for the club. 2012 – Played in 55 games, making 52 starts (49 at second base, three at shortstop)... batted .302 with two home runs, six doubles, 21 RBI and 28 runs...recorded a .977 fielding percentage as the Bruins’ starting second baseman...totaled 11 multiple-hit games and four multiple-RBI efforts...hit over the .300 plateau throughout the season...opened the year batting .429 through UCLA’s first 17 games...tied his career high with three hits in three games...most memorable moment came in UCLA’s 6-5 win over Arizona State (March 16), belting a walkoff home run with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning to snap a 5-5 tie after UCLA had trailed in the contest, 5-0...finished the series against Arizona State (March 16-18) going 4-for-11 (.364) with one home run, three runs and one RBI...went 5-for-11 (.455) with one RBI and one run in a three-game series at California (May 18-20)...went 5-for12 (.417) with two doubles, three runs and two RBI in a three-game series against Purdue (May 5-6)...went 3-for-4 with one double, two RBI and one run in a midweek win over Cal State Northridge (April 17)...belted his first career home run in UCLA’s 7-2 win over USC at Dodger Stadium (March 13)...went 6-for-11 (.545) with one double, three RBI and two runs in a three-game sweep of Sacramento State (March 2-4)...missed seven games (including all three NCAA Regional contests) recovering from a knee injury. 2011 (summer) – Played in 24 games for the Walla Walla Sweets of the West Coast
2011 – Played in 28 games, making 20 starts (18 at second base and two as the designated hitter)…batted .210, totaling one double, six RBI and six runs…had two multiple-hit games and two multiple-RBI efforts…was the first player to record at least four hits in one game in 2011, going 4-for-5 with two runs and one RBI in a 14-6 victory over San Diego State (April 19)… was one of three players all year to record four hits in a game…went 3-for-4 with one run in the series finale at Oregon (May 8), leading UCLA to a 4-0 win and Pac-10 series sweep… went 1-for-2 with the game-winning two-RBI single up the middle in the top of the fifth inning in UCLA’s 3-1 win at Oregon (May 7)…went 1-for-1 with one run playing off the bench in a 10-0 victory at Pepperdine (May 3)…went 1-for-1 with a pinch-hit double in the first game of a doubleheader at Cal Poly (March 21)…totaled a season-high three RBI in the second game of a doubleheader against San Jose State (Feb. 27), going 0-for-3 with two sacrifice flies… went 1-for-1 with one walk in his first collegiate game versus Pepperdine (Feb. 22) – had a pinch-hit single to right field in his first collegiate at-bat. 2010 (summer) – Played in 17 games for the Walla Walla Sweets of the West Coast Collegiate League…batted .163 with one triple, one double and six RBI…also collected six walks and scored one run…Walla Walla went 18-30 overall, finishing fourth in the East Division of the West Coast Collegiate League. High School – Three-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Crespi High School under head coach Scott Muckey…selected in the 41st round of the 2010 MLB Draft by the Los Angeles Dodgers…earned first-team All-CIF Southern Section Division II honors as a senior (2010), second-team as a junior (2009)…secured first-team All-Mission League acclaim as a senior and junior…led Crespi with a .412 batting average as a senior, totaling three home runs, 10 doubles, 21 RBI, 20 runs…logged a .512 on-base percentage as a senior, leading Crespi to the 2010 Mission League championship…named Crespi’s “Most Inspirational Player” in 2010…batted .312 with two home runs, team-leading six triples, eight doubles, 24 RBI and 21 runs as a junior (2009)…helped lead Crespi to the 2009 CIF Southern Section Division II Championship at Angel Stadium…selected as an honorable mention on the 2009 Daily News All-Area Baseball Team…named Crespi’s best offensive baseball player his junior season (2009)…two-year varsity football letterwinner at Crespi High School under head coach Jeremiah Ross (2008-09)…registered 46 total tackles and one interception as a defensive back during his senior season (2009)…totaled 47 tackles, one sack and one interception as a junior (2008). Personal – Full name: Kevin Anthony Williams II…born January 2, 1992 in Woodland Hills, Calif…Kevin is the second of Kevin Sr. and Pamela Williams’ four children…has one younger brother, Nile, and two sisters, Dominique and Kaila…father, Kevin Sr., played football at Cal State Northridge…mother, Pamela, played volleyball and softball at Chico State…Political Science major. Career Highs At-bats - 5 (two times), last vs. Purdue (5/6/12) Runs - 2 (eight times), last vs. California (3/24/13) Hits - 4 vs. San Diego State (4/19/11) RBI - 3 (three times), last vs. Cal Poly (6/1/13) Doubles - 2 vs. Purdue (5/6/12) Triples - 1 vs. Cal Poly (6/1/13) Home Runs - 1 (three times), last vs. Oregon State (4/5/13) Stolen Bases - 2 vs. LSU (6/16/13)
Kevin Williams’ Career Stats YEAR 2011 (Fr.) 2012 (So.) 2013 (Jr.) TOTALS
AVG .210 .302 .227 .258
GP-GS 28-20 55-52 42-36 125-108
AB 62 159 128 349
R 6 28 15 49
H 13 48 29 90
2B 1 6 4 11
3B 0 0 1 1
HR 0 2 1 3
RBI 6 21 12 39
TB 14 60 38 112
SLG .226 .377 .297 .321
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BB 4 19 14 37
HBP 1 11 3 15
SO 18 28 36 82
GDP 1 5 3 9
OBP .261 .413 .317 .352
SF 2 0 0 2
SH 2 8 3 13
SB-ATT 0-0 4-7 4-5 8-12
PO A 32 24 106 111 7 7 145 142
E 1 5 0 6
FLD .982 .977 1.000 .980
PLAYER PROFILES
9
SHANE
ZEILE
C/INF • Junior • 6-1 • 191 • R/R Valencia, Calif. (Valencia HS)
Notes – A very versatile player who can play both in the infield and at the catcher position... strong, right-handed batter who can hit to all fields and is expected to be an impact offensive player in the middle of the lineup. 2013 – Played in 61 games, making 57 starts (all at catcher)...hit .226 with two home runs, nine doubles, 22 runs and 20 RBI...slugged .302 while drawing 23 walks and posting a .326 on-base percentage...batted .286 in Pac-12 play, recording 14 RBI, 13 runs, a .371 slugging percentage and a .342 on-base percentage...totaled 11 multi-hit games and four multi-RBI games...threw out 15 of 57 attempted base stealers behind the plate (26.3%)...handled a pitching staff that posted a 2.55 ERA and held opponents to a .222 batting average, both the second-lowest marks in the Pac-12...went 2-for-4 with a run, a RBI and a stolen base at Baylor on Feb. 22, leading the Bruins to a 4-3 win...enjoyed an eight-game hitting streak from March 15 to March 30, posting four multi-hit games in that time span...recorded seven multi-hit games in a 12-game span from March 17 to April 9...hit his first career home run on March 29 at Arizona State, going 2-for-4 with two RBI and a run in the game...posted a 2-for-4 game on May 12 vs. Arizona, scoring two runs and logging two RBI and a double... belted his second home run of the year on May 25 at Stanford...started all 10 postseason games at catcher, hitting .152 with two runs and a RBI...went 2-for-4 with a run scored in UCLA’s 5-3 win over San Diego State in the Bruins’ opening game of the NCAA Los Angeles Regional...recorded a hit and a RBI at Cal State Fullerton on June 8 in game two of the NCAA Fullerton Super Regional. 2012 (summer) – Played in 28 games for the Walla Walla Sweets of the West Coast Collegiate League...posted a team-leading .324 batting average with four home runs, 19 RBI and 15 runs...selected to the West Coast League All-Star Game...named the No. 6 overall prospect from the West Coast League by Baseball America. 2012 – Played in 33 games, making 15 starts (eight as designated hitter, four at first base, three at second base)...made three pitching appearances, all in relief...batted .371 with one triple, three doubles, 10 RBI and 12 runs...posted a .480 on-base percentage...batted .433 (13-for-30) in limited action during 14 Pac-12 games, logging a .553 on-base percentage in those contests...went 4-for-11 (.364) as a pinch-hitter...had a season-high three hits in two games - going 3-for-5 with one double at Cal State Northridge (Feb. 21) and going 3-for-4 with one double in the final regular-season game against USC (May 27)...went 3-for-7 in four postseason games with one RBI and one run...started all three games at California at second base, going 4-for-11 (.364) with four runs and one RBI...in three pitching appearances, logged a 9.00 ERA...threw one scoreless inning in relief against Long Beach State in his first relief outing, recording three consecutive outs on seven pitches. High School – Three-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Valencia High School under head coach Jared Snyder…secured first-team All-Foothill League accolades as a junior and senior… batted .335 with five home runs, two triples, eight doubles, 19 walks, 25 RBI and 30 runs
SHANE ZEILE as a senior (2011)…selected to the Bakersfield vs. Santa Clarita All-Star Game and City vs. CIF All-Star Game…batted .330 with four home runs, four doubles, 20 RBI and 22 runs as a junior (2010)…ranked second in batting average (.529) in the Valley Invitational Baseball League (summer 2010)…posted a league-leading .882 slugging percentage in the Valley Invitational Baseball League (2010)…competed at the fourth annual Jesse Flores Memorial All-Star Game at Mt. SAC in November 2010 Personal – Full name: Shane Todd Zeile...born June 14, 1993 in Valencia, Calif...Shane is the son of Mike and Heidi Zeile...has one brother, Brady, and one sister, Kate...uncle, Todd Zeile, played for UCLA from 1984-1986 before enjoying a 15-year major league career...his father, uncle and aunt all attended UCLA...Economics major.
Career Highs At-bats - 6 (two times), last at UC Irvine (4/16/13) Runs - 2 (six times), last vs. Arizona (5/12/13) Hits - 3 (two times), last vs. USC (5/27/12) RBI - 2 (six times), last at Stanford (5/25/13) Doubles - 1 (12 times), last at Cal State Fullerton (6/7/13) Triples - 1 at Arizona (4/14/12) Home Runs - 1 (two times), last at Stanford (5/25/13) Stolen Bases - 1 (two times), last at Baylor (2/22/13)
Shane Zeile’s Career Stats YEAR 2012 (Fr.) 2013 (So.) TOTALS
AVG .371 .226 .261
GP-GS 30-15 61-57 91-72
AB 62 199 261
R 12 22 34
H 23 45 68
2B 3 9 12
3B 1 0 1
HR 0 2 2
RBI 10 20 30
TB 28 60 88
SLG .452 .302 .337
BB 5 23 28
HBP 8 8 16
SO 10 39 49
GDP 2 2 4
OBP .480 .326 .364
SF 0 3 3
SH 2 9 11
SB-ATT 1-2 2-5 3-7
PO 42 370 412
A 13 66 79
E 1 4 5
FLD .982 .991 .990
Pac-12 Conference History Pac-12 Standings (2006-2013) Pac-12 Arizona State UCLA Oregon State Arizona Stanford Oregon Washington State California Washington USC Utah 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993
W 141 132 123 114 109 69 93 91 76 81 14
Pac-12 OSU UCLA/Arizona Pac-10 UCLA ASU ASU ASU ASU OSU OSU STAN STAN USC USC ASU/STAN/UCLA STAN Pac-10 North WASH* WASH* WASH WSU OSU WASH
L 72 80 89 99 103 72 120 122 122 132 46
PCT .662 .623 .580 .535 .514 .489 .437 .427 .425 .380 .233
Overall Standings (2006-2013) Overall Arizona State Oregon State Arizona UCLA Oregon Stanford Washington State California Washington USC Utah 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 Pac-8 1978 1977
South STAN STAN USC* USC* STAN ASU
Pac-8 1976 Pac-8 1975 1974 1973 1972 1971
W 354 329 296 309 181 271 240 231 222 204 193 WASH WSU WSU WSU WSU WSU OSU WSU WSU/PSU OSU OSU/WSU WASH WSU WSU North WSU WSU North WSU** North WSU ORE/WSU WSU WSU/ORE WSU
L 133 153 172 183 127 191 210 208 226 249 240
PCT .727 .683 .632 .628 .588 .587 .533 .526 .496 .450 .446
ARIZ USC STAN ARIZ ASU STAN UCLA STAN ASU STAN ASU ASU ARIZ/CAL UCLA South USC** USC** CIBA UCLA South USC** USC** USC** USC** USC**
1970 1969 1968 1967 1966 1965 1964 1963 1962 1961 1960 1959 1958 1957 1956 1955 1954 1953 1952 1951 1950 1949 1948 1947 1946 1945 1944 1943 1942 1941 1940 1939 1938 1937 1936 1935
WSU
USC**
Pac-8 UCLA USC STAN North WSU WSU ORE OSU OSU WSU WSU WASH OSU ORE WSU# ORE ORE# ORE OSU# OSU WSU# WSU WSU WSU ORE WSU WSU ORE ORE ORE OSU ORE OSU/WSU ORE WSU ORE
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CIBA USC STAN USC USC SC USC CAL/USC #USC #USC #CAL/USC USC #USC USC #STAN USC #USC STAN #USC #USC CAL/USC USC CAL UCLA +CAL/USC USC CAL/STM STM USC/STM CAL CAL USC CAL/USC
1934 1933 1932 1931 1930 1929 1928 1927 1926 1925 1924 1923 1922
ORE WSU WASH WASH WASH WASH ORE/WSU WSU WASH WASH
CAL CAL USC STAN USC CAL STM STM CAL STAN
CAL WASH WASH
CAL
1921 CAL 1920 CAL 1919 WASH 1918 ORE 1917 CAL 1916 CAL * North-South playoff champion ** Pac-8 playoff champion # Pacific Coast Conference playoff champion + California won CIBA Division 1, USC won Division 2. Cal def. USC in CIBA playoff title game. PSU (Portland State), SC (Santa Clara), STM (St. Mary’s)
OVER THE YEARS 2012 2009 1999 1996 1991 1982 1982 1979 1977 1976 1970 1967 1951 1947 1935 1933 1931 1928 1927 1925
Utah added to Pac-12 Conference (Colorado does not have baseball) Oregon rejoins Pac-10 after having reinstated baseball in July 2007 Pac-10 dissolves North and South Divisions; Portland State dropped Gonzaga and Portland dropped from Northern Division Eastern Washington dropped from Northern Division Portland State, Gonzaga and Eastern Washington added to North Oregon drops baseball Arizona, Arizona State added to Southern Division, establishing “Pac-10” Pac-8 Conference returns to two four-team divisions (North, South) Southern Division becomes CIBA, adds UC Santa Barbara for one season Pac-8 Conference splits into two four-team divisions (North, South) Pac-8 Conference emerges as one eight-team group (UCLA, USC, STAN, CAL, OSU, ORE, WASH, WSU) Two five-team divisions form (CIBA, North) CIBA includes UCLA, USC, STAN, CAL, SCU Northern Division includes WSU, OSU, ORE, WASH, IDAHO CIBA adds St. Mary’s for next four seasons UCLA and Santa Clara added back to CIBA UCLA, Santa Clara and San Francisco dropped from CIBA San Francisco added to CIBA UCLA added to CIBA CIBA forms (St. Mary’s, USC, Stanford, California and Santa Clara) North. Div. (WASH, WSU, ORE, OSU, IDAHO) carries Montana through 1928
RECORD-SETTING SEASON
Closer David Berg enjoyed what may arguably be the finest season that any relief pitcher has had in NCAA history in 2013. He was named Pac-12 Pitcher of the Year, the NCBWA Stopper of the Year and was a first-team All-American and a Golden Spikes Award semifinalist. Berg led the Pac-12 with a 0.92 ERA and set an NCAA record with 24 saves last season, all while tying the NCAA Division I single-season record for appearances with 51. He also finished second in the nation in WHIP with a 0.85 mark and posted an undefeated 7-0 record.
PAC-12 DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR
Junior Pat Valaika became the first player in UCLA history to win the Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Year award in 2013. The Valencia, Calif. native started every game at shortstop for the Bruins, committing only six errors in 277 chances. Valaika anchored a UCLA defense that posted a .984 fielding percentage in the CWS and set a school record with .980 fielding percentage. SCHOOL RECORD 21 CONFERENCE WINS
The Bruins tied a school record by winning 21 conference games in 2013. UCLA finished in the top three for the eighth consecutive season last year, the only Pac-12 team do have done so.
DYNAMIC DUO
ON THE BASEPATHS
Brian Carroll led the Pac-12 with 32 stolen bases in 40 attempts in 2013. Carroll’s 32 stolen bases were the 7th-most all-time by a UCLA player in a single season and the most since Dave Roberts had 45 in 1994.
JOHN SAVAGE Head coach John Savage became UCLA’s all-time winningest postseason manager with UCLA’s 3-0 win over Cal State Fullerton in the NCAA Super Regional round. Savage has a record of 32-14 in the postseason in his time at UCLA, leading the Bruins to three College World Series appearances in the last four years and one NCAA Championship. In 2013, Savage coached a pitching staff that posted a 2.55 ERA, sixth-best in the country and second-best in the conference.
OUTFIELD LEADER Right-fielder Eric Filia was key in UCLA’s run to the 2013 NCAA Championship, hitting .444 in the postseason. He batted at a .333 clip in the College World Series, knocking in eight runs, including five in the championship-clinching game against Mississippi State on June 25. Overall, Filia led UCLA with a .281 batting average in 2013 and a .387 onbase percentage. Filia was named to the 2013 NCAA Los Angeles Regional All-Tournament team and the All-CWS team for his efforts in the posteason.
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Adam Plutko and Nick Vander Tuig combined to become the winningest pitching tandem in UCLA history in 2013, finishing their careers with 29 and 27 wins respectively. Vander Tuig won 14 games last year, tied for second on UCLA’s all-time single-season list while Plutko won 10. Both players were named to the All-Pac-12 team All-CWS team as well.
DRAFTED/GRADUATED PLAYERS
BRENTON ALLEN
PAT VALAIKA
OF • 6-1 • 225 • Cerritos, Calif. (Gahr HS)
INF • 5-11 • 206 • Valencia, Calif. (Hart HS)
Helped lead UCLA to the postseason in each of his three years at 2013 MLB Draft the school, including the 2013 NCAA Championship...batted .258 20th Round Selection in 68 games played (43 starts) in his career, recording two home runs and 15 RBI...played in 43 games, making 37 starts in 2013... 2010 MLB Draft batted .250 with three doubles, 16 runs, two home runs and 13 RBI... 9th Round Selection logged a .339 on-base percentage, drawing 13 walks and slugging .352...hit .250 in nine postseason games, scoring four runs and logging two RBI...played in 13 games in 2012, making six starts as the designated hitter...batted .286, going 4-for-14 with two doubles, five runs and two RBI...played in 12 games in 2011, contributing solely as a pinch-hitter during his fresho 0 with t ttwoo runs. u s man campaign...batted .300 with two walks in 12 plate appearances, goingg 3 3-for-10
RYAN DEETER
Helped UCLA reach the College World Series in two of his three 2013 MLB Draft seasons at the school, leading the Bruins to the 2013 NCAA 9th Round Selection Championship...hit .254 with 35 doubles, seven triples, seven home runs, 107 RBI and 90 runs in his career...started all 66 games at shortstop in 2013...batted .253 while leading the team in slugging percentage (.394), RBI (48), doubles (tied, 14), triples (3), home runs (5), sacrifice flies (6) and walks (33)...became the first UCLA player to win Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Year honors...was also named to the Division I Rawlings Gold Glove Team...All-Pac-12 selection and first-team ABCA All-West Region selection...was named as one of 14 semifinalists for the Brooks Wallace Award... led the Pac-12 with 202 assists...finished second on the team with 18 multi-hit games and nine mutli-RBI games...started 61 games at shortstop, helping UCLA reach the College World Series in 2012...batted .266 with one home run, four triples, 11 doubles, 39 RBI and 37 runs...recorded a .319 on-base percentage and stole five bases in six attempts...played in 53 games, making 50 starts at shortstop in 2011...batted .238, totaling one home run, 10 doubles, 21 runs and 20 RBI...registered 10 two-hit games and six multiple-RBI efforts...led UCLA to the postseason in all three of seasons in Westwood.
RHP • 6-0 • 180 • Newark, Calif. (Newark HS) Made 62 appearances, all in relief, in four seasons at UCLA (2010MLB Draft 13)...compiled a career record of 3-0 with an ERA of 2.68 and 43 2013 32nd Round Selection strikeouts...made 21 appearances in 2013, going 2-0 with a 4.24 ERA and 10 strikeouts in 17 innings pitched while helping UCLA win the 2013 NCAA Championship... became UCLA’s first ever recipient of the NCAA Elite 89 Award, given out to the student-athlete with the highest cumulative GPA participating at the finals site for each of the NCAA’s 89 championships...earned Capital One Academic All-District VIII Team and first-team Pac-12 All-Academic honors for the second consecutive year Made 36 appearances in 2012, helping UCLA reach the College World Series...went 1-0 with a 0.89 ERA, recording 26 strikeouts and 18 walks in 30.1 innings as a setup reliever...earned Capital One Academic All-District VIII Team honors and was named a firstteam Pac-12 All-Academic selection...tied for second in the conference with 36 appearances...0.89 ERA ranks as the second-lowest ERA in a single-season in UCLA history...made five appearances in 2011...did not record a decision, posting a 7.11 ERA with seven strikeouts and three walks in 6.1 innings...redshirted the season in 2010.
ADAM PLUTKO RHP • 6-3 • 192 • Glendora, Calif. (Glendora HS) Finished his three-year career with the second-most wins in school 2013 MLB Draft history (29)...also made the second-most starts (52) and logged 11th Round Selection the second-most innings pitched (351.1)...his career ERA of 2.25 and 272 career strikeouts both rank seventh on UCLA’s all-time 2010 MLB Draft lists...finished his career with the most postseason wins (7), games 6th Round Selection started (8), innings pitched (57.2) and lowest ERA (0.94) in school history...is one of just four players in UCLA history to earn All-Pac-12 honors three years in a row... combined with teammate Nick Vander Tuig to compile the most pitching wins by two teammates in program history (56)...finished his career with a record of 29-10, posting an ERA of 2.25 and 272 strikeouts...led UCLA to two College World Series appearances and one national championship in his three years at the school...went 10-3 in 19 starts as UCLA’s Friday starter in 2013, leading the Bruins to their first NCAA Championship in program history...compiled 81 strikeouts in 124 innings pitched...ranked in the top-10 in the Pac-12 in numerous categories, including eighth in ERA (2.25), fourth in innings pitched (124), seventh in strikeouts (81) and sixth in wins (10)... in four postseason starts, went 3-0 with a 1.00 ERA and a .206 opposing batting average..went 2-0 in two starts at the College World Series, posting a 1.38 ERA...named the College World Series Most Outstanding Player...went 12-3 with a 2.48 ERA in 18 starts as UCLA’s Friday night starting pitcher in 2012, leading UCLA to its second College World Series appearance in three years...totaled 99 strikeouts and 47 walks in a team-high 119.2 innings...captured third-team All-America honors from Baseball America and second-team All-America acclaim from Perfect Game USA...went 7-4 with a 2.01 ERA in 16 appearances (15 starts) in a terrific freshman campaign in 2011...secured Freshman AllAmerica acclaim from Louisville Slugger/Collegiate Baseball and the NCBWA...posted a 2.01 ERA, the second-lowest mark in the Pac-10 Conference.
CODY REGIS INF • 6-2 • 235 • Glendora, Calif. (Glendora HS) Played in at least 54 games in each of his four seasons at UCLA...finished his career as UCLA’s career postseason leader in games played (34), at-bats (120), runs scored (tied, 20), home runs (tied, 5), walks (20) and RBI (22)...is the only UCLA player to ever play in three College World Series...drew the fourth-most walks in school history (129)...helped UCLA reach the postseason in all four of his years at the school, marking the first time UCLA has reached the postseason in four straight seasons... hit .268 with 16 home runs, 39 doubles, four triples, 137 RBI and 111 runs in 232 games played in his four-year career...slugged .396 and posted a career on-base percentage of .379 as well... led UCLA to the 2013 NCAA Championship, playing in 54 games and making 51 starts...batted .234 with 19 runs, eight doubles and 29 RBI...drew 30 walks while slugging .281 and posting an on-base percentage of .350...played in 60 games, making 58 starts in 2012 while helping UCLA reach the College World Series...batted .239 with one home run, one triple, four doubles, 25 RBI and 31 runs... registered a .361 on-base percentage...ranked fourth on the team with a .330 batting average in Pac-12 games, going 29-for-88 with 13 RBI and 18 runs...played in 57 games in 2011, making 56 starts at third base...batted .284 with a team-leading six home runs and 45 RBI...also led UCLA with a .448 slugging percentage...played in 61 games in 2010, making 53 starts and leading UCLA to the College World Series Finals...batted .312 with nine home runs, one triple, 17 doubles, 47 RBI and 41 runs...earned honorable mention All-Pac-10 Team accolades...secured All-Tournament Team honors at the College World Series and NCAA Los Angeles Regional.
NICK VANDER TUIG RHP • 6-3 • 195 • Oakdale, Calif. (Oakdale HS) Finished his three-year career with the third-most wins in school 2013 MLB Draft history (27)...14 wins in 2013 rank as the second-most by a UCLA 6th Round Selection player in a single-season...appeared in 10 postseason games, starting seven of them and going 6-2 with a 2.13 ERA...10 postseason 2010 MLB Draft appearances rank second all-time in UCLA history...owns the sixth- 39th Round Selection lowest career postseason ERA (2.13) and second-most wins (6) and innings pitched (50.2) in school history...combined with teammate Adam Plutko to compile the most pitching wins by two teammates in program history (56)...helped UCLA reach the postseason in each of his three seasons in Westwood...led UCLA to the 2012 College World Series and 2013 NCAA Championship...made 19 starts in 2013, serving as UCLA’s Saturday starter all year...went 14-4 with a 2.16 ERA, logging a team-leading 93 strikeouts and allowing 18 walks...ranked in the top-10 in the Pac-12 in numerous categories, including seventh in ERA (2.16), ninth in opposing batting average (.229), third in innings pitched (129), fourth in strikeouts (93) and first in wins (tied, 14)...18 walks were also the eighth-fewest allowed in the Pac-12...was named to the All-Pac-12 team...threw at least six innings in 17 of his 19 starts...went 4-0 in four postseason starts, logging a 1.65 ERA and 19 strikeouts in 27.1 innings pitched...won the NCAA Championship-clinching game on June 25 vs. Mississippi State, pitching eight shutout innings and striking out six...named to the All-CWS Team...made 18 starts in 2012, serving as UCLA’s No. 2 starting pitcher...went 10-4 with a 4.43 ERA, recording 77 strikeouts and 25 walks in 109.2 innings...went 2-1 with a 2.21 ERA, 24 strikeouts and three walks in 20.1 innings through three postseason starts...earned All-Tournament Team honors at the NCAA Los Angeles Regional...limited the opposition to three runs or fewer in 10 of his 18 starts...made 28 relief appearances in 2011, serving as UCLA’s closer during his freshman campaign...went 3-4 with a 2.90 ERA, logging nine saves in 14 opportunities...registered 31 strikeouts and eight walks in 31.0 innings, limiting the opposition to a .250 batting average...secured honorable mention All-Pac-10 team honors.
ZACK WEISS RHP • 6-3 • 210 • Irvine, Calif. (Northwood HS) Posted a career record of 10-7 in three seasons at UCLA, recording 2013 MLB Draft a 3.25 ERA and 124 strikeouts in 82 appearances (22 starts)...82 6th Round Selection career appearances rank ninth on UCLA’s all-time appearances list...appeared in 43 games in 2013, all in relief...served primarily 2010 MLB Draft as UCLA’s eighth-inning setup man while helping lead UCLA to the 10th Round Selection 2013 NCAA Championship...went 2-1 with a 2.25 ERA and 27 strikeouts in 40 innings pitched...honorable mention Pac-12 All-Academic selection...43 appearances were second-most in the nation to teammate David Berg’s 51 and rank as the third-most in a singleseason in UCLA history...made 17 appearances, including 13 starts in 2012 while helping UCLA reach the College World Series...went 3-3 with a 4.28 ERA, logging 44 strikeouts and 32 walks in 69.1 innings...served as UCLA’s No. 3 starting pitcher in the weekend rotation...made 22 appearances, including nine starts in 2011...went 5-3 with a 2.86 ERA, recording 53 strikeouts and 22 walks in 66.0 innings...served as UCLA’s primary midweek starting pitcher, in addition to contributing from the bullpen...secured Freshman All-America honors from Louisville Slugger/Collegiate Baseball...as a starting pitcher, went 4-3 with a 2.55 ERA in 49.1 innings (nine starts), recording 38 strikeouts and 13 walks while limiting the opposition to a .199 batting average...as a relief pitcher, went 1-0 with a 3.78 ERA in 16.2 innings (13 appearances), totaling 15 strikeouts and nine walks.
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DRAFTED/GRADUATED PLAYERS Brenton Allen’s Career Stats YEAR 2011 (Fr.) 2012 (So.) 2013 (Jr.) TOTALS
AVG .300 .286 .250 .258
GP-GS 12-0 13-6 43-37 68-43
AB 10 14 108 132
R 2 5 16 23
H 3 4 27 34
2B 0 2 3 5
3B 0 0 1 1
HR 0 0 2 2
RBI 0 2 13 15
TB 3 6 38 47
SLG .300 .429 .352 .356
BB 2 6 13 21
HBP 0 1 2 3
SO 6 6 40 52
GDP 1 0 2 3
OBP .417 .524 .339 .369
SF 0 0 1 1
SH 0 0 5 5
SB-ATT 0-0 0-1 1-2 1-3
PO 0 0 49 49
A 0 0 0 0
E 0 0 1 1
FLD .000 .000 .980 .980
Ryan Deeter’s Career Stats YEAR 2011 (R-Fr.) 2012 (R-So.) 2013 (R-Jr.) TOTALS
ERA 7.11 0.89 4.24 2.68
W-L 0-0 1-0 2-0 3-0
APP 5 36 21 62
GS 0 0 0 0
CG 0 0 0 0
SHO/CBO 0/1 0/1 0/1 0/3
SV 0 0 0 0
IP 6.1 30.1 17.0 53.2
H 8 20 12 40
R 5 7 8 20
ER 5 3 8 16
BB 3 18 12 33
SO 7 26 10 43
2B 1 4 2 7
3B 0 0 1 1
HR 0 0 1 1
BF 31 127 81 239
OAV .308 .196 .194 .211
WP 0 0 3 3
HBP 2 2 6 10
SFA 0 2 1 3
SHA 0 3 0 3
BK 0 1 1 2
GS 15 18 19 52
CG 1 2 1 4
SHO/CBO 1/1 2/3 0/1 0/3
SV 0 0 0 0
IP 107.2 119.2 124.0 351.1
H 73 91 92 256
R 28 35 35 98
ER 24 33 31 88
BB 24 47 30 101
SO 92 99 81 272
2B 14 13 20 47
3B 1 2 4 7
HR 3 7 6 16
BF 425 490 496 1411
OAV .193 .215 .207 .206
WP 2 2 2 6
HBP 5 6 9 20
SFA 3 2 3 8
SHA 15 12 10 37
BK 0 0 3 3
R 41 20 31 19 111
H 59 55 45 40 199
2B 17 10 4 8 39
3B 1 2 1 0 4
HR 9 6 1 0 16
RBI 47 45 25 20 137
TB 105 87 54 48 294
SLG .556 .448 .287 .281 .396
BB 35 34 30 30 129
HBP 1 1 8 1 11
SO 46 56 46 36 184
GDP 5 2 2 0 9
OBP .420 .381 .361 .350 .379
SF 1 7 4 1 13
SH 6 6 3 4 19
SB-ATT 7-7 4-7 3-5 1-7 15-26
PO A 45 90 31 73 132 59 133 108 341 330
E 12 11 6 3 32
FLD .918 .904 .970 .988 .954
R 21 37 32 90
H 38 61 63 162
2B 10 11 14 35
3B 0 4 3 7
HR 1 1 5 7
RBI 20 39 48 107
TB 51 83 98 232
SLG .319 .362 .394 .364
BB 11 17 33 61
HBP 8 2 6 16
SO 26 32 44 102
GDP 3 8 4 15
OBP .318 .319 .347 .330
SF 0 3 6 9
SH 7 9 4 20
SB-ATT 2-6 5-6 8-11 15-23
PO A 39 103 69 183 67 204 175 490
E 10 12 6 28
FLD .934 .955 .978 .960
Adam Plutko’s Career Stats YEAR 2011 (Fr.) 2012 (So.) 2013 (Jr.) TOTALS
ERA 2.01 2.48 2.25 2.25
W-L 7-4 12-3 10-3 29-10
APP 16 18 19 53
Cody Regis’s Career Stats YEAR 2010 (Fr.) 2011 (So.) 2012 (Jr.) 2013 (Sr.) TOTALS
AVG .312 .284 .239 .234 .268
GP-GS 61-53 57-56 60-58 54-51 232-218
AB 189 194 188 171 742
Pat Valaika’s Career Stats YEAR 2011 (Fr.) 2012 (So.) 2013 (Jr.) TOTALS
AVG .238 .266 .253 .254
GP-GS 53-50 61-61 66-66 180-177
AB 160 229 249 638
Nick Vander Tuig’s Career Stats YEAR 2011 (Fr.) 2012 (So.) 2013 (Jr.) TOTALS
ERA 2.90 4.43 2.16 3.17
W-L 3-4 10-4 14-4 27-12
APP 28 18 19 65
GS 0 18 19 37
CG 0 0 2 2
SHO/CBO 0/3 0/0 1/4 1/7
SV 9 0 0 9
IP 31.0 109.2 129.0 269.2
H 29 121 108 258
R 13 60 34 107
ER 10 54 31 95
BB 8 25 18 51
SO 31 77 93 201
2B 6 24 20 50
3B 0 0 0 0
HR 0 13 4 17
BF 130 480 509 1119
OAV .250 .277 .229 .252
WP 3 1 10 14
HBP 1 8 8 17
SFA 0 5 3 8
SHA 5 5 8 18
BK 0 2 0 2
GS 9 13 0 22
CG 0 0 0 0
SHO/CBO 0/3 0/0 0/5 0/8
SV 0 0 0 0
IP 66.0 69.1 40.0 175.1
H 44 73 36 153
R 24 42 13 79
ER 21 33 10 64
BB 22 32 12 66
SO 53 44 27 124
2B 7 12 5 24
3B 0 2 1 3
HR 1 7 1 9
BF 271 320 176 767
OAV .191 .274 .243 .238
WP 5 4 6 15
HBP 15 10 10 35
SFA 1 3 3 7
SHA 3 9 3 15
BK 1 0 1 2
Zack Weiss’s Career Stats YEAR 2011 (Fr.) 2012 (So.) 2013 (Jr.) TOTALS
ERA 2.86 4.28 2.25 3.29
W-L 5-3 3-3 2-1 27-12
APP 22 17 43 82
Pat Valaika
Zack Weiss
Adam Plutko
Nick Vander Tuig
Cody Regis
Ryan Deeter
47
FUTURE BRUINS UCLA BASEBALL SIGNS NINE PLAYERS FOR 2014-15
Grant Hockin
UCLA head coach John Savage signed nine standout players to National Letters of Intent during the early signing period in November of 2013. Aided by assistant coaches Rex Peters, Jake Silverman and T.J. Bruce, the Bruins’ latest recruiting class features six pitchers and three position players.
RHP – 6-1, 185 – R/R – Pomona, Calif. (Damien HS)
Name Brady Aiken Sean Bouchard Griffin Canning Nathan Hadley Grant Hockin Josh Morgan Jacob Nix Matt Trask Nick Valaika
Position LHP INF RHP RHP RHP INF RHP RHP INF
B/T L/L R/R R/R R/R R/R R/R R/R R/R R/R
Ht. 6-3 6-3 6-1 5-11 6-1 5-11 6-3 6-3 5-11
Wt. 210 180 165 180 185 175 200 205 180
Hometown (High School) Cardiff by the Sea, Calif. (Cathedral Catholic HS) San Diego, Calif. (Cathedral Catholic HS) Coto de Caza, Calif. (Santa Margarita HS) Encino, Calif. (Loyola HS) Pomona, Calif. (Damien HS) Corona, Calif. (Orange Lutheran HS) Los Alamitos, Calif. (Los Alamitos HS) Davis, Calif. (Davis HS) Valencia, Calif. (Hart HS)
Three-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Damien High School (La Verne, Calif.) under head coach Al Leyva ... ranked No. 132 on Perfect Game USA’s list of Top 500 High School prospects for 2014 ... pitched at the 2013 Tournament of the Stars in Cary, N.C., competing for the AABC team … went 7-3 with a 1.96 ERA and 96 strikeouts as a junior in 2013, logging 75 innings pitched ... made 13 appearances in 2012, posting an 8-3 record with a 2.10 ERA … two-time Perfect Game Underclass All-American (2012 and 2013) … pitched at the 2012 and 2013 Area Code Games in Long Beach, Calif., pitching the Milwaukee Brewers squad … also competed at the 2013 Perfect Game National Showcase in Minneapolis, Minn. and the 2013 Under Armour All-America game at Wrigley Field in Chicago, Ill. … struck out 70 batters in 70 innings pitched that season … pitched 6.2 innings as a freshman on varsity, recording one win in three appearances … participated in the USA Baseball 16U National Team Trials in 2011. Head Coach John Savage: “Grant is one of the best right-handed pitchers in the country. Like Griffin Canning, he has high pitch ability with a plus fastball and we look forward to having Grant become a Bruin next fall.”
Josh Morgan
Brady Aiken
INF – 5-11, 175 – R/R – Corona, Calif. (Orange Lutheran HS)
LHP – 6-3, 210 – L/L – Cardiff by the Sea, Calif. (Cathedral Catholic HS)
Three-year baseball letterwinner at Orange Lutheran High School (Orange, Calif.) under head coach Eric Borba ... ranked No. 51 on Perfect Game USA’s list of Top 500 High School prospects for 2014 ... batted .326 with 15 runs, five RBI, three doubles and four stolen bases as a junior in 2013 ... recorded an on-base percentage of .420 and a slugging percentage of .395 … logged one save in his only pitching appearance as well … 2013 first-team Perfect Game Underclass All-American … played for the Milwaukee Brewers squad at the 2013 Area Code Games in Long Beach, Calif. … also competed at the 2013 Perfect Game National Showcase in Minneapolis, Minn. … hit .316 with 15 runs, 15 RBI, two doubles and a home run as a sophomore in 2012, leading Orange Lutheran to the Trinity League title … participated in the USA Baseball 17U National Team Development Program in 2012 … batted at a .233 clip with four doubles as a freshman on varsity in 2011.
Three-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Cathedral Catholic High School (San Diego, Calif.) under head coach Gary Remiker ... ranked No. 9 on Baseball America’s Top 50 Prospects for the 2014 MLB Draft ... ranked No. 24 on Perfect Game USA’s list of Top 500 High School prospects for 2014 ... competed for the U.S. 18U National Team at the 18U World Cup in Taiwan, leading the team to its second straight World Cup title … delivered a great performance in the 2013 IBAF 18U/’AAA’ World Cup championship game against Japan, pitching seven innings and allowing one run on five hits while striking out 10 to earn the win … received International Performance of the Year honors from USA Baseball for his game against Japan … also picked up the victory vs. Korea in a must-win game four days prior to the Championship game, pitching 5.2 innings and striking out seven … played for the Milwaukee Brewers squad at the 2012 and 2013 Area Code Games in Long Beach, Calif. … struck out eight batters in just three innings of work at the 2013 Area Code Games, allowing only two balls to be in put in play in his start … named the No. 6 prospect from the 2013 Area Code Games by Baseball America … two-time Under Armour and Perfect Game Underclass All-American … also played for the U.S. 16U and 14U National Teams … participated in the 2013 Tournament of the Stars in Cary, N.C. … struck out seven batters in three innings at the tournament without surrendering a hit … pitched in the 2013 Perfect Game All-American Classic Presented by Rawlings at Petco Park in San Diego, Calif. … 2013 second-team All-State Underclass selection … went 5-3 in 10 games (nine starts) as a junior at Cathedral Catholic, tossing three complete games in 53.1 innings … logged 80 strikeouts to just 25 walks while recording a 0.92 ERA as well … opposing batters hit just .162 against him in 2013 … posted a 6-1 record with a 1.32 ERA as a sophomore on varsity, fanning 69 hitters in 47.2 innings pitched … allowed hitters to post just a .170 batting average against him in 2012. Head Coach John Savage: “Brady is one of the top left-handed pitchers in the country. He has established himself both on the national and international level and has the ability to be an impact pitcher in a rotation right away with the three above-average pitches he possesses.”
Sean Bouchard INF – 6-3, 180 – R/R – San Diego, Calif. (Cathedral Catholic HS) Two-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Cathedral Catholic High School (San Diego, Calif.) under head coach Gary Remiker ... ranked No. 58 on Perfect Game USA’s list of Top 500 High School prospects for 2014 ... batted .316 with 16 runs, nine RBI, one double and one home run as a junior in 2013 ... posted an on-base percentage of .391 and stole seven bases as well … 2013 third-team Perfect Game Underclass All-American … played for the Milwaukee Brewers squad at the 2013 Area Code Games in Long Beach, Calif. … also competed at the 2013 Perfect Game All-American Classic Presented by Rawlings at Petco Park in San Diego, Calif. … played in the 2013 Perfect Game National Showcase in Minneapolis, Minn. … 2013 UT-San Diego All-Academic Baseball Team selection. Head Coach John Savage: “Sean is a very good athlete who we look for to play on the left side of the infield. He has all of the tools you are looking for in an impact freshman and we are very excited for what the future holds for him.”
Griffin Canning RHP – 6-1, 185 – R/R – Coto de Caza, Calif. (Santa Margarita HS) Two-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Santa Margarita Catholic High School (Santa Margarita, Calif.) under head coach Dave Bacani ... ranked No. 202 on Perfect Game USA’s list of Top 500 High School prospects for 2014 ... pitched in the 2013 Tournament of the Stars in Cary, N.C., earning the win for the Babe Ruth team on June 19 with two innings of scoreless relief … was one of 40 players selected to attend the USA Baseball 18U National Team Trials … in two outings during the team trials, pitched five innings, allowing just one hit and one unearned run while striking out six … 2013 third-team Perfect Game Underclass All-American … made 15 appearances as a junior in 2013, going 5-2 with a 1.78 ERA while leading Santa Margarita to the quarterfinals of the CIF-SS playoffs … pitched 86.1 innings in 2013, fanning 60 batters while walking only 15 … appeared in 13 games as a sophomore in 2012, making 12 starts and posting a 4-7 record with a 2.30 ERA … tossed five complete games and recorded one shutout in 67 innings pitched … logged 50 strikeouts while walking just seven … participated in the 2012 17U USA Baseball National Team Development Program … pitched in nine games as a freshman in 2011, posting a 6-2 record with a 0.90 ERA. Head Coach John Savage: “Griffin has terrific pitch ability and is one of the top competitors in Southern California. He is pitch ready, has very good command of his fastball and possesses an above-average changeup. Griffin pitches in one of the toughest leagues in the Trinity League in Orange County and will have a significant role on our staff in the future.”
Nathan Hadley RHP – 5-11, 180 – R/R – Encino, Calif. (Loyola HS) Earned two varsity letters in baseball at Loyola High School (Los Angeles, Calif.) under head coach Mike Cordero ... ranked No. 312 on Perfect Game USA’s list of Top 500 High School prospects for 2014 ... pitched in 14 games for Loyola as a junior in 2013, making one start ... posted a 5-3 record with three saves and a 2.62 ERA in 45.1 innings pitched … logged 45 strikeouts in his 45.1 innings of work as well … one start came in the CIF-SS second round against Lakewood, where he pitched a complete game, allowing one earned run on four hits in a 6-3 victory … 2013 honorable mention Perfect Game Underclass All-American … pitched for the Milwaukee Brewers squad at the 2013 Area Code Games in Long Beach, Calif. … also pitched at the 2013 Tournament of the Stars in Cary, N.C., competing for the RBI team … made the start for RBI at the Tournament of the Stars on June 23, striking out five in three innings … 2013 second-team All-State Underclass selection … 2013 first-team All-Mission League selection … appeared in six games as a sophomore in 2012 (all in relief), going 1-0 with one save … did not allow a run in 6.2 innings pitched while fanning three. Head Coach John Savage: “Nathan established himself this summer as one of the top right-handed pitchers in Southern California and is a fierce competitor that will bring an attitude to the mound. He has a big-time arm and we look for him to be an immediate impact pitcher in our program.”
Head Coach John Savage: “Josh is a terrific young infielder with all of the skills you are looking for in an impact player. He has taken a big step forward this past summer and fall and should be able to step in and play a major role in our program as a freshman.”
Jacob Nix RHP – 6-3, 200 – R/R – Los Alamitos, Calif. (Los Alamitos HS) Three-year letterwinner in baseball at Los Alamitos High School (Los Alamitos, Calif.) under head coach Matt Nuez ... ranked No. 60 on Perfect Game USA’s list of Top 500 High School prospects for 2014 ... competed at the 2013 USA Baseball 18U National Team Trials … made the final cut and pitched for the U.S. 18U National Team at the 18U World Cup in Taiwan, leading the team to its second straight World Cup title … earned the win in an exhibition game against Chinese Taipei on Aug. 27, 2013, pitching 2.1 innings of hitless relief while striking out two … helped the U.S. earn a 6-5 win over Cuba in the 18U World Cup on Sept. 2 with 5.2 innings of scoreless relief … 2013 third-team Perfect Game Underclass All-American … pitched for the Milwaukee Brewers squad at the 2013 Area Code Games in Long Beach, Calif. … also competed at the 2013 Tournament of the Stars in Cary, N.C., playing for the Babe Ruth squad … played at the 2013 Perfect Game National Showcase in Minneapolis, Minn. … 2013 All-Sunset League selection … went 8-0 with a 1.97 ERA and 41 strikeouts as a sophomore in 2012, leading Los Alamitos to the Sunset League title … 2012 Sunset League Pitcher of the Year … 2012 second-team All-Orange County selection … struck out 10 in a complete game one-hitter against El Toro in the 2012 CIF-SS Quarterfinals … pitched a no-hitter in 2012. Head Coach John Savage: “Jacob is a power right-handed pitcher who has elevated his game over the last nine months. Along with Brady Aiken, he led the 18U USA Baseball team to a Gold medal at the World Cup this past summer and proved himself to be one of the top right-handers in the country. Jacob, along with the rest of the pitchers in this class, will comprise the best pitching class going into college next season in my opinion.”
Matt Trask RHP – 6-3, 205 – R/R – Davis, Calif. (Davis HS) Two-year baseball letterwinner at Davis High School (Davis, Calif.) under head coach Dan Ariola ... ranked No. 275 on Perfect Game USA’s list of Top 500 High School prospects for 2014 ... posted a 7-2 in 11 appearances, logging a 1.52 ERA with three complete games in 55.1 innings as a junior in 2013 … batted .413 with 13 runs, 20 RBI, eight doubles and a .511 on-base percentage as well … named to the All-Nor-Cal first team and the Cal Hi Sports All-State second team … pitched at the 2013 Perfect Game WWBA 18U Championship, earning All-Tournament honors … competed at the 2013 Area Code Games in Long Beach, Calif., playing for the Oakland A’s squad … 2013 third-team Perfect Game Underclass All-American and 2012 Underclass honorable mention selection … went 3-3 with a 1.72 ERA in 10 appearances (seven starts) as a sophomore in 2012. Head Coach John Savage: “Matt is one of the best right-handed pitchers in Northern California. He comes from a very good program at Davis High School and has a chance to play a major role as a freshman in our staff next year.”
Nick Valaika INF – 5-11, 180 – R/R – Valencia, Calif. (Hart HS) Two-year varsity baseball letterwinner at Hart High School (Valencia, Calif.) under head coach Jim Ozella ... ranked No. 234 on Perfect Game USA’s list of Top 500 High School prospects for 2014 ... brother Pat played at UCLA from 2011-13, winning the NCAA Championship with the squad this past season … played for the Milwaukee Brewers squad at the 2013 Area Code Games in Long Beach, Calif. … also competed at the 2013 Tournament of the Stars in Cary, N.C., playing for the Babe Ruth squad … 2013 third-team Perfect Game Underclass All-American and 2012 Underclass honorable mention selection … batted at a .316 clip as a sophomore in 2012, missing most of the season with a knee injury. Head Coach John Savage: “Nick comes from one of the best baseball families in Southern California and also plays for one of the best baseball programs in Southern California. Coach Ozella has proven that they can produce top notch players both at the collegiate level as well as the professional level. We have had very good players come from Hart High School in Trevor Brown, Trevor Bauer (Golden Spikes Award Winner 2011) and Pat Valaika (captain of the 2013 National Championship team) and we believe that Nick will continue that tradition for us next year.”
UCLA’S RECRUITING CLASS RANKINGS UNDER JOHN SAVAGE Publication Baseball America Collegiate Baseball
‘05 5 9
‘06 13 18
’07 7 5
‘08 7 6
‘09 19 35
‘10 3 4
‘11 NR 39
‘12 2 2
‘13 NR 16
UCLA’S RECRUITING CLASS BREAKDOWN UNDER JOHN SAVAGE Recruits Total Newcomers MLB Draftees AFLAC All-Americans
48
‘05 17 4 0
‘06 13 4 2
‘07 12 5 2
‘08 9 1 2
‘09 14 4 1
‘10 9 6 0
‘11 13 2 0
‘12 12 5 0
‘13 8 4 0
2013 SEASON STATS
GAME-BY-GAME RESULTS Record: 49-17 Date Feb. 15 Feb. 16 Feb. 17 Feb. 22 Feb. 23 Feb. 24 Feb. 26 March 1 March 2 March 3 March 5 March 8 March 9 March 10 March 12 March 15 March 16 March 17 March 22 March 23 March 24 March 28 March 29 March 30 April 2 April 5 April 6 April 7 April 9 April 12 April 13 April 14 April 16 April 19 April 20 April 21 April 23 April 26 April 27 April 28 April 30 May 3 May 4 May 5 May 7 May 10 May 11 May 12 May 14 May 17 May 18 May 19 May 21 May 24 May 25 May 26 May 31 June 1 June 2 June 7 June 8 June 16 June 18 June 21 June 24 June 25 * RE SR CWS
W/L L W W W L W W W W W W W L W W W W W L W W L L W L W L L W W W L W W W L L W W L W W W W L W W W L W W W W L L W W W W W W W W W W W
Home: 27-9 Score 6-2 14-0 14-1 4-3 5-0 5-4 12-3 6-3 4-2 10-2 3-2 2-1 4-0 6-1 5-4 3-2 5-0 3-0 5-1 8-3 10-2 4-1 7-4 12-10 9-6 3-2 5-0 5-2 5-1 2-0 3-1 4-1 6-4 1-0 1-0 5-3 11-1 7-6 10-1 4-3 8-1 5-2 5-4 4-3 4-1 10-2 7-1 12-5 5-2 2-1 7-6 5-2 2-1 2-1 7-3 6-4 5-3 6-4 6-0 5-3 3-0 2-1 2-1 4-1 3-1 8-0
(10)
(10)
(15)
(10)
(12)
(11)
(10)
Away: 17-8 Record 0-1 1-1 2-1 3-1 3-2 4-2 5-2 6-2 7-2 8-2 9-2 10-2 10-3 11-3 12-3 13-3 14-3 15-3 15-4 16-4 17-4 17-5 17-6 18-6 18-7 19-7 19-8 19-9 20-9 21-9 22-9 22-10 23-10 24-10 25-10 25-11 25-12 26-12 27-12 27-13 28-13 29-13 30-13 31-13 31-14 32-14 33-14 34-14 34-15 35-15 36-15 37-15 38-15 38-16 38-17 39-17 40-17 41-17 42-17 43-17 44-17 45-17 46-17 47-17 48-17 49-17
Neutral: 5-0
Opponent (Rank) Minnesota Minnesota Minnesota at Baylor at Baylor at Baylor at UC Santa Barbara Wright State Wright State Wright State at Long Beach State Notre Dame (22) Oklahoma (17) USC at Cal State Northridge Washington* Washington* Washington* California* California* California* at Arizona State* at Arizona State* at Arizona State* Cal State Fullerton (4) Oregon State* (6) Oregon State* (6) Oregon State* (6) Hawaii Loyola Marymount Loyola Marymount Loyola Marymount at UC Irvine at Oregon* (10) at Oregon* (10) at Oregon* (10) Long Beach State at Washington State* at Washington State* at Washington State* UC Irvine Utah* Utah* Utah* Cal State Northridge Arizona* Arizona* Arizona* at Cal State Fullerton (4) at USC* at USC* at USC* UC Santa Barbara at Stanford* at Stanford* at Stanford* San Diego State REG Cal Poly REG San Diego REG at Cal State Fullerton SR at Cal State Fullerton SR LSU CWS North Carolina State CWS North Carolina CWS Mississippi State CWS Mississippi State CWS
Pac-12 Conference game NCAA Los Angeles Regional (at Jackie Robinson Stadium, UCLA) NCAA Super Regional (at Jackie Robinson Stadium, UCLA) NCAA College World Series (at TD Ameritrade Park, Omaha, Neb.) (ranking from Baseball America, week of game/series)
49
Pac-12: 21-9
Postseason: 10-0
UCLA Pitcher of Record Poteet L 0-1 Vander Tuig W 1-0 Watson W 1-0 Plutko W 1-0 Vander Tuig L 1-1 Berg W 1-0 Poteet W 1-1 Plutko W 2-0 Vander Tuig W 2-1 Watson W 2-0 Deeter W 1-0 Berg W 2-0 Vander Tuig L 2-2 Watson W 3-0 Weiss W 1-0 Ehret W 1-0 Vander Tuig W 3-2 Watson W 4-0 Plutko L 2-1 Vander Tuig W 4-2 Watson W 5-0 Plutko L 2-2 Poteet L 1-2 Berg W 3-0 Poteet L 1-3 Plutko W 3-2 Vander Tuig L 4-3 Watson L 5-1 Poteet W 2-3 Plutko W 4-2 Vander Tuig W 5-3 Watson L 5-2 Berg W 4-0 Plutko W 5-2 Vander Tuig W 6-3 Watson L 5-3 Poteet L 2-4 Berg W 5-0 Vander Tuig W 7-3 Weiss L 1-1 Poteet W 3-4 Plutko W 6-2 Vander Tuig W 8-3 Berg W 6-0 Poteet L 3-5 Plutko W 7-2 Vander Tuig W 9-3 Deeter W 2-0 Poteet L 3-6 Weiss W 2-1 Vander Tuig W 10-3 Watson W 6-3 Poteet W 4-6 Plutko L 7-3 Vander Tuig L 10-4 Watson W 7-3 Plutko W 8-3 Vander Tuig W 11-4 Watson W 8-3 Berg W 7-0 Vander Tuig W 12-4 Plutko W 9-3 Vander Tuig W 13-4 Watson W 9-3 Plutko W 10-3 Vander Tuig W 14-4
Attendance 841 818 847 2,715 3,085 2,667 425 515 562 609 1,322 620 866 2,157 653 428 503 613 525 740 974 3,501 3,561 2,870 723 847 1,001 1,057 465 510 592 714 1,041 1,917 3,181 2,137 459 873 1,117 781 459 613 733 872 489 844 1,016 809 2,738 796 871 1,106 653 2,121 1,792 2,679 1,690 1,749 1,220 3,244 3,303 26,344 25,543 25,947 25,690 27,127
Time 3:33 2:50 3:03 3:55 3:16 3:20 3:10 2:39 2:35 2:55 4:14 2:52 2:52 3:06 3:29 5:35 2:47 3:06 2:55 3:02 3:02 2:48 3:01 4:10 3:46 3:10 3:17 3:25 2:34 3:22 2:48 3:16 3:51 2:54 2:31 2:49 3:44 4:10 2:31 3:20 3:12 2:42 3:09 3:19 3:29 3:18 2:48 3:41 3:09 3:17 3:32 3:10 2:26 2:23 3:26 3:17 2:53 3:28 2:41 4:06 3:14 3:10 3:09 3:33 3:34 3:20
2013 SEASON STATS
Overall Batting Stats Record: 49-17 Player Justin Hazard Eric Filia Kevin Kramer Pat Gallagher Brian Carroll Trent Chatterton Pat Valaika Brenton Allen Cody Regis Kevin Williams Shane Zeile Ty Moore Christoph Bono Chris Keck Darrell Miller Jr. Tyler Scott Brett Urabe Aaron Weimer Totals Opponents
Home: 27-9 AVG .333 .281 .278 .274 .258 .257 .253 .250 .234 .227 .226 .219 .216 .186 .143 .111 .083 .000 .250 .222
Away: 17-8
GP-GS AB 14-6 21 66-63 242 66-66 245 56-48 175 66-66 244 41-30 105 66-66 249 43-37 108 54-51 171 42-36 128 61-57 199 28-19 73 55-15 74 31-22 70 10-6 14 6-1 9 25-5 12 1-0 1 66-66 2140 66-66 2173
R 2 42 41 20 50 18 32 16 19 15 22 10 10 9 1 1 4 0 312 196
H 7 68 68 48 63 27 63 27 40 29 45 16 16 13 2 1 1 0 534 482
Neutral: 5-0 2B 1 14 11 7 3 4 14 3 8 4 9 4 2 3 1 0 0 0 88 75
3B 0 1 2 0 2 0 3 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 12 10
HR 0 1 3 1 0 0 5 2 0 1 2 0 2 1 0 0 1 0 19 19
Pac-12: 21-9
RBI 1 33 42 20 20 10 48 13 20 12 20 10 10 10 3 2 4 0 278 176
TB 8 87 92 58 70 31 98 38 48 38 60 22 24 21 3 1 4 0 703 634
SLG .381 .360 .376 .331 .287 .295 .394 .352 .281 .297 .302 .301 .324 .300 .214 .111 .333 .000 .329 .292
Postseason: 10-0
BB HBP 3 0 32 11 30 14 20 7 31 17 12 5 33 6 13 2 30 1 14 3 23 8 7 2 9 5 13 0 2 0 2 0 6 1 0 0 280 82 163 61
SO GDP 4 0 22 4 47 2 45 1 38 6 16 1 44 4 40 2 36 0 36 3 39 2 20 3 27 1 10 1 5 1 3 0 4 0 0 0 436 31 457 31
OBP .400 .387 .382 .368 .380 .358 .347 .339 .350 .317 .326 .301 .337 .306 .235 .273 .400 .000 .354 .293
SF SH SB-AT 1 1 0-0 2 10 9-16 4 12 9-18 2 7 0-1 0 14 32-40 1 2 2-2 6 4 8-11 1 5 1-2 1 4 1-7 0 3 4-5 3 9 2-5 1 0 0-1 1 2 2-4 2 0 0-0 1 0 0-0 0 0 0-0 1 3 1-2 0 0 0-0 27 76 71-114 16 52 42-64
FLD% 1.000 1.000 .953 .991 .993 .954 .978 .980 .988 1.000 .991 .975 1.000 1.000 .960 .000 .600 .000 .980 .963
LOB: UCLA 547, Opponents 467. DPs Turned: UCLA 40, Opponents 40. TPs Turned: UCLA 0, Opponents 0. IBB: UCLA 16 (Valaika 5, Regis 3, Filia 2, Kramer 2, Allen 1, Williams 1, Gallagher 1), Opponents 0. Picked Off: UCLA 8 (Filia 3, Kramer 2, Bono 1, Carroll 1, Regis 1), Opponents 10. Catcher’s Interference: UCLA 1, Opponents 0. Errors: UCLA 52, Opponents 94.
Overall Pitching Stats Player ERA Max Schuh 0.00 Hunter Virant 0.00 David Berg 0.92 James Kaprielian 1.55 Nick Vander Tuig 2.16 Adam Plutko 2.25 Zack Weiss 2.25 Grant Watson 3.01 Ryan Deeter 4.24 Cody Poteet 4.84 Jake Ehret 16.20 Totals 2.55 Opponents 3.74
W-L 0-0 0-0 7-0 0-0 14-4 10-3 2-1 9-3 2-0 4-6 1-0 49-17 17-49
APP 12 5 51 34 19 19 43 18 21 29 5 66 66
GS 0 0 0 0 19 19 0 17 0 11 0 66 66
CG SHO/CBO SV 0 0/0 0 0 0/1 0 0 0/7 24 0 0/1 2 2 1/4 0 1 0/2 0 0 0/5 0 0 0/2 0 0 0/1 0 0 0/1 0 0 0/0 0 3 9/8 26 2 3/3 12
IP 2.1 3.1 78.0 40.2 129.0 124.0 40.0 92.2 17.0 70.2 3.1 601.0 582.0
H R ER 1 1 0 2 1 0 55 8 8 19 12 7 108 34 31 92 35 31 36 13 10 93 36 31 12 8 8 57 42 38 7 6 6 482 196 170 534 312 242
BB 4 4 11 24 18 30 12 16 12 31 1 163 280
SO 2 1 78 53 93 81 27 55 10 56 1 457 436
2B 0 0 6 2 20 20 5 7 2 11 2 75 88
3B HR AB OAV 0 0 7 .143 0 0 12 .167 0 2 278 .198 2 0 135 .141 0 4 472 .229 4 6 444 .207 1 1 147 .243 2 2 349 .266 1 1 62 .194 0 3 251 .227 0 0 16 .438 10 19 2173 .222 12 19 2140 .250
WP HBP BK 1 1 0 1 1 0 2 5 1 10 5 1 10 8 0 2 9 3 6 10 1 6 6 1 3 6 1 7 9 0 0 1 1 48 61 9 45 82 8
Runners caught stealing (catchers): Zeile 15/50 (.300), Hazard 2/7 (.286), Miller Jr. 3/5 (.600). Runners caught stealing (pitchers): Vander Tuig 6/13 (.462), Poteet 3/16 (.188), Berg 1/2 (.500), Watson 2/4 (.500), Kaprielian 1/3 (.333), Weiss 3/6 (.500), 6/17 (.353), Deeter 0/2 (.000), Schuh 0/1 (.000). Passed Balls: UCLA 15 (Zeile 13, Hazard 2), Opponents 16. Pickoffs: UCLA 10 (Vander Tuig 3, Watson 2, Plutko 2, Berg 2, Poteet 1), Opponents 8.
Overall Fielding Stats Player Eric Filia Chris Keck Justin Hazard Christoph Bono Nick Vander Tuig Cody Poteet Kevin Williams Jake Ehret Hunter Virant Brian Carroll Pat Gallagher Shane Zeile Cody Regis Brenton Allen Pat Valaika
C 122 113 51 48 36 21 14 3 1 151 554 440 244 50 277
PO A 120 2 104 9 46 5 47 1 11 25 6 15 7 7 0 3 1 0 146 4 516 33 370 66 133 108 49 0 67 204
Cody Regis
E 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 5 4 3 1 6
FLD% 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 .993 .991 .991 .988 .980 .978
DP CS SBA SBA% PB CI 0 0 0 --- 0 0 5 0 0 --- 0 0 0 2 5 .714 2 0 0 0 0 --- 0 0 1 6 7 .538 0 0 0 3 13 .813 0 0 1 0 0 --- 0 0 0 0 0 --- 0 0 0 0 0 --- 0 0 1 0 0 --- 0 0 26 0 0 --- 0 0 2 15 35 .700 13 0 21 0 0 --- 0 0 0 0 0 --- 0 0 27 0 0 --- 0 0
Player Ty Moore Darrell Miller Jr. Trent Chatterton Kevin Kramer David Berg Grant Watson James Kaprielian Zack Weiss Adam Plutko Ryan Deeter Brett Urabe Max Schuh Totals Opponents
Kevin Kramer
50
C PO A E FLD% DP CS SBA SBA% PB CI 40 39 0 1 .975 0 0 0 --- 0 0 25 18 6 1 .960 1 3 2 .400 0 1 108 39 64 5 .954 12 0 0 --- 0 0 190 52 129 9 .953 10 0 0 --- 0 0 36 4 30 2 .944 0 1 1 .500 0 0 46 11 32 3 .935 2 2 2 .500 0 0 9 1 7 1 .889 0 1 2 .667 0 0 11 4 5 2 .818 0 3 3 .500 0 0 25 9 11 5 .800 0 6 11 .647 0 0 4 1 2 1 .750 0 0 2 1.000 0 0 5 2 1 2 .600 0 0 0 --- 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 1 1.000 0 0 2624 1803 769 52 .980 40 42 44 .656 15 1 2547 1746 707 94 .963 40 71 43 .623 16 0
Adam Plutko
2013 SEASON STATS
Pac-12 Conference Batting Stats Record: 21-9 Player Justin Hazard Cody Regis Kevin Kramer Shane Zeile Chris Keck Pat Valaika Christoph Bono Eric Filia Brenton Allen Brian Carroll Pat Gallagher Trent Chatterton Kevin Williams Ty Moore Brett Urabe Totals Opponents
Home: 12-3 AVG .429 .291 .286 .286 .286 .265 .244 .236 .233 .231 .225 .222 .206 .154 .125 .251 .246
Away: 9-6
GP-GS AB 5-2 7 26-24 86 30-30 112 28-28 105 10-8 28 30-30 117 27-9 41 30-29 110 16-15 43 30-30 117 23-19 71 21-16 54 23-19 68 10-7 26 11-4 8 30 993 30 1012
R 1 12 19 13 7 71 5 18 5 20 9 6 9 1 2 144 100
H 3 25 32 30 8 32 10 26 10 27 16 12 14 4 1 249 249
2B 1 7 4 3 2 4 0 7 2 2 3 0 1 0 0 36 36
3B 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 5 9
HR 0 0 2 2 1 3 2 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 13 9
RBI 1 14 14 14 7 20 8 14 4 11 5 4 5 2 3 126 90
TB 4 32 42 39 15 48 16 35 15 31 19 12 18 4 4 334 330
SLG .571 .372 .375 .371 .536 .410 .390 .318 .349 .265 .268 .222 .265 .154 .500 .336 .326
BB HBP 2 0 12 1 15 6 8 2 3 0 16 1 7 2 19 4 4 1 12 6 7 3 6 2 11 1 1 0 2 0 125 29 64 31
SO GDP 3 0 14 0 22 1 16 1 4 1 20 3 18 1 11 2 14 1 16 3 20 1 5 0 19 2 7 0 3 0 192 16 217 10
OBP .500 .380 .398 .342 .344 .356 .380 .368 .313 .333 .317 .317 .325 .179 .300 .349 .308
SF SH 1 0 1 1 0 7 2 3 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 3 0 3 0 7 1 2 1 1 0 2 1 0 0 2 9 33 10 27
SB-AT 0-0 1-6 4-9 0-2 0-0 4-5 1-3 5-9 0-0 13-15 0-0 1-1 0-1 0-0 0-0 29-51 15-23
FLD% 1.000 .976 .963 .991 1.000 .973 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 .986 .980 1.000 .957 .600 .979 .965
LOB: UCLA 240, Opponents 225. DPs Turned: UCLA 14, Opponents 20. IBB: UCLA 9 (Valaika 3, Gallagher 1, Filia 1, Allen 1, Regis 1, Williams 1, Kramer 1) Opponents 0. Picked Off: UCLA 3 (Filia 1, Bono 1, Regis 1), Opponents 5. Catcher’s Interference: UCLA 0, Opponents 0. Errors: UCLA 25, Opponents 41.
Pac-12 Pitching Stats Player Max Schuh Hunter Virant Jake Ehret David Berg James Kaprielian Nick Vander Tuig Adam Plutko Zack Weiss Cody Poteet Ryan Deeter Grant Watson Totals Opponents
ERA 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.75 1.65 2.35 2.94 4.02 4.15 4.50 5.01 2.93 3.59
W-L 0-0 0-0 1-0 3-0 0-0 7-2 4-3 1-1 0-1 1-0 4-2 21-9 9-21
APP 3 1 1 21 16 10 10 19 13 9 10 30 30
GS 0 0 0 0 0 10 10 0 0 0 10 30 30
CG SHO/CBO SV 0 0/0 0 0 0/0 0 0 0/0 0 0 0/3 11 0 0/0 0 2 1/1 0 1 0/1 0 0 0/2 0 0 0/0 0 0 0/1 0 0 0/1 0 3 4/3 11 1 1/1 7
IP 0.2 0.2 0.1 36.0 16.1 69.0 64.1 15.2 17.1 6.0 46.2 273.0 268.1
H R ER 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 28 3 3 11 5 3 58 20 18 46 23 21 17 9 7 20 8 8 3 3 3 66 29 26 249 100 89 249 144 107
BB 1 0 0 2 8 10 17 8 5 3 10 64 125
SO 0 1 1 32 19 57 46 12 20 4 25 217 192
2B 0 0 0 3 0 12 12 2 0 1 6 36 36
3B HR AB OAV 0 0 2 .000 0 0 2 .000 0 0 1 .000 0 2 130 .215 2 0 57 .193 0 2 252 .230 3 3 228 .202 1 0 59 .288 0 1 68 .294 1 0 21 .143 2 1 192 .344 9 9 1012 .246 5 13 993 .251
WP HBP BK 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 3 3 1 5 5 0 0 6 2 1 7 1 1 0 0 1 2 0 2 5 1 14 31 6 20 29 5
Runners caught stealing (catchers): Zeile 6/20 (.300), Hazard 0/1 (.000). Runners caught stealing (pitchers): Plutko 3/7 (.429), Vander Tuig 1/6 (.167), Watson 2/4 (.500), Weiss 2/3 (.667), Kaprielian 0/2 (.000), Poteet 0/1 (.000). Passed Balls: UCLA 5 (Zeile 5), Opponents 7. Pickoffs: UCLA 5 (Vander Tuig 2, Poteet 1, Berg 1, Watson 1), Opponents 3.
Pac-12 Fielding Stats Player C Brian Carroll 66 Eric Filia 55 Chris Keck 54 Christoph Bono 28 Nick Vander Tuig 21 Justin Hazard 18 Brenton Allen 16 Kevin Williams 9 Cody Poteet 7 Zack Weiss 3 James Kaprielian 3 Hunter Virant 1 Shane Zeile 222 Pat Gallagher 220 Trent Chatterton 50
PO 62 55 49 28 7 17 16 2 2 2 0 1 190 201 19
A 4 0 5 0 14 1 0 7 5 1 3 0 30 16 30
Kevin Williams
E 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 3 1
FLD% DP CS SBA SBA% PB CI 1.000 1 0 0 --- 0 0 1.000 0 0 0 --- 0 0 1.000 1 0 0 --- 0 0 1.000 0 0 0 --- 0 0 1.000 1 1 5 .833 0 0 1.000 0 0 1 1.000 0 0 1.000 0 0 0 --- 0 0 1.000 1 0 0 --- 0 0 1.000 0 0 1 1.000 0 0 1.000 0 2 1 .333 0 0 1.000 0 0 2 1.000 0 0 1.000 0 0 0 --- 0 0 .991 1 6 14 .700 5 0 .986 9 0 0 --- 0 0 .980 4 0 0 --- 0 0
Player Cody Regis Pat Valaika Kevin Kramer Ty Moore David Berg Grant Watson Adam Plutko Brett Urabe Ryan Deeter Max Schuh Jake Ehret Totals Opponents
Eric Filia
51
C 126 113 82 23 17 21 13 5 2 0 0 1175 1178
PO A E FLD% DP CS SBA SBA% PB CI 80 43 3 .976 6 0 0 --- 0 0 29 81 3 .973 10 0 0 --- 0 0 23 56 3 .963 2 0 0 --- 0 0 22 0 1 .957 0 0 0 --- 0 0 1 15 1 .941 0 0 0 --- 0 0 5 14 2 .905 1 2 2 .500 0 0 6 4 3 .769 0 3 4 .571 0 0 2 1 2 .600 0 0 0 --- 0 0 0 1 1 .500 0 0 0 --- 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 --- 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 --- 0 0 819 331 25 .979 14 15 8 .652 5 0 805 332 41 .965 20 29 22 .569 7 0
Grant Watson
2013 GAME-BY-GAME LINE SCORES GAME 1: MINNESOTA 6, UCLA 2
GAME 12: UCLA 2, NOTRE DAME 1
GAME 23: ARIZONA STATE 7, UCLA 4
Feb. 15 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 R H E MINN 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 4 6 12 1 UCLA 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 2 6 1 WP: Kray (1-0) LP: Poteet (0-1) Time: 3:33 Attendance: 841
March 8 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 R H E ND 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 1 6 0 UCLA 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 7 0 WP: Berg (2-0) LP: McCarty (2-2) Time: 2:52 Attendance: 620
March 29 at Packard Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E UCLA 0 1 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 4 8 0 ASU 0 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 X 7 9 0 WP: Kellogg (6-0) LP: Poteet (1-2) SV: Burr (5) Time: 3:01 Attendance: 3561
GAME 2: UCLA 14, MINNESOTA 0
GAME 13: OKLAHOMA 4, UCLA 0
GAME 24: UCLA 12, ARIZONA STATE 10
Feb. 16 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 MINN 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 UCLA 3 2 2 0 5 1 1 0 X WP: Vander Tuig (1-0) LP: Meyer (0-1) Time: 2:50 Attendance: 818
March 9 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 OU 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 0 0 UCLA 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 WP: Gray (3-1) LP: Vander Tuig (2-2) Time: 2:52 Attendance: 866
March 30 at Packard Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 R H E UCLA 2 4 0 0 1 0 2 1 0 2 12 12 3 ASU 2 0 4 1 1 0 0 0 2 0 10 19 2 WP: Berg (3-0) LP: Melbostad (0-1) Time: 4:10 Attendance: 2870
R H E 0 6 4 14 16 1
GAME 3: UCLA 14, MINNESOTA 1
GAME 14: UCLA 6, USC 1
Feb. 17 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 MINN 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 UCLA 6 0 0 1 0 1 1 5 X WP: Watson (1-0) LP: Jess (0-1) Time: 3:03 Attendance: 847
March 10 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 USC 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 UCLA 1 0 0 0 0 3 0 2 X WP: Watson (3-0) LP: Adler (0-2) Time: 3:06 Attendance: 2157
R H E 1 6 2 14 17 1
R H E 4 6 0 0 5 2
GAME 25: CAL ST. FULLERTON 9, UCLA 6 R H E 1 5 1 6 10 2
April 2 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E CSF 2 0 0 2 1 4 0 0 0 9 12 5 UCLA 0 1 2 0 0 1 1 1 0 6 7 1 WP: Peitzmeier (2-0) LP: Poteet (1-3) SV: Lorenzen (9) Time: 3:46 Attendance: 723
GAME 4: UCLA 4, BAYLOR 3
GAME 15: UCLA 5, CAL ST. NORTHRIDGE 4
GAME 26: UCLA 3, OREGON STATE 2
Feb. 22 at Baylor Ballpark 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 UCLA 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 BAY 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 WP: Plutko (1-0) LP: Garner (0-2) Time: 3:58 Attendance: 2715
March 12 at Matador Field 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E UCLA 0 0 2 0 1 0 1 1 0 5 9 0 CSUN 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 3 6 WP: Weiss (1-0) LP: Maltese (0-1) SV: Berg (4) Time: 3:29 Attendance: 653
April 5 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E OSU 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 4 1 UCLA 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 X 3 6 1 WP: Plutko (3-2) LP: Boyd (6-1) SV: Berg (6) Time: 3:10 Attendance: 847
GAME 5: BAYLOR 5, UCLA 0
GAME 16: UCLA 3, WASHINGTON 2
GAME 27: OREGON STATE 5, UCLA 0
Feb. 23 at Baylor Ballpark 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E UCLA 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 BAY 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 3 X 5 8 1 WP: Newman (1-0) LP: Vander Tuig (1-1) SV: Smith (2) Time: 3:16 Attendance: 3085
March 15 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 WASH 110000000000000 UCLA 000000020000001 WP: Ehret (1-0) LP: Kim (0-1) Time: 5:35 Attendance: 428
April 6 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 OSU 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 3 UCLA 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 WP: Moore (6-1) LP: Vander Tuig (4-3) Time: 3:17 Attendance: 1,001
GAME 6: UCLA 5, BAYLOR 4
GAME 17: UCLA 5, WASHINGTON 0
GAME 28: OREGON STATE 5, UCLA 2
Feb. 24 at Baylor Ballpark 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 UCLA 0 0 0 1 3 0 0 BAY 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 WP: Berg (1-0) LP: Michalec (0-1) Time: 3:20 Attendance: 2667
March 16 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 WASH 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 UCLA 2 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 X WP: Vander Tuig (3-2) LP: Voth (2-3) Time: 2:47 Attendance: 503
April 7 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E OSU 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 5 11 2 UCLA 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 2 6 1 WP: Wetzler (1-1) LP: Watson (5-1) SV: Schultz (7) Time: 3:25 Attendance: 1,057
8 9 R H E 0 0 4 8 0 0 1 3 7 0 SV: Kaprielian (1)
8 9 R H E 0 1 5 7 0 1 0 4 9 2 SV: Kaprielian (2)
R H E 2 9 1 3 9 0
R H E 0 7 1 5 12 0
R H E 5 10 0 0 6 0
GAME 7: UCLA 12, UC SANTA BARBARA 3
GAME 18: UCLA 3, WASHINGTON 0
GAME 29: UCLA 5, HAWAII 1
Feb. 26 at Caesar Uyesaka Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 UCLA 0 0 2 0 2 7 0 0 1 UCSB 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 WP: Poteet (1-1) LP: Mahle (0-1) Time: 3:10 Attendance: 425
March 17 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E WASH 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 0 UCLA 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 X 3 7 2 WP: Watson (4-0) LP: Fisher (0-1) SV: Berg (5) Time: 3:06 Attendance: 613
April 9 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Hawaii 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 UCLA 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 2 X WP: Poteet (2-3) LP: Squier (0-5) Time: 2:34 Attendance: 465
GAME 8: UCLA 6, WRIGHT STATE 3
GAME 19: CALIFORNIA 5, UCLA 1
GAME 30: UCLA 2, LOYOLA MARYMOUNT 0
March 1 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E Wright St. 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 7 3 UCLA 0 5 0 1 0 0 0 0 X 6 6 0 WP: Plutko (2-0) LP: Henn (1-2) SV: Berg (1) Time: 2:39 Attendance: 515
March 22 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 CAL 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 UCLA 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 WP: Mason (4-0) LP: Plutko (2-1) Time: 2:55 Attendance: 525
April 12 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E LMU 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 3 UCLA 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 X 2 4 0 WP: Plutko (4-2) LP: Welmon (5-2) SV: Berg (7) Time: 3:22 Attendance: 510
GAME 9: UCLA 4, WRIGHT STATE 2
GAME 20: UCLA 8, CALIFORNIA 3
GAME 31: UCLA 3, LOYOLA MARYMOUNT 1
March 2 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E Wright St. 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 7 0 UCLA 0 2 1 0 0 0 1 0 X 4 5 0 WP: Vander Tuig (2-1) LP: Braun (0-2) SV: Berg (2) Time: 2:35 Attendance: 562
March 23 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 CAL 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 UCLA 0 1 0 0 3 4 0 0 X WP: Vander Tuig (4-2) LP: Jones (1-2) Time: 3:02 Attendance: 740
April 13 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E LMU 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 5 0 UCLA 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 X 3 8 0 WP: Vander Tuig (5-3) LP: Griffin (3-4) SV: Berg (8) Time: 2:48 Attendance: 592
GAME 10: UCLA 10, WRIGHT STATE 2
GAME 21: UCLA 10, CALIFORNIA 2
GAME 32: LOYOLA MARYMOUNT 4, UCLA 1
March 3 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Wright St. 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 UCLA 2 0 5 0 1 2 0 0 X WP: Watson (2-0) LP: Sexton (1-2) Time: 2:55 Attendance: 609
March 24 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E CAL 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 7 1 UCLA 0 0 4 0 0 1 0 5 X 10 16 0 WP: Watson (5-0) LP: Nelson (0-1) Time: 3:02 Attendance: 974
April 14 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E LMU 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 4 11 2 UCLA 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 5 2 WP: McGrath (2-1) LP: Watson (5-2) SV: Dahlson (4) Time: 3:16 Attendance: 714
GAME 11: UCLA 3, LONG BEACH STATE 2
GAME 22: ARIZONA STATE 4, UCLA 1
GAME 33: UCLA 6, UC IRVINE 4
March 5 at Blair Field 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E UCLA 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 6 1 LBSU 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 7 0 WP: Deeter (1-0) LP: Frye (0-1) SV: Berg (3) Time: 4:14 Attendance: 1322
March 28 at Packard Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E UCLA 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 8 2 ASU 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 X 4 4 0 WP: Williams (4-2) LP: Plutko (2-2) SV: Burr (4) Time: 2:48 Attendance: 3501
April 16 at Anteater Ballpark 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 UCLA 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 2 UCI 3 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 WP: Berg (4-0) LP: Parmenter (1-2) Time: 3:51 Attendance: 1041
R H E 12 11 2 3 4 1
R H E 2 4 0 10 8 2
52
R H E 5 7 0 1 7 0
R H E 3 8 2 8 10 1
R H E 1 5 2 5 4 1
R H E 6 14 1 4 6 2
2013 GAME-BY-GAME LINE SCORES GAME 34: UCLA 1, OREGON 0
GAME 45: CAL ST. NORTHRIDGE 4, UCLA 1
GAME 56: UCLA 6, STANFORD 4
April 19 at PK Park 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 UCLA 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 Oregon 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 WP: Plutko (5-2) LP: Thorpe (5-4) Time: 2:54 Attendance: 1917
May 7 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E CSUN 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 4 4 0 UCLA 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 11 1 WP: Sandoval (2-0) LP: Poteet (3-5) SV: Goossen-Brown (9) Time: 3:29 Attendance: 489
May 26 at Sunken Diamond 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 UCLA 1 3 0 0 0 0 2 0 STAN 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 WP: Watson (7-3) LP: McArdle (3-3) Time: 3:05 Attendance: 2679
GAME 35: UCLA 1, OREGON 0
GAME 46: UCLA 10, ARIZONA 2
GAME 57: UCLA 5, SAN DIEGO STATE 3
April 20 at PK Park 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 UCLA 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Oregon 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 WP: Vander Tuig (6-3) LP: Irvin (7-2) Time: 2:31 Attendance: 3181
May 10 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 ARIZ 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 UCLA 0 0 0 0 7 0 3 0 X WP: Plutko (7-2) LP: Farris (4-5) Time: 3:18 Attendance: 844
May 31 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E SDSU 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 3 9 0 UCLA 0 0 1 3 0 0 1 0 X 5 12 1 WP: Plutko (8-3) LP: Doran (8-4) SV: Berg (19) Time: 2:53 Attendance: 1690
8 9 R H E 0 0 1 4 1 0 0 0 4 3 SV: Berg (9)
9 R H E 0 1 6 1 0 0 3 2 SV: Berg (10)
R H E 2 7 0 10 9 1
9 R H E 0 6 10 1 0 4 9 3 SV: Berg (18)
GAME 36: OREGON 5, UCLA 3
GAME 47: UCLA 7, ARIZONA 1
GAME 58: UCLA 6, CAL POLY 4
April 21 at PK Park 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 UCLA 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 Oregon 0 0 1 0 4 0 0 WP: Reed (5-3) LP: Watson (5-3) Time: 2:49 Attendance: 2137
May 11 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E ARIZ 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 7 1 UCLA 0 2 2 0 0 1 0 2 X 7 13 0 WP: Vander Tuig (9-3) LP: Wade (4-6) SV: Berg (13) Time: 2:48 Attendance: 1016
June 1 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E UCLA 0 0 0 0 0 4 2 0 0 6 7 0 CP 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 9 0 WP: Vander Tuig (11-4) LP: Reilly (2-4) SV: Berg (20) Time: 3:28 Attendance: 1749
GAME 37: LONG BEACH STATE 11, UCLA 1
GAME 48: UCLA 12, ARIZONA 5
GAME 59: UCLA 6, SAN DIEGO 0
April 23 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 LBSU 2 0 6 0 3 0 0 0 0 UCLA 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 WP: Sabo (2-2) LP: Poteet (2-4) Time: 3:44 Attendance: 459
May 12 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 ARIZ 0 2 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 UCLA 0 1 6 0 4 1 0 0 X WP: Deeter (2-0) LP: Crawford (5-2) Time: 3:41 Attendance: 809
June 2 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 USD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 UCLA 4 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 X WP: Watson (8-3) LP: Homick (5-2) Time: 2:41 Attendance: 1220
8 9 R H E 0 0 3 6 0 0 X 5 7 1 SV: Sherfy (13)
R H E 11 8 2 1 4 1
R H E 5 10 1 12 13 1
R H E 0 1 1 6 9 1
GAME 38: UCLA 7, WASHINGTON STATE 6
GAME 49: CAL ST. FULLERTON 5, UCLA 2
GAME 60: UCLA 5, CAL ST. FULLERTON 3
April 26 at Bailey-Brayton Field 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 UCLA 0 2 1 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 WSU 0 0 0 1 1 3 0 1 0 0 0 WP: Berg (5-0) LP: Monda (2-1) Time: 4:10 Attendance: 873
May 14 at Goodwin Field 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E UCLA 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 6 1 CSF 3 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 X 5 5 0 WP: Birosak (1-0) LP: Poteet (3-6) SV: Lorenzen (16) Time: 3:09 Attendance: 2738
June 7 at Goodwin Field 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 R H E UCLA 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 2 5 9 1 CSF 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 3 9 2 WP: Berg (7-0) LP: Davis (1-2) Time: 4:06 Attendance: 2870
GAME 39: UCLA 10, WASHINGTON STATE 1
GAME 50: UCLA 2, USC 1
GAME 61: UCLA 3, CAL ST. FULLERTON 0
April 27 at Bailey-Brayton Field 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E UCLA 4 2 0 1 2 0 0 1 0 10 10 1 WSU 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 7 3 WP: Vander Tuig (7-3) LP: Chleborad (3-7) Time: 2:31 Attendance: 1117
May 17 at Dedeaux Field 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E UCLA 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 2 8 2 USC 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 4 2 WP: Weiss (2-1) LP: Brent Wheatley (1-3) SV: Berg (14) Time: 3:17 Attendance: 796
June 8 at Goodwin Field 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E CSF 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 2 UCLA 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 X 3 6 1 WP: Vander Tuig (12-4) LP: Eshelman (12-3) SV: Berg (21) Time: 3:14 Attendance: 3303
GAME 40: WASHINGTON STATE 4, UCLA 3
GAME 51: UCLA 7, USC 6
GAME 62: UCLA 2, LSU 1
April 28 at Bailey-Brayton Field 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E UCLA 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 8 3 WSU 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 X 4 11 5 WP: Leckenby (1-2) LP: Weiss (1-1) SV: Monda (1) Time: 3:20 Attendance: 781
May 18 at Dedeaux Field 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E UCLA 0 0 0 0 2 0 5 0 0 7 7 0 USC 0 0 0 3 0 0 3 0 0 6 7 3 WP: Vander Tuig (10-3) LP: Nootbaar (2-5) SV: Berg (15) Time: 3:32 Attendance: 871
June 16 at TD Ameritrade Park 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E UCLA 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 2 5 1 LSU 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 5 2 WP: Plutko (9-3) LP: Nola (12-1) SV: Berg (22) Time: 3:10 Attendance: 26344
GAME 41: UCLA 8, UC IRVINE 1
GAME 52: UCLA 5, USC 2
GAME 63: UCLA 2, NORTH CAROLINA ST. 1
April 30 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 UCI 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 UCLA 0 0 1 0 1 1 5 0 X WP: Poteet (3-4) LP: Brock (1-1) Time: 3:12 Attendance: 459
May 19 at Dedeaux Field 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 UCLA 0 0 2 0 1 2 0 0 USC 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 WP: Watson (6-3) LP: Twomey (2-7) Time: 3:10 Attendance: 1106
R H E 7 9 0 6 16 3
9 R H E 0 5 8 2 0 2 12 1 SV: Berg (16)
June 18 at TD Ameritrade Park 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E UCLA 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 2 5 0 NCSU 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 5 0 WP: Vander Tuig (13-4) LP: Jernigan (1-1) SV: Berg (23) Time: 3:09 Attendance: 25543
GAME 42: UCLA 5, UTAH 2
GAME 53: UCLA 2, UC SANTA BARBARA 1
GAME 64: UCLA 4, NORTH CAROLINA 1
May 3 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E UTAH 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 9 1 UCLA 2 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 X 5 9 0 WP: Plutko (6-2) LP: Watrous (3-3) SV: Berg (11) Time: 2:42 Attendance: 613
May 21 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E UCSB 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 2 UCLA 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 X 2 6 0 WP: Poteet (4-6) LP: Jacome (5-4) SV: Berg (17) Time: 2:26 Attendance: 653
June 21 at TD Ameritrade Park 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 UNC 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 UCLA 0 1 0 0 0 1 2 0 X WP: Watson (9-3) LP: Emanuel (11-5) Time: 3:33 Attendance: 25947
GAME 43: UCLA 5, UTAH 4
GAME 54: STANFORD 2, UCLA 1
GAME 65: UCLA 3, MISSISSIPPI ST. 1
May 4 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E UTAH 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 4 7 0 UCLA 1 1 0 0 0 1 2 0 X 5 6 1 WP: Vander Tuig (8-3) LP: Carroll (3-6) SV: Berg (12) Time: 3:09 Attendance: 733
May 24 at Sunken Diamond 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 UCLA 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 STAN 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 WP: Appel (10-4) LP: Plutko (7-3) Time: 2:23 Attendance: 2121
June 24 at TD Ameritrade Park 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E UCLA 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 3 6 1 MSU 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 6 1 WP: Plutko (10-3) LP: Fitts (0-1) SV: Berg (24) Time: 3:34 Attendance: 25690
GAME 44: UCLA 5, UTAH 4
GAME 55: STANFORD 7, UCLA 3
GAME 66: UCLA 8, MISSISSIPPI ST. 0
May 5 at Jackie Robinson Stadium 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 UTAH 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 UCLA 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 WP: Berg (6-0) LP: Green (0-1) Time: 3:19 Attendance: 872
May 25 at Sunken Diamond 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E UCLA 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 4 1 STAN 0 0 1 0 1 3 2 0 X 7 14 1 WP: James (3-3) LP: Vander Tuig (10-4) SV: Lindquist (5) Time: 3:26 Attendance: 1792
June 25 at TD Ameritrade Park 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E MSU 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 3 UCLA 1 0 2 2 0 1 0 2 X 8 12 1 WP: Vander Tuig (14-4) LP: Pollorena (6-4) Time: 3:20 Attendance: 27127
R H E 1 6 2 8 13 0
R H E 3 8 1 4 11 0
53
8 9 R H E 0 0 1 3 0 0 X 2 5 0 SV: Hughes (4)
R H E 1 7 1 4 6 0
2013 SEASON STATS
Team Game Highs
Multi-Hit Games
BATTING
PLAYER
2
3
4
5+
Eric Filia Pat Valaika Kevin Kramer Brian Carroll Shane Zeile Pat Gallagher Trent Chatterton Cody Regis Kevin Williams Christoph Bono Ty Moore Justin Hazard Chris Keck Brenton Allen
16 17 13 9 11 8 6 6 7 3 2 2 2 1
3 1 4 3 1 3 1 1 1
1 1 1 -
-
20 18 17 12 11 10 9 8 7 3 3 2 2 2
3
0
124
TOTAL
At bats Runs scored
48 14 14 17 14 5 5 2 3 25 10 10 10 13 5 2 2 2 5 5 2 14 14 14 4
vs. Washington (March 15) vs. Minnesota (Feb. 16) vs. Minnesota (Feb. 17) vs. Minnesota (Feb. 17) vs. Minnesota (Feb. 17) vs. Minnesota (Feb. 17) vs. California (March 24) vs. Wright State (March 3) vs. Arizona (May 12) vs. Arizona (May 12) vs. Washington (March 15) at Arizona State (March 30) at USC (May 18) vs. Washington (March 15) vs. California (March 24) vs. Minnesota (Feb. 16) vs. San Diego State (May 31) vs. Mississippi State (June 25) vs. Wright State (March 1) at UC Santa Barbara (Feb. 26) Nine times vs. USC (March 10) vs. Washington (March 15) vs. UC Irvine (April 30) at Arizona State (March 30)
45 20 3 3 2 2
vs. Washington (March 15) vs. USC (March 10) at Arizona State (March 30) at Washington State (April 28) at Cal State Northridge (March 12) Nine times
15.0 14 11 10 10 Walks Allowed 9 Hits Allowed 19 Wild Pitches 4 4 Hit Batters 4 4
vs. Washington (March 15) vs. Washington (March 15) vs. Long Beach State (April 23) at Arizona State (March 30) vs. Long Beach State (April 23) vs. Long Beach State (April 23) at Arizona State (March 30) at Baylor (Feb. 22) vs. Wright State (March 3) vs. Washington (March 15) vs. Washington (March 17)
Hits RBI Doubles Triples Home Runs Total Bases Walks Strikeouts Sacrifice Hits Sacrifice Flies Stolen Bases Hit by Pitch Caught Stealing Runners LOB Hit into DP
FIELDING Putouts Assists Errors Passed Balls DPs turned
PITCHING Innings Strikeouts Runs Allowed Earned Runs
Individual Game Highs BATTING At Bats Runs Hits RBI Doubles Triples Home Runs Total Bases Walks Strikeouts Stolen Bases Hit by Pitch Sacrifice Hits Sacrifice Flies
6 4 4 4 4 6 2 1 1 7 3 4 3 2 3 1
Eight times Chatterton at Arizona State (3/30) Regis vs. Arizona (5/11) Gallagher at Stanford (5/26) Filia at Cal State Fullerton (6/7) Regis vs. Arizona (5/10) Seven times 12 times 19 times Keck vs. Arizona (5/12) Regis vs. UC Irvine (4/30) Valaika vs. Arizona (5/10) Carroll vs. Wright State (3/1) Six times Four times 27 times
TEAM
103 18
Multi-RBI Games PLAYER
2
3
4
5+
Kevin Kramer Pat Valaika Eric Filia Pat Gallagher Shane Zeile Trent Chatterton Brian Carroll Cody Regis Ty Moore Christoph Bono Brenton Allen Kevin Williams Chris Keck Darrell Miller Jr. Tyler Scott
6 6 3 4 4 4 2 2 2 1 2 1 1 1 1
5 1 3 1 1 1 1 1 -
2 1 -
1 1 -
11 9 7 5 4 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 1 1
40
14
3
2
59
TEAM
Hitting Streaks PLAYER Kevin Kramer Eric Filia Pat Valaika Pat Gallagher Shane Zeile Cody Regis Brian Carroll Kevin Williams Christoph Bono Brenton Allen Trent Chatterton Chris Keck Ty Moore Darrell Miller Jr. Justin Hazard Brett Urabe Tyler Scott
GAMES
CURRENT
13 12 9 9 8 8 8 8 5 5 4 3 3 2 2 1 1
1 2 3 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 -
Inning-by-Inning Summary 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 EX Total UCLA Opponents
40 36 45 21 46 43 34 31 7 9 34 13 29 22 22 21 19 21 11 4
FIELDING Putouts Assists Errors
18 Gallagher vs. USC (3/10) 18 Gallagher vs. Hawaii (4/9) 8 Valaika (3/3 and 5/19) 8 Regis at Washington State (4/26) 2 Urabe at Arizona (3/30) 2 Gallagher at Washington State (4/28)
PITCHING Innings Strikeouts Runs Allowed Hits Allowed
9.0 8 6 9
Situational Records TOTAL SITUATION
Vander Tuig (3/16 and 4/27) Five times Watson at Arizona State (3/30) Four times
54
312 196
RECORD
Total 49-17 Conference 21-9 Non-Conference 28-8 Home 27-9 Away 17-8 Neutral 5-0 Day 23-7 Night 26-10 February 5-2 March 13-4 April 10-7 May 12-4 June 9-0 vs Left-handed starter 21-5 vs Right-handed starter 28-12 1-Run games 17-2 2-Run games 10-1 5+Run games 15-3 Extra innings 6-1 Shutouts 9-3 UCLA scores 0-2 runs 8-12 UCLA scores 3-5 runs 20-4 UCLA scores 6-9 runs 12-1 UCLA scores 10+ runs 9-0 Opponent scores 0-2 runs 32-1 Opponent scores 3-5 runs 14-11 Opponent scores 6-9 runs 12-1 Opponent scores 10+ runs 1-1 UCLA scores in 1st inning 19-2 Opponent scores in 1st inning 12-9 UCLA scores first 32-6 Opponent scores first 17-11 Leading after 6 38-2 Trailing after 6 5-14 Tied after 6 6-1 Leading after 7 41-0 Trailing after 7 2-15 Tied after 7 6-2 Leading after 8 40-0 Trailing after 8 1-16 Tied after 8 8-1 UCLA hits 0 home runs 38-12 UCLA hits 1 home run 9-5 UCLA hits 2+ home runs 2-0 Opponent hits 0 home runs 37-11 Opponent hits 1 home run 12-5 Opponent hits 2+ home runs 0-1 UCLA makes 0 errors 21-6 UCLA makes 1 error 21-7 UCLA makes 2+ errors 7-4 Opponent makes 0 errors 12-8 Opponent makes 1 error 14-4 Opponent makes 2+ errors 23-5 UCLA out-hits opponent 27-3 Out-hit by opponent 12-14 Hits are tied 10-0 Longest Winning Streak 11 Longest Losing Streak 2 Current Streak W11 Largest Margin of Victory 14 Largest Margin of Defeat 10 Last At-Bat Wins 3 Most Runs (UCLA only) 14 (twice) Most Runs (Both Teams) 22 (at ASU, 3/30) Fewest Runs (Both Teams) 1 (W, 1-0, twice) Most UCLA Errors 3 (twice) Most Opponent Errors 6 (Cal State Northridge, 3/12) Longest Game 5:35 (vs. Washington, 3/15) Shortest Game 2:23 (at Stanford, 5/23) Largest Home Crowd 2,157 (vs. USC, 3/10) Largest Road/Neutral Crowd 27,127 (vs. Mississippi St., 6/25)
2013 SEASON STATS
Starters by Position PITCHER Adam Plutko Nick Vander Tuig Grant Watson Cody Poteet
19 19 17 11
15-4 14-5 13-4 7-4
CATCHER Shane Zeile Justin Hazard Darrell Miller Jr.
57 6 3
43-14 5-1 1-2
FIRST BASE Pat Gallagher Chris Keck Cody Regis
48 11 7
40-8 5-6 4-3
SECOND BASE Cody Regis Trent Chatterton Kevin Williams
39 25 2
31-8 16-9 2-0
THIRD BASE Kevin Kramer
66
49-17
SHORTSTOP Pat Valaika
66
49-17
LEFT FIELD Brenton Allen Ty Moore Christoph Bono Brett Urabe
31 17 14 4
23-8 12-5 11-3 3-1
CENTER FIELD Brian Carroll
66
49-17
RIGHT FIELD Eric Filia Christoph Bono Ty Moore Tyler Scott
63 1 1 1
46-17 1-0 1-0 1-0
DESIGNATED HITTER Kevin Williams Chris Keck Brenton Allen Trent Chatterton Cody Regis Darrell Miller Jr. Ty Moore Brett Urabe
34 11 6 5 5 3 1 1
23-11 9-2 5-1 5-0 3-2 2-1 1-0 1-0
Starters by Batting Order LEADOFF Brian Carroll Eric Filia Christoph Bono
54 11 1
40-14 8-3 1-0
2ND SPOT Kevin Kramer Eric Filia Brian Carroll Trent Chatterton Ty Moore Kevin Williams
36 12 10 6 1 1
31-5 6-6 7-3 4-2 1-0 0-1
3RD SPOT Eric Filia Kevin Kramer Pat Valaika
31 30 5
26-5 18-12 5-0
CLEANUP Pat Valaika Pat Gallagher Cody Regis Shane Zeile
61 3 1 1
44-17 3-0 1-0 1-0
5TH SPOT Kevin Williams Pat Gallagher Cody Regis Shane Zeile Chris Keck Christoph Bono Eric Filia Brenton Allen
21 18 11 7 4 2 2 1
14-7 17-1 6-5 5-2 3-1 2-0 2-0 0-1
6TH SPOT Shane Zeile Pat Gallagher Chris Keck Cody Regis Kevin Williams Eric Filia Christoph Bono Brenton Allen Darrell Miller Jr. Ty Moore
32 11 8 5 3 3 1 1 1 1
22-10 8-3 6-2 4-1 3-0 3-0 1-0 0-1 1-0 1-0
UCLA’s Home Run Log
(Team W-L record when starter)
No. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19.
Player Eric Filia Pat Valaika Pat Gallagher Christoph Bono Pat Valaika Shane Zeile Kevin Kramer Pat Valaika Kevin Williams Brett Urabe Kevin Kramer Brenton Allen Pat Valaika Christoph Bono Brenton Allen Chris Keck Kevin Kramer Pat Valaika Shane Zeile
Date 2/16 3/1 3/3 3/16 3/17 3/29 3/30 4/2 4/5 4/7 4/14 4/16 4/27 4/27 5/4 5/12 5/12 5/12 5/25
Opponent Minnesota Wright State Wright State Washington Washington at Arizona State at Arizona State Cal State Fullerton Oregon State Oregon State Loyola Marymount at UC Irvine at Washington State at Washington State Utah Arizona Arizona Arizona at Stanford
(Team W-L record when starter)
7TH SPOT Shane Zeile Cody Regis Pat Gallagher Chris Keck Darrell Miller Jr. Kevin Williams Brenton Allen Eric Filia Trent Chatterton Ty Moore
15 14 9 7 5 4 3 3 3 3
13-2 10-4 7-2 4-3 2-3 3-1 3-0 1-2 3-0 3-0
8TH SPOT Cody Regis Brenton Allen Trent Chatterton Pat Gallagher Christoph Bono Ty Moore Kevin Williams Chris Keck Brett Urabe Shane Zeile Brian Carroll Eric Filia Tyler Scott
17 8 8 7 6 6 3 3 2 2 2 1 1
14-3 6-2 5-3 5-2 4-2 5-1 2-1 1-2 2-0 2-0 2-0 0-1 1-0
9TH SPOT Brenton Allen Trent Chatterton Ty Moore Justin Hazard Christoph Bono Kevin Williams Cody Regis Brett Urabe
24 13 8 6 5 4 3 3
19-5 9-4 4-4 5-1 4-1 3-1 3-0 2-1
Ty Moore
Brian Carroll
Pat Gallagher
55
Runners On Outs Inning 1 2 B2 2 2 B2 0 2 B5 1 0 B4 0 2 B3 0 0 T5 2 2 T2 1 2 B3 0 0 B5 0 0 B6 0 0 B4 1 1 T9 0 2 T2 1 2 T5 0 0 B7 2 2 B3 2 2 B5 0 0 B6 1 1 T2
2013 CONFERENCE REVIEW
Final Standings CONFERENCE W L Pct 24 6 .800 22 8 .733 21 9 .700 16 14 .533 16 14 .533 15 15 .500 15 15 .500 10 20 .333 10 20 .333 9 21 .300 7 23 .233
Oregon State%*^# Oregon* UCLA*^#& Arizona State* Stanford Arizona Washington California USC Washington State Utah % Pac-12 Champion
* NCAA Regional selection
Home 13-2 11-4 12-3 7-8 7-8 10-5 9-6 4-11 5-10 3-12 4-11
Away 11-4 11-4 9-6 9-6 9-6 5-10 6-9 6-9 5-10 6-9 3-12
^ NCAA Super Regional Participant
Neut 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0
OVERALL W L 52 13 48 16 49 17 37 22 32 22 34 21 24 32 23 31 20 36 23 32 21 31
# College World Series Participant
T 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Pct .800 .750 .742 .625 .593 .618 .429 .426 .357 .418 .404
Home 27-5 25-9 27-9 17-11 18-13 28-10 12-10 12-13 11-17 15-12 9-11
Away 18-6 23-7 17-8 16-11 14-9 6-11 12-22 10-16 9-19 8-17 11-19
Neut 7-2 0-0 5-0 4-0-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-2 0-0 0-3 1-1
Streak L1 L1 W11 L1 L1 W4 W1 W1 L3 L2 W1
& NCAA Champion
2013 All-Pac-12 Team
2013 Pac-12 All-Academic Team
Player of the Year: Michael Conforto, Oregon State Pitcher of the Year: David Berg, UCLA Defensive Player of the Year: Pat Valaika, UCLA Freshman of the Year: Andrew Moore, Oregon State Coach of the Year: Pat Casey, Oregon State
FIRST TEAM Name Ryan Deeter Danny Diekroeger Brett Jacobs Josh McAlister Dean McArdle Adam Nelubowich Luke Pappas Geo Saba Collin Slaybaugh Kevin Swick
School UCLA STAN WSU ASU STAN WSU STAN STAN WSU USC
Year RJr. Jr. RJr. Jr. Sr. RJr. So. So. Jr. Jr.
GPA 3.93 3.79 3.61 3.69 3.65 3.64 3.92 4.00 4.00 3.77
Major Math/Economics Computer Science Accounting Accounting (Honors College) Communications & History Finance Computer Science Undeclared Movement Studies Business Administration
SECOND TEAM Name Sahil Bloom Brandon Dixon Chris Muse-Fisher Brian Guymon Joe Meggs Jason Monda Joe Pond Mathew Troupe Luke West Greg Zebrack
School STAN ARIZ CAL STAN WASH WSU UTAH ARIZ UTAH USC
Year Sr. Jr. So. Jr. RSr. So. Sr. So. Jr. RSr.
GPA 3.58 3.40 3.70 3.45 3.47 3.50 3.52 3.56 3.51 3.40
Major Economics General Studies Undeclared Product Design Economics Zoology Economics Pre-Business Business Administration Business Administration
Name Mark Appel (2) J.J. Altobelli Michael Benjamin David Berg (2) Matt Boyd Kasey Coffman Michael Conforto (2) Dylan Davis Brandon Dixon Johnny Field (2) Ryon Healy Ryan Kellogg Andrew Knapp Andrew Moore Kevin Newman Adam Plutko (3) Brian Ragira Justin Ringo Jake Rodriguez Jimmie Sherfy (2) Tyler Smith (2) Tommy Thorpe Pat Valaika Nick Vander Tuig Ben Wetzler
School STAN ORE ARIZ UCLA OSU ASU OSU OSU ARIZ ARIZ ORE ASU CAL OSU ARIZ UCLA STAN STAN OSU ORE OSU ORE UCLA UCLA OSU
Pos. RHP SS 3B RHP LHP OF OF OF 3B OF 1B LHP C RHP SS RHP 1B DH C RHP SS LHP SS RHP LHP
Yr. Sr. Sr. Jr. So. Sr. Jr. So. So. Jr. Jr. Jr. Fr. Jr. Fr. Fr. Jr. Jr. Sr. Jr. Jr. Sr. So. Jr. Jr. Jr.
Hometown Houston, Tex. Newport Beach, Calif. Queen Creek, Ariz. Covina, Calif. Mercer Island, Wash. Phoenix, Ariz. Woodinville, Wash. Redmond, Wash. Murrieta, Calif. Las Vegas, Nev. West Hills, Calif. Whitby, Ontario, Canada Granite Bay, Calif. Eugene, Ore. Poway, Calif. Glendora, Calif. Arlington, Tex. Palos Park, Ill. Elk Grove, Calif. Camarillo, Calif. Thousand Oaks, Calif. Vancouver, Wash. Valencia, Calif. Oakdale, Calif. Clackamas, Ore.
HONORABLE MENTION: Ty Afenir (WASH), Ryan Barnes (OSU) Tyler Baumgartner (ORE), Augey Bill (ARIZ), Christoph Bono (UCLA), Cole Brocker (OSU), Brian Carroll (UCLA), Josh Chapman (UTAH), Dan Child (OSU), Kasey Coffman (ASU), Michael Conforto (OSU), Brett Michael Doran (STAN), Andrew Ely (WASH), Johnny Field (ARIZ), Trent Gilbert (ARIZ), Darin Gillies (ASU), Nick Green (UTAH), Scott Heineman (ORE), Trevor Hildenberger (CAL), John Hochstatter (STAN), Cory Hunt (UTAH), Christian Jones (ORE), Dominic Jose (STAN), Lonnie Kauppila (STAN), Andrew Knapp (CAL), Spenser Linney (STAN), Michael Lowden (CAL), Zakary MacDonald-Miller (ASU), Riley Moore (ARIZ) Chris Paul (CAL), Aaron Payne (ORE), Robert Pehl (WASH), Kyle Porter (CAL), Brian Ragira (STAN), Jayce Ray (WASH), Jake Reed (ORE), Tyler Relf (UTAH), Mike Reuvekamp (CAL), Jake Rodriguez (OSU), Max Rossiter (ASU), David Schmidt (STAN), Max Schuh (UCLA), Austin Slater (STAN), Wayne Taylor (STAN), Eric Walbridge (CAL), Zack Weiss (UCLA), Ben Wetzler (OSU), Brant Whiting (STAN), Austin Wilson (STAN), Zach Wright (WASH), William Young (ASU).
(2) Second All-Conference Selection, (3) Third All-Conference Selection
All-Pac-12 Honorable Mention Trever Allen Ryan Burr Michael Camporeale Brian Carroll Danny Diekroeger Trent Gilbert Cole Irvin Kevin Kramer Adam Landecker Jason Monda Andy Peterson
ASU ASU WASH UCLA STAN ARIZ ORE UCLA USC WSU OSU
OF RHP OF OF 2B 2B LHP 3B 2B OF/P 2B
So. Fr. Sr. Jr. Jr. So. Fr. So. Sr. Jr. Jr.
Jayce Ray Jace Fry Max Rossiter Scott Schultz Collin Slaybaugh Garrett Stubbs Brett Thomas Austin Voth Mitch Watrous Greg Zebrack
WASH OSU ASU OSU WSU USC ORE WASH UTAH USC
OF LHP C RHP C C OF RHP RHP OF
Sr. Jr. Sr. Jr. Jr. So. Jr. Jr. So. Sr.
2013 Pitchers and Players of the Week Date Feb. 19 Feb. 26 March 5 March 12 March 19 March 26 April 1 April 8 April 15 April 22 April 29 May 6 May 13 May 20 May 27
56
Player Ryon Healy (ORE) Trever Allen (ASU) Michael Conforto (OSU) Tyler Smith (OSU) Michael Conforto (OSU) Dallas Carroll (UTAH) Trent Gilbert (ARIZ) RJ Ybarra (ASU) Scott Heineman (ORE) Brian Ragira (STAN) Ryon Healy (ORE) Mitchell Tolman (ORE) Greg Zebrack (USC) Michael Benjamin (ASU) Kevin Newman (ARIZ)
Pitcher James Farris (ARIZ) Matt Boyd (OSU) Mark Appel (STAN) Trevor Williams (ASU) Matt Boyd (OSU) Ryan Kellogg (ASU) Cole Irvin (ORE) Scott Simon (WSU) Sean Silva (USC) David Berg (UCLA) Nick Vander Tuig (UCLA) Mark Appel (STAN) Cole Irvin (ORE) Andrew Moore (OSU) Mark Appel (STAN)
2013 CONFERENCE REVIEW
Team Batting Arizona Washington State Oregon State Arizona State USC Stanford Washington California Oregon Utah UCLA
AVG .306 .293 .289 .288 .279 .279 .275 .268 .258 .254 .250
G 55 55 65 60 56 54 56 54 64 52 66
AB 1819 1920 2194 2086 1883 1858 1910 1852 2066 1733 2140
R 368 290 372 375 230 295 247 248 313 229 312
H 556 563 635 600 526 518 525 496 533 441 534
2B 73 92 108 118 95 93 70 71 106 74 88
3B 35 17 11 26 11 15 7 5 15 18 12
HR 13 24 30 49 18 38 10 30 24 16 19
RBI 335 253 345 349 209 271 220 225 280 192 278
TB 738 761 855 917 697 755 639 667 741 599 703
SLG .406 .396 .390 .440 .370 .406 .335 .360 .359 .346 .329
BB 237 148 266 220 132 182 132 163 207 162 280
HBP 70 70 62 68 65 47 78 57 68 63 82
SO 262 361 372 385 328 315 312 355 431 344 436
GDP 36 21 44 44 47 41 47 34 28 31 29
OBP .400 .362 .377 .370 .344 .354 .345 .342 .342 .338 .354
3B 9 10 14 11 12 17 7 8 26 18 17
HR 17 19 15 25 30 13 26 12 17 29 21
AB 2092 2172 2071 1818 1899 1774 1874 2021 1844 1885 1884
SF 30 22 32 29 24 23 11 22 22 12 27
SH 71 42 61 26 44 22 75 62 99 65 76
SB 98 42 54 44 38 42 30 25 82 76 71
ATT 129 76 79 67 64 54 48 42 115 109 114
WP HBP 38 55 47 61 40 62 66 70 37 30 45 40 32 36 37 79 38 68 55 47 43 61
BK 0 9 2 2 4 5 4 10 4 8 11
OAV .217 .222 .238 .248 .264 .279 .285 .265 .266 .292 .294
Team Pitching Oregon State UCLA Oregon Stanford Washington Utah Washington State Arizona State Arizona California USC
ERA 2.28 2.55 2.78 3.38 3.88 3.92 4.14 4.20 4.41 4.61 4.81
W-L 52-13 49-17 48-16 32-22 24-32 20-31 23-32 37-22 34-21 23-31 20-36
G 65 66 64 54 56 52 55 60 55 54 56
CG SHO/CBO SV 9 12/5 19 3 9/8 26 4 7/5 26 5 3/1 13 0 0/0 12 1 2/1 8 3 4/3 11 4 4/2 15 4 1/1 16 0 0/0 8 3 2/1 8
IP 587.0 601.0 575.1 482.1 499.0 461.1 487.0 542.1 486.0 486.1 490.1
H 454 482 493 451 501 495 534 536 491 551 554
R 196 196 214 232 255 261 284 307 280 278 318
ER 149 170 178 181 215 201 224 253 238 249 262
BB 173 163 198 189 203 158 171 239 161 178 241
SO 447 457 442 407 324 347 307 388 357 355 316
2B 76 76 83 71 106 72 81 81 66 69 88
Team Defense C 2514 2622 2084 2163 2079 2556 2112 2112 2444 2176 2044
Oregon UCLA Washington USC Arizona Oregon State California Stanford Arizona State Washington State Utah
PO 1726 1803 1497 1471 1458 1761 1459 1447 1627 1461 1384
A 740 767 537 638 569 724 591 598 731 632 573
E 48 52 50 54 52 71 62 67 86 83 87
FLD% .981 .980 .976 .975 .975 .972 .971 .968 .965 .962 .957
DPs 47 39 35 46 45 64 44 47 56 58 40
CS 28 22 18 34 17 31 26 19 26 20 28
ATT 59 66 69 69 72 55 70 59 121 69 78
*PCT .475 .333 .261 .493 .236 .564 .371 .322 .215 .290 .359
PB 9 15 4 9 17 16 15 15 4 11 13
CI 1 1 0 0 4 0 0 0 2 1 0
*indicates percentage that team threw out opposing base stealers
Individual Batting (minimum 2.5 TPA/team game) Player Brandon Dixon, ARIZ Adam Landecker, USC Andrew Knapp, CAL Johnny Field, ARIZ Trent Gilbert, ARIZ Greg Zebrack, USC Andrew Ely, WASH Kevin Newman, ARIZ Michael Benjamin, ASU Dylan Davis, OSU Andy Peterson, OSU Ryon Healy, ORE Kasey Coffman, ASU Trek Stemp, WSU Brett Jacobs, WSU
AVG .369 .351 .350 .347 .344 .340 .338 .336 .335 .335 .333 .333 .332 .331 .328
GP-GS 55-55 51-51 54-53 55-55 55-55 55-55 55-53 55-55 59-59 63-62 65-65 59-59 59-59 42-37 43-40
AB 214 202 206 222 221 200 201 217 248 257 246 228 232 145 134
R 57 31 34 58 45 35 29 40 53 45 49 44 57 27 14
H 79 71 72 77 76 68 68 73 83 86 82 76 77 48 44
2B 3B 13 5 18 1 16 0 11 7 13 5 15 3 4 1 6 3 20 4 22 3 5 0 20 0 13 5 6 2 6 0
HR 6 2 8 5 0 3 0 0 8 5 0 11 8 1 0
RBI 51 25 41 39 49 23 14 42 47 61 28 56 44 15 16
TB 120 97 112 117 99 98 74 85 135 129 87 129 124 61 50
SLG .561 .480 .544 .527 .448 .490 .368 .392 .544 .502 .354 .566 .534 .421 .373
BB 21 9 27 25 21 18 17 20 10 19 16 28 30 7 6
HBP 12 9 6 7 4 10 5 4 5 2 6 2 13 3 7
SO GDP 35 1 23 3 35 0 22 5 28 5 42 4 36 6 13 4 54 5 35 2 38 5 24 5 28 5 21 0 16 2
OBP .443 .401 .434 .424 .407 .417 .404 .398 .364 .379 .384 .408 .430 .372 .380
SF 6 2 3 3 2 2 0 3 6 4 3 2 4 1 3
SH 4 7 0 6 3 8 22 6 4 1 21 0 1 1 5
SB 30 6 4 16 5 5 1 11 4 8 14 5 9 3 1
ATT 37 8 6 21 9 9 4 13 9 11 19 8 15 7 1
OAV .198 .207 .197 .203 .225 .229 .229 .208 .239 .235 .247 .248 .263
WP 2 6 2 11 7 3 10 2 3 4 7 2 4
HBP 5 11 9 11 8 2 8 9 6 8 7 9 5
BK 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 1 3
Individual Pitching (minimum 1.0 IP/team game) Player David Berg, UCLA Andrew Moore, OSU Matt Boyd, OSU Mark Appel, STAN Tommy Thorpe, ORE Trevor Dunlap, WASH Nick Vander Tuig, UCLA Adam Plutko, UCLA Ben Wetzler, OSU Bobby Zarubin, STAN Wyatt Strahan, USC Cole Irvin, ORE Joe Pistorese, WSU
ERA 0.92 1.79 2.04 2.12 2.16 2.16 2.16 2.25 2.25 2.32 2.45 2.48 2.78
W-L 7-0 14-2 11-4 10-4 7-5 4-3 14-4 10-3 10-1 3-3 4-3 12-3 5-5
APP 51 19 20 14 16 29 19 19 16 14 13 16 15
GS CG 0 0 18 3 18 4 14 4 16 0 4 0 19 2 19 1 16 2 10 0 12 1 16 4 15 2
SHO/CBO SV 0/7 24 3/3 1 3/1 1 2/0 0 0/2 0 0/0 6 1/4 0 0/2 0 1/1 0 0/0 0 0/0 0 2/0 0 0/1 0
IP 78.0 131.0 132.2 106.1 104.1 66.2 129.0 124.0 96.0 54.1 80.2 116.0 100.1
57
H 55 93 92 80 82 56 108 92 83 46 72 105 100
R 8 33 33 37 28 19 34 35 34 23 31 37 50
ER 8 26 30 25 25 16 31 31 24 14 22 32 31
BB 11 28 33 23 39 20 18 30 32 27 41 22 26
SO 78 72 122 130 87 52 93 81 83 34 45 60 61
2B 3B HR 6 0 2 17 1 4 17 0 5 13 2 2 14 2 1 6 1 6 20 0 4 20 4 6 15 2 3 8 0 1 7 3 4 13 1 5 21 2 4
2013 FINAL POLLS AND AWARDS BASEBALL AMERICA No. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.
ESPN/USA TODAY
School UCLA Mississippi State North Carolina Oregon State LSU North Carolina State Indiana Louisville Vanderbilt Cal State Fullerton Virginia Florida State Kansas State South Carolina Oklahoma Rice Oregon Arkansas Virginia Tech Florida Atlantic Austin Peay Arizona State San Diego Oklahoma State Troy
Record 49-17 51-20 59-12 52-13 57-11 50-16 49-16 51-14 54-12 51-10 50-12 47-17 45-19 43-20 43-21 44-20 48-16 39-22 40-22 42-22 47-15 37-22-1 37-25 41-19 42-20
COLLEGIATE BASEBALL No. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30.
School UCLA Mississippi State North Carolina Oregon State North Carolina State Indiana LSU Louisville Vanderbilt Cal State Fullerton Virginia Florida State South Carolina Rice Kansas State Oklahoma Oregon Arkansas Arizona State Virginia Tech Cal Poly Oklahoma State Troy Florida Atlantic Central Arkansas Liberty Clemson William & Mary Austin Peay San Diego
Pac-12 vs. Ranked Teams
No. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. t-15. t-15. 17. 18. t-19. t-19. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.
PERFECT GAME USA
School UCLA Mississippi State North Carolina Oregon State North Carolina State LSU Indiana Louisville Vanderbilt Cal State Fullerton Virginia South Carolina Florida State Kansas State Oregon Rice Oklahoma Arkansas Arizona State Virginia Tech Oklahoma State Florida Atlantic Georgia Tech Cal Poly Clemson
Record 49-17 51-20 59-12 52-13 50-16 57-11 49-16 51-14 54-12 51-10 50-12 43-20 47-17 45-19 48-16 44-20 43-21 39-22 37-22-1 40-22 41-19 42-22 37-27 40-19 40-22
Pts. 497 493 489 488 486 484 481 479 478 476 473 469 464 462 460 457 448 445 442 439 437 436 432 427 426 422 420 416 413 411
No. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30.
School UCLA Mississippi State North Carolina Oregon State LSU Indiana North Carolina State Cal State Fullerton Louisville Vanderbilt Virginia Florida State South Carolina Kansas State Oklahoma Rice Oregon Virginia Tech Arkansas Florida Atlantic Arizona State San Diego Oklahoma State Austin Peay Troy
School UCLA Mississippi State North Carolina Oregon State North Carolina State LSU Indiana Louisville Vanderbilt Cal State Fullerton Virginia Florida State South Carolina Kansas State Rice Oklahoma Oregon Arkansas Oklahoma State Arizona State Virginia Tech Florida Atlantic Austin Peay Cal Poly Central Arkansas Mississippi Georgia Tech Campbell Clemson South Alabama
Record 49-17 51-20 59-12 52-13 50-16 57-11 49-16 51-14 54-12 51-10 50-12 47-17 43-20 45-19 44-20 43-21 48-16 39-22 41-19 37-22-1 40-22 42-22 47-15 40-19 42-22 38-24 37-27 49-10 40-22 43-20
Pac-12 vs. Other Conferences
DAVID BERG (RHP, So.) -NCBWA Stopper of the Year -Pac-12 Pitcher of the Year -Baseball America All-America, first team -Louisville Slugger/Collegiate Baseball All-America, first team -NCBWA All-America, first team -Perfect Game USA All-America, second team -All-Pac-12 Conference Team -ABCA All-West Region, first team -Pac-12 Pitcher of the Week (April 22)
CHRISTOPH BONO (OF, RFr.) -Pac-12 All-Academic, honorable mention
BRIAN CARROLL (OF, Jr.) -All-Pac-12 Conference Team, honorable mention -Pac-12 All-Academic, honorable mention
RYAN DEETER (RHP, RJr.) -NCAA Elite 89 Award winner -Pac-12 All-Academic, first team -Capital One Academic All-District VIII Team
JAMES KAPRIELIAN (RHP, Fr.) -Louisville Slugger/Collegiate Baseball Fr. All-America -Perfect Game USA Fr. All-America, second team
KEVIN KRAMER (INF, So.) -All-Pac-12 Conference Team, honorable mention
ADAM PLUTKO (RHP, Jr.) -All-Pac-12 Conference Team
JOHN SAVAGE (Head Coach) -Baseball America National Coach of the Year -Collegiate Baseball National Coach of the Year -Perfect Game USA National Coach of the Year -ABCA National Coach of the Year
MAX SCHUH (RHP, RSo.) Arizona 3-11 Arizona State 8-9 California 4-17 Oregon 8-11 Oregon State 16-7 Stanford 6-9 UCLA 16-6 USC 3-14 Utah 3-12 Washington 4-8 Washington State 5-10 TOTAL 76-114
ACC 2-1-0 Ivy League Atlantic 10 2-0-0 Mid-Eastern Big East 2-3-0 MAC Big Ten 10-2-0 Missouri Valley Big 12 13-6-0 Mountain West Big West 41-28-0 Northeast Conference USA 3-5-0 SEC Great West 4-1-0 Southern Horizon 4-1-0 Southland
Record 49-17 51-20 59-12 52-13 57-11 49-16 50-16 51-10 51-14 54-12 50-12 47-17 43-20 45-19 43-21 44-20 48-16 40-22 39-22 42-22 37-22-1 37-25 41-19 47-15 42-20
2013 Honors and Awards
NCBWA Record 49-17 51-20 59-12 52-13 50-16 49-16 57-11 51-14 54-12 51-10 50-12 47-17 43-20 44-20 45-19 43-21 48-16 39-22 37-22-1 40-22 40-19 41-19 42-20 42-22 42-22 36-29 40-22 39-24 47-15 37-25
No. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.
7-2-0 5-1-0 5-0-0 2-0-0 17-5-0 5-0-0 9-8-0 1-2-0 1-3-0
Southwestern 3-0-0 WAC 18-7-0 Summit 1-0 West Coast 38-25-1 Independent 0-0-0 TOTAL 193-101-1 (.656)
-Pac-12 All-Academic, honorable mention
PAT VALAIKA (INF, Jr.) -Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Year -Division I Rawlings Gold Glove Team -All-Pac-12 Conference Team -ABCA All-West Region, first team
NICK VANDER TUIG (RHP, Jr.) -All-Pac-12 Conference Team -Pac-12 Pitcher of the Week (April 29)
ZACK WEISS (RHP, Jr.) -Pac-12 All-Academic, honorable mention
58
2014 OPPONENTS ARIZONA April 11-13 (at Arizona) 7 p.m., 7:30 p.m., 4 p.m.
ARIZONA STATE March 28-30 (at UCLA) 6 p.m., 2 p.m., 1 p.m.
CAL POLY Feb. 21-23 (at UCLA) 6 p.m., 2 p.m., 1 p.m.
CAL STATE FULLERTON April 8 (at CSF), May 6 (at UCLA) 6 p.m., 6 p.m.
CAL STATE NORTHRIDGE Feb. 18 (at UCLA) 6 p.m.
CALIFORNIA March 14-16 (at California) 7 p.m., 6 p.m., 2 p.m.
HOUSTON March 8 (at UCLA) 2 p.m.
LONG BEACH STATE March 25/April 5 (at UCLA), 6/2 p.m. April 4/6 (at LBSU), 6/1 p.m.
LOYOLA MARYMOUNT March 4/April 22 (at UCLA), 6/6 p.m. April 1 (at LMU), 6 p.m.
MICHIGAN March 2 (at Cary, N.C.) 9 a.m.
NORTH CAROLINA ST. March 1 (at Cary, N.C.) 3:30 p.m.
NOTRE DAME Feb. 28 (at Cary, N.C.) 3:30 p.m.
OREGON May 16-18 (at UCLA) 7 p.m., 7 p.m., 12 p.m.
OREGON STATE May 9-11 (at Oregon State) 7:30 p.m., 7 p.m., 3 p.m.
PEPPERDINE March 7 (at UCLA) 6 p.m.
PORTLAND Feb. 16 14-16 (at UCLA)
6 p.m., 2 p.m., 1 p.m.
STANFORD May 2-4 (at UCLA)
6 p.m., 7 p.m., 1 p.m.
UC IRVINE March 11 (at UCLA), May 13 (at UCI) 6 p.m., 6:30 p.m.
UC SANTA BARBARA Feb. 25 (at UCLA), April 29 (at UCSB) 6 p.m., 3 p.m.
USC TROJANS March 9 (at USC), 1 p.m. April 24-26 (at UCLA), 6/7/2 p.m.
UTAH UTES April 17-19 (at Utah) 4 p.m., 4 p.m., 12 p.m.
WASHINGTON May 23-25 (at Washington) 7 p.m., 7 p.m., 3 p.m.
WASHINGTON STATE March 21-23 (at UCLA) 6 p.m., 2 p.m., 1 p.m.
59
2014 OPPONENTS
ARIZONA WILDCATS
ARIZONA STATE SUN DEVILS
April 11-13 at Arizona’s Hi Corbett Field Game Times – 7 p.m., 7:30 p.m., 4 p.m. m. 2013 Series (UCLA wins, 3-0) UCLA 10, Arizona 2 (5/10/13) UCLA 7, Arizona 1 (5/11/13) UCLA 12, Arizona 5 (5/12/13)
March 28-30 at UCLA’s Jackie Robinson Stadium Game Times – 6 p.m., 2 p.m., 1 p.m. 2013 Series (ASU wins, 2-1) Arizona State 4, UCLA 1 (3/28/13) Arizona State 7, UCLA 4 (3/29/13) UCLA 12, Arizona State 10 (3/30/13) Andy Lopez
GENERAL INFORMATION Location Tucson, Ariz. Enrollment 40,200 Nickname Wildcats Colors Cardinal and Navy Home Field Hi Corbett Field Capacity 9,500 Conference Pac-12 President Dr. Ann Weaver Hart Athletic Director Greg Byrne
James Farris
Tim Esmay
COACHING STAFF Head Coach Andy Lopez (UCLA, ’75) Record (at Arizona) 437-267-1 (12 years) Overall Record 1,124-685-7 (31 years) Assistant Coaches Shaun Cole, Matt Siegel, Josh Garcia Baseball Office Phone (520) 621-4102
SERIES HISTORY (UCLA leads, 124-114-2 since 1950) Last UCLA Sweep 2013 (May 10-12) Last Arizona Sweep 2005 (April 1-3) Most Runs Scored 28 (3/22/86) 2013 SEASON 20 (5/8/04) Overall Record 34-21 Most Runs Allowed 23 (W, 28-5, 3/22/86) Pac-12 Record 15-15 Margin of Victory 18 (L, 18-0, 3/3/75) Pac-12 Finish t-6th Margin of Defeat Postseason None SPORTS INFORMATION Letterwinners Ret/Lost 19/11 Baseball SID Blair Willis SID Phone (520) 621-0914 CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY (520) 621-2681 Pac-12 Titles (Last) 4 (2012) SID Fax bmw23@arizona.edu NCAA Tournaments (Last) 37 (2012) SID E-mail (520) 621-4440 College World Series Trips (Last) 16 (2012) Press Box Phone
GENERAL INFORMATION Location Tempe, Ariz. Enrollment 73,373 Nickname Sun Devils Colors Maroon and Gold Home Field Packard Stadium Capacity 3,879 Conference Pac-12 President Dr. Michael Crow Interim Athletic Director Dr. James Rund
SERIES HISTORY (ASU leads, 112-68) Last UCLA Sweep 1999 (April 16-18) Last ASU Sweep 2010 (April 30-May 2) 2013 SEASON Most Runs Scored 19 (3/4/79) Overall Record 37-22-1 Most Runs Allowed 21 (5/1/88) Pac-12 Record 16-14 Margin of Victory 17 (W, 19-2, 3/4/79) Pac-12 Finish t-4th Margin of Defeat 16 (L, 17-1, 4/19/03) Postseason 2-2 at Fullerton Regional SPORTS INFORMATION Letterwinners Ret/Lost 22/10 Baseball SID Thomas Lenneberg CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY SID Phone (480) 965-6594 Pac-12 Titles (Last) 10 (2010) SID Fax (480) 965-5408 NCAA Tournaments (Last) 36 (2013) SID E-mail thomas.lenneberg@asu.edu College World Series trips (Last) 22 (2010) Press Box Phone (480) 727-7253
CAL POLY MUSTANGS
CAL STATE FULLERTON TITANS
Feb. 21-23 at UCLA’s Jackie Robinson Stadium Game Times – 6 p.m., 2 p.m., 1 p.m. Series History UCLA leads, 20-4 Last meeting: June 1, 2013 UCLA 6, Cal Poly 4 (at UCLA)
April 8 at CSF’s Goodwin Field (6 p.m.) May 6 at UCLA’s Jackie Robinson Stadium (6 p.m.) 2013 Series (Split, 2-2) CSF 9, UCLA 6 (4/2); CSF 5, UCLA 2 (5/14) UCLA 5, CSF 3 (6/7); UCLA 3, CSF 0 (6/8) Larry Lee
GENERAL INFORMATION Location San Luis Obispo, Calif. Enrollment 19,800 Nickname Mustangs Colors Forest Green and Gold Home Field Baggett Stadium Capacity 1,734 Conference Big West President Dr. Jeffrey D. Armstrong Athletic Director Don Oberhelman
Matt Imhof
Rick Vanderhook
COACHING STAFF Head Coach Larry Lee (Pepperdine, ’83) Record (at Cal Poly) 349-272-2 (11 years) Overall Record 809-513-5 (26 years) Assistant Coaches Teddy Warrecker Thomas Eager, Alex Hoover Baseball Office Phone (805) 756-6367
SERIES HISTORY (UCLA leads, 20-4) Last UCLA Sweep 2010 (March 25-27) Last Cal Poly Sweep none Most Runs Scored 12 (twice, last 3/15/08) 2013 SEASON 14 (2/12/66) Overall Record 40-19 Most Runs Allowed 10 (twice) Big West Record 17-10 Margin of Victory 5 (L, 8-3, 1/30/05) Big West Finish t-2nd Margin of Defeat Postseason 1-2 at Los Angeles Regional SPORTS INFORMATION Letterwinners Ret/Lost 19/9 Baseball SID Eric Burdick SID Phone (805) 756-6550 CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY (805) 756-2650 Big West Titles (Last) None SID Fax eburdick@calpoly.edu NCAA Tournaments (Last) 2 (2013) SID E-mail (805) 756-7456 College World Series Trips (Last) None (D-1) Press Box Phone
GENERAL INFORMATION Location Fullerton, Calif. Enrollment 38,325 Nickname Titans Colors Navy, Orange and White Home Field Goodwin Field Capacity 3,500 Conference Big West President Dr. Mildred Garcia Athletic Director Jim Donovan
Feb. 18 at UCLA’s Jackie Robinson Stadium (6 p.m.)
Matt Chapman
COACHING STAFF Head Coach Rick Vanderhook (Trinity Univ., ’03) Record (at CS Fullerton) 87-31 (2 years) Overall Record 87-31 (2 years) Assistant Coaches Mike Kirby, Jason Dietrich, Chad Baum Baseball Office Phone (657) 278-3789
SERIES HISTORY (CSF leads, 63-32-2) Last UCLA Sweep 2012 (April 10, May 15) Last CS Fullerton Sweep 2006 (March 24-26) 2013 SEASON Most Runs Scored 16 (twice) Overall Record 51-10 Most Runs Allowed 19 (4/22/98) Big West Record 23-4 Margin of Victory 10 (W, 16-6, 2/16/82) Big West Finish 1st Margin of Defeat 15 (L, 16-1, 2/22/84) Postseason 0-2 at Fullerton Super Regional SPORTS INFORMATION Letterwinners Ret/Lost 18/15 Baseball SID Andria Wenzel CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY SID Phone (657) 278-3970 Conference Titles (Last) 27 (2013) SID Fax (657) 278-3141 NCAA Tournaments (Last) 35 (2013) SID E-mail awenzel@fullerton.edu College World Series Titles (Last) 4 (2004) Press Box Phone (657) 278-5327
CAL STATE NORTHRIDGE MATADORS
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS March 14-16 at California’s Evans Diamond Game Times – 7 p.m., 6 p.m., 2 p.m. 2013 Series (UCLA wins, 2-1) California 5, UCLA 1 (3/22/13) UCLA 8, California 3 (3/23/13) UCLA 10, California 2 (3/24/13)
2013 Series (Split, 1-1) UCLA 5, CSUN 4 (3/12/13) CSUN 4, UCLA 1 (5/7/13) Greg Moore
GENERAL INFORMATION Location Northridge, Calif. Enrollment 39,000 Nickname Matadors Colors Red, White and Black Home Field Matador Field Capacity 1,000 Conference Big West President Dr. Dianne F. Harrison Athletic Director Dr. Brandon E. Martin
Ryan Kellogg
COACHING STAFF Head Coach Tim Esmay (Arizona State, ’88) Record (at ASU) 168-70-1 (4 years) Overall Record 381-305-2 (12 years) Assistant Coaches Ken Knutson, Mike Benjamin, Greg Bordes Baseball Office Phone (480) 965-3677
Jerry Keel
David Esquer
COACHING STAFF Head Coach Greg Moore (San Francisco, ’99) Record (at CSUN) 0-0 (1st year) Overall Record 0-0 (1st year) Assistant Coaches Jordon Twohig, Chris Hom, Tom Meusborn Baseball Office Phone (818) 677-6652
SERIES HISTORY (UCLA leads, 32-28-1) Last UCLA Sweep 2012 (Feb. 21, April 17) Last CSUN Sweep 1998 (March 20-21) 2013 SEASON Most Runs Scored 22 (2/26/08) Overall Record 31-26 Most Runs Allowed 15 (4/17/91) Big West Record 15-12 Margin of Victory 20 (W, 22-2, 2/26/08) Big West Finish t-4th Margin of Defeat 14 (L, 15-1, 4/17/91) Postseason None SPORTS INFORMATION Letterwinners Ret/Lost 18/11 Baseball SID Kevin Strauss CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY SID Phone (818) 677-3860 Conference Titles (Last) 12 (2002) SID Fax (818) 677-4950 NCAA Tournaments (Last) N/A SID E-mail kevin.strauss@csun.edu College World Series Trips (Last) None (D-1) Press Box Phone Strauss’ Cell (909) 730-2076
GENERAL INFORMATION Location Berkeley, Calif. Enrollment 35,409 Nickname Golden Bears Colors Blue and Gold Home Field Evans Diamond Capacity 2,500 Conference Pac-12 Chancellor Dr. Nicholas Dirks Athletic Director Sandy Barbour
Devon Rodriguez
COACHING STAFF Head Coach David Esquer (Stanford, ’87) Record (at California) 406-369-2 (14 years) Overall Record 406-369-2 (14 years) Assistant Coaches Tony Arnerich, Mike Neu, Rueben Noriega Baseball Office Phone (510) 643-6006
SERIES HISTORY (UCLA leads, 172-171) Last UCLA Sweep 2010 (May 21-23) Last California Sweep 1991 (April 12-14) 2013 SEASON Most Runs Scored 20 (4/23/83) Overall Record 23-31 Most Runs Allowed 18 (4/14/79) Pac-12 Record 10-20 Margin of Victory 17 (W, 19-2, 4/6/02) Pac-12 Finish t-8th Margin of Defeat 14 (L, 16-2, 2/22/91) Postseason None SPORTS INFORMATION Letterwinners Ret/Lost 18/4 Baseball SID Scott Ball CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY SID Phone (510) 643-1741 Pac-12 Titles (Last) 1 (1980) SID Fax (510) 643-7778 NCAA Tournaments (Last) 12 (2011) SID E-mail sball@berkeley.edu College World Series Trips (Last) 6 (2011) Press Box Phone (510) 334-0793
60
2014 OPPONENTS
LONG BEACH STATE DIRTBAGS
LOYOLA MARYMOUNT LIONS March 4/April 22 at UCLA’s Jackie Robinson Stadium (6 p.m.) April 1 at LMU’s Page Stadium (6 p.m.) 2013 Series (UCLA wins, 2-1) UCLA 2, LMU 0 (4/12/13) UCLA 3, LMU 1 (4/13/13) LMU 4, UCLA 1 (4/14/13)
April 4/6 at Long Beach State’s Blair Field (6 p.m./1 p.m.) April 5/22 at UCLA’s Jackie Robinson Stadium (2 p.m./6 p.m.) 2013 Series (Split, 1-1) UCLA 3, LBSU 2 (3/5/13) LBSU 11, UCLA 1 (4/23/13) Troy Buckley
GENERAL INFORMATION Location Long Beach, Calif. Enrollment 36,288 Nickname Dirtbags Colors Black and Gold Home Field Blair Field Capacity 3,000 Conference Big West Interim President Donald J. Para Athletic Director Vic Cegles
Michael Hill
Jason Gill
COACHING STAFF Head Coach Troy Buckley (Santa Clara, ’90) Record (at LBSU) 86-81 (3 years) Overall Record 86-81 (3 years) Assistant Coaches Jesse Zepeda, Shawn Gilbert, Justin Ramsey Baseball Office Phone (562) 985-4661
SERIES HISTORY (UCLA leads, 59-40) Last UCLA Sweep 2012 (Feb. 28, May 1) Last LBSU Sweep 2008 (March 21-22) 2013 SEASON Most Runs Scored 22 (4/12/78) Overall Record 29-27 Most Runs Allowed 21 (3/3/98) Big West Record 15-12 Margin of Victory 22 (W, 22-0, 4/12/78) Big West Finish 6th Margin of Defeat 16 (L, 21-5, 3/3/98) Postseason None SPORTS INFORMATION Letterwinners Ret/Lost 21/14 Baseball SID Steven Olveda CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY SID Phone (562) 985-7797 Big West Titles (Last) 8 (2008) SID Fax (562) 985-1549 NCAA Tournaments (Last) 19 (2008) SID E-mail steven.olveda@csulb.edu College World Series trips (Last) 4 (1998) Press Box Phone (562) 433-8605
GENERAL INFORMATION Location Los Angeles, Calif. Enrollment 9,369 Nickname Lions Colors Crimson and Navy Home Field George C. Page Stadium Capacity 600 Conference West Coast President David W. Burcham Athletic Director Dr. William Husak
Colin Welmon
COACHING STAFF Head Coach Jason Gill (CS Fullerton, ’96) Record (at LMU) 134-141 (5 years) Overall Record 134-141 (5 years) Assistant Coaches Bryant Ward, Danny Ricabal, Bobby Andrews Baseball Office Phone (310) 338-2765
SERIES HISTORY (UCLA leads, 47-46-1) Last UCLA Sweep 2002 (Feb. 11, March 5) Last LMU Sweep 2005 (April 12, May 17) 2013 SEASON Most Runs Scored 22 (4/1/80) Overall Record 24-27 Most Runs Allowed 23 (4/4/00) WCC Record 12-12 Margin of Victory 12 (twice, last on 2/14/97) WCC Finish 6th Margin of Defeat 11 (L, 23-12, 4/4/00) Postseason None SPORTS INFORMATION Letterwinners Ret/Lost 16/9 Baseball SID Tyler Geivett CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY SID Phone (310) 338-7638 WCC Titles (Last) 6 (2000) SID Fax (310) 338-2703 NCAA Tournaments (Last) 8 (2000) SID E-mail tgeivett@lmu.edu College World Series Trips (Last) 1 (1986) Press Box Phone (310) 338-3046
MICHIGAN WOLVERINES
NORTH CAROLINA STATE WOLFPACK
March 2 at Cary, N.C. (9 a.m. PT)
March 1 at Cary, N.C. (3:30 p.m. PT) Series History UCLA leads, 6-1 Last Meeting: June 18, 2013 UCLA 2, N.C. State 1 (at Omaha, Neb.)
Series History Michigan leads, 2-0 Last meeting: March 2, 1999 Michigan 4, UCLA 3 (at UCLA) Erik Bakich
GENERAL INFORMATION Location Ann Arbor, Mich. Enrollment 43,426 Nickname Wolverines Colors Maize and Blue Wilpon Complex/Ray Fisher Stadium Home Field Capacity 3,500 Conference Big Ten President Mary Sue Coleman Athletic Director Dave Brandon
Cole Martin
Elliott Avent
COACHING STAFF Erik Bakich (East Carolina, ‘00) Head Coach Record (at Minnesota) 29-27 (1 year) Overall Record 99-125 (4 years) Assistant Coaches Sean Kenny, Nick Schnabel Baseball Office Phone (734) 647-4550 SERIES HISTORY (Michigan leads, 2-0) MICH 4, UCLA 1 4/4/87 (Minneapolis, MN) MICH 4, UCLA 3 3/2/99 (Los Angeles, CA)
GENERAL INFORMATION Location Raleigh, N.C. Enrollment 34,767 Nickname Wolfpack Colors Red and White Home Field Doak Field at Dail Park Capacity 3,051 Conference ACC President Dr. Randy Woodson Athletic Director Deborah A. Yow
Carlos Rodon
COACHING STAFF Head Coach Elliott Avent (VCU, ‘83) Record (at N.C. State) 649-398 (17 years) Overall Record 874-611 (25 years) Assistant Coaches Tom Holliday, Chris Hart, Brian Ward Baseball Office Phone
SPORTS INFORMATION Baseball SID Kent Reichert SID Phone (734) 647-1726 CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY (734) 647-1188 Big Ten Titles (Last) 35 (2008) SID Fax kereiche@umich.edu NCAA Tournaments (Last) 21 (2008) SID E-mail (734) 647-1283 College World Series Trips (Last) 7 (1984) Press Box Phone
SERIES HISTORY (UCLA leads 6-1) Last UCLA Sweep 2006 (March 3-5) None Last N.C. State Sweep Most Runs Scored 13 (3/5/06) 2013 SEASON 9 (2/16/03) Overall Record 50-16 Most Runs Allowed 11 (W, 13-2, 3/5/06) ACC Record 19-10 Margin of Victory 3 (L, 9-6, 2/16/03) ACC Finish 2nd (Atlantic Division) Margin of Defeat Postseason 1-2 at College World Series SPORTS INFORMATION Letterwinners Ret/Lost 25/11 Baseball SID Cavan Fosnes SID Phone (919) 896-1863 CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY Conference Titles (Last) 5 (1992) SID Fax cafosnes@ncsu.edu NCAA Tournaments (Last) 26 (2013) SID E-mail College World Series Trips (Last) 2 (2013) Press Box Phone
NOTRE DAME FIGHTING IRISH
OREGON DUCKS
2013 SEASON Overall Record Big Ten Record Big Ten Finish Postseason Letterwinners Ret/Lost
29-27 14-10 6th None 18/9
Feb. 28 at Cary, N.C. (3:30 p.m. PT) Series History UCLA leads, 2-1 Last Meeting: March 8, 2013 UCLA 2, ND 1 (at Los Angeles, Calif.)
May 16-18 at UCLA’s Jackie Robinson Stadium Game Times – 7 p.m., 7 p.m., 12 p.m. 2013 Series (UCLA wins, 2-1) UCLA 1, Oregon 0 (4/19/13) UCLA 1, Oregon 0 (4/20/13) Oregon 5, UCLA 3 (4/21/13) Mik Aoki
GENERAL INFORMATION Location Notre Dame, Ind. Enrollment 8,452 Nickname Fighting Irish Colors Gold and Blue Home Field Frank Eck Stadium Capacity 2,500 Conference ACC President Rev. John I. Jenkins Athletic Director Jack Swarbrick 2013 SEASON Overall Record Big East Record Big East Finish Postseason Letterwinners Ret/Lost
34-24 10-14 t-6th None 21/10
Pat Connaughton
COACHING STAFF Head Coach Mik Aoki (Davidson, ‘90) Record (at Notre Dame) 88-80-1 (3 years) Overall Record 298-343-2 (13 years) Assistant Coaches Jesse Woods, Chuck Ristano, Adam Pavkovich Baseball Office Phone (574) 631-6366 SERIES HISTORY (UCLA leads, 2-1) ND 7, UCLA 2 4/4/61 (Los Angeles, CA) UCLA 6, ND 3 3/31/91 (Minneapolis, MN) UCLA 2, ND 1 3/8/13 (Los Angeles, CA)
SPORTS INFORMATION Baseball SID Russell Dorn SID Phone (574) 631-4780 CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY (574) 631-7941 Conference Titles (Last) 6 (2006) SID Fax rdorn@nd.edu NCAA Tournaments (Last) 21 (2006) SID E-mail (574) 631-9018 College World Series Trips (Last) 2 (2002) Press Box Phone
George Horton
GENERAL INFORMATION Location Eugene, Ore. Enrollment 24,500 Nickname Ducks Thunder Green and Lightning Yellow Colors Home Field PK Park Capacity 4,000 Conference Pac-12 President Michael Gottfredson Athletic Director Rob Mullens
Cole Irvin
COACHING STAFF George Horton (CS Fullerton, ‘78) Head Coach Record (at Oregon) 180-125-1 (5 years) Overall Record 896-390-2 (22 years) Assistant Coaches Mark Wasikowski, Jay Uhlman, Dean Stiles Baseball Office Phone (541) 346-5776
SERIES HISTORY (UCLA leads, 20-8) Last UCLA Sweep 2011 (May 6-8) Last Oregon Sweep None 2013 SEASON Most Runs Scored 18 (5/1/71) Overall Record 48-16 Most Runs Allowed 8 (twice, last 4/6/12) Pac-12 Record 22-8 Margin of Victory 17 (W, 18-1, 5/1/71) Pac-12 Finish 2nd Margin of Defeat 5 (L, 8-3, 4/6/12) Postseason 3-2 at Eugene Regional SPORTS INFORMATION Letterwinners Ret/Lost 23/7 Baseball SID Todd Miles CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY SID Phone (541) 346-0962 Pac-12 Titles (Last) 17 (1974) SID Fax (541) 346-5449 NCAA Tournaments (Last) 5 (2013) SID E-mail miles@uoregon.edu College World Series Trips (Last) 1 (1954) Press Box Phone (541) 346-6309
61
2014 OPPONENTS
OREGON STATE BEAVERS
PORTLAND PILOTS
May 9-11 at Oregon State’s Goss Stadium Game Times – 7:30 p.m., 7 p.m., 3 p.m. 2013 Series (OSU wins, 2-1) UCLA 3, Oregon State 2 (4/5/13) Oregon State 5, UCLA 0 (4/6/13) Oregon State 5, UCLA 2 (4/7/13)
Feb. 14-16 at UCLA’s Jackie Robinson Stadium Game Times – 6 p.m., 2 p.m., 1 p.m. Series History First meeting Pat Casey
GENERAL INFORMATION Location Corvallis, Ore. Enrollment 23,761 Nickname Beavers Colors Orange and Black Home Field Goss Stadium Capacity 3,248 Conference Pac-12 President Dr. Edward Ray Athletic Director Bob De Carolis
Michael Conforto
COACHING STAFF Head Coach Pat Casey (George Fox, ‘90) Record (at OSU) 670-389-4 (19 years) Overall Record 841-498-5 (26 years) Assistant Coaches Pat Bailey Andy Jenkins, Nate Yeskie Baseball Office Phone (541) 737-0598
SERIES HISTORY (UCLA leads, 34-27) Last UCLA Sweep 2000 (March 31-April 2) Last Oregon State Sweep 2005 (March 6-8) 2013 SEASON Most Runs Scored 18 (4/1/00) Overall Record 52-13 Most Runs Allowed 19 (5/9/98) Pac-12 Record 24-6 Margin of Victory 15 (W, 15-0, 5/8/99) Pac-12 Finish 1st Margin of Defeat 14 (L, 19-5, 5/9/98) Postseason 2-2 at College World Series SPORTS INFORMATION Letterwinners Ret/Lost 19/15 Baseball SID Hank Hager CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY SID Phone (541) 737-7472 Pac-12 Titles (Last) 6 (2013) SID Fax (541) 737-3072 NCAA Tournaments (Last) 13 (2013) SID E-mail hank.hager@oregonstate.edu College World Series Trips (Last) 5 (2013) Press Box Phone (541) 737-7475
Chris Sperry
GENERAL INFORMATION Location Portland, Ore. Enrollment 3,810 Nickname Pilots Colors Purple and White Home Field Joe Etzel Field Capacity 1,000 Conference West Coast President Rev. E. William Beauchamp Athletic Director Scott Leykam 2013 SEASON Overall Record WCC Record WCC Finish Postseason Letterwinners Ret/Lost
18-36 8-16 8th None 21/13
UC IRVINE ANTEATERS March 11 at UCLA’s Jackie Robinson Stadium (6 p.m.) May 13 at UC Irvine’s Anteater Ballpark (6:30 p.m.) 2013 Series (UCLA wins, 2-0) UCLA 6, UC Irvine 4 (4/16/13) UCLA 8, UC Irvine 1 (4/30/13)
Mark Marquess
CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY Pac-12 Titles (Last) 20 (2004) NCAA Tournaments (Last) 31 (2012) College World Series Trips (Last) 16 (2008)
Alex Blandino
Mike Gillespie
COACHING STAFF Head Coach Mark Marquess (Stanford, ’69) Record (at Stanford) 1,536-799-7 (37 years) Overall Record 1,536-799-7 (37 years) Assistant Coaches Dean Stotz, Rusty Filter, Brock Ungricht Baseball Office Phone (650) 723-4528 SERIES HISTORY (Stanford leads, 194-147) Last UCLA Sweep 2007 (March 30-April 1) Last Stanford Sweep 1998 (Feb. 20-22, March 28-30) Most Runs Scored 20 (twice, last 3/31/79) Most Runs Allowed 26 (Game 1, 1932) Margin of Victory 18 (W, 20-2, 3/31/79) Margin of Defeat 19 (L, 23-4, 2/21/98) SPORTS INFORMATION Baseball SID Brett Moore SID Phone (309) 212-6367 SID Fax (650) 725-2957 SID E-mail bmoore1@stanford.edu Press Box Phone (650) 723-4629
GENERAL INFORMATION Location Irvine, Calif. Enrollment 27,000 Nickname Anteaters Colors Blue and Gold Home Field Anteater Ballpark Capacity 3,200 Conference Big West Chancellor Dr. Michael V. Drake Athletic Director Mike Izzi
Taylor Sparks
COACHING STAFF Head Coach Mike Gillespie (USC, ’62) Record (at UC Irvine) 233-119 (6 years) Overall Record 996-590-2 (26 years) Associate Head Coach Ben Orloff Bob Macaluso, Danny Bibona Assistant Coaches Baseball Office Phone (949) 824-9521
SERIES HISTORY (UCLA leads, 49-28-1) 2013 (April, 16, April 30) Last UCLA Sweep Last UC Irvine Sweep 2004 (March 9, May 19) Most Runs Scored 18 (4/23/86) 2013 SEASON 11 (4/24/79) Overall Record 33-22 Most Runs Allowed 15 (W, 16-1, 2/19/79) Big West Record 15-12 Margin of Victory 3 (seven times, last 3/1/09) Big West Finish t-4th Margin of Defeat Postseason None SPORTS INFORMATION Letterwinners Ret/Lost 20/11 Baseball SID Fumi Kimura SID Phone (949) 824-9474 CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY (Div. I) (949) 824-5260 Big West Titles (Last) 1 (2009) SID Fax fkimura@uci.edu NCAA Tournaments (Last) 6 (2011) SID E-mail (949) 824-9905 College World Series trips (Last) 1 (2007) Press Box Phone
UC SANTA BARBARA GAUCHOS
USC TROJANS
Feb. 25 at UCLA’s Jackie Robinson Stadium (6 p.m.) April 29 at UCSB’s Caesar Uyesaka Stadium (3 pp.m.) 2013 Series (UCLA wins, 2-0) UCLA 12, UCSB 3 (2/26/13) UCLA 2, UCSB 1 (5/21/13)
March 9 at USC’s Dedeaux Field (1 p.m.) April 24-26 at UCLA’s Jackie Robinson Stadium (6 p.m., 7 p.m., 2 p.m.) 2013 Series (UCLA wins, 4-0) UCLA 6, USC 1 (3/10); UCLA 2, USC 1 (5/25) UCLA 7, USC 6 (5/18); UCLA 5, USC 2 (5/19) Andrew Checketts Austin Pettibone
GENERAL INFORMATION Location Santa Barbara, Calif. Enrollment 21,685 Nickname Gauchos Colors Blue and Gold Home Field Caesar Uyesaka Stadium Capacity 1,000 Conference Big West Chancellor Dr. Henry T. Yang Athletic Director Mark Massari
SERIES HISTORY first meeting
SPORTS INFORMATION Baseball SID Adam Linnman SID Phone (503) 943-7731 CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY (503) 943-8082 WCC Titles (Last) None SID Fax linnman@up.edu NCAA Tournaments (Last) 3 (1991) SID E-mail N/A College World Series Trips (Last) None (D-1) Press Box Phone
STANFORD CARDINAL May 2-4 at UCLA’s Jackie Robinson Stadium Game Times – 6 p.m., 7 p.m., 1 p.m. 2013 Series (Stanford wins, 2-1) Stanford 2, UCLA 1 (5/24/13) Stanford 7, UCLA 3 (5/25/13) UCLA 6, Stanford 4 (5/26/13) GENERAL INFORMATION Location Stanford, Calif. Enrollment 18,217 Nickname Cardinal Colors Cardinal and White Home Field Sunken Diamond Capacity 4,000 Conference Pac-12 President John Hennessy Athletic Director Bernard Muir 2013 SEASON Overall Record 32-22 Pac-12 Record 16-14 Pac-12 Finish t-4th Postseason None Letterwinners Ret/Lost 28/9
Cody Lenahan
COACHING STAFF Head Coach Chris Sperry (Portland, ’89) Record (at Hawaii) 324-518-1 (16 years) Overall Record 324-518-1 (16 years) Assistant Coaches Larry Casian, Tucker Brack, Dale Stebbins Baseball Office Phone (503) 943-7732
COACHING STAFF Andrew Checketts (Oregon St., ‘98) Head Coach Record (at UCSB) 63-53 (2 years) Overall Record 63-53 (2 years) Assistant Coaches Eddie Cornejo, Jason Hawkins Baseball Office Phone (805) 893-2021
SERIES HISTORY (UCLA leads, 53-35) Last UCLA Sweep 2013 (Feb. 26, May 21) Last UCSB Sweep 2006 (April 25, May 9) Most Runs Scored 18 (4/30/02) 2013 SEASON 18 (twice, 4/8/86) Overall Record 35-25 Most Runs Allowed 15 (W, 15-0, 2/23/80) Big West Record 17-10 Margin of Victory 10 (L, 18-8, 2/15/74) Big West Finish t-2nd Margin of Defeat Postseason 0-2 at Corvallis Regional SPORTS INFORMATION Letterwinners Ret/Lost 26/9 Baseball SID Andrew Wagner SID Phone (805) 893-8603 CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY (Div. I) (805) 893-5477 Big West Titles (Last) 2 (1986) SID Fax NCAA Tournaments (Last) 9 (2013) SID E-mail Andrew.Wagner@athletics.ucsb.edu N/A College World Series Trips (Last) None Press Box Phone
Dan Hubbs
GENERAL INFORMATION Location Los Angeles, Calif. Enrollment 40,000 Nickname Trojans Colors Cardinal and Gold Home Field Dedeaux Field Capacity 2,500 Conference Pac-12 President Dr. C.L. Max Nikias Athletic Director Pat Haden
Kevin Swick
COACHING STAFF Head Coach Dan Hubbs (USC, ‘93) Record (at USC) 20-36 (1 year) Overall Record 20-36 (1 year) Assistant Coaches Gabe Alvarez, Matt Curtis, Vinny Lopez Baseball Office Phone (213) 740-5762
SERIES HISTORY (USC leads, 253-130) Last UCLA Sweep 2013 (Mar. 10, May 17-19) Last USC Sweep 2005 (April 8-10) 2013 SEASON Most Runs Scored 18 (twice, last, 4/25/98) Overall Record 20-36 Most Runs Allowed 26 (2/23/02) Pac-12 Record 10-20 Margin of Victory 15 (W, 17-2, 3/23/09) Pac-12 Finish t-8th Margin of Defeat 22 (L, 26-4, 2/23/02) Postseason None SPORTS INFORMATION Letterwinners Ret/Lost 23/5 Baseball SID Rachel Caton CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY SID Phone (213) 740-3809 Pac-12 Titles (Last) 7 (2002) SID Fax (213) 740-7584 NCAA Tournaments (Last) 40 (2005) SID E-mail rcaton@usc.edu College World Series Trips (Last) 21 (2001) Press Box Phone (213) 748-3449
62
2014 OPPONENTS
UTAH UTES
WASHINGTON HUSKIES
April 17-19 at Utah’s Spring Mobile Ballpark Game Times – 4 p.m., 4 p.m., 12 p.m. 2013 Series (UCLA wins, 3-0) UCLA 5, Utah 2 (5/3/13) UCLA 5, Utah 4 (5/4/13) UCLA 4, Utah 3 (5/5/13)
May 23-25 at Washington’s Husky Ballpark Game Times – 7 p.m., 7 p.m., 3 p.m. 2013 Series (UCLA wins, 3-0) UCLA 3, Washington 2 (3/15/13) UCLA 5, Washington 0 (3/16/13) UCLA 3, Washington 0 (3/17/13) Bill Kinneberg
GENERAL INFORMATION Location Salt Lake City, Utah Enrollment 31,660 Nickname Utes Colors Crimson and White Home Field Spring Mobile Ballpark Capacity 15,500 Conference Pac-12 President David W. Pershing Athletic Director Dr. Chris Hill
Mitch Watrous
Lindsay Meggs
COACHING STAFF Head Coach Bill Kinneberg (Arizona, ’80) Record (at Utah) 242-298 (10 years) Overall Record 487-481 (18 years) Assistant Coaches Mike Crawford, Bryan Kinneberg, Pete Flores Baseball Office Phone (801) 581-3526
SERIES HISTORY (UCLA leads, 13-2) Last UCLA Sweep 2013 (May 3-5) Last Utah Sweep None 2013 SEASON Most Runs Scored 16 (3/30/12) Overall Record 21-31 Most Runs Allowed 9 (3/28/70) Pac-12 Record 7-23 Margin of Victory 16 (W, 16-0, 3/30/12) Pac-12 Finish 11th Margin of Defeat 3 (L, 7-4, 2/18/05) Postseason None SPORTS INFORMATION Letterwinners Ret/Lost 19/9 Baseball SID Brooke Frederickson CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY SID Phone (801) 581-8302 Conference Titles (Last) 4 (2009) SID Fax (801) 581-4358 NCAA Tournaments (Last) 4 (2009) SID E-mail bfrederickson@huntsman.utah.edu College World Series Trips (Last) 1 (1951) Press Box Phone N/A
GENERAL INFORMATION Location Seattle, Wash. Enrollment 43,307 Nickname Huskies Colors Purple and Gold Home Field Husky Ballpark Capacity 2,200 Conference Pac-12 President Michael K. Young Athletic Director Scott Woodward
SERIES HISTORY (UCLA leads, 44-17) Last UCLA Sweep 2013 (March 15-17) Last Washington Sweep 2005 (May 27-29) 2013 SEASON Most Runs Scored 17 (5/18/68) Overall Record 24-32 Most Runs Allowed 16 (twice, last, 5/29/05) Pac-12 Record 15-15 Margin of Victory 14 (W, 16-2, 5/2/70) Pac-12 Finish t-6th Margin of Defeat 11 (twice, last, L 16-5, 5/29/05) Postseason None SPORTS INFORMATION Letterwinners Ret/Lost 23/10 Baseball SID Brian Tom SID Phone (206) 897-1742 CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY (206) 543-5000 Pac-12 Titles (Last) 18 (1998) SID Fax briantom@uw.edu NCAA Tournaments (Last) 8 (2004) SID E-mail (206) 685-1994 College World Series Trips (Last) None Press Box Phone
WASHINGTON STATE COUGARS
PEPPERDINE AND HOUSTON
March 21-23 at UCLA’s Jackie Robinson Stadium Game Times – 6 p.m., 2 p.m., 1 p.m. 2013 Series (UCLA wins, 2-1) UCLA 7, Washington State 6 (4/26/13) UCLA 10, Washington State 1 (4/27/13) Washington State 4, UCLA 3 (4/28/13) Donnie Marbut
GENERAL INFORMATION Location Pullman, Wash. Enrollment 20,060 Nickname Cougars Colors Crimson and Gray Home Field Bailey-Brayton Field Capacity 3,500 Conference Pac-12 President Dr. Elson S. Floyd Athletic Director Bill Moos
Andrew Ely
COACHING STAFF Head Coach Lindsay Meggs (UCLA, ’85) Record (at Washington) 99-122 (4 years) Overall Record 714-429-4 (20 years) Assistant Coaches Jason Kelly, Donegal Fergus, Tanner Swanson Baseball Office Phone (206) 543-9365
March 7 vs. Pepperdine at UCLA’s Jackie Robinson Stadium (6 p.m.) March 8 vs. Houston at UCLA’s Jackie Robinson Stadium (2 p.m.) Series History Pepperdine: 57-37-4 Last meeting: May 8, 2012 (UCLA wins 6-2) Houston: 0-1 Last meeting: March 14, 2004 (UH wins 7-6)
Jason Monda
COACHING STAFF Head Coach Donnie Marbut (Portland State, ’97) Record (at Wash. St.) 261-247 (9 years) Overall Record 261-247 (9 years) Assistant Coaches Gregg Swenson, Pat Waer, Michael Naughton Baseball Office Phone (509) 335-0368
SERIES HISTORY (UCLA leads, 44-21) Last UCLA Sweep 2008 (April 28-30) Last Wash. St. Sweep None Most Runs Scored 21 (5/23/03) 2013 SEASON 15 (5/24/03) Overall Record 23-32 Most Runs Allowed 18 (W, 21-3, 5/23/03) Pac-12 Record 9-21 Margin of Victory 13 (L, 15-2, 5/24/03) Pac-12 Finish 10th Margin of Defeat Postseason None SPORTS INFORMATION Letterwinners Ret/Lost 19/11 Baseball SID Craig Lawson SID Phone (509) 335-0265 CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY (509) 335-0267 Pac-12 Titles (Last) 20 (1995) SID Fax craigl@wsu.edu NCAA Tournaments (Last) 16 (2010) SID E-mail (509) 335-8291 College World Series Trips (Last) 4 (1976) Press Box Phone
PEPPERDINE GENERAL INFORMATION Location Malibu, Calif. Enrollment 8,000 Nickname Waves Colors Blue, Orange and White Home Field Eddy D. Field Stadium Capacity 1,800 Conference West Coast Conference President Andrew K. Benton Athletic Director Dr. Steve Potts
HOUSTON GENERAL INFORMATION Location Houston, Tex. Enrollment 39,800 Nickname Cougars Colors Scarlet and White Home Field Cougar Field Capacity 3,500 Conference America Athletic Conference President Dr. Renu Khator Athletic Director Mack Rhoades
2013 SEASON Overall Record Pac-12 Record Pac-12 Finish Postseason Letterwinners Ret/Lost
2013 SEASON Overall Record C-USA Record C-USA Finish Postseason Letterwinners Ret/Lost
27-24 13-11 5th None 20/10
36-22 13-11 t-5th None 21/10
CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY WCC Titles (Last) 17 (2012) Conference Titles (Last) 7 (2002) NCAA Tournaments (Last) 26 (2012) NCAA Tournaments (Last) 18 (2008) College World Series Trips (Last) 2 (1992) College World Series Trips (Last) 2 (1967)
2014 OPPONENTS AT A GLANCE School Arizona Arizona State Cal Poly Cal State Fullerton Cal State Northridge California Houston Long Beach State Loyola Marymount Michigan North Carolina State Notre Dame Oregon Oregon State Pepperdine Portland Stanford UC Irvine UC Santa Barbara USC Utah Washington Washington State
Contact Blair Willis Thomas Lenneberg Eric Burdick Andria Wenzel Kevin Strauss Scott Ball Allison McClain Steven Olveda Tyler Geivett Kent Reichert Cavan Fosnes Russell Dorn Todd Miles Hank Hager Jacob Breems Adam Linnman Brett Moore Fumi Kimura Andrew Wagner Rachel Caton Brooke Frederickson Brian Tom Craig Lawson
Office Phone (520) 621-0914 (480) 965-6594 (254) 710-3784 (657) 278-3970 (818) 677-3860 (510) 643-1741 (713) 743-9406 (562) 985-7797 (310) 338-7638 (734) 647-1726 (919) 513-8195 (574) 631-8642 (541) 346-0962 (541) 737-7472 (310) 506-4333 (503) 943-7731 (309) 212-6367 (949) 824-9474 (805) 893-8603 (213) 740-3809 (801) 581-8302 (206) 897-1742 (509) 335-0265
Fax (520) 621-2681 (480) 965-5408 (254) 710-1369 (657) 278-3141 (818) 677-4950 (510) 643-7778 (713) 743-9384 (562) 985-1549 (310) 338-2703 (734) 647-1188 N/A (574) 631-7941 (541) 346-5449 (541) 737-3072 N/A (503) 943-8082 (650) 725-2957 (949) 824-5260 (805) 893-5477 (213) 740-7584 (801) 581-4358 (206) 685-7910 (509) 335-0267
63
E-mail Address bmw23@arizona.edu thomas.lenneberg@asu.edu eburdick@calpoly.edu awenzel@fullerton.edu kevin.strauss@csun.edu sball@berkeley.edu ammcclai@central.uh.edu steven.olveda@csulb.edu tgeivett@lmu.edu kereiche@umich.edu cavan_fosnes@ncsu.edu Dorn.7@nd.edu miles@uoregon.edu hank.hager@oregonstate.edu Jacob.Breems@pepperdine.edu linnman@up.edu bmoore1@stanford.edu fkimura@uci.edu Andrew.Wagner@athletics.ucsb.edu rcaton@usc.edu bfrederickson@huntsman.utah.edu briantom@uw.edu craigl@wsu.edu
Conference Pac-12 Pac-12 Big West Big West Big West Pac-12 Conference USA Big West West Coast (WCC) Big Ten ACC ACC Pac-12 Pac-12 West Coast (WCC) West Coast (WCC) Pac-12 Big West Big West Pac-12 Pac-12 Pac-12 Pac-12
2013 Record 34-21 37-22-1 40-19 51-10 31-26 23-31 36-22 29-27 24-27 29-27 50-16 34-24 48-16 52-13 27-24 18-36 32-22 33-22 35-25 20-36 21-31 24-32 23-32
BEN FRANCISCO After being traded midseason to Philadelphia, he helped lead the Phillies to their second consecutive World Series in 2009. JEFF CONINE Spent 17 seasons in the majors, helping lead the Florida Marlins to World Series titles in 1997 and 2003.
HECTOR AMBRIZ Pitched for the Indians in 2010 and the Astros in 2012 and 2013, starring at UCLA from 2003-2006.
GARRETT ATKINS Led the Colorado Rockies to the NL pennant and the World Series in 2007, playing for the ballclub from 2003-2009.
ADAM MELHUSE After two years excelling as an infielder at UCLA (1992-1993), he spent eight seasons in the major leagues as a catcher.
DAVE ROBERTS After four years at UCLA (1991-94), he enjoyed a 10-year major league career. Roberts starred in center field for the Los Angeles Dodgers for three seasons before leading the Boston Red Sox to the 2004 World Series title.
TODD ZEILE Among the best-ever hitters in UCLA history, Zeile competed for the Bruins from 1984-86. In 16 major-league seasons, he totaled 253 home runs and 1,110 RBI.
CASEY JANSSEN A four-year letterwinner for the Bruins (2001-2004), Janssen broke into the majors in 2006. He was drafted by Toronto in the fourth round of the 2004 MLB Draft and has pitched for the Blue Jays since then.
SHANE MACK TROY GLAUS After batting .361 in three After winning the 2002 World Series seasons at UCLA, Mack helped with the Anaheim Angels, Glaus earned lead the Minnesota Twins to World Series MVP honors that October. the 1991 World Series title. He enjoyed a 13-year major league career.
CHASE UTLEY One of the game’s top second basemen, Utley led Philadelphia to the World Series title in 2008. In 2009, he guide the Phillies back to the Fall Classic, clubbing five homers in six games in that World Series.
DAVID HUFF As a rookie in 2009, he led the Cleveland Indians with 11 victories. Huff starred in UCLA’s rotation as a junior in 2006, leading the Bruins to the NCAA Malibu Regional.
ERIC KARROS One of UCLA’s top hitters (1986-1988), he set the Los Angeles Dodgers’ career home run record, belting 284 round-trippers in 12 seasons in Los Angeles. ERIC BYRNES After four years at UCLA (1995-1998), he spent 11 seasons playing Major League Baseball. Byrnes still holds the UCLA career records for hits (326), at-bats (984), runs (326) and doubles (75).
BRANDON CRAWFORD A three-year standout at UCLA (2006-2008), he clubbed a grand slam in his major league debut with San Francisco (May 27, 2011) and won the World Series with the club in 2012.
MAJOR LEAGUE BRUINS
45
GERRIT
COLE
PITTSBURGH PIRATES • RHP
Cole in MLB (2013-present) YR TEAM 2013 Pittsburgh 1-YEAR TOTALS
W-L ERA 10-7 3.22 10-7 3.22
G/GS IP CG SV 19/19 117.1 0 0 19/19 117.1 0 0
H 109 109
R 43 43
ER SO 42 100 42 100
BB HP 28 3 28 3
Career at UCLA (2009-2011) YR 2009 2010 2011 3 YEARS
W-L 4-8 11-4 6-8 21-20
ERA G/GS 3.49 15/14 3.37 19/19 3.31 16/16 3.38 50/49
SV 0 0 0 0
IP CG H R ER 85.0 1 57 46 33 123.0 0 92 51 46 114.1 4 103 46 42 322.1 5 252 143 121
SO BB HP WP 104 38 6 12 153 52 11 7 119 24 10 3 376 114 27 22
Gerrit Cole
35
BRANDON
CRAWFORD RD RD
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS • SHORTSTOP
Crawford in MLB (2011-present) YR TEAM G AB R 2011 San Francisco 66 196 22 44 2012 San Francisco 143 435 52 2013 San Francisco 149 499 3-YEAR TOTALS 358 1130 118
H 40 108 124 272
2B 5 26 24 55
3B 2 3 3 8
HR 3 4 9 16
RBI 21 45 43 109
BB 23 33 42 98
SB 1 1 1 3
CS AVG. 3 .204 4 .248 2 .248 9 .241
Crawford at UCLA (2006-2008) YR 2006 2007 2008 3 YEARS
GS-GP 58-58 61-61 60-60 179-179
AB R 242 42 248 50 232 53 722 145
H 72 83 70 230
2B 3B 14 6 17 2 13 5 44 13
HR RBI 6 30 7 55 7 51 20 136
Brandon Crawford
60
DAVID
HUFF
NEW YORK YANKEES • LHP 2006 at UCLA • Huntington Beach, Calif. (Edison HS)
Huff in MLB (2009-present) YR TEAM W-L ERA 2009 Cleveland 11-8 5.61 2010 Cleveland 2-11 6.21 2011 Cleveland 2-6 4.09 2012 Cleveland 3-1 3.38 2013 CLE/NYY 3-1 5.50 5-YEAR TOTALS 21-27 5.32
G/GS IP CG SV 23/23 128.1 0 0 15/15 79.2 1 0 11/10 50.2 0 0 6/4 26.2 0 0 14/2 37.2 0 0 69/54 323.0 1 0
H R ER SO BB HP 159 82 80 65 41 1 101 61 55 37 34 3 55 35 23 36 17 0 30 14 10 19 5 1 33 23 23 31 9 1 378 215 191 188 106 6
Career at UCLA (2006) YR 2006 1 YEAR
W-L ERA G/GS 7-4 2.98 16/16 7-4 2.98 16/16
SV 0 0
IP CG H 129.2 3 121 129.2 3 121
R 50 50
ER 43 43
SO BB HP WP 100 27 6 7 100 27 6 7
David Huff
66
BB SO 24 46 25 58 31 59 80 163
SB CS AVG. 7 5 .318 11 1 .335 11 6 .302 29 12 .319
MAJOR LEAGUE BRUINS
44
CASEY
JANSSEN
TORONTO BLUE JAYS • RHP
Janssen in MLB (2006-present) YR TEAM 2006 Toronto 2007 Toronto 2008 Toronto 2009 Toronto 2010 Toronto 2011 Toronto 2012 Toronto 2013 Toronto 7-YEAR TOTALS
W-L ERA G/GS IP CG SV 6-10 5.07 19/17 94.0 0 0 2-3 2.35 70/0 72.2 0 6 injured – DNP – – – – 2-4 5.85 21/5 40.0 0 1 5-2 3.67 56/0 68.2 0 0 6-0 2.26 55/0 55.2 0 2 1-1 2.54 62/0 63.2 0 22 4-1 2.56 56/0 52.2 0 34 26-21 3.48 339/22 447.1 0 65
H R ER SO BB HP 103 58 53 44 21 7 67 22 19 39 20 3 – – – – – – 59 29 26 24 14 2 74 29 28 63 21 4 47 14 14 53 14 2 44 18 18 67 11 3 39 17 15 50 13 2 433 187 173 340 114 23
Career at UCLA (2001-2004, pitching) YR 2001 2002 2003 2004 4 YEARS
W-L 2-3 4-2 6-6 10-4 22-15
ERA G/GS 5.57 13/4 4.06 8/8 5.88 16/14 3.16 17/17 4.34 54/43
SV 1 0 0 0 1
IP CG H R ER 32.1 0 35 23 20 44.1 0 47 27 20 72.0 1 93 55 47 116.2 1 87 46 41 265.1 2 262 151 128
SO BB HP WP 22 19 0 2 47 33 2 5 73 25 6 9 103 30 7 2 245 97 15 18
Career at UCLA (2001-2004, hitting) YR 2001 2002 2003 2004 4 YEARS
GS-GP 22-4 37-31 26-22 19-17 104-74
AB 9 98 29 2 138
R 1 20 4 0 25
H 2 25 4 0 31
2B 3B 1 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 4 0
HR 1 3 0 0 4
RBI 3 16 1 0 20
BB 1 14 6 0 21
SO 4 35 11 1 51
SB CS AVG. 0 0 .222 2 2 .255 1 0 .138 0 0 .000 3 2 .225
Casey Janssen
20
JOSH
ROENICKE
MINNESOTA TWINS • RHP 2003-2006 at UCLA • Nevada City, Calif. (Nevada Union HS)
Roenicke in MLB (2008-present) YR TEAM 2008 Cincinnati 2009 CIN/TOR 2010 Toronto 2011 Colorado 2012 Colorado 2013 Minnesota 6-YEAR TOTALS
W-L ERA 0-0 9.00 0-0 5.23 1-0 5.68 0-0 3.78 4-2 3.25 3-1 4.35 8-3 4.17
G/GS IP CG SV 5/0 3.0 0 0 24/0 31.0 0 0 16/0 19.0 0 0 19/0 16.2 0 0 63/0 88.2 0 1 63/0 62.0 0 1 190/0 220.1 0 2
H R ER SO BB HP 6 3 3 6 2 1 32 19 18 33 16 1 18 15 12 18 13 2 14 7 7 12 7 1 85 40 32 54 43 2 63 31 30 45 36 1 218 115 102 168 117 8
Career at UCLA (2003-2006, pitching) YR 2004 2006 2 YEARS
W-L ERA 0-0 0.00 2-3 3.46 2-3 2.93
G/GS 3/0 16/0 19/0
SV 0 4 4
IP CG 2.1 0 13.0 0 15.1 0
H 1 13 14
R 0 7 7
ER 0 5 5
SO BB HP WP 1 2 0 1 13 7 2 3 14 9 2 4
Career at UCLA (2003-2006, hitting) YR 2003 2004 2005 2006 4 YEARS
Josh Roenicke
26
GS-GP 6-0 33-4 39-35 45-42 123-81
AB 4 33 119 157 313
R 0 6 13 18 37
H 1 9 33 39 82
2B 3B 0 0 2 0 6 1 6 0 14 1
HR 0 0 0 1 1
CHASE
UTLEY
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES • SECOND BASE 1998-2000 at UCLA • Long Beach, Calif. (Long Beach Polyy HS)
Utley in MLB (2003-present) YR TEAM G AB R H 2B 2003 Philadelphia 43 134 13 32 10 2004 Philadelphia 94 267 36 71 11 2005 Philadelphia 147 543 93 158 39 40 2006 Philadelphia 160 658 131 203 48 2007 Philadelphia 132 530 104 176 41 2008 Philadelphia 159 607 113 177 28 2009 Philadelphia 156 571 112 161 2010 Philadelphia 115 425 75 117 20 54 103 21 2011 Philadelphia 103 398 48 77 15 2012 Philadelphia 83 301 73 135 25 2013 Philadelphia 131 476 11-YEAR TOTALS 1323 4910 852 1410 298
3B HR 1 2 2 13 6 28 4 32 5 22 4 33 4 31 2 16 6 11 2 11 6 18 42 217
RBI 21 57 105 102 103 104 93 65 44 45 69 808
BB SB 11 2 15 4 69 16 63 15 50 9 64 14 88 23 63 13 39 14 43 11 45 8 550 129
CS AVG. 0 .239 1 .266 3 .291 4 .309 1 .332 2 .292 0 .282 2 .275 0 .259 1 .256 3 .284 17 .287
Career at UCLA (1998-2000) YR 1998 1999 2000 3 YEARS
GS-GP 53-44 62-62 64-64 179-170
AB R 194 35 271 66 283 81 748 182
H 62 86 108 256
2B 3B 11 0 13 2 17 2 41 4
HR RBI 15 49 16 56 22 69 53 174
BB SO 12 44 26 54 27 35 65 122
SB CS AVG. 1 2 .320 5 1 .317 15 1 .382 21 4 .342
67
Chase Utley
RBI 0 6 16 23 45
BB 0 4 14 5 23
SO 2 8 28 23 61
SB CS AVG. 0 0 .250 0 1 .273 2 1 .277 1 4 .248 3 6 .262
UCLA’S ALL-TIME MAJOR LEAGUERS
UCLA’s All-Time MLB Players
BOB ADAMS (1977)
In the 94-year history of UCLA’s baseball program, 72 Bruins have had the opportunity to play Major League Baseball. In fact, at least one player from every UCLA baseball team from 1965-2011 has advanced to the majors.
Name (72) Marv Gudat Bill Brubaker Hal Spindel Dick Conger Bud Stewart Bud Sketchley Bobby Brown Jackie Robinson George Elder Frank Ernaga Randy Schwartz Rick Kester Bobby Floyd Jim York Bill Bonham Chris Chambliss Mike Reinbach Luis Gomez Bob Adams Mike Edwards Marshall Edwards Tim Leary Dave Rucker Dave Schmidt Ron Roenicke Floyd Chiffer Don Slaught Dave Baker Matt Young Pat Clements Mike Gallego Colin Ward Pat Dodson Shane Mack Eric Nolte Torey Lovullo Alex Sanchez Todd Zeile Bill Haselman Jeff Conine Sean Berry Randy Hennis Tony Scruggs Mike Magnante Rich Amaral Eric Karros Bob Hamelin Chris Pritchett Mike Fyhrie Ryan McGuire Tim Kubinski Jim Parque Troy Glaus Dave Roberts Adam Melhuse Eric Byrnes Tom Jacquez Eric Valent Chase Utley Garrett Atkins Casey Janssen Ben Francisco Josh Roenicke David Huff Wes Whisler Hector Ambriz Brandon Crawford Trevor Bauer Tyson Brummett Jermaine Curtis Charles Brewer Gerrit Cole
Years at UCLA 1924-28 1929-32 1931-38 1939 1934-37 1938-41 1944 1940 1946-47 1949-51 1963-64 1966-67 1963 1968-69 1969-70 1969 1969 1971-73 1971-73 1973-74 1973-74 1977-79 1976-77 1977-79 1977 1975-78 1977, 1979-80 1975-78 1979-80 1981-83 1979-81 1981-82 1979-80 1982-84 1984-85 1984-87 1985-87 1984-86 1986-87 1985-87 1985 1985-87 1986-87 1986-88 1982-83 1986-88 1987 1989-91 1988-91 1991-93 1991-93 1995-97 1995-97 1991-94 1992-93 1995-98 1995-97 1996-98 1999-00 1998-00 1998-00 2001-02 2004-06 2006 2002-04 2003-06 2006-08 2009-11 2006-07 2006-08 2007-09 2009-11
MLB Debut 5/21/1929 9/08/1932 4/23/1939 4/22/1940 4/19/1941 4/14/1942 9/22/1946 4/15/1947 7/22/1949 5/24/1957 9/8/1965 8/18/1968 9/18/1968 9/21/1970 4/7/1971 5/28/1971 4/7/1974 4/28/1974 7/10/1977 9/10/1977 4/11/1981 4/12/1981 4/21/1981 5/1/1981 9/2/1981 4/7/1982 7/6/1982 9/12/1982 4/6/1983 4/9/1985 4/11/1985 9/21/1985 9/5/1986 5/25/1987 8/1/1987 9/10/1988 5/23/1989 8/18/1989 9/3/1990 9/16/1990 9/17/1990 9/17/1990 4/8/1991 4/22/1991 5/27/1991 9/1/1991 9/12/1993 9/6/1996 9/14/1996 6/5/1997 7/16/1997 5/26/1998 7/31/1998 8/7/1999 6/16/2000 8/22/2000 9/9/2000 6/8/2001 4/4/2003 8/3/2003 4/27/2006 5/1/2007 9/13/2008 5/17/2009 6/2/2009 4/30/2010 5/27/2011 6/28/2012 10/3/2012 4/27/2013 6/10/2013 6/11/2013
YR TEAM 1977 Detroit 1-YEAR TOTALS
G 15 15
AB 24 24
R 2 2
H 6 6
2B 1 1
3B 0 0
HR 2 2
RBI 2 2
BB 0 0
SB 0 0
CS AVG. 0 .250 0 .250
SO -----
SB CS AVG. 0 -- .242 -----9 -- .327 10 -- .322
Adams at UCLA (1970-1973) YR 1970 1971 1972 1973 4 YEARS
G AB R H 2B 3B -33 5 8 2 0 -------- 257 53 84 9 6 49 180 47 58 9 2 stat totals are unavailable
HR 1 -6 13
RBI 6 -52 48
BB -----
RICH AMARAL (1991-2000) YR TEAM 1991 Seattle 1992 Seattle 1993 Seattle 1994 Seattle 1995 Seattle 1996 Seattle 1997 Seattle 1998 Seattle 1999 Baltimore 2000 Baltimore 10-YEAR TOTALS
G AB R 14 16 2 35 100 9 110 373 53 77 228 37 90 238 45 118 312 69 89 190 34 73 134 25 91 137 21 30 60 10 727 1788 305
H 1 24 108 60 67 91 54 37 38 13 493
2B 0 3 24 10 14 11 5 6 8 1 82
3B 0 0 1 2 2 3 0 0 1 1 10
HR 0 1 1 4 2 1 1 1 0 0 11
RBI 0 7 44 18 19 29 21 4 11 6 159
BB SB 1 0 5 4 33 19 24 5 21 21 47 25 10 12 13 11 15 9 7 6 176 112
CS AVG. 0 .063 2 .240 11 .290 1 .263 2 .282 6 .292 8 .284 1 .276 6 .277 2 .217 39 .276
Amaral at UCLA (1982-1983) YR 1982 1983 2 YEARS
GP-GS 65-64 52-51 117-115
AB R 226 61 211 51 437 112
H 74 72 146
2B 3B 10 0 12 1 22 1
HR 0 5 5
RBI BB 34 65 30 38 64 103
SO 34 29 63
SB CS AVG. 19 11 .327 26 5 .341 45 16 .334
HECTOR AMBRIZ (2010, 2012-13) YR TEAM 2010 Cleveland 2012 Houston 2013 Houston 3-YEAR TOTALS
W-L ERA 0-2 5.59 1-1 4.19 2-4 5.70 3-7 5.37
G/GS IP CG SV 34/0 48.1 0 0 18/0 19.1 0 0 43/0 36.1 0 2 95/0 104.0 0 2
H 68 14 50 132
R 31 9 28 68
ER 30 9 23 62
SO 37 22 27 86
BB HP 17 1 11 2 14 1 42 4
Career at UCLA (2003-2006, pitching) YR 2003 2004 2005 2006 4 YEARS
W-L 0-5 2-2 3-7 8-7 13-21
ERA G/GS 6.50 12/5 5.62 7/6 3.94 18/16 3.65 20/16 4.41 57/43
SV 0 0 1 2 3
IP CG H R ER 45.2 0 58 42 33 32.0 0 37 24 20 105.0 2 99 52 46 113.1 2 105 55 46 296.0 4 299 173 145
SO BB HP WP 41 24 4 7 27 9 2 4 84 40 8 4 97 41 5 15 249 114 19 30
Career at UCLA (2003-2006, hitting) YR 2003 2004 2005 2006 4 YEARS
GS-GP 36-14 11-9 51-44 48-42 146-109
AB 49 14 157 147 367
R 4 2 19 29 54
H 11 4 53 46 114
2B 3B 2 0 0 0 14 0 10 0 26 0
HR 0 2 1 5 8
RBI 5 5 18 34 62
BB 5 0 22 20 47
SO 7 0 30 29 68
SB CS AVG. 0 0 .224 0 0 .286 0 1 .338 0 0 .313 0 1 .311
GARRETT ATKINS (2003-2010) YR TEAM 2003 Colorado 2004 Colorado 2005 Colorado 2006 Colorado 2007 Colorado 2008 Colorado 2009 Colorado 2010 Baltimore 7-YEAR TOTALS
G AB R 25 69 6 15 28 3 138 519 62 157 602 117 157 605 83 155 611 86 126 354 37 44 152 5 773 2788 394
H 2B 11 2 10 2 149 31 198 48 182 35 175 32 80 12 30 7 805 162
3B 0 0 1 1 1 3 1 0 7
HR 0 1 13 29 25 21 9 1 98
RBI 4 8 89 120 111 99 48 9 479
BB 3 4 45 79 67 40 41 12 279
SB 0 0 0 4 3 1 0 0 8
CS AVG. 0 .159 0 .357 2 .287 0 .329 1 .301 1 .286 0 .226 0 .214 4 .289
Atkins at UCLA (1998-2000) YR 1998 1999 2000 3 YEARS
GS-GP 54-54 62-62 64-64 180-180
AB R 222 43 256 64 270 73 748 141
H 85 96 95 276
2B 3B 22 1 18 1 16 2 56 4
HR RBI 9 54 14 41 17 72 40 167
BB 18 34 32 84
SO 21 25 32 78
SB CS AVG. 1 0 .383 2 0 .375 2 0 .352 5 0 .368
BB 3 3
SB 0 0
DAVE BAKER (1982) YR TEAM 1982 Toronto 1-YEAR TOTALS
G 9 9
AB 20 20
R 3 3
H 5 5
2B 1 1
3B 0 0
HR 0 0
RBI 2 2
CS AVG. 0 .250 0 .250
Baker at UCLA (1975-1978) YR 1975 1976 1977 1978 4 YEARS
GS-GP 38 58 60 58 214
AB R 90 16 202 30 231 32 215 49 738 127
H 27 56 66 58 207
2B 3B 6 0 10 1 11 3 9 2 36 6
HR RBI 3 22 7 37 10 43 14 50 34 152
BB SO 13 20 30 32 18 40 37 33 98 125
SB CS AVG. 1 -- .300 3 1 .277 1 -- .286 2 -- .270 7 -- .280
TREVOR BAUER (2012-13) YR TEAM 2012 Arizona 2013 Cleveland 2-YEAR TOTALS
W-L ERA 1-2 6.06 1-2 5.29 2-4 5.67
G/GS 4/4 4/4 8/8
IP CG SV 16.1 0 0 17.0 0 0 33.1 0 0
H 14 15 29
R 13 11 24
ER 11 10 21
SO 17 11 28
BB HP 13 1 16 1 29 2
IP CG H R 105.1 4 85 39 131.1 1 121 64 136.2 10 73 22 373.1 15 279 125
ER 35 44 19 99
SO BB HP WP 92 27 9 10 165 41 4 12 203 36 6 8 460 104 19 30
Bauer at UCLA (2009-2011) YR 2009 2010 2011 3 YEARS
68
W-L 9-3 12-3 13-2 34-8
ERA G/GS 2.99 20/10 3.02 18/18 1.25 16/16 2.36 54/44
SV 2 0 0 2
UCLA’S ALL-TIME MAJOR LEAGUERS BILL BRUBAKER (1932-1943) YR TEAM 1932 Pittsburgh 1933 Pittsburgh 1934 Pittsburgh 1935 Pittsburgh 1936 Pittsburgh 1937 Pittsburgh 1938 Pittsburgh 1939 Pittsburgh 1940 Pittsburgh 1943 Boston-NL 10-YEAR TOTALS
G AB R 7 24 3 2 2 0 3 6 0 6 11 1 145 554 77 120 413 57 45 112 18 100 345 41 38 78 8 13 19 3 479 1564 208
H 10 0 2 0 160 105 33 80 15 8 413
2B 3 0 1 0 27 20 5 23 3 3 85
3B 0 0 0 0 4 4 0 1 1 0 10
HR 0 0 0 0 6 6 3 7 0 0 22
RBI 4 0 1 0 102 48 19 43 7 1 225
BB 3 0 1 2 50 47 9 29 8 2 151
SB 1 0 0 0 5 2 2 3 0 0 13
CS AVG. -- .417 -- .000 -- .333 -- .000 -- .289 -- .254 -- .295 -- .232 -- .192 -- .421 -- .264
*Brubaker played at UCLA from 1929-1932; his UCLA stats are not available.
TYSON BRUMMETT (2012) YR TEAM 2012 Philadelphia 1-YEAR TOTALS
W-L 0-0 0-0
ERA 0.00 0.00
G/GS 1/0 1/0
IP CG SV 0.2 0 0 0.2 0 0
H 2 2
R 0 0
ER 0 0
SO 2 2
BB HP 0 0 0 0
Brummett at UCLA (2006-2007) YR 2006 2007 2 YEARS
W-L ERA G/GS 6-7 4.52 17/15 10-6 4.04 20/18 16-13 4.24 37/33
SV 1 0 1
IP CG H R ER 97.2 1 103 57 49 138.0 7 146 73 62 235.2 8 249 130 111
SO BB HP WP 83 32 7 9 111 33 9 8 194 65 16 17
ERIC BYRNES (2000-2010)
Eric Byrnes
SEAN BERRY (1990-2000) YR TEAM 1990 Kansas City 1991 Kansas City 1992 Montreal 1993 Montreal 1994 Montreal 1995 Montreal 1996 Houston 1997 Houston 1998 Houston 1999 Milwaukee 2000 Mil./Bos. 11-YEAR TOTALS
G AB R 8 23 2 31 60 5 24 57 5 122 299 50 103 320 43 103 314 38 132 431 55 96 301 37 102 299 48 106 259 26 33 50 1 860 2413 310
H 2B 5 1 8 3 19 1 78 15 89 19 100 22 121 38 77 24 94 17 59 11 7 2 657 153
3B 1 0 0 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 0 10
HR 0 0 1 14 11 14 17 8 13 2 1 81
RBI 4 1 4 49 41 55 95 43 52 23 2 369
BB 2 5 1 41 32 25 23 25 31 17 4 206
SB 0 0 2 12 14 3 12 1 3 0 0 47
CS AVG. 0 .217 0 .133 1 .333 2 .261 0 .278 8 .318 6 .281 5 .256 1 .314 0 .228 1 .140 24 .272
Berry at UCLA (1985) YR 1985 1 YEARS
G 48 48
AB 150 150
R 37 37
H 44 44
2B 3B 7 1 7 1
HR 3 3
RBI 23 23
BB 19 19
SO 28 28
SB CS AVG. 13 4 .293 13 4 .293
R 38 22 55 133 133 102 111 59 80 10 743
ER 31 20 51 104 120 93 104 55 74 10 662
SO BB HP 41 36 5 49 25 1 121 64 4 191 109 6 165 109 5 110 96 2 134 82 3 83 50 1 78 60 8 13 5 0 985 636 35
BILL BONHAM (1971-1980) YR TEAM 1971 Chicago-NL 1972 Chicago-NL 1973 Chicago-NL 1974 Chicago-NL 1975 Chicago-NL 1976 Chicago-NL 1977 Chicago-NL 1978 Cincinnati 1979 Cincinnati 1980 Cincinnati 10-YEAR TOTALS
W-L 2-1 1-1 7-5 11-22 13-15 9-13 10-13 11-5 9-7 2-1 75-83
ERA G/GS IP CG SV H 4.65 33/2 60.0 0 0 63 3.12 19/4 57.2 0 4 56 3.02 44/15 152.0 3 6 126 3.86 44/36 242.2 10 1 246 4.71 38/36 229.1 7 0 254 4.27 32/31 196.0 3 0 215 4.36 34/34 214.2 1 0 207 3.53 23/23 140.2 1 0 151 3.79 29/29 175.2 2 0 173 4.74 4/4 19.0 0 0 21 4.01 300/214 1487.1 27 11 1512
Bonham at UCLA (1969-1970) YR 1969 1970 4 YEARS
W-L ERA 5-2 3.22 4-5 2.60 22-15 4.34
G/GS 16 18 54-43
SV ----
IP CG H R ER 64.1 -- 50 35 23 82.2 -- 58 36 24 265.1 2 262 151 128
SO BB HP WP 68 41 --100 50 --245 97 15 18
CHARLES BREWER (2013) YR TEAM 2013 Arizona 1-YEAR TOTALS
W-L ERA 0-0 3.00 0-0 3.00
G/GS 4/0 4/0
IP CG SV 6.0 0 0 6.0 0 0
H 8 8
R 2 2
IP CG H R 6.2 0 9 7 97.0 0 108 63 71.2 0 83 49 175.1 0 200 119
ER 4 55 36 95
ER 2 2
SO 5 5
BB HP 2 0 2 0
W-L 0-1 9-4 3-5 12-10
ERA G/GS 5.40 4/0 5.10 19/13 4.52 16/14 4.88 39/27
SV 0 1 0 1
SO BB HP WP 4 4 0 1 69 31 17 2 65 22 11 2 138 57 28 5
BOBBY BROWN (1946-1954) YR TEAM G AB R 1946 New York-AL 7 24 1 1947 New York-AL 69 150 21 1948 New York-AL 113 363 62 1949 New York-AL 104 343 61 1950 New York-AL 95 277 33 1951 New York-AL 103 313 44 1952 New York-AL 29 89 6 1954 New York-AL 28 60 5 8-YEAR TOTALS 548 1619 233
H 8 45 109 97 74 84 22 13 452
G AB R 10 10 5 19 38 9 90 94 24 121 414 64 143 569 91 126 412 49 143 562 82 160 626 103 52 206 28 84 239 26 15 32 1 963 3202 482
H 2B 3 0 9 1 23 4 109 27 161 39 93 24 150 37 179 30 43 13 54 14 3 2 827 191
3B HR 0 0 0 3 2 3 9 12 3 20 3 10 3 26 8 21 1 6 1 8 0 0 30 109
RBI 0 5 11 51 73 40 79 83 23 31 0 396
BB SB 0 2 4 1 4 3 42 10 46 17 32 7 34 25 57 50 16 4 12 9 6 1 253 129
CS AVG. 1 .300 0 .237 0 .245 2 .263 1 .283 1 .225 3 .267 7 .286 4 .209 3 .226 0 .094 23 .258
Byrnes at UCLA (1995-1998) YR 1995 1996 1997 1998 4 YEARS
GS-GP 56-56 62-60 67-67 57-57 242-240
AB R 238 45 225 32 277 95 244 63 984 235
H 77 76 92 81 326
2B 3B 11 2 21 1 24 1 19 2 75 6
HR RBI BB SO 9 35 16 38 8 56 17 41 17 60 39 42 14 52 32 42 48 203 104 163
SB CS AVG. 18 5 .324 14 2 .338 19 1 .332 30 4 .332 81 12 .331
CHRIS CHAMBLISS (1971-1986) YR TEAM G AB R H 2B 1971 Cleveland 111 415 49 114 20 1972 Cleveland 121 466 51 136 27 1973 Cleveland 155 572 70 156 30 1974 Cle./NYY 127 467 46 119 20 1975 New York-AL 150 562 66 171 38 1976 New York-AL 156 641 79 188 32 1977 New York-AL 157 600 90 172 32 1978 New York-AL 162 625 81 171 26 1979 New York-AL 149 554 61 155 27 1980 Atlanta 158 602 83 170 37 1981 Atlanta 107 404 44 110 25 1982 Atlanta 157 534 57 144 25 1983 Atlanta 131 447 59 125 24 1984 Atlanta 135 389 47 100 14 1985 Atlanta 101 170 16 40 7 1986 Atlanta 97 122 13 38 8 1988 New York-AL 1 1 0 0 0 17-YEAR TOTALS 2175 7571 912 2109 392
3B HR 4 9 2 6 2 11 3 6 4 9 6 17 6 17 3 12 3 18 2 18 2 8 2 20 3 20 0 9 0 3 0 2 0 0 42 185
RBI 48 44 53 50 72 96 90 90 63 72 51 86 78 44 21 14 0 972
BB 40 26 58 48 29 27 45 41 34 49 44 57 63 58 18 15 0 632
SB 2 3 4 0 0 1 4 2 3 7 4 7 2 1 0 0 0 40
CS AVG. 0 .275 4 .292 8 .273 1 .255 1 .304 0 .293 0 .287 1 .274 2 .280 3 .282 1 .272 3 .270 7 .280 2 .257 0 .235 2 .311 0 .000 35 .279
Chambliss at UCLA (1969) YR 1969 1 YEAR
G ---
AB 188 188
R 43 43
H 64 64
2B 3B 13 3 13 3
HR 15 15
RBI 45 45
BB ---
SO ---
SB CS AVG. 11 -- .340 11 -- .340
FLOYD CHIFFER (1982-1984) YR TEAM 1982 San Diego 1983 San Diego 1984 San Diego 3-YEAR TOTALS
W-L ERA 4-3 2.95 0-2 3.18 1-0 7.71 5-5 4.02
G/GS IP CG SV 51/0 79.1 0 4 15/0 22.2 0 1 15/1 28.0 0 0 81/1 130.0 0 5
H 73 17 42 132
R 33 10 24 67
ER 26 8 24 58
SO 48 15 20 60
BB HP 34 4 10 0 16 0 10 4
Chiffer at UCLA (1975-1978)
Brewer at UCLA (2007-2009) YR 2007 2008 2009 3 YEARS
YR TEAM 2000 Oakland 2001 Oakland 2002 Oakland 2003 Oakland 2004 Oakland 2005 Oak/Bal/Col 2006 Arizona 2007 Arizona 2008 Arizona 2009 Arizona 2010 Seattle 11-YEAR TOTALS
2B 1 6 19 14 4 15 2 1 62
3B 0 1 5 4 2 2 0 0 14
HR 0 1 3 6 4 6 1 1 22
RBI 1 18 48 61 37 51 14 7 237
*Brown played at UCLA in 1944; his stats from that season are not available.
BB 4 21 48 38 39 47 9 8 214
SB ----------
CS AVG. -- .333 -- .300 -- .300 -- .283 -- .267 -- .268 -- .247 -- .217 -- .279
YR 1975 1976 1977 1978 4 YEARS
W-L 0-2 1-4 5-2 11-3 17-11
ERA G/GS 5.22 10/-8.00 23/2 3.01 21/6 1.73 19/16 3.63 73/--
SV 0 2 1 0 3
IP CG H R ER 29.2 -- 23 18 17 54.0 -- 76 55 48 86.2 -- 76 39 29 120.0 6 98 33 23 290.1 -- 273 145 117
SO BB HP WP 20 27 --29 31 --61 35 4 3 84 37 3 1 194 130 ---
PAT CLEMENTS (1985-1992) YR TEAM W-L ERA 1985 Cal/Pit 5-2 3.46 1986 Pittsburgh 0-4 2.80 1987 New York-AL 3-3 4.95 1988 New York-AL 0-0 6.48 1989 San Diego 4-1 3.92 1990 San Diego 0-0 4.15 1991 San Diego 1-0 3.77 1992 San Diego 4-1 2.98 8-YEAR TOTALS 17-11 3.77
69
G/GS IP CG SV 68/0 96.1 0 3 65/0 61.0 0 2 55/0 80.0 0 7 6/1 8.1 0 0 23/1 39.0 0 0 9/0 13.0 0 0 12/0 14.1 0 0 50/0 48.1 0 0 288/2 360.1 0 12
H R ER SO BB HP 86 37 37 36 40 2 53 20 19 31 32 2 91 45 44 36 30 3 12 8 6 3 4 0 39 17 17 18 15 0 20 9 6 6 7 1 13 8 6 8 9 0 48 19 16 20 23 4 362 163 151 158 160 11
UCLA’S ALL-TIME MAJOR LEAGUERS MIKE EDWARDS (1977-1980) YR TEAM G 1977 Pittsburgh 7 1978 Oakland 142 1979 Oakland 122 1980 Oakland 46 317 3-YEAR TOTALS
AB 6 414 400 59 879
R H 1 0 48 113 35 93 10 14 94 220
2B 0 16 12 0 28
3B 0 2 2 0 4
HR 0 1 1 0 2
RBI 0 23 23 3 49
BB SB CS AVG. 0 0 2 .000 16 27 21 .273 15 10 6 .233 1 1 1 .237 32 38 30 .250
Mike Edwards at UCLA (1973-1974) YR 1973 1974 2 YEARS
G 25 60 85
AB 89 225 314
R 13 43 56
H 29 75 104
2B 3B 3 2 15 3 18 5
HR 1 14 15
RBI 12 42 54
BB -14 --
SO -14 --
SB CS AVG. 4 -- .326 12 -- .333 16 -- .331
BB 4 4
SB ---
CS AVG. -- .250 -- .250
BB 9 0 9
SB ----
CS AVG. -- .314 -- .125 -- .279
BB 0 6 4 7 5 4 2 28
SB 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 2
CS AVG. 0 .111 0 .202 1 .311 0 .152 0 .179 1 .333 0 .111 2 .219
SO ---
SB CS AVG. 10 -- .291 10 -- .291
GEORGE ELDER (1949) YR TEAM 1949 St. Louis 1-YEAR TOTALS
Jeff Conine W-L 6-6 9-6 3-6 18-18
ERA 5.58 6.32 5.34 5.78
G/GS 22/12 23/17 21/11 66/40
W-L ERA 1-0 3.00 0-0 0.00 0-0 2.16 2-7 6.09 3-7 5.14
G/GS 2/0 2/1 2/1 13/10 19/12
SO BB HP WP 41 53 1 10 60 76 2 12 59 57 3 8 160 186 6 30
H 2 3 9 72 86
R 1 0 3 46 50
ER 1 0 2 37 40
SO 1 2 3 18 24
BB HP 3 0 3 0 5 0 24 0 35 5
JEFF CONINE (1990-2007) YR TEAM G AB R H 2B 1990 Kansas City 9 20 3 5 2 91 10 23 5 1992 Kansas City 28 1993 Florida 162 595 75 174 24 1994 Florida 115 451 60 144 27 1995 Florida 133 483 72 146 26 1996 Florida 157 597 8 175 32 1997 Florida 151 405 46 98 13 1998 Kansas City 93 309 30 79 26 1999 Baltimore 139 444 54 129 31 2000 Baltimore 119 409 53 116 20 2001 Baltimore 139 524 75 163 23 2002 Baltimore 116 451 44 123 26 2003 Balt/Fla 149 577 88 163 36 2004 Florida 140 521 55 146 35 2005 Florida 131 335 42 102 20 2006 Bal/Phila 142 489 54 131 26 2007 Cin/NYM 101 256 25 65 13 17-YEAR TOTALS 2024 6957 870 1982 385
3B HR RBI 0 0 2 2 0 9 3 12 79 6 18 82 2 25 105 2 26 95 1 17 61 0 8 43 1 13 75 2 13 46 2 14 97 4 15 63 3 20 95 1 14 83 2 3 33 4 10 66 1 6 37 36 214 1071
BB 2 8 52 40 66 62 57 26 30 36 64 25 50 48 38 40 27 671
SB 0 0 2 1 2 1 2 3 0 4 12 8 5 5 2 0 4 54
CS 0 0 0 1 0 4 0 0 3 3 8 0 0 5 0 0 0 29
AVG. .250 .253 .292 .319 .302 .293 .242 .256 .291 .284 .311 .273 .282 .280 .304 .267 .254 .285
Conine at UCLA (1985-1987) W-L 0-2 4-2 1-0 5-4
ERA G/GS 7.97 9/1 5.22 17/12 6.94 17/3 6.07 27/16
SV IP CG H R 0 14.2 0 20 17 1 70.2 1 66 53 1 36.1 0 36 36 2 121.2 1 122 106
ER 13 41 28 82
SO BB HP WP 6 8 0 1 35 49 5 4 25 32 3 5 66 89 8 10
JERMAINE CURTIS (2013) YR TEAM 2013 St. Louis 1-YEAR TOTALS
G 5 5
AB 3 3
R 0 0
H 0 0
2B 0 0
3B 0 0
HR 0 0
RBI 0 0
BB 1 1
SB 0 0
CS AVG. 0 .000 0 .000
SO 17 17 37 71
SB CS AVG. 1 1 .336 5 0 .329 9 2 .306 15 3 .321
GS-GP 50-44 37-37 60-60 147-141
AB R 146 34 152 31 235 45 533 110
H 49 50 72 171
2B 3B 12 4 8 0 18 2 38 6
HR 0 4 2 6
RBI 21 33 26 80
BB 24 15 42 81
BB 3 8 6 17
SB 0 0 0 0
SO 50 33 83
SB CS AVG. 3 -- .327 3 -- .259 6 -- .299
PAT DODSON (1986-1988) YR TEAM 1986 Boston 1987 Boston 1988 Boston 3-YEAR TOTALS
G 9 26 17 52
AB 12 42 45 99
R 3 4 5 12
H 5 7 8 20
2B 2 3 3 8
3B 0 0 1 1
HR 1 2 1 4
RBI 3 6 1 10
CS AVG. 0 .417 0 .167 0 .178 0 .202
Dodson at UCLA (1979-1980) YR 1979 1980 2 YEARS
G 60 49 109
AB 199 135 334
R 53 23 76
H 65 35 100
2B 3B 11 1 3 0 14 1
HR 15 5 20
RBI 46 28 74
BB 41 46 87
MARSHALL EDWARDS (1981-1983) YR TEAM G 1981 Milwaukee 40 1982 Milwaukee 69 1983 Milwaukee 51 160 3-YEAR TOTALS
AB 58 178 74 310
R 10 24 14 48
H 14 44 22 80
2B 1 4 1 6
3B 1 1 1 3
HR 0 2 0 2
RBI 4 14 5 23
BB SB CS AVG. 0 6 2 .241 4 10 4 .247 1 5 5 .297 5 21 11 .258
Marshall Edwards at UCLA (1973-1974) YR 1973 1974 2 YEARS
G 28 53 81
AB 57 184 241
R 9 27 36
H 18 48 66
2B 3 3
3B 0 0
HR 0 0
RBI 2 2
YR TEAM 1957 Chicago-NL 1958 Chicago-NL 2-YEAR TOTALS
G 20 9 29
AB 35 8 43
R 9 0 9
H 11 1 12
2B 3 0 3
3B 2 0 2
HR 2 0 2
RBI 7 0 7
*Ernaga played at UCLA from 1949-1951; his UCLA stats are not available.
YR TEAM G 1968 Baltimore 5 1969 Baltimore 39 1970 Bal./K.C. 17 1971 Kansas City 31 1972 Kansas City 61 1973 Kansas City 51 1974 Kansas City 10 214 7-YEAR TOTALS
AB 9 84 45 66 134 78 9 425
R 0 7 5 8 9 10 1 40
H 1 17 14 10 24 26 1 93
2B 1 4 4 3 3 3 0 18
3B 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1
HR 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
RBI 1 1 9 2 5 8 0 26
Floyd at UCLA (1963) YR 1963 1 YEAR
G ---
AB 148 148
R 23 23
H 43 43
2B 3B 5 2 5 2
HR 3 3
RBI 26 26
BB ---
BEN FRANCISCO (2007-2013) YR TEAM G AB R 2007 Cleveland 25 62 10 2008 Cleveland 121 447 65 2009 CLE/PHI 126 405 58 2010 Philadelphia 88 179 24 2011 Philadelphia 100 250 24 14 2012 TOR/HOU/TB 82 192 44 4 2013 New York-AL 21 7-YEAR TOTALS 563 1579 199
H 2B 17 5 119 32 104 30 45 13 61 10 46 14 5 0 400 104
3B 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 3
HR 3 15 15 6 6 4 1 50
RBI 12 54 46 28 34 15 1 190
BB 3 40 38 14 33 13 5 146
SB 0 4 14 8 4 0 0 30
CS AVG. 2 .274 3 .266 7 .257 0 .268 4 .244 1 .240 0 .114 17 .253
Francisco at UCLA (2001-2002) YR 2001 2002 2 YEARS
GS-GP 55-54 38-37 93-91
AB 236 152 388
R 48 42 90
H 73 56 129
2B 3B 20 1 11 1 31 2
HR 6 6 12
RBI 42 37 79
BB 18 12 30
SO 33 8 41
SB CS AVG. 15 0 .309 20 5 .368 35 5 .332
MARK FYHRIE (1996-2002) YR TEAM W-L ERA 1996 New York-NL 0-1 15.43 1999 Anaheim 0-4 5.05 2000 Anaheim 0-0 2.39 2001 CHC/Oak. 0-2 3.15 2002 Oakland 2-4 4.44 5-YEAR TOTALS 2-11 4.00
G/GS IP CG SV 2/0 2.3 0 0 16/7 51.7 0 0 32/0 52.7 0 0 18/0 20.0 0 0 16/4 48.7 0 0 84/11 175.1 0 0
H 4 61 54 18 46 183
R 4 32 14 7 25 82
ER SO 4 0 29 26 14 43 7 11 24 29 78 109
BB HP 3 0 21 0 15 0 8 0 20 4 67 4
IP CG H R 64.2 1 69 39 101.2 2 104 63 2.0 0 3 1 38.0 0 38 20 206.1 3 214 123
ER 27 42 1 17 87
SO BB HP WP 46 31 5 1 58 40 6 4 2 1 1 0 33 17 3 5 139 89 15 10
Fyhrie at UCLA (1988-1991)
Curtis at UCLA (2006-2008) YR 2006 2007 2008 3 YEARS
H 11 11
BOBBY FLOYD (1968-1974)
IP CG SV 3.0 0 0 4.0 0 0 8.1 0 0 54.2 2 0 70.0 0 0
*Conger played at UCLA in 1939; his stats from that season are not available.
YR 1985 1986 1987 3 YEARS
R 9 9
FRANK ERNAGA (1957-1958)
SV IP CG H R ER 0 98.1 2 116 78 61 0 105.1 2 125 89 74 0 87.2 1 86 63 52 0 291.1 5 327 230 187
DICK CONGER (1940-1942) YR TEAM 1940 Detroit 1941 Pittsburgh 1942 Pittsburgh 1943 Philadelphia 4-YEAR TOTALS
AB 44 44
*Elder played at UCLA in 1946 and 1947; his UCLA stats are not available.
Clements at UCLA (1981-1983) YR 1981 1982 1983 3 YEARS
G 41 41
2B 3B 3 0 5 0 8 0
HR 1 1 2
RBI 5 16 21
BB -13 --
SO -18 --
SB CS AVG. 7 -- .316 19 -- .261 26 -- .274
YR 1988 1989 1990 1991 4 YEARS
W-L 3-5 7-5 0-1 2-4 12-15
ERA G/GS 3.76 24/6 3.72 23/12 4.50 2/0 4.03 18/2 3.79 67/20
SV 1 4 0 5 10
MIKE GALLEGO (1985-1997) YR TEAM G AB R 1985 Oakland 76 77 13 1986 Oakland 20 37 2 1987 Oakland 72 124 18 1988 Oakland 129 277 38 1989 Oakland 133 357 45 1990 Oakland 140 389 36 1991 Oakland 159 482 67 1992 New York-AL 53 173 24 1993 New York-AL 119 403 63 1994 New York-AL 89 306 39 1995 Oakland 43 120 11 1996 St. Louis 51 143 12 1997 St. Louis 27 43 6 13-YEAR TOTALS 1111 2931 374
H 2B 16 5 10 2 31 6 58 8 90 14 80 13 119 15 44 7 114 20 73 17 28 0 30 2 7 2 700 111
3B 1 0 0 0 2 2 4 1 1 1 0 0 0 12
HR 1 0 2 2 3 3 12 3 10 6 0 0 0 42
RBI 9 4 14 20 30 34 49 14 54 41 8 4 1 282
BB 12 1 12 34 34 35 67 20 50 38 9 12 1 326
SB 1 0 0 2 7 5 6 0 3 0 0 0 0 24
CS AVG. 1 .208 2 .270 1 .250 3 .209 5 .252 5 .206 9 .247 1 .254 2 .283 1 .239 1 .233 0 .210 0 .163 31 .239
Gallego at UCLA (1979-1981) YR 1979 1980 1981 3 YEARS
70
GP/GS 56/----56/----46/46 158/-----
AB R 208 47 208 29 181 38 597 114
H 61 48 47 156
2B 3B 10 3 10 1 12 5 32 9
HR 2 3 6 11
RBI 28 27 33 88
BB 18 23 32 73
SO 35 25 22 82
SB CS AVG. 2 -- .293 4 -- .231 14 5 .260 20 -- .261
UCLA’S ALL-TIME MAJOR LEAGUERS TROY GLAUS (1998-2010)
BILL HASELMAN (1990-2003)
YR TEAM G AB R H 2B 1998 Anaheim 48 165 19 36 9 1999 Anaheim 154 551 85 132 29 2000 Anaheim 159 563 120 160 37 2001 Anaheim 161 588 100 147 38 2002 Anaheim 156 569 99 142 24 2003 Anaheim 91 319 53 79 17 2004 Anaheim 58 207 47 52 11 2005 Arizona 149 538 78 139 29 2006 Toronto 153 540 105 136 27 2007 Toronto 115 385 60 101 19 2008 St. Louis 151 544 69 147 33 2009 St. Louis 14 29 2 5 2 2010 Atlanta 128 412 52 99 18 13-YEAR TOTALS 1537 5410 889 1375 293
3B HR 0 1 0 29 1 47 2 41 1 30 2 16 1 18 1 37 0 38 1 20 1 27 0 0 0 16 10 320
RBI 23 79 102 108 111 50 42 97 104 62 99 2 71 950
BB 15 71 112 107 88 46 31 84 86 61 87 3 63 854
SB 1 5 14 10 10 7 2 4 3 0 0 0 0 56
CS AVG. 0 .218 1 .240 11 .284 3 .250 3 .250 2 .248 3 .251 2 .258 2 .252 1 .262 1 .270 0 .172 0 .240 29 .254
Glaus at UCLA (1995-1997) YR 1995 1996 1997 3 YEARS
GS-GP 55-54 57-57 67-67 179-178
AB R 217 46 216 65 264 100 697 211
2B 3B 7 0 17 1 15 1 39 2
YR TEAM G AB R H 1974 Minnesota 82 168 18 35 1975 Minnesota 89 72 7 10 1976 Minnesota 38 57 5 11 1977 Minnesota 32 65 6 16 1978 Toronto 153 413 39 92 1979 Toronto 59 163 11 39 1980 Atlanta 121 278 18 53 1981 Atlanta 35 35 4 7 609 1251 108 263 8-YEAR TOTALS
HR RBI BB SO 12 39 28 55 16 50 38 37 34 91 57 52 62 180 123 144
SB CS AVG. 2 3 .258 12 2 .352 10 0 .409 24 5 .344
2B 1 0 1 4 7 7 6 0 26
3B 0 0 0 2 3 0 0 0 5
HR 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
RBI 3 5 3 11 32 11 24 1 90
BB 12 4 3 4 34 6 16 6 86
SB CS AVG. 2 3 .208 0 2 .139 1 0 .193 0 2 .246 2 10 .223 1 0 .239 0 4 .191 0 1 .200 6 22 .210
SO -----
SB CS AVG. ------15 -- .221 8 -- .301 -------
BB 0 16 16
SB ----
Gomez at UCLA (1971-1973) G AB R H stats unavailable --- 217 29 48 52 186 32 56 career stats incomplete
2B 3B --7 0 7 3 ---
HR -1 1 --
RBI -15 18 --
BB -----
MARV GUDAT (1929, 1932) YR TEAM 1929 Cincinnati 1932 Chicago-NL 2-YEAR TOTALS
G 9 60 69
AB 10 94 104
YR TEAM 1929 Cincinnati 1932 Chicago-NL 2-YEAR TOTALS
W-L ERA 1-1 3.37 0-0 0.00 1-1 3.25
R 0 15 15
H 2 24 26
G/GS 7/2 1/0 8/2
2B 0 4 4
3B 0 1 1
HR 0 1 1
IP CG SV 26.2 2 0 1.0 0 0 27.2 2 1
RBI 0 15 15 H 29 1 30
R 12 0 12
ER 10 0 10
SO 0 2 2
CS AVG. -- .200 -- .255 -- .250 BB HP 4 0 0 0 4 0
*Gudat played at UCLA from 1924-1928; his UCLA stats are not available.
BOB HAMELIN (1993-1998) YR TEAM 1993 Kansas City 1994 Kansas City 1995 Kansas City 1996 Kansas City 1997 Detroit 1998 Milwaukee 6-YEAR TOTALS
G AB R 16 49 2 101 312 64 72 208 20 89 239 31 110 318 47 109 146 15 497 1272 179
H 11 88 35 61 86 32 313
2B 3 25 7 14 15 6 70
3B 0 1 1 1 0 0 3
HR 2 24 7 9 18 7 67
RBI 5 65 25 40 52 22 209
BB 6 56 26 54 48 16 206
SB 0 4 0 5 2 0 11
CS AVG. 0 .224 3 .282 1 .168 2 .255 1 .270 1 .219 8 .246
G 51 51
AB 130 130
R 37 37
H 2 5 35 16 37 65 50 33 39 53 37 44 0 416
2B 0 0 8 7 6 13 15 6 8 18 6 7 0 94
3B 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
HR 0 0 5 1 5 8 6 6 4 6 3 3 0 47
RBI 3 0 16 8 23 34 26 17 14 26 25 18 0 210
BB 1 0 12 3 17 19 15 3 10 15 8 11 0 114
SB 0 0 2 1 0 4 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 9
CS AVG. 0 .154 0 .263 1 .255 0 .193 2 .243 2 .274 2 .236 0 .314 0 .273 1 .275 1 .285 0 .246 0 .000 9 .259
YR 1986 1987 2 YEARS
G 41 65 106
AB 129 257 386
R 31 53 84
H 47 78 125
2B 3B 12 0 13 1 25 1
HR 11 9 20
RBI 44 51 95
BB 9 28 37
SO 25 42 67
SB CS AVG. 5 0 .364 16 6 .304 21 6 .324
RANDY HENNIS (1990) YR TEAM 1990 Houston 1-YEAR TOTAL
W-L ERA 0-0 0.00 0-0 0.00
G/GS 3/1 3/1
IP CG SV 9.2 0 0 9.2 0 0
H 1 1
R 0 0
ER 0 0
SO 4 4
BB HP 3 1 3 1
Hennis at UCLA (1985-1987) YR 1985 1986 1987 3 YEARS
W-L 4-0 6-7 9-4 19-11
ERA G/GS 6.35 12/4 4.97 16/15 5.81 23/18 5.56 41/37
SV 0 0 0 0
IP CG H R ER 34.0 0 41 29 24 94.0 5 111 69 52 110.0 2 112 78 71 238.0 7 264 176 147
SO BB HP WP 15 21 1 4 54 41 6 8 81 58 9 4 150 120 16 16
TOM JACQUEZ (2000) YR TEAM 2000 Philadelphia 1-YEAR TOTALS
W-L ERA 0-0 11.05 0-0 11.05
G/GS 9/0 9/0
IP CG SV 7.1 0 1 7.1 0 1
H 10 10
R 9 9
R 19 8 62 89
ER 16 4 44 64
ER 9 9
SO 6 6
BB HP 3 0 3 0
Jacquez at UCLA (1995-1997) YR 1995 1996 1997 3 YEARS
W-L 0-1 1-1 10-4 11-6
ERA G/GS 5.14 13/1 4.50 5/0 3.06 19/17 3.48 37/180
SV 0 0 0 0
IP CG H 28.0 0 33 8.0 0 9 129.1 2 115 165.1 2 157
SO BB HP WP 7 11 1 3 11 1 1 1 100 42 11 3 118 54 13 7
ERIC KARROS (1991-2004) YR TEAM G AB R H 2B 1991 Los Angeles 14 14 0 1 1 1992 Los Angeles 149 545 63 140 30 1993 Los Angeles 158 619 74 153 27 1994 Los Angeles 111 406 51 108 21 1995 Los Angeles 143 551 83 164 29 1996 Los Angeles 154 608 84 158 29 1997 Los Angeles 162 628 86 167 28 1998 Los Angeles 139 507 59 150 20 1999 Los Angeles 153 578 74 176 40 2000 Los Angeles 155 584 84 146 29 2001 Los Angeles 121 438 42 103 22 2002 Los Angeles 142 524 52 142 26 2003 Chicago-NL 114 336 37 96 16 2004 Oakland 40 103 8 20 6 14-YEAR TOTALS 1755 6441 797 1724 324
3B HR RBI 0 0 1 1 20 88 2 23 80 1 14 46 3 32 105 1 34 111 0 31 104 1 23 87 0 34 112 0 31 106 0 15 63 1 13 73 1 12 40 0 2 11 11 284 1027
BB 1 37 34 29 61 53 61 47 53 63 41 37 28 7 552
SB 0 2 0 2 4 8 15 7 8 4 3 4 1 1 59
CS AVG. 0 .071 4 .257 1 .247 0 .266 4 .298 0 .260 7 .266 2 .296 5 .304 3 .250 1 .235 2 .271 1 .286 0 .194 30 .268
Karros at UCLA (1986-1988)
Hamelin at UCLA (1987) YR 1987 1-YEAR TOTALS
G AB R 7 13 0 8 19 1 58 137 21 38 83 11 64 152 22 77 237 33 67 212 22 40 105 11 48 143 13 62 193 23 47 130 12 69 179 16 4 3 0 589 1606 185
Haselman at UCLA (1986-1987)
H 56 76 108 240
LUIS GOMEZ (1974-1981)
YR 1971 1972 1973 3 YEARS
YR TEAM 1990 Texas 1992 Seattle 1993 Seattle 1994 Seattle 1995 Boston 1996 Boston 1997 Boston 1998 Texas 1999 Detroit 2000 Texas 2001 Texas 2002 Texas 2003 Boston 13-YEAR TOTALS
H 47 47
2B 3B 13 0 13 0
HR 13 13
RBI 47 47
BB 33 33
SO 43 43
SB CS AVG. 10 2 .362 10 2 .362
YR 1986 1987 1988 3 YEARS
G 12 66 58 136
AB R 22 6 269 62 241 53 532 121
H 10 84 100 194
2B 3B 1 0 23 3 14 2 38 5
HR RBI 1 12 8 57 17 54 26 123
BB 1 34 33 68
SO 3 34 28 65
SB CS AVG. 0 0 .454 8 2 .312 11 3 .415 19 5 .365
RICK KESTER (1968-1970) YR TEAM 1968 Atlanta 1969 Atlanta 1970 Atlanta 3-YEAR TOTALS
W-L ERA 0-0 5.68 0-0 13.50 0-0 5.57 0-0 5.98
G/GS 5/0 1/0 15/0 21/0
IP CG SV 6.1 0 0 2.0 0 0 32.1 0 0 40.2 0 0
H 8 5 36 49
R 4 3 24 31
ER 4 3 20 27
SO 9 2 20 31
BB HP 3 0 0 0 19 0 22 0
IP CG H 100.0 -- 92 83.0 -- 58 183.0 -- 150
R 48 36 84
ER 29 22 51
SO BB HP WP 98 48 --104 36 --202 84 ---
H 12 14 26
R 9 8 17
ER 8 8 16
Kester at UCLA (1966-1967) YR 1966 1967 2 YEARS
W-L ERA 4-7 2.61 10-2 2.35 14-9 2.51
G 36 20 56
SV ----
TIM KUBINSKI (1997-1999) YR TEAM 1997 Oakland 1999 Oakland 2-YEAR TOTALS
W-L ERA 0-0 5.68 0-0 5.84 0-0 5.76
G/GS 11/0 11/4 22/4
IP CG SV 12.2 0 0 12.1 0 0 25.0 0 0
SO 10 7 17
BB HP 6 1 5 1 11 2
Kubinski at UCLA (1991-1993) YR 1991 1992 1993 3 YEARS
W-L 4-2 5-1 11-3 20-6
ERA G/GS 4.88 17/1 4.24 19/9 4.03 17/17 4.22 53/27
SV 0 0 0 0
IP CG H R ER 31.1 0 34 19 17 70.0 1 63 42 33 125.0 4 126 63 56 226.1 5 233 124 106
SO BB HP WP 21 19 3 1 43 30 7 6 86 35 8 10 150 84 18 17
TIM LEARY (1981-1994)
Eric Karros
YR 1981 1983 1984 1985
71
TEAM New York-NL New York-NL New York-NL Milwaukee
W-L 0-0 1-1 3-3 1-4
ERA 0.00 3.38 4.02 4.05
G/GS 1/1 2/2 20/7 5/5
IP CG SV 2.0 0 0 10.2 1 0 53.2 0 0 33.1 0 0
H 0 15 61 40
R 0 10 28 18
ER 0 4 24 15
SO 3 9 29 29
BB HP 1 0 4 0 18 2 8 1
UCLA’S ALL-TIME MAJOR LEAGUERS 1986 Milwaukee 12-12 1987 Los Angeles 3-11 1988 Los Angeles 17-11 1989 L.A./Cin. 8-14 1990 New York-AL 9-19 1991 New York-AL 4-10 1992 NYY/Seattle 8-10 1993 Seattle 11-9 1994 Texas 1-1 13-YEAR TOTALS78-105
4.21 33/30 188.1 3 4.76 39/12 107.2 0 2.91 35/34 228.2 9 3.52 33/31 207.0 2 4.11 31/31 208.0 6 6.49 28/28 120.2 1 5.36 26/23 141.0 3 5.05 33/27 169.1 0 8.14 6/3 21.0 0 4.36 292/224 1491.1 25
0 216 97 88 1 121 62 57 0 201 87 74 0 205 84 81 0 202 105 95 0 150 89 87 0 131 89 84 0 202 104 95 0 26 19 19 1 1570 792 723
110 53 7 61 36 2 180 56 6 123 68 5 138 78 7 83 57 4 46 87 9 68 58 8 9 11 1 888 535 52
Leary at UCLA (1977-1979) YR 1977 1978 1979 3 YEARS
W-L 4-7 5-5 12-3 21-15
ERA G/GS 3.43 14/8 3.42 17/13 2.72 22/19 3.09 53/40
SV 0 0 0 0
AB 21 87 51 367 72 82 19 38 737
SO BB HP WP 59 36 7 4 88 50 6 4 111 60 0 6 258 146 13 14
R H 2 8 8 10 0 9 42 92 9 16 15 18 1 4 3 8 80 165
2B 1 2 2 20 5 4 1 0 35
3B 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
HR 1 1 0 6 2 3 0 2 15
RBI 2 4 2 30 7 9 1 5 60
BB 1 14 5 36 9 11 1 3 80
SB 0 0 0 7 1 1 0 0 9
CS AVG. 0 .381 0 .115 0 .176 6 .251 0 .222 2 .220 0 .211 0 .211 8 .224
SO 19 21 28 26 94
SB CS AVG. 1 2 .219 1 1 .321 4 2 .317 7 1 .350 13 6 .311
Lovullo at UCLA (1984-1987) YR 1984 1985 1986 1987 4 YEARS
GP/GS 51/48 61/----62/62 66/----240/-----
AB R H 146 23 32 218 50 70 255 55 81 237 83 83 856 211 266
2B 3B 1 0 13 0 15 16 15 3 44 19
HR RBI BB 0 14 22 11 36 43 3 16 36 24 73 79 38 139 180
SHANE MACK (1987-1998) YR TEAM G AB R H 2B 3B 1987 San Diego 105 238 38 57 11 3 1988 San Diego 56 119 13 29 3 0 1990 Minnesota 125 313 50 102 10 4 1991 Minnesota 143 442 79 137 27 8 1992 Minnesota 156 600 101 189 31 6 1993 Minnesota 128 503 66 139 30 4 1994 Minnesota 81 303 55 101 21 2 1997 Boston 60 130 13 41 7 0 1998 Oak./K.C. 69 209 31 58 15 1 923 2857 436 853 155 28 9-YEAR TOTALS
HR 4 0 8 18 16 10 15 3 6 80
RBI BB SB CS AVG. 25 18 4 6 .239 12 14 5 1 .244 44 29 13 4 .326 74 34 13 9 .310 75 64 26 14 .315 61 41 15 5 .276 61 32 4 1 .333 17 9 2 1 .315 29 15 8 2 .278 298 256 90 43 .299
Mack at UCLA (1982-1984) YR 1982 1983 1984 3 YEARS
GP/GS 53/48 49/49 57/56 159/153
AB R 183 43 210 54 213 61 606 158
H 56 88 75 219
2B 3B 9 5 14 3 15 2 38 10
HR RBI 2 29 11 60 16 53 29 142
BB 27 18 36 81
SO 25 26 26 77
SB CS AVG. 7 2 .306 20 4 .419 17 5 .352 44 11 .361
MIKE MAGNANTE (1991-2002) YR TEAM W-L ERA G/GS IP CG SV 1991 Kansas City 0-1 2.45 38/0 55.0 0 0 1992 Kansas City 4-9 4.94 44/12 89.1 0 0 1993 Kansas City 1-2 4.08 7/6 35.1 0 0 1994 Kansas City 2-3 4.60 36/1 47.0 0 0 1995 Kansas City 1-1 4.23 28/0 44.2 0 0 1996 Kansas City 2-2 5.67 38/0 54.0 0 0 1997 Houston 3-1 2.27 40/0 47.2 0 1 1998 Houston 4-7 4.88 48/0 51.2 0 2 1999 Anaheim 5-2 3.38 53/0 69.1 0 0 2000 Oakland 1-1 4.31 55/0 39.2 0 0 2001 Oakland 3-1 2.77 65/0 55.1 0 0 2002 Oakland 0-2 5.97 32/0 28.2 0 0 12-YEAR TOTALS 26-32 4.08 484/19 617.2 0 3
H R ER SO BB HP 55 19 15 42 23 0 115 53 49 31 35 2 37 16 16 16 11 1 55 27 24 21 16 0 45 23 21 28 16 2 58 38 34 32 24 4 39 16 12 43 11 0 56 28 28 39 26 4 68 30 26 44 29 3 50 22 19 17 19 2 50 23 17 23 13 1 38 22 19 11 11 1 666 317 280 347 234 20
Magnante at UCLA (1984-1988) YR 1984 1986 1987 1988 4 YEARS
W-L 2-0 2-0 4-1 14-4 22-5
ERA G/GS 5.40 7/0 4.43 6/3 6.23 15/1 3.93 25/21 4.30 53/25
SV 0 0 0 1 1
AB 24 71 77 214 97 128 94 30 735
R H 3 4 5 13 13 23 23 55 11 24 10 28 8 20 3 5 76 172
2B 0 2 7 11 7 8 4 1 40
3B 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
HR 0 1 5 11 2 4 1 0 24
IP CG H R 8.2 0 8 6 22.1 0 24 15 34.2 0 38 26 137.1 7 139 74 203.0 7 209 121
ER 2 11 24 60 97
SO BB HP WP 5 4 0 0 14 14 1 1 22 28 4 1 101 51 9 5 142 97 14 7
YR 1992 1993 2 YEARS
GP 63 60 123
AB R 228 43 250 64 478 107
H 59 86 145
2B 3B 10 3 19 2 29 5
HR 10 10 20
AB 199 210 140 2 54 26 631
YR TEAM 1987 San Diego 1988 San Diego 1989 San Diego 1991 S.D./Texas 4-YEAR TOTALS
W-L ERA 2-6 3.21 0-0 6.00 0-0 11.00 3-2 10.22 5-8 5.63
R H 22 51 17 39 17 31 0 0 8 10 0 2 64 133
2B 15 9 7 0 2 1 34
3B 2 0 2 0 0 0 4
HR 3 1 2 0 1 0 7
RBI 17 10 18 0 8 2 55
BB 19 32 27 1 7 2 88
SB 1 0 1 0 1 0 3
G 51 63 60 174
AB R 135 30 234 56 221 71 590 157
H 43 74 83 200
2B 3B 13 1 19 1 11 0 43 2
HR RBI BB SO 7 30 25 29 14 61 48 41 26 91 62 38 47 182 135 108
RBI 41 50 91
G/GS IP CG SV 12/12 67.1 1 0 2/0 3.0 0 0 3/1 9.0 0 0 9/6 24.2 0 0 26/19 104.0 1 0
CS AVG. 0 .167 0 .183 0 .299 1 .257 0 .247 1 .219 0 213 0 .167 2 .234
BB 47 34 81
SO 50 30 80
SB CS AVG. 9 3 .259 5 6 .344 14 9 .303
H 57 3 15 40 115
R 28 2 12 28 70
ER 24 2 11 28 65
SO 44 1 8 16 69
BB HP 36 2 2 0 7 0 13 0 58 2
R 10 61 71
ER 10 54 64
SO BB HP WP 8 15 1 3 45 60 2 0 53 75 3 3
Nolte at UCLA (1984-1985) YR 1984 1985 2 YEARS
W-L ERA G/GS 0-0 7.50 6/3 6-2 6.75 24/11 6-2 6.86 30/14
SV 0 0 0
IP CG 12.0 0 72.0 1 84.0 1
H 11 74 85
JIM PARQUE (1998-2003) YR TEAM W-L ERA G/GS IP CG SV 1998 Chicago-AL 7-5 5.10 21/21 113.0 0 0 1999 Chicago-AL 9-15 5.13 31/30 173.2 1 0 2000 Chicago-AL 13-6 4.28 33/32 187.0 0 0 2001 Chicago-AL 0-3 8.04 5/5 28.0 1 0 2002 Chicago-AL 1-4 9.95 8/4 25.1 0 0 2003 Tampa Bay 1-1 11.94 5/5 17.1 0 0 6-YEAR TOTALS 31-34 5.42 103/97 544.1 2 0
H R ER SO BB 135 72 64 77 44 210 111 99 111 79 208 105 89 111 71 36 26 25 15 10 34 29 28 13 16 27 23 23 8 16 650 366 328 335 241
HP 6 10 11 2 1 1 31
Parque at UCLA (1995-1997) YR 1995 1996 1997 3 YEARS
W-L 6-3 9-3 13-2 28-8
ERA G/GS 3.94 14/14 3.72 18/17 3.08 19/19 3.55 51/50
SV 0 0 0 0
IP CG H R ER 89.0 2 90 45 39 125.2 5 142 71 52 120.0 3 117 56 41 334.2 10 349 172 132
SO BB HP WP 84 35 1 0 116 38 4 9 119 63 5 12 319 136 10 21
CHRIS PRITCHETT (1996-2000) YR TEAM 1996 California 1998 Anaheim 1999 Anaheim 2000 Philadelphia 4-YEAR TOTALS
G 5 31 20 5 61
AB 13 80 45 11 149
R 1 12 3 0 16
H 2 23 7 1 33
2B 0 2 1 0 3
3B 0 1 0 0 1
HR 0 2 1 0 3
RBI 1 8 2 0 11
BB 0 4 2 1 7
SB 0 2 1 0 3
CS AVG. 0 .154 0 .288 1 .156 0 .091 1 .221
SO 7 36 47 90
SB CS AVG. 0 0 .238 3 2 .368 6 1 .328 9 3 .341
BB 2 2
SB 0 0
SO ---
SB CS AVG. 4 -- .263 4 -- .263
BB 9 2
SB 11 1
Pritchett at UCLA (1989-1991) YR 1989 1990 1991 3 YEARS
G 25 67 58 150
AB R 42 5 277 73 241 52 560 130
H 10 102 79 191
2B 3B 2 0 14 1 11 0 27 1
HR RBI 0 5 13 67 18 57 31 129
BB 4 28 29 61
MIKE REINBACH (1974) YR TEAM 1974 Baltimore 1-YEAR TOTAL
G 12 12
AB 20 20
R 2 2
H 5 5
2B 1 1
3B 0 0
HR 0 0
RBI 2 2
CS AVG. 0 .250 0 .250
Reinbach at UCLA (1969) YR 1969 1 YEAR
GP ---
AB 76 76
R 13 13
H 20 20
2B 3B 6 0 6 0
HR 1 1
RBI 13 13
BB ---
DAVE ROBERTS (1999-2008) YR 1999 2000
TEAM Cleveland Cleveland
G 41 19
AB 143 10
R 26 1
H 34 2
2B 4 0
3B 0 0
CS AVG. 4 .256 0 .186 1 .221 0 .000 0 .185 0 .077 5 .211
McGuire at UCLA (1991-1993) YR 1991 1992 1993 3 YEARS
SB 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
ERIC NOLTE (1987-1991)
RYAN McGUIRE (1997-2002) YR TEAM G 1997 Montreal 84 1998 Montreal 130 1999 Montreal 88 2000 New York-NL 1 2001 Florida 48 2002 Baltimore 17 368 6-YEAR TOTALS
RBI BB 4 3 8 6 14 9 31 16 12 5 18 9 9 7 2 2 98 193
Melhuse at UCLA (1992-1993) IP CG H R ER 65.2 -- 63 48 25 94.2 -- 90 44 36 145.2 -- 124 57 44 306.0 -- 277 101 105
TOREY LOVULLO (1988-1999) YR TEAM G 1988 Detroit 12 1989 Detroit 29 1991 New York-AL 22 1993 California 116 1994 Seattle 36 1996 Oakland 65 1998 Cleveland 6 1999 Philadelphia 17 303 8-YEAR TOTALS
YR TEAM G 2000 L.A./Col. 24 2001 Colorado 40 2003 Oakland 40 2004 Oakland 69 2005 Oakland 39 2006 Oakland 49 2007 Oak/Texas 35 2008 Texas/Col. 15 311 8-YEAR TOTALS
SB CS AVG. 1 2 .319 15 2 .316 14 3 .376 30 7 .339
ADAM MELHUSE (2000-2008) Dave Roberts
72
HR 2 0
RBI 12 0
CS AVG. 3 .238 1 .200
UCLA’S ALL-TIME MAJOR LEAGUERS Rucker at UCLA (1976-1977) YR 1976 1977 2 YEARS
W-L ERA 2-0 4.15 4-3 3.49 6-3 3.61
G/GS 5/0 22/4 27/4
SV 0 3 3
IP CG 13.0 -59.1 4 72.1 --
H 18 62 80
R 6 27 33
ER 6 23 29
SO BB HP WP 7 7 1 1 32 35 1 4 39 42 2 5
H 16 16
R 13 13
ER 13 13
ALEX SANCHEZ (1989) YR TEAM 1989 Toronto 1-YEAR TOTALS
W-L ERA 0-1 10.03 0-1 10.03
G/GS 4/3 4/3
IP CG SV 11.2 0 0 11.2 0 0
SO 4 4
BB HP 14 0 14 0
Sanchez at UCLA (1985-1987) YR 1985 1986 1987 3 YEARS
W-L 5-7 16-3 6-7 27-17
ERA G/GS 5.26 22/16 4.06 23/19 5.92 28/23 4.98 73/58
SV 0 0 1 1
IP CG H R ER 95.2 1 98 68 56 139.1 5 130 78 63 106.1 0 110 92 70 341.1 6 338 238 189
SO BB HP WP 85 46 3 1 142 71 4 4 101 95 8 9 328 212 15 14
DAVE SCHMIDT (1981-1992) YR TEAM W-L ERA G/GS IP CG SV 1981 Texas 0-1 3.13 14/1 31.2 0 1 1982 Texas 4-6 3.20 33/8 109.2 0 6 1983 Texas 3-3 3.88 31/0 46.1 0 2 1984 Texas 6-6 2.56 43/0 70.1 0 12 1985 Texas 7-6 3.15 51/4 85.2 1 5 1986 Chicago-AL 3-6 3.31 49/1 92.1 0 8 1987 Baltimore 10-5 3.77 35/14 124.0 2 1 1988 Baltimore 8-5 3.40 41/9 129.2 0 2 1989 Baltimore 10-13 5.69 38/26 156.2 2 0 1990 Montreal 3-3 4.31 34/0 48.0 0 13 1991 Montreal 0-1 10.38 4/0 4.1 0 0 1992 Seattle 0-0 18.90 3/0 3.1 0 0 12-YEAR TOTALS 54-55 3.88 376/63 902.0 5 50
Schmidt at UCLA (1977-1979)
Jackie Robinson 2001 Cleveland 15 12 3 4 2002 Los Angeles 127 422 63 117 2003 Los Angeles 107 388 56 97 2004 L.A./Bos. 113 319 110 81 2005 San Diego 115 411 65 113 2006 San Diego 129 499 80 146 2007 San Francisco 114 396 61 103 2008 San Francisco 52 107 18 24 10-YEAR TOTALS 832 2707 437 721
1 0 14 7 6 5 14 7 19 10 18 13 17 9 2 2 95 53
0 3 2 4 8 2 2 0 23
2 1 0 1 34 48 45 10 16 43 40 14 35 38 38 3 38 53 23 12 44 51 49 6 23 42 31 5 9 18 5 3 213 307 243 58
.333 .277 .250 .254 .275 .293 .260 .224 .266
Roberts at UCLA (1991-1994) YR 1991 1992 1993 1994 4 YEARS
GP 9 63 60 58 190
AB R 5 1 257 51 247 65 235 60 744 177
H 1 85 73 83 242
2B 3B 0 0 11 7 12 0 12 3 35 10
HR 0 2 3 3 8
RBI BB 0 1 27 37 28 51 27 39 82 128
SO SB 1 0 32 36 33 28 21 45 87 109
CS AVG. 0 .200 11 .331 8 .296 13 .353 32 .325
YR 1977 1978 1979 3 YEARS
W-L 6-3 8-2 10-2 24-7
ERA G/GS 3.50 13/13 2.91 14/8 5.09 19/18 4.00 46/39
SV 0 0 0 0
IP CG H R 64.1 -- 66 33 65.0 -- 52 23 93.2 -- 100 62 223.0 -- 210 118
YR TEAM G AB R H 2B 3B HR 1947 Brooklyn 151 590 125 175 31 5 12 1948 Brooklyn 147 574 109 170 38 8 12 1949 Brooklyn 156 593 122 203 38 12 16 1950 Brooklyn 144 518 99 170 39 4 14 1951 Brooklyn 153 548 106 185 33 7 19 1952 Brooklyn 149 510 104 157 17 3 19 1953 Brooklyn 136 484 109 159 34 7 12 1954 Brooklyn 124 386 62 120 22 4 15 1955 Brooklyn 105 317 51 81 6 2 8 1956 Brooklyn 117 357 61 98 15 2 10 10-YEAR TOTALS 1382 4877 947 1518 273 54 137 HR ---
YR TEAM 1965 Kansas City 1966 Kansas City 2-YEAR TOTALS
G 6 10 16
AB 7 11 18
R 0 0 0
H 2 1 3
2B 0 0 0
3B 0 0 0
H 11 37 82 6 34 68 13 5 256
2B 0 8 16 1 9 13 3 1 51
3B 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 3
YR 1963 1964 2 YEARS
G AB R H 2B 3B -- 145 24 51 14 2 stats unavailable ---career stats incomplete ---
HR 5 ---
RBI BB SB CS AVG. 48 74 29 -- .297 85 57 22 -- .296 124 86 37 -- .342 81 80 12 -- .328 88 79 25 8 .338 75 106 24 7 .308 95 74 17 4 .329 59 63 7 3 .311 36 61 12 3 .256 43 60 12 5 .275 734 740 197 30 .311
YR TEAM 1996 Texas 1-YEAR TOTALS
G 5 5
AB 6 6
R 1 1
H 0 0
2B 0 0
3B 0 0
G 52 52
AB 197 197
R 36 36
H 56 56
2B 3B 8 2 8 2
HR 9 9
YR 1986 1987 2 YEARS
GP/GS 50/43 40/----90/-----
AB 171 118 289
R 41 27 68
H 59 37 96
2B 3B 10 1 10 2 20 3
HR 3 5 8
RBI ---
BB ---
SO ---
SB CS AVG. --- .097 --- .097
HR 0 1 6 1 3 5 1 0 17
RBI 0 12 35 2 13 42 4 5 113
BB 6 21 47 2 35 61 14 4 190
SB 1 5 9 0 6 2 1 0 24
CS AVG. 1 .234 0 .259 4 .239 0 .300 2 .256 2 .247 0 .167 0 .135 9 .238
RBI 40 40
BB 35 35
SO 27 27
SB CS AVG. 9 -- .284 9 -- .284
DAVE RUCKER (1981-1988) YR TEAM W-L ERA G/GS IP CG SV 1981 Detroit 0-0 6.75 2/0 4.0 0 0 1982 Detroit 5-6 3.38 27/4 64.0 1 0 1983 Det./STL 6-5 5.48 38/3 46.0 0 0 1984 St. Louis 2-3 2.10 50/0 73.0 0 0 1985 Philadelphia 3-2 4.31 39/3 79.1 0 0 1986 Philadelphia 0-2 5.76 19/0 25.0 0 0 1988 Pittsburgh 0-2 4.76 31/0 28.1 0 0 7-YEAR TOTALS 16-20 3.97 206/10 319.2 1 0
RBI 1 1 2
BB 0 1 1
SB 0 0 0
CS AVG. 0 .286 0 .091 0 .167
RBI 26 ---
BB ----
SO ----
SB CS AVG. 1 -- .354 -----------
HR 0 0
RBI 0 0
BB 0 0
SB 0 0
SO 28 28 56
SB CS AVG. 6 3 .345 4 1 .314 10 4 .332
CS AVG. 0 .000 0 .000
Scruggs at UCLA (1986-1987)
Ron Roenicke at UCLA (1977) YR 1977 1 YEAR
HR 0 0 0
Schwartz at UCLA (1963-1964)
RON ROENICKE (1981-1988) YR TEAM G AB R 1981 Los Angeles 22 47 6 1982 Los Angeles 109 143 18 1983 L.A./Seattle 140 343 35 1984 San Diego 12 20 4 1985 San Francisco 65 133 23 1986 Philadelphia 102 275 42 1987 Philadelphia 63 78 9 1988 Cincinnati 14 37 4 8-YEAR TOTALS 527 1076 141
SO BB HP WP 47 29 2 6 43 39 2 1 81 49 1 7 171 117 5 14
RANDY SCHWARTZ (1965-1966)
Robinson at UCLA (1940) G AB R H 2B 3B complete stats unavailable --career stats incomplete ---
ER 25 21 53 99
TONY SCRUGGS (1996-2000)
JACKIE ROBINSON (1947-1956)
YR 1940 1 YEAR
H R ER SO BB HP 31 11 11 13 11 1 118 45 39 69 25 5 42 20 20 20 14 1 69 30 20 46 20 0 81 36 30 46 22 0 94 37 34 67 27 5 128 57 52 70 26 1 129 58 49 67 38 3 196 102 99 46 36 2 58 26 23 22 13 0 9 5 5 3 2 0 3.1 7 7 1 3 0 962 434 389 479 237 18
H R ER SO BB HP 3 4 3 2 1 1 62 26 24 31 23 2 54 31 28 28 26 2 62 23 17 38 34 1 83 42 38 41 40 2 34 19 16 14 14 0 39 19 15 16 9 1 337 164 141 170 147 8
Ron Roenicke
73
RBI 24 22 46
BB 18 13 31
UCLA’S ALL-TIME MAJOR LEAGUERS BUD SKETCHLEY (1942) YR TEAM 1942 Chicago-AL 1-YEAR TOTALS
G 13 13
AB 36 36
R 1 1
H 7 7
2B 1 1
3B 0 0
HR 0 0
RBI 3 3
BB 7 7
SB ---
CS AVG. -- .194 -- .194
BB 9 11 20 20 16 24 24 30 27 21 17 29 34 9 15 5 311
SB 0 3 0 5 3 0 1 1 0 1 2 2 0 0 0 0 18
CS AVG. 0 .278 1 .312 0 .264 4 .280 2 .264 3 .224 0 .283 1 .251 1 .300 0 .295 2 .345 1 .300 0 .288 0 .304 0 .313 0 .000 15 .283
*Sketchley played at UCLA from 1938-1941; his UCLA stats are not available.
DON SLAUGHT (1982-1997) YR TEAM G AB R H 2B 1982 Kansas City 43 115 14 32 6 1983 Kansas City 83 276 21 86 13 1984 Kansas City 124 409 48 108 27 1985 Texas 102 343 34 96 17 1986 Texas 95 314 39 83 17 1987 New York-AL 95 237 25 53 15 1988 New York-AL 97 322 33 91 25 1989 New York-AL 117 350 34 88 21 1990 Pittsburgh 84 230 27 69 18 1991 Pittsburgh 77 220 19 65 17 1992 Pittsburgh 87 255 26 88 17 1993 Pittsburgh 116 377 34 113 19 1994 Pittsburgh 76 240 21 69 7 1995 Pittsburgh 35 112 13 34 6 1996 Cal./Chi-AL 76 243 25 76 10 1997 San Diego 20 20 2 0 0 16-YEAR TOTALS 1327 4063 415 1151 235
3B 0 4 4 4 1 2 1 3 3 1 3 2 0 0 0 0 28
HR 3 0 4 8 13 8 9 5 4 1 4 10 2 0 6 0 77
RBI 8 28 42 35 46 16 32 38 29 29 37 55 21 13 36 0 476
Don Slaught
Slaught at UCLA (1977-1980) YR 1977 1979 1980 3 YEARS
GS 12 45 53 110
AB 28 152 212 392
R 1 38 28 67
H 7 65 62 134
2B 3B 2 0 15 1 7 3 24 4
HR 0 7 4 11
RBI 5 41 34 80
BB 1 19 18 38
SO 2 12 11 25
SB CS AVG. 2 -- .250 4 -- .428 10 -- .292 16 -- .342
BB 8 6 0 14
SB -----
G 48 36 1 85
AB 119 87 3 209
R 13 7 0 20
H 32 20 1 53
2B 3 3 0 6
3B 1 0 0 1
HR 0 0 0 0
RBI 11 8 1 20
CS AVG. -- .269 -- .230 -- .333 -- .254
EDDIE “BUD” STEWART (1941-1942, 1948-1954) G AB R 73 172 27 82 183 21 124 406 57 118 388 58 118 378 46 95 217 40 92 225 23 53 59 16 18 13 0 773 2041 288
H 46 40 113 110 101 60 60 16 1 547
2B 7 8 18 23 15 13 10 2 0 96
3B 0 4 13 4 6 5 0 0 0 32
HR 0 0 7 8 4 6 5 2 0 32
RBI 10 20 69 43 35 40 30 13 0 260
BB 12 22 49 49 46 29 28 14 3 252
SB 3 2 8 6 5 1 3 1 0 29
CS AVG. -- .267 -- .219 9 .278 4 .284 4 .267 6 .276 0 .267 0 .271 0 .077 23 .268
BB 4 0 2 28 7 41
SB 0 0 0 0 0 0
CS AVG. 0 .098 0 .200 0 .214 1 .267 0 .186 1 .234
*Stewart played at UCLA from 1934-1937; his UCLA stats are not available.
ERIC VALENT (2001-2005) YR TEAM G 2001 Philadelphia 22 2002 Philadelphia 7 2003 Cincinnati 18 2004 New York-NL 130 2005 New York-NL 28 5-YEAR TOTALS 205
AB 41 10 42 270 43 406
R 3 1 3 39 4 50
H 4 2 9 72 8 95
2B 2 0 0 15 3 20
3B 0 0 0 2 0 2
HR 0 0 0 13 0 13
RBI 1 0 1 34 1 37
Valent at UCLA (1996-1998) YR 1996 1997 1998 3 YEARS
GP/GS 64/62 67/67 57/57 188/186
AB R 228 56 274 74 220 69 722 199
H 66 93 74 233
2B 3B 12 0 16 3 10 1 38 4
HR RBI BB SO 12 55 35 33 27 91 37 46 30 73 36 37 69 219 108 116
SB CS AVG. 6 0 .289 3 2 .339 4 2 .336 13 4 .323
COLIN WARD (1985) YR TEAM W-L ERA 1985 San Francisco 0-0 4.38 1-YEAR TOTAL 0-0 4.38
G/GS 6/2 6/2
IP CG SV 12.1 0 0 12.1 0 0
H 10 10
R 6 6
ER 6 6
SO 8 8
BB HP 7 0 7 0
W-L ERA G/GS 3-5 7.59 20/11 7-6 4.51 25/21 10-11 5.65 45/32
SV 0 0 0
G/GS 3/0 3/0
IP CG SV 1.1 0 0 1.1 0 0
H 0 0
R 2 2
ER 2 2
SO 2 2
BB HP 3 0 3 0
YR 2002 2003 2004 3 YEARS
W-L 5-2 3-7 3-5 11-14
ERA G/GS 4.06 18/13 5.66 15/15 5.24 16/15 4.99 49/43
SV 0 0 0 0
IP CG H R ER 84.1 1 94 52 38 82.2 1 96 63 52 92.2 2 103 58 54 259.2 4 293 173 144
SO BB HP WP 59 40 8 7 53 30 7 4 60 35 13 2 172 105 28 13
YR TEAM W-L ERA 1970 Kansas City 1-1 3.38 1971 Kansas City 5-5 2.89 1972 Houston 0-1 5.25 1973 Houston 3-4 4.42 1974 Houston 2-2 3.29 1975 Houston 4-4 3.86 1976 New York-AL 1-0 5.59 6-YEAR TOTALS 16-17 3.79
G/GS IP CG SV 4/0 8.0 0 0 53/0 93.1 0 3 26/0 36.0 0 0 41/0 53.0 0 6 28/0 38.1 0 1 19/4 46.2 0 0 3/0 9.2 0 0 174/4 285.0 0 10
H R ER SO BB HP 5 3 3 6 2 0 70 32 30 103 44 3 45 21 21 25 18 1 65 26 26 22 20 1 48 20 14 15 19 1 43 22 20 17 25 5 14 7 6 6 4 1 290 131 120 194 132 12
York at UCLA (1968-1969) YR 1968 1969 2 YEARS
W-L ERA 7-4 1.48 2-2 2.55 9-6 2.01
G 27 21 48
SV ----
IP CG 60.2 -42.1 -103.0 --
H 45 32 77
R 16 15 31
ER 10 13 23
SO BB HP WP 70 24 --32 18 --102 42 ---
MATT YOUNG (1983-1993) YR TEAM W-L ERA G/GS IP CG SV H R ER 1983 Seattle 11-15 3.27 33/32 203.2 5 0 178 86 74 1984 Seattle 6-8 5.72 22/22 113.1 1 0 141 81 72 1985 Seattle 12-19 4.91 37/35 218.1 5 1 242 135 119 1986 Seattle 8-6 3.82 65/5 103.2 1 13 108 50 44 1987 Los Angeles 5-8 4.47 47/0 54.1 0 11 62 30 27 1989 Oakland 1-4 6.75 26/4 37.1 0 0 42 31 28 1990 Seattle 8-18 3.51 34/33 225.1 7 0 198 106 88 1991 Boston 3-7 5.18 19/16 88.2 0 0 92 55 51 1992 Boston 0-4 70.2 8/1 70.2 1 0 69 42 36 1993 Cleveland 1-6 74.1 22/8 74.1 0 0 75 45 43 10-YEAR TOTALS 55-95 4.40 333/163 1189.2 20 25 1207 661 582
SO BB HP 130 79 7 73 57 1 136 76 7 82 46 8 42 17 0 27 31 0 176 107 6 69 53 2 57 42 3 65 47 3 857 565 37
Young at UCLA (1979-1980) YR 1979 1980 2 YEARS
W-L ERA G/GS 1-2 6.70 15/8 9-5 2.82 18/18 10-7 3.99 33/26
SV 1 0 1
IP CG H 49.2 -- 63 115.0 6 89 164.2 -- 152
R 45 51 96
ER 37 36 73
SO BB HP WP 21 36 0 1 83 77 -4 104 113 -5
TODD ZEILE (1989-2004)
Ward at UCLA (1981-1982) YR 1981 1982 2 YEARS
W-L ERA 0-0 13.50 0-0 13.50
JIM YORK (1970-1976)
*Spindel played at UCLA between 1931-1938; his UCLA stats are not available.
YR TEAM 1941 Pittsburgh 1942 Pittsburgh 1948 NYY/Wash. 1949 Washington 1950 Washington 1951 Chicago-AL 1952 Chicago-AL 1953 Chicago-AL 1954 Chicago-AL 9-YEAR TOTALS
YR TEAM 2009 Chicago-AL 1-YEAR TOTAL
Whisler at UCLA (2002-2004)
HAL SPINDEL (1939, 1945-1946) YR TEAM 1939 St. Louis 1945 Philadelphia 1946 Philadelphia 3-YEAR TOTALS
WES WHISLER (2009)
IP CG H R ER 72.1 0 82 71 61 121.2 3 109 78 61 194.0 3 191 149 122
SO BB HP WP 45 58 4 6 106 99 4 13 151 157 8 19
YR TEAM G AB R H 2B 1989 St. Louis 28 82 7 21 3 1990 St. Louis 144 495 62 121 25 1991 St. Louis 155 565 76 158 36 1992 St. Louis 126 439 51 113 18 1993 St. Louis 157 571 82 158 36 1994 St. Louis 113 415 62 111 25 1995 STL/Chi-NL 113 426 50 105 22 1996 Phila./Balt. 163 617 78 162 32 1997 Los Angeles 160 575 89 154 17 1998 L.A./Fla./Tex.158 572 85 155 32 1999 Texas 156 588 80 172 41 2000 New York-NL 153 544 67 146 36 2001 New York-NL 151 531 66 141 25 2002 Colorado 144 506 61 138 23 2003 NYY/Mon. 100 299 40 68 10 2004 New York-NL 137 348 30 81 16 16-YEAR TOTALS 2158 7573 986 2004 397
3B HR RBI BB 1 1 8 9 3 15 57 67 3 11 81 62 4 7 48 68 1 17 103 70 1 19 75 52 0 14 52 34 0 25 99 82 0 31 90 85 3 19 94 69 4 24 98 56 3 22 79 74 1 10 62 73 0 18 87 66 2 11 432 34 0 9 35 44 23 253 1110 1279
SB 0 2 17 7 5 1 1 1 8 4 1 3 1 1 1 0 53
CS AVG. 0 .256 4 .244 11 .280 10 .257 4 .277 3 .267 0 .246 1 .263 7 .268 4 .271 2 .293 4 .268 0 .266 1 .273 0 .227 0 .233 51 .265
Zeile at UCLA (1984-1986)
Todd Zeile
YR 1984 1985 1986 3 YEARS
74
GP/GS 28/13 54/----55/50 137/-----
AB R H 62 12 19 201 41 67 205 49 69 468 102 155
2B 3B 4 0 10 0 12 2 26 2
HR 1 12 13 26
RBI 10 41 43 94
BB 9 14 23 46
SO 11 28 18 57
SB CS AVG. 0 0 .306 1 0 .333 0 0 .336 1 0 .331
MLB DRAFT HISTORY
Trevor Bauer
Gerrit Cole
Josh Karp
Chase Utley
Troy Glaus
Pete Janicki
Alex Sanchez
2011 (1st round, 1st overall) 2011 (1st round, 3rd overall) 2001 (1st round, 6th overall) 2000 (1st round, 15th overall) 1997 (1st round, 3rd overall) 1992 (1st round, 8th overall) 1987 (1st round, 17th overall) Arizona Diamondbacks Montreal Expos Philadelphia Phillies Anaheim Angels California Angels Toronto Blue Jays Pittsburgh Pirates
Player, Pos.
Team
Round
Player, Pos.
Team
Nick Vander Tuig, P Zack Weiss, P Pat Valaika, INF Adam Plutko, P Brenton Allen, OF Kevin Williams, INF Ryan Deeter, P
Giants
Reds Rockies Indians Nationals Marlins Brewers
6th 6th 9th 11th 20th 29th 32nd
2012 Jeff Gelalich, OF Beau Amaral, OF Tyler Heineman, C Scott Griggs, P Trevor Brown, C/INF Eric Jaffe, P Cody Keefer, OF
Reds (57) Reds Astros Dodgers Giants White Sox Marlins
^1st 7th 8th 8th 10th 11th 15th
2011 Gerrit Cole, P Trevor Bauer, P Steve Rodriguez, C Dean Espy, 1B Mitchell Beacom, P Tyler Rahmatulla, INF Chris Giovinazzo, OF Adrian Williams, INF Brandon Lodge, P
Pirates (1) D’Backs (3) D’Backs Royals Giants Cardinals Angels Brewers Angels
1st 1st 15th 15th 20th 34th 39th 45th 47th
2010 Rob Rasmussen, P Dan Klein, P Matt Grace, P Garett Claypool, P Matt Drummond, P Chris Giovinazzo, OF Erik Goeddel, P Brett Krill, OF Niko Gallego, INF Mitchell Beacom, P Blair Dunlap, OF
Marlins Orioles Nationals Phillies Orioles Rockies Mets Giants D’Backs Royals Orioles
2nd 3rd 8th 11th 20th 21st 24th 25th 27th 36th 43rd
2009 Casey Haerther, INF Gavin Brooks, P Charles Brewer, P Brendan Lafferty, P Cody Decker, INF Gabe Cohen, OF Garett Claypool, P Jason Novak, P
Angels Yankees Diamondbacks Royals Padres Rays Athletics Cardinals
5th 9th 12th 18th 22nd 29th 32nd 48th
2008 Tim Murphy, P Brandon Crawford, INF Jermaine Curtis, INF Alden Carrithers, INF Ryan Babineau, C
Rangers Giants Cardinals Tigers D’Backs
3rd 4th 5th 15th 17th
2007 Brant Rustich, P Tyson Brummett, P Kevin Brophy, P
Mets Phillies Devil Rays
2nd 7th 21st
2006#+ David Huff, P Hector Ambriz, P Jarrad Page, OF Josh Roenicke, P Brant Rustich, P Brett McMillan, INF Paul Oseguera, P Sean Smith, INF Chris Jensen, OF Eric Taylor, Jr., UTL Brian Schroeder, P Daniel Miltenberger, P
Indians (39) D’Backs Angels Reds Indians Nationals Giants D’Backs Dodgers Astros Cardinals Indians
^1st 5th 7th 10th 13th 14th 16th 21st 22nd 30th 33rd 46th
2005 Chris Denove, C Jarrad Page, OF Brett McMillan
Reds Rockies Nationals
Round
Player, Pos.
2004+
2013
32nd 36th 36th
Wes Whisler, P Casey Janssen, P Billy Susdorf, OF Ryan McCarthy, SS David Johnson, P Kyle Wilson, P Brandon Averill, INF Mike Svetlic, INF Matt Thayer, OF
White Sox Blue Jays Rangers White Sox Brewers Dodgers Astros Cubs Padres
Travis Boyd, SS Gabe Sollecito, P David Roberts, OF Jon Van Zandt, P
2nd 4th 6th 9th 15th 22nd 24th 29th 31st
Giants Rangers Orioles
Pete Janicki, P Michael Moore, OF Adam Schulhofer, P Robert Hinds, 2B Shawn Wills, OF
Indians Mets
Chris Pritchett, 1B Joel Wolfe, OF David Tokheim, OF Gary Hagy, SS Kevin Webb, 3B Michael Fyhrie, P Shawn Wills, OF Mike Lewis, P Tim Lindsay, P Jim Bonds, P
5th 23rd
2001 Josh Karp, P Jon Brandt, P Josh Canales, SS Randall Shelley, 3B Matt Pearl, OF
Expos (6) Padres Dodgers Rangers Cardinals
1st 16th 16th 17th 34th
Phillies (15) Marlins Rockies Brewers Phillies Tigers Rockies Indians Devil Rays Cardinals Twins White Sox
1st 3rd 5th 8th 8th 13th 17th 19th 20th 25th 46th 50th
D’Backs Mets
Dave Keating, OF John Sutherland, P Scott Cline, 3B Charlie Fiacco, 2B Shawn Wills, OF
Phillies (42) Athletics Yankees Pirates Dodgers
19th 20th ^1st 8th 16th 27th 27th
Alex Sanchez, P Billy Haselman, C Randy Hennis, P Torey Lovullo, 3B Tony Scruggs, OF Steve Stowell, P Keith Shibata, P Steve Hisey, OF Jeff Conine, P
Angels (3) 1st White Sox (46) ^1st Astros 4th Phillies 6th White Sox 7th Marlins 9th Dodgers 20th Yankees 63rd Cardinals Twins Orioles White Sox Marlins Mets
Todd Zeile, C Tony Scruggs, OF Gary Gorski, P Steve Stowell, P Dana Ridenour, P John Joslyn, 1B Torey Lovullo, 2B Gary Berman, 1B
7th 12th 17th 32nd 34th 54th
Mets Angels Royals
Eric Nolte, P Andy Naworski, P Jeff Hirsch, P Scott Kershaw, P Vince Lopez, SS
24th 24th 36th
Cubs Yankees Tigers Royals
2nd 9th 28th 63rd
Shane Mack, OF Jeff Pries, P Lindsay Meggs, INF Pete Beall, INF Daniel Sullivan, 1B
3rd 7th 9th 9th 13th
Rich Amaral, 2B Pat Clements, P Lindsay Meggs, INF Pete Beall, INF
1993 Ryan McGuire, 1B Tim Kubinski, P John Myrow, OF Matt Schwenke, C Adam Melhuse, 3B
Red Sox Athletics Rockies Dodgers Blue Jays
^1st ^1st 14th 32nd 33rd
Tigers White Sox Brewers Cubs Astros
5th 8th 26th 36th 43rd
Dodgers Brewers Royals Indians Mariners Indians
6th 10th 11th 16th 28th 31st
Blue Jays (17) Rangers (23) Astros Tigers Rangers Twins Royals Mariners Royals
1st 1st 2nd 5th 7th 16th 24th 35th 55th
Cardinals Angels Angels Astros Yankees Royals Royals Phillies
2nd 7th 14th 14th 16th 26th 27th 38th
Padres Dodgers Cubs White Sox White Sox
6th 13th 22nd ^^1st ^^2nd
1984
1994 Brian Stephenson, P Mike Mitchell, 1B David Roberts, OF Brett Schafer, OF
Cardinals (30) Athletics (34) Expos Yankees Yankees
1985
1995 Jeff Howatt, P Gar Vallone, INF Brett Schafer, CF
2nd 3rd 7th 10th 11th 12th 12th 21st 21st 56th
1986
1996 Kevin Sheredy, P Ryan Lynch, P Tim DeCinces, C Rick Heineman, P Zak Ammirato, INF Ryan O’Toole, P
Angels Athletics Phillies Angels Astros Royals Expos Twins Blue Jays Athletics
1987
1997 Troy Glaus, 3B Jim Parque, P Eric Byrnes, OF Tom Jacquez, P Jake Meyer, P Jon Heinrichs, OF Peter Zamora, P John Phillips, P
Player, Pos. Vince Beringhele, OF Mike Young, OF
Padres (11) Yankees (22) Royals Angels Red Sox
1st 1st 15th 16th 22nd
1983
75
Cubs Angels Brewers Brewers
2nd 4th 19th 23rd
Team
Round
Dodgers Mets
24th 37th
1982 Colin Ward, P Brian Graham, INF Jeff McDonald, P
Tigers Athletics Mariners
3rd 4th 5th
1981 Mike Gallego, INF Eric Broersma, P Greg Norman, INF
Athletics Twins Tigers
2nd 3rd 22nd
1980 Matt Young, P Pat Dodson, 1B Todd Gauntlett, INF Don Slaught, C Eric Broersma, P Jim Thomas, C
Mariners Red Sox Dodgers Royals Athletics Padres
2nd 6th 7th 7th 15th 28th
1979 Tim Leary, P Jim Auten, OF Vern Followell, INF Dan Gausepohl, OF Don Slaught, C Dave Schmidt, P Mark Miller, OF Scott Bollens, P
Mets (2) Expos Tigers Padres Brewers Rangers Reds Tigers
1st 5th 8th 11th 21st 27th 27th 31st
1978 Craig Johnson, OF Floyd Chiffer, P Ray Townsend, INF Dave Baker, INF Dennis Delany, C Mike Carpenter, 1B
1988 Eric Karros, 1B Charlie Fiacco, OF Mike Magnante, P Joey James, DH Scott Cline, 3B Dave Keating, OF
1998 Eric Valent, OF Eric Byrnes, OF Gabe Crecion, P Casey Cloud, C Nick Theodorou, 2B
1st ^1st 9th 10th 15th
1989
1999 Jack Santora, SS Rob Henkel, P
Angels (8) Dodgers (36) Cubs Yankees Phillies
1990 Paul Ellis, C Dave Zancanaro, P Robbie Katzaroff, OF Mike Hankins, SS John Sutherland, P
2000# Chase Utley, 2B Rob Henkel, P Garrett Atkins, 1B Bill Scott, OF Ryan Carter, P Forrest Johnson, C Charles Merricks, OF Chad Cislak, P Nick Lyon, OF Ryan Hamill, C Brian Baron, OF Freddie Mitchell, OF
31st 38th 47th 53rd
1991
23rd 29th 49th
2002 Ben Francisco, OF Rashad Parker, UTL
Round
1992
2003 Mike Kunes Chris Cordeiro Casey Janssen
Team Padres Tigers Indians Marlins
Tigers Padres Reds Blue Jays Cardinals Cardinals
2nd 5th 6th 11th 12th 16th
1977 Dennis Delany, C Floyd Chiffer, P Ron Roenicke, OF
Dodgers Padres Dodgers
13th 5th ^^1st
1976 Earl Battey, INF Bob Lizarraga, P Ed Cowan, P
Padres Royals Royals
14th 17th 18th
1975 Andy Lopez, INF Venoy Garrison, OF
Tigers Tigers
9th 21st
1974 Mike Edwards, INF Tim Doerr, INF
Pirates Reds
7th 18th
1973 Bob Adams, INF Luis Gomez, INF Greg Zail, P Bill Hobbs, UTL
Tigers Twins Padres Athletics
3rd 7th 15th 21st
1972 Gary Robson, P Mike Gerakos, 3B
Orioles Twins
5th 19th
1971 Rick Pope, P
Cardinals
^^1st
1969 Guy Hansen, P Jim York, P Gary Sanserino, SS
Royals Royals Royals
20th 59th 87th
1968 Ross Hoffman, 1B
Expos
9th
1967 Johnny Lung, INF Bob Wiswell, P
Cubs Braves
11th 17th
1966 Rick Ganulin, UTL ^ ^^ # +
Angels
30th
First round selection (supplemental phase) Selected in June secondary phase NCAA record 12 players selected in draft UCLA record 10 players signed a pro contract
2013 MINOR LEAGUE BRUINS BRENTON ALLEN
JERMAINE CURTIS
Auburn Doubledays (A, New York-Penn League – Washington Nationals)
Memphis Redbirds (AAA, Pacific Coast League – St. Louis Cardinals)
Played in 41 games for the Auburn Doubledays after getting selected in the 20th round of the 2013 MLB Draft by the Washington Nationals...hit .197 for the Doubledays, logging 13 runs, seven doubles, one home run, 10 RBI and a .329 on-base percentage...stole three bases as well...appeared in two games for the GCL Nationals of the Rookie Gulf Coast League, posting five at-bats.
Played in 115 games for AAA Memphis of the Cardinals organization...hit .257 with 45 runs scored, 17 doubles, one triple, five home runs and 49 RBI...stole 10 bases in 12 attempts while posting an on-base percentage of .355 and a slugging percentage of .349...was called up to the big leagues by the Cardinals on April 26, making his MLB debut a night later on April 27 against the Pittsburgh Pirates.
TEAM GCL NAT Auburn TOTALS
TEAM Memphis TOTALS
AVG .000 .197 .189
G 2 41 43
AB 5 117 122
R 0 13 13
H 0 23 23
2B 0 7 7
3B 0 0 0
HR 0 1 1
RBI 0 10 10
BB 0 15 15
SO 4 33 37
OBP .000 .329 .317
AVG G .257 115 .257 115
AB 370 370
R 45 45
H 95 95
2B 17 17
3B 1 1
HR 5 5
RBI 49 49
BB 52 52
SO 53 53
OBP .355 .355
BRENT DEAN
BEAU AMARAL
Brevard County Manatees (high-A, Florida State League – Milwaukee Brewers)
Dayton Dragons (A, Midwest League – Cincinnati Reds)
Appeared in 14 games for both High-A Brevard County and A Wisconsin...hit a combined .154 with three doubles and four RBI in 52 at-bats...played in 13 games for Wisconsin, recording eight hits...played in one game for Brevard County before suffering an injury that ended his season.
Batted .258 in 125 games for the single-A Dayton...scored 67 runs while recording 15 doubles, five triples, three home runs and 38 RBI...tied for the team lead with 40 stolen bases, which was also good for fourth-best in the Midwest League...hit .369 and posted a .403 on-base percentage against left-handers.
TEAM Dayton TOTALS
AVG G .258 125 .258 125
AB 515 515
R H 67 133 67 133
2B 15 15
3B 5 5
HR 3 3
RBI 38 38
BB 34 34
SO 81 81
TEAM Wisconsin Brevard County TOTALS
OBP .312 .312
AVG .167 .000 .154
G 13 1 14
AB 48 4 52
R 3 0 3
H 8 0 8
2B 3 0 3
3B 0 0 0
HR 0 0 0
RBI 4 0 4
BB 2 0 2
SO 20 0 20
OBP .216 .000 .200
HECTOR AMBRIZ
CODY DECKER
Oklahoma City RedHawks (AAA, Pacific Coast League – Houston Astros)
Tucson Padres (AAA, Pacific Coast League – San Diego Padres)
Began the season at the big league level with the Houston Astros, spending the majority of the year there... made 14 appearances for AAA Oklahoma City, posting a 1-2 record with a 5.40 ERA and three saves... struck out 12 batters in 16.2 innings pitched for OKC.
Played in 123 games between double-A San Antonio and triple-A Tucson, totalling a .262 batting average with 19 home runs...hit .171 with two home runs and six RBI and runs in 10 games for San Antonio...played in 113 games for Tucson, spending the majority of the season in AAA...batted at a .272 clip for Tucson, logging 45 runs scored, 24 doubles, five triples, 17 home runs and 64 RBI...17 home runs were tied for the most on the club...posted a .349 on-base percentage while slugging .534.
TEAM OKC TOTALS
W 1 1
L 2 2
ERA 5.40 5.40
G/GS 14/0 14/0
CG 0 0
SV 3 3
IP 16.2 16.2
H 23 23
R 12 12
ER 10 10
BB 3 3
SO 12 12
TEAM San Antonio Tucson TOTALS
TREVOR BAUER Columbus Clippers (AAA, International League – Cleveland Indians) Made 22 starts for AAA Columbus, going 6-7 with a 4.15 ERA...fanned 106 batters in 121.1 innings pitched for the Clippers...threw a complete game on July 22 against Buffalo, allowing two runs and striking out four in a 10-3 win...made four starts for the Indians at the Major League level, posting a 1-2 record with a 5.29 ERA.
TEAM Columbus TOTALS
W 6 6
L 7 7
ERA 4.15 4.15
G/GS 22/22 22/22
CG 1 1
SV 0 0
IP 121.1 121.1
H 119 119
R 64 64
ER 56 56
BB 73 73
G/GS 25/22 25/22
CG 0 0
SV 0 0
IP 139.2 139.2
H 158 158
R 83 83
ER 76 76
BB 43 43
TEAM W AZL Brewers 1 TOTALS 1
R H 48 96 5 10 53 106
2B 18 4 22
3B 1 0 1
HR 3 0 3
RBI 40 4 44
BB 27 4 31
SO 52 10 62
TEAM Asheville Modesto TOTALS
G/GS 1/1 33/9 34/10
CG 0 1 1
SV 0 2 2
IP 0.1 87.1 87.2
H 3 90 93
R 5 57 62
OBP .275 .349 .342
L 0 0
ERA 0.00 0.00
G/GS 7/0 7/0
CG 0 0
SV 1 1
IP 11.0 11.0
H 5 5
R 0 0
ER 0 0
BB 4 4
SO 9 9
AVG .333 .000 .200
G 1 1 2
AB 3 2 5
R 0 0 0
H 1 0 1
2B 0 0 0
3B 0 0 0
HR 0 0 0
RBI 0 0 0
BB 0 0 0
SO 0 2 2
OBP .333 .000 .200
Began the 2013 season with the New York Yankees, playing in 21 games while recording one solo home run... was picked up by the Padres off of waivers and was assigned to AAA Tucson on June 19...played in 60 games for Tucson, batting .241 with 20 runs scored, eight doubles, one triple and one home run...recorded 16 RBI and six stolen bases as well.
OBP .304 .226 .294
TEAM Tucson TOTALS
AVG .241 .241
G 60 60
AB 187 187
R 20 20
H 45 45
2B 8 8
3B 1 1
HR 1 1
RBI 16 16
BB 18 18
SO 38 38
OBP .309 .309
NIKO GALLEGO Modesto Nuts (High-A, California League – Colorado Rockies)
Pitched in 34 games between AAA Buffalo and AA New Hampshire...made one start for the Buffalo Bisons of the International League, pitching 0.1 innings...made 33 appearances (nine starts) for AA New Hampshire, recording two saves and a 5.36 ERA...posted a 1-7 record with 76 strikeouts for the Fisher Cats.
L ERA 1 108.00 7 5.36 8 5.75
BB SO 5 14 37 98 42 112
BEN FRANCISCO
TYSON BRUMMETT
W 0 1 1
RBI 6 64 70
Tucson Padres (AAA, Pacific Coast League – San Diego Padres)
New Hampshire Fisher Cats (AA, Eastern League – Toronto Blue Jays)
TEAM Buffalo NH TOTALS
HR 2 17 19
Played in two games for both the Asheville Tourists (A) and Modesto Nuts (High-A) of the Rockies organization...had one single in five at-bats between the two clubs.
SO 107 107
Played in 111 games between A Augusta and High-A San Jose...batted .250 in 97 games for the Augusta GreenJackets, logging 18 doubles, one triple, three home runs and 40 RBI...stole 10 bases for Augusta as well... was promoted to High-A San Jose in mid-August...appeared in 14 games for the San Jose Giants, batting .172 with five runs, four doubles and four RBI.
AB 384 58 442
3B 0 5 5
DEAN ESPY
TREVOR BROWN
AVG G .250 97 .172 14 .240 111
2B 0 24 24
Modesto Nuts (High-A, California League – Colorado Rockies)
San Jose Giants (High-A, California League – San Francisco Giants)
TEAM Augusta San Jose TOTALS
H 6 88 94
Pitched in seven games (all in relief) for the AZL Brewers of the Rookie Arizona League after being drafted in the 32nd round by the Brewers in the 2013 MLB Draft...went 1-0 with a save, not allowing a run in 11 innings pitched... struck out nine batters in his 11 innings pitched while relinquishing just five hits.
SO 106 106
Appeared in 25 games for AAA Reno, making 22 starts...posted a record of 5-12 with a 4.90 ERA and 107 strikeouts...tossed 139.2 innings, surrending 43 walks...was called up to the Diamondbacks on June 10, making his Major League debut later that night against the Los Angeles Dodgers...pitched in four games for Arizona, all in relief, fanning five batters in six innings.
ERA 4.90 4.90
R 6 45 51
RYAN DEETER
Reno Aces (AAA, Pacific Coast League – Arizona Diamondbacks)
W L 5 12 5 12
AB 35 324 359
AZL Brewers (Rookie, Arizona League – Milwaukee Brewers)
CHARLES BREWER
TEAM Reno TOTALS
AVG G .171 10 .272 113 .262 123
ER 4 52 56
BB 3 31 34
Appeared in 81 games for High-A Modesto, hitting .215 with 29 runs scored...also logged 11 doubles, three triples, three home runs and 17 RBI while stealing 14 bases in 19 attempts...slugged .329 with an on-base percentage of .287.
SO 1 76 77
TEAM Modesto TOTALS
AVG .215 .215
G 81 81
AB 228 228
R 29 29
H 49 49
2B 11 11
3B 3 3
HR 3 3
RBI 17 17
BB 14 14
SO 58 58
OBP .287 .287
ALDEN CARRITHERS
JEFF GELALICH
Gwinnett Braves (AAA, International League – Atlanta Braves)
Dayton Dragons (A, Midwest League – Cincinnati Reds)
Appeared in 102 games between AA Mississippi and AAA Gwinnett...batted a combined .284 in those 102 games, logging 14 doubles, one triple, three home runs, 19 RBI and 16 stolen bases...played in 12 games for the Mississippi Braves (AA), hitting .184 with three stolen bases...promoted to AAA Gwinnett on April 7, spending the majority of the year there...posted a .299 batting average with 19 RBI and 13 stolen bases for Gwinnett...recorded a .387 on-base percentage and .398 slugging percentage for the club as well.
Played in 123 games for the Dayton Dragons of the Midwest League...recorded a .245 batting average with 17 doubles, two triples, one home run, 37 RBI and 61 runs...compiled a .331 OBP and stole 20 bases in 26 attempts... posted a slugging percentage of .300.
TEAM Mississippi Gwinnett TOTALS
AVG G .184 12 .299 90 .284 102
AB 27 251 278
R 4 34 38
H 4 75 79
2B 0 14 14
3B 0 1 1
HR 0 3 3
RBI 0 19 19
BB 8 32 40
SO 6 27 33
TEAM Dayton TOTALS
OBP .361 .387 .384
ERA 2.91 2.91
G/GS 12/12 12/12
CG 0 0
SV 0 0
IP 68.0 68.0
H 44 44
R 23 23
2B 17 17
3B 2 2
HR 1 1
RBI 37 37
BB SO 57 107 57 107
OBP .331 .331
Made 25 starts for the Binghamton Mets (AA) of the Eastern League...posted a 9-7 record with a 4.37 ERA and 125 strikeouts in 134 innings pitched...allowed only 58 walks in his 134 innings pitched...went 3-0 with a 1.08 ERA in four starts in June.
Mad 12 starts for AAA Indianapolis...went 5-3 with a 2.91 ERA in 68 innings pitched for the club...struck out 47 hitters while walking 28... in his last three starts, posted a 0.90 ERA with 12 strikeouts and did not allow a run in his last two starts...was called up to the Majors by the Pirates on June 11, making his debut that same evening against the San Francisco Giants.
L 3 3
R H 61 109 61 109
ERIK GOEDDEL
Indianapolis Indians (AAA, International League – Pittsburgh Pirates)
W 5 5
AB 444 444
Binghamton Mets (AA, Eastern League – New York Mets)
GERRIT COLE
TEAM Indianapolis TOTALS
AVG G .245 123 .245 123
ER 22 22
BB 28 28
TEAM Binghamton TOTALS
SO 47 47
76
W 9 9
L 7 7
ERA 4.37 4.37
G/GS 25/25 25/25
CG 0 0
SV 0 0
IP 134.0 134.0
H 135 135
R 72 72
ER 65 65
BB 58 58
SO 125 125
2013 MINOR LEAGUE BRUINS MATT GRACE
ROB RASMUSSEN
Harrisburg Senators (Double-A, Eastern League – Washington Nationals)
Reading Fightin Phils (AA, Eastern League – Philadelphia Phillies)
Split time between the Potomac Nationals (High-A) and the Harrisburg Senators (AA)...went 3-0 with a 3.18 ERA and 24 strikeouts in 14 relief appearances for Potomac...tossed 28.1 innings for Potomac, walking only seven... assigned to the Harrisburg Senators on June 3...made 28 relief appearances, fanning 31 batters in 38 innings... posted a 6-3 record with one save for Harrisburg.
Began the season pitching for the Chattanooga Lookouts (AA) in the Los Angeles Dodgers organization...went 3-4 with a 2.55 ERA in 16 appearances (14 starts)...fanned 76 batters in 81.1 total innings for the Lookouts, surrendering 28 walks...assigned to AAA Albuquerque on June 7...posted a 6.46 ERA in 12 appearances (10 starts), striking out 37 batters in 54.1 innings...was traded to the Philadelphia Phillies on August 31 as a part of the deal that sent major leaguer Michael Young to the Dodgers...was assigned to the Reading Fightin Phils of the Eastern League (AA) but did not make an appearance for the club.
TEAM Potomac Harrisburg TOTALS
W 3 6 9
L 0 3 3
ERA 3.18 3.79 3.53
G/GS 14/0 28/0 42/0
CG 0 0 0
SV 0 1 1
IP 28.1 38.0 66.1
H 26 42 68
R 11 17 28
ER 10 16 26
BB 7 7 14
SO 24 31 55
TEAM ALB CHA TOTALS
SCOTT GRIGGS Great Lakes Loons (A, Midwest League – Los Angeles Dodgers)
W L 0 7 3 4 3 11
ERA 6.46 2.55 4.11
G/GS 12/10 16/14 28/24
CG 0 0 0
SV 0 0 0
IP 54.1 81.1 135.2
H 64 60 124
R 42 26 68
ER 39 23 62
BB 32 28 60
SO 37 76 113
STEVE RODRIGUEZ
Made 34 relief appearances for the Great Lake Loons (A) of the Midwest League...posted a 2-7 record with a 2.56 ERA and 74 strikeouts in 45.2 innings pitched...did not pitch after July 22 due to an injury.
Visalia Rawhide (High-A, California League – Arizona Diamondbacks)
TEAM Great Lakes TOTALS
Split time between the South Bend Silver Hawks (A) of the Midwest League and the Visalia Rawhide (High-A) of the California League...batted a combined .202 with 23 RBI and 22 runs in 56 total games...played in 16 games for South Bend, hitting .216 with five runs, two doubles and three RBI...was promoted to High-A Visalia on June 12... played in 40 games for Visalia, batting at a .197 clip with 17 runs, six doubles, three home runs and 20 RBI...drew 24 walks for the Rawhide as well.
W 2 2
L 7 7
ERA 2.56 2.56
G/GS 34/0 34/0
CG 0 0
SV 4 4
IP 45.2 45.2
H 28 28
R 18 18
ER 13 13
BB 33 33
SO 74 74
TYLER HEINEMAN
TEAM South Bend Visalia TOTALS
Lancaster JetHawks (High-A, California League – Houston Astros) Played in 104 games for the Lancaster JetHawks (High-A) of the California League...batted .286 with 67 runs, 23 doubles, four triples, 13 home runs and 71 RBI...slugged .476 while posting an on-base percentage of .361...stole two bases in five attempts as well.
TEAM Lancaster TOTALS
AVG G .286 104 .286 104
AB 370 370
R H 67 106 67 106
2B 23 23
3B 4 4
HR 13 13
RBI 71 71
BB 32 32
SO 47 47
ERA 4.07 3.84 3.90
G/GS 9/2 13/12 22/14
CG 0 0 0
SV 0 1 1
IP 24.1 68.0 92.1
H 21 76 97
R 13 31 44
ER 11 29 40
BB 9 13 22
TEAM Tri-City TOTALS
ERA 9.89 9.89
G/GS 18/0 18/0
CG 0 0
SV 3 3
IP 23.2 23.2
H 32 32
R 27 27
ER 26 26
BB 23 23
TEAM AZL San Jose Salem-Keizer TOTALS
SO 27 27
AB 325 325
R 32 32
H 78 78
2B 16 16
3B 2 2
HR 4 4
RBI 39 39
BB 35 35
SO 74 74
BB 4 24 28
SO 8 30 38
OBP .268 .318 .305
AVG .240 .240
G 42 42
AB 146 146
R 27 27
H 35 35
2B 15 15
3B 2 2
HR 1 1
RBI 18 18
BB 23 23
SO 33 33
OBP .345 .345
W 0 0 0 0
L 0 0 0 0
ERA 0.00 11.57 13.50 11.70
G/GS 1/1 1/1 3/3 5/5
CG 0 0 0 0
SV 0 0 0 0
IP 1.0 2.1 6.2 10.0
H 0 4 15 19
R 0 3 10 13
ER 0 3 10 13
BB 0 2 2 4
SO 2 3 5 10
Pitched in a total of 13 games (six starts) between the AZL Reds and Billings Mustangs after being drafted in the sixth round of the 2013 MLB Draft by the Cincinnati Reds...made two relief appearances for the AZL Reds, not allowing an earned run and striking out two...went 2-4 with a 4.70 ERA in 11 appearances (six starts) for Billings... fanned 23 batters in 30.2 innings for the Mustangs, walking only six.
Played in 97 games for the Greensboro Grasshoppers of the South Atlantic League (A)...batted at a .240 clip with 32 runs, 16 doubles, two triples, four home runs and 39 RBI...logged a .319 on-base percentage while drawing 35 walks and stealing one base.
G 97 97
RBI 3 20 23
ZACK WEISS
Greensboro Grasshoppers (A, South Atlantic – Miami Marlins)
AVG .240 .240
HR 0 3 3
Billings Mustangs (Rookie, Pioneer League – Cincinnati Reds)
CODY KEEFER
TEAM Greensboro TOTALS
3B 0 0 0
Made five starts between three teams - the AZL Giants (Arizona Rookie League), San Jose Giants (High-A) and Salem-Keizer Volcanoes (A) - after being selected in the 6th round of the 2013 MLB Draft by the San Francisco Giants...pitched one inning, striking out two in his only start for the AZL Giants...tossed 2.1 innings of the San Jose Giants, striking out three in his only start for the team...made three starts for Salem-Keizer, pitching 6.2 innings while striking out five...missed the final month of the season with an injury.
SO 28 64 92
Pitched in 18 games for the Great Falls Voyagers of the Rookie Pioneer League...went 1-1 with a 9.89 ERA and three saves...struck out 27 batters in 23.2 innings as well.
L 1 1
2B 2 6 8
NICK VANDER TUIG
ERIC JAFFE
W 1 1
H 11 26 37
Salem-Keizer Volcanoes (A, Northwest League – San Francisco Giants)
Great Falls Voyagers (Rookie, Pioneer League – Chicago White Sox) TEAM Great Falls TOTALS
R 5 17 22
Played in 42 games for the Tri-City Dust Devils (Single-A, s.s.) of the Northwest League after being selected in the ninth round of the 2013 MLB Draft by the Colorado Rockies...hit .240 with 27 runs scored, 15 doubles, two triples, one home run and 18 RBI...posted an OBP of .345 while slugging .390...stole five bases in three attempts as well.
Split time between AAA Columbus of the Indians organization and AAA Scranton/Wilkes-Barre of the Yankees organization...posted a 3-1 record with a 4.07 ERA in nine games (two starts) for Columbus...tossed 24.1 innings, striking out 28...made three relief appearances for the Indians at the big league level...was claimed by the New York Yankees on May 26, reporting to AAA Scranton on May 28...went 1-6 for Scranton, making 13 appearances (12 starts) and logging an ERA of 3.84...pitched 68 innings, fanning 64 and walking just 13...appeared in seven games in the majors for the Yankees, making one start while pitching 19.1 innings.
L 1 6 7
AB 51 132 183
Tri-City Dust Devils (A, Northwest League – Colorado Rockies)
DAVID HUFF
W 3 1 4
G 16 40 56
PAT VALAIKA
OBP .361 .361
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders (AAA, International League – New York Yankees)
TEAM Columbus SWB TOTALS
AVG .216 .197 .202
TEAM AZL Billings TOTALS
OBP .319 .319
W 0 2 2
L 0 4 4
ERA 0.00 4.70 4.41
G/GS 2/0 11/6 13/6
CG 0 0 0
SV 0 0 0
IP 2.0 30.2 32.2
H 1 33 34
R 1 24 25
ER 0 16 16
BB 1 6 8
SO 2 23 25
ADRIAN WILLIAMS
BRETT KRILL
Wisconsin Timber Rattlers (A, Midwest League – Milwaukee Brewers)
Richmond Flying Squirrels (AA, Eastern League – San Francisco Giants)
Played in 45 games for two Milwaukee minor league affiliates - the Brevard County Manatees (High-A) and the Wisconsin Timber Rattlers (A)...hit .143 in seven games for Brevard County, recording three runs...batted .140 in 38 games for Wisconsin, logging two doubles, nine runs and three RBI.
Played in 85 games for the Richmond Flying Squirrels of the Eastern League...batted .258 with two home runs and 10 doubles...collected 28 RBI and scored 27 runs while registering a .313 OBP...stole three bases and slugged .329 as well.
TEAM Richmond TOTALS
AVG .258 .258
G 85 85
AB 225 225
R 27 27
H 58 58
2B 10 10
3B 0 0
HR 2 2
RBI 28 28
BB 11 11
SO 55 55
TEAM Brevard County Wisconsin TOTALS
OBP .313 .313
AVG .143 .140 .140
G 7 38 45
AB 14 86 100
R 3 9 12
H 2 12 14
2B 0 2 2
3B 0 0 0
ADAM PLUTKO Mahoning Valley Scrappers (A, New York-Penn League – Cleveland Indians) Was selected in the 11th round of the 2013 MLB Draft by the Cleveland Indians...was diagnosed with an injury before he could report to Mahoning Valley, costing him the 2013 minor league season.
TEAM MV TOTALS
W 0 0
L 0 0
ERA 0.00 0.00
G/GS 0/0 0/0
CG 0 0
SV 0 0
IP 0.0 0.0
H 0 0
R 0 0
ER 0 0
BB 0 0
SO 0 0
TYLER RAHMATULLA Springfield Cardinals (AA, Texas League – St. Louis Cardinals) Splite time between two St. Louis affiliates, hitting a total of .167 with 12 runs scored...began the season at High-A Palm Beach, playing in 23 games while batting at a .205 clip...logged eight runs, two doubles and two RBI...was promoted to AA Springfield on May 14...played in 24 games for Springfield, recording four hits in 41 at-bats... battled with injuries for much of the 2013 season.
TEAM Palm Beach Springfield TOTALS
AVG .205 .098 .167
G 23 24 47
AB 73 41 114
R 8 4 12
H 15 4 19
2B 2 1 3
3B 0 0 0
HR 0 0 0
RBI 2 1 3
BB 6 10 16
SO 11 11 22
OBP .266 .302 .280
Tyler Heineman
77
HR 0 0 0
RBI 1 3 4
BB 1 12 13
SO 5 22 27
OBP .200 .245 .239
GAME-BY-GAME RESULTS 1955 (22-9-1, 9-6, 4th)
1958 (14-19, 5-11, 4th)
Head Coach: Arthur Reichle
Head Coach: Arthur Reichle
Date
Opponent
Result
2/26 3/1 3/4 3/5 3/9 3/12 3/15 3/16 3/19* 3/22 3/23 3/25* 3/26* 3/29 3/30 4/1* 4/2* 4/2* 4/6 4/11 4/12 4/16 4/20 4/22* 4/23* 4/29* 5/6* 5/7* 5/13* 5/14* 5/14* 5/17*
Alumni Long Beach CC Peterson All-Stars at Los Angeles Angels Fort Ord Camp Pendleton Marines Portland Beavers at Hollywood Stars at USC Hollywood Star B’s Pepperdine Santa Clara Santa Clara Boise (Pioneer League) at Los Angeles Angels at Stanford at California at California Pepperdine College of Pacific Arizona Los Angeles Angels Los Angeles State Stanford Stanford California at USC USC at Stanford Santa Clara Santa Clara USC
W W W W W W W L W W W W W T L L L W W W W W L W W L L L L W W W
7-6 11-5 11-3 9-6 8-7 2-1 2-0 6-5 10-6 5-2 8-2 7-0 6-2 6-6 11-1 11-2 5-4 10-4 15-9 23-2 11-2 19-0 6-2 11-1 11-7 6-5 14-8 7-1 3-1 23-6 14-2 18-4
Record 1-0 2-0 3-0 4-0 5-0 6-0 7-0 7-1 8-1 9-1 10-1 11-1 12-1 12-1-1 12-2-1 12-3-1 12-4-1 13-4-1 14-4-1 15-4-1 16-4-1 17-4-1 17-5-1 18-5-1 19-5-1 19-6-1 19-7-1 19-8-1 19-9-1 20-9-1 21-9-1 22-9-1
*CIBA game
Opponent
2/25 Alumni 3/2 Long Beach CC 3/3 Chicago W.S. Minors 3/6 Pepperdine 3/9 Orange Coast College 3/10 Santa Barbara College 3/13 Camp Pendleton 3/16 at Fresno State 3/17 at Fresno State 3/23* Santa Clara 3/24* Santa Clara 3/26 at Los Angeles Angels 3/27 San Jose State 3/30* Stanford 3/31* Stanford 4/3 Arizona 4/6* at Santa Clara 4/7* at California 4/7* at California 4/9 Fort Ord 4/10 Fort Ord 4/17* USC 4/20* at Santa Clara 4/21* at Stanford 4/21* at Stanford 4/24 George Air Force Base 4/27 at Arizona 4/28 at Arizona 5/1 Long Beach CC 5/4* USC 5/5* at USC 5/7* at USC 5/11* California 5/12* California *CIBA game
Result
2/22 2/26 2/28 3/1 3/1 3/4 3/7 3/8 3/8 3/11 3/22 3/22 3/28* 3/29* 4/4* 4/5* 4/9 4/11 4/12 4/15 4/18* 4/19* 4/25* 4/26* 4/26* 5/2* 5/3* 5/9 5/16* 5/17* 5/17* 5/23* 5/24*
Alumni Chicago W.S. Minors Miller’s Playtimers Chicago W.S. Minors Chicago W.S. Minors Long Beach CC Orange Coast College Miller’s Playtimers Miller’s Playtimers Chicago W.S. Minors Vancouver Vancouver Stanford Stanford California California at Long Beach CC Arizona Arizona Pepperdine Santa Clara Santa Clara at Santa Clara at Stanford at Stanford USC at USC San Diego Marines at Santa Clara at California at California at USC USC
W W W L L W W W W W L L L L W W L L W L L W L W L L L L L W L L L
12-1 17-7 5-4 6-1 7-2 5-3 5-0 3-0 4-1 8-7 1-0 7-0 3-0 7-4 4-2 8-5 3-2 3-2 7-3 6-4 9-4 5-4 8-6 4-1 11-3 3-0 21-2 2-0 9-8 3-2 6-2 23-1 15-1
Record
Head Coach: Arthur Reichle
L L L T W W L L L L W L W L L T W W L L W L W L L W L L W L L L L W
0-1 0-2 0-3 0-3-1 1-3-1 2-3-1 2-4-1 2-5-1 2-6-1 2-7-1 3-8-1 3-9-1 4-9-1 4-10-1 4-11-1 4-11-2 5-11-2 6-11-2 6-12-2 7-13-2 7-13-2 7-14-2 8-14-2 8-15-2 8-16-2 9-16-2 9-17-2 9-18-2 10-18-2 10-18-2 10-19-2 10-20-2 10-20-2 11-20-2
Date
Opponent
Result
2/24 2/25 2/27 2/28 3/3 3/6 3/7 3/7 3/10 3/13 3/14 3/17 3/20 3/21 3/24 3/27* 3/28* 3/31 4/3* 4/4* 4/7 4/10* 4/11* 4/17* 4/18* 4/18* 4/21 4/28 5/1* 5/2* 5/8* 5/9* 5/9* 5/15* 5/16*
Long Beach CC at L.A. Minor Leaguers Scoremaster All-Stars Cincinnati Minor Leaguers Cincinnati Minor Leaguers at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona UC Santa Barbara at San Diego Marines at San Diego State Cal Poly at Fresno State at Fresno State Orange Coast College Stanford Stanford Arizona Santa Clara Santa Clara Pepperdine at USC USC at Santa Clara at Stanford at Stanford Camp Pendleton Marines San Diego Marines at USC USC at Santa Clara at California at California California California
W W L L W L L W L L L W L W L L L L L L W L L W L L L L L L L L L L W
7-3 4-2 3-1 6-6 10-1 17-4 3-2 6-4 15-4 6-3 8-1 11-6 5-4 9-0 4-3 3-3 11-3 7-4 4-3 7-6 15-4 5-3 17-8 9-8 5-4 18-0 10-0 10-0 6-0 2-1 15-8 4-3 5-4 5-4
1-0 2-0 3-0 3-1 3-2 4-2 5-2 6-2 7-2 8-2 8-3 8-4 8-5 8-6 9-6 10-6 10-7 10-8 11-8 11-9 11-10 12-10 12-11 13-11 13-12 13-13 13-14 13-15 13-16 14-16 14-17 14-18 14-19
13-2 5-2 3-1 10-9 5-4 15-3 18-6 7-6 8-6 4-2 11-4 12-6 7-0 10-9 10-3 3-0 10-7 3-1 7-1 3-2 8-3 5-1 10-6 11-10 3-2 1-0 6-3 9-5 9-0 9-3 6-5 3-2 5-3 14-3 2-0
Record 1-0 2-0 2-1 2-2 3-2 3-3 3-4 4-4 4-5 4-6 4-7 5-7 5-8 6-8 6-9 6-10 6-11 6-12 6-13 6-14 7-14 7-15 7-16 8-16 8-17 8-18 8-19 8-20 8-21 8-22 8-23 8-24 8-25 8-26 9-26
* CIBA game
Head Coach: Arthur Reichle Date
Opponent
Result
Record
2/26 3/2 3/2 3/5 3/8 3/12 3/15 3/16 3/19 3/20 3/22 3/23 3/26 3/27 3/30* 3/30* 4/1* 4/5* 4/6* 4/12* 4/13* 4/16 4/19* 4/26* 4/27* 4/30 5/3* 5/4* 5/11 5/11 5/17* 5/18*
Long Beach CC Chicago W.S. Minors Alumni Pepperdine Miller’s Playtimers San Diego Marines College of Sequoias Chicago W.S. Minors Santa Barbara College Chicago W.S. Minors at Fresno State at Fresno State at Hollywood Stars Vancouver Mounties at Stanford at Stanford at California at USC USC California California Long Beach CC at California Stanford Stanford San Jose State at USC USC Air Force Air Force Santa Clara Santa Clara
T W L W L T W W W W W L L L W L L L L L L L W L W W L L W W W W
0-0-1 1-0-1 1-1-1 2-1-1 2-2-1 2-2-2 3-2-2 4-2-2 5-2-2 6-2-2 7-2-2 7-3-2 7-4-2 7-5-2 8-5-2 8-6-2 8-7-2 8-8-2 8-9-2 8-10-2 8-11-2 8-12-2 9-12-2 9-13-2 10-13-2 11-13-2 11-14-2 11-15-2 12-15-2 13-15-2 14-15-2 15-15-2
4-4 15-1 6-1 13-5 2-0 3-3 11-3 12-2 8-7 9-0 9-3 5-2 12-1 9-8 11-2 5-0 13-8 3-1 8-3 1-0 9-4 9-8 7-0 6-3 1-0 9-3 5-1 12-8 4-3 17-4 12-5 7-0
Record
1959 (9-26, 2-14, 5th)
Result
1957 (15-15-2, 5-9, 4th)
*CIBA game
Opponent
*CIBA game
1956 (11-21-2, 5-11, 4th) Head Coach: Arthur Reichle Date
Date
1960 (18-29-1, 4-12, 5th) Head Coach: Arthur Reichle game results not available
1961 (25-15-5, 7-9, 3rd) Head Coach: Arthur Reichle Date
Opponent
Result
2/18 2/21 2/24 2/25 2/25 2/28 3/1 3/3 3/4 3/8 3/10 3/11 3/11 3/14 3/17 3/18 3/21 3/23 3/25* 3/31* 4/1* 4/4 4/5 4/7* 4/8* 4/11 4/14* 4/15*
Alumni Chicago W.S. Minors Chicago W.S. Minors Baltimore Oriole Juniors Baltimore Oriole Juniors at El Camino College Chicago W.S. Minors Los Angeles State Chicago W.S. Minors at Occiental San Diego Cal Poly Cal Poly at Los Angeles State at Fresno State at Fresno State Brigham Young at Cal Poly Pomona at USC Stanford Stanford Notre Dame Arizona Santa Clara Santa Clara El Camino College at Santa Clara at Stanford
W T T W W T W W W T W W W L L W T W L W W L W W W L L W
8-7 0-0 9-9 7-3 7-0 5-5 9-5 5-4 5-3 5-5 3-2 5-4 10-0 10-2 2-0 10-4 5-5 7-4 7-2 4-3 5-3 7-2 3-1 7-4 4-1 6-5 10-7 4-2
Record 1-0 1-0-1 1-0-2 2-0-2 3-0-2 3-0-3 4-0-3 5-0-3 6-0-3 6-0-4 7-0-4 8-0-4 9-0-4 9-1-4 9-2-4 10-2-4 10-2-5 11-2-5 11-3-5 12-3-5 13-3-5 13-4-5 14-4-5 15-4-5 16-4-5 16-5-5 16-6-5 17-6-5
4/15* 4/18 4/21 4/22 4/28* 4/29* 5/2* 5/5* 5/6* 5/9 5/10 5/12 5/13 5/16 5/19* 5/20* 5/20*
at Stanford Long Beach State Pepperdine Long Beach CC California California USC at USC USC at Pepperdine Loyola College of Sequoias at Occidental Cal Poly Pomona at Santa Clara at California at California
W W W L W L L L L W W W W L L L L
4-0 7-0 5-3 8-4 1-0 2-1 3-1 11-8 6-4 2-1 4-3 4-1 9-5 8-3 6-5 5-0 4-2
18-6-5 19-6-5 20-6-5 20-7-5 21-7-5 21-8-5 21-9-5 21-10-5 21-11-5 22-11-5 23-11-5 24-11-5 25-11-5 25-12-5 25-13-5 25-14-5 25-15-5
at California at California Long Beach State Cal Poly Pomona Arizona Loyola USC USC at Los Angeles State San Diego Stanford Stanford
L L W L W W W L W W W L
10-3 2-1 13-7 8-0 6-1 4-0 11-2 1-0 3-1 5-2 6-0 7-3
23-13-2 23-14-2 24-13-2 24-15-2 25-15-2 26-15-2 27-15-2 27-16-2 28-16-2 29-16-2 30-16-2 20-17-2
* CIBA Game # Los Angeles State Tournament
1964 (35-16-2, 13-7, 3rd) Head Coach: Arthur Reichle game results not available
*CIBA game
1962 (23-22-3, 4-12, 5th) Head Coach: Arthur Reichle Date
Opponent
Result
Record
2/14 2/17 2/17 2/20 2/22 2/24 2/27 3/2 3/3 3/3 3/7 3/9 3/10 3/13 3/14 3/16 3/17* 3/23 3/24 3/26 3/27 3/30* 3/31* 4/3 4/4 4/6* 4/7* 4/10 4/11 4/13* 4/14* 4/16# 4/17# 4/18# 4/19# 4/20# 4/21* 4/24 4/27* 4/28* 4/28* 5/1 5/4* 5/5* 5/8 5/11* 5/12*^ 5/12*
Phillie Minors Chicago W.S. Minors Chicago W.S. Minors Boston R.S. Minors Chicago W.S. Minors New York Mets Minors Valley College at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona Pierce College College of Sequoias L.A. Angels (semipro) Westmont College Occidental San Diego USC Whittier College Cal Poly Pomona Hawaii Los Angeles State Santa Clara Santa Clara Cal Poly Pomona Loyola at Stanford at California El Camino at Occidental Stanford Stanford vs. USC vs. San Jose State vs. Arizona State vs. Cal Poly Pomona vs. Los Angeles State at USC Arizona at Stanford at Santa Clara at Santa Clara at S.F. Valley State USC at USC at Los Angeles State California California California
T L L W T L W L W T L W W W W W L W W W L W L W W W L W W W L L W W W W L L L L L L L L L L W L
0-0-1 0-1-1 0-2-1 1-2-1 1-2-2 1-3-2 2-3-2 2-4-2 3-4-2 3-4-3 3-5-3 4-5-3 5-5-3 6-5-3 7-5-3 8-5-3 8-6-3 9-6-3 10-6-3 11-6-3 11-7-3 12-7-3 12-8-3 13-8-3 14-8-3 15-8-3 15-9-3 16-9-3 17-9-3 18-9-3 18-10-3 18-11-3 19-11-3 20-11-3 21-11-3 22-11-3 22-12-3 22-13-3 22-14-3 22-15-3 22-16-3 22-17-3 22-18-3 22-19-3 22-20-3 22-21-3 23-21-3 23-22-3
4-4 5-1 4-1 3-1 6-6 4-3 13-0 11-4 8-3 5-5 3-2 7-3 13-1 10-1 5-3 6-2 11-1 13-9 4-0 6-5 6-3 1-0 5-3 4-3 5-3 3-1 4-3 2-1 3-1 6-4 4-0 6-2 12-2 12-5 8-1 4-3 11-5 7-1 10-9 6-1 10-2 14-13 5-3 6-5 2-0 2-1 6-1 5-1
* CIBA game # Los Angeles State Easter Classic ^ Completion of suspended game (began in Berkeley, April 7)
1963 (30-17-2, 9-7, 2nd) Head Coach: Arthur Reichle Date
Opponent
Result
2/12 2/13 2/14 2/15 2/16 2/19 2/20 2/22 2/23 2/26 2/27 3/1 3/2 3/5 3/8 3/9 3/9 3/12 3/15* 3/16* 3/22* 3/23* 3/26 3/27 3/29* 3/30* 4/2 4/3 4/5* 4/8# 4/9# 4/10# 4/16 4/17 4/19* 4/20* 4/20*
Phillie Minors Chicago W.S. Minors Los Angeles Angels Juniors Cal Poly Cal Poly Phillie Minors Chicago W.S. Minors at Occidental Boston R.S. Minors at El Camino Boston R.S. Minors at Cal Poly Pomona at San Diego at Pierce College at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona Valley College at USC at USC Santa Clara Santa Clara Los Angeles State S.F. Valley State California California Westmont College Pepperdine at Santa Clara vs. Fresno State vs. Long Beach State vs. Cal Poly Pomona College of Sequoias New Mexico at Santa Clara at Stanford at Stanford
L L T W W W L L W W W W W W L W W T W W W W W L W W W L W W L L W W L L L
78
4/22* 4/22* 4/23 4/24 4/27 5/1 5/3* 5/4* 5/7 5/8 5/10* 5/11*
Record
2-1 0-1 5-2 0-2 2-2 0-2-1 5-2 1-2-1 4-1 2-2-1 3-2 3-2-1 4-3 3-3-1 3-2 3-4-1 8-2 4-4-1 3-2 5-4-1 10-8 6-4-1 3-1 7-4-1 16-4 8-4-1 7-3 9-4-1 7-3 9-5-1 10-9 10-5-1 8-5 11-5-1 3-3 11-5-2 13-3 12-5-2 3-1 13-5-2 8-4 14-5-2 3-2 15-5-2 3-2 16-5-2 5-0 16-6-2 1-0 17-6-2 4-2 18-6-2 7-6 19-6-2 4-2 19-7-2 2-1 20-7-2 7-2 21-7-2 5-4 21-8-2 3-0 21-9-2 2-1 22-9-2 6-0 23-9-2 4-1 23-10-2 3-0 23-11-2 3-1 23-12-2
1965 (33-15, 10-10, 4th) Head Coach: Arthur Reichle game results not available
1966 (35-24, 10-10, 4th) Head Coach: Arthur Reichle Date
Opponent
Result
2/4 2/9 2/11 2/12 2/15 2/16 2/18 2/19 2/19 2/22 2/23 2/25 2/26 2/26 3/1 3/2 3/4 3/5 3/5 3/8 3/9 3/11* 3/12* 3/12* 3/15 3/16 3/18 3/19 3/19 3/23 3/26 3/26 3/29 3/30 4/1* 4/2* 4/2* 4/4 4/8* 4/9* 4/12 4/13 4/15* 4/16* 4/16* 4/19 4/20 4/22* 4/23* 4/26 4/27 4/29* 4/30* 4/30* 5/6* 5/7* 5/11 5/13* 5/14*
Alumni Phillie Minors at Millers Playtimers Cal Poly Phillie Minors Long Beach State at Fresno State at Fresno State at Fresno State S.F. Valley State El Camino at Cal State Los Angeles San Diego State San Diego State Cal State Los Angeles Whittier at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona Pierce College at Cal State Los Angeles California Santa Clara Santa Clara Chapman College at Cal State Los Angeles Arizona Arizona Arizona Loyola Cal Poly Pomona Cal Poly Pomona UC Riverside Fullerton JC at Stanford at Santa Clara at Santa Clara Pepperdine UC Santa Barbara at UC Santa Barbara La Verne Santa Ana at Stanford at California at Calfiornia at S.F. Valley State at Cal Lutheran UC Santa Barbara at UC Santa Barbara College of Sequoias Westmont College California Stanford Stanford USC at USC Los Angeles CC at USC USC
W W W L L W L W W W W W L W W W L L L W L W W W L W W L W L L W W W L W W L W W W W L L W W W W W L W L L L L L L L L
6-3 6-3 10-3 14-11 7-6 8-0 7-2 9-7 9-4 5-1 13-4 6-5 10-5 5-4 4-1 2-1 6-3 5-3 7-6 8-6 9-5 3-2 5-4 10-3 19-2 4-3 4-3 10-8 9-8 3-2 6-2 6-5 4-2 11-7 1-0 6-5 5-2 6-5 14-2 6-2 7-0 4-1 7-5 5-4 3-2 7-4 5-1 4-3 9-8 6-5 12-2 5-2 18-0 7-0 13-10 3-2 5-2 13-11 4-1
Record 1-0 2-0 3-0 3-1 3-2 4-2 4-3 5-3 6-3 7-3 8-3 9-3 9-4 10-4 11-4 12-4 12-5 12-6 12-7 13-7 14-7 15-7 16-7 17-7 17-8 18-8 19-8 19-9 20-9 20-10 20-11 21-11 22-11 23-11 23-12 24-12 25-12 25-13 26-13 27-13 28-13 29-13 29-14 29-15 30-15 31-15 32-15 33-15 34-15 34-16 35-16 35-17 35-18 35-19 35-20 35-21 35-22 35-23 35-24
* CIBA Game
1967 (43-19, 10-6, 2nd) Head Coach: Arthur Reichle Date
Opponent
Result
2/4 2/8 2/11 2/14 2/16 2/17 2/18 2/18 2/21 2/22 2/24 2/25 2/25 2/28 3/1 3/3 3/4 3/6 3/7 3/9 3/10 3/11 3/11
Alumni Phillie Minors Paramount Angels Long Beach CC at College of Sequoias at Fresno State at Fresno State at Fresno State at El Camino CC Phillie Minors at Long Beach State Cal Poly Cal Poly at Pierce College at Cal Poly Pomona at Occidental at UC Riverside College of Sequoias Cal Poly Pomona at Arizona State at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona
W W L W W L L W L W W W W W W L W W L L W W L
15-8 4-3 4-3 5-4 8-3 19-3 8-5 8-1 4-3 11-3 9-7 8-6 7-0 7-1 8-5 1-0 4-1 7-1 9-3 2-1 3-2 8-7 6-2
Record 1-0 2-0 2-1 3-1 4-1 4-2 4-3 5-3 5-4 6-4 7-4 8-4 9-4 10-4 11-4 11-5 12-5 13-5 13-6 13-7 14-7 15-7 15-8
GAME-BY-GAME RESULTS 3/20# 3/21# 3/21# 3/22# 3/23# 3/24# 3/25# 3/27 3/28 3/29 4/4 4/5 4/7 4/12 4/14* 4/14* 4/15* 4/15* 4/22* 4/22* 4/25 4/26 4/28* 4/29* 4/29* 5/2 5/3 5/5 5/6* 5/9* 5/10 5/12* 5/12* 5/13* 5/13* 5/16 5/17 5/19* 5/20*
vs. Wyoming vs. Brigham Young vs. Washington vs. UC Riverside vs. Mississippi State vs. Yale vs. Ohio State at Cal State Los Angeles UC Riverside Yale at Long Beach State Pepperdine Westmont College Fullerton JC Washington Washington Washington State Washington State California California Cal State Los Angeles Chapman College at California at Stanford at Stanford Cal Lutheran at Chapman College Santa Clara at USC at S.F. Valley State Los Angeles CC at Oregon State at Oregon State at Oregon at Oregon Loyola UC Santa Barbara USC USC
L W W W W W W L W W W W W W W W W W W W L W W L L W W W L W L L L W W W L W L
4-3 5-4 2-1 10-2 12-10 2-0 4-3 6-4 12-2 7-4 5-4 8-6 8-4 10-2 8-0 3-0 11-5 6-3 8-7 8-3 6-1 7-5 1-0 8-3 9-2 13-5 2-0 8-7 8-1 3-2 4-2 4-1 5-4 10-2 3-0 7-0 2-1 12-8 10-2
15-9 16-9 17-9 18-9 19-9 20-9 21-9 21-10 22-10 23-10 24-10 25-10 26-10 27-10 28-10 29-10 30-10 31-10 32-10 33-10 33-11 34-11 35-11 35-12 35-13 36-13 37-13 38-13 38-14 39-14 39-15 39-16 39-17 40-17 41-17 42-17 42-18 43-18 43-19
* Pac-8 Games # UC Riverside Tournament
1968 (35-20, 11-8, 4th) Head Coach: Arthur Reichle Date
Opponent
Result
2/6 2/15 2/16 2/16 2/17 2/20 2/21 2/23 2/24 2/24 2/27 2/28 3/1 3/2 3/2 3/6 3/8 3/8 3/18# 3/19# 3/19# 3/20# 3/21# 3/23# 3/23# 3/26 3/27 3/29 4/5 4/11 4/11 4/13 4/16 4/17 4/19* 4/20* 4/20* 4/23 4/26* 4/27* 4/27* 4/29* 4/29* 4/30* 5/3* 5/4* 5/7 5/10* 5/11* 5/11* 5/17* 5/18* 5/18* 5/21* 5/25*
Los Angeles CC at College of Sequoias at College of Sequoias at College of Sequoias at L.B. Merchants at S.F. Valley State at El Camino at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State at Cal State Fullerton San Diego State UC Riverside Cal Poly Cal Poly at Cal State Los Angeles at Cal Poly Pomona at Cal Poly Pomona Tennessee Brigham Young Pittsburgh UC Riverside Kansas Oregon Mississippi State UC Santa Barbara at Pierce College Los Angeles CC Chapman College Arizona State Arizona State Occidental Long Beach State Fullerton JC at Stanford at California at California Cal State Los Angeles Oregon Oregon State Oregon State Washington State Washington State Washington at USC at USC Cal Lutheran California Stanford Stanford at Washington State at Washington at Washington at Oregon State USC
W L W W W L W W L L W W W W W W L L W W L L W W W L L W W W L W W W L W W L W W W W L W W L W L L L L W W W L
8-7 7-3 7-0 9-4 11-6 3-2 5-3 6-5 4-3 6-0 4-2 3-2 7-4 8-4 6-4 5-4 4-2 8-3 1-0 5-2 4-3 1-0 19-5 4-3 12-6 4-3 4-2 9-2 7-5 5-1 6-5 9-3 2-1 4-1 7-3 3-2 6-3 8-6 7-2 11-8 2-1 4-3 10-6 5-4 7-4 8-3 10-1 4-2 4-0 8-4 8-0 17-7 8-4 8-5 11-2
Record 1-0 0-1 2-1 3-1 4-1 4-2 5-2 6-2 6-3 6-4 7-4 8-4 9-4 10-4 11-4 12-4 12-5 12-6 13-6 14-6 14-7 14-8 15-8 16-8 17-8 17-9 17-10 18-10 19-10 20-10 20-11 21-11 22-11 23-11 23-12 24-12 25-12 25-13 26-13 27-13 28-13 29-13 29-14 30-14 31-14 31-15 32-15 32-16 32-17 32-18 32-19 33-19 34-19 35-19 35-20
* Pac-8 Conference game # UC Riverside Tournament
1969 (42-12-1, 17-4, 1st) Head Coach: Arthur Reichle Date
Opponent
Result
2/7 2/11 2/13 2/14 2/26 3/1 3/1 3/4
Long Beach CC Cal Lutheran College of Sequoias at Fresno State Pepperdine Cal Poly Cal Poly Loyola
W W L W W W W W
6-0 10-0 1-0 4-0 5-4 11-1 5-2 14-7
Record 1-0 2-0 2-1 3-1 4-1 5-1 6-1 7-1
3/5 3/7 3/8 3/8 3/11 3/12 3/14 3/25 3/25 3/28 3/29 3/29 3/31^ 4/1^ 4/1^ 4/2^ 4/4^ 4/5^ 4/5^ 4/8 4/9 4/11* 4/12* 4/12* 4/15 4/18* 4/19* 4/19* 4/21* 4/21* 4/22* 4/25* 4/26* 4/26* 5/3* 5/9* 5/10* 5/10* 5/12* 5/12* 5/13* 5/16* 5/17* 5/23# 5/24# 6/13% 6/14%
at Occidental at S.F. Valley State at San Diego State at San Diego State Cal State Fullerton at Claremont at Long Beach State Utah Utah at Chapman College at Cal State Los Angeles at Cal State Los Angeles Illinois Indiana Delaware UC Riverside Mississippi USC Brigham Young S.F. Valley State San Diego State Stanford California California Cal Poly Pomona Washington State Washington Washington Oregon Oregon Oregon State at California at Stanford at Stanford USC at Oregon at Oregon State at Oregon State at Washington State at Washington State at Washington USC at USC Santa Clara Santa Clara Tulsa Arizona State
W W W W W W W W W T W L L W W W W L L L W L L W W W W W L W W L W W W W W W W W W W W W W L L
3-1 8-1 8-3 9-1 10-6 10-1 9-0 11-1 6-5 12-1 13-3 13-1 2-1 14-1 5-4 15-1 3-0 16-1 2-2 16-1-1 8-1 17-1-1 5-4 17-2-1 12-8 17-3-1 6-4 18-3-1 6-0 19-3-1 10-7 20-3-1 5-1 21-3-1 11-3 21-4-1 11-7 21-5-1 4-3 21-6-1 9-8 22-6-1 3-2 22-7-1 3-1 22-8-1 5-4 23-8-1 11-8 24-8-1 1-0 25-8-1 6-2 26-8-1 7-0 27-8-1 2-1 27-9-1 7-0 28-9-1 2-1 29-9-1 3-2 29-10-1 5-0 30-10-1 4-3 31-10-1 6-5 32-10-1 4-1 33-10-1 12-2 34-10-1 3-1 35-10-1 4-1 36-10-1 9-7 37-10-1 5-2 38-10-1 9-4 39-10-1 14-5 40-10-1 7-5 41-10-1 2-1 42-10-1 6-5 42-11-1 2-1 (11)42-12-1
* Pac-8 Conference game ^ Riverside Tournament # NCAA Tournament District 8 (Sawtelle Field) % College World Series (Omaha, Neb.)
1970 (26-24-1, 8-7, 2nd) Head Coach: Arthur Reichle Date
Opponent
Result
2/12 2/13 2/14 2/14 2/17 2/18 2/20 2/21 2/21 2/23 2/24 2/27 3/3 3/6 3/7 3/7 3/10 3/25 3/26 3/27 3/28 3/28 4/1 4/3 4/4 4/4 4/11* 4/14 4/15 4/17* 4/18* 4/18* 4/22 4/24* 4/25* 4/25* 4/28 5/1* 5/1* 5/2* 5/2* 5/5 5/9* 5/9* 5/13 5/15* 5/16* 5/21** 5/22** 5/22** 5/23**
at College of Sequoias at Fresno State at Fresno State at Fresno State at UC Irvine at Long Beach State Westmont College Cal Poly Cal Poly San Diego State Long Beach State at Chapman College Occidental Loyola at Cal State Los Angeles at Cal State Los Angeles Pepperdine at Loyola Gonzaga at Loyola Utah Utah Fullerton JC UC Santa Barbara at UC Santa Barbara at UC Santa Barbara at USC at Cal Poly Pomona Cal Poly Pomona at Stanford at California at California Pierce College California Stanford Stanford Valley College Washington State Washington State Washington Washington Chapman College at Oregon State at Oregon State Cal Lutheran USC at USC Washington State USC Oregon State USC
L L L W L L L W W W W L W W W T W L W L W L W W L L L W L W L L W W W L L W L W W L W W W L L W L W L
Record
5-4 0-1 1-0 0-2 7-4 0-3 5-4 1-3 7-0 1-4 6-5 1-5 12-10 1-6 10-4 2-6 10-5 3-6 13-9 4-6 5-4 5-6 5-3 5-7 2-1 6-7 4-3 7-7 3-2 8-7 4-4 8-7-1 15-1 9-7-1 10-9 9-8-1 8-4 10-8-1 12-4 10-9-1 12-9 11-9-1 7-5 11-10-1 8-6 12-10-1 6-5 13-10-1 4-2 13-11-1 2-1 13-12-1 8-2 13-13-1 4-1 14-13-1 11-9 14-14-1 5-4 15-14-1 2-1 15-15-1 3-2 15-16-1 11-4 16-16-1 5-1 17-16-1 8-4 18-16-1 6-0 18-17-1 4-0 18-18-1 5-4 19-18-1 8-3 19-19-1 7-3 20-19-1 16-2 21-19-1 6-1 21-20-1 7-3 22-20-1 4-3 23-20-1 11-0 24-20-1 8-5 24-21-1 4-1 24-22-1 5-4 25-22-1 8-4 25-23-1 13-2 26-23-1 7-1 26-24-1
* Pac-8 Conference game ** Pac-8 Conference Tournament game
1971 (38-17, 11-6, 3rd) Head Coach: Arthur Reichle Date
Opponent
Result
2/9 2/11 2/12
Cal Poly Pomona at College of Sequoias at Fresno State
W W L
13-0 30-0 10-3
Record 1-0 2-0 2-1
2/13 2/13 2/17 2/19 2/20 2/20 2/23 2/24 2/26 2/27 3/2 3/3 3/5 3/6 3/6 3/12 3/22^ 3/23^ 3/24^ 3/25^ 3/26^ 3/27^ 3/29 3/30 4/3 4/3 4/6 4/7 4/13* 4/16* 4/17* 4/17* 4/20 4/23* 4/24* 4/24* 4/28 4/30* 4/30* 5/1* 5/1* 5/4 5/5 5/7* 5/7* 5/8* 5/8* 5/11 5/11 5/12 5/14* 5/15* 5/18
at Fresno State at Fresno State Long Beach State UC Santa Barbara at Chapman College at Chapman College Cal Poly Pomona Westmont College at Long Beach State at Long Beach State at Cal State Los Angeles Cal State Los Angeles at Loyola at UC Santa Barbara at UC Santa Barbara Pepperdine Cal Poly Pomona UC Irvine Cal State Fullerton Chapman College Southern Illinois Chapman College Gonzaga at Pepperdine at Angels at Angels Occidental UC Irvine USC Stanford California California San Diego State at California at Stanford at Stanford at Cal State Los Angeles Oregon State Oregon State Oregon Oregon Loyola S.F. Valley State at Washington at Washington at Washington State at Washington State at Loyola at Loyola Cal State Los Angeles at USC USC Chapman College
W L L L W W L W W W W W T L W W L L W W W W L L W W W W L W W W W L L L W W W W W L W W W W W L W W L L W
9-3 4-3 4-2 5-3 6-3 4-3 4-3 2-1 7-3 6-2 2-1 6-4 6-6 6-5 6-0 13-1 4-3 4-1
3-1 3-2 3-3 3-4 4-4 5-4 5-5 6-5 7-5 8-5 9-5 10-5 10-5-1 10-6-1 11-6-1 12-6-1 12-7-1 13-7-1 14-7-1 15-7-1 6-5 16-7-1 9-6 17-7-1 5-0 17-8-1 4-1 17-9-1 9-4 18-9-1 4-1 19-9-1 8-2 20-9-1 9-6 21-9-1 7-1 21-10-1 6-4 22-10-1 11-8 23-10-1 8-6 24-10-1 6-5 25-10-1 6-1 25-11-1 2-1 25-12-1 3-2 25-13-1 13-6 26-13-1 4-3 27-13-1 5-1 28-13-1 3-1 29-13-1 18-1 30-13-1 7-5 30-14-1 31-14-1 2-1 32-14-1 12-1 33-14-1 5-1 34-14-1 11-0 35-14-1 8-7 35-15-1 11-10 36-15-1 37-15-1 1-0 37-16-1 6-3 37-17-1 6-5 38-17-1
* Pac-8 Conference game ^ Anaheim Collegiate Baseball Tournament
1972 (32-33-1, 4-14, 4th) Head Coach: Arthur Reichle Date
Opponent
Result
Record
2/6 2/6 2/8 2/10 2/11 2/12 2/12 2/15 2/18 2/19 2/19 2/22 2/23 2/25 2/26 2/26 2/29 3/1 3/3 3/4 3/4 3/7 3/8 3/10 3/21^ 3/21^ 3/22^ 3/23^ 3/23^ 3/24^ 3/25^ 3/28^ 3/29^ 3/31 4/1 4/1 4/4 4/5 4/7* 4/8* 4/8* 4/11 4/12 4/14* 4/15* 4/15* 4/18 4/19 4/21* 4/22* 4/22* 4/25 4/26 4/28* 4/29* 4/29*
at San Diego State at San Diego State at UC Irvine at College of Sequoias at Fresno State at Fresno State at Fresno State at Fullerton JC Arizona Arizona Arizona Cal Lutheran Cal Poly Pomona Loyola Cal State Los Angeles Cal State Los Angeles Westmont College Pepperdine UC Santa Barbara UC Santa Barbara at UC Santa Barbara San Diego State at Cal State Los Angeles at Long Beach State Santa Clara Cornell Tennessee UC Riverside South Carolina Stanford Arizona State Gonzaga Long Beach State at Chapman College at California Angels at California Angels at S.F. Valley State at Chapman College California California California S.F. Valley State at Occidental at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford at Cal Poly Pomona UC Irvine at USC USC USC Long Beach State at Pepperdine Stanford Stanford Stanford
L T L W L L W W L W W L W L W W W W W L W W W W W W W W W L L L W L W W L L L L L L L L L W L L L L L W W L W L
0-1 0-1-1 0-2-1 1-2-1 1-3-1 1-4-1 2-4-1 3-4-1 3-5-1 4-5-1 5-5-1 5-6-1 6-6-1 6-7-1 7-7-1 8-7-1 9-7-1 10-7-1 11-7-1 11-8-1 12-8-1 13-8-1 14-8-1 15-8-1 16-8-1 17-8-1 18-8-1 19-8-1 20-8-1 20-9-1 20-10-1 20-11-1 21-11-1 21-12-1 22-12-1 23-12-1 23-13-1 23-14-1 23-15-1 23-16-1 23-17-1 23-18-1 23-19-1 23-20-1 23-21-1 24-21-1 24-22-1 24-23-1 24-24-1 24-25-1 24-26-1 25-26-1 26-26-1 26-27-1 27-27-1 27-28-1
79
10-6 4-4 9-0 24-8 7-2 4-3 11-0 5-4 6-5 11-7 3-2 8-6 5-0 10-9 7-3 10-0 3-2 4-3 9-2 2-1 2-1 9-3 4-3 9-1 5-2 11-3 5-2 8-3 10-4 6-0 12-1 7-3 11-1 6-2 4-1 11-1 4-2 3-1 4-2 4-2 4-1 6-5 6-2 4-3 4-2 3-1 2-0 10-6 2-1 5-2 10-0 7-6 9-2 16-13 8-7 20-3
5/2 5/3 5/5* 5/6* 5/6* 5/9 5/10 5/12* 5/13* 5/13*
Cal Poly Pomona Loyola at California at California at California at Cal State Los Angeles at Loyola USC at USC at USC
W W L W L W L L L W
12-9 8-5 3-2 9-5 4-3 14-8 3-1 8-6 9-2 7-6
28-28-1 29-28-1 29-29-1 30-29-1 30-30-1 31-30-1 31-31-1 31-32-1 31-33-1 32-33-1
* Pac-8 Conference game ^ UC Riverside Tournament
1973 (29-24, 7-11, 3rd) Head Coach: Arthur Reichle Date
Opponent
Result
2/9 2/10 2/10 2/13 2/14 2/16 2/19 2/23 2/23 2/26 2/27 3/1 3/2 3/3 3/3 3/7 3/10* 3/10* 3/13 3/14 3/16 3/16 3/24 3/24 4/3 4/4 4/6* 4/7* 4/7* 4/11^ 4/14* 4/15* 4/15* 4/17 4/18 4/20 4/21 4/21 4/24 4/25 4/27* 4/28* 4/28* 5/1 5/2 5/4* 5/5* 5/5* 5/8 5/10* 5/11* 5/12* 5/12*
at Fresno State at Fresno State at Fresno State at Cal State Northridge at San Diego State Cal Lutheran at Arizona Loyola Loyola at Cal State Northridge at Loyola Chapman College at Long Beach State Los Angeles CC Los Angeles CC Occidental at USC at USC Long Beach State UC Santa Barbara at Cal Poly Pomona at Cal Poly Pomona Gonzaga Gonzaga at Loyola UC Irvine Stanford Stanford Stanford Chapman College at California at California at California Cal State Northridge Pepperdine at Cal State Los Angeles at UC Santa Barbara at UC Santa Barbara Cal Poly Pomona Westmont College California California California at Cal State Los Angeles at Pepperdine at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford at UC Irvine at USC at USC USC USC
W L L L W W W W L W W W L W W W L L W W L L W W W W W L W W L W W L W W L W W L L W L L L W L L L W L L L
2-1 6-3 2-1 4-2 11-6 6-3 2-1 10-5 8-3 12-5 11-0 6-3 2-1 11-6 6-3 8-1 6-3 10-1 8-4 10-8 1-0 6-5 5-1 10-3 7-6 3-2 3-2 7-3 4-2 15-3 3-0 5-4 7-6 12-10 10-3 6-5 5-1 2-1 9-1 7-6 3-1 5-2 4-2 6-5 9-3 2-1 4-2 3-1 4-2 6-5 6-2 8-4 6-4
Record 1-0 1-1 1-2 1-3 2-3 3-3 4-3 5-3 5-4 6-4 7-4 8-4 8-5 9-5 10-5 11-5 11-6 11-7 12-7 13-7 13-8 13-9 14-9 15-9 16-9 17-9 18-9 18-10 19-10 20-10 20-11 21-11 22-11 22-12 23-12 24-12 24-13 25-13 26-13 26-14 26-15 27-15 27-16 27-17 27-18 28-18 28-19 28-20 28-21 29-21 29-22 29-23 29-24
* Pac-8 Conference Game ^ played at La Palma
1974 (26-35, 7-11, 4th) Head Coach: Arthur Reichle Date
Opponent
Result
2/5 2/6 2/8 2/9 2/9 2/12 2/13 2/15 2/16 2/16 2/18 2/18 2/19 2/21 2/23 2/23 2/26 2/27 3/5 3/6 3/8 3/9 3/12 3/13
Cal State Northridge at Long Beach State Fresno State at Loyola at Loyola at Cal State Fullerton UC Irvine UC Santa Barbara at Cal State Los Angeles at Cal State Los Angeles at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State at Chapman College San Diego State San Diego State at Occidental at Pepperdine CS Dominguez Hills at San Diego State Arizona Arizona Loyola Cal Lutheran at UC Santa Barbara Cal State Los Angeles Cal State Los Angeles vs. Oregon vs. Tulane vs. Stanford vs. UC Riverside vs. Wisconsin vs. BYU vs. Arizona State at UC Irvine at UC Irvine at California at California at California
L L L L L L L L L L L W L L L W W L W W L L W W W W W W W L L W W L L L W L L
3/23 3/23 3/25# 3/26# 3/27# 3/28# 3/29# 3/30# 4/3 4/3 4/5* 4/6* 4/6*
6-5 4-3 5-2 10-5 5-4 5-1 6-2 18-8 6-3 4-3 7-2 7-6 14-2 6-3 5-1 7-3 3-2 1-2 19-1 10-5 9-6 13-1 9-8 10-6 13-6 5-3 9-1 10-2 4-2 6-4 8-4 7-6 2-1 5-0 6-4 13-6 4-3 3-2 16-6
Record 0-1 0-2 0-3 0-4 0-5 0-6 0-7 0-8 0-9 0-10 0-11 1-11 1-12 1-13 1-14 2-14 3-14 3-15 4-15 5-15 5-16 5-17 6-17 7-17 8-17 9-17 10-17 11-17 12-17 12-18 12-19 13-19 14-19 14-20 14-21 14-22 15-22 15-23 15-24
GAME-BY-GAME RESULTS 4/10 4/10 4/12* 4/13* 4/13* 4/19* 4/20* 4/20* 4/23 4/24 4/26* 4/27* 4/27* 4/30 5/1 5/3* 5/4* 5/4* 5/10* 5/11* 5/11*
Hawaii Gonzaga Gonzaga Stanford Stanford Stanford USC at USC at USC at Cal Poly Pomona Pepperdine at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford at Cal State Northridge Cal Poly Pomona California California California at USC USC USC
W W W W W W L L L W L L L L L W W W L L W L
15-6 9-5 13-2 8-3 6-0 11-8 8-2 11-5 6-5 4-2 5-4 2-0 6-0 8-7 7-6 9-7 11-10 5-4 9-6 10-0 6-5 22-2
16-24 17-24 18-24 19-24 20-24 21-24 21-25 21-26 21-27 22-27 22-28 22-29 22-30 22-31 22-32 23-32 24-32 25-32 25-33 25-34 26-34 26-35
* Pac-8 Conference game # Riverside Tournament
1975 (31-22, 7-11, 3rd) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
2/7 2/8 2/8 2/11 2/12 2/14 2/15 2/15 2/17 2/17 2/21 2/22 2/22 2/25 2/26 2/28 3/1 3/1 3/3 3/4 3/5 3/7 3/12 3/14 3/26 3/29^ 3/31 4/2 4/4* 4/5* 4/5* 4/8 4/11* 4/12* 4/13* 4/15 4/16 4/18* 4/19* 4/19* 4/22 4/25* 4/26* 4/26* 4/29 5/2* 5/3* 5/3* 5/6 5/7 5/9* 5/10* 5/10*
at Fresno State at Fresno State at Fresno State at UC Irvine Occidental Cal State Fullerton at UC Santa Barbara at UC Santa Barbara San Diego State San Diego State SoCal College at Cal State Los Angeles at Cal State Los Angeles Loyola Marymount Chapman College San Diego State UC Irvine UC Irvine at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona State Pepperdine Cal State Northridge at Loyola Marymount Oregon Utah Washington State Westmont College at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford at Pepperdine California California California Cal State Los Angeles CS Dominguez Hills USC at USC at USC Cal Poly Pomona at California at California at California at Cal State Northridge Stanford Stanford Stanford at Cal Poly Pomona UC Santa Barbara at USC USC USC
W W W W W L L W W W W W W L W L W W L L L W L W L W W W W L L W W W W W W L L L W W L L L W L L L W W L L
9-7 5-2 2-0 11-8 12-4 7-2 10-9 5-1 9-4 9-6 9-0 9-1 3-1 8-7 10-2 6-5 15-6 13-6 18-0 9-3 15-3 4-3 9-6 15-12 3-2 4-3 16-4 12-2 3-0 4-1 7-3 6-1 6-5 9-7 15-11 8-6 6-1 7-2 6-4 6-4 2-1 4-3 5-4 10-0 11-3 9-5 4-3 13-3 5-3 5-2 6-3 10-4 5-0
Record 1-0 2-0 3-0 4-0 5-0 5-1 5-2 6-2 7-2 8-2 9-2 10-2 11-2 11-3 12-3 12-4 13-4 14-4 14-5 14-6 14-7 15-7 15-8 16-8 16-9 17-9 18-9 19-9 20-9 20-10 20-11 27-14 21-11 22-11 23-11 24-11 25-11 25-12 25-13 25-14 26-14 28-14 28-15 28-16 28-17 29-17 29-18 29-19 29-20 30-20 31-20 31-21 31-22
* Pac-8 conference game ^ Neutral site (Pomona) NA - Not available
1976 (35-25, 16-8, 1st) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
2/13 2/14 2/14 2/16 2/16 2/17 2/20 2/21 2/21 2/25 2/27 2/28 2/28 3/2 3/4* 3/5* 3/6* 3/9 3/10 3/12* 3/13* 3/13* 3/15 3/16 3/17 3/19* 3/20*
Fresno State Fresno State Fresno State at UC Irvine at UC Irvine Whittier College at Cal State Northridge at Cal State Fullerton at Cal State Fullerton Long Beach State Pepperdine Cal State Los Angeles Cal State Los Angeles Occidental at USC USC USC Loyola Marymount Gonzaga Stanford Stanford Stanford Arizona at Long Beach State at CS Dominguez Hills at California at California
W W L L W W L L L W W W W W W L L L W W L W W L W W W
12-3 6-2 7-0 3-2 4-3 8-7 12-11 5-1 6-2 3-2 12-11 14-4 8-7 15-3 9-0 4-1 13-6 13-11 3-2 5-3 5-4 4-3 5-0 6-4 4-0 8-3 17-2
Record 1-0 2-0 2-1 2-2 3-2 4-2 4-3 4-4 4-5 5-5 6-5 7-5 8-5 9-5 10-5 10-6 10-7 10-8 11-8 12-8 12-9 13-9 14-9 14-10 15-10 16-10 17-10
3/20* NA 3/30 3/30 4/2* 4/3* 4/3* 4/5 NA 4/9 4/10 4/10 4/14 4/16* 4/17* 4/17* 4/20 4/23* 4/24* 4/24* 4/27 4/27 4/28 4/30 NA 5/4 5/5 5/7* 5/8* 5/8* 5/13* 5/14* 5/15*
at California at San Diego State at San Diego State. at San Diego State at UC Santa Barbara UC Santa Barbara UC Santa Barbara at SoCal College Chapman College at UNLV at UNLV at UNLV SoCal College UC Santa Barbara at UC Santa Barbara at UC Santa Barbara at Pepperdine at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford Cal State Northridge Cal Poly Pomona CS Dominguez Hills UC Irvine at Cal Poly Pomona Loyola Marymount Westmont College California California California USC at USC USC
L L L L W W W W L L W W W W L W L L W W L W L W L L W W W W L L W
2-1 6-3 4-3 3-2 7-2 6-2 11-10 6-0 6-3 4-3 8-6 12-2 12-3 14-4 9-6 5-2 4-2 13-9 8-7 5-3 6-1 9-2 6-4 11-7 6-3 15-6 9-6 10-3 9-7 3-2 6-3 7-3 7-6
17-11 17-12 17-13 17-14 18-14 19-14 20-14 21-14 21-15 21-16 22-16 23-16 24-16 25-16 25-17 26-17 26-18 26-19 27-19 28-19 28-20 29-20 29-21 30-21 30-22 30-23 31-23 32-23 33-23 34-23 34-24 34-25 35-25
* CIBA/Pac-8 South Conference game NA - not available
1977 (31-30, 10-8, 2nd) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
2/8 2/9 2/11 2/12 2/12 2/15 2/16 2/19 2/19 2/21 2/21 2/25 2/26 2/26 2/28 3/1 3/4* 3/5* 3/5* 3/8 3/9 3/11 3/11 NA 3/15 3/18 3/19 NA^ NA^ NA^ NA^ NA^ NA^ NA^ 4/5 4/6 4/8* 4/9* 4/9* 4/12 4/13 4/15* 4/16* 4/16* 4/19 4/20 4/22* 4/23* 4/23* 4/26 4/27 4/30 4/30 5/3 5/4 5/6* 5/7* 5/7* 5/12* 5/13* 5/14*
Cal State Fullerton Cal State Northridge at San Diego State at San Diego State at San Diego State Chapman College Cal Poly Pomona at Cal State Fullerton at Cal State Fullerton UC Irvine UC Irvine at UC Santa Barbara at Cal State Los Angeles at Cal State Los Angeles Occidental at Cal State Northridge California California California at CS Dominguez Hills at Cal Poly Pomona Stanislaus State CS Dominguez Hills Pepperdine Westmont College Arizona Arizona Pittsburgh California BYU Missouri UC Riverside Washington State Oral Roberts at Loyola Marymount UC Santa Barbara Stanford Stanford Stanford Long Beach State Whittier College at USC USC USC Cal State Los Angeles SoCal College at California at California at California at Pepperdine Loyola Marymount Cal State Los Angeles Cal State Los Angeles Loyola Marymount at Long Beach State at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford at USC USC at USC
L W L L L W W L L W L W W W W L W W W L L W L W L W L W L W L L L L L W W W W W W L L L W L L W W W L W L W W L L W W L L
13-6 8-4 8-6 11-4 9-7 4-1 4-3 7-1 7-0 3-2 6-3 11-2 6-5 4-1 12-0 5-2 7-6 17-0 7-6 6-4 3-1 6-0 3-1 5-1 9-2 7-1 9-1 4-0 7-5 10-4 8-7 8-4 6-2 4-1 8-7 14-10 4-3 8-6 5-4 4-1 5-2 8-4 5-3 8-7 10-4 15-4 5-4 13-10 11-0 3-2 7-5 6-1 5-3 6-4 12-8 5-4 19-3 7-1 7-4 2-1 4-3
Record 0-1 1-1 1-2 1-3 1-4 2-4 3-4 3-5 3-6 4-6 4-7 5-7 6-7 7-7 8-7 8-8 9-8 10-8 11-8 11-9 11-10 12-10 12-11 13-11 13-12 14-12 14-13 15-13 15-14 16-14 16-15 16-16 16-17 16-18 16-19 17-19 18-19 19-19 20-19 21-19 22-19 22-20 22-21 22-22 23-22 23-23 23-24 24-24 25-24 26-24 26-25 27-25 27-26 28-26 29-26 29-27 29-28 30-28 31-28 31-29 31-30
* Pac-8 Conference game ^ Riverside Tournament game (3/28 - 4/2) NA - not available
1978 (39-20, 9-9, 2nd) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
2/16 2/17 2/18 2/18 2/20 2/20 2/21 NA
at Cal Poly Pomona CS Dominguez Hills Cal Poly Pomona Cal Poly Pomona at UC Irvine at UC Irvine Cal State Northridge Cal State Los Angeles
W W W W W W W W
5-4 14-0 5-4 3-0 7-5 11-2 17-1 22-6
Record 1-0 2-0 3-0 4-0 5-0 6-0 7-0 8-0
2/24 2/25 2/25 NA 3/8 NA^ 3/11 3/11 3/14 3/15 3/17 3/18 3/18 3/28 3/28 3/30 3/30 3/31 3/31 4/3 4/3 4/5 4/7* 4/8* 4/8* 4/11 4/12 4/14* 4/15*! 4/15*! 4/18 4/20* 4/21* 4/22* 4/25 4/26 4/28* 4/29* 4/29* 5/2 5/2 5/3 5/5* 5/6* 5/6* NA 5/9 5/11* 5/12* 5/13* 5/23$
at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona Occidental UC Irvine Loyola Marymount at Long Beach State at Long Beach State at Cal State Fullerton New Mexico at Chapman College Cal State Fullerton Cal State Fullerton at Hawaii at Hawaii at Hawaii at Hawaii at Hawaii at Hawaii Washington State Washington State SoCal College at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford UC Santa Barbara Long Beach State California California California at Loyola Marymount at USC USC at USC Pepperdine at CS Dominguez Hills Stanford Stanford Stanford San Diego State San Diego State Westmont College at California at California at California at Cal State Los Angeles at Pepperdine USC at USC USC vs. Washington State
L L L W W W W W W W W W L L W L L L L W W W L L W W W W W W W L L L W W W W L W W W W L W W L L L W L
3-0 5-3 6-3 5-0 6-0 10-5 5-2 3-2 4-1 2-1 6-2 4-3 1-0 2-1 9-0 1-0 6-1 7-4 5-3 15-5 6-0 3-0 8-7 10-9 4-2 5-2 22-0 8-3 2-0 11-4 8-6 6-5 5-4 7-3 9-2 6-3 6-1 15-8 8-6 8-2 8-7 11-1 12-6 5-4 6-4 6-5 5-1 1-0 7-6 9-8 7-6
8-1 8-2 8-3 9-3 10-3 11-3 12-3 13-3 14-3 15-3 16-3 17-3 17-4 17-5 18-5 18-6 18-7 18-8 18-9 19-9 20-9 21-9 21-10 21-11 22-11 23-11 24-11 25-11 26-11 27-11 28-11 28-12 28-13 28-14 29-14 30-14 31-14 32-14 32-15 33-15 34-15 35-15 36-15 36-16 37-16 38-16 38-17 38-18 38-19 39-19 39-20
* Pac-8 Conference game ^ UCLA home game (at LMU) ! UCLA home game (at Palm Springs) $ Pac-8 playoff game (at Stanford, for NCAA Tournament berth) NA - not available
1979 (43-18, 21-9, 1st) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
2/7 2/8 2/10 2/13 2/14 2/16 2/17 2/19 2/19 2/24 2/24 2/26 2/27 2/28 3/3* 3/3* 3/4* 3/6 3/8* 3/9* 3/10* 3/18* 3/24 3/24 3/30* 3/31* 3/31* 4/3 4/5* 4/6* 4/7 4/10 4/12*! 4/12*^ 4/13* 4/14* 4/14* 4/16 4/17 4/19* 4/20* 4/21* 4/23 4/24 4/27* 4/28* 4/28* 4/30 5/2 5/4* 5/6* 5/6* 5/7 5/8 5/10*
Westmont College at Cal State Northridge at UC Santa Barbara Occidental Chapman College Pepperdine at Pepperdine UC Irvine UC Irvine Cal State Los Angeles Cal State Los Angeles Long Beach State Cal State Fullerton Wheaton College Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State at Cal State Los Angeles at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona at California Oregon Oregon Stanford Stanford Stanford at San Diego State at USC USC at USC at Cal Poly Pomona California California California California California at Loyola Marymount at CS Dominguez Hills at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State Loyola Marymount at UC Irvine Arizona Arizona Arizona at Long Beach State SoCal College at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford Cal Poly Pomona San Diego State USC
W W W W W L W W W W W L L W W W W L W L W L W W W L W W W W W L W W W L L W W W W W W W W W L L W L L W W L W
80
6-0 8-1 7-3 8-2 3-1 10-9 2-1 16-1 3-2 7-0 5-4 6-5 9-2 28-2 5-4 7-6 19-2 10-7 12-4 13-4 15-10 8-7 14-3 5-4 6-3 9-7 20-2 5-2 6-5 7-4 10-4 6-5 13-12 6-5 9-5 18-12 3-2 8-3 7-1 4-3 8-4 6-5 17-15 14-11 13-1 12-6 6-5 7-2 19-2 5-4 10-4 4-3 10-4 11-6 12-5
Record 1-0 2-0 3-0 4-0 5-0 5-1 6-1 7-1 8-1 9-1 10-1 10-2 10-3 11-3 12-3 13-3 14-3 14-4 15-4 15-5 16-5 16-6 17-6 18-6 19-6 19-7 20-7 21-7 22-7 23-7 24-7 24-8 25-8 26-8 27-8 27-9 27-10 28-10 29-10 30-10 31-10 32-10 33-10 34-10 35-10 36-10 36-11 36-12 37-12 37-13 37-14 38-14 39-14 39-15 40-15
5/11* 5/12* 5/25 $ 5/26 $ 5/27 $ 5/28 $
at USC USC Cal State Fullerton Fresno State Cal State Fullerton Cal State Fullerton
L W W W L L
9-4 14-13 5-4 5-4 9-2 9-5
40-16 41-16 42-16 43-16 43-17 43-18
* Pac-10 Conference game ! completion of game was 3/18 at California ^ California home game at UCLA (Sawtelle Field) $ NCAA District 8 playoffs at Fresno, CA
1980 (31-22-3, 15-15, t-3rd) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
2/5 2/6 2/8 2/9 2/10 2/12 2/23 2/23 2/24 2/26 2/27 2/29* 3/1* 3/4 3/7* 3/8* 3/9* 3/11 3/13* 3/14* 3/15* 3/22* 3/23* 3/24* 3/26 3/28* 3/29* 3/30* 4/1 4/2 4/3^ 4/7 4/8 4/10* 4/11* 4/12* 4/14 4/15 4/16 4/19* 4/20* 4/21* 4/22 4/24* 4/25* 4/26* 4/29! 5/3* 5/3* 5/4* 5/5 5/6 5/7* 5/8* 5/9* 5/10*
at Cal State Los Angeles at Occidental at Loyola Marymount at Pepperdine at Pepperdine at UC Irvine UC Santa Barbara UC Santa Barbara Cal State Fullerton SoCal College at Cal State Los Angeles at USC at USC at Cal State Northridge California California California at Cal State Fullerton Arizona Arizona Arizona at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State Long Beach State at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford at Loyola Marymount at Cal State Fullerton St. Mary’s at Chapman College at San Diego State at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona Westmont College Cal Poly Pomona at Cal Poly Pomona Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State La Verne at California at California at California San Diego State Stanford Stanford Stanford at CS Dominguez Hills CS Dominguez Hills USC USC USC at USC
L W L W T T W W L W W L W L L W W L W W W L W L L L L L W T W W W L L W W W W L L W W L L L W W W W L W L W W W
Record
4-3 1-0 5-4 1-1 12-4 1-2 8-7 2-2 8-8 2-2-1 3-3 2-2-2 4-2 3-2-2 15-0 4-2-2 4-0 4-3-2 11-3 5-3-2 13-3 6-3-2 6-4 6-4-2 8-1 7-4-2 6-4 7-5-2 5-0 7-6-2 5-4 8-6-2 8-0 9-6-2 1-0 9-7-2 5-1 10-7-2 8-2 11-7-2 7-5 12-7-2 4-3 12-8-2 5-4 13-8-2 19-4 13-9-2 4-3 13-10-2 8-2 13-11-2 4-1 13-12-2 4-3 13-13-2 22-19 14-13-2 4-4 14-13-3 13-7 15-13-3 7-1 16-13-3 8-3 17-13-3 3-2 17-14-3 17-1 17-15-3 4-3 18-15-3 3-2 19-15-3 6-4 20-15-3 8-2 21-15-3 8-2 21-16-3 4-3 21-17-3 4-1 22-17-3 3-1 23-17-3 2-1 23-18-3 2-1 23-19-3 7-2 23-20-3 14-4 24-20-3 4-2 25-20-3 4-1 26-20-3 9-5 27-20-3 6-4 27-21-3 7-1 28-21-3 8-4 28-22-3 8-4 29-22-3 5-3 30-22-3 3-2 31-22-3
Note: Home games played at Pepperdine (Eddy D. Field Stadium) * Pac-10 conference game ^ UCLA home game (at West LA CC) ! UCLA home game (at Pierce College)
1981 (21-35, 7-23, 6th) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
2/10 2/11 2/13 2/14 2/15 2/16 2/16 2/18 2/20 2/21 2/21 2/24 2/25 2/27 3/3 3/6* 3/7* 3/8* 3/10 3/11 3/13* 3/14* 3/15* 3/16 3/17 3/21 3/21* 3/21* 3/22* 3/29* 3/30* 3/31* 4/3* 4/4* 4/5* 4/8 4/10*
at Loyola Marymount at Cal Poly Pomona at UC Irvine Pepperdine at Pepperdine at UC Santa Barbara at UC Santa Barbara Chapman College at Long Beach State Long Beach State Long Beach State at Cal State Fullerton at Cal State Los Angeles UC Irvine Loyola Marymount Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State UC San Diego La Verne at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona Oral Roberts San Diego State Cal State Fullerton Stanford Stanford Stanford at California at California at California USC at USC USC SoCal College Arizona
L L W L L L L W W W W L L L L L L L W W W L W L L W L L L L L L L L L W L
9-3 6-5 12-3 9-6 4-3 11-2 8-5 10-3 3-1 4-1 8-4 5-2 9-7 5-2 5-1 13-9 10-1 15-5 11-6 4-2 5-2 10-9 8-2 10-1 14-5 5-1 20-3 8-2 11-5 3-2 6-5 4-3 9-1 5-3 6-3 15-2 5-3
Record 0-1 0-2 1-2 1-3 1-4 1-5 1-6 2-6 3-6 4-6 5-6 5-7 5-8 5-9 5-10 5-11 5-12 5-13 6-13 7-13 8-13 8-14 9-14 9-15 9-16 10-16 10-17 10-18 10-19 10-20 10-21 10-22 10-23 10-24 10-25 11-25 11-26
GAME-BY-GAME RESULTS 4/11* 4/12* 4/14 4/15 4/16* 4/17* 4/18* 4/21 4/22 4/24* 4/25* 4/26* 4/29 5/1* 5/2* 5/3* 5/7* 5/8* 5/9*
Arizona Arizona at CS Dominguez Hills Westmont College at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford Occidental Cal State Northridge at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State Cal State Los Angeles California California California at USC USC at USC
W L W W L W W W W L L L W W L L W L L
9-8 10-5 13-6 9-8 6-5 15-9 10-7 9-4 7-6 6-5 10-9 14-9 13-11 8-0 4-2 9-8 12-6 10-2 6-4
12-26 12-27 13-27 14-27 14-28 15-28 16-28 17-28 18-28 18-29 18-30 18-31 19-31 20-31 20-32 20-33 21-33 21-34 21-35
* Pac-10 Conference game
1982 (38-27, 11-19, 4th) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
2/2 2/3 2/5 2/6 2/9 2/12 2/13 2/13 2/15 2/16 2/17 2/19 2/20 2/20 2/23 2/24 2/26* 2/27* 2/28* 3/3 3/6* 3/6* 3/7* 3/9 3/10 3/13* 3/15* 3/20* 3/20* 3/21* 3/30 3/31 4/5 4/7 4/9* 4/10* 4/10* 4/12 4/13 4/14 4/17* 4/17* 4/18* 4/20 4/21 4/22 4/23* 4/24* 4/25* 4/27 4/28 4/29*# 4/30* 5/1* 5/2* 5/3 5/5 5/5 5/7* 5/8* 5/9* 5/10 5/13* 5/14* 5/15*
Azusa Pacific U.S. International Pepperdine at Pepperdine Loyola Marymount at CS Dominguez Hills Cal Poly Pomona Cal Poly Pomona UC San Diego Cal State Fullerton Pomona-Pitzer at UC Irvine UC Irvine UC Irvine Long Beach State at Cal Poly Pomona at USC USC at USC Cal State Los Angeles at California at California at California at Cal State Fullerton San Diego Arizona State Arizona State Stanford Stanford Stanford at UNLV at UNLV SoCal College Cal State Los Angeles California California California at Cal State Northridge Chapman College San Diego State at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford at Occidental Cal Lutheran CS Dominguez Hills Arizona Arizona Arizona La Verne SoCal College Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State at Loyola Marymount UC Santa Barbara UC Santa Barbara at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona at San Diego State USC at USC USC
W W W L W W W W W W W W W W L W L W L W W L L L W L L L W L W L W W W W W W L W W L L L W W L L W W W L L L L L W L W L W W W L L
Record
12-8 13-0 18-14 17-4 6-4 7-1 9-4 11-3 17-1 16-6 14-1 4-2 1-0 16-4 11-6 13-12 4-1 8-1 12-6 7-6 11-9 15-3 7-6 9-7 7-6 4-2 4-3 11-5 7-5 11-8 13-11 10-9 15-2 6-1 6-5 11-10 17-11 10-8 9-6 3-2 4-3 9-3 16-5 4-0 4-2 8-0 2-1 6-2 3-0 11-5 7-2 6-2 10-4 18-4 9-2 14-7 11-6 7-2 10-7 7-5 12-6 7-3 7-6 13-9 17-8
1-0 2-0 3-0 3-1 4-1 5-1 6-1 7-1 8-1 9-1 10-1 11-1 12-1 13-1 13-2 14-2 14-3 15-3 15-4 16-4 17-4 17-5 17-6 17-7 18-7 18-8 18-9 18-10 19-10 19-11 20-11 20-12 21-12 22-12 23-12 24-12 25-12 26-12 26-13 27-13 28-13 28-14 28-15 28-16 29-16 30-16 30-17 30-18 31-18 32-18 33-18 33-19 33-20 33-21 33-22 33-23 34-23 34-24 35-24 35-25 36-25 37-25 38-25 38-26 38-27
* Pac-10 conference game # UCLA designated as home team vs. Arizona State (Tempe, Ariz.)
1983 (28-24-1, 12-18, 5th) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
2/9 2/10 2/11 2/12 2/12 2/15 2/16 2/18 2/19 2/21 2/22 2/23 2/25* 3/6* 3/8 3/9 3/11* 3/12* 3/13*
Cal State Los Angeles Occidental at Pepperdine at UC Irvine at UC Irvine Santa Clara Cal Poly Pomona UC Irvine Pepperdine at UC Santa Barbara at Chapman College Long Beach State Stanford at California at Cal State Fullerton Gonzaga at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State
W W T W L W W W W L W L L W L W L W W
8-2 6-0 5-5 5-0 7-4 19-0 8-6 9-2 6-1 4-3 14-3 14-12 13-5 3-2 6-4 12-11 4-3 7-6 5-4
Record 1-0 2-0 2-0-1 3-0-1 3-1-1 4-1-1 5-1-1 6-1-1 7-1-1 7-2-1 8-2-1 8-3-1 8-4-1 9-4-1 9-5-1 10-5-1 10-6-1 11-6-1 12-6-1
3/15 3/26 3/26 3/27 3/30 4/1* 4/2* 4/3* 4/6 4/8* 4/9* 4/10* 4/13 4/15*! 4/15* 4/16* 4/17* 4/18*! 4/22** 4/22** 4/23* 4/23* 4/24* 4/30* 5/1* 5/1* 5/4 5/6* 5/7* 5/8* 5/11 5/13* 5/14* 5/15*
Cal State Northridge Cal State Los Angeles Cal State Los Angeles Northwestern Loyola Marymount Arizona Arizona Arizona at Loyola Marymount USC at USC USC U.S. International Stanford at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford Stanford at California at California California California California Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State CS Dominguez Hills at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona at San Diego State at USC USC at USC
W W L W W L W L L L L L W L W L L L W L W W W L L L W W W L W W L L
11-2 13-6-1 11-9 14-6-1 4-3 14-7-1 9-5 15-7-1 13-2 16-7-1 8-6 16-8-1 4-3 17-8-1 3-2 17-9-1 10-8 17-10-1 6-3 17-11-1 11-4 17-12-1 14-5 17-13-1 9-7 18-13-1 13-8 18-14-1 12-11 19-14-1 10-4 19-15-1 10-3 19-16-1 4-3 19-17-1 11-6 20-17-1 7-4 20-18-1 6-2 21-18-1 20-4 22-18-1 6-3 23-18-1 6-4 23-19-1 5-2 23-20-1 10-5 23-21-1 10-8 24-21-1 16-14 25-21-1 20-0 26-21-1 6-5 26-22-1 9-7 27-22-1 7-5 28-22-1 8-3 28-23-1 5-4 28-24-1
* Pac-10 conference game ! Home game vs. Stanford (in Palo Alto, Calif.) ** Road game vs. Cal at Jackie Robinson Stadium
1984 (28-32, 8-22, 6th) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
2/6 2/7 2/8 2/11 2/12 2/13 2/14 2/15 2/17 2/18 2/18 2/20 2/21 2/22 2/24 2/25 2/28 2/29 3/2 3/4 3/4 3/6 3/7 3/9* 3/10* 3/11* 3/13 3/15* 3/16* 3/17* 3/24* 3/25* 3/26* 3/27 3/30* 3/31* 4/1* 4/3 4/6* 4/8* 4/11 4/13* 4/14* 4/15* 4/19* 4/20* 4/21* 4/25 4/27* 4/28* 4/29* 5/2 5/4* 5/5* 5/6* 5/9 5/11* 5/12* 5/13*
Chapman College at Occidental U.S. International at Miami at Miami at Miami at Cal State Fullerton Long Beach State Azusa Pacific at UC Irvine at UC Irvine at San Diego State Pomona-Pitzer Cal State Fullerton Cal Poly Pomona at Pepperdine Loyola Marymount CS Dominguez Hills Pepperdine at UC Santa Barbara at UC Santa Barbara at Loyola Marymount at Cal State Northridge at USC USC at USC Gonzaga California California California at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford at San Jose State at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State U.S. International Arizona Arizona at Long Beach State at California at California at California Stanford Stanford Stanford Cal State Los Angeles Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State Cal Lutheran at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona San Diego State USC at USC USC
W W W L L L W W W W W L W L L L W W W L W W L L L L W W L W L L L W L L L W W L W W L L L W L L L L L W L W W W L L L
Record
8-5 10-0 7-5 6-5 7-6 7-6 5-2 7-2 7-5 8-4 10-0 12-7 16-4 16-1 9-8 8-4 6-2 11-9 11-5 2-0 4-3 8-5 5-4 4-0 2-0 8-7 13-1 13-11 11-8 15-13 7-6 4-0 6-5 13-6 13-3 11-6 14-13 7-6 4-3 8-5 21-3 11-5 5-4 7-1 7-0 8-1 5-4 8-6 11-5 19-10 8-5 11-2 10-4 7-5 17-6 5-4 5-2 9-7 5-0
1-0 2-0 3-0 3-1 3-2 3-3 4-3 5-3 6-3 7-3 8-3 8-4 9-4 9-5 9-6 9-7 10-7 11-7 12-7 12-8 13-8 14-8 14-9 14-10 14-11 14-12 15-12 16-12 16-13 17-13 17-14 17-15 17-16 18-16 18-17 18-18 18-19 19-19 20-19 21-20 22-20 23-20 23-21 23-22 23-23 24-23 24-24 24-25 24-26 24-27 24-28 25-28 25-29 26-29 27-29 28-29 28-30 28-31 28-32
* Pac-10 conference game
1985 (34-30-1, 13-17, 5th) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
2/4 2/5 2/7 2/8 2/9 2/10 2/12 2/13 2/15 2/16
at Cal Poly Pomona U.S. International at Hawaii at Hawaii at Hawaii at Hawaii Loyola Marymount at Cal State Los Angeles at Chapman College UC Irvine
L W L W L L W W W W
6-3 14-4 9-7 10-3 6-5 7-2 16-4 9-5 6-3 10-8
Record 0-1 1-1 1-2 2-2 2-3 2-4 3-4 4-4 5-4 6-4
2/16 2/18 2/19 2/22* 2/23* 2/24* 2/26 2/27 3/1* 3/2* 3/3* 3/5 3/6 3/8* 3/9* 3/10* 3/12 3/14* 3/15* 3/16* 3/23* 3/24* 3/25* 3/26^ 3/27^ 3/28^ 3/28^ 3/29^ 3/29^ 3/30^ 4/2 4/3 4/5 4/6 4/6 4/10 4/12* 4/13* 4/14* 4/16 4/19* 4/20* 4/21* 4/24 4/26* 4/27* 4/28* 5/1 5/3* 5/4* 5/5* 5/8 5/10* 5/11* 5/12*
UC Irvine UC Santa Barbara Cal State Northridge USC at USC USC Cal State Fullerton Long Beach State Arizona Arizona Arizona at Pepperdine at Long Beach State Stanford Stanford Stanford Gonzaga at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State California California California Arizona State UC Riverside Missouri Air Force San Diego State Harvard Oregon State San Diego State at Cal State Fullerton at Oral Roberts at Oral Roberts at Oral Roberts Cal State Los Angeles at California at California at California at Loyola Marymount at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford CS Dominguez Hills Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State U.S. International at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona Pepperdine at USC USC at USC
W W W W L W T W W W W L W L L L W L L L L L L L W W W L W L W L L L W L L L W W L W L W L W W W L L W L W W W
6-4 7-4 10-9 8-4 7-3 9-4 5-4 10-4 5-2 10-5 9-8 11-5 7-7 11-5-1 5-4 12-5-1 3-2 13-5-1 15-4 14-5-1 11-7 15-5-1 5-4 15-6-1 13-9 16-6-1 5-2 16-7-1 3-2 16-8-1 9-0 16-9-1 16-7 17-9-1 9-2 17-10-1 7-6 17-11-1 8-1 17-12-1 17-1117-13-1 13-4 17-14-1 4-2 17-15-1 8-3 17-16-1 17-7 18-16-1 10-7 19-16-1 7-4 20-16-1 4-2 20-17-1 6-4 21-17-1 14-6 21-18-1 7-6 22-18-1 5-4 22-19-1 2-1 22-20-1 3-0 22-21-1 13-3 23-21-1 11-10 23-22-1 5-3 23-23-1 4-3 23-24-1 12-4 24-24-1 14-3 25-24-1 4-3 25-25-1 9-6 26-25-1 9-8 26-26-1 10-6 27-26-1 9-8 27-27-1 11-10 28-27-1 6-5 29-27-1 5-4 30-27-1 14-11 30-28-1 14-4 30-29-1 11-4 31-29-1 7-3 31-30-1 7-3 32-30-1 5-3 33-30-1 10-5 34-30-1
* Pac-10 conference game ^ Riverside Tournament game
1986 (39-23, 21-9, 1st) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
2/4 2/5 2/7 2/8 2/8 2/11 2/12 2/16 2/16 2/18 2/20 2/22 2/23 2/23 2/26 2/28* 3/1* 3/2* 3/5 3/9* 3/11 3/12 3/14* 3/15* 3/17* 3/18 3/19 3/21* 3/22* 3/23* 3/29 3/29 4/1 4/2 4/4* 4/5* 4/7* 4/8 4/11* 4/12* 4/13* 4/15 4/18* 4/19* 4/20* 4/21* 4/21* 4/23 4/25* 4/26* 4/27* 4/29 4/30 5/2* 5/3* 5/4* 5/7 5/9* 5/10* 5/11* 5/22$ 5/23$
at Pepperdine at Cal State Fullerton Chapman College San Diego State San Diego State at Loyola Marymount CS Dominguez Hills U.S. International U.S. International Pepperdine Cal Poly Pomona at Fresno State at Fresno State at Fresno State Long Beach State at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State UC Irvine at Stanford Gonzaga New Mexico California California California at Cal State Northridge Oral Roberts at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona Cal State Los Angeles Cal State Los Angeles at San Diego State at U.S. International Stanford Stanford Stanford UC Santa Barbara at USC USC at USC Loyola Marymount at California at California at California at Stanford at Stanford at UC Irvine Arizona Arizona Arizona at Long Beach State at UC Santa Barbara Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State Cal State Fullerton USC at USC USC Hawaii Loyola Marymount
L W W L W L W W L W W W W W W W L L L L L W W W W W L L W W L W W L W L W L W W W L W L W L L W W L W W L W W W W W W W L L
81
8-4 4-3 8-0 8-4 7-6 7-4 7-6 4-3 5-3 8-4 6-2 6-0 6-3 13-6 13-8 6-4 12-8 6-5 3-0 4-2 3-1 6-0 12-3 8-2 18-9 12-8 11-1 14-5 28-5 12-9 6-1 13-8 14-13 9-6 6-5 7-2 9-8 18-9 13-10 8-7 12-10 17-9 7-4 12-9 8-6 5-2 6-5 18-6 17-5 12-4 14-13 5-3 4-3 9-2 9-7 12-4 6-5 5-2 6-4 12-7 6-3 12-10
Record 0-1 1-1 2-1 2-2 3-2 3-3 4-3 5-3 5-4 6-4 7-4 8-4 9-4 10-4 11-4 12-4 12-5 12-6 12-7 12-8 12-9 13-9 14-9 15-9 16-9 17-9 17-10 17-11 18-11 19-11 19-12 20-12 21-12 21-13 22-13 22-14 23-14 23-15 24-15 25-15 26-15 26-16 27-16 27-17 28-17 28-18 28-19 29-19 30-19 30-20 31-20 32-20 32-21 33-21 34-21 35-21 36-21 37-21 38-21 39-21 39-22 39-23
* Pac-10 Conference game $ NCAA Western Regionals at Jackie Robinson Stadium
1987 (40-25-1, 16-14, 2nd) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
2/4 2/6 2/7 2/8 2/10 2/11 2/14 2/15 2/16 2/16 2/18 2/20* 2/21* 2/22* 2/24 2/25 2/27* 2/28* 3/1* 3/4 3/6* 3/7* 3/8* 3/10 3/11 3/13* 3/14* 3/15* 3/22* 3/23* 3/24* 3/26 3/26 3/27 3/31 4/1 4/3^ 4/4^ 4/4^ 4/8 4/10* 4/11* 4/12* 4/14 4/16* 4/17* 4/18* 4/22 4/24* 4/25* 4/26* 4/29 5/1* 5/2* 5/3* 5/6 5/7 5/9* 5/10* 5/11* 5/16 5/22$ 5/23$ 5/24$ 5/24$ 5/25$
U.S. International at Loyola Marymount Loyola Marymount at Pepperdine at Chapman College at UC Santa Barbara at Hawaii at Hawaii at Hawaii at Hawaii Pepperdine Arizona Arizona Arizona UC Santa Barbara CS Dominguez Hills Stanford Stanford Stanford at San Diego State at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State Gonzaga Pacific California California California USC at USC USC at U.S. International at U.S. International Cal State Northridge San Diego State at Cal State Fullerton Maine Michigan Minnesota Long Beach State at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford at UC Irvine Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State Cal State Fullerton at California at California at California at Cal Poly Pomona at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona at Long Beach State Cal State Los Angeles at USC USC at USC at Cal State Fullerton Hawaii Arizona State Hawaii Pepperdine Arizona State
W L L L W W L W W L T L W W W W W W L W L W W W W W L W W W W W W W L W W L W W W L L W W W L W L W L L L L L W W L W L L W L W W L
Record
7-4 1-0 3-2 1-1 7-6 1-2 8-4 1-3 17-5 2-3 6-3 3-3 5-4 3-4 9-6 4-4 11-3 5-4 8-7 5-5 3-3 5-5-1 12-10 5-6-1 6-5 6-6-1 18-5 7-6-1 17-4 8-6-1 6-5 9-6-1 17-9 10-6-1 14-5 11-6-1 13-5 11-7-1 7-2 12-7-1 11-6 12-8-1 3-2 13-8-1 12-5 14-8-1 11-4 15-8-1 8-3 16-8-1 7-6 17-8-1 9-8 17-9-1 19-8 18-9-1 11-6 19-9-1 9-7 20-9-1 5-4 21-9-1 14-4 22-9-1 7-1 23-9-1 13-2 24-9-1 6-5 24-10-1 8-5 25-10-1 10-3 26-10-1 4-1 26-11-1 2-0 27-11-1 9-7 28-11-1 14-6 29-11-1 3-2 29-12-1 8-6 29-13-1 8-0 30-13-1 13-12 31-13-1 11-10 32-13-1 20-5 32-14-1 16-12 33-14-1 8-3 33-15-1 9-0 34-15-1 9-5 34-16-1 12-8 34-17-1 10-8 34-18-1 12-8 34-19-1 12-4 34-20-1 10-3 35-20-1 23-5 36-20-1 7-6 36-21-1 11-6 37-21-1 7-4 37-22-1 4-0 37-23-1 12-11 38-23-1 9-3 38-24-1 16-7 39-24-1 21-5 40-24-1 14-4 40-25-1
* Pac-10 Conference game ^ Wheaties Tournament at Metrodome (Minneapolis, Minn.) $ NCAA West II Regional playoff game (Tempe, Ariz.)
1988 (31-28, 12-18, 5th) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
2/2 2/3 2/5 2/6 2/7 2/9 2/10 2/12 2/13 2/14 2/16 2/19* 2/20* 2/21* 2/23 2/24 2/26* 2/27* 3/2 3/4* 3/5* 3/6* 3/8 3/10* 3/11* 3/12* 3/22 3/23 3/25^ 3/26^ 3/27^ 3/31* 4/1* 4/2* 4/7 4/8* 4/9* 4/10* 4/13 4/15* 4/16* 4/17* 4/18* 4/22*
at UC Santa Barbara Pepperdine at San Diego at U.S. International at U.S. International at Loyola Marymount at Cal State Northridge UC Irvine at San Diego State at San Diego State Loyola Marymount Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State Chapman College at Cal State Los Angeles Arizona Arizona Cal State Fullerton at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford Cal Poly Pomona at California at California at California at South Alabama at South Alabama New Orleans Tulane Louisiana State at USC USC at USC CS Dominguez Hills California California California Long Beach State Stanford Stanford Stanford Arizona at Arizona
W W W W L L W W W W L L W L W W W L L W L L W W L L W W W L L W L L W L W W W W L L W W
12-5 9-3 11-6 12-3 9-8 7-4 13-8 10-9 11-5 16-7 9-5 12-7 9-5 15-8 10-4 10-2 9-2 12-6 12-6 6-3 11-4 5-1 7-4 9-3 4-2 8-1 11-7 14-3 5-2 5-4 7-1 4-3 8-2 12-3 9-5 6-4 9-1 9-0 10-5 9-4 8-5 5-2 9-8 9-4
Record 1-0 2-0 3-0 4-0 4-1 4-2 5-2 6-2 7-2 8-2 8-3 8-4 9-4 9-5 10-5 11-5 12-5 12-6 12-7 13-7 13-8 13-9 14-9 15-9 15-10 15-11 16-11 17-11 18-11 18-12 18-13 19-13 19-14 19-15 20-15 20-16 21-16 22-16 23-16 24-16 24-17 24-18 25-18 26-18
GAME-BY-GAME RESULTS 4/23* 4/24* 4/26 4/27 4/29* 4/30* 5/1* 5/4 5/6* 5/7* 5/8* 5/10 5/13 5/14 5/15
at Arizona at Arizona at Pepperdine at Long Beach State at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State at Cal State Fullerton USC at USC USC San Diego State at UNLV at UNLV at UNLV
L L W W L L L L W L W L L W L
8-5 17-0 6-2 19-5 17-6 6-5 21-7 4-3 6-1 7-4 6-5 3-1 12-7 6-4 9-8
26-19 26-20 27-20 28-20 28-21 28-22 28-23 28-24 29-24 29-25 30-25 30-26 30-27 31-27 31-28
* Pac-10 Conference game ^ Busch Challenge (at Louisiana Superdome, New Orleans, LA)
1989 (27-32, 10-20, 5th) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
2/1 2/5 2/5 2/10 2/11 2/12 2/15 2/18 2/19 2/21 2/24* 2/25* 2/26* 3/1 3/3* 3/4* 3/5* 3/7 3/10* 3/11* 3/12* 3/15 3/17 3/18 3/19 3/25* 3/26* 3/27* 3/29 3/31* 4/1* 4/2* 4/4 4/7* 4/8* 4/9* 4/11 4/12 4/14* 4/15* 4/16* 4/18 4/21* 4/22* 4/23* 4/28* 4/29* 4/30* 5/2 5/5 5/6 5/7 5/10 5/12* 5/13* 5/14* 5/19 5/20 5/21
UC Santa Barbara U.S. International U.S. International at Texas at Texas at Texas UC Irvine Pepperdine at Pepperdine at Loyola Marymount at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State at UC Santa Barbara Arizona Arizona Arizona Iona at USC USC at USC Loyola Marymount Gonzaga Utah Minnesota Stanford Stanford Stanford at UC Irvine California California California Cal State Fullerton at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona CS Dominguez Hills at Long Beach State Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State Long Beach State at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford at California at California at California at Cal State Fullerton at Maine at Maine at Maine Cal State Los Angeles USC at USC USC UNLV UNLV UNLV
W L W L L L W L W L L L L W L L L W L L W L W W L L W W L W W L W L L L W W W W L W W W L L W L W W L W W L L L L L W
8-3 4-1 6-3 4-3 6-3 14-4 6-3 10-7 9-7 5-2 5-1 10-9 4-3 12-5 11-1 6-3 10-4 13-1 6-0 10-7 16-12 14-5 10-6 11-2 12-4 8-7 11-8 5-0 6-5 7-4 8-1 5-4 4-3 6-1 6-5 7-1 5-4 9-7 4-2 7-6 5-4 2-1 2-1 9-6 2-1 9-1 11-10 8-3 9-6 1-0 9-8 4-3 4-3 10-5 10-2 12-5 10-5 15-4 10-1
Record 1-0 1-1 2-1 2-2 2-3 2-4 2-5 2-6 3-6 4-6 4-7 4-8 4-9 5-9 5-10 5-11 5-12 6-12 6-13 6-14 7-14 7-15 8-15 9-15 9-16 9-17 10-17 11-17 11-18 12-18 13-18 13-19 14-19 14-20 14-21 14-22 15-22 16-22 17-22 18-22 18-23 19-23 20-23 21-23 21-24 21-25 22-25 22-26 23-26 24-26 24-27 25-27 26-27 26-28 26-29 26-30 26-31 26-32 27-32
* Pac-10 conference game NA - not available
1990 (41-26, 14-16, 4th) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
1/30 2/1 2/2 2/3 2/4 2/7 2/8 2/10 2/11 2/13 2/14 2/18* 2/19* 2/19* 2/21 2/23* 2/24* 2/25* 2/28 3/3* 3/5* 3/6 3/9* 3/10* 3/11* 3/14 3/15 3/17 3/24* 3/25* 3/26* 3/30* 3/31* 4/1* 4/3 4/6*
Cal State Los Angeles at Hawaii-Hilo at Hawaii at Hawaii at Hawaii at UC Riverside South Alabama UC Irvine Pepperdine at UC Irvine San Diego Stanford Stanford Stanford Long Beach State at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State at Loyola Marymount at California at California Cal State Fullerton USC at USC USC Cal State Northridge UC Santa Barbara Illinois at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona California California California at Long Beach State at Stanford
W W W L W W W W W W W L W L W L W L W L W W L L W W L W W W W W W L W L
Record
12-1 1-0 8-3 2-0 3-2 3-0 7-1 3-1 7-0 4-1 7-2 5-1 6-5 6-1 6-4 7-1 8-4 8-1 13-10 9-1 11-4 10-1 16-5 10-2 5-3 11-2 6-5 11-3 15-5 12-3 6-5 12-4 11-4 13-4 9-2 13-5 10-2 14-5 4-1 14-6 7-6 15-6 12-4 16-6 7-5 16-7 5-4 16-8 9-7 17-8 11-4 18-8 8-5 18-9 14-9 19-9 4-3 20-9 8-6 21-9 10-8 22-9 10-5 23-9 7-5 24-9 15-12 24-10 8-3 25-10 6-1 25-11
4/7* 4/8* 4/9* 4/12* 4/13* 4/14* 4/17 4/18 4/20* 4/21* 4/22* 4/25 4/27* 4/28* 4/29* 5/2 5/3 5/5 5/6 5/8 5/9 5/11 5/12 5/15 5/18 5/19 5/20 5/25$ 5/26$ 5/27$ 5/28$
at Stanford at Stanford at California Arizona Arizona Arizona at UC Irvine at U.S. International Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State Loyola Marymount at USC USC at USC at UC Santa Barbara at Chapman College U.S. International U.S. International at Cal State Fullerton CS Dominguez Hills Sacramento State Sacramento State at Pepperdine at UNLV at UNLV at UNLV South Alabama Fordham Wichita State Georgia Southern
L L W L L W W W L W W L L W L L L W W L L W W W W L W L W W L
9-7 11-8 8-6 4-3 9-7 14-4 15-5 12-7 8-4 12-9 2-1 11-10 7-2 8-6 7-5 9-6 5-4 4-1 6-3 10-9 11-4 9-7 13-5 5-0 22-6 12-8 7-3 6-4 13-8 7-5 5-4
25-12 25-13 26-13 26-14 26-15 27-15 28-15 29-15 29-16 30-16 31-16 31-17 31-18 32-18 32-19 32-20 32-21 33-21 34-21 34-22 34-23 35-23 36-23 37-23 38-23 38-24 39-24 39-25 40-25 41-25 41-26
* Pac-10 conference game $ NCAA Midwest Regional at Wichita State (Eck Stadium)
1991 (29-30, 13-17, 4th) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
2/2 2/3 2/6 2/8# 2/8# 2/9# 2/10# 2/13 2/14 2/16 2/18 2/20 2/22* 2/23* 2/24* 3/2* 3/3* 3/4* 3/6 3/8* 3/9* 3/10* 3/14 3/16 3/16 3/23* 3/24* 3/25* 3/29^ 3/30^ 3/31^ 4/3 4/5* 4/6* 4/7* 4/10 4/12* 4/13* 4/14* 4/17 4/19* 4/20* 4/21* 4/24 4/26* 4/27* 4/28* 4/30 5/3* 5/4* 5/5* 5/7 5/10* 5/11* 5/12* 5/15 5/17 5/18 5/19
UC Irvine at UC Irvine Loyola Marymount Georgia Southern Florida Central Florida Florida Cal State Los Angeles Chapman College U.S. International at UC Santa Barbara Pepperdine at California at California at California Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State Long Beach State Arizona Arizona Arizona Cal State Fullerton at U.S. International at U.S. International at USC USC at USC Minnesota Stanford Notre Dame Cal Poly Pomona at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona at Cal State Northridge California California California at Cal State Northridge at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford at Cal State Fullerton at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State at Long Beach State Stanford Stanford Stanford UC Santa Barbara USC at USC USC U.S. International UNLV UNLV UNLV
L W L W L W W W W L W L L L W W L L W W W W W L W L L L W L W W L L L L L L L L W W W W W L W L L L W L L W W W W L L
4-1 9-6 7-5 16-3 5-4 6-5 10-6 12-8 9-3 3-1 3-2 10-6 16-2 11-10 18-4 16-15 8-7 4-1 3-1 3-1 11-9 16-4 9-8 4-2 8-7 5-4 6-5 11-8 7-4 11-7 6-3 11-2 17-8 15-14 11-9 4-2 6-4 8-7 11-7 15-1 6-4 11-7 5-4 7-4 6-1 10-4 18-5 7-3 18-0 12-11 4-3 7-3 4-0 7-5 13-4 12-1 9-0 11-9 8-10
Record 0-1 1-1 1-2 2-2 2-3 3-3 4-3 5-3 6-3 6-4 7-4 7-5 7-6 7-7 8-7 9-7 9-8 9-9 10-9 11-9 12-9 13-9 14-9 14-10 15-10 15-11 15-12 15-13 16-13 16-14 17-14 18-14 18-15 18-16 18-17 18-18 18-19 18-20 18-21 18-22 19-22 20-22 21-22 22-22 23-22 23-23 24-23 24-24 24-25 24-26 25-26 25-27 25-28 26-28 27-28 28-28 29-28 29-29 29-30
* Pac-10 Conference game # Olive Garden Classic (Kissimmee, Fla.) ^ Oscar Mayer Classic at Metrodome (Minneapolis, Minn.)
1992 (37-26, 14-16, 3rd) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
2/4 2/7 2/8 2/9 2/14 2/15 2/16 2/18 2/20 2/21 2/22 2/23 2/25 2/26 2/28* 2/29* 3/1* 3/4 3/6* 3/7*
at Cal State Fullerton at Hawaii at Hawaii at Hawaii CS Dominguez Hills San Francisco State Cal Poly Pomona Cal State Los Angeles Northwestern Northwestern at UC Irvine UC Irvine San Diego UC Santa Barbara California California California at Loyola Marymount at Arizona at Arizona
W L W L W W W W W W L W W W W L W W W L
3-2 11-10 1-0 6-5 7-1 12-2 8-6 6-0 6-5 10-9 5-2 5-4 10-9 17-4 5-0 10-6 10-8 9-3 5-1 4-3
Record 1-0 1-1 2-1 2-2 3-2 4-2 5-2 6-2 7-2 8-2 8-3 9-3 10-3 11-3 12-3 12-4 13-4 14-4 15-4 15-5
3/11 3/14 3/21* 3/22* 3/23* 3/25 3/27* 3/28* 3/29* 4/3* 4/4* 4/5* 4/8 4/10* 4/11* 4/12* 4/14 4/16*! 4/16 4/17* 4/18* 4/21 4/22 4/24* 4/25* 4/26* 4/29 5/1* 5/2* 5/3* 5/5 5/6 5/9 5/10 5/13 5/15* 5/16* 5/17* 5/21^ 5/22^ 5/23^ 5/24^ 5/24^
Pepperdine Chapman College Stanford Stanford Stanford at Chapman College at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State USC at USC USC at Long Beach State at California at California at California Loyola Marymount Arizona Arizona Arizona Arizona UC Riverside Long Beach State Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State Cal State Northridge at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford at UC Santa Barbara Cal State Fullerton at Sacramento State at Sacramento State at Pepperdine at USC USC at USC Oklahoma Clemson Yale Mississippi State Oklahoma
W L L W L W L L W W L W W W L L W L W L W W L W L W W W L L W L W L L L W L L W W W L
9-4 7-6 5-3 8-1 3-1 2-1 5-4 8-6 11-8 11-1 13-8 15-2 13-11 7-6 10-3 7-0 9-1 7-2 8-4 4-1 7-2 10-2 4-3 7-6 6-3 7-5 4-0 10-9 15-6 10-5 7-2 10-5 5-2 10-7 16-8 6-5 3-1 4-2 4-3 6-5 8-0 3-2 10-0
16-5 16-6 16-7 17-7 17-8 18-8 18-9 18-10 19-10 20-10 20-11 21-11 22-11 23-11 23-12 23-13 24-13 24-14 25-14 25-15 26-15 27-15 27-16 28-16 28-17 29-17 30-17 31-17 31-18 31-19 32-19 32-20 33-20 33-21 33-22 33-23 34-23 34-24 34-25 35-25 36-25 37-25 37-26
* Pac-10 conference game ! Game played at UCLA; Arizona designated as home team ^ NCAA Mideast Regional (Starkville, MS - Mississippi State)
1993 (37-23, 17-13, 2nd) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
2/13 2/14 2/16 2/21 2/22 2/24 2/27* 2/27* 2/28* 3/3 3/5* 3/6* 3/7* 3/9 3/10 3/13 3/14 3/16 3/20 3/28* 3/29* 3/29* 3/31 4/2* 4/3* 4/4* 4/8* 4/9* 4/10* 4/12 4/13 4/16* 4/17* 4/18* 4/20 4/21 4/23* 4/24* 4/25* 4/28 4/30* 5/1* 5/2* 5/4 5/5 5/7 5/8 5/11 5/12 5/14* 5/15* 5/16* 5/19 5/21* 5/22* 5/23* 5/27$ 5/28$ 5/29$ 5/29$
Chapman College at Chapman College San Diego State Chapman College at Chapman College Long Beach State Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State at Loyola Marymount at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona at Long Beach State Cal Poly Pomona Southern Utah Southern Utah Cal State Northridge Cal State Los Angeles at California at California at California at Cal State Northridge at USC USC at USC Arizona Arizona Arizona at Pepperdine CS Dominguez Hills Stanford Stanford Stanford at San Diego San Diego at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State Cal State Fullerton California California California Pepperdine at UC Santa Barbara at Southern Utah at Southern Utah at Cal State Fullerton Loyola Marymount USC at USC USC UC Santa Barbara at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford Lamar Hawaii Texas A&M North Carolina
W W W W W L W L L W W W W L W W W L W L W L W L, W L W L L L W W W W L L L L W L W L W L W W W W W L W W W L W W W W L L
10-4 7-5 6-4 7-5 5-3 7-3 9-8 4-3 10-3 12-10 10-8 16-9 20-15 4-2 8-5 13-1 22-7 4-3 7-6 3-2 8-1 6-5 19-5 14-4 9-6 11-5 5-0 9-4 8-7 3-2 15-7 7-6 7-5 6-2 7-3 11-7 11-3 9-3 9-5 7-6 5-2 6-2 9-1 8-1 10-4 16-6 6-1 12-9 11-5 7-6 6-4 8-7 13-4 18-14 6-2 10-1 6-1 9-4 11-4 8-5
Record 1-0 2-0 3-0 4-0 5-0 5-1 6-1 6-2 6-3 7-3 8-3 9-3 10-3 10-4 11-4 12-4 13-4 13-5 14-5 14-6 15-6 15-7 16-7 16-8 17-8 17-9 18-9 18-10 18-11 18-12 19-12 20-12 21-12 22-12 22-13 22-14 22-15 22-16 23-16 23-17 24-17 24-18 25-18 25-19 26-19 27-19 28-19 29-19 30-19 30-20 31-20 32-20 33-20 33-21 34-21 35-21 36-21 37-21 37-22 37-23
* Pac-10 Conference game $ NCAA Central I Regional at College Station, TX (Texas A&M)
1994 (22-36, 11-19, 5th) Head Coach: Gary Adams
Cal State Los Angeles UNLV UNLV UNLV at Hawaii at Hawaii at Hawaii San Diego State Stanford Stanford Stanford CS Dominguez Hills at California at California at California at Loyola Marymount Cal State Fullerton USC at USC USC Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State at UC Santa Barbara San Diego California California California at San Diego State at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona at Cal State Fullerton at USC USC at USC at Long Beach State at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State Loyola Marymount at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford at Pepperdine at Cal State Fullerton Arizona Arizona Arizona at Nevada at Nevada at Nevada
W W W L L L L L L W L L W L L L L W L L L L L W W L W W W L W L L L W L W L L W L L L L W L W W W W L W
9-2 11-3 9-8 6-4 6-4 9-8 8-7 12-11 3-0 11-4 14-3 6-4 11-10 12-6 5-3 7-4 13-3 6-0 1-0 7-2 6-5 5-3 8-6 7-3 6-0 5-3 6-4 5-1 12-7 6-1 10-6 4-2 8-6 6-2 4-3 10-8 12-2 9-3 8-2 15-8 11-4 3-2 3-0 14-5 5-0 10-2 9-4 13-5 9-6 8-2 12-3 15-13
2-5 3-5 4-5 4-6 4-7 4-8 4-9 4-10 4-11 5-11 5-12 5-13 6-13 6-14 6-15 6-16 6-17 7-17 7-18 7-19 7-20 7-21 7-22 8-22 9-22 9-23 10-23 11-23 12-23 12-24 13-24 13-25 13-26 13-27 14-27 14-28 15-28 15-29 15-30 16-30 16-31 16-32 16-33 16-34 17-34 17-35 18-35 19-35 20-35 21-35 21-36 22-36
* Pac-10 Conference game
1995 (29-28, 12-8, 5th) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
1/20 1/21 1/22 2/1 2/7 2/10 2/15 2/17 2/18 2/19 2/22 2/24* 2/25* 2/26* 3/1 3/4* 3/6* 3/6* 3/8 3/10* 3/11* 3/12* 3/17 3/18 3/18 3/19 3/25* 3/26* 3/27* 3/31* 4/1* 4/2* 4/5 4/8* 4/8* 4/9* 4/13* 4/14* 4/15* 4/18 4/21* 4/22* 4/23* 4/26 4/28* 4/29* 4/30* 5/3 5/5* 5/6* 5/7* 5/9 5/10 5/17 5/19 5/20 5/21
at Hawaii at Hawaii at Hawaii San Diego State Cal State Fullerton at Long Beach State Long Beach State Nevada Nevada Nevada at Cal State Northridge Stanford Stanford Stanford at San Diego USC at USC at USC Loyola Marymount at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona Washington State Washington Washington State Washington California California California at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State at Pepperdine at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford Arizona Arizona Arizona Cal State Northridge USC at USC USC San Diego Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State at Loyola Marymount at California at California at California at San Diego State Pepperdine UC Santa Barbara at UNLV at UNLV at UNLV
W L W W L W W L W L W L W L W L L W L W L W L W W W L L W L W L W W L L W W W W L L L L W W L L L L L W L L W W W
5-1 9-8 9-2 8-6 6-2 5-2 6-2 7-3 11-6 6-3 4-2 6-5 8-6 2-0 4-0 5-2 9-3 9-4 4-1 19-3 6-5 4-2 4-3 11-10 7-6 4-3 3-1 16-3 10-3 8-6 13-2 10-6 5-0 9-1 7-4 16-3 7-1 8-6 11-10 4-3 7-3 13-8 8-7 7-4 7-3 8-7 8-7 8-3 4-3 9-8 10-5 5-3 5-1 8-6 12-7 19-10 10-7
Record 1-0 1-1 2-1 3-1 3-2 4-2 5-2 5-3 6-3 6-4 7-4 7-5 8-5 8-6 9-6 9-7 9-8 10-8 10-9 11-9 11-10 12-10 12-11 13-11 14-11 15-11 15-12 15-13 16-13 16-14 17-14 17-15 18-15 19-15 19-16 19-17 20-17 21-17 22-17 23-17 23-18 23-19 23-20 23-21 24-21 25-21 25-22 25-23 25-24 25-25 25-26 26-26 26-27 26-28 27-28 28-28 29-28
* Pac-10 Conference game
Date
Opponent
Result
2/8 2/9 2/11 2/12 2/13 2/16
UC Santa Barbara Pepperdine at Cal State Northridge at San Diego Cal State Northridge Long Beach State
W L L L L L
82
2/17 2/19 2/20 2/21 2/25 2/26 2/27 3/2 3/4* 3/5* 3/6* 3/9 3/11* 3/12* 3/13* 3/16 3/18 3/26* 3/27* 3/28* 3/31* 4/1* 4/2* 4/5 4/6 4/8* 4/9* 4/10* 4/13 4/15* 4/16* 4/17* 4/20 4/22* 4/23* 4/24* 4/26 4/29* 4/30* 5/1* 5/4 5/5* 5/6* 5/7* 5/10 5/11 5/14* 5/15* 5/16* 5/20 5/21 5/22
8-6 2-1 7-5 9-5 10-7 4-3
Record 1-0 1-1 1-2 1-3 1-4 1-5
1996 (36-28, 16-14, 3rd) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
1/30 2/2 2/3!
Cal State Northridge UNLV UNLV
L L W
3-1 5-2 6-2
Record 0-1 0-2 1-2
GAME-BY-GAME RESULTS 2/4 2/7^ 2/8 2/9 2/10 2/11 2/14 2/16 2/17 2/18 2/23* 2/24* 2/25* 2/28 3/1* 3/2* 3/3* 3/6 3/8* 3/9* 3/10* 3/23* 3/24* 3/25* 3/29* 3/30* 3/31* 4/2 4/4* 4/5* 4/6* 4/9 4/12* 4/13* 4/14* 4/17 4/19* 4/20* 4/21* 4/23 4/24 4/24 4/26* 4/27* 4/28* 4/30 5/1 5/3 5/4 5/7 5/11* 5/12* 5/13* 5/17 5/18 5/19 5/23$ 5/24$ 5/25$ 5/25$ 5/26$
UNLV at Hawaii-Hilo at Hawaii-Hilo at Hawaii at Hawaii at Hawaii Cal State Fullerton Pepperdine at Pepperdine Pepperdine Stanford Stanford Stanford at Loyola Marymount California California California UC Santa Barbara at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona USC at USC USC at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State at Cal State Fullerton at California at California at California at Long Beach State Arizona Arizona Arizona San Diego State Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State Westmont College CS Dominguez Hills Loyola Marymount at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford at San Diego at San Diego State Cal State Los Angeles CS Dominguez Hills Long Beach State at USC USC at USC at Nevada at Nevada at Nevada Texas SW Missouri State Sam Houston State SW Missouri State Miami
W W W L W W L W W W W L W L W W W L L L W W L W W W L L W W W L W L L L W L W W W W L L L W W W L W L L L L L W W L W W L
9-4 7-1 15-9 10-9 12-4 11-6 14-7 9-4 7-1 10-6 6-5 9-1 7-5 10-7 4-1 11-8 5-4 4-2 6-5 11-6 12-6 12-7 13-3 10-5 10-6 9-7 12-9 18-8 8-4 6-3 8-5 6-5 4-3 19-13 5-4 8-7 12-9 8-4 16-9 16-3 13-6 11-5 4-0 10-8 6-4 6-0 8-7 18-1 5-4 13-7 5-4 13-3 8-1 8-6 9-8 23-10 5-2 13-2 10-8 9-4 8-4
2-2 3-2 4-2 4-3 5-3 6-3 6-4 7-4 8-4 9-4 10-4 10-5 11-5 11-6 12-6 13-6 14-6 14-7 14-8 14-9 15-9 16-9 16-10 17-10 18-10 19-10 19-11 19-12 20-12 21-12 22-12 22-13 23-13 23-14 23-15 23-16 24-16 24-17 25-17 26-17 27-17 28-17 28-18 28-19 28-20 29-20 30-20 31-20 31-21 32-21 32-22 32-23 32-24 32-25 32-26 33-26 34-26 34-27 35-27 36-27 36-28
* Pac-10 Conference game ! Game in Palm Springs, Calif. (UCLA designated home team) ^ Game in Kona, Hawaii (Hawaii-Hilo designated home team) $ NCAA Central I Regional (at Texas)
1997 (45-21-1, 19-11, 2nd) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
1/23 1/24 1/25 1/31 2/1 2/2 2/4 2/5 2/7 2/8 2/9 2/11 2/14 2/15 2/16 2/18 2/21* 2/22* 2/23* 2/25 2/28^ 3/1^ 3/2^ 3/4 3/7* 3/8* 3/9* 3/11 3/13 3/22* 3/23* 3/24* 3/27* 3/28* 3/29* 4/1 4/4* 4/5* 4/6* 4/8 4/11* 4/12* 4/13* 4/19* 4/19* 4/20* 4/22 4/25* 4/26* 4/27* 4/29 5/2* 5/3*
at Hawaii at Hawaii at Hawaii at UNLV at UNLV at UNLV Pepperdine at Cal State Northridge Nevada Nevada Nevada at San Diego Loyola Marymount at Loyola Marymount Loyola Marymount at UC Santa Barbara Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State CS Dominguez Hills Washington Nebraska Minnesota UC Santa Barbara at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona Cal State Fullerton Cal State Los Angeles at USC USC at USC California California California at Pepperdine at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State Long Beach State Arizona Arizona Arizona at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford San Diego USC at USC USC at Cal State Fullerton at California at California
W W W W W W W T W L W W W W W W W W L W W W W L L L W W W W W L W W W L W L L L W W W L W W W L L W L W W
Record
23-11 1-0 10-0 2-0 12-8 3-0 7-4 4-0 12-5 5-0 10-3 6-0 6-5 7-0 7-0-1 9-9 11-3 8-0-1 6-5 8-1-1 11-0 9-1-1 7-1 10-1-1 13-1 11-1-1 10-5 12-1-1 13-4 13-1-1 17-7 14-1-1 4-3 15-1-1 16-5 16-1-1 17-12 16-2-1 21-10 17-2-1 11-5 18-2-1 12-9 19-2-1 13-5 20-2-1 9-6 20-3-1 4-2 20-4-1 13-3 20-5-1 12-1 21-5-1 7-6 22-5-1 16-2 23-5-1 12-6 24-5-1 8-5 25-5-1 8-7 25-6-1 13-1 26-6-1 9-0 27-6-1 8-1 28-6-1 8-7 28-7-1 5-2 29-7-1 4-3 29-8-1 15-14 29-9-1 14-3 29-10-1 11-3 30-10-1 13-6 31-10-1 13-3 32-10-1 7-4 32-11-1 8-5 33-11-1 5-3 34-11-1 8-3 35-11-1 10-6 35-12-1 11-2 35-13-1 14-4 36-13-1 11-6 36-14-1 6-5 37-14-1 7-6 38-14-1
5/4* 5/6 5/9* 5/10* 5/11* 5/13 5/22 R 5/23 R 5/24 R 5/24 R 5/25 R 5/25 R 5/31 WS 6/2 WS
at California at Long Beach State Stanford Stanford Stanford Cal State Northridge Harvard Ohio Tennessee Harvard Oklahoma State Oklahoma State Miami Mississippi State
L L W W L L L W W W W W L L
9-8 7-3 10-9 13-8 9-6 12-6 7-2 15-1 5-3 14-9 14-2 22-2 7-3 7-5
38-15-1 38-16-1 39-16-1 40-16-1 40-17-1 40-18-1 40-19-1 41-19-1 42-19-1 43-19-1 44-19-1 45-19-1 45-20-1 45-21-1
* Pac-10 Conference game ^ Hormel Foods Classic at Metrodome (Minneapolis, Minn.) R – NCAA Midwest Regional (at Oklahoma State) WS – College World Series (Rosenblatt Stadium – Omaha, Neb.)
1998 (24-33, 11-19, 5th) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
1/24 1/29 1/30 1/31 2/6 2/7 2/8 2/10 2/13*! 2/15* 2/18 2/20* 2/21* 2/22* 2/24 2/27* 2/28* 3/1 3/3 3/6* 3/7* 3/8* 3/10 3/13* 3/14* 3/15* 3/17 3/20 3/21 3/28* 3/29* 3/30* 4/1* 4/3* 4/5* 4/5* 4/7 4/9* 4/10* 4/12* 4/13 4/14 4/17* 4/18* 4/19* 4/22 4/24* 4/25* 4/26* 4/28 5/1 5/2 5/3 5/6 5/8 5/9 5/10
CS Dominguez Hills at Hawaii at Hawaii at Hawaii at Georgia Tech at Georgia Tech at Georgia Tech San Diego at California at California Loyola Marymount Stanford Stanford Stanford Cal State Fullerton at USC USC at USC Long Beach State Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State at Loyola Marymount at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona San Diego State Cal State Northridge at Cal State Northridge at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford at California California California California at San Diego Arizona Arizona Arizona Hawaii-Hilo at San Diego State at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State at Cal State Fullerton USC at USC USC at Long Beach State Portland State Portland State Portland State UC Santa Barbara at Oregon State at Oregon State at Oregon State
W L L L L W W W W W W L L L L L L W L W L L L W L L W L L L L L L W W W W L W W W L L L L L L W L W W W W W L L L
Record
8-5 7-4 14-5 8-6 16-7 10-9 13-11 7-1 13-8 11-10 10-4 18-6 23-4 13-9 11-8 6-1 10-9 12-7 21-5 6-5 14-6 9-3 16-8 16-14 18-7 12-10 14-13 4-3 10-3 4-1 15-3 7-6 11-4 15-5 16-15 6-3 8-2 10-4 15-7 12-7 16-0 21-4 19-10 8-7 18-4 19-5 14-6 18-17 17-12 4-2 7-6 4-3 7-4 16-4 8-7 19-5 11-8
1-0 1-1 1-2 1-3 1-4 2-4 3-4 4-4 5-4 6-4 7-4 7-5 7-6 7-7 7-8 7-9 7-10 8-10 8-11 9-11 9-12 9-13 9-14 10-14 10-15 10-16 11-16 11-17 11-18 11-19 11-20 11-21 11-22 12-22 13-22 14-22 15-22 15-23 16-23 17-23 18-23 18-24 18-25 18-26 18-27 18-28 18-29 19-29 19-30 20-30 21-30 22-30 23-30 24-30 24-31 24-32 24-33
* Pac-10 Conference game ! Game completed on February 15
1999 (31-33, 13-11, t-3rd) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
1/22 1/23 1/24 1/26! 1/26! 2/2 2/5 2/6 2/7 2/10 2/12# 2/13# 2/14# 2/16 2/17 2/19^ 2/20^ 2/21^ 2/24 2/26 2/27 2/28 3/2 3/5 3/6 3/7 3/9 3/12* 3/13* 3/14* 3/16 3/17 3/27* 3/28* 3/29*† 4/1* 4/2*
at Hawaii at Hawaii at Hawaii at Hawaii-Hilo at Hawaii-Hilo Pepperdine Georgia Tech Georgia Tech Georgia Tech San Diego McNeese State Rice Northwestern State at UC Santa Barbara at UC Santa Barbara vs. Loyola Marymount vs. Texas Tech vs. San Diego State at Cal State Northridge California California California Michigan USC USC USC at Loyola Marymount at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona Long Beach State at Pepperdine at Washington at Washington at Washington at California at California
L L L W W L L W W W L W L L L W L W L W W W L L W W W L W L L L L L L L L
Record
6-0 3-0 5-3 7-2 (7) 5-0 8-6 13-8 12-3 6-1 4-3 8-5 14-6 5-4 12-9 7-6 6-5 13-5 8-5 10-4 11-6 8-7 11-10 4-3 6-3 6-5 8-7 12-10 6-4 6-1 8-7 9-7 7-6 8-6 12-5 16-15 14-12 4-3
0-1 0-2 0-3 1-3 2-3 2-4 2-5 3-5 4-5 5-5 5-6 6-6 6-7 6-8 6-9 7-9 7-10 8-10 8-11 9-11 10-11 11-11 11-12 11-13 12-13 13-13 14-13 14-14 15-14 15-15 15-16 15-17 15-18 15-19 15-20 15-21 15-22
4/3* 4/6 4/7 4/13 4/16* 4/17* 4/18* 4/20 4/23* 4/24* 4/25* 4/27 4/30* 5/1* 5/2* 5/7* 5/8* 5/9* 5/11 5/14* 5/15* 5/16* 5/28 R 5/29 R 5/29 R
at California at Arkansas at Arkansas Loyola Marymount Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State at Long Beach State Washington State Washington State Washington State Cal State Fullerton at USC at USC at USC Oregon State Oregon State Oregon State at San Diego Stanford Stanford Stanford Oklahoma State Wichita State Oklahoma State
W W W L W W W L W W W L L W W L W W W L W L W L L
13-10 6-3 5-4 7-5 11-10 9-3 8-6 15-4 7-4 15-8 6-5 11-10 4-1 3-2 8-5 7-5 15-0 8-6 8-4 8-7 12-7 14-4 12-6 4-2 17-10
16-22 17-22 18-22 18-23 19-23 20-23 21-23 21-24 22-24 23-24 24-24 23-25 23-26 25-27 26-27 25-27 27-27 28-27 29-27 29-28 30-28 30-29 31-29 31-30 31-31
* Pac-10 Conference game ! Doubleheader (Jan. 25 rainout); Game 1 (7 inn.) # Big Ball Sports Tournament (Houston, Texas, hosted by Rice) ^ San Diego Baseball Classic (San Diego, hosted by San Diego State) † Suspended March 29 after 1.5 inn. (hail), resumed March 30 R – NCAA Wichita Regional (at Wichita State)
2000 (38-26, 17-7, t-1st) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
2/3 2/4 2/5 2/9 2/11 2/12 2/13 2/15 2/18 2/19 2/20 2/22 2/25 2/26 2/29 3/1 3/7 3/10 3/11 3/12 3/14 3/17 3/18 3/18 3/25* 3/26* 3/27* 3/29 3/31* 4/1* 4/2* 4/4 4/7* 4/8* 4/9* 4/11 4/14 4/15 4/16 4/18 4/20* 4/21* 4/22* 4/24 4/25 4/28* 4/29* 4/30* 5/2 5/5* 5/6* 5/7* 5/9 5/13* 5/14* 5/15* 5/19* 5/20* 5/21* 5/26 R 5/27 R 5/28 R 6/2 SR 6/3 SR
at Hawaii at Hawaii at Hawaii UC Santa Barbara at UNLV at UNLV at UNLV at Loyola Marymount North Carolina North Carolina North Carolina Pepperdine at USC at USC at San Diego State at Long Beach State at Cal State Fullerton Bradley Bradley Bradley San Diego State Harvard Harvard Harvard Washington Washington Washington at San Diego at Oregon State at Oregon State at Oregon State Loyola Marymount USC USC USC at UC Santa Barbara Cal State Northridge Cal State Northridge Cal State Northridge at USC at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State San Diego Cal State Fullerton at Washington State at Washington State at Washington State at Pepperdine California California California Long Beach State Arizona Arizona Arizona at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford Delaware Oklahoma Oklahoma Louisiana State Louisiana State
W W W W L W W L L L L W L L L L L W W W W W W W W L W W W W W L L W W W W L L L L W L L L W W W L L W W W W W W W L L W W W L L
15-3 10-3 9-3 17-4 21-5 10-1 6-5 5-4 17-13 6-4 12-11 11-7 10-7 4-3 9-8 6-1 17-5 14-4 9-8 12-4 7-6 9-2 5-4 10-3 2-1 7-6 12-5 11-9 3-1 18-10 9-5 23-12 5-1 15-5 8-5 10-2 10-5 7-2 12-9 6-2 10-8 13-3 18-3 10-1 8-3 14-10 13-2 14-1 7-6 13-7 18-7 8-7 17-6 5-3 10-0 8-5 10-9 19-3 17-11 13-12 10-5 11-3 8-2 14-8
Record 1-0 2-0 3-0 4-0 4-1 5-1 6-1 6-2 6-3 6-4 6-5 7-5 7-6 7-7 7-8 7-9 7-10 8-10 9-10 10-10 11-10 12-10 13-10 14-10 15-10 15-11 16-11 17-11 18-11 19-11 20-11 20-12 20-13 21-13 22-13 23-13 24-13 24-14 24-15 24-16 24-17 25-17 25-18 25-19 25-20 26-20 27-20 28-20 28-22 28-22 29-22 30-22 31-22 32-22 33-22 34-22 35-22 35-23 35-24 36-24 37-24 38-24 38-25 38-26
* Pac-10 Conference Game R – NCAA Oklahoma City Regional (at Bricktown Ballpark) SR – NCAA Baton Rouge Super Regional (at LSU)
2001 (30-27, 9-15, 7th) Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
1/27 2/1 2/2 2/3 2/6 2/9 2/10 2/11 2/14 2/16 2/17 2/18 2/20 2/23 3/2 3/2
at UC Riverside at Hawaii at Hawaii at Hawaii Loyola Marymount UNLV UNLV UNLV UC Santa Barbara USC USC USC at Pepperdine Tulane at North Carolina at North Carolina
L L W W W W W W W W L L W W L W
83
10-6 9-8 16-3 12-2 10-6 6-2 10-2 11-2 6-5 4-3 6-0 5-4 6-5 8-3 8-7 12-2
Record 0-1 0-2 1-2 2-2 3-2 4-2 5-2 6-2 7-2 8-2 8-3 8-4 9-4 10-4 10-5 11-5
3/6 3/9* 3/10* 3/11* 3/13 3/14 3/25 3/26 3/27 3/30* 4/1* 4/2* 4/3 4/7* 4/7* 4/8* 4/10 4/12* 4/13* 4/14* 4/17 4/18 4/20 4/21^ 4/22 4/24 4/27* 4/28* 4/29* 5/1 5/4* 5/5* 5/6* 5/9 5/11* 5/12* 5/13* 5/15 5/18* 5/19* 5/20*
at Loyola Marymount Arizona Arizona Arizona Cal State Northridge Purdue Cal State Los Angeles at Cal State Northridge at San Diego at Washington State at Washington State at Washington State Pepperdine at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford at San Diego State Washington Washington Washington Long Beach State at Cal State Fullerton at Kansas State at Kansas State at Kansas State at Long Beach State at USC at USC at USC San Diego State California California California Cal State Fullerton Oregon State Oregon State Oregon State at UC Santa Barbara at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State
W W L L W W W W L L W W W W L L W L W W W L L L L L L L L W W L L W W W L L L W L
8-4 3-2 6-4 9-6 12-7 10-6 9-6 5-4 9-3 12-11 13-10 10-9 11-3 6-4 9-0 11-2 3-2 3-0 4-2 11-3 5-1 11-10 8-5 13-12 11-7 10-2 2-0 7-6 7-1 3-1 3-1 9-8 8-6 9-3 5-3 7-6 11-8 10-4 7-3 3-1 12-9
12-5 13-5 13-6 13-7 14-7 15-7 16-7 17-7 17-8 17-9 18-9 19-9 20-9 21-9 21-10 21-11 22-11 22-12 23-12 24-12 25-12 25-13 25-14 25-15 25-16 25-17 25-18 25-19 25-20 26-20 27-20 27-21 26-23 27-23 28-23 29-23 29-24 29-25 29-26 30-26 30-27
* Pac-10 Conference Game ^ Suspended in ninth inn. (darkness); resumed April 22
2002 (26-35, 9-15, 7th)
Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
1/29 2/1 2/2 2/3 2/8 2/9 2/10 2/11 2/13 2/14 2/15 2/16 2/17 2/22 2/23 2/24 2/26 3/2 3/2 3/3 3/5 3/8 3/9 3/10 3/12 3/13 3/23 3/24 3/25 4/2 4/5* 4/6* 4/7* 4/9 4/12* 4/13* 4/14* 4/16 4/19* 4/20* 4/21* 4/23 4/26* 4/27* 4/28* 4/30 5/3* 5/4* 5/5* 5/7 5/10* 5/11* 5/12* 5/14 5/17* 5/18* 5/19* 5/21 5/24* 5/25* 5/26*
at UC Irvine Gonzaga Gonzaga Gonzaga Florida Atlantic Florida Atlantic Florida Atlantic at Loyola Marymount at Hawai’i-Hilo at Hawai’i-Hilo at Hawaii at Hawaii at Hawaii USC USC USC UC Santa Barbara at Tulane at Tulane at Tulane Loyola Marymount at Cal State Northridge at Cal State Northridge Cal State Northridge Pepperdine UC Irvine at Miami at Miami at Miami at Long Beach State at California at California at California at Pepperdine Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State at UC Riverside at Oregon State at Oregon State at Oregon State Cal State Fullerton Washington State Washington State Washington State at UC Santa Barbara at Washington at Washington at Washington Long Beach State at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona UC Riverside Stanford Stanford Stanford at Cal State Fullerton USC USC USC
L W L W L W W W W W L L L L L L W W L W W L L W W L L L L L L W L L L W L W L W W L W L L W W L L W L W W W L W L L L L L
Record
6-4 5-2 14-10 12-6 23-13 4-1 11-5 7-2 9-1 9-4 6-4 7-6 8-7 1-0 26-4 6-3 12-7 9-7 4-1 10-4 10-9 10-9 12-11 6-3 10-6 6-4 8-7 8-2 5-1 4-3 5-3 19-2 10-6 4-3 4-3 10-2 15-2 4-2 9-8 6-1 9-7 7-6 5-3 14-10 9-6 18-13 8-1 5-4 9-5 7-6 10-9 5-3 18-14 4-3 11-0 9-4 17-4 11-4 5-4 16-10 13-3
0-1 1-1 1-2 2-2 2-3 3-3 4-3 5-3 6-3 7-3 7-4 7-5 7-6 7-7 7-8 7-9 8-9 9-9 9-10 10-10 11-10 11-11 11-12 12-12 13-12 13-13 13-14 13-15 13-16 13-17 13-18 14-18 14-19 14-20 14-21 15-21 15-22 16-22 16-23 17-23 18-23 18-24 19-24 19-25 19-26 20-26 21-26 21-27 21-28 22-28 22-29 23-29 24-29 25-29 25-30 26-30 26-31 26-32 26-33 26-34 26-35
* Pac-10 Conference game
2003 (28-31, 11-13, t-5th)
Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
1/31 2/1 2/2 2/4 2/7 2/8 2/9 2/14 2/15 2/16
Cal State Northridge Cal State Northridge at Cal State Northridge at UC Riverside at Hawaii at Hawaii at Hawaii NC State NC State NC State
L W W L L W L W W L
8-6 17-6 13-8 8-3 11-5 5-4 8-3 8-6 12-5 9-6
Record 0-1 1-1 2-1 2-2 2-3 3-3 3-4 4-4 5-4 5-5
GAME-BY-GAME RESULTS 2/18 2/22% 2/22% 2/23% 2/23% 2/24% 2/24% 2/28^ 3/1^ 3/2^ 3/4 3/7 3/8 3/9 3/11 3/12 3/22 3/23 3/25 3/28* 3/29* 3/30* 4/4* 4/5* 4/6* 4/8 4/11* 4/12* 4/13* 4/15 4/17* 4/18* 4/19* 4/22 4/29 5/2* 5/3* 5/4* 5/6 5/9* 5/10* 5/11* 5/13 5/16* 5/17* 5/18* 5/23* 5/24* 5/25*
at UC Santa Barbara Creighton Utah Utah Texas A&M Creighton Texas A&M Texas Tulane Cal State Fullerton at Loyola Marymount USC USC USC Pacific UC Riverside Wichita State Wichita State at Long Beach State Arizona Arizona Arizona California California California Long Beach State at USC at USC at USC Cal State Fullerton at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State Cal State Fullerton Loyola Marymount Oregon State Oregon State Oregon State UC Santa Barbara Washington Washington Washington at Pepperdine at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford at Washington State at Washington State at Washington State
L L W W L W L W W L L W L W L L W W L W W L W L L L L L L L W W L L W W W L W W L L W L W L W L W
7-5 10-4 3-0 3-0 7-2 2-1 3-0 13-2 12-2 7-1 9-0 7-4 9-6 17-5 8-4 10-6 9-7 11-10 2-0 6-4 7-5 12-10 10-2 8-6 12-9 5-3 7-6 7-4 8-5 13-2 9-8 8-7 17-1 11-1 7-1 8-7 10-9 7-6 8-7 5-4 3-2 13-2 4-3 9-1 9-5 9-8 21-3 15-2 18-7
5-6 5-7 6-7 7-7 7-8 8-8 8-9 9-9 10-9 10-10 10-11 11-11 11-12 12-12 12-13 12-14 13-14 14-14 14-15 15-15 16-15 16-16 17-16 17-17 17-18 17-19 17-20 17-21 17-22 17-23 18-23 19-23 19-24 19-25 20-25 21-25 22-25 22-26 23-26 24-26 24-27 24-28 25-28 25-29 26-29 26-30 27-30 27-31 28-31
* Pac-10 Conference Game % Domino’s Pizza Aggie Baseball Classic (College Station, Texas, hosted by Texas A&M); all games were six innings ^ Kia Baseball Bash (hosted by Cal State Fullerton)
2004 (35-29, 14-10, t-3rd)
Head Coach: Gary Adams Date
Opponent
Result
2/3 2/13 2/14 2/15 2/17 2/20 2/21 2/24 2/26 2/27 2/29 3/1 3/2 3/5 3/6 3/7 3/9 3/12# 3/13# 3/14# 3/16 3/26 3/27 3/28 3/30 4/2* 4/3* 4/4* 4/6 4/8* 4/9* 4/10* 4/13 4/16* 4/17* 4/18* 4/20 4/23* 4/24* 4/25* 4/27 4/30* 5/1* 5/2* 5/4 5/5 5/7 5/8 5/9 5/11 5/14* 5/15* 5/16* 5/18 5/21* 5/22* 5/23* 5/28* 5/29* 5/30* 6/4 R 6/5 R 6/5 R 6/6 R
UC Riverside Fresno State Fresno State Fresno State at Loyola Marymount Pacific Pacific Pepperdine at Hawai’i Hilo at Hawai’i Hilo at Hawai’i Hilo at Hawai’i Hilo UC Santa Barbara Texas A&M Texas A&M Texas A&M at UC Irvine vs. Long Beach State vs. Nebraska vs. Houston Loyola Marymount at USC at USC at USC at San Diego State Stanford Stanford Stanford at Pepperdine at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona Long Beach State Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State at Cal State Fullerton at California at California at California at Long Beach State USC USC USC at Wichita State at Wichita State Arizona Arizona Arizona Cal State Fullerton Washington State Washington State Washington State UC Irvine at Washington at Washington at Washington at Oregon State at Oregon State at Oregon State at Oklahoma vs. Florida vs. Oklahoma vs. Florida
W W W L L W L W W W W W W W L L L L W L W L L W L L L W W W W L W L L W W W W L L L W W L L W L L W L W W L W L W L W W W L W L
4-1 6-2 13-11 3-2 7-3 6-1 7-0 8-6 10-4 14-1 11-0 12-1 3-2 8-6 8-4 8-2 6-0 3-0 4-2 7-6 7-5 11-4 5-0 13-7 5-1 11-4 15-13 6-5 3-2 9-7 4-3 9-5 11-1 12-4 4-3 11-10 5-4 7-2 10-7 3-2 2-1 6-4 12-6 13-12 6-4 10-3 7-3 20-9 11-2 8-2 10-9 3-1 14-0 7-5 3-1 7-2 4-3 3-2 12-2 11-6 9-1 4-3 17-7 11-0
* Pac-10 Conference game # Aztec Invitational (San Diego, Calif. – Petco Park) R – NCAA Oklahoma City Regional (at Bricktown Ballpark)
Record 1-0 2-0 3-0 3-1 3-2 4-2 4-3 5-3 6-3 7-3 8-3 9-3 10-3 11-3 11-4 11-5 11-6 11-7 12-7 12-8 13-8 13-9 13-10 13-10 14-11 14-12 14-13 15-13 16-13 17-13 18-13 18-14 19-14 19-15 19-16 20-16 21-16 22-16 23-16 23-17 23-18 23-19 24-19 25-19 25-20 25-21 26-21 26-22 26-23 27-23 27-24 28-24 29-24 29-25 30-25 30-26 31-26 31-27 32-27 33-27 34-27 34-28 35-28 35-29
R – NCAA Malibu Regional (at Pepperdine)
2005 (15-41, 4-20, 8th)
2007 (33-28, 14-10, 3rd)
Head Coach: John Savage Date
Opponent
Result
1/29 1/29 1/30 2/4 2/5 2/6 2/8 2/12 2/13 2/18 2/25 2/26 2/27 3/4# 3/5# 3/6# 3/8 3/11 3/12 3/13 3/29 4/1* 4/2* 4/3* 4/5 4/8* 4/9* 4/10* 4/12 4/15 4/16 4/17 4/19 4/22* 4/23* 4/24* 4/26 4/29* 4/30* 5/1* 5/3 5/6* 5/7* 5/8* 5/10 5/13* 5/14* 5/15* 5/17 5/20* 5/21* 5/22* 5/24 5/27* 5/28* 5/29*
Cal Poly Cal Poly Cal Poly at Fresno State at Fresno State at Fresno State UC Riverside Cal State Northridge at Cal State Northridge Utah Pacific Pacific Pacific vs. Oklahoma vs. Nevada at Cal State Fullerton at Cal State Northridge at Texas A&M at Texas A&M at Texas A&M Cal State Fullerton Arizona Arizona Arizona at Long Beach State at USC at USC at USC at Loyola Marymount UC Santa Barbara at UC Santa Barbara at UC Santa Barbara at San Diego State at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State UC Irvine California California California San Diego Oregon State Oregon State Oregon State at UC Irvine at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford Loyola Marymount at Washington State at Washington State at Washington State at UC Riverside Washington Washington Washington
W L L W L W W W W L W L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L W L L L L L W L L W W L L L W L W L L W L W L L L L
7-4 2-1 8-3 7-4 8-4 6-5 17-0 5-4 7-1 7-4 9-0 7-5 10-9 7-2 7-3 14-4 6-2 15-5 3-2 5-3 7-6 8-4 11-0 12-2 2-1 11-1 9-0 6-0 4-2 9-4 9-8 4-3 9-6 12-5 16-2 10-8 3-1 7-1 6-4 4-2 8-5 3-1 10-4 16-3 11-1 3-2 4-3 11-1 6-1 4-3 10-7 4-1 3-2 6-0 6-5 16-5
Record 1-0 1-1 1-2 2-2 2-3 3-3 4-3 5-3 6-3 6-4 7-4 7-5 7-6 7-7 7-8 7-9 7-10 7-11 7-12 7-13 7-14 7-15 7-16 7-17 7-18 7-19 7-20 7-21 7-22 7-23 8-23 8-24 8-25 8-26 8-27 8-28 9-28 9-29 9-30 10-30 11-30 11-31 11-32 11-33 12-33 12-34 13-34 13-35 13-36 14-36 14-37 15-37 15-38 15-39 15-40 15-41
* Pac-10 Conference Game # Kia Baseball Bash (hosted by Cal State Fullerton)
2006 (33-25, 13-10, 3rd)
Head Coach: John Savage Date
Opponent
Result
2/3 2/4 2/5 2/10 2/11 2/12 2/14 2/18 2/18 2/19 2/21 2/24 2/25 2/26 2/28 3/3 3/4 3/5 3/7 3/10 3/11 3/12 3/14 3/17 3/18 3/19 3/31* 4/1* 4/2* 4/7* 4/8* 4/9* 4/13* 4/14* 4/15* 4/18 4/21* 4/22* 4/23* 4/25 4/28* 4/29* 4/30* 5/2 5/9 5/12* 5/13* 5/14* 5/16 5/19* 5/20* 5/21* 5/23 5/26* 5/28* 6/2 R 6/3 R 6/4 R
Fresno State Fresno State Fresno State Miami Miami Miami UC Riverside at Pacific at Pacific at Pacific Pepperdine Cal State Fullerton at Cal State Fullerton at Cal State Fullerton at Long Beach State at NC State at NC State at NC State at Pepperdine Mississippi Mississippi Mississippi UNLV San Diego State San Diego State San Diego State at Washington at Washington at Washington Washington State Washington State Washington State at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona Long Beach State Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State UC Santa Barbara at California at California at California at UC Riverside at UC Santa Barbara USC USC USC at UC Irvine Stanford Stanford Stanford UC Irvine at Oregon State at Oregon State vs. UC Irvine vs. Pepperdine vs. Missouri
L L W L W L L W W L W L L L W W W W L W L W W W W W L W L W L W L W W W L W W L W L L W L L W W W W L W W L W W L L
* Pac-10 Conference game
11-9 5-0 12-2 3-1 7-4 5-2 6-4 5-2 5-1 3-0 2-0 7-2 3-1 12-6 6-3 7-2 5-4 13-2 6-1 9-2 6-5 6-4 16-2 14-6 12-2 9-1 5-0 3-2 4-1 9-5 4-3 10-7 4-3 13-8 8-5 9-7 3-2 5-1 11-10 11-8 4-2 3-2 9-4 9-4 4-3 8-6 8-3 12-1 8-4 8-1 6-2 8-7 10-1 9-2 3-1 3-2 6-0 2-1
Record 0-1 0-2 1-2 1-3 2-3 2-4 2-5 3-5 4-5 4-6 5-6 5-7 5-8 5-9 6-9 7-9 8-9 9-9 9-10 10-10 10-11 11-11 12-11 13-11 14-11 15-11 15-12 16-12 16-13 17-13 17-14 18-14 18-15 19-15 20-15 21-15 21-16 22-16 23-16 23-17 24-17 24-18 24-19 25-19 25-20 25-21 26-21 27-21 28-21 29-21 29-22 30-22 31-22 31-23 32-23 33-23 33-24 33-25
Head Coach: John Savage Date
Opponent
Result
2/2 2/3 2/4 2/9 2/10 2/11 2/13 2/16 2/17 2/18 2/20 2/23 2/24 2/25 3/9 3/10 3/11 3/13 3/16 3/17 3/18 3/24 3/25 3/26 3/30* 3/31* 4/1* 4/5* 4/6* 4/7* 4/10 4/13* 4/14* 4/15* 4/17 4/21 4/21 4/22 4/24 4/27* 4/28* 4/29* 5/1 5/4* 5/5* 5/6* 5/8 5/11* 5/12* 5/13* 5/18* 5/19* 5/20* 5/25* 5/26* 5/27* 6/1 R 6/2 R 6/3 R 6/9 SR 6/10 SR
Winthrop Winthrop Winthrop at Miami at Miami at Miami UC Riverside East Carolina East Carolina East Carolina at Long Beach State at Cal State Fullerton Cal State Fullerton Cal State Fullerton at Mississippi at Mississippi at Mississippi Long Beach State at San Diego State at San Diego State at San Diego State Pacific Pacific Pacific at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford Washington Washington Washington UC Irvine at USC at USC at USC Pepperdine Cal State Northridge Cal State Northridge Cal State Northridge at UC Riverside Arizona Arizona Arizona at UC Irvine California California California at Pepperdine at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State at Washington State at Washington State at Washington State Oregon State Oregon State Oregon State vs. Pepperdine vs. Illinois-Chicago at Long Beach State at Cal State Fullerton at Cal State Fullerton
W L W L L L W W W W L W L L L W L L L L L L W W W W W W W L L W W W W W W W L W W L W W W L W L L L L L W L L W W W W L L
2-1 6-4 19-5 1-0 9-8 7-3 3-2 6-1 9-7 7-6 14-1 6-2 7-4 7-2 8-0 7-6 4-1 4-2 8-2 12-6 5-3 4-3 15-8 8-3 8-2 16-11 10-4 6-5 11-2 9-4 5-4 5-2 7-6 12-9 6-2 8-3 6-5 12-8 3-1 9-3 11-4 5-3 4-2 13-6 7-2 16-0 4-1 16-14 5-4 11-10 5-1 10-5 7-5 10-7 13-5 5-2 7-3 3-1 7-4 12-2 2-1
Record 1-0 1-1 2-1 2-2 2-3 2-4 3-4 4-4 5-4 6-4 6-5 7-5 7-6 7-7 7-8 8-8 8-9 8-10 8-11 8-12 8-13 8-14 9-14 10-14 11-14 12-14 13-14 14-14 15-14 15-15 15-16 16-16 17-16 18-16 19-16 20-16 21-16 22-16 22-17 23-17 24-17 24-18 25-18 26-18 27-18 27-19 28-19 28-20 28-21 28-22 28-23 28-24 29-24 29-25 29-26 30-26 31-26 32-26 33-26 33-27 33-28
* Pac-10 Conference game R – NCAA Long Beach Regional (at Long Beach State, Blair Field) SR – NCAA Fullerton Super Regional (at Cal State Fullerton)
2008 (33-27, 13-11, 3rd)
Head Coach: John Savage Date
Opponent
Result
2/23 2/23 2/26^ 2/27 2/29# 3/1# 3/2# 3/4 3/5 3/7 3/8 3/9 3/11 3/13 3/14 3/15 3/21 3/22 3/22 3/25 3/28* 3/29* 3/30* 4/1 4/4* 4/5* 4/6* 4/8 4/11 4/12 4/13 4/15 4/18* 4/19* 4/20* 4/22 4/25* 4/26* 4/27* 4/29 4/30 5/2* 5/3* 5/4* 5/6 5/9* 5/10* 5/11* 5/13 5/16* 5/17* 5/18* 5/20
Oklahoma Oklahoma at Cal State Northridge UC Santa Barbara Southern vs. Bethune-Cookman at USC at Cal State Fullerton Cal State Fullerton St. Mary’s St. Mary’s St. Mary’s Pepperdine at Cal Poly at Cal Poly at Cal Poly Long Beach State at Long Beach State at Long Beach State at San Diego State at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona San Diego State USC USC USC UC Irvine UC Riverside UC Riverside UC Riverside Cal State Northridge Stanford Stanford Stanford UNLV at Washington at Washington at Washington at Pepperdine Loyola Marymount Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State San Diego at Oregon State at Oregon State at Oregon State at UC Irvine Washington State Washington State Washington State at Cal State Fullerton
W L W W W W W L L W W L W L W W L L L L W W L W L L W L W W W L L L W W L W W L W L W L L L W L W W W W L
84
7-5 3-2 22-2 5-4 11-2 2-0 4-3 7-1 13-2 14-0 7-6 4-2 11-3 9-8 10-6 12-9 13-3 3-2 10-3 6-3 4-3 20-8 8-4 6-2 6-1 7-4 4-2 6-5 5-3 18-7 9-5 4-0 4-1 6-1 8-2 8-7 5-2 8-1 4-3 6-2 6-2 10-5 8-3 11-8 5-3 10-1 11-4 8-7 6-4 10-0 7-6 2-1 12-8
Record 1-0 1-1 2-1 3-1 4-1 5-1 6-1 6-2 6-3 7-3 8-3 8-4 9-4 9-5 10-5 11-5 11-6 11-7 11-8 11-9 12-9 13-9 13-10 14-10 14-11 14-12 15-12 15-13 16-13 17-13 18-13 18-14 18-15 18-16 19-16 20-16 20-17 21-17 22-17 22-18 23-18 23-19 24-19 24-20 24-21 24-22 25-22 25-23 26-23 27-23 28-23 29-23 29-24
5/23* 5/24* 5/25* 5/30 R 5/31 R 6/1 R 6/2 R
at California at California at California vs. Virginia at Cal State Fullerton at Cal State Fullerton at Cal State Fullerton
W W L W W L L
8-0 7-0 7-6 3-2 11-4 11-8 5-4
30-24 31-24 31-25 32-25 33-25 33-26 33-27
* Pac-10 Conference game ^ Game resumed April 15 at UCLA after 7.5 inn (darkness) # MLB Urban Invitational (March 1 at Urban Youth Academy) R – NCAA Fullerton Regional (at Cal State Fullerton)
2009 (27-29, 15-12, t-3rd)
Head Coach: John Savage Date
Opponent
Result
2/20 2/21 2/22 2/24 2/25 2/27^ 2/28^ 3/1 3/3 3/6 3/7 3/8 3/10 3/11 3/13 3/13# 3/14 3/21* 3/22* 3/23* 3/25 3/27* 3/28* 3/29* 4/1 4/3* 4/4* 4/5* 4/7 4/9* 4/10* 4/11* 4/14 4/17* 4/18* 4/19* 4/21 4/24* 4/25* 4/26* 4/28 5/1* 5/2* 5/3* 5/5 5/8* 5/9* 5/10* 5/12 5/15 5/16 5/17 5/19 5/22 5/23 5/24
UC Davis UC Davis UC Davis at UC Santa Barbara UC Riverside vs. Rice vs. Baylor vs. UC Irvine Pepperdine at Oklahoma at Oklahoma at Oklahoma UC Santa Barbara San Diego State at East Carolina at East Carolina at East Carolina at USC at USC at USC at Pepperdine Arizona Arizona Arizona Loyola Marymount at Washington State at Washington State at Washington State UC Irvine at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford at San Diego State Washington Washington Washington at UC Riverside Oregon State Oregon State Oregon State Long Beach State at Oregon at Oregon at Oregon Cal State Bakersfield California California California Long Beach State at Cal State Fullerton Cal State Fullerton Cal State Fullerton at UC Irvine at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State
W W L L L L L L L L L L W L W W L W L W W W L W L L L W W L W L W W W W L W L W W L W W W L W L W L L W L L W L
13-1 5-2 8-7 7-6 11-1 5-4 5-1 7-4 5-4 6-5 7-6 6-4 5-3 10-6 10-9 8-6 7-5 14-4 5-1 17-2 7-2 7-6 19-5 8-6 3-2 7-2 4-3 9-5 8-3 4-3 8-5 7-2 7-3 4-2 13-0 6-3 17-6 7-5 5-3 5-2 7-5 3-2 6-2 8-1 15-2 3-2 9-4 8-3 15-2 6-3 6-5 13-10 5-4 4-0 10-4 6-5
Record 1-0 2-0 2-1 2-2 2-3 2-4 2-5 2-6 2-7 2-8 2-9 2-10 3-10 3-11 4-11 5-11 5-12 6-12 6-13 7-13 8-13 9-13 9-14 10-14 10-15 10-16 10-17 11-17 12-17 12-18 13-18 13-19 14-19 15-19 16-19 17-19 17-20 18-20 18-21 19-21 20-21 20-22 21-22 22-22 23-22 23-23 24-23 24-24 25-24 25-25 25-26 26-26 26-27 26-28 27-28 27-29
* Pac-10 Conference game ^ Houston College Classic (at Minute Maid Park, Houston) # Game postponed after 4.5 inn. (resumed March 14)
2010 (51-17, 18-9, 2nd)
Head Coach: John Savage Date
Opponent
Result
2/19# 2/20# 2/21# 2/23 2/26^ 2/28^ 3/5 3/5 3/6 3/9 3/12@ 3/13@ 3/14@ 3/19 3/20 3/21 3/23 3/25 3/26 3/27 3/30 4/1* 4/2* 4/3* 4/6 4/9* 4/10* 4/11* 4/13 4/16* 4/17* 4/18* 4/20 4/23* 4/24* 4/25* 4/27 4/30* 5/1* 5/2* 5/4 5/7* 5/8* 5/9* 5/11
Southern vs. Bethune Cookman Cal State Northridge at Long Beach State Vanderbilt vs. USC Nebraska Nebraska Nebraska UC Riverside at Texas A&M Corpus Christi vs. Mississippi State vs. Oklahoma Oral Roberts Oral Roberts Oral Roberts at UC Santa Barbara Cal Poly Cal Poly Cal Poly Pepperdine Stanford Stanford Stanford Cal State Fullerton at Oregon State at Oregon State at Oregon State at UC Riverside Oregon Oregon Oregon Long Beach State at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona UC Irvine Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State at Pepperdine at Washington at Washington at Washington at UC Irvine
W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W L W L L W W W L L W L W W L W L L L W W W W L
16-2 10-3 14-5 10-1 9-2 6-1 13-1 5-3 5-4 3-2 11-3 5-2 5-2 20-4 12-2 9-1 7-1 11-7 4-3 6-4 2-1 6-5 8-4 7-5 6-1 4-1 3-1 8-2 10-0 5-4 8-4 5-1 16-4 6-3 6-2 6-4 4-1 5-1 6-1 12-3 5-1 7-2 14-6 7-6 2-1
Record 1-0 2-0 3-0 4-0 5-0 6-0 7-0 8-0 9-0 10-0 11-0 12-0 13-0 14-0 15-0 16-0 17-0 18-0 19-0 20-0 21-0 22-0 22-1 23-1 23-2 23-3 24-3 25-3 26-3 26-4 26-5 27-5 27-6 28-6 29-6 29-7 30-7 30-8 30-9 30-10 31-10 32-10 33-10 34-10 34-11
GAME-BY-GAME RESULTS 5/14* 5/15* 5/16* 5/18 5/21* 5/22* 5/23* 5/25 5/28* 5/29* 5/30* 6/4 R 6/5 R 6/6 R 6/11 SR 6/12 SR 6/13 SR 6/19 WS 6/21 WS 6/25 WS 6/26 WS 6/28 WS 6/29 WS
USC USC USC UC Santa Barbara at California at California at California at Cal State Fullerton Washington State Washington State Washington State Kent State LSU UC Irvine Cal State Fullerton Cal State Fullerton Cal State Fullerton Florida TCU TCU TCU South Carolina South Carolina
W W W W W W W L W L W W W W L W W W W L W L L
13-7 15-2 2-1 6-2 8-7 12-4 11-2 5-2 6-1 6-4 11-1 15-1 6-3 6-2 4-3 11-7 8-1 11-3 6-3 6-2 10-3 7-1 2-1
35-11 36-11 37-11 38-11 39-11 40-11 41-11 41-12 42-12 42-13 43-13 44-13 45-13 46-13 46-14 47-14 48-14 49-14 50-14 50-15 51-15 51-16 51-17
* Pac-10 Conference game # MLB Urban Invitational (March 1 at Urban Youth Academy) ^ Dodgertown Classic (Feb. 28 at Dodger Stadium) @ Whataburger College Classic (Corpus Christi, Texas) R – NCAA Los Angeles Regional (Jackie Robinson Stadium) SR – NCAA Los Angeles Super Regional (Jackie Robinson Stadium) CWS – College World Series (Rosenblatt Stadium – Omaha, Neb.)
2011 (35-24, 18-9, 1st)
Head Coach: John Savage Date
Opponent
Result
2/18 2/19 2/20 2/22 2/26 2/27 2/27 3/1 3/4 3/5 3/6 3/11^ 3/12^ 3/13^ 3/21 3/21 3/25* 3/26* 3/27* 3/29 4/1* 4/2* 4/3* 4/5 4/8* 4/9* 4/10* 4/12 4/15* 4/16* 4/17* 4/19 4/21* 4/22* 4/23* 4/26 4/29* 4/30* 5/1* 5/3 5/6* 5/7* 5/8* 5/10 5/11 5/13 5/14 5/15 5/20* 5/21* 5/22* 5/24 5/27* 5/28* 5/29* 6/3 R 6/4 R 6/5 R 6/5 R
San Francisco San Francisco San Francisco Pepperdine San Jose State San Jose State San Jose State at San Diego State at Nebraska at Nebraska at Nebraska Georgia Saint Mary’s vs. USC at Cal Poly at Cal Poly at USC at USC at USC at Cal State Fullerton Washington Washington Washington at UC Riverside at Washington State at Washington State at Washington State Long Beach State Arizona Arizona Arizona San Diego State at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford UC Irvine Oregon State Oregon State Oregon State at Pepperdine at Oregon at Oregon at Oregon at Long Beach State UC Santa Barbara Cal State Bakersfield Cal State Bakersfield Cal State Bakersfield California California California at UC Irvine at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State San Francisco Fresno State San Francisco UC Irvine
W W W W L L W W W L L L W L L W W W L L W W W L W W L W L W W W L W L W L L W W W W W L L L W W L W W L W W L L W W L
Record
1-0 4-1 3-0 9-0 5-3 8-3 12-2 5-2 1-0 2-1 5-4 6-2 10-2 2-0 2-1 8-0 8-4 4-0 6-2 5-3 2-1 5-3 3-2 5-4 3-1 10-3 3-2 6-4 5-4 4-0 8-5 14-6 7-4 4-1 5-4 6-1 7-5 2-0 5-2 10-0 7-1 3-1 4-0 4-2 5-4 5-1 10-1 3-2 4-0 2-1 5-2 2-1 10-3 7-0 10-5 3-0 3-1 4-1 4-3
1-0 2-0 3-0 4-0 4-1 4-2 5-2 6-2 7-2 7-3 7-4 7-5 8-5 8-6 8-7 9-7 10-7 11-7 11-8 11-9 12-9 13-9 14-9 14-10 15-10 16-10 16-11 17-11 17-12 18-12 19-12 20-12 20-13 21-13 21-14 22-14 22-15 22-16 23-16 24-16 25-16 26-16 27-16 27-17 27-18 27-19 28-19 29-19 29-20 30-20 31-20 31-21 32-21 33-21 33-22 33-23 34-23 35-23 35-24
* Pac-10 Conference game ^ Dodgertown Classic (March 13 at Dodger Stadium) R – NCAA Los Angeles Regional (Jackie Robinson Stadium)
2012 (48-16, 20-10, 1st)
Head Coach: John Savage Date
Opponent
Result
2/17 2/18 2/19 2/21 2/24 2/25 2/26 2/28 3/2 3/3 3/4 3/6 3/9 3/10 3/11 3/13^ 3/16* 3/18* 3/18* 3/23* 3/24* 3/26* 3/30* 3/31* 4/1*
Maryland Maryland Maryland at Cal State Northridge Baylor Baylor Baylor Long Beach State Sacramento State Sacramento State Sacramento State UC Riverside at Georgia at Georgia at Georgia vs. USC Arizona State Arizona State Arizona State Washington State Washington State Washington State at Utah at Utah at Utah
L W L W L W W W W W W W W W W W W L W W W L W W W
2-1 6-5 5-1 19-7 15-3 9-3 8-6 9-1 5-2 6-2 11-2 4-0 2-0 7-6 7-3 7-2 6-5 4-3 4-2 12-3 12-3 10-4 16-0 9-6 5-1
Record 0-1 1-1 1-2 2-2 2-3 3-3 4-3 5-3 6-3 7-3 8-3 9-3 10-3 11-3 12-3 13-3 14-3 14-4 15-4 16-4 17-4 17-5 18-5 19-5 20-5
4/5* 4/6* 4/7* 4/10 4/13* 4/14* 4/15* 4/17 4/20* 4/21* 4/22* 4/24 4/27* 4/28* 4/29* 5/1 5/5 5/5 5/6 5/8 5/11#* 5/12* 5/13* 5/15 5/18* 5/19* 5/20* 5/22 5/25* 5/26* 5/27* 6/1 R 6/2 R 6/3 R 6/8 SR 6/9 SR 6/15 WS 6/17 WS 6/19 WS
Oregon Oregon Oregon Cal State Fullerton at Arizona at Arizona at Arizona Cal State Northridge at Oregon State at Oregon State at Oregon State UC Irvine Stanford Stanford Stanford at Long Beach State Purdue Purdue Purdue at Pepperdine at Washington at Washington at Washington at Cal State Fullerton at California at California at California at UC Irvine USC USC USC Creighton New Mexico Creighton TCU TCU Stony Brook Arizona Florida State
L L W W L W W W W L L W L W L W W W L W W W W W W W L W W W W W W W W W W L L
6-2 8-3 8-6 4-2 4-3 15-3 6-2 12-4 4-0 3-0 7-6 9-3 7-2 7-4 7-2 2-1 5-1 3-2 15-11 6-2 2-0 11-3 4-2 6-3 7-2 8-5 6-5 6-2 3-1 6-5 7-6 3-0 7-1 13-5 6-2 4-1 9-1 4-0 4-1
20-6 20-7 21-7 22-7 22-8 23-8 24-8 25-8 26-8 26-9 26-10 27-10 27-11 28-11 28-12 29-12 30-12 31-12 31-13 32-13 33-13 34-13 35-13 36-13 37-13 38-13 38-14 39-14 40-14 41-14 42-14 43-14 44-14 45-14 46-14 47-14 48-14 48-15 48-16
* Pac-12 Conference game ^ Dodgertown Classic (March 13 at Dodger Stadium) # – Game played at Safeco Field in Seattle, Wash. R – NCAA Los Angeles Regional (Jackie Robinson Stadium) SR – NCAA Los Angeles Super Regional (Jackie Robinson Stadium) CWS – College World Series (TD Ameritrade Park – Omaha, Neb.)
2013 (49-17, 21-9, 3rd)
Head Coach: John Savage Date
Opponent
Result
2/15 2/16 2/17 2/22 2/23 2/24 2/26 3/1 3/2 3/3 3/5 3/8 3/9 3/10 3/12 3/15* 3/16* 3/17* 3/22* 3/23* 3/24* 3/28* 3/29* 3/30* 4/2 4/5* 4/6* 4/7* 4/9 4/12 4/13 4/14 4/16 4/19* 4/20* 4/21* 4/23 4/26* 4/27* 4/28* 4/30 5/3* 5/4* 5/5* 5/7 5/10* 5/11* 5/12* 5/14 5/17* 5/18* 5/19* 5/21 5/24* 5/25* 5/26* 5/31 R 6/1 R 6/2 R 6/7 SR 6/8 SR 6/16 WS 6/18 WS 6/21 WS 6/24 WS 6/25 WS
Minnesota Minnesota Minnesota at Baylor at Baylor at Baylor at UC Santa Barbara Wright State Wright State Wright State at Long Beach State Notre Dame Oklahoma USC at Cal State Northridge Washington Washington Washington California California California at Arizona State at Arizona State at Arizona State Cal State Fullerton Oregon State Oregon State Oregon State Hawaii Loyola Marymount Loyola Marymount Loyola Marymount at UC Irvine at Oregon at Oregon at Oregon Long Beach State at Washington State at Washington State at Washington State UC Irvine Utah Utah Utah Cal State Northridge Arizona Arizona Arizona at Cal State Fullerton at USC at USC at USC UC Santa Barbara at Stanford at Stanford at Stanford San Diego State Cal Poly San Diego at Cal State Fullerton at Cal State Fullerton LSU NC State North Carolina Mississippi State Mississippi State
L W W W L W W W W W W W L W W W W W L W W L L W L W L L W W W L W W W L L W W L W W W W L W W W L W W W W L L W W W W W W W W W W W
6-2 14-0 14-1 4-3 5-0 5-4 12-3 6-3 4-2 10-2 3-2 2-1 4-0 6-1 5-4 3-2 5-0 3-0 5-1 8-3 10-2 4-1 7-4 12-10 9-6 3-2 5-0 5-2 5-1 2-0 3-1 4-1 6-4 1-0 1-0 5-3 11-1 7-6 10-1 4-3 8-1 5-2 5-4 4-3 4-1 10-2 7-1 12-5 5-2 2-1 7-6 5-2 2-1 2-1 7-3 6-4 5-3 6-4 6-0 5-3 3-0 2-1 2-1 4-1 3-1 8-0
Record 0-1 1-1 2-1 3-1 3-2 4-2 5-2 6-2 7-2 8-2 9-2 10-2 10-3 11-3 12-3 13-3 14-3 15-3 15-4 16-4 17-4 17-5 17-6 18-6 18-7 19-7 19-8 19-9 20-9 21-9 22-9 22-10 23-10 24-10 25-10 25-11 25-12 26-12 27-12 27-13 28-13 29-13 30-13 31-13 31-14 32-14 33-14 34-14 34-15 35-15 36-15 37-15 38-15 38-16 38-17 39-17 40-17 41-17 42-17 43-17 44-17 45-17 46-17 47-17 48-17 49-17
* Pac-12 Conference game R – NCAA Los Angeles Regional (Jackie Robinson Stadium) SR – NCAA Los Angeles Super Regional (Jackie Robinson Stadium) CWS – College World Series (TD Ameritrade Park – Omaha, Neb.)
UCLA vs. All Opponents Air Force Arizona Arizona State Arkansas Azusa Pacific Baylor Bethune-Cookman Bradley Brigham Young Cal Lutheran Cal Poly Cal Poly Pomona California College of Pacific Cal State Bakersfield Cal State Dominguez Hills Cal State Fullerton Cal State Los Angeles Cal State Northridge Chapman College Central Florida Clemson Creighton Delaware East Carolina Florida Florida Atlantic Florida State Fordham Fresno State Fullerton JC Georgia Georgia Southern Georgia Tech Gonzaga Harvard Hawaii Hawaii-Hilo Houston Illinois Illinois-Chicago Indiana Lamar Iona Kansas Kansas State Kent State La Verne Long Beach CC Long Beach State Loyola Marymount LSU Maine Maryland McNeese State Miami Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Mississippi State Missouri N.C. State Nebraska Nevada New Mexico New Orleans North Carolina Northwestern Northwestern State Notre Dame Occidental Ohio Ohio State Oklahoma Oklahoma State Oral Roberts Orange Coast College Oregon Oregon State Pacific Pepperdine Pierce College Pittsburgh Pomona-Pitzer Portland State Purdue Rice Sacramento State Saint Mary’s Sam Houston State San Diego San Diego State
3-0 124-114-2 68-112 2-0 2-0 4-3 2-0 3-0 2-1-1 14-1 21-5 33-21 172-171 1-0 3-1 22-7 32-63-2 51-20-1 32-28-1 28-10-1 1-0 1-0 3-1 2-0 5-1 2-3 2-1 0-1 1-0 27-22 6-0 3-1 1-1 4-2 13-4 5-1 26-31 12-0 0-1 1-1 1-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 0-3 1-0 4-0 6-4-1 59-40 47-46-1 2-3 3-1 1-2 0-1 1-13 0-2 5-2 4-3 6-1 1-2 6-1 6-2 6-7 4-0 1-0 2-5 3-0 0-1 2-1 19-4 1-0 1-0 6-8 3-1 4-5 2-1 20-8 34-27 7-6 57-37-4 4-2 1-1 2-0 3-0 3-1 1-1 6-1 17-26 1-0 16-7 48-30-2
1957 1927 1962 1999 1982 2009 2008 2000 1961 1966 1959 1961 1928 1955 2009 1974 ^1968 t *1955 1973 1966 1991 1992 2003 1969 2007 1991 2002 2012 1990 *1956 1966 2011 1990 1998 1970 1985 *1962 1990 2004 1969 2007 1969 1993 1989 1968 2001 2010 *1966 *1955 1960 *1961 1988 1987 2012 1999 1984 1987 1987 1969 1967 1977 2003 1997 1994 1963 1988 1993 1983 1999 1961 1961 1997 1967 1992 1997 1977 *1956 1967 1967 1987 *1954 *1962 1968 1982 1998 2001 1999 1990 & 1928 1996 1961 1948
San Fernando Valley State San Francisco San Francisco State San Jose State Santa Ana Santa Clara South Alabama South Carolina Southern Southern California College Southern Illinois Southern Utah Southwest Missouri State Stanford Stanislaus State Stony Brook TCU Tennessee Texas Texas A&M Texas A&M Corpus Christi Texas Tech Tulane Tulsa UC Davis UC Irvine UC Riverside UC San Diego UC Santa Barbara UNLV USC U.S. International Utah Valley College Vanderbilt Virginia Washington Washington State Westmont College Wichita State Winthrop Wright State Wyoming Yale
4-6 4-1 1-0 5-2 1-0 50-48 3-1 0-2 2-0 9-1 1-0 4-0 1-1 143-194 1-0 1-0 4-1 3-0 2-3 1-8 1-0 0-1 5-2 0-1 2-1 49-28-1 22-12 2-0 53-35 25-12 130-253 17-6 13-2 1-1-1 1-0 1-0 44-17 44-21 13-3 3-3 2-1 3-0 0-1 3-0
1962 2011 1992 1956 1966 1929 1988 2010 2008 1975 1971 1993 1996 1928 1962 2012 2010 1968 1989 1993 2010 1999 1974 1969 2009 1970 *1966 1981 *1959 1976 1928 1982 1969 *1962 2010 2008 1967 1967 *1962 1990 2007 2013 1967 1967
*UCLA’s game-by-game records date back through the 1955 season; asterisk indicates an opponent who UCLA played prior to 1955 (record incomplete). All-time series records are complete for those schools with the year listed prior to 1955. Year in right column indicates first season in which UCLA played that school. ^UCLA is 27-56-2 against Cal State Fullerton since the Titans became a Division I program in 1975. t UCLA has played Cal State Los Angeles prior to 1955; until 1964, the school is referred to as Los Angeles State. & Records versus St. Mary’s from 1948-1954 are missing. Both schools have played five games since 1955.
Pac-12 Opponents Team Home Road Neutral Total # Arizona 51-58-1 #66-47-1 #0-1 124-114-2 Arizona State 38-46 29-63 1-3 68-112 # 82-49 #57-68 #0-1 172-171 California Oregon 8-6 10-2 2-0 20-8 Oregon State 16-13 17-13 1-1 34-27 # 58-68 #46-88 #1-2 147-194 Stanford USC 71-110 57-139 2-4 130-253 Utah 8-2 3-0 2-0 13-2 Washington 26-8 17-9 1-0 44-17 Washington State 24-9 19-10 1-2 44-21 # home and road records vs. Cal, Stanford date back to 1955 home and road records vs. Arizona date back to 1950
2014 Non-Conference Opponents Team Home Cal Poly 18-3 Cal State Fullerton 16-27-1 Cal State Northridge 20-14 Houston 0-0 Long Beach State 33-15 Loyola Marymount 26-22 Michigan 0-1 N.C. State 2-1 Notre Dame 1-1 Pepperdine 35-16-2 Portland 0-0 UC Santa Barbara 29-16
Road Neutral 3-2 0-0 15-34-1 1-2 12-14-1 0-0 0-0 0-1 25-23 1-2 20-23-1 1-0 0-0 0-1 3-0 1-0 0-0 1-0 20-21-2 2-0 0-0 0-0 24-19 0-0
Total 21-5 32-63-2 32-28-1 0-1 59-40 47-46-1 0-2 6-1 2-1 57-37-4 0-0 53-35
UCLA in the National Polls rankings indicate position at end of season
Year 1964 1965 1969 1976 1978 1979 1986 1987 1990 1992
Collegiate Baseball Baseball America 18 N/A 23 N/A 3 N/A 15 N/A 15 N/A 6 N/A 13 8 12 16 19 24 23 21
Year 1993 1996 1997 2000 2007 2010 2011 2012 2013
Collegiate Baseball Baseball America 23 22 15 21 8 5 16 15 23 22 2 2 20 22 5 5 1 1
NOTES: UCLA reached the No. 1 spot in the polls in 1979, 1997 and 2010 and finished No. 1 in both polls in 2013 after winning the NCAA Championship. In 1979, UCLA was ranked No. 1 by Collegiate Baseball. In 1997, UCLA was ranked No. 1 by Collegiate Baseball and Baseball America (March 3) for one week. In 2008, UCLA opened the season ranked No. 1 by Baseball America. In 2010, UCLA was ranked No. 1 by Baseball America and Collegiate Baseball (April 12) for one week..
85
YEAR-BY-YEAR SUMMARY
Fred Cozens
Caddy Works
Jack Fournier
A.J. Sturzenegger
(1920-1924)
(1925-1926)
(1934-1936)
(1927-31, 1933, 1943-1945)
Season Head Coach
Captain(s)
Overall
Pct.
Conf.
Pct.
Finish
1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983
Wayne Banning Wayne Banning Al Olmstead Howard Rossell Aaron Wagner Grayson Turney Al Wagner Gene Patz Pete Kruhling Witney Graham Jimmy Leyh Harry Griffith Bill Brubaker Ralph Koontz Mike Frankovich, Bill Athey Lowell McGinnis Ralph McFadden Curt Counts Al Martel John Carter Billy Geyer Johnny Moore Kirk Sinclair, Rudy Hummes not available Bob Brown Vic Smith Lynn “Buck” Compton Lou Briganti Jack Myers Hal Handley Phil Steinberg Kenny Moats John Mutalich Hal Crow Al Bates Daryl Westerfield Jim Decker Bob Mesa Conrad Munatones Art Harris Tom Bergeron Gene Adams Gary Adams Ezell Singleton Dave Ardell Bill Macri, Jim Colletto Ray Arrington, Fred Dyer Jim Colletto, Charlie Petrilla Aaron McGuire Don Sealy, Gary Sanserino Bob Petretta, Jake Molina Bob Petretta, Ralph Punaro Mike Gerakos Bob Adams Tim Doerr, Mark Swedlow Venoy Garrison, Andy Lopez Dave Penniall, Bobby Dallas Dave Baker, Dennis Delany Dave Baker, Dennis Delany Jim Auten, Dan Gausepohl Pat Dodson, Don Slaught Eric Broersma, Mike Gallego Brian Graham, Jeff McDonald Bob Westland, Rich Amaral
3-10 7-11 19-8-1 16-2 16-2 9-8 14-6 6-9 7-10 8-18-2 5-17 10-19-1 14-11 7-9 10-7 15-11 15-12 17-12 10-14 13-13 14-23-1 6-19-1 7-18 6-13 16-12 6-19 15-13 29-15 21-18 21-15 19-21 24-13 21-15 16-20 19-16 22-9-1 11-21-2 15-15-2 14-19 9-26 18-29-1 25-15-5 23-22-3 30-17-2 35-16-2 33-15 35-24 43-19 35-20 42-12-1 26-24-1 38-17 32-33-1 29-24 26-35 31-22 35-25 31-30 39-20 43-18 31-22-3 21-35 38-27 28-24-1
.231 .389 .696 .889 .889 .529 .700 .400 .412 .321 .227 .350 .560 .438 .588 .577 .556 .586 .417 .500 .382 .250 .368 .316 .571 .240 .536 .659 .538 .583 .475 .649 .583 .444 .543 .703 .338 .500 .424 .460 .385 .611 .510 .646 .679 .688 .593 .694 .636 .763 .520 .691 .492 .547 .426 .585 .583 .508 .661 .705 .580 .375 .585 .537
1-9 5-5 7-3 7-2 10-0 — 6-4 4-2 3-9 4-11 2-13 3-15 7-11 — — 8-7 8-7 7-8 6-9 4-11 6-9 3-12 5-10 6-4 5-3 2-6 4-8 7-8 5-10 8-6 5-10 10-6 8-8 6-10 6-10 9-6 5-11 5-9 5-11 2-14 4-12 7-9 4-12 9-7 13-7 10-10 10-10 10-6 11-8 17-4 8-7 11-6 4-14 7-11 7-11 7-11 16-8 10-8 9-9 21-9 15-15 7-23 11-19 12-18
.100 .500 .700 .778 1.000 .556 .600 .667 .250 .267 .133 .167 .389 — — .533 .533 .467 .400 .267 .400 .200 .333 .600 .625 .250 .333 .467 .333 .571 .333 .625 .500 .375 .375 .600 .313 .357 .313 .125 .250 .438 .250 .563 .650 .500 .500 .625 .579 .810 .533 .647 .222 .389 .389 .389 .667 .556 .500 .700 .500 .233 .367 .400
6th 3rd t-1st 2nd 1st 3rd 2nd 2nd 5th 6th 6th 7th 6th — — 4th 3rd 5th 4th 5th 5th 6th 4th 2nd 1st 3rd 3rd 4th 5th 3rd 6th 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 2nd 4th 4th 4th 5th 5th 3rd 5th 2nd 3rd 4th 4th 2nd 4th 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 3rd 4th 3rd 1st 2nd 2nd 1st 3rd 6th 4th 5th
Fred W. Cozens Fred W. Cozens Fred W. Cozens Fred W. Cozens Fred W. Cozens Caddy Works Caddy Works A.J. Sturzenegger A.J. Sturzenegger A.J. Sturzenegger A.J. Sturzenegger A.J. Sturzenegger Al Montgomery A.J. Sturzenegger, Jim Schaeffer Jack Fournier Jack Fournier Jack Fournier, Bill James* Marty Krug Marty Krug Marty Krug John Schaeffer Arthur E. Reichle Lowell McGinnis A.J. Sturzenegger A.J. Sturzenegger A.J. Sturzenegger Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Arthur E. Reichle Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams
86
YEAR-BY-YEAR SUMMARY
Arthur Reichle
Gary Adams
John Savage
(1941, 1946-74)
(1975-2004)
(2005-present)
Season Head Coach
Captain(s)
Overall
Pct.
Conf.
Pct.
Finish
1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Lindsay Meggs, Brent Brakebill 28-32 David Bond, Vince Lopez 34-30-1 Todd Zeile, Torey Lovullo 39-23 Torey Lovullo, Steve Hisey 40-25-1 Eric Karros, Scott Cline 31-28 Charlie Fiacco, Scott Cline 27-32 Robbie Katzaroff, John Dolak 41-26 Chris Pritchett, Tim Lindsay 29-30 Pete Janicki, Michael Moore 37-26 Ryan McGuire, David Ravitz 37-23 David Roberts 22-36 Bobby Kazmirski, Gar Vallone 29-28 Zak Ammirato 36-28 Jon Heinrichs 45-21-1 Eric Byrnes, Eric Valent 24-33 Jason Green, Jack Santora 31-31 Chad Cislak, Bill Scott, Chase Utley 38-26 Paul Diaz, Josh Canales 30-27 Josh Arhart, Adam Berry, Ben Francisco 26-35 Mike Kunes, Warren Trott 28-31 Brandon Averill, Chad Concolino 35-29 Chris Denove, Brett McMillan 15-41 Hector Ambriz, Brett McMillan 33-25 Ryan Babineau, Tyson Brummett 33-28 Ryan Babineau, Jermaine Curtis, Tim Murphy 33-27 no captains 27-29 Matt Grace, Dan Klein Brett Krill, Justin Uribe 51-17 Gerrit Cole, Chris Giovnazzo, Marc Navarro, Steve Rodriguez 35-24 Beau Amaral, Jeff Gelalich, Scott Griggs, Adam Plutko, Pat Valaika 48-16 Brian Carroll, Ryan Deeter, Adam Plutko, Pat Valaika, Nick Vander Tuig 49-17
.467 .554 .629 .615 .525 .458 .612 .492 .587 .617 .379 .509 .563 .679 .422 .500 .594 .526 .420 .475 .547 .268 .568 .541 .550 .482 .750 .593 .750 .742
8-22 13-17 21-9 16-14 12-18 10-20 14-16 13-17 14-16 17-13 11-19 12-18 16-14 19-11 11-19 13-11 17-7 9-15 9-15 11-13 14-10 4-20 13-10 14-10 13-11 15-12 18-9 18-9 20-10 21-9
.267 .433 .700 .533 .400 .333 .467 .433 .467 .567 .366 .400 .533 .633 .367 .542 .708 .400 .400 .458 .583 .166 .565 .583 .542 .556 .667 .667 .667 .700
6th 5th 1st 2nd 5th 5th 4th 4th 3rd 2nd 5th 5th 3rd 2nd 5th 3rd t-1st 7th t-7th t-5th t-3rd 8th 3rd 3rd 3rd t-3rd 2nd 1st t-1st 3rd
2,310-1,918-34
.546
860-965
.471
Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams Gary Adams John Savage John Savage John Savage John Savage John Savage John Savage John Savage John Savage John Savage
94-YEAR TOTALS
Southern California Conference, 1920-27; Pacific Coast Conference, 1928-29; CIBA, 1930-32, 1935-66, 1976; No Conference (financial problems), 1933-34; Pac-8, 1967-78; Pac-10, 1979-2011; Pac-12, 2012-current) *James coached last 19 games (12-7, 7-6)
UCLA Baseball Head Coach History Head Coach
Years
Fred W. Cozens Caddy Works A.J. Sturzenegger Al Montgomery Jack Fournier Marty Krug John Schaeffer Lowell McGinnis Arthur Reichle Gary Adams John Savage
1920-1924 1925-1926 1927-1931, 1933, 1943-1945 1932 1934-1936 1937-1939 1940 1942 1941, 1946-1974 1975-2004 2005-current
OVERALL RECORD
CONFERENCE RECORD
W
L
T
Pct.
W
L
Pct.
61 23 71 14 40 40 14 7 733 984 324
33 14 126 11 30 39 23 18 577 823 224
1 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 22 7 0
.647 .622 .363 .560 .571 .506 .382 .368 .559 .544 .591
30 6 29 7 16 17 6 5 220 388 136
19 4 63 11 14 28 9 10 273 434 100
.612 .600 .315 .389 .533 .378 .400 .333 .446 .472 .576
In Memoriam: Arthur E. Reichle (1914-2000) “A courageous man who taught his players to strive for excellence both on and off the field of play.” The UCLA baseball program lost a great teacher and friend when former head coach Art Reichle passed away on May 23, 2000. Reichle, who was inducted into the UCLA Athletics Hall of Fame in 1998, became head coach of the Bruins in 1941. After one year, he entered the Army and served until 1946, at which time he resumed coaching baseball at UCLA. In 1969, the Bruins, led by future major leaguer Chris Chambliss, won the Pacific-8 title and earned UCLA’s first appearance into the College World Series. Reichle retired as coach after the 1974 season with 733-577-22 record, and was succeeded by Gary Adams, one of his former players. As an athlete, Reichle played football, rugby and baseball at UCLA from 1934-36. He began his coaching career as an assistant for the Bruin baseball team and one of the players during his tenure was future Hall of Famer Jackie Robinson. Reichle was an assistant athletic director at UCLA until 1980. He continued to teach at clinics and assist high school coaches in Ventura County until his retirement. Reichle moved to Florida in 1989. Reichle is survived by his wife Ruth, sons Arthur Jr. and Richard, and daughter Denise Margarite.
87
STARTING LINEUPS
Jim Auten, OF (1976-1979)
Tim Leary, RHP (1977-1979)
1976 C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF DH P P P
Dennis Delany Ken Gaylord Bobby Dallas Raymond Townsend Robbie Henderson Dave Baker Dave Penniall Larry Silver Brian Viselli Tim O’Neill Steve Bianchi Ed Cowan
1981 So. Sr. Sr. Jr. Jr. So. Sr. Jr. Jr. So. Sr. Sr.
.257 7 30 .272 11 37 .310 7 30 .306 0 6 .302 9 37 .277 7 37 .287 5 29 .248 5 21 .287 2 19 7-4 3.21 5-3 3.86 10-2 3.50
C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF DH P P P
Jr. Sr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Sr. Fr. Jr. So. Jr.
.339 11 37 .324 7 39 .254 3 23 .258 4 22 .283 0 11 .286 10 43 .284 9 40 .273 5 26 .265 4 21 6-7 4.00 6-3 3.50 5-2 3.01
C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF DH P P P
Sr. Jr. Jr. Sr. Sr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Sr. Sr. Sr. So.
.339 6 37 .343 0 16 .241 0 24 .278 7 30 .270 14 50 .328 17 57 .308 2 16 .332 6 36 .284 4 25 11-3 1.73 6-5 3.05 5-5 3.42
C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF DH P P P
Jr. So. Fr. Sr. Jr. Sr. Sr. Sr. So. Jr. Sr. Jr.
.428 7 41 .327 15 46 .293 2 28 .388 6 53 .305 2 19 .294 3 24 .312 10 41 .309 29 78 .295 5 29 12-3 2.72 10-2 5.09 1-2 6.70
C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF DH P P P
Sr. Jr. So. So. Jr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Sr. Jr.
.292 .259 .231 .325 .267 .277 .269 .236 .298 10-2 9-5 4-5
C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF DH P P P
1977 C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF DH P P P
Dennis Delany Brian Viselli Gary Rasmussen Mobil Cox Ray Townsend Dave Baker Ron Roenicke Larry Silver John Violette Tim O’Neill Dave Schmidt Floyd Chiffer
Dennis Delany Mike Carpenter Vern Followell Mobil Cox Dave Baker Craig Johnson Dan Gausepohl Jim Auten Matt Odeski Floyd Chiffer Tim O’Neill Tim Leary
Don Slaught Pat Dodson Mike Gallego Vern Followell Roger Lang Mark Miller Dan Gausepohl Jim Auten Dave Montanari Tim Leary Dave Schmidt Matt Young
Don Slaught Pat Dodson Mike Gallego Brian Graham Todd Gauntlett Chris Smith Reggie West Dave Montanari Gary Fradella Eric Broersma Matt Young Andy Center
.273 .347 .291 .260 .300 .333 .337 .374 .267 5-9 6-6 3-5
3 9 1 6 5 0 3 1 1
14 47 29 33 36 12 22 37 21 4.27 5.58 7.59
C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF DH P P P
Sr. Jr. Jr. So. So. Fr. So. Sr. Sr. So. Sr. Jr.
.216 .274 .327 .278 .290 .306 .338 .339 .254 9-6 7-6 7-6
1 5 0 7 6 2 3 3 1
17 40 34 52 46 29 47 43 21 6.32 4.51 6.37
C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF DH P P P
Brent Brakebill Pete Beall Rich Amaral Vince Lopez Lindsay Meggs Mike Young Vince Beringhele Shane Mack Jeff Pries Jeff Pries Chuck Yaeger Bob Westland
So. Jr. Sr. Fr. Jr. So. Jr. So. So. So. Jr. Sr.
.273 2 15 .351 5 33 .341 5 30 .296 2 33 .333 7 43 .311 3 26 .282 4 25 .419 11 60 .301 4 30 7-6 4.46 5-2 3.78 5-2 3.70
C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF DH P P P
Brent Brakebill Dan Sullivan Torey Lovullo Pete Beall Lindsay Meggs David Alarid Matt Morrison Shane Mack John Nero Jeff Pries Chuck Yaeger Dana Ridenour
Jr. Jr. Fr. Sr. Sr. Jr. Sr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Sr. Fr.
.303 6 29 .300 5 42 .219 0 14 .358 7 43 .243 11 43 .307 1 10 .303 1 27 .352 16 53 .257 3 20 5-5 4.01 5-9 5.40 3-5 5.86
C C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF DH P P P
34 28 27 23 34 8 21 12 31 2.24 2.82 2.97
Todd Zeile Gary Berman Torey Lovullo John Barry Hector Cano Brent Brakebill Sean Berry Steve Stowell John Joslyn Eric Nolte Alex Sanchez Randy Hennis
So. Jr. So. Jr. Jr. Sr. Fr. So. Jr. So. Fr. Fr.
.333 12 41 .301 7 49 .321 11 46 .281 0 12 .297 5 42 .237 2 20 .293 3 23 .283 5 35 .370 6 42 6-2 6.75 5-7 5.26 4-0 6.35
1991 Jr. Sr. Jr. Fr. Fr. Jr. So. Fr. Sr. So. So. So.
.336 13 43 .347 18 53 .317 16 65 .277 4 22 .301 6 29 .342 14 59 .345 3 24 .364 11 44 .300 5 22 16-3 4.06 6-7 4.97 4-2 5.22
C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF DH P P P
Billy Haselman Eric Karros Torey Lovullo Bobby Holley Scott Cline Steve Hisey Charlie Fiacco Jeff Osborn Steve Stowell Steve Stowell Randy Hennis Alex Sanchez
So. So. Sr. So. So. Sr. So. Jr. Sr. Sr. Jr. Jr.
.303 9 51 .312 8 57 .350 24 73 .286 4 21 .345 9 38 .298 18 79 .330 11 51 .269 8 31 .295 5 29 11-6 4.93 9-4 5.81 6-7 5.92
C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF CF RF DH P P P
John Dolak Eric Karros Bobby Holley Mike Hankins Scott Cline Rob Katzaroff Charlie Fiacco Jeff Osborn Joe James Mike Magnante Scott Schanz Mike Fyhrie
So. Jr. Jr. So. Jr. So. Jr. Sr. Jr. Sr. Fr. Fr.
.268 7 36 .415 17 54 .275 7 27 .268 3 31 .308 9 44 .329 1 23 .293 15 44 .330 9 36 .300 14 47 14-4 3.93 4-7 5.96 3-5 3.76
So. Jr. So. Sr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Jr. So. Sr. Jr. So. So.
.281 .244 .260 .320 .260 .312 .342 .266 .288 .295 6-6 2-12 7-5
Jr. So. Sr. Sr. So. So. Sr. Jr. Fr. Jr. Fr. Jr.
.360 29 83 .368 13 67 .305 3 35 .306 4 53 .289 11 43 .376 10 44 .306 2 41 .318 6 40 .304 3 18 .9-8 3.93 9-1 3.63 11-6 3.19
1989 Paul Ellis John Dolak Mike Lewis Charlie Fiacco Mike Hankins Mannie Adams Robbie Katzaroff Dave Keating David Tokheim Scott Cline John Sutherland Scott Schanz Mike Fyhrie
4 2 1 7 1 1 0 6 3 1
23 17 18 38 18 20 30 24 20 19 4.40 4.83 3.72
1990 C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF DH P P P
88
Paul Ellis Chris Pritchett Mannie Adams Mike Hankins Kevin Webb Joel Wolfe Robbie Katzaroff David Tokheim Michael Moore Tim Lindsay Pete Janicki Dave Zancanaro
Matt Schwenke Chris Pritchett Robert Hinds Gary Hagy Kevin Webb Joel Wolfe Michael Moore David Tokheim Ryan McGuire Tim Lindsay Pete Janicki Mike Lewis
Fr. Jr. So. Sr. Jr. Jr. So. Sr. Fr. Sr. So. Sr.
.237 2 12 .328 18 57 .321 1 17 .305 9 48 .352 6 27 .345 6 7 .328 8 28 .321 6 39 .319 7 0 9-4 4.57 5-7 6.09 5-6 3.99
So. So. Jr. So. Jr. So. Fr. Jr. Jr. Fr. Jr. Jr. So.
.219 4 24 .316 14 61 .236 1 25 .259 10 41 .263 1 22 .331 2 27 .344 2 22 .338 8 30 .295 2 26 .351 12 36 9-4 3.53 7-5 3.99 5-1 4.24
Jr. Jr. Sr. So. Jr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Fr. Jr. Jr. Sr.
.223 2 32 .376 26 91 .324 6 2 .224 1 29 .344 10 50 .296 3 28 .325 5 40 .358 7 32 .264 2 15 11-3 4.03 4-3 3.94 7-7 5.70
Fr. Jr. Fr. Jr. Jr. So. Sr. So. Sr. Sr. So. Fr. Jr.
.305 6 48 .339 12 46 .239 1 16 .157 0 9 .344 2 42 .272 5 28 .353 3 27 .268 1 21 .220 2 26 .231 2 16 5-5 4.97 2-7 4.25 2-2 4.67
So. Fr. Fr. So. Sr. Fr. Jr. Sr. Fr. So. Fr. Fr. Jr. Fr. Sr.
.315 13 51 .295 6 48 .257 2 13 .291 0 15 .292 8 34 .258 2 9 .322 2 8 .268 1 23 .306 0 6 .303 1 29 .324 9 35 3-6 3.94 7-4 4.00 3-3 2.76 0-2 3.97
1992
1988
1985 4 5 3 1 8 0 0 0 4
Todd Zeile John Joslyn Torey Lovullo Bobby Holley Scott Cline Steve Hisey Tony Scruggs Billy Haselman Gary Berman Alex Sanchez Randy Hennis Jeff Conine
1987
1984
1980 C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF DH P P P
Tim Gudim Tony Perri Rich Amaral Pete Beall Lindsay Meggs Shane Mack Vince Beringhele Brian Graham Rick Krikorian Pat Clements Colin Ward Jeff McDonald
Todd Zeile, C (1984-1986)
1986 Jr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Fr. Sr. Fr. Sr. Fr. Sr. Fr. Jr.
1983
1979 C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF DH P P P
Tim Gudim Greg Norman Brian Graham Mike Gallego Lindsay Meggs Chris Smith Vince Beringhele Dave Montanari Pete Beall Eric Broersma Pat Clements Colin Ward
1982
1978 C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF DH P P P
Shane Mack, OF (1982-1984)
Matt Schwenke Ryan McGuire Robert Hinds Adam Melhuse David Ravitz David Roberts John Myrow Michael Moore Shawn Wills Mike Mitchell Pete Janicki Adam Schulhofer Tim Kubinski
1993 C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF RF P P P
Matt Schwenke Ryan McGuire David Ravitz Gar Vallone Adam Melhuse David Roberts John Myrow Chris Lohman Brett Schafer Tim Kubinski Gabe Sollecito Jon Van Zandt
1994 C 1B 2B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF DH P P P
Tim DeCinces Mike Mitchell Chad Matoian Travis Boyd Gar Vallone Zak Ammirato David Roberts Brett Schafer Chris Lohman Dave Dieter Brian Stephenson Nick St. George Bobby Kazmirski
1995 C 1B 2B 2B
Tim DeCinces Peter Zamora Brett Nista Chad Matoian 2B/SS Gar Vallone SS/3B Troy Glaus 3B/LF Zak Ammirato LF Mike Seal LF Nick Theodorou CF Jon Heinrichs RF Eric Byrnes SP Jim Parque SP Rick Heineman RP Peter Zamora RP Bob Kazmirski
STARTING LINEUPS 2004 C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF DH SP SP
Peter Zamora, 1B/P (1995-1997)
1996 C 1B 2B 2B SS
Tim DeCinces Peter Zamora Brett Nista Chad Matoian Jack Santora SS/3B Troy Glaus 3B Zak Ammirato LF Jon Heinrichs CF Eric Valent RF Eric Byrnes DH Nick Theodorou DH Cassidy Olson SP Jim Parque SP Peter Zamora SP Dan Keller RP Kevin Sheredy
Casey Cloud Peter Zamora Nick Theodorou Troy Glaus Aldo Pinto Brett Nista Jack Santora Jon Heinrichs Eric Valent Eric Byrnes Chad Matoian Cassidy Olson Jim Parque Tom Jacquez Peter Zamora Jake Meyer Rob Henkel
Jr. So. So. Jr. Fr. So. Sr. So. Fr. So. So. So. So. So. Fr. Jr.
.341 18 67 .234 6 30 .251 2 31 .258 1 14 .270 0 13 .352 16 50 .354 6 42 .296 3 40 .289 12 55 .338 8 56 .314 1 25 .265 2 13 9-3 3.72 6-1 4.89 7-3 4.79 4-2 4.59
.244 3 21 .379 16 24 .365 6 47 .409 34 91 .289 1 14 .311 4 25 .389 2 17 .358 28 79 .339 27 91 .332 17 60 .314 1 29 .293 0 13 13-2 3.08 10-4 3.06 6-2 5.06 3-3 4.20 3-3 3.67
Jr. Sr. Sr. Jr. Fr. Fr. Sr. So. Jr. Sr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Fr.
.333 3 21 .304 10 47 .337 2 15 .245 2 20 .320 15 49 .383 9 54 .284 8 31 .301 0 13 .336 30 73 .332 14 52 3-1 6.39 4-8 8.50 2-5 7.05 4-2 5.23
Jason Green Garrett Atkins Chase Utley Jack Santora Nick Lyon Bill Scott Charles Merricks Brian Baron Jon Brandt Josh Karp Ryan Carter Chad Cislak
Forrest Johnson Garrett Atkins Chase Utley Josh Canales Randall Shelley Bill Scott Charles Merricks Matt Pearl Nick Lyon Jim Hemming Adam Berry Josh Karp Rob Henkel Bobby Roe Jon Brandt Ryan Carter
Jr. Jr. Jr. Jr. So. Jr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Fr. So. So. Jr. Jr. Jr. Jr.
.351 23 78 352 17 72 .382 22 69 .248 0 18 .294 7 28 .421 21 76 .257 2 33 .357 4 34 .341 8 28 .273 6 47 .303 4 13 10-2 5.06 6-4 5.68 7-5 5.44 7-5 4.03 3-1 5.65
C 1B 2B 3B SS LF CF RF DH SP SP SP
Josh Arhart Eric Reece Josh Canales Randall Shelley Preston Griffin Adam Berry Matt Pearl Ben Francisco Brian Baron Josh Karp Jon Brandt Bobby Roe SP/RP Paul Diaz RP Mike Castillo RP Kevin Jerkens
Jr. Sr. Sr. Jr. Fr. Jr. Sr. So. Sr. Jr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Fr. So.
.292 3 24 .259 10 44 .376 0 22 .256 3 13 .245 3 17 .245 5 29 .317 6 42 .309 6 42 .443 2 47 5-2 3.26 4-4 4.93 4-3 5.88 3-3 5.32 1-1 2.25 3-2 5.00
2002 C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF DH SP SP SP SP RP RP
Josh Arhart Wes Whisler Ryan Rasmussen Ryan McCarthy Brandon Averill Chris Jensen Rashad Parker Ben Francisco Adam Berry Mike Kunes, Wes Whisler Chris Cordeiro Casey Janssen Doug Silva Kevin Jerkens
Sr. Fr. Sr. Fr. So. Fr. Sr. Jr. Sr. r. Fr. So. So. Jr. Jr.
.363 7 37 .328 18 46 .304 1 22 .258 0 20 .310 6 31 .289 1 13 .286 4 14 .368 6 37 .308 18 50 7-4 4.55 5-2 4.06 2-7 5.00 4-2 4.06 0-5 4.15 2-2 7.58
Fr. So. Jr. So. Jr. So. So. So. Fr. So. Jr. Sr. Jr. Sr.
.319 6 26 .310 9 39 .264 9 44 .264 7 40 .329 10 33 .272 2 7 .299 5 37 .310 10 40 .330 8 35 3-7 5.66 6-6 5.88 5-2 6.81 1-2 4.62 6-0 3.86
2003
1999 C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF SP SP SP RP
C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF RF DH DH SP SP SP RP RP
Sr. So. So. Sr. So. So. So. Jr. So. Fr. So. So.
.309 6 50 .375 4 41 .317 16 56 .279 6 25 .211 4 20 .380 28 86 .277 1 14 .293 1 27 7-4 4.21 8-3 4.26 1-8 7.95 5-3 5.91
C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF DH SP SP SP RP RP
Chris Denove Wes Whisler Preston Griffin Ryan McCarthy Brandon Averill Chris Jensen Matt Thayer Billy Susdorf Brett McMillan Wes Whisler Casey Janssen Mike Kunes Chris Cordeiro Doug Silva
2009 So. So. Sr. Jr. Sr. Sr. Fr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Sr. Jr. Jr. Jr.
.291 8 47 .254 6 38 .258 0 23 .295 15 47 .313 3 27 .276 8 31 .233 3 19 .323 4 33 .279 7 44 3-5 5.24 10-4 3.16 2-3 5.76 4-3 4.46 0-1 3.38
C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF DH SP SP SP RP RP
Jr. Jr. Jr. So. So. So. So. Jr. Jr. So. So. Sr. So. So. Jr.
.227 .257 .250 .269 .228 .280 .149 .277 .368 .338 3-7 1-11 2-7 4-6 1-5
0 7 0 1 1 1 1 0 7 1
22 33 4 8 16 18 9 16 21 18 3.94 6.01 5.23 4.77 6.79
C 1B 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF DH SP SP SP RP RP
Fr. Jr. Sr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Sr. Sr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Fr.
.258 .301 .271 .318 .336 .300 .254 .248 .325 .313 8-7 7-4 6-7 3-1 1-1
6 6 6 6 0 2 1 1 6 5
25 25 32 30 21 9 7 23 36 34 3.65 2.98 4.52 1.66 5.35
C 1B 2B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF DH SP SP SP
So. Sr. Jr. So. So. Sr. So. Fr. Fr. So. Sr. So. Fr. Fr. So.
.272 5 37 .205 3 17 .352 2 32 .335 7 55 .329 4 33 .297 2 16 .244 0 5 .285 2 18 .345 10 36 .307 14 57 10-6 4.04 5-4 5.68 6-7 4.47 3-1 3.54 3-0 4.83
Jr. So. Sr. Jr. Jr. Sr. Sr. So. So. Jr. Jr. So. So. Jr. Jr.
.247 0 25 .324 12 52 .377 5 47 .302 7 51 .306 2 26 .247 2 17 .287 2 18 .250 2 16 .204 9 29 .218 7 30 5-6 3.34 9-4 5.10 6-3 5.07 4-3 3.74 1-1 3.60
2005
2001 Jr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Fr. Jr. So. Sr. So. Jr. Sr. Jr. Jr. So. Jr. Jr. Fr.
1998 C Jason Green 1B Cassidy Olson 2B Nick Theodorou 2B/SS Jack Santora SS/DH Chase Utley 3B Garrett Atkins LF Brett Nista LF Michael Hymes CF Eric Valent RF Eric Byrnes SP Ryan Carter SP Chad Cislak SP Paul Diaz RP Bobby Roe
Chase Utley, INF (1998-2000)
2000
1997 C 1B 2B SS 3B INF INF LF CF RF DH DH SP SP SP RP RP
Chris Denove Brett McMillan Mike Svetlic Ryan McCarthy Preston Griffin Brandon Averill Jarrad Page Matt Thayer Wes Whisler Wes Whisler Casey Janssen SP Bryan Beck SP/RP David Johnson RP Kyle Wilson
C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF CF RF DH SP SP
Chris Denove Brett McMillan Sean Carpenter Tommy Lansdon Eric Taylor, Jr. Will Penniall Jarrad Page Josh Roenicke Chris Jensen Hector Ambriz Hector Ambriz Bryan Beck SP/RP Brant Rustich RP Brian Schroeder RP Adam Simon
Ryan Babineau Tim Stewart Sean Smith Brandon Crawford Jermaine Curtis Blair Dunlap Tim Murphy Josh Roenicke Chris Jensen Hector Ambriz Hector Ambriz David Huff Tyson Brummett Paul Oseguera Jason Novak
Fr. Sr. Sr. So. Jr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Sr. Fr. Fr. Jr. Jr. So.
.179 2 10 .322 21 53 .282 2 30 .273 0 27 .305 9 42 .274 5 28 .301 7 39 .318 3 23 .353 2 16 4-8 3.49 9-3 2.99 3-5 4.52 0-4 4.71 4-3 4.72
So. Sr. So. So. Jr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Jr. Sr. So. So. Jr. So. So.
.249 .308 .345 .325 .267 .312 .318 .354 .289 .314 11-4 12-3 11-3 6-1 2-0
8 3 9 7 3 9 2 4 7 6
37 27 52 45 33 47 31 31 38 28 3.37 3.02 2.72 1.90 3.06
Jr. Jr. So. Fr. Fr. So. So. So. Sr. So. Jr. Jr. Fr. Fr. Jr. Fr.
.196 .320 .217 .210 .238 .284 .303 .299 .250 .268 6-8 13-2 7-4 5-3 0-2 3-4
0 3 0 0 1 6 1 2 2 2
17 40 8 6 20 45 18 29 18 13 3.31 1.25 2.01 2.86 2.20 2.90
Jr. Jr. So. So. Fr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Jr. So. So. So. Fr. Fr. Jr.
.332 1 27 .321 3 52 .302 2 21 .266 1 39 .281 0 13 .333 0 37 .313 4 46 .351 11 48 .239 1 25 12-3 2.48 10-4 4.43 3-3 4.28 9-2 4.45 5-3 1.46 3-1 2.65
So. Jr. Sr. Jr. So. Jr. Jr. So. Jr. Jr. Jr. So. Fr. Jr. So.
.226 .274 .234 .253 .278 .250 .258 .281 .239 10-3 14-4 9-3 4-6 2-1 7-0
2010
2006 C 1B 2B SS 3B LF LF CF RF DH SP SP SP RP RP
Steve Rodriguez Cody Decker Eddie Murray Niko Gallego Casey Haerther Gabe Cohen Blair Dunlap Justin Uribe Gino Aielli Gerrit Cole Trevor Bauer Charles Brewer Gavin Brooks Matt Grace
Steve Rodriguez Justin Uribe Dean Espy Tyler Rahmatulla Niko Gallego Cody Regis Cody Keefer Beau Amaral Brett Krill Blair Dunlap Gerrit Cole Trevor Bauer Rob Rasmussen Dan Klein Erik Goeddel
2011 Steve Rodriguez Dean Espy Trevor Brown Kevin Williams Pat Valaika Cody Regis Cody Keefer Beau Amaral Chris Giovinazzo Jeff Gelalich Gerrit Cole Trevor Bauer Adam Plutko SP/RP Zack Weiss RP Mitchell Beacom RP Nick Vander Tuig
2007 C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF CF RF DH SP SP SP
Ryan Babineau Tim Stewart Alden Carrithers Brandon Crawford Jermaine Curtis Will Penniall Tim Murphy Justin Uribe Gabe Cohen Cody Decker Tyson Brummett Tim Murphy Gavin Brooks SP/RP Garett Claypool RP Jason Novak
2008 C 1B 2B SS 3B LF LF CF RF DH SP SP SP RP RP
89
Ryan Babineau Casey Haerther Alden Carrithers Brandon Crawford Jermaine Curtis Mickey Weisser Brady Dolan Blair Dunlap Gabe Cohen Cody Decker Tim Murphy Charles Brewer Gavin Brooks Brendan Lafferty Jason Novak
2012 C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF DH SP SP SP
Tyler Heineman Trevor Brown Kevin Williams Pat Valaika Kevin Kramer Cody Keefer Beau Amaral Jeff Gelalich Cody Regis Adam Plutko Nick Vander Tuig Zack Weiss SP/RP Grant Watson RP David Berg RP Scott Griggs
2013 C 1B 2B SS 3B LF CF RF DH SP SP SP
Shane Zeile Pat Gallagher Cody Regis Pat Valaika Kevin Kramer Brenton Allen Brian Carroll Eric Filia Kevin Williams Adam Plutko Nick Vander Tuig Grant Watson SP/RP Cody Poteet RP Zack Weiss RP David Berg
2 1 0 5 3 2 0 1 1
20 20 20 48 42 13 20 33 12 2.25 2.16 3.01 4.84 2.25 0.92
YEARLY LEADERS
Garrett Atkins, INF (1998-2000) Year Batting Average 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977 1976 1975 1974 1973 1972 1971 1970 1969 1968 1967 1966 1965 1964 1963 1962 1961 1960
Filia Gelalich Espy Amaral Aielli Carrithers Carrithers Curtis Ambriz Thayer Trott Trott Baron Scott Scott Atkins Glaus Ammirato Byrnes Roberts McGuire Mitchell Wolfe Wolfe Katzaroff Karros Hamelin Haselman Joslyn Beall Mack Graham Montanari Graham Slaught Carpenter Delany Waters Garrison Garrison Hobbs Altshuler Gerakos Pifferini Chambliss Sanserino Klausen Arrington Ganulin Schwartz Schwartz Ga. Adams Fowler Ge. Adams
At-Bats .281 .351 .320 .354 .353 .377 .352 .336 .338 .323 .366 .375 .443 .421 .380 .383 .409 .354 .324 .353 .376 .351 .345 .376 .342 .415 .362 .364 .370 .358 .419 .339 .374 .325 .428 .343 .339 .324 .344 .345 .356 .379 .346 .308 .340 .354 .366 .324 .352 .386 .354 .265 .309 .308
Valaika Amaral Espy Dunlap Dunlap Haerther Crawford Crawford McMillan McCarthy Griffin Rasmussen Pearl Utley Utley Byrnes Heinrichs Henrichs Zamora Roberts Melhuse Roberts Tokheim Katzaroff Katzaroff Katzaroff Karros Lovullo Berman Meggs Amaral Graham Montanari Slaught Gausepohl, Auten Baker Baker Penniall Garrison Doerr Gomez B. Adams Diggle Punaro, Molina Sanserino Sanserino Lung Petrilla Arrington Ardell Floyd Fowler Fowler O’Leary
Ryan McGuire, 1B/P (1991-1993)
Brandon Crawford, INF (2006-2008) 249 268 231 242 226 238 248 242 210 254 227 230 236 283 271 244 299 250 244 235 250 257 265 284 215 255 269 255 232 230 211 251 214 212 234 215 231 223 180 231 186 257 207 172 212 212 237 209 129 175 143 168 149 155
Hits
Doubles
Kramer, Filia 68 Gelalich 86 Espy 74 Amaral 79 Dunlap 68 Carrithers 84 Crawford 83 Crawford 77 McMillan 54 McCarthy 75 Whisler 70 Rasmussen, Arhart 70 Baron 105 Scott 112 Atkins 96 Atkins 85 Glaus 108 DeCinces 79 Byrnes 77 Roberts 83 Melhuse 86 Roberts 85 Tokheim 85 Pritchett 102 Katzaroff 75 Karros 100 Karros 84 Lovullo 81 Lovullo, Joslyn, Berman 70 Beall 81 Mack 88 Graham 85 Montanari 80 Graham 68 Followell 83 Auten 67 Baker 66 Dallas 65 Garrison 62 Edwards 74 B. Adams 58 Altshuler 89 Diggle 67 Punaro 52 Chambliss, Sanserino 64 Sanserino 75 Lung 72 Arrington, Petrilla 66 Arrington 62 Schwartz 59 Schwartz 51 Singleton 41 Fowler 46 Ge. Adams 56
Valaika, Filia Brown Amaral Dunlap Dunlap Haerther Crawford Smith Ambriz McCarthy McMillan Arhart Francisco Scott Green, Scott Atkins Heinrichs Byrnes DeCinces Mitchell Melhuse, Ravitz McGuire McGuire Tokheim Wolfe Osborn Karros Joslyn Joslyn Sullivan Meggs Meggs Montanari Fradella Gausepohl Auten Viselli Baker, Penniall Peterson Edwards Swedlow Doerr Diggle Landress Chambliss, Molina Runk McGuire McGinnis Dyer Colletto Schwartz Fowler, Goodrich, Zak Ge. Adams, Fowler Miller
90
14 13 16 20 17 23 17 18 14 15 16 18 20 23 19 22 28 21 23 19 19 19 13 15 11 20 23 19 19 20 15 15 17 11 18 17 12 10 13 15 13 12 18 10 13 13 12 13 13 12 14 7 5 5
Triples
Home Runs
Valaika 3 Amaral 5 Gelalich, C. Giovinazzo 4 Espy 3 Dunlap, Murray 3 Crawford 5 Crawford, Uribe, Babineau 2 Crawford 6 Penniall, Taylor Jr. 3 Thayer 5 Averill 3 Rasmussen 2 Berry 2 Johnson, Scott 3 Utley 2 Byrnes, Johnson, Nista, Santora 2 E. Valent 3 Heinrichs 5 M. Seal 3 Roberts 3 Myrow 7 Roberts 7 Hagy, Tokheim, Wolfe 4 Wolfe 6 Keating 5 Katzaroff 10 Karros 3 Lovullo 3 Cano 5 Berman 3 Beringhele, Mack 3 Mack 5 Gallego 5 Slaught, West 3 Gallego 3 Carpenter 5 Baker, Silver 3 Gaylord 3 Six players 1 Doerr 4 Gomez 3 B. Adams 6 Diggle 6 Molina, Price, Punaro 2 Chambliss, Sanserino 3 Hoffman, Runk 4 Lung 5 Arrington 5 Four players 3 Colletto, Schwartz 3 Patten, Singleton 4 Fowler 5 Ge. Adams, Gowler, Wright 4 Bergeron 4
Valaika 5 Gelalich 11 Regis 6 Espy, Regis 9 Decker 21 Haerther 12 Decker 14 Six players 6 Jensen, McMillan 7 McCarthy 15 Averill, Susdorf 10 Whisler, Berry 18 Reece 10 Johnson 23 Scott 28 Valent 30 Glaus 34 DeCinces 18 DeCinces 13 Mitchell 12 McGuire 26 McGuire 14 Pritchett 18 Ellis 29 Fiacco 7 Karros 17 Lovullo 24 Joslyn 18 Zeile 12 Mack 16 Mack 11 Beall 7 Norman 9 Gauntlett 8 Auten 29 Johnson 17 Delany 11 Gaylord 11 Garrison 7 Edwards 14 B. Adams 13 Swedlow 9 Diggle 8 Graham, Pifferini 8 Chambliss 15 Hoffman 11 Cooper, Hoffman, Klausen, Lung 5 Ganulin 11 Bashore 11 Schwartz 13 Schwartz 5 Fowler 5 Fowler 5 Fowler, O’Leary 2
YEARLY LEADERS
Eric Byrnes, OF (1995-1998) Year Runs Batted In 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977 1976 1975 1974 1973 1972 1971 1970 1969 1968 1967 1966 1965 1964 1963 1962 1961 1960
Valaika Brown Regis Espy Decker Haerther Decker Jensen McMillan McCarthy Griffin Berry Baron Johnson Scott Valent Glaus, E. Valent DeCinces DeCinces DeCinces McGuire McGuire Pritchett Ellis Fiacco Karros Hisey Lovullo Berman Mack Mack Beall Norman Gauntlett, Slaught Auten Johnson Baker Baker, Dallas, Henderson Garrison Edwards B. Adams B. Adams Diggle Price Chambliss Runk Lung Ganulin Ganulin Schwartz Floyd, Schwartz Fowler Fowler Fowler, Weikel
48 52 45 52 53 52 57 36 33 47 44 50 47 78 86 73 91 67 51 48 91 61 57 83 38 54 79 65 49 53 60 52 47 34 78 57 43 37 37 42 48 52 53 31 45 43 44 51 41 59 26 41 34 19
Ben Francisco, OF (2001-2002)
Eric Karros, INF (1986-1988)
Runs Scored
Stolen Bases
Carroll 50 Amaral 63 Amaral 37 Rahmatulla 52 Decker 55 Crawford 51 Carrithers 53 Jensen 45 McMillan 30 Thayer 49 Thayer 46 Rasmussen 52 Francisco 52 Utley 81 Scott, Utley 66 Valent 69 Glaus 100 DeCinces 66 Glaus 46 Roberts 60 McGuire 71 McGuire 56 Wolfe 55 Pritchett 73 Katzaroff 47 Fiacco 60 Lovullo 83 Joslyn 68 Lovullo 50 Mack 61 Mack 54 Amaral 61 Norman 42 Smith 35 Gausepohl 62 Johnson 54 Roenicke 42 Penniall 59 Garrison 51 Edwards 43 B. Adams 47 B. Adams 53 Diggle 46 Graham 41 Chambliss, Sanserino 43 Runk 49 Petrilla 50 Arrington 51 Dyer 45 Harmon 42 Schwartz, Singleton 24 Fowler 30 Ge. Adams, Singleton 26 Ge. Adams 28
Carroll Gelalich C. Giovinazzo Gallego Dunlap Carrithers Crawford Crawford Penniall Thayer Thayer Francisco, Rasmussen Canales, Francisco Utley Santora Byrnes Byrnes Heinrichs Byrnes Roberts Roberts Roberts Wolfe Wolfe Katzaroff Katzaroff Fiacco Fiacco, Lovullo, Scruggs Berry Mack Amaral Graham Beringhele Smith Gausepohl Carpenter Roenicke Penniall Garrison Edwards B. Adams B. Adams Diggle Hume Sanserino Runk Sanserino Arrington Arrington Harmon Patten Ga. Adams Ge. Adams no record
Total Bases 32 16 15 27 15 17 11 7 11 9 9 20 15 15 9 30 19 21 18 45 28 36 35 30 33 26 17 6 13 17 26 22 20 20 17 36 9 38 29 19 10 9 13 7 19 13 11 13 9 14 15 12 10
91
Valaika Gelalich Espy Dunlap, Rahmatulla Decker Haerther Crawford Crawford McMillan McCarthy McMillan, Susdorf Berry Baron Scott Scott Valent Glaus DeCinces DeCinces Mitchell McGuire McGuire Pritchett Ellis Katzaroff Karros Lovullo Lovullo Lovullo Mack Mack Graham Norman Slaught Auten Johnson Baker Dallas Garrison Edwards B. Adams B. Adams Diggle Graham Chambliss Runk Lung Arrington Dyer Schwartz Schwartz Fowler Fowler Ge. Adams
Walks 98 131 98 118 136 138 125 121 82 135 109 127 128 204 195 176 227 149 132 132 172 137 144 86 92 169 176 151 116 142 138 112 123 87 178 129 113 97 88 138 110 123 121 80 128 126 106 102 107 111 84 73 74 56
Valaika Gelalich Regis Rahmatulla Decker Curtis Carrithers Crawford, Curtis Ambriz, McMillan Thayer Thayer Whisler Pearl Atkins Santora Santora Glaus Theodorou Vallone, Zamora Roberts McGuire McGuire Pritchett Ellis Fiacco Holley Lovullo Joslyn Lovullo Mack Amaral Amaral Beringhele Dodson Dodson Baker Roenicke Dallas Garrison Colton no record no record no record no record no record no record no record no record no record no record no record no record no record no record
On-Base Percentage 33 34 34 39 36 42 32 24 22 35 30 21 27 32 41 37 57 39 39 39 62 48 29 38 30 40 79 56 43 36 38 65 45 46 41 37 35 42 40 29
Filia Gelalich Keefer Keefer Murray Carrithers Carrithers Curtis Jensen Thayer Thayer Arhart Baron Scott Scott Theodorou Glaus Theodorou Vallone Roberts, Vallone McGuire McGuire Wolfe Ellis Fiacco Karros Lovullo Lovullo Joslyn Mack Mack Beringhele Beringhele Smith Slaught Auten Delaney Dallas Garrison Colton no record no record no record no record no record no record no record no record no record no record no record no record no record no record
.387 .444 .408 .450 .434 .484 .445 .457 .438 .420 .405 .427 .487 .480 .463 .470 .520 .475 .407 .442 .510 .434 .414 .470 .458 .487 .511 .401 .455 .441 .466 .482 .470 .443 .486 .417 .431 .431 .464 .415
YEARLY LEADERS
Tim Lindsay, RHP (1981-1985) Year Innings Pitched 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977 1976 1975 1974 1973 1972 1971 1970 1969 1968 1967 1966 1965 1964 1963 1962 1961 1960
Vander Tuig Plutko Bauer Bauer Bauer Murphy Brummett Huff Ambriz Janssen Whisler Kunes Karp Roe Brandt Cislak Jacquez Parque Heineman Stephenson Kubinski Janicki Lindsay Lindsay Sutherland Magnante Hennis Sanchez Sanchez Pries Pries Ward Broersma Young Leary Chiffer O’Neill Bianchi Cowan Bianchi Panick Robson Robson Bonham Pope Hoops Wiswell Brasher Gore Gore Bottoms Bottoms Sapp Collins
Josh Karp, RHP (1999-2001)
Appearances 129.0 119.2 136.2 131.1 105.1 102.1 138.0 129.2 105.0 116.2 82.2 89.0 80.0 91.0 107.0 83.2 129.1 125.2 90.0 105.0 125.0 150.1 124.0 149.0 114.2 137.1 110.0 139.1 95.2 89.2 113.0 116.0 109.2 115.0 145.2 120.0 117.0 91.0 121.1 96.2 86.0 107.2 84.0 82.2 95.1 113.2 98.2 115.2 106.0 104.2 70.2 123.0 93.0 82.2
Berg Berg Vander Tuig Klein Brooks Lafferty Lafferty Oseguera Schroeder Brophy Cordeiro Kunes Jerkens Carter Cislak, Roe Roe Henkel Heineman Lynch Howatt Mitchell, Kramer Sollecito Lindsay Zancanaro Sutherland Magnante Wenrick Wenrick Wenrick Bloom Westland Yaeger Yaeger Fauland Bollens Bollens Rucker Chiffer Soroko Ross Baranick Baranick Sandford Sandford York Hansen Hansen Kester Gore Gore Bottoms, Brown Bottoms Bruckner Bruckner
51 50 28 39 27 33 25 29 31 29 21 28 31 23 25 24 34 26 20 24 25 24 21 30 28 25 37 28 26 32 32 29 34 31 27 32 22 23 19 25 27 38 17 22 27 27 26 36 26 28 19 22 23 23
Wins
Strikeouts
Vander Tuig 14 Plutko 12 Bauer 13 Bauer 12 Bauer 9 Brewer 9 Brummett 10 Ambriz 8 Schroeder 4 Janssen 10 Silva, Janssen 6 Kunes 7 Karp 5 Karp 10 Karp 8 Cislak, Roe 4 Parque 13 Parque 9 Heineman 7 Stephenson 5 Kubinski 11 Janicki 9 Lindsay 9 Zancanaro 11 Zancanaro 9 Magnante 14 Stowell 11 Sanchez 16 Nolte 6 Pries, Yaeger 5 Pries 7 Clements 9 Clements 6 Broersma 10 Leary 12 Chiffer 11 O’Neill, Schmidt 5 Cowan 10 Cowan 9 Bianchi 9 Zail 7 Susa 7 Pope 7 Pope, Bonham, Robson, Susa 4 Pope 9 Hoops 12 Hansen, Kester 10 Coston 9 Gore 8 Brasher 12 Arens, Pederson, Boteboom 5 Bottoms 8 Sapp 7 Weiner 8
Vander Tuig Plutko Bauer Bauer Cole Murphy Brummett Huff Ambriz Janssen Janssen Kunes Karp Henkel Brandt Cislak Parque Parque Parque Stephenson Kubinski Janicki Janicki Zancanaro Sutherland Magnante Sanchez Sanchez Sanchez Ridenour Clements Ward Broersma Young Leary Leary O’Neill Cowan Cowan Bianchi Panick Robson Pope Bonham Pope Hoops Kester Brasher Gore Gore Pederson Bottoms Sapp Weiner
92
Hector Ambriz, RHP (2003-2006) Saves 93 99 203 165 104 111 111 100 84 103 73 71 92 136 109 66 119 116 84 79 86 150 94 100 72 101 101 142 85 67 59 106 108 83 111 88 62 69 109 52 64 112 97 110 99 92 104 110 100 101 63 97 89 53
Berg Griggs Vander Tuig Klein Brooks Novak Rustich Roenicke Simon Simon Cordeiro Susdorf, Silva, Wilson Jerkens Carter Cislak Roe Meyer Sheredy Zamora, Kazmirski Howatt Sollecito Sollecito Fyhrie Zancanaro Schulhofer, Fyhrie Lewis Wenrick Ridenour, Wenrick Naworski Bloom Westland Pries Yaeger Fauland Bollens Bollens Bollens Lizarraga Soroko five players Baranick Baranick Sandford, Smith Zail York York Tysdal Brasher no record no record no record no record no record no record
ERA 24 15 9 10 8 4 6 4 2 5 4 3 5 4 6 7 8 8 5 3 9 12 5 5 4 4 6 6 5 5 4 4 4 10 5 6 4 4 4 1 9 5 3 3 4 5 5 3
Berg Deeter Bauer Klein Bauer Murphy Claypool Oseguera Ambriz Janssen Silva Whisler, Janssen Castillo Brandt Birkins Righetti Righetti Meyer Zamora St. George McGuire Bonds Lewis Zancanaro Zancanaro Fyhrie Wenrick Sanchez Ridenour Pries Bloom Ward Broersma Broersma Leary Chiffer Chiffer Peterson Cowan Soroko Thomas Smith Zail Bonham York Cassidy Kester Kester Arens Brasher Zeno Bottoms Bruckner Collins
0.92 0.89 1.25 1.90 2.99 3.34 3.54 1.66 3.94 3.16 3.86 4.06 2.25 4.03 4.05 2.81 2.63 2.64 2.76 4.25 1.73 1.78 3.99 3.19 3.60 3.76 3.82 4.06 4.50 4.01 2.55 4.51 4.27 2.24 2.72 1.73 3.01 3.09 3.26 4.37 1.66 1.69 2.28 2.60 1.48 1.81 2.35 2.61 3.54 1.66 0.86 1.48 1.54 1.94
TEAM SEASON STATS BATTING STATS Year
GP
AVG
AB
R
H
2B
3B
HR
RBI
TB
SLG
1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
59 61 55 55 51 ---66 53 61 53 60 61 59 61 56 56 65 53 60 65 62 56 59 59 67 59 63 60 58 57 64 67 57 62 64 57 61 59 64 56 58 61 60 56 68 59 64 66
.267 .285 .280 .281 .276 ---.284 .274 .281 .280 .275 .274 .295 .320 .276 .295 .288 .320 .292 .296 .312 .308 .306 .284 .309 .313 .288 .303 .274 .293 .297 .336 .313 .297 .326 .304 .302 .287 .279 .254 .286 .296 .279 .285 .304 .263 .304 .250
1888 1972 1827 1864 1729 ---2250 1677 2036 1723 2007 2051 1992 2238 1893 1917 2203 1933 2102 2284 2174 2328 2098 2032 2434 2148 2140 2154 1993 2080 2254 2535 2097 2226 2346 2098 2242 2057 2208 1889 1988 2081 2074 1909 2362 1936 2135 2140
321 334 297 317 282 ---365 267 332 321 383 329 384 499 300 335 482 388 416 45 496 574 414 321 510 424 391 461 338 357 495 631 452 439 551 372 415 381 395 232 337 366 374 348 469 261 394 312
503 562 516 524 476 ---639 459 573 482 551 562 588 717 523 566 635 619 614 677 678 718 642 577 751 673 616 652 546 610 669 851 656 662 764 638 677 591 617 480 568 615 578 544 718 509 650 534
87 85 79 75 75 ---78 77 82 78 81 82 95 129 77 92 110 106 124 125 139 147 124 101 107 101 108 121 104 128 138 173 123 121 143 116 121 105 105 84 120 106 117 110 136 107 89 88
12 22 22 17 10 ---17 12 13 6 16 12 13 19 11 20 19 17 12 20 12 17 16 23 24 18 20 12 5 9 15 11 10 9 17 8 5 9 15 12 14 8 16 12 14 14 16 12
52 40 43 44 45 ---45 43 71 40 65 62 61 89 31 36 36 49 61 69 103 116 85 34 88 71 58 77 41 56 77 142 107 87 117 47 70 73 64 21 55 51 50 54 65 17 23 19
304 295 278 270 247 ---332 225 298 284 343 298 345 451 267 295 409 350 370 411 447 523 381 294 478 384 348 421 316 327 450 591 423 396 505 331 376 353 369 213 302 341 345 311 417 238 347 278
770 811 768 765 706 ---886 689 894 692 859 854 892 1151 715 806 891 906 945 1049 1150 1247 1053 826 1170 1023 938 1028 783 924 1068 1472 1120 1062 1292 911 1018 933 944 651 881 890 877 840 1077 695 840 703
.408 .411 .420 .410 .408 ---.394 .411 .439 .402 .428 .416 .448 .514 .378 .420 .404 .469 .450 .459 .529 .536 .502 .406 .481 .476 .438 .477 .393 .444 .474 .581 .534 .477 .551 .434 .454 .454 .428 .345 .443 .428 .423 .440 .456 .359 .393 .329
BB HBP
Year
ERA
W
L
GS
CG
SV
IP
H
R
ER
BB
SO
2B
3B
1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
3.45 3.21 3.14 2.40 3.71 ---3.79 3.71 5.46 4.77 4.26 4.14 2.75 4.48 3.55 5.58 5.70 4.81 5.01 5.09 5.54 5.36 5.30 4.54 4.26 5.08 4.36 5.16 5.56 4.72 4.97 4.52 8.19 5.73 5.98 4.75 5.76 5.95 4.98 5.65 3.77 5.01 4.45 4.28 3.00 2.44 3.13 2.55
35 42 35 42 26 ---32 29 26 31 35 31 39 43 31 21 38 28 28 34 39 40 31 27 41 29 37 37 22 29 36 45 24 31 38 30 26 28 35 15 33 33 33 27 51 35 48 49
24 19 20 12 24 ---33 24 35 22 25 30 20 18 22 35 27 24 32 30 23 25 28 32 26 30 26 23 36 28 28 21 33 31 26 27 35 31 29 41 25 28 27 29 17 24 16 17
59 61 55 55 51 ---66 53 61 53 60 61 59 61 56 56 65 53 60 65 62 56 59 59 67 59 63 60 58 57 64 67 57 62 64 57 61 59 64 56 58 61 60 56 68 59 64 66
------------------------------14 ---19 13 10 5 9 10 7 3 11 3 9 6 13 10 13 10 5 3 5 6 1 1 2 1 3 2 4 5 6 11 2 5 2 15 2 3
---------------------16 ---11 15 9 7 8 14 8 14 6 11 10 16 15 10 13 17 9 13 14 7 14 13 12 10 13 10 12 14 12 13 6 11 12 12 12 12 9 16 26
508.0 496.0 470.0 483.0 450.0 ---558.2 434.0 511.0 455.0 517.0 520.0 510.0 546.1 491.0 492.0 568.1 465.2 522.2 571.1 536.0 572.1 518.1 527.0 599.2 529.1 557.2 544.0 506.1 515.0 567.0 595.2 495.1 542.1 561.2 515.2 548.0 512.2 568.0 487.1 516.1 533.2 540.1 493.2 618.1 528.0 569.0 601.0
473 410 418 378 389 ---556 394 555 482 552 553 462 564 450 551 647 506 600 570 610 607 592 571 641 645 527 583 596 545 663 650 708 586 596 569 672 606 576 565 496 551 526 482 502 388 502 482
301 242 241 180 248 ---331 225 383 295 302 308 212 334 254 387 439 318 374 407 403 424 387 363 398 400 329 364 366 331 427 394 593 425 469 341 446 404 355 374 253 351 308 295 247 165 235 196
197 177 164 129 186 ---235 179 310 241 246 239 156 272 194 305 360 249 291 323 330 341 305 266 284 299 270 312 313 270 313 299 451 345 373 272 351 339 314 306 216 297 267 235 206 143 198 170
264 242 228 239 293 ---325 226 321 248 252 218 203 287 266 297 397 246 297 346 309 373 252 269 297 239 272 237 264 246 246 290 349 331 301 232 264 219 265 250 173 204 282 197 210 157 238 163
418 456 367 484 405 ---434 302 317 344 333 338 369 357 286 304 368 246 341 413 430 441 339 332 411 348 410 359 360 363 434 478 403 488 531 372 385 399 451 379 436 461 442 509 700 572 436 457
------------------81 55 ------70 ---------71 85 96 67 107 82 91 98 114 83 116 93 89 105 102 89 90 86 119 101 83 110 126 121 92 100 73 93 88 109 89 67 90 75
------------------12 8 ------8 ---------5 11 14 8 18 17 10 19 15 11 10 18 10 10 13 13 14 5 15 7 10 5 8 13 8 4 5 18 14 11 11 5 4 10
------------------------233 260 284 214 256 298 253 277 435 259 317 297 317 427 287 240 297 241 296 314 291 228 287 330 272 287 299 194 211 203 250 189 200 206 271 237 278 210 228 280
------------------------------28 24 25 21 22 23 25 27 19 25 36 53 48 29 52 32 45 33 24 30 36 42 22 35 65 62 47 52 52 48 62 87 72 72 104 73 96 82
SO
OBP
SF
SH
------------------------335 263 263 282 290 328 222 247 360 .249 334 375 329 418 394 378 395 477 424 378 365 368 395 415 386 428 444 392 443 451 486 403 368 409 480 434 467 461 341 436
------------------------------.368 .347 .378 .400 .366 .386 .406 .405 .386 .379 .405 .421 .397 .363 .392 .386 .382 .394 .369 .368 .380 .417 .396 .382 .412 .375 .370 .363 .362 .335 .365 .380 .377 .382 .397 .355 .391 .354
------------------------------26 16 24 32 13 24 33 15 22 32 18 36 25 27 22 27 22 34 26 20 34 29 8 26 28 28 28 19 31 15 22 17 27 16 24 15 30 27
------------------------------19 18 19 15 25 24 27 12 23 25 5 8 11 29 12 10 30 32 19 15 49 16 28 16 20 23 25 17 26 37 34 56 37 40 55 68 64 76
SB SBA
PO
A
------------------------------------------------------------------------1801 1574 1673 1632 1519 1515 1701 1787 1485 1627 1685 1547 1644 1538 1704 1462 1549 1601 1621 1481 1855 1584 1707 1803
------------------------------------------------------------------------709 672 803 696 620 727 778 757 615 650 651 670 623 610 705 536 594 610 625 514 617 502 639 769
E FLD
---50 40 80 33 ---44 59 66 29 125 44 101 56 91 84 86 97 54 44 42 107 86 113 123 114 128 81 106 53 84 68 68 23 35 48 80 26 47 47 21 53 74 55 104 65 62 71
------------------------------166 ------------131 121 122 75 63 67 130 112 146 154 164 186 117 143 77 181 157 84 36 46 61 105 44 65 68 42 74 98 90 137 94 98 114
------------------------------------------------------------------------94 111 92 78 87 90 132 129 132 96 118 91 86 90 69 98 50 66 76 63 76 51 58 52
------------------------------------------------------------------------.964 .953 .964 .968 .961 .962 .949 .952 .941 .960 .952 .961 .963 .960 .972 .953 .977 .971 .967 .969 .970 .976 .976 .980
HR
WP
HBP
BK
AB
OAV
------------------40 33 57 ---37 ---------21 50 38 43 42 46 55 55 62 37 58 65 54 78 35 45 47 56 75 76 77 43 71 68 59 38 41 50 56 47 48 20 33 19
------------------------------26 32 14 21 17 45 59 37 46 40 23 34 28 34 31 52 56 46 33 44 51 59 57 56 80 63 56 49 41 42 50 68 39 65 47 29 23 48
------------------------------29 22 20 3 22 30 28 23 31 29 27 42 44 44 40 39 51 57 46 43 46 42 58 63 81 45 61 54 73 72 37 57 66 59 43 51 48 61
------------------------------7 4 0 26 4 10 3 6 5 9 4 6 3 11 5 ---------------4 8 7 7 7 12 15 15 7 17 18 8 21 7 6 4 3 9
------------------2127 1607 ------------------1819 1908 2238 1809 2048 2217 2105 2201 2052 2045 2337 2143 2062 2121 2022 1995 2268 2347 2109 2136 2208 2015 2209 2051 2139 1933 1933 2039 2022 1859 2286 1890 2085 2173
------------------.262 .245 ------------.244 ---.247 .289 .289 .280 .293 .257 .289 .276 .288 .279 .274 .301 .256 .275 .295 .273 .292 .277 .336 .274 .270 .282 .304 .295 .269 .292 .257 .270 .260 .259 .220 .205 .241 .222
PITCHING STATS
93
SINGLE-SEASON RECORDS
Batting AT-BATS 1. 2. 3. 4.
Jon Heinrichs (1997) Robbie Katzaroff (1990) Chase Utley (2000) Eric Byrnes (1997) Chris Pritchett (1990) Eric Valent (1997) Chase Utley (1999) Eric Karros (1987) Beau Amaral (2012) Mike Hankins (1990)
6. 7. 8. 9.
TRIPLES 299 284 283 277 277 274 271 269 268 268
RUNS SCORED 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.
Troy Glaus (1997) Eric Byrnes (1997) Jon Heinrichs (1997) Torey Lovullo (1987) Chase Utley (2000) Bill Scott (2000) Eric Valent (1997) Garrett Atkins (2000) Chris Pritchett (1990) 10. Ryan McGuire (1993)
100 95 92 83 81 75 74 73 73 71
HITS 1. Bill Scott (2000) 2. Chase Utley (2000) Troy Glaus (1997) 4. Jon Heinrichs (1997) 5. Brian Baron (2001) 6. Chris Pritchett (1990) 7. Eric Karros (1988) 8. Garrett Atkins (1999) 9. Garrett Atkins (2000) 10. Eric Valent (1997)
112 108 108 107 105 102 100 96 95 93
DOUBLES 1. Jon Heinrichs (1997) 2. Eric Byrnes (1997) 3. Casey Haerther (2008) Tim DeCinces (1995) Eric Karros (1987) Bill Scott (2000) 7. Garrett Atkins (1998) 8. Eric Byrnes (1996) 9. Blair Dunlap (2010) Ben Francisco (2001) Jeff Osborn (1988) Daniel Sullivan (1984)
28 24 23 23 23 23 22 21 20 20 20 20
1. Robbie Katzaroff (1988) 2. David Roberts (1992) John Myrow (1993) 4. Brandon Crawford (2006) Joel Wolfe (1990) Bob Adams (1972) Ron Diggle (1971)
BATTING AVERAGE
10 7 7 6 6 6 6
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
WALKS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.
Torey Lovullo (1987) Rich Amaral (1982) Ryan McGuire (1993) Vince Beringhele (1982) Troy Glaus (1997) John Joslyn (1986) Chris Smith (1981) David Roberts (1993) Pete Beall (1982) 10. Randy Schwartz (1963)
79 65 62 61 57 56 52 51 51 50
Brian Baron (2001) Don Slaught (1979) Bill Scott (2000) Shane Mack (1983) Eric Karros (1988) Troy Glaus (1997) Vern Followell (1979) Randy Schwartz (1964) Garrett Atkins (1998) Chase Utley (2000)
.443 .428 .421 .419 .415 .409 .388 .386 .383 .382
Brian Baron Brian Baron, OF (1999-2001)
HOME RUNS 1. Troy Glaus (1997) 2. Eric Valent (1998) 3. Jim Auten (1979) Paul Ellis (1990) 5. Jon Heinrichs (1997) Bill Scott (1999) 7. Eric Valent (1997) 8. Ryan McGuire (1993) 9. Torey Lovullo (1987) 10. Forrest Johnson (2000)
STOLEN BASES 1. David Roberts (1994) 2. Dave Penniall (1976) 3. David Roberts (1992) Mike Carpenter (1978) 5. Joel Wolfe (1991) 6. Robbie Katzaroff (1989) 7. Brian Carroll (2013) 8. Eric Byrnes (1998) Joel Wolfe (1990) 10. Venoy Garrison (1975)
45 38 36 36 35 33 32 30 30 29
34 30 29 29 28 28 27 26 24 23
ON-BASE PERCENTAGE 1. 2. 3. 4. 6. 8. 9. 10.
Troy Glaus (1997) Torey Lovullo (1987) Ryan McGuire (1993) Chris Smith (1981) Bob Hamelin (1987) Eric Karros (1988) Brian Baron (2001) Don Slaught (1979) Alden Carrithers (2008) Vince Beringhele (1982) John Joslyn (1986)
.520 .511 .510 .491 .491 .487 .487 .486 .484 .482 .482
Troy Glaus, INF (1995-1997)
RUNS BATTED IN 1. Troy Glaus (1997) Eric Valent (1997) Ryan McGuire (1993) 4. Bill Scott (1999) 5. Paul Ellis (1990) 6. Jon Heinrichs (1997) Steve Hisey (1987) 8. Forrest Johnson (2000) Jim Auten (1979) 10. Bill Scott (2000)
91 91 91 86 83 79 79 78 78 76
Paul Ellis, C (1988-1990)
Pitching INNINGS PITCHED 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 7. 8. 9.
EARNED RUN AVERAGE (ERA) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Larry Zeno (1963) Ryan Deeter (2012) David Berg (2013) Tom Pederson (1963) Trevor Bauer (2011) David Berg (2012) Jim York (1969) Tim Bottoms (1962) Ron Bruckner (1961) James Kaprielian (2013)
0.86 0.89 0.92 1.24 1.25 1.46 1.48 1.48 1.54 1.55
1. Alex Sanchez (1986) 2. Nick Vander Tuig (2013) Mike Magnante (1988) 4. Trevor Bauer (2011) Jim Parque (1997) 6. Adam Plutko (2012) Trevor Bauer (2010) Tim Leary (1979) Al Hoops (1968) Bill Brasher (1964)
STRIKEOUTS Trevor Bauer (2011) Trevor Bauer (2010) Gerrit Cole (2010) Pete Janicki (1992) Alex Sanchez (1986) Rob Henkel (2000) Rob Rasmussen (2010) Gerrit Cole (2011) Jim Parque (1997) 10. Jim Parque (1996)
203 165 153 150 142 136 128 119 119 116
SAVES 150.1 149.0 145.2 139.1 138.0 137.1 136.2 131.1 129.2 129.1
1. 2. 3. 4.
David Berg (2013) Scott Griggs (2012) Gabe Sollecito (1992) Dan Klein (2010) Herb Fauland (1980) 6. Nick Vander Tuig (2011) Gabe Sollecito (1993) Bruce Baranick (1973) 9. Gavin Brooks (2009) Jake Meyer (1997) Kevin Sheredy (1996)
24 15 12 10 10 9 9 9 8 8 8
WINS
Pete Janicki, RHP (1990-1992)
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.
Pete Janicki (1992) Tim Lindsay (1990) Tim Leary (1979) Alex Sanchez (1986) Tyson Brummett (2007) Mike Magnante (1988) Trevor Bauer (2011) Trevor Bauer (2010) David Huff (2006) Tom Jacquez (1997)
16 14 14 13 13 12 12 12 12 12
APPEARANCES 1. 2. 3. 4.
David Berg (2013) David Berg (2012) Zack Weiss (2013) Dan Klein (2010) Bruce Baranick (1972) 6. Bill Wenrick (1987) 7. Ryan Deeter (2012) Scott Griggs (2012) Erik Goeddel (2010) Rick Kester (1966)
David Berg, RHP (2012-pres.)
94
51 50 43 39 39 37 36 36 36 36
GAMES STARTED 1. Alex Sanchez (1987) 2. Tim Lindsay (1991) Mike Magnante (1988) Colin Ward (1982) Eric Broersma (1981) 6. Mike Lewis (1991) Tim Lindsay (1990) Chuck Yaeger (1984) 9. 10 players
23 21 21 21 21 20 20 20 19
COMPLETE GAMES 1. Trevor Bauer (2011) Tim Leary (1979) 3. Tyson Brummett (2007) Pete Janicki (1992) Tim Lindsay (1990) Mike Magnante (1988) Jeff Pries (1983) Ed Cowan (1975) Bob Boyer (1967) 10. seven players
10 10 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 6
CAREER RECORDS
Batting AT-BATS
BATTING AVERAGE 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Bill Scott (1998-00) Brian Baron (2000-01) Randy Schwartz (1963-64) Garrett Atkins (1998-00) Eric Karros (1986-88) Alden Carrithers (2007-08) Earl Altshuler (1970-72) Shane Mack (1982-84) John Joslyn (1985-86) Joel Wolfe (1989-91)
Eric Byrnes (1995-98) Torey Lovullo (1984-87) Robbie Katzaroff (1987-90) Lindsay Meggs (1981-84) David Roberts (1991-94) Jon Heinrichs (1994-97) Pete Beall (1981-84) Garrett Atkins (1998-00) Chase Utley (1998-00) 10. Cody Regis (2010-13)
.392 .376 .369 .368 .365 .364 .362 .361 .358 .348
1. Eric Byrnes (1995-98) 2. Troy Glaus (1995-97) Torey Lovullo (1984-88) 4. Eric Valent (1996-98) 5. Jon Heinrichs (1995-97) 6. Charlie Fiacco (1986-89) 7. Chase Utley (1998-00) Robbie Katzaroff (1987-90) 9. Garrett Atkins (1998-00) 10. David Roberts (1991-94)
Brian Baron
HOME RUNS 69 62 53 53 51 48 47 47 40 39
235 211 211 199 186 184 182 182 180 177
HITS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Eric Valent, OF (1996-1998) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Eric Valent (1996-98) Eric Byrnes (1995-98) Torey Lovullo (1984-87) Ryan McGuire (1991-93) Troy Glaus (1995-97) Steve Hisey (1984-87) Chase Utley (1998-00) Bill Scott (1998-00) Lindsay Meggs (1981-84) Garrett Atkins (1998-00)
Eric Byrnes (1995-98) Garrett Atkins (1998-00) Torey Lovullo (1984-87) Robbie Katzaroff (1987-90) Chase Utley (1998-00) Pete Beall (1981-84) Jon Heinrichs (1994-97) Brian Graham (1979-82) David Roberts (1991-94) Troy Glaus (1995-97)
326 276 266 264 256 246 245 243 242 240
DOUBLES 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
Eric Byrnes (1995-98) Jon Heinrichs (1994-97) Garrett Atkins (1998-00) Tim DeCinces (1994-96) Lindsay Meggs (1981-84) Blair Dunlap (2006-10) Bill Scott (1998-00) Jeff Osborn (1985-88) 9. Torey Lovullo (1984-87) 10. Brandon Crawford (2006-08) Peter Zamora (1995-97)
RUNS BATTED IN
Torey Lovullo, INF (1984-1987)
984 856 821 814 784 778 773 748 748 742
RUNS SCORED
Bill Scott, OF (1998-2000)
1. Eric Valent (1996-98) 2. Troy Glaus (1995-97) 3. Bill Scott (1998-00) Chase Utley (1998-00) 5. Torey Lovullo (1984-87) 6. Eric Byrnes (1995-98) 7. Cody Decker (2006-09) Ryan McGuire (1991-93) 9. Garrett Atkins (1998-00) 10. Steve Hisey (1984-87)
TRIPLES
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.
219 203 188 182 180 176 174 173 168 167
75 57 56 54 49 48 47 47 45 44 44
1. Robbie Katzaroff (1987-90) 2. Brandon Crawford (2006-08) Joel Wolfe (1989-91) 4. David Roberts (1991-94) Shane Mack (1982-84) 6. Chris Giovinazzo (2008-11) Ezel Singleton (1961-63) Mike Gallego (1979-81) Bob Adams (1970-73) Tebbie Fowler (1960-62) 11. five players (tied)
20 13 13 10 10 9 9 9 9 9 8
WALKS 1. 2. 3. 4. 6. 8. 9. 10.
Torey Lovullo (1984-87) Vince Beringhele (1981-83) Ryan McGuire (1991-93) Cody Regis (2010-13) Charlie Fiacco (1986-89) Nick Theodorou (1995-98) David Roberts (1991-94) Lindsay Meggs (1981-84) Troy Glaus (1995-97) Eric Valent (1996-98) Bobby Holley (1986-88)
180 138 135 129 129 128 128 125 123 108 108
STOLEN BASES 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 7. 8. 9. 10.
David Roberts (1991-94) Robbie Katzaroff (1987-90) Joel Wolfe (1989-91) Eric Byrnes (1995-98) David Tokheim (1988-91) Charlie Fiacco (1986-89) Brian Graham (1979-82) Jon Heinrichs (1994-97) Dave Penniall (1975-76) Vince Beringhele (1981-83)
109 96 83 81 55 55 54 52 48 46
ON-BASE PERCENTAGE 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Nick Theodorou (1995-98) John Joslyn (1985-86) Chris Smith (1980-81) Alden Carrithers (2007-08) Bill Scott (1998-00) Ryan McGuire (1991-93) Rich Amaral (1982-83) Vince Beringhele (1981-83) Troy Glaus (1995-97) Eric Karros (1986-88) Pat Dodson (1978-80)
.475 .470 .469 .464 .462 .462 .461 .452 .448 .442 .442
Pitching INNINGS PITCHED 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Trevor Bauer (2009-11) Adam Plutko (2011-13) Alex Sanchez (1985-87) Jim Parque (1995-97) Pete Janicki (1990-92) Gerrit Cole (2009-11) Tim O’Neill (1977-79) Tim Leary (1977-79) Tim Lindsay (1987, 89-91) Hector Ambriz (2003-06) Jon Brandt (1998-2001)
SAVES 373.1 351.1 341.0 334.2 325.0 322.1 307.0 306.0 302.0 296.0 296.0
WINS 1. Trevor Bauer (2009-11) 2. Adam Plutko (2011-13) 3. Nick Vander Tuig (2011-13) Alex Sanchez (1985-87) 5. Bill Brasher (1964-66) 6. Jim Parque (1995-97) 7. Dave Schmidt (1977-79) 8. Josh Karp (1999-2001) Pete Janicki (1990-92) Dave Zancanaro (1988-90) Bill Wenrick (1984-87) Chuck Yaeger (1981-84) David Berg (2012-pres.) Brendan Lafferty (2005-09) Mike Kunes (2000-03) Bobby Roe (1998-01) Jason Novak (2006-09) Bill Brasher (1964-66) Zack Weiss (2011-13) Scott Bollens (1977-79)
6. 7. 8. 9.
David Berg (2012-pres.) Gabe Sollecito (1992-93) Bill Wenrick (1984-87) Scott Griggs (2010-12) Scott Bollens (1977-79) Bruce Baranick (1971-73) Bobby Roe (1998-01) Herb Fauland (1979-80) Dan Klein (2008-10) Brant Rustich (2004-07) Mike Fyhrie (1988-91)
25 21 16 15 15 14 13 11 10 10 10
EARNED RUN AVERAGE 1. 1.81 2. 1.87 3. 2.01 2.01 5. 2.24 2.24 7. 2.25 8. 2.32 9. 2.36 10. 2.44
Tim Bottoms (1961-63) Larry Zeno (1963-64) Jim York (1968-69) Howard Collins (1960-61) Steve Smith (1970-72) Ron Bruckner (1960-61) Adam Plutko (2011-13) Tom Pederson (1962-64) Trevor Bauer (2009-11) Dave Weiner (1960-61)
GAMES STARTED 34 29 27 27 26 25 24 23 23 23
APPEARANCES 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
1. 2. 3. 4.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
Alex Sanchez (1985-87) Adam Plutko (2011-13) Jim Parque (1995-97) Gerrit Cole (2009-11) Tim O’Neill (1976-78) Tim Lindsay (1987,89-91) Trevor Bauer (2009-11) Josh Karp (1999-2001) Bill Brasher (1964-66) 10. Three players
58 52 50 49 47 46 44 44 44 43
Alex Sanchez, RHP (1985-1987)
STRIKEOUTS
COMPLETE GAMES 119 111 101 94 88 87 86 83 82 80
1. Tim Leary (1977-79) 2. Trevor Bauer (2009-11) 3. Tim O’Neill (1976-78) Ed Cowan (1974-76) 5. Tim Lindsay (1987, 89-91) 6. Pete Janicki (1990-92) Bill Brasher (1964-66) 8. Jim Parque (1995-97) Rick Pope (1969-71) Jeff Pries (1982-84)
16 15 14 14 13 11 11 10 10 10
95
Trevor Bauer, RHP (2009-2011)
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
460 376 328 319 307 274 272 265 262 258
Trevor Bauer (2009-11) Gerrit Cole (2009-11) Alex Sanchez (1985-87) Jim Parque (1995-97) Pete Janicki (1990-92) Gary Robson (1970-72) Adam Plutko (2011-13) Jon Brandt (1998-2001) Josh Karp (1999-2001) Tim Leary (1977-79)
MISCELLANEOUS RECORDS TEAM — SEASON Most Stolen Bases Most Home Wins Best Home Record Worst Home Record Most Road Wins Best Road Record Worst Road Record Most Shutouts Most Times Shut Out Most Runs Scored Most Hits Most Doubles Most Triples Most Home Runs Most Total Bases Most Grand Slams
128 29 25-4 (.862) 7-19 (.269) 22 18-2-1 (.881) 8-20 (.286) 10 6 631 (67 games) 851 (67 games) 173 (67 games) 24 (67 games) 142 (67 games) 1472 (67 games) 11
1992 2010 1978 2005 2010 1969 2005 2011, 1969 1984 1997 1997 1997 1990 1997 1997 1997
TEAM — STREAKS Winning Streak Losing Streak Home Winning Streak Home Unbeaten Streak Home Losing Streak Road Winning Streak Road Unbeaten Streak Road Losing Streak Conference Winning Streak Conference Losing Streak
22 gm 2010 19 gm 2005 15 gm 2010 15 gm 2010 7 gm 1972, 1981, 2005 8 gm 1972, 1979 1997 10 gm (9-0-1) 12 gm 2005 11 gm 1969 11 gm 1985
TEAM — LEAGUE PLAY Most Wins 21 1986, 1979 1924 Best Record 10-0 (1.000) 17-4 (.810) 1969 Best Record (modern era) Highest Batting Average .348 1986 Most Runs Scored 272 1986 Most Hits 373 1986 Most Doubles 71 1987 Most Home Runs 64 1987 Best Home Record 13-2 1986 54 1998 Most Runs Allowed (three-game series) Feb. 20-22, 1998 vs. Stanford
TEAM — SINGLE GAME Most Runs Scored Most Stolen Bases
28 10
3/22/86 at Arizona 2/8/96 at Hawaii-Hilo
TEAM — SINGLE INNING Most Runs Scored
14 3/25/07 vs. Pacific (8th inning) 13 2/4/07 vs. Winthrop (4th inning) 13 2/22/97 vs. Arizona State (8th inning) Most Hits 10 3/25/07 vs. Pacific (8th inning) 10 2/22/97 vs. Arizona State (8th inning) Most Hit Batsmen (by UCLA) 5 *4/22/98 at CS Fullerton (4th inning)
Garrett Atkins
Torey Lovullo
Mike Magnante
INDIVIDUAL — CAREER Total Bases On-Base Percentage Games Played Wins (right-hander) Wins (left-hander) Winning Percentage: Walks Issued Hit-by-Pitches Issued Losses
Nick Theodorou
Wes Whisler
INDIVIDUAL — CONFERENCE SEASON BATTING
486 .475 242 34 25 1.000 233 40 21
Eric Valent (1996-98) Nick Theodorou (1995-98) Eric Byrnes (1995-98) Trevor Bauer (2009-11) Jim Parque (1995-97) Tom Miles (5-0, 1969-70) Pete Janicki (1990-92) Bobby Roe (1998-01) Hector Ambriz (2003-06)
INDIVIDUAL — SINGLE SEASON Wins (right-hander) Wins (left-hander) Losses Walks Hit Batters Winning Percentage
Bill Scott
16 14 12 99 21 1.000
Alex Sanchez (1986) Mike Magnante (1988) Scott Schanz (1989) Colin Ward (1982) Bobby Roe (2000) Rick Pope (8-0, 1969) Doug Silva (6-0, 2003) Tom Miles (5-0, 1969), Bob Westland (5-0, 1982) Fielding Errors 35 Troy Glaus (1997) RISP Average .476 Ben Francisco (2002) Intentional Walks 13 Paul Ellis (1990) Strikeouts 61 Bill Scott (1999) Hit by Pitch 18 Tyler Heineman (2012) Niko Gallego (2010), Eddie Murray (2009) Sacrifice Hits 18 Tyler Heineman (2012) Sacrifice Flies 9 Brett McMillan (2004) Games Played 67 Gallego (2010), Byrnes (1997), Glaus (1997), Heinrichs (1997), E. Valent (1997), M. Adams (1990), Pritchett (1990), Hankins (1990)
INDIVIDUAL — SINGLE SEASON (FRESHMEN) Batting Average .383 Garrett Atkins (1998) Most Hits 85 Garrett Atkins (1998) Most Home Runs 18 Wes Whisler (2002) Most Doubles 22 Garrett Atkins (1998) Most Innings Pitched 110.2 Gavin Brooks (2007) Most Strikeouts 104 Gerrit Cole (2009) Most Wins 9 Grant Watson (2012) Trevor Bauer (2010), Pete Janicki (1992) Most Saves 7 Bobby Roe (1998)
Batting Average Runs Scored Most Hits
.442 42 51 51 15 15 5 16 16 47 21 40
Most Doubles Most Triples Most Home Runs Most Runs Batted In Most Stolen Bases Most Walks
Casey Grzecka (2002) Troy Glaus (1997) Shane Mack (1983) Garrett Atkins (1998) David Ravitz (1993) Jason Green (1999) Dave Keating (1989) Torey Lovullo (1987) Eric Valent (1998) Ryan McGuire (1993) David Roberts (1994) Torey Lovullo (1987)
INDIVIDUAL — CONFERENCE SEASON PITCHING Most Games Most Innings Pitched Most Wins
Most Losses Most Saves Highest Win Pct.
Lowest ERA Most Strikeouts
25 89 8 8 8 9 11 1.000
David Berg (2012) Tim Leary (1979) Trevor Bauer (2011) Alex Sanchez (1986) Mike Magnante (1988) Scott Schanz (1989) David Berg (2013) Trevor Bauer (7-0) Josh Karp (6-0, 2000) Rick Pope (5-0, 1969), four pitchers (4-0) 0.45 Jim York (1969) 118 Trevor Bauer (2011)
INDIVIDUAL — SINGLE GAME Most Home Runs Most RBI Most Total Bases
4 11 17
Bill Scott, 3/30/99 at Washington** Bill Scott, 3/30/99 at Washington** Bill Scott, 3/30/99 at Washington**
INDIVIDUAL — MISCELLANEOUS Longest Hitting Strk. 33 gm Consecutive Hits 11 Consecutive HR Games 7 Home Runs in an Inning 2
Most RBI (3-gm Pac-10 series)
Garrett Atkins (1998) Chad Matoian (1996) Bill Scott (1999)** Jon Heinrichs (1997) Torey Lovullo (1986, 1987) Garrett Atkins (1999) 16 Ryan McGuire, 1993 vs. Arizona
* NCAA Record, ** Pac-10 Record
UCLA Single-Season Conference Leaders BATTING AVERAGE 2001 2000 1988 1983 1979
WALKS
Brian Baron Bill Scott Eric Karros Shane Mack Don Slaught
.443 .421 .415 .419 .428
DOUBLES 1997 1995 1992 1978
Jon Heinrichs Tim DeCinces Ryan McGuire Jim Auten
28 23 19 17
TRIPLES 1992 1988 1978
David Roberts Robbie Katzaroff Mike Carpenter
7 10 5
HOME RUNS 2009 2002 1999* 1998 1997 1996 1993 1990 1987 1979
Cody Decker Wes Whisler, Adam Berry Bill Scott Eric Valent Troy Glaus Tim DeCinces Ryan McGuire Paul Ellis Torey Lovullo Jim Auten
21 18 28 30 34 18 26 29 24 29
RUNS BATTED IN
Tim DeCinces, C (1994-1996)
1999 1997 1993 1990 1987
Bill Scott Troy Glaus, Eric Valent Ryan McGuire Paul Ellis Steve Hisey
86 91 91 83 79
96
1997 1987
Troy Glaus Torey Lovullo
COMPLETE GAMES 57 79
STOLEN BASES 2013 2002 1994 1993 1992 1991 1989 1978
Brian Carroll Ryan Rasmussen, Ben Francisco David Roberts David Roberts David Roberts Joel Wolfe Robbie Katzaroff Mike Carpenter
32 20 45 28 36 35 33 36
ERA 2013 2012 2011 1980 1979 1978
David Berg David Berg Trevor Bauer Eric Broersma Tim Leary Floyd Chiffer
0.92 1.46 1.25 2.24 2.72 1.60
WINS 2013 2011 2010 1997 1986 1980 1979
Nick Vander Tuig (tied) Trevor Bauer Trevor Bauer (tied) Jim Parque Alex Sanchez Eric Broersma Tim Leary
14 13 12 12 16 10 12
David Berg Gabe Sollecito Dana Ridenour, Bill Wenrick Herb Fauland
24 12 6 10
SAVES 2013 1992 1986 1980
2011 2007 1983 1979 1978
Trevor Bauer Tyson Brummett Jeff Pries Tim Leary Floyd Chiffer, Tim O’Neill
10 7 7 10 6
INNINGS PITCHED 2010 2007 1996 1992 1990 1979
Trevor Bauer Tyson Brummett Jim Parque Pete Janicki Tim Lindsay Tim Leary
131.1 138.0 125.2 150.1 149.0 145.2
STRIKEOUTS 2011 2010 2008 1996 1992 1986 1982 1981 1979
Trevor Bauer Trevor Bauer Tim Murphy Jim Parque Pete Janicki Alex Sanchez Colin Ward Eric Broersma Tim Leary
203 165 111 116 150 142 106 108 111
* In 1999, the conference moved from two divisions, composed of four northern teams (Pac-10 North) and six southern teams (Pac-10 South), to one nine-team league after Portland State dropped baseball. As a result, the conference schedule was reduced to 24 games, down from 30 in years past. In 2009, the inclusion of Oregon raised the total number of Pac-10 games from 24 to 27. In 2012, the inclusion of Utah will push the total number of Pac-12 games from 27 to 30.
UCLA’s ALL-AMERICA SELECTIONS
Rich Amaral
Eric Byrnes
Troy Glaus
Ryan McGuire
Chase Utley
Eric Valent
Peter Zamora
All-America Selections 1963 Randy Schwartz, 1B 1964 Randy Schwartz, 1B 1967 Steve Klausen, OF 1968 Gary Sanserino, SS 1979 Tim Leary, P Jim Auten, OF 1983 Rich Amaral, 2B Shane Mack, OF 1984 Shane Mack, OF 1986 Alex Sanchez, P Billy Haselman, OF 1987 Torey Lovullo, 2B
Bob Hamelin, 1B 1988 Eric Karros, 1B 1990 Paul Ellis, C
Chris Pritchett, 1B Pete Janicki, P 1991 Ryan McGuire, DH 1992 Mike Mitchell, DH
Ryan McGuire, 1B 1993 Ryan McGuire, 1B
1994 Tim DeCinces, C 1995 Eric Byrnes, OF
Tim DeCinces, C 1996 Tim DeCinces, C Jim Parque, P Eric Valent, OF 1997 Troy Glaus, SS
ABCA 2nd ABCA 1st TSN 1st ABCA 2nd ABCA 3rd TSN 1st ABCA 2nd TSN 1st ABCA 2nd TSN 1st ABCA 1st BA 1st ABCA 1st TSN 1st BA 2nd BA 1st BA (Fr) 1st ABCA 1st TSN 1st BA 1st BA (Fr) 2nd BA 3rd BA 1st ^ ABCA 1st CB 1st TSN 1st BA 3rd BA (Fr) 1st CB (Fr) 2nd BA (Fr) 3rd CB (Fr) 1st BA (Fr) 2nd CB 3rd CB 1st BA 1st TSN 1st SST 1st BA (Fr) 2nd CB (Fr) 1st BA (Fr) 1st SST 2nd SST 2nd SST 2nd CB (Fr) 1st BA 1st TSN 1st NCBWA 1st
Jim Parque, P Jon Heinrichs, OF
Eric Valent, OF
Peter Zamora, UTL 1998 Eric Valent, CF
Garrett Atkins, 3B
Bobby Roe, P Chase Utley, SS 1999 Garrett Atkins, 1B Josh Karp, P Bill Scott, LF
Chase Utley, 2B 2000 Garrett Atkins, 1B Bill Scott, LF
Chase Utley, 2B
Forrest Johnson, C 2001 Brian Baron, DH 2002 Wes Whisler, UT 2003 Brett McMillan, DH 2006 Ryan Babineau, C Brandon Crawford, SS
Garrett Atkins earned All-America honors in three consecutive seasons (1998-2000), standing as the only Bruin to ever accomplish that feat.
CB 2nd CB 3rd TSN 2nd ABCA 2nd CB 2nd ABCA 2nd BA 3rd NCBWA 3rd TSN 2nd ABCA 3rd NCBWA 3rd BA 1st CB 1st NCBWA 1st ABCA 1st TSN 2nd CB 3rd NCBWA 3rd BA 3rd CB (Fr) 1st CB (Fr) CB (Fr) NCBWA 3rd BA (Fr) CB (Fr) ABCA 1st NSCWA 2nd CB 3rd ABCA 1st CB 3rd CB 1st ABCA 1st NCBWA 2nd TSN 2nd TSN 1st NCBWA 1st ABCA 1st CB 3rd CB 2nd NCBWA 1st CB 1st BA 3rd BA 3rd BA (Fr) 1st CB (Fr) CB (Fr) CB (Fr) 1st BA (Fr) 1st
2007 Gabe Cohen, OF 2009 Trevor Bauer, P
Gerrit Cole, P 2010 Beau Amaral, OF Trevor Bauer, P Gerrit Cole, P 2011 Trevor Bauer, P
Adam Plutko, P
Zack Weiss, P 2012 Jeff Gelalich, OF Adam Plutko, P Scott Griggs, P David Berg, P
Grant Watson, P 2013 David Berg, P James Kaprielian, P
BA (Fr) 1st CB (Fr) 1st BA (Fr) 1st NCBWA (Fr) 1st ** CB (Fr) CB (Fr) BA (Fr) 2nd BA 2nd CB 2nd CB 2nd BA 3rd NCBWA 3rd ^ BA 1st ^ CB 1st ^ ABCA 1st NCBWA 1st BA (Fr) 1st CB (Fr) NCBWA (Fr) 2nd CB (Fr) BA 1st BA 3rd NCBWA 2nd CB 3rd NCBWA (Fr) 2nd CB (Fr) CB (Fr) BA 1st CB 1st NCBWA 1st CB (Fr)
BA - Baseball America, CB - Collegiate Baseball, TSN - The Sporting News, NCBWA - National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association, SST - Smith Super Team, ABCA - American Baseball Coaches Association ^ Player of the Year (as named by that publication) ** Collegiate Baseball Freshman Pitcher of the Year
Golden Spikes Award Winner 2011 Trevor Bauer, P
NCBWA Stopper of the Year 2013 David Berg, P
COSIDA Academic All-America Selections 1972 1979 1979 1988 1999
Mike Gerakos, 3B Tim Leary, P Don Slaught, C Mike Magnante, P Bill Scott, LF
Trevor Bauer became UCLA’s first Golden Spikes Award winner in 2011, going 13-2 with a 1.25 ERA and nation-leading 203 strikeouts.
97
AWARDS AND HONORS All-Conference Selections Year
Player
1967
Charlie Petrilla Steve Klausen Gary Sanserino Chris Chambliss Gary Sanserino Jim York Steve Busby Gary Robson Earl Altshuler Bob Adams Venoy Garrison Mike Edwards Ed Cowan Venoy Garrison Ed Cowan Dennis Delany Bobby Dallas Rob Henderson Dave Penniall Ken Gaylord Dennis Delany Dave Rasmussen Dave Baker Floyd Chiffer Dennis Delany Craig Johnson Tim Leary Don Slaught Vern Followell Jim Auten Dan Gausepohl
1968 1969 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976
1977 1978 1979
Pos.
Year
Player
2B OF SS 1B 2B P P P UTL OF C 2B P OF P C 2B SS OF DH C 2B OF P C OF P C SS OF OF
1980
Eric Broersma Don Slaught Brian Graham Rich Amaral Shane Mack Pete Beall Shane Mack John Joslyn Todd Zeile Steve Hisey John Joslyn Eric Karros Torey Lovullo Charlie Fiacco Steve Stowell Mike Magnante Eric Karros Robbie Katzaroff Chris Pritchett Paul Ellis # Joel Wolfe Joel Wolfe Pete Janicki ** David Roberts Mike Mitchell Ryan McGuire # David Ravitz Adam Melhuse David Roberts Tim DeCinces Peter Zamora Eric Byrnes
1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987
1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995
Pos. Year P C OF 2B OF INF OF DH C OF UTL 1B INF OF UTL P INF OF 1B C OF OF P OF DH 1B 2B 3B OF C 1B/LHP OF
1996 1997
1998 1999 2000
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
Player Tim DeCinces Troy Glaus Jim Parque Troy Glaus* Jon Heinrichs Eric Valent Eric Byrnes Peter Zamora Jim Parque Tom Jacquez Eric Valent* Garrett Atkins Garrett Atkins Bill Scott Chase Utley Garrett Atkins Forrest Johnson Josh Karp Bill Scott Chase Utley Brian Baron Josh Canales Ben Francisco Wes Whisler ^ Wes Whisler Casey Janssen Ryan McCarthy Chris Jensen Hector Ambriz Ryan Babineau David Huff
Pos.
Year
Player
C SS/3B P SS OF OF OF UTL P P CF 3B 1B LF 2B 1B C C LF 2B DH 2B RF 1B/LHP 1B/LHP RHP SS OF DH C P
2007
Tyson Brummett Gabe Cohen ^ Brandon Crawford Jermaine Curtis Cody Decker Alden Carrithers Trevor Bauer ^ Gerrit Cole Cody Decker Trevor Bauer Gerrit Cole Dan Klein Tyler Rahmatulla Rob Rasmussen Beau Amaral Trevor Bauer ** Adam Plutko Beau Amaral David Berg Jeff Gelalich Scott Griggs Tyler Heineman Adam Plutko David Berg ** Adam Plutko Pat Valaika *** Nick Vander Tuig
2008 2009 2010
2011 2012
2013
Pos. P OF SS 3B 1B 2B P P 1B P P P 2B P OF P P OF P OF P C P P P SS P
* Player of the Year ** Pitcher of the Year *** Defensive Player of the Year # Co-Player of the Year ^ Freshman/Newcomer of the Year
All-Tournament Team Selections 1979 NCAA West Regional Mike Gallego Jim Auten Don Slaught
1991 Olive Garden Classic 2B OF C
1985 Riverside Invitational Todd Zeile
Michael Moore* Chris Pritchett Adam Schulhofer David Tokheim Tim Lindsay
CF 1B 2B RF P
2006 NCAA Malibu Regional
Eric Valent* Nick Theodorou Troy Glaus Peter Zamora Jim Parque
Hector Ambriz Blair Dunlap
CF 2B SS UTL P
C
1991 Oscar Mayer Classic 1986 NCAA West Regional John Joslyn Steve Hisey
1997 NCAA Midwest Regional
1B LF
Ryan McGuire David Tokheim
1999 NCAA Wichita Regional DH RF
Garrett Atkins Josh Karp Bill Scott
1B P LF
1992 NCAA Mideast Regional 1987 Wheaties Tournament Steve Stowell*
UTL
Bob Hamelin
1B
Torey Lovullo Charlie Fiacco Billy Haselman Steve Hisey
2B CF C LF
Pete Janicki David Ravitz Ryan McGuire David Roberts
P 2B 1B OF
1993 NCAA Central I Regional Tim Kubinski David Roberts
P OF
1987 NCAA West II Regional Scott Cline Eric Karros
3B 1B
1988 Busch Challenege II Eric Karros Scott Cline
1B 3B
1990 NCAA Midwest Regional Chris Pritchett
1B
Tim DeCinces Jon Heinrichs Jim Parque
C OF P
1997 Hormel Foods Classic Troy Glaus* Eric Valent Jon Heinrichs Peter Zamora Jim Parque Tom Jacquez
Garrett Atkins Ryan Carter Forrest Johnson Josh Karp Bill Scott Chase Utley*
1B P C P LF 2B
David Roberts (1992, 1993 Regionals)
Wes Whisler Casey Janssen Ryan McCarthy Billy Susdorf
1B P SS RF
2003 Kia Baseball Bash SS CF LF DH P P
OF P 2B
2007 NCAA Long Beach Regional Jermaine Curtis* Ryan Babineau Cody Decker Justin Uribe Gavin Brooks
3B C DH OF P
2011 NCAA Los Angeles Regional Beau Amaral Trevor Bauer Cody Keefer Jeff Gelalich
OF P OF DH
2008 NCAA Fullerton Regional 2012 NCAA Los Angeles Regional 2000 NCAA Oklahoma Regional
2003 Domino’s Aggie Classic 1996 NCAA Central I Regional
2010 College World Series
P Beau Amaral OF Trevor Bauer Cody Regis
Wes Whisler*
P/1B
2004 NCAA Okla. City Regional Chris Denove Ryan McCarthy Casey Janssen Mike Svetlic Preston Griffin
C SS P 2B 3B
Casey Haerther Alden Carrithers Jermaine Curtis Blair Dunlap Brandon Crawford
2009 Houston College Classic
Beau Amaral Trevor Brown Jeff Gelalich* Cody Keefer Adam Plutko Pat Valaika Nick Vander Tuig
OF INF OF OF P INF P
Gerrit Cole Blair Dunlap Casey Haerther Eddie Murray
P OF 2013 NCAA Los Angeles Regional 1B Eric Filia OF 2B Pat Gallagher* INF Adam Plutko P INF 2010 NCAA Los Angeles Regional Pat Valaika P Beau Amaral OF Grant Watson Trevor Bauer* P Gerrit Cole P 2013 College World Series Niko Gallego SS Eric Filia OF Cody Regis 3B Adam Plutko* P Pat Valaika INF Nick Vander Tuig P
Bill Scott (1999, 2000 Regionals)
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1B 2B 3B OF ^DH
*Tournament MVP ^ DH awarded to a designated hitter or deserving player at a different position
Jermaine Curtis (2006, 2007, 2008 Regionals)
AWARDS AND HONORS Multiple All-Conference Selections UCLA has produced 25 players since 1967 who have earned all-conference acclaim at least twice, with four standouts having earned all-conference honors three times (Garrett Atkins, Dennis Delany, Trevor Bauer and Adam Plutko). BEAU AMARAL All-Pac-12 Team in 2011, 2012 A three-year starting outfielder (2010-2012), Beau Amaral helped lead the Bruins to two College World Series appearances in his three years at the school. As a freshman, Amaral batted a team-leading .354 as he helped lead UCLA to the finals of the 2010 College World Series. He followed that up with a solid sophomore campaign, batting .299 with a team-best 16 doubles and 37 runs, earning All-Pac-10 honors for the first time in his career. In 2012, Amaral batted .313 with a team-best 63 runs as he again earned All-Pac-12 honors and helped the Bruins return to the College World Series. GARRETT ATKINS All-Pac-10 Team in 1998, 1999, 2000 Garrett Atkins captured All-Pac-10 acclaim each of his three seasons at UCLA. He set the school’s single-season freshman batting average record in 1998, hitting at a .383 clip with nine homers and 54 RBI. As a sophomore, Atkins batted .275 with 14 home runs, 18 doubles and 41 RBI. He helped lead UCLA to the NCAA Super Regional at LSU during his junior season, batting .352 with 17 home runs, 72 RBI and 73 runs. TREVOR BAUER All-Pac-10 Team in 2009, 2010, 2011 Among the most dominant pitchers in conference history, Trevor Bauer secured All-Pac-10 acclaim each of his three seasons (2009-2011). As a junior, he became the first UCLA player to ever win the Golden Spikes Award. That season, Bauer went 13-2 with a 1.25 ERA and a nation-leading 203 strikeouts. He went 12-3 with a 3.02 ERA and a nation-best 165 strikeouts as a sophomore and secured Pac-10 Freshman of the Year honors in 2009, going 9-3 with a 2.99 ERA. Bauer helped lead UCLA to the finals of the 2010 College World Series and back to the postseason in 2011. DAVID BERG All-Pac-12 Team in 2012, 2013 Having already proven himself to be one of the greatest relievers in program history, David Berg enters his junior season in 2014 looking to expand upon his record-setting 2013 campaign. Last season, he became the first reliever in conference history to win Pac-12 Pitcher of the Year and was UCLA’s first recipient of the NCBWA Stopper of the Year Award, given out to the nation’s top relief pitcher. Berg posted a 7-0 record with a 0.92 ERA while setting an NCAA single-season record with 24 saves in 2013, all while leading the Bruins to the NCAA title. He also matched the NCAA single-season record with 51 apperances in 2013. Berg is the only pitcher in UCLA history to lead the conference in ERA in back-to-back seasons and enters his junior year at UCLA with a 12-3 record and a 1.18 ERA in 152 innings pitched (all in relief). Additionally, Berg is UCLA’s all-time record holder for most postseason appearances (17) and saves (6) and holds the school record for most career saves (25). ERIC BYRNES All-Pac-10 Team in 1995, 1997 A talented four-year starter (1995-1998), Eric Byrnes guided the Bruins to postseason appearances in 1996 and 1997, including to the College World Series in 1997. He batted .324 with nine home runs, 35 RBI and 18 stolen bases as a freshman. Two years later, he posted career numbers with 17 home runs, 60 RBI and 95 runs. Byrnes finished his carrer as UCLA’s all-time leader in runs (235), hits (326) and at-bats (984).
JOHN JOSLYN All-Pac-10 Team in 1985, 1986 A two-year standout for the Bruins (1985-1986), John Joslyn was a key player on UCLA’s 1986 Pac-10 Championship squad. That season, he batted .347 with 18 home runs and 53 RBI as the Bruins hosted an NCAA Regional. In 1985, Joslyn earned the first of his two All-Pac-10 team honors, batting .370 with six home runs and 42 RBI. ERIC KARROS All-Pac-10 Team in 1987, 1988 After playing in just 12 games as a freshman in 1986, Eric Karros made a tremendous impact for the Bruins in 1987 and 1988. In 66 games as a sophomore (1987), Karros batted .312 with eight home runs, 23 doubles and 57 RBI. The following season, he batted .415 with 17 homers, 14 doubles and 54 RBI. Karros finished his three-year career batting .365 with 26 home runs and 123 RBI. SHANE MACK All-Pac-10 Team in 1983, 1984 A three-year starter for the Bruins (1982-1984), Shane Mack batted over the .300 plateau each season. He posted his best numbers as a sophomore and junior. In 1983, Mack batted .419 with 11 home runs, 60 RBI and 54 runs in 49 games. The following season, he batted .352 with 16 home runs and 53 RBI. Mack was the No. 11 overall selection in the 1984 MLB Draft by the San Diego Padres. JIM PARQUE All-Pac-10 Team in 1996, 1997 Serving as the ace of UCLA’s 1997-bound College World Series team, Jim Parque had a very strong three-year career (1995-1997). He posted a 28-8 career record on the mound, logging 319 strikeouts in 334.2 innings while recording a 3.55 ERA. As a junior in 1997, Parque went 13-2 with a 3.08 ERA. He led the Pac-10 with 116 strikeouts in 1996 and with 12 wins in 1997. ADAM PLUTKO All-Pac-12 Team in 2011, 2012, 2013 After leading the Bruins to two College World Series appearances in three years, including the program’s first NCAA title in 2013, Adam Plutko finished his career with the second-most wins in school history (29) while making the second-most starts (52). He also logged the second-most innings pitched (351.1) in UCLA history, and his career ERA of 2.25 and 272 career strikeouts both rank seventh on UCLA’s all-time lists. Plutko finished his career with the most postseason wins (7), games started (8), innings pitched (57.2) and lowest ERA (0.94) in school history and was one of just four players in UCLA history to earn All-Pac-12 honors three years in a row. Additionally, Plutko combined with teammate Nick Vander Tuig to compile the most pitching wins by two teammates in program history (56). DAVE ROBERTS All-Pac-10 Team in 1992, 1994 Among the best basestealers in UCLA history, Dave Roberts batted over .295 with at least 28 stolen bases in each of his final three seasons. A four-year letterwinner (1991-1994), he led the conference in stolen bases in 1992, 1993 and 1994. He set the school’s single-season record with 45 swipes in 1994. Roberts finished his UCLA career with a .325 batting average, 82 RBI, 177 runs and 109 stolen bases. GARY SANSERINO All-Pac-8 Team in 1968, 1969 A three-year letterwinner who excelled as a shortstop (1967-1969), Dave Sanserino posted a career .319 batting average, totaling 12 home runs and 98 RBI. He batted .302 with 10 home runs and set a then-school record with 19 stolen bases in 1969, leading UCLA to its first-ever appearance in the College World Series that season.
GERRIT COLE All-Pac-10 Team in 2009, 2010 A three-year starting pitcher (2009-2011), Gerrit Cole twice earned All-Pac-10 acclaim. As a freshman, he moved into the team’s Friday night starter role, going 4-8 with a 3.49 ERA, 104 strikeouts and 38 walks in 95.0 innings. As a sophomore, Cole went 11-4 with a 3.37 ERA, 153 strikeouts and 52 walks in 123.0 innings. Cole led UCLA to the finals of the College World Series in 2010 and back to the postseason as a junior in 2011.
BILL SCOTT All-Pac-10 Team in 1999, 2000 Bill Scott established himself in three seasons (1998-2000) as one of UCLA’s most successful hitters. He posted career totals of 53 home runs and 173 RBI while batting .392 and leading UCLA to NCAA Regionals in 1999 and 2000. Scott led all Pac-10 hitters with a .421 batting average as a junior in 2000 and led the conference with 28 home runs and 86 RBI in 1999.
ED COWAN All-Pac-8 Team in 1975, 1976 A three-year letterwinner for the Bruins (1974-1976), Ed Cowan posted a 10-2 record with a 3.50 ERA as a starting pitcher for the Bruins during his senior campaign. He led the Bruins in strikeouts and wins during his junior and senior years. The two-time all-conference selection finished his UCLA career with a 22-11 record and 4.10 ERA.
DON SLAUGHT All-Pac-10 Team in 1979, 1980 A three-year letterwinner at UCLA (1977, 1979-1980), Don Slaught was among the Bruins’ most talented hitters during his final two seasons. He batted at a conference-leading .428 clip in 1979, totaling seven home runs, 41 RBI and 38 runs in 45 games as the Bruins’ catcher. In 1980, Slaught batted .292 with four home runs and 34 RBI.
TIM DECINCES All-Pac-10 Team in 1995, 1996 Among the best hitting catchers in program history, Tim DeCinces helped lead the Bruins to the 1996 NCAA Central I Regional at the University of Texas. He posted a career .321 batting average in three seasons (1994-1996), belting 37 home runs and collecting 166 RBI. He led all Pac-10 hitters with 23 doubles in 1995 and 18 home runs in 1996. DeCinces ranks fourth on UCLA’s career doubles list (54).
CHASE UTLEY All-Pac-10 Team in 1999, 2000 Starring as a middle infielder for UCLA from 1998-2000, Chase Utley batted over the .300 plateau with at least 15 home runs in each of his three seasons. He belted 16 home runs as a sophomore (1999) and 22 as a junior (2000). Utley batted .382 with 69 RBI and 81 runs in 2000, helping lead UCLA to an NCAA Super Regional at LSU. He finished his career having batted .342 with 53 home runs, 174 RBI and 182 runs in 179 games.
CODY DECKER All-Pac-10 Team in 2007, 2009 Among the conference’s premier power hitters during his four years (2006-2009), Decker led all Pac-10 hitters with 21 home runs in 2009. He earned All-Pac-10 honors in 2007, batting .307 with 14 homers and 57 RBI. As a senior, he batted .322 with 21 homers and 53 RBI. He finished his career sporting a .288 batting average, 47 home runs and 153 RBI.
ERIC VALENT All-Pac-10 Team in 1997, 1998 UCLA’s all-time leader in career home runs (69) and RBI (219), Eric Valent had a sensational three-year career (1996-1998). He batted .339 with 27 home runs and 91 RBI as a sophomore (1997) and followed that season with a .336 average, 30 homers and 73 RBI as a junior (1998). Valent helped lead UCLA to postseason appearances in 1996 and 1997, including the Bruins’ second-ever trip to the College World Series in 1997.
DENNIS DELANY All-Pac-8 Team in 1976, 1977, 1978 A four-year standout (1975-1978), Dennis Delany led UCLA to the 1976 CIBA title, in addition to second-place finishes in the Pac-8 in 1977 and 1978. As a junior in 1977, Delany posted a team-best .339 batting average, totaling 11 home runs and 37 RBI. The following season, he batted .339 with six homers, 14 doubles and 37 RBI. Delany finished his collegiate career having compiled a .302 batting average. VENOY GARRISON All-Pac-8 Team in 1974, 1975 Venoy Garrison finished his three-year career (1973-1975) having batted .331 with nine home runs, 17 doubles and 68 RBI. He starred behind the plate for UCLA, blossoming during his junior and senior campaigns. In 1974, Garrison batted .345 with 12 doubles. The following year, he batted .344 with seven home runs and 37 RBI. TROY GLAUS All-Pac-10 Team in 1996, 1997 Among the most talented power hitters in school history, Troy Glaus capped his three-year career (1995-1997) with a sensational junior season. In 1997, Glaus led the Pac-10 with 34 home runs (single-season school record), batted .409 and drove in 91 runs. As a sophomore in 1996, Glaus batted .352 with 16 home runs, 17 doubles and 50 RBI. He posted career totals of 62 home runs, 180 RBI, 211 runs scored and a .344 batting average.
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WES WHISLER All-Pac-10 Team in 2002, 2003 One of UCLA’s best two-way players during the 2000s, Wes Whisler batted .328 with 18 home runs and 46 RBI as a freshman (2002). That season, he went 5-2 with a 4.06 ERA in 84.1 innings. The following year, Whisler batted .310 with nine home runs and 39 RBI. On the mound, he totaled 53 strikeouts in 82.2 innings. Whisler and teammate Adam Berry tied for the Pac-10 lead in home runs (18) during the 2002 season. JOEL WOLFE All-Pac-10 Team in 1990, 1991 A career .348 hitter in three seasons (1989-1991), Joel Wolfe batted at least .320 each year with the Bruins. He batted .320 with two homers and 28 RBI as a freshman. Wolfe batted .376 with 10 home runs and 44 RBI as a sophomore. As a junior, he hit at a .345 clip with six home runs and 47 RBI. PETE ZAMORA All-Pac-10 Team in 1995, 1997 A standout for UCLA both on the mound and at the plate, Pete Zamora went 15-6 with a 4.66 ERA in 48 games (31 starts) while batting .310 with 28 home runs and 152 RBI in three seasons (1995-1997). He batted .379 with 16 home runs and 74 RBI as a junior in 1997, helping lead UCLA to the College World Series as a junior that year.
1940 UCLA Baseball Jackie Robinson spent the 1940 season playing baseball at UCLA. Robinson (far left, top row) played his first game on March 10, 1940. He finished his career at UCLA as the school’s first four-sport letterwinner (baseball, football, basketball, track and field).
Gary Adams UCLA’s all-time winningest head coach (below, center), Gary Adams led the Bruins to the 1997 College World Series. That season, UCLA overcame an early loss in NCAA Regional action by winning its next five games in dominating fashion. Adams played at UCLA from 1959-62.
Bob Andrews Paul Ellis Shown here being congratulated by his teammtes, Paul Ellis (#19) served as the Bruins’ starting catcher in 1989 and 1990. He was a consensus first-team All-America selection and Diviion I ABCA Player of the Year honoree in 1990.
Playing under head coach Art Reichle, Bob Andrews pitched for UCLA from 1948-50 when the Bruins were members of the CIBA.
2010 UCLA Baseball The Bruins posted a program-best 51-17 record in 2010, closing the season with UCLA’s first-ever trip to the finals of the College World Series in Omaha, Neb. Anchored by starting pitchers Gerrit Cole, Trevor Bauer and Rob Rasmussen, the Bruins took down Cal State Fullerton in the Super Regionals to advance to the College World Series.
2012 UCLA Baseball Led by the winningest junior class in school history, the 2012 UCLA Baseball team advanced to their second College World Series in three years. The Bruins swept all three games in the Los Angeles Regional before knocking off TCU in the Los Angeles Super Regional. Chris Chambliss Chambliss led UCLA to its first-ever College World Series in 1969, posting a team-high .340 batting average with 15 home runs.
Jim Parque Among the top pitchers in the nation in 1997, Parque posted a career 25-11 record with a 3.55 ERA in 334.2 innings (1995-97). He was an integral member of UCLA’s 1997 College World Series team.
Dan Guerrero An infielder on UCLA’s baseball team from 1971-73, Guerrero has served as UCLA’s Athletic Director since 2002.
2000 UCLA Baseball UCLA’s 2000 team advanced to the NCAA Super Regional in Baton Rouge with the help of (left to right) Chase Utley, Chad Cislak and Bill Scott. The Bruins won the 2000 Oklahoma City Regional that spring.
Garrett Atkins Among the best hitters to ever play at UCLA, Garrett Atkins posted a school freshman season record .383 batting average in 1998. Two years later, Atkins teammed with Chase Utley to lead UCLA to the 2000 NCAA Super Regional at LSU. The Bruins swept three games at the NCAA Oklahoma City Regional. 2007 UCLA Baseball Backed by three standout starting pitching efforts, the 2007 UCLA team swept the NCAA Long Beach Regional, earning its first Super Regional appearance since 2000.
Todd Zeile One of the premiere major leaguers of the 1990s, Zeile batted .331 with 26 homers and 94 RBI for UCLA from 1984-86. Zeile captured All-Pac-10 team honors in 1986, as UCLA advanced to NCAA Regional action at Jackie Robinson Stadium.
UCLA BASEBALL HISTORY
1944 – CIBA CHAMPIONS 16-12 overall, 5-3 CIBA (1st Place) Led by head coach A.J. Sturzenegger, the 1944 Bruins claimed both the Southern California Interscholastic Baseball Association and the California Interscholastic Association titles. No UCLA team had finished with a first-place league standing since 1924. In the words of Sturzenegger, his 1944 squad was “one of the best fielding and hitting teams of Bruin history.” Team captain and shortstop Bob Brown led UCLA with the bat and anchored the infield before later becoming the president of Major League Baseball’s American League. Pitcher Burt Avedon and catcher Dave Fainer provided the Bruins with a veteran battery combination, while pitcher Nick Russin, outfielders Lyle Palmer and Mike Knauff, and first baseman Jack Myers added some pop to a hard-hitting lineup. Rounding out the infield were third baseman Don Reaume and second baseman Ken Proctor. Warren Hayes was the third member of the outfield. UCLA’s pitching staff revolved around starters Frank Freericks and “Doc Mason,” in addition to Avedon. The bullpen included Sid Gilmore, Baker Garrison, Jack Porter and John Derdivanis. The Bruins ended the season with a four-game win streak, including two over California and two against USC.
1969 – FIRST COLLEGE WORLD SERIES TRIP 42-12-1, 17-4 Pac-8 (1st Place) Led by future major league star Chris Chambliss, the 1969 UCLA baseball team became the first Bruin squad to reach the College World Series. UCLA finished the season with A 42-12-1 record, losing two heartbreakers at the College World Series in extra innings. Chambliss, who played first base, batted .340 and set a then-school record with 15 home runs, including 10 in conference play. Shortstop Gary Sanserino batted .302 with 10 home runs, establishing a then-school record 19 stolen bases. UCLA’s pitching staff was led by sophomore right-hander Rick Pope, who compiled an 8-0 record and a 1.60 ERA in a team-leading 95.1 innings. Senior right-hander Jim York pitched in a team-high 27 games, collecting 70 strikeouts and 24 walks in 60.2 innings. UCLA’s march to Omaha, Neb., in 1969 began with consecutive shutout victories as the Bruins won 16 of their first 17 games. After opening Pac-8 play with back-to-back losses, UCLA won 17 of its final 19 conference games to secure a 17-4 Pac-8 mark. UCLA entered a best-of-three NCAA Regional having won its previous 11 contests, all in Pac-8 play. The Bruins dispatched of Santa Clara in the NCAA Regional, winning by scores of 7-5 and 2-1. In the College World Series, UCLA fell to Tulsa, 6-5, in 10 innings. The Bruins were eliminated the following day, dropping a 2-1 decision in 12 innings to Arizona State.
1944 UCLA BRUINS – standing (left to right): Coach A.J. Sturzenegger, Jack Porter, Bobby Brown, Jack “Moose” Myers, Dave Fainer, Trainer “Ducky” Drake. Kneeling: Warren Hayes, Frank Frericks, Miller, Hal Holman, John Derdivanis, Burt Avedon, Manager Dave Tomlinson. Sitting: Wally Finch, Don Reume, Nick Russin, Lyle Palmer, Ritzman, Mike Knauff. (not pictured: Sid Gilmore).
1975 – 31-22, 7-11 Pac-8 (3rd Place) A new era of UCLA baseball began as former Bruin captain Gary Adams took over the reins in 1975. Adams, who inherited a squad that finished 26-35 in 1974, guided the 1975 Bruins to a 31-22 mark. UCLA began its season with a first start, winning 11 of the first 13 games and compiling a 28-14 record before hitting a late-season slump. A trio of UCLA outfielders – senior Steve Connors and juniors Venoy Garrison and Dave Penniall – led the Bruins at the plate. Garrison posted a teamhigh .344 batting average, collecting seven home runs and 37 RBI in 50 games. Connors had the second-highest average (.306) among UCLA’s everyday players and contributed 12 doubles and 30 RBI in 44 games. Penniall, who transferred from Glendale Junior College that season, batted .301 with nine doubles, three home runs and 35 runs. Junior right-hander Ed Cowan anchored UCLA’s rotation, totaling 109 strikeouts and a 9-3 record in a team-high 121.1 innings.
1976 – 35-25, 16-8 CIBA (1st Place)
Despite winning just one of their first seven games, the 1970 UCLA ballclub posted a winning record and finished second in the Pac-8. reins. Following the opening 1-6 skid, UCLA rebounded to win seven of its next eight games. Early non-conference wins against Cal Poly, San DIego State and Long Beach State boosted the Bruins’ record as UCLA hovered around the .500 plateau most of the spring. Junior shortstop Ralph Punaro led the Bruins in Pac-8 play, posting a .356 average. Sophomore Earl Altshuler registered a .390 batting average in limited action (32-for-82 at the plate).
The 1976 UCLA baseball team captured the program’s first conference title since 1969, defeating crosstown rival USC on the final day of the season to secure the CIBA crown. In a game dubbed “The Miracle of Sawtelle Field”, UCLA defeated the Trojans by scoring three runs in the bottom of the ninth inning. Unfortunately for the 1976 Bruins, the CIBA champion did not earn an automatic berth to the NCAA Tournament, and UCLA was not invited to play in Region 8 postseason play as an at-large selection (Northern Colorado earned an at-large berth). A school-record six Bruins earned All-CIBA Team honors after the season. Junior Robbie Henderson led all Bruin regulars with a .302 average, swatted nine home runs, and finished in a three-way tie for the team lead with 37 RBI. UCLA’s starting rotation featured seniors Steve Bianchi (5-3, 3.86) and Ed Cowan (10-2, 3.50) and sophomore Tim O’Neill (7-4, 3.21). Speed on the basepaths emerged as a pivotal weapon for the Bruins that spring, as UCLA swiped a then-school record 125 bases (later broken in 1992).
1971 – 38-17, 11-6 Pac-8 (3rd Place)
1977 – 31-30, 10-8 Pac-8 (2nd Place)
The 1971 season marked the fourth season in UCLA’s last five in which the Bruins won 35 games or more. UCLA won 10 of its first 15 games that spring, posting a 13-0 shutout victory against Cal Poly Pomona in the season opener. Two days later, UCLA routed the College of Sequoias, 30-0. The Bruins opened Pac-8 play winning three of the first four contests, including a win at home against Stanford followed by two victories against California. UCLA continued rolling through their conference late in May, posting two-game series sweeps at Washington and Washington State.
After losing 12 lettermen from the 1976 team, UCLA surprised many by finishing with a respectable 31-30 mark. The Bruins recorded three-game series sweeps in Pac-8 play against California and Stanford before finishing their conference slate at 10-8. Catcher Dennis Delany and outfielder Dave Baker helped provide the most power in UCLA’s lineup that spring. Delany registered 11 homers and 37 RBI, while sporting a team-best .339 average, and Baker belted 10 homers and compiled a team-leading 43 RBI. UCLA’s pitching staff registered a combined 4.14 ERA, as junior right-handers Tim O’Neill and Floyd Chiffer led the way. O’Neill went 6-7 with a 4.00 ERA, posting team-highs of 62 strikeouts and 117.0 innings. Chiffer compiled a 5-2 mark, totaling 61 strikeouts in 86.2 innings.
THE 1970s – 330-248-2 (.571) 1970 – 26-24-1, 8-7 Pac-8 (3rd Place)
1972 – 32-33-1, 4-14 Pac-8 (4th Place) UCLA’s 1972 ballclub featured a mid-season nine-game win streak quickly followed by a nine-game losing skid. After hovering near .500 through the first 14 games, the Bruins won 14 of their next 15 to boast a 20-8-1 ledger by March 23. UCLA hit an April swoon, dropping 19 of its next 23 games and sending its record to a pedestrian 24-26-1. Senior outfielder Earl Altshuler led the Bruins at the plate with a .379 batting average along with six home runs, 33 RBI and 45 runs. UCLA’s pitching staff posted a 3.79 team ERA as Steve Smith (1.69 ERA, 63.2 IP), Gary Robson (2.84 ERA, 107.2 IP) and Bruce Baranick (3.05 ERA, 62.0 IP) led the club on the bump.
1973 – 29-24, 7-11 Pac-8 (3rd Place) The Bruins opened 1973 with wins in 11 of their first 16 games, boasting a 26-13 mark midway through conference play. UCLA took two of three games from Stanford at Sawtelle Field and picked up a series victory at California later that month. The Bruins improved their resume, notching non-conference wins over Pepperdine, Cal State L.A., UC Santa Barbara and Cal Poly Pomona. However, the Bruins good fortune ran out in May, as UCLA dropped 11 of its final 14 contests. Bill Hobbs and Tim Doerr led the Bruins offensively – Hobbs batted .356 and Doerr hit at a .348 clip. Bob Adams led the club with 13 home runs, 48 RBI and 10 stolen bases.
1978 – 39-20, 9-9 Pac-8 (2nd Place) The “Baby Bruins” showed signs of maturity, as UCLA finished with 39 wins, the fifth-highest win total in school history (second-highest at the time). The Bruins returned 16 letterwinners and finished second in the conference for the second straight season. UCLA narrowly missed earning a berth in the NCAA Tournament. In a one-game Pac-8 Conference playoff game at Stanford’s Sunken Diamond, Washington State clubbed a three-run walkoff homer with two outs in the bottom of the ninth to end UCLA’s season. The Bruins were able to force the one-game playoff by salvaging the final game of a three-game series against USC in the final contest of the regular season. After dropping the series opener, 1-0, and losing the second game, 7-6, UCLA responded by edging the Trojans, 9-8. Individual highlights that season included right-hander Floyd Chiffer’s dominant senior campaign. Chiffer, who posted the the lowest ERA in Pac-8 competition (1.60), finished the year with an 11-3 record and 84 striekouts in a team-best 120.0 innings. Sophomore right-hander Tim Leary went 5-5 in 17 games (13 starts), recording a team-best 88 strikeouts and a 3.42 ERA in 94.2 innings. Offensively, UCLA stole 101 bases, the fifth-highest total in school history. Junior outfielder Mike Carpenter catalyzed UCLA at the plate with a team-leading .343 batting average and 36 stolen bases.
1979 – 43-18, 21-9 Pac-10 (1st Place)
1974 – 26-35, 7-11 Pac-8 (4th Place) In the final year of his 30-year tenure at UCLA, head coach Arthur Reichle led the 1974 Bruins to a fourthplace Pac-8 finish. After opening the season 0-11, the Bruins rebounded to win 11 games in a 14-game window through February and March. Midway through April, UCLA crawled to within three games of the .500 mark (21-24) with series sweeps of Gonzaga and Stanford. In Pac-8 play, the Bruins rolled to series victories against California and Stanford. Second baseman Mike Edwards led UCLA with 14 home runs, 42 RBI and 12 stolen bases. Steve Bianchi posted a 9-4 Arthur Reichle record, totaling 52 strikeouts in a team-high (head coach 1941, 1946-74) 96.2 innings.
With the addition of Arizona and Arizona State to the conference, the Pac-10 Southern Division (6-Pac) became the toughest league in college baseball. The frustrations of 1977 and 1978 were erased, as UCLA cruised through the conference and earned the automatic playoff berth as Pac10 Champions. UCLA recorded its best record since 1969 and competed in the West Regional at Fresno State, finishing second to eventual NCAA Champion Cal State Fullerton. The Bruins won their first three games to earn a berth in the finals before losing a doubleheader to Cal State Fullerton. Highlights of the season included UCLA’s first-ever three game sweep of USC and being ranked No. 1 in the nation by Collegiate Baseball. The Bruins rewrote the school record book, led by Sporting News All-America selections Tim Leary and Jim Auten. Leary set then-school records with 145.2 innings, 12 wins, and eight conference wins (since tied). He was the second player picked in the 1979 MLB Draft, the highest pick in school history. Auten set a then-NCAA record with 29 home runs and established a then-school record with 78 RBI. Catcher Don Slaught, who was selected an Academic All-American along with Leary, broke the UCLA batting average record and won the Pac-10 batting title with a .428 overall mark. The Bruins set a school record with a .320 overall batting average (that record was broken in 1997). UCLA had eight players taken in the MLB draft, the highest total in the nation that season. Six of those eight later saw action in the big leagues.
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UCLA BASEBALL HISTORY
THE 1980s – 317-278-6 (.532)
1985 – 34-30-1, 13-17 Pac-10 (5th Place)
1980 – 31-22-3, 15-15 Pac-10 (3rd Place) Despite having to replace two All-Americans (Tim Leary, Jim Auten) from their 1979 team, the 1980 Bruins managed to compete for the Pac-10 title until the season’s final weekend. Due to unfinished construction at Jackie Robinson Stadium, the Bruins practiced on the school’s intramural field and played their “home” games at Pepperdine in 1980. UCLA compiled a winning record for the sixth straight season, finishing two games behind conference co-champions California and Arizona. The pitching staff posted a 3.55 ERA, as UCLA won eight of its final 10 games, including wins in the season’s final three games against USC. Junior right-hander Eric Broersma hurled two complete games, going 10-2 with a team-low 2.24 ERA in 17 games (14 starts). Senior left-hander Herb Fauland tallied a team-best 10 saves, recording 40 strikeouts and a 2.91 ERA in 58.2 innings. Six Bruins were selected in the MLB Draft that year, including second-rounder Matt Young (Seattle).
1981 – 21-35, 7-23 Pac-10 (6th Place) The good news was that UCLA opened up newly built Jackie Robinson Stadium in 1981, but the bad news was that the Bruins suffered through their first losing season since 1974. UCLA’s 21-man traveling roster featured seven freshmen that season. Outfielder Vince Beringhele had a strong freshman campaign, finishing second on the team with a .337 average. He totaled three homers, 22 RBI and 39 runs and drew a team-high 45 walks. First baseman Greg Norman provided the power, registering team-highs with nine home runs, 47 RBI and 42 runs. Senior outfielder David Montanari led the Bruins with a .374 average, starting all but two contests. UCLA won 11 of its final 21 games, including a conference series victory at Stanford.
1982 – 38-27, 11-19 Pac-10 (4th Place) In 1982, UCLA rebounded with its seventh winning season in eight years, finishing 11 games over the .500 plateau. UCLA jumped out to a 13-1 start, rising as high as No. 3 in national polls. The Bruins won 17 of their first 21 games before finishing the season with 21 wins in their final 44 contests. The team’s early-season success was fueled by a 10-game win streak in February. Midway through the spring, UCLA dropped out of the polls before finishing fourth in the Pac-10. Outfielder Brian Graham earned All-Pac-10 Southern Division Team accolades, having logged team highs in batting average (.337), hits (85), stolen bases (22) and at-bats (251). Outfielder Vince Beringhele followed his successful freshman campaign with an equally strong sophomore season, batting .338 with three home runs, 13 doubles and 61 RBI. Senior left-hander Colin Ward led the starting pitchers with a 4.51 ERA in a team-high 121.2 innings.
1983 – 28-24-1, 12-18 Pac-10 (5th Place) UCLA finished fifth in the Pac-10’s Southern Division after having improved its conference win total by one game. The Bruins batted at a combined .320, tying the then-school record. Outfielder Shane Mack had a strong sophomore campaign, leading UCLA with a .419 batting average, the second highest single-season mark in program history at the time (currently, fourth). Mack, a future major league ballplayer, earned first-team All-America honors from Baseball America and the American Baseball Coaches Association (ABCA), after leading the Bruins in home runs (11), RBI (60), hits (88), runs (54) and total bases (138). UCLA sustained a winning record throughout the season, reaching as high as nine wins over .500 twice (17-8-1). The Bruins won two of three Pac-10 games at Arizona State in March and captured four wins in five games against California. Sophomore right-hander Jeff Pries tossed two complete game shutouts, a feat that would not be duplicated by a UCLA pitcher until 2008 (Tim Murphy). Pries finished the season with a 7-6 record and 4.46 ERA in 19 games (18 starts).
1984 – 28-32, 8-22 Pac-10 (6th Place) For the second straight spring, junior Shane Mack’s phenomenal play highlighted UCLA’s season. Mack captured first-team All-America honors for the second consecutive year before leading the USA Olympic Baseball Team to a silver-medal finish at the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles. Mack finished UCLA’s 1984 campaign with a team-leading 16 home runs and 36 RBI, hitting at a .352 clip. Despite the team’s vaunted “Mack Attack,” UCLA finished 28-32 with a sixth-place finish in the Pac-10’s Southern Division, marking just the second losing season in head coach Gary Adams’ 15 years at the helm. Right-hander Jeff Pries followed his strong sophomore season with a valient effort as a junior, hurling three complete games (including one shutout) while logging a 5-5 record and 4.01 ERA in 15 games (14 starts).
UCLA finished the season with a winning record, as the Bruins were bolstered by the strong play of sophomore catcher Todd Zeile, junior designated hitter John Joslyn and junior first baseman Gary Berman. Zeile assumed starting catching duties and finished the season with a .333 average in 54 games, totaling a team-high 12 home runs. Joslyn led UCLA with a .370 average in 57 games, and Berman batted .301 in a team-high 232 at-bats. Season highlights included winning four of six games from College World Series participant Arizona, capturing five of six games from USC, defeating Arizona State for the first time in 15 tries (winning a three-game series in Los Angeles), and knocking then-No. 1 Stanford out of the top spot by winning one and losing two close games at Sunken Diamond in Palo Alto, Calif. UCLA concluded its regular season with seven wins in its final 10 contests.
1986 – 39-23, 21-9 Pac-10 (1st Place) The Pac-10 title returned to UCLA for the first time since 1979, as the Bruins captured the 1986 conference crown with a 21-9 Pac-10 mark. UCLA’s 1984 freshman class that had been rated as the nation’s No. 2 recruiting class by Collegiate Baseball (Torey Lovullo, Todd Zeile, Steve Hisey, Bill Wenrick, and Dana Ridenour) matured to help produce a conference champion. Jackie Robinson Stadium served as host for the NCAA West Regional, where the Bruins dropped their first two postseason games. Loyola Marymount emerged as the Regional Champion, defeating Hawaii to secure a berth in the College World Series. After 35 games, UCLA owned a 7-4 Pac-10 record and a 22-13 overall mark. The Bruins won 11 of their final Eric Karros, a three-year Bruin 13 regular-season games, including their letterwinner (1986-88), set the last seven. Lovullo captured Pac-10 Co-Player Los Angeles Dodgers’ career home of the Year honors with Sanchez after totaling run record with 270 round-trippers. 16 home runs and 65 RBI while posting a .317 batting average. Sanchez led all Pac-10 pitchers with a 16-3 overall record, including an 8-1 mark against Pac-10 foes. He struck out 142 batters in 139.1 innings, the top mark in the conference that spring. In Pac-10 play, Sanchez won his last seven decisions, throwing a complete game victory against each conference team. For the first time in seven seasons, UCLA led the Pac-10 in home runs (103). The Bruins’ “Bomb Squad” (pictured below) featured five players who belted 10 or more home runs – Nos. 2 through 6 in the lineup consisted of Torey Lovullo (16), Billy Haselman (11), John Joslyn (18), Steve Hisey (14) and catcher Todd Zeile (13).
1987 – 40-25-1, 16-14 Pac-10 (2nd Place) UCLA finished second in the Pac-10’s Southern Division, going 40-25-1 with an appearance in the the NCAA West II Regional Final at Arizona State. The Bruins soared as high as 19 games over .500 at several points in the spring before playing five games in NCAA Regional play. UCLA advanced to the Regional Final against host Arizona State with a series-opening victory against Hawaii, 12-11. Following a 9-3 loss to the Sun Devils one day later, UCLA registered two wins in one day – versus Hawaii (16-7) and Pepperdine (21-5) – to force a winner-take-all contest against Arizona State. The Sun Devils ended the Bruins’ season before over 8,000 fans with a 14-4 win on May 25. Senior Torey Lovullo became the first player in conference history to repeat as Pac-10 Player of the Year. The Bruins’ veteran second baseman also became the program’s first-ever consensus All-America selection (ABCA, Baseball America, Sporting News). Lovullo broke the then-school career records in at-bats (856), hits (266), runs (211), home runs (51), RBI (188) and walks (180, still stands as UCLA record). That spring, UCLA led the Pac-10 in home runs, breaking the previous league record with 116 round-trippers. The Bruins also tied a then-NCAA record with 10 grand slams. By season’s end, Billy Haselman (Texas) and Alex Sanchez (Toronto) were both selected in the first round of the MLB Draft.
1988 – 31-28, 12-18 Pac-10 (5th Place) Limited pitching depth hindered UCLA from making its third straight appearance in the NCAA Tournament in 1988. The Bruins finished with a 5.30 team ERA and narrowly missed a third-consecutive postseason berth, as fourth-place USC advanced to NCAA Regional play with a 13-17 conference mark. UCLA won eight of its first 10 games, pushing its ledger to 28-20 late in the season. Senior left-hander Mike Magnante compiled a 14-4 overall record and 3.93 ERA in a team-high 137.1 innings, earning AllPac-10 team honors and Academic All-America accolades. Junior first baseman Eric Karros Karros used a terrific second half to establish a then-single-season record of 100 hits. The future major leaguer posted team-highs with a .415 average, 17 home runs and 54 RBI. Karros won the Pac-10 batting crown and earned All-Pac-10 honors before being selected in the sixth round of the 1988 MLB Draft by the Los Angeles Dodgers.
1989 – 27-32, 10-20 Pac-10 (5th Place)
The 1986 UCLA baseball team advanced to the NCAA Western Regional after sweeping Arizona State and USC in May. Starring on the ‘86 squad (left to right) included Steve Hisey, Todd Zeile, Bill Haselman, Torey Lovullo and John Joslyn.
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UCLA dropped its first eight Pac-10 games and never recovered in the spring of 1989. In just the third losing season in the Adams’ era, injuries and illnesses took a toll on the Bruins, as 14 of 27 players missed at least one week of action due to illness or injury. One of the most devastating losses was Charlie Fiacco, the team’s home run and RBI leader. Fiacco missed the final 18 games with torn ligaments in his right knee. The pitching staff’s 4.54 ERA marked the ballclub’s lowest since 1980, when the Bruins compiled a 3.55 mark. UCLA’s 113 steals were the most by a Bruin ballclub since 1976, when UCLA recorded 120 steals. Six Bruins finished the season with at least 10 stolen bases, as Robbie Katzaroff led the way on the basepaths for UCLA, swiping 33 bases.
UCLA BASEBALL HISTORY
THE 1990s – 331-282-1 (.540) 1990 – 41-26, 14-16 Pac-10 (4th Place) A season full of surprises, UCLA’s 1990 campaign marked just the fourth 40-win season in program history at the time (two since). Ranked in just one preseason poll (No. 20 by The Sporting News), UCLA compiled 41 wins, its most in one season since 1979. The Bruins finished third in the six-team Midwest Regional at WIchita State, losing to eventual regional champion Georgia Southern, 5-4, on the final day of the tournament. A starting rotation that featured Dave Zancanaro, Tim Lindsay and Pete Janicki developed into one of the top Pac-10 staffs. Zancanaro led the club with 11 wins and eliminated defending NCAA Champion Wichita State on its home field in the Midwest Regional. Lindsay led the club in starts (20), complete games (7) and innings pitched (149.0). His innings total led the Pac-10 and set a new UCLA record that would be eclipsed two years later by Janicki. One of the team’s hottest pitchers down the stretch, Janicki won his final eight decisions and earned Freshman All-America honors from Baseball America. Paul Ellis, Chris Pritchett, and Joel Wolfe formed the “Awesome Threesome.” Ellis, the 1990 Pac-10 Co-Player of the Year, enjoyed a dream season by leading the nation with 29 home runs and tying the school record set by Jim Auten in 1979. He set a school record with 83 RBI, only to have that record broken one year later by Ryan McGuire. Ellis became only the second player in league history to hit at least one home run in every Pac-10 ballpark (Mike Sodders of Arizona State had done so in 1981). After the season, Ellis became the second player in school history to earn consensus AllAmerica honors (first-team All-America from Baseball America, The Sporting News and the American Baseball Coaches Association). The ABCA named Ellis the Division I College Baseball Player of the Year.
1991 – 29-30, 13-17 Pac-10 (4th Place) The 1991 Bruins had terrific performances at the Olive Garden Classic (Kissimmee, Fla.) and at the Oscar Mayer Classic (Minneapolis, Minn.). UCLA won the tournament in Florida the second week of Februrary and finished in a three-way tie at the Oscar Mayer Classic during the final weekend in March. For the first time in program history, the Bruins swept Stanford at Sunken Diamond. The Bruins did not accomplish the feat again until the Pac-10 series opener in 2007. Joel Wolfe helped key UCLA’s offense, leading the team with a .345 batting average and 35 stolen bases, a single-season total that ranked second at the time. Chris Pritchett led UCLA with 18 home runs and 57 RBI before earning first-team All-Pac-10 accolades at the end of the season.
1992 – 37-26, 14-16 Pac-10 (3rd Place) In a season filled with surprises, UCLA finished in a tie for third place in the Pac-10’s Southern Division after having been selected to finish last (sixth) in the conference’s preseason poll. Ranked in the top 25 through much of the season, UCLA closed the year with an NCAA Mideast Regional berth at Mississippi State. In Starkville, Miss., the Bruins came within one game of reaching the College World Series. After a dropping their first game to Oklahoma, the Bruins reboudned with wins over Clemson (6-5) and Yale (8-0). The Bruins defeated host Mississippi State, 3-2, to advance to the championship game, where they were shut down own by Oklahoma, 10-0. UCLA’s regular-season schedule hedule featured 34 games came against teams which advanced to the postseason. Five of six Pac-10 ac-10 Southern Division teams advanced to NCAA Regionals. UCLA’s offense was led by freshman hman All-American Mike Mitchell (.351, 12 HR, 36 6 RBI) and All Pac-10 selection David Roberts (.331, 85 hits, 36 6 SB). Veterans Ryan McGuire (.316, 14 HR, 61 RBI) and Michael ichael Moore (.338, 8 HR, 14 SB) impressed throughout the 1992 campaign. Pete Janicki led UCLA on the mound, earning Pac-10 ac-10 Pitcher of the Year accolades with a 9-4 record, 3.53 ERA A and 150 strikeouts. Gabe Sollecito made an impact as a sophomore omore om ore (transfer), setting a school single-season record with 12 saves.
1993 – 37-23, 17-13 Pac-10 (2nd Place) ce)) UCLA made its third postseason trip in four years, advancing anccing to the NCAA Central I Regional at Texas A&M. After victories tories ies over Lamar and North Carolina, the Bruins were eliminated nated with losses to Texas A&M and North Carolina. Consensus ensus All-America selection and Pac-10 Player of the Year Ryan R an Ry McGuire recorded a .376 batting average, totaling ngg 26 26 home runs, 91 RBI, 71 runs and 14 stolen bases. On the mound, McGuire posted a 3-0 record, d, tw twoo saves, 29 strikeouts and a team-best 1.73 ERA in 26.0 innings. Third baseman Adam Melhusee andd second baseman David Ravitz both gained All-Pac-10 honors after having banner seasons. Melhuse elhusee batted .344 with 10 home runs and 50 RBI. Ravitz hit .324 with six home runs and a team-leading eading ng 19 doubles, establishing a school single-season record with 15 doubles in Pac-10 play. Outfielder fieldeer David Roberts was one of four position players to play in all 60 games, batting .296 with 28 stole stolen en bases in 36 attempts. Staff ace Tim Kubinski led UCLA with an 11-3 record, posting a 4.03 ERA and A an nd totaling 86 strikeouts and four complete games. Jon Van Zandt served as UCLA’s second starter ter on the weekend, leading the Bruins with five complete games, going 7-7 with a 5.70 ERA in 17 games. ames. es. Gabe Sollecito split time between the bullpen and the starting rotation, finishing the season with with a 4-3 record, nine saves and a 3.94 ERA. Dave Roberts (1991-94) owns the single-season and career stolen bases records with 45 steals in 1994 and 109 overall.
1994 – 22-36, 11-19 Pac-10 (5th Place) The Bruins opened the 1994 season by losing seven of their first 11 games. UCLA inched closer ser to respectability, going 15-14 down the stretch, including six wins in their final eight games. Senior David Roberts became UCLA’s career stolen bases leader (109), collecting a school single-season record eccord or with 45. Roberts led all Bruins that spring with a .353 batting average and secured All-Pac-10 TTeam eam honors for the third consecutive season. The future major league outfielder led the conference in stolen bases for a third straight year. Catcher Tim DeCinces earned Freshman All-America honors, batting atting .305 with six home runs, a team-best 48 RBI and 15 doubles. Junior first baseman Mike Mitchell hell hit at a .339 clip with a team-leading 12 home runs, 19 doubles and 46 RBI. Brian Stephenson headed eaded the weekend rotation, going 5-5 with a 4.97 ERA in 105.0 innings.
1995 – 29-28, 12-18 Pac-10 (5th Place) UCLA’s 1995 ballclub managed just six wins in its final 17 games, eliminating the team from postseason eason contention. A sweep over UNLV in the season’s final weekend helped push UCLA’s mark above .500. Sophomore catcher Tim DeCinces led UCLA with a .315 average, 13 home runs and 51 RBI. BI. He secured All-Pac-10 Team honors and earned second-team Smith Super Team accolades. Freshman hman right fielder Eric Byrnes, an All-Pac-10 Team selection and freshman All-America honoree (Baseball seball
America, Collegiate Baseball) batted .324 with nine home runs and 18 stolen bases. Freshman first baseman and pitcher Peter Zamora was named an All-Pac-10 Team selection, hitting .295 with six home runs and 48 RBI. The top freshman two-way player belted game-winning home runs on consecutive days against Arizona (April 14, 15). Additionally, he logged a 2.76 ERA on the mound, going 3-3 with five saves. Junior third baseman Zak Ammirato finished the season riding a 19-game hitting streak. The pitching staff was led by freshman left-hander Jim Parque, who struck out 84 batters in 90 innings, placing him second in the Pac-10 in strikeouts per nine innings.
1996 – 36-28, 16-14 Pac-10 (3rd Place) UCLA advanced farther than any West Coast ballclub in 1996, falling one game short of a trip to the College World Series. The Bruins opened the year with a preseason No. 10 ranking before rising to as high as No. 4 after a 14-6 start. UCLA opened Pac-10 play with consecutive home series wins over Stanford and California and had won four of five conference series by the end March. The Bruins opened their April slate with a sweep at California, dropped two of three games at home to Arizona and salvaged two games in a three-game set against Arizona State. A win at Nevada on the final day of the regular season snapped a five-game losing streak, and the Bruins opened the NCAA Central I Regional at the University of Texas as a No. 4 seed. At Texas, UCLA upset the host Longhorns in both teams’ regional opener with southpaw Jim Parque on the hill. The Bruins received key at-bats from third baseman Zak Ammirato and junior catcher Tim DeCinces. After dropping game two to Southwest Missouri State, UCLA rallied twice the next day with wins over Sam Houston State (10-8) and Southwest Missouri State (9-4, 10 inn.). In the latter contest, the Bruins rallied with two runs in the eighth inning on an Ammirato homer, handing UCLA a 4-3 advantage, before Southwest Missouri State tied the contest in the ninth and loaded the bases with two outs. Junior Kevin Sheredy escaped the ninth-inning jam, and in extra innings junior outfielder Jon Heinrichs tripled home one run before DeCinces belted a grand slam. Miami upended the Bruins the following night in the Regional Final, 8-4. DeCinces caught fire in his final month as a Bruin, batting .500 (30-for-60) with nine home runs. Infielder Troy Glaus capped a memorable sophomore season with a .352 average, 16 home runs and 50 RBI before heading to the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta. Parque finished the season 9-3 with a 3.72 ERA and 116 strikeouts.
1997 – 45-21-1, 19-11 Pac-10 (2nd Place) – CWS APPEARANCE The players from UCLA’s highly-regarded 1995 recruiting class all had experience under their belts, as the Bruins opened their 1997 campaign ranked No. 2 in Collegiate Baseball’s preseason poll. By season’s end, UCLA had advanced to the College World Series for the second time in school history (first time since 1969) and set single-season program records with 45 wins (since broken), 142 home runs and 631 runs. The Bruins overcame an early upset to Harvard in the Midwest Regional by sweeping their final five games to advance to Omaha, Neb. UCLA’s march to Omaha began with a bang – the Bruins won 20 of their first 23 games, amassing a 20-2-1 record entering the month of March. With a powerful batting lineup bolstered by juniors Troy Glaus, Eric Byrnes, Peter Zamora and Nick Theodorou and sophomore Eric Valent, UCLA slugged its way to a 19-11 Pac-10 mark, good enough for a second-place finish. After opening conference play by winning two of three games against Arizona State, UCLA swept the Hormel Foods Classic at the Metrodome (Minneapolis, Minn.), posting double-digit run total in each of three games. UCLA entered as the top-seeded team in the NCAA Midwest Regional, boasting a 40-18-1 regularseason record. After dropping their first game to Harvard, 7-2, the Bruins responded in grand fashion. UCLA won five “must-win” games with several lopsided final scores. After crushing Ohio, 15-1, the Bruins edged Tennessee, 5-3. In a rematch against Harvard, UCLA won 14-9 before making a statement against host Oklahoma State on May 25. Playing at OSU’s Reynolds Stadium the Bruins punched their ticket to Omaha with a 14-2 victory in the afternoon before winning, 22-2, that evening. Valent earned NCAA Regional MVP honors after having blasted six home runs in six games. Theodorou compiled one of the most electric performances in NCAA Tournament history, going 16-for-24 with eight runs, five RBI and five walks in six games (.714 on-base percentage). UCLA came up short in Omaha, dropping its two contests in the College World Series. In the team’s opener, the Bruins overcame a late 3-1 deficit, tying the contest with two runs in the bottom of the ninth to force extra innings. Playing as the visiting team, Miami broke the tie with a four-run 12th inning to advance in the winner’s bracket. Two days later, UCLA lost an elimination game to Mississippi State, 7-5. Byrnes and Theodorou each had two hits in both College World Series games. Five Bruins earned All-America honors and seven players captured All-Pac-10 Team accolades. Glaus was named Pac-10 Player of the Year, compiling a team-best .409 average with a conference-leading 34 home runs. Glaus also established the Pac-10 single-season total bases record (227). Senior Jon Heinrichs was the top leadoff hitter in the nation, totaling 28 homers and 79 RBI. On the mound, Parque (13-2, 3.08 ERA) and sophomore Tom Jacquez (10-4, 3.06 ERA) provided one of the nation’s most powerful 1-2 punches. The left-handed Zamora performed best down the stretch, finishing with a 6-2 overall mark. Junior Jake Meyer tallied eight saves, and freshman Rob Henkel recorded 49 strikeouts in 41.2 innings as UCLA’s primary setup reliever. UCLA earned its Troy Glaus, a three-year Bruin first No. 1 ranking by Collegiate Baseball letterwinner (1995-97), belted a since 1979 and captured its first-ever No. single-season school record 34 1 ranking by Baseball America after winning home runs as a junior in 1997, all three contests at the Hormel Foods Classic leading UCLA to the College on March 2. World Series.
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UCLA BASEBALL HISTORY 1998 – 24-33, 11-19 Pac-10 (5th Place)
2001 – 30-27, 9-15 Pac-10 (7th Place)
The 1998 Bruins welcomed the top-ranked incoming class, as rated by Collegiate Baseball. Freshman pitchers accounted for 67 percent (328.2 IP) of the team’s total innings, as the Bruins’ weekend rotation (Ryan Carter, Chad Cislak and Paul Diaz) and the team’s closer (Bobby Roe) consisted exclusively of freshmen. While the Bruins welcomed back seniors Eric Byrnes and Nick Theodorou, both key contributors to UCLA’s run to the 1997 College World Series, the team managed to win just 11 of its first 33 games. Among the season’s highlights included junior Eric Valent capturing Pac-10 Player of the Year honors. Valent also secured first-team All-America acclaim from four publications, totaling a team-leading 30 home runs and batting .336. Freshmen Garrett Atkins and Chase Utley each had sensation rookie campaigns in Westwood. Atkins set a school record with a 33-game hitting streak, and his .383 batting average was the highest-ever by a freshman at UCLA. Utley set the school’s freshman season record with 15 home runs, and left-hander Bobby Roe set a UCLA freshman season record with seven saves.
UCLA shook off an 0-2 start in 2001 to reel off eight consecutive wins, highlighted by a 4-3 victory over No. 1 USC (Feb. 16). Before a regional television audience, junior Adam Berry smashed a game-winning, three-run home run to left with UCLA down to its final strike. The Bruins rolled through their non-conference schedule, then knocked off top-ranked Stanford at Sunken Diamond in the first game of a Pac-10 series to improve to 21-9 overall. A series win at home against Washington (April 12-14) brought UCLA back to .500 in Pac-10 play and pushed the team’s overall record to 25-12. The season’s turning point came in the opening game of a road trip at No. 1 Cal State Fullerton (April 18). UCLA let an eight-run lead slip away, before Cal State Fullerton claimed an 11-10 win in 14 innings. The Bruins went 0-8 on the road trip, having been swept by Kansas State and USC. UCLA broke its mid-season skid by winning the rematch with Cal State Fullerton (May 9), by a 9-3 margin for the team’s third victory over a No. 1-ranked team that year. Senior Brian Baron registered a school-record .443 batting average and collected 105 hits, earning first-team All-America honors from Baseball Weekly, Collegiate Baseball and the National Collegiate Baseball Writers’ Association. Junior Josh Karp led the pitching staff in victories (5), innings (80.0) and strikeouts (92), before being selected sixth overall in the first round Gary Adams served as UCLA’s head coach of the 2001 MLB Draft. Sophomore Kevin from 1975-2004, totaling 984 victories and Jerkens topped the Pac-10 with 31 relief 169 MLB draft selections in his 30 years. appearances.
1999 – 31-31, 13-11 Pac-10 (Tie – 3rd Place) The Bruins’ 1999 campaign began with several milestones, as head coach Gary Adams recorded his 800th career victory on Feb. 6 and his 1,000th career win on March 13. Other highlights included sophomore right-hander Jon Brandt striking out 17 batters in a loss to McNeese State (Feb. 12) and sophomore left fielder Bill Scott setting school records with four homers, 11 RBI and 17 total bases at Washington (March 30). UCLA’s tide turned after the team suffered its eight straight loss at California (April 2). The next day, the Bruins won 13-10, scoring nine runs in the top of the ninth. Consecutive wins at No. 10 Arkansas (April 6, 7) and sweeps of Arizona State (April 16-18), for the first time since 1986, and Washington State (April 23-25), helped propel UCLA within striking distance of an NCAA Tournament berth. UCLA finished the regular season tied for third place in the Pac-10, earning a berth in the NCAA Wichita Regional (first year of Super Regional format). Freshman right-hander Josh Karp pitched brilliantly in his playoff debut, and Scott homered for the seventh consecutive game (school record and tie for Pac-10 reecord) as UCLA beat Oklahoma State, 12-6. The next day, injured ace Jon Brandt went the distance in a 4-2 loss to host Wichita State. Forced to rematch Oklahoma State later that day, the Bruins fell to the eventual regional champs, 17-10, despite Scott’s two home runs. Scott finished the season leading UCLA with a .380 batting average, 28 home runs, 86 RBI and a staggering .806 slugging percentage. Karp went 8-3 on the season with a 4.26 ERA, collecting 109 strikeouts in 107.1 innings.
THE 2000s – 298-298 (.500) 2000 – 38-26, 17-7 Pac-10 (Three-way tie – 1st Place) In the spring of 2000, UCLA captured its first Pac-10 title since 1986 and advanced to the NCAA Super Regionals in the second year of college baseball’s new postseason format. Led by All-America selections Garrett Atkins, Bill Scott, Chase Utley and Forrest Johnson, the Bruins began their 2000 campaign in grand style, as first baseman Eric Reece became the first UCLA ballplayer to hit for the cycle on Opening Day. UCLA won six of its first seven games and was ranked as high as No. 2 in the national polls. After a slump that saw UCLA lose nine of 10 contests, the Bruins fought back to win 20 of their next 25 games. In that 25-game span, left-hander Rob Henkel set a UCLA record by striking out 16 batters in consecutive appearances (against Bradley and Harvard) to earn National Player of the Week honors. Henkel fanned a school-record 18 batters in the team’s Pac-10 opener against Washington, capturing National Player of the Week honors again. The Huskies snapped UCLA’s eightgame win streak, but the Bruins continued to cruise with wins in nine of their next 11 games. UCLA continued its Pac-10 slate with a threegame series victory against USC, salvaging the second and third contests at home. In game two, UCLA routed the Trojans, 15-5, on national television (April 8). Karp pitched a three-hitter, notching a career-high 12 strikeouts. Against Arizona State (April 22), he limited the heavy-hitting Sun Devils to two hits through 7.1 innings. Utley hit two home runs to lead the Bruins, 13-3, in their only win over Arizona State. Scott drove in a team-high eight RBI against Washington State (April 30), going 4-for-6 with two homers and one triple in a 14-1 rout. UCLA belted six round-trippers against California (May 6). After sweeping Arizona (may 13-15), UCLA secured a share of the Pac-10 title on May 19, defeating Stanford, 10-9 before a record crowd at Sunken Diamond. The Bruins scored four runs in the bottom of the seventh, tying the game (9-9) on home runs by Utley and Jim Hemming. Scott scored the gamewinning run on a bases loaded wild pitch in the ninth. UCLA registered a 17-7 Pac-10 record and a share of the conference title with Stanford and Arizona State.
Chase Utley, a three-year Bruin letterwinner (1998-2000), totaled 53 home runs and 174 RBI at UCLA.
In postseason play, UCLA swept the Oklahoma City Regional, defeating Delaware, 13-12, in the opening game, before routing Oklahoma on back-to-back days. LSU awaited the Bruins at the NCAA Super Regionals in Baton Rouge, La., and the Tigers silenced UCLA’s offense. In game one, LSU blanked the Bruins, 10-0. In the elimination game, the Bruins rallied from a 10-0 deficit, clawing to within four runs (12-8). LSU advanced to Omaha with an eventual 14-8 victory. Scott and Utley both secured first-team All-America honors, and five Bruins were named to the All-Pac-10 Team.
2002 – 26-35, 9-15 Pac-10 (Tie – 7th Place) UCLA opened its 2002 season with a loss to UC Irvine’s reinstated baseball program before winning two of three contests each against Gonzaga and Florida Atlantic. The series with Florida Atlantic began a five-game winning streak, including a three-game sweep at Hawaii-Hilo. UCLA won six of nine games through the first two weeks of March, including two wins at 2001 College World Series participant Tulane. Having hovered near the .500 plateau through the first 25 games, the Bruins entered a six-game skid, from which they never recovered. UCLA pulled its record to 25-29 with two weeks to go in the season before closing the year 26-35. Outfielder Adam Berry and first baseman Wes Whisler led the Pac-10 with 18 home runs. In fact, Whisler set the school record for home runs in a season by a freshman. Berry was named a semifinalist for the Dick Howser Award, an honor awarded to the nation’s top collegiate baseball player. A standout at the plate and on the mound in 2002, Whisler earned Pac-10 Freshman of the Year accolades and was named to Baseball America and Collegiate Baseball’s All-Freshman teams. Ben Francisco (.368, 6 HR, 37 RBI) and Rashad Parker (.286, 4 HR, 14 RBI) were both selected in the 2002 MLB Draft.
2003 – 28-31, 11-13 Pac-10 (Tie – 5th Place) Similar to 2002, the Bruins had trouble putting together wins on a consistent basis, reaching a three-game win streak just once during the year. After opening the year with a 17-16 mark through its first 34 games, UCLA never again kept its record over the .500 plateau. At the Dominos Pizza Aggie Baseball Classic, UCLA posted a 3-3 record, finishing second to host Texas A&M. Playing at the Kia Baseball Bash at Cal State Fullerton one week later, UCLA defeated defending national champion Texas, 13-2, before routing Tulane, 12-2, the following day. A seven-game losing streak dropped UCLA out of reach of the Pac-10 title during the first two weeks in April. The Bruins ended their skid at No. 4 Arizona State, rattling off consecutive extra-inning wins in Tempe, Ariz., to hand the Sun Devils a Pac-10 series loss on their turf. UCLA concluded the season on a high note, as Brandon Averill hit for the cycle in the final game of the season at Washington State (May 25). Sophomore two-way player Wes Whisler earned first-team All-Pac-10 honors for the second consecutive season and was named a third-team CollegeBaseballInsider.com All-America selection. Brett McMillan was honored as a Freshman All-American by Collegiate Baseball.
2004 – 35-29, 14-10 Pac-10 (Tied – 3rd Place) UCLA earned a trip to the NCAA Tournament in 2004, the final year of head coach Gary Adams’ 30-year tenure as the Bruins’ skipper. The road to the postseason began with a 4-1 season-opening victory against UC Riverside, before the Bruins took the first two of three games against Fresno State. Senior Brandon Averill collected Pac-10 Player of the Week honors after the Fresno State series, as he totaled six RBI in the second game. The Bruins motored to an 11-3 record before opening a stretch of six straight games against ranked opponents on March 5. A series-opening win against No. 14 Texas A&M handed UCLA its seventh consecutive win before the Bruins dropped two games to the Aggies and one game each to UC Irvine and Long Beach State. In the Pac-10 season-opening series against Stanford (April 2-4), the Cardinal overpowered UCLA in the first two games, before the Bruins answered with a walk-off home run from Preston Griffin in the series finale to win, 6-5. UCLA continued rolling, notching non-conference victories against Pepperdine and Long Beach State and a series win at Arizona. After outscoring Washington State, 26-11, in a three-game home series and winning two of three on the road at Washington, UCLA concluded its conference slate with two road wins at Oregon State. Junior Wes Whisler earned Pac-10 Pitcher of the Week accolades after his complete game shutout against Washington State (May 16). UCLA won its final two of three games against Oregon State to close the regular season. The team’s late-season surged pushed UCLA into the NCAA Regionals at Oklahoma City as the No. 3 seed. The Bruins won their first game of the NCAA Regional, 9-1, backed by Casey Janssen’s eight shutout innings (two hits, seven strikeouts) against Oklahoma on June 4. After a heartbreaking 4-3 loss to Florida, the Bruins pounded Oklahoma, 17-7, in a critical rematch on June 5. The following day, Florida routed UCLA, 11-0, to advance to the NCAA Super Regionals.
2005 – 15-41, 4-20 Pac-10 (8th Place) The 2005 season marked the start of a new era for UCLA baseball, as John Savage took over as the Bruins’ head coach after spending the previous three seasons as head coach at UC Irvine. Savage took over for 30-year head coach Gary Adams in July 2004 and helped put the wheels in motion for the future of UCLA baseball, inking the nation’s fifth-best recruiting class (Nov. 2004), as ranked by Baseball America. The Bruins struggled in 2005, opening the season with a 7-4 record before losing 19 consecutive games. UCLA managed just eight wins the rest of the way. Junior Brett McMillan earned team MVP honors, batting .257 with seven home runs and 33 RBI in all 56 games. Sophomore Hector Ambriz had a strong season, returning from an injury that had severly limited his opportunities in 2004. At the plate, Ambriz batted .338 with 14 doubles, 19 runs and 18 RBI in 51 games. On the hill, the right-hander led UCLA with a 3.94 ERA in 18 games (team-high 16 starts), striking out 84 batters in 105.0 innings. Sophomore Brian Schroeder led the Bruins’ pitching staff with 31 appearances, totaling 48 strikeouts in 71.2 innings.
2006 – 33-25, 13-10 Pac-10 (3rd Place) Led by juniors David Huff and Hector Ambriz on the mound and aided by an influx of standout freshmen, UCLA made its second NCAA Regional appearance in three seasons. In his second year as the Bruins’ head coach, John Savage engineered a strong turnaround as UCLA posted a 27-12 record in their final 39 regular-season contests. For the first time since 1987, UCLA won each of its home series against Pac-10 opponents (Washington State, Arizona State, USC and Stanford). In addition, the Bruins tied a program record as 12 players were selected in the MLB Draft. After opening the year 6-9, UCLA sparked its season with a road sweep at N.C. State (March 3-5), outscoring the Wolfpack by a 22-6 margin in three games. UCLA posted one of its most dramatic victories of the season with an 11-10, extra-inning home victory against Arizona State (April 23). Trailing 8-7 in the bottom of the ninth, the Bruins tied the contest, 8-8, to force extra innings. Facing
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UCLA BASEBALL HISTORY a two-run deficit in the bottom of the 10th, freshman Cody Decker slugged a two-run double and freshman Ryan Babineau clubbed the game-winning single. After dropping the series opener to USC, 8-3, at Jackie Robinson Stadium (May 12), UCLA rebounded to win the next two games and capture the season series. The following weekend, UCLA won the rubber game of a three-game home set against Stanford in exhilarating fashion. Having won Friday and lost Saturday, UCLA secured a series victory Sunday in the team’s final home game when junior Tim Stewart belted a ninth-inning, two-out walk-off solo home run to snap a 7-7 tie. Stewart’s blast helped improve UCLA’s conference record to 12-9.. On the final weekend of the season, UCLA split two games at eventual national champion Oregon State (one game was canceled due to rain). The Bruins entered the NCAA Malibu Regional as the No. 2 seed, marking a strong transformation after having been picked to finish eighth in the Pac-10 in the preseason coaches’ poll. Playing at Pepperdine in the NCAA Regional, UCLA edged UC Irvine, 3-2, in both team’s regional-opening contest. UCLA lost to No. 1-seed Pepperdine, 6-0, and No. 4-seed Missouri, 2-1, on back-to-back afternoons. In the elimination loss to Missouri on June 4, Brummett struck out six batters in 6.2 innings, surrendering just two runs and five hits. Selected 39th overall (supplemental first round) by the Cleveland Indians in the 2006 MLB Draft, Huff finished the season with a 7-4 record and 2.98 ERA, totaling 100 strikeouts in 129.2 innings (16 starts). Ambriz, a fifth-round draft pick by the Arizona Diamondbacks, registered a 3.65 ERA and an 8-7 record in 113.1 innings (20 appearances, 16 starts). Two-way player Josh Roenicke, who emerged as the team’s closer midway through the spring, was drafted in the 10th round by the Cincinnati Reds. UCLA’s freshman nucleus of Ryan Babineau, Jermaine Curtis, Brandon Crawford, Cody Decker, Blair Dunlap, Tim Murphy and Jason Novak proved to be major assets to the program not only in their first year, but throughout their respective Bruin careers.
2007 – 33-28, 14-10 Pac-10 (3rd Place) UCLA’s 2007 ballclub reached the NCAA Super Regionals for the first time since 2000 after having opened Pac-10 play with its best conference start since 1924. Playing against the nation’s third-most challenging schedule, as rated by Boyd’s World, the Bruins won just eight of their first 22 games. However, a school record-setting 14-run eighth inning against Pacific (March 25) not only helped the Bruins overcome an 8-0 deficit, but also helped UCLA jump-start its season. The Bruins trailed 8-0 and cut the Tigers’ lead to 8-1 in the seventh inning before sophomore Cody Decker belted a grand slam with nobody out in the bottom of the eighth, trimming the deficit to 8-5. UCLA scored 10 more runs in the frame to secure a 15-8 win, initiating one of the most successful stretches in program history. Jermaine Curtis returned to the Bruins’ lineup at third base the following weekend at Stanford, helping spark UCLA to an 8-1 victory in both teams’ first Pac-10 game of the spring. Including that win, UCLA won 17 of its first 21 games with Curtis patroling the hot corner. The Bruins opened Pac-10 play with their first series sweep of Stanford at Sunken Diamond since 1991 – snapping a streak of 71 consecutive three-game series in which Stanford had not been swept at home (since 1997, versus Arizona State). After a home series win against Washington, UCLA recorded its first-ever three-game series sweep at USC (April 13-15). The Bruins rolled to an 8-1 Pac-10 mark by mid-April, the program’s best conference start since finishing the 1924 season with a 10-0 Pacific Coast Conference record. With a pitching rotation featuring senior Tyson Brummett (10-6, 4.04), sophomore Tim Murphy (5-4, 5.68) and freshman Gavin Brooks (6-7, 4.47), the Bruins continued picking up Pac-10 series victories, capturing two of three against No. 14 Arizona and California. UCLA headed to No. 10 Arizona State (May 11-13) with a one-game conference lead. The Bruins were swept in the desert, losing three closely-contested games to fall into second place – the Sun Devils outscored UCLA by two runs on Friday and one on Saturday and Sunday. The Bruins salvaged their series at Washington State and their home set against eventual back-to-back national champion Oregon State by winning each of the series finales. UCLA entered the Long Beach Regional as the No. 2 seed, riding its starting pitchers to an NCAA Regional sweep. Brummett limited Pepperdine to three runs in 8.2 innings in the regional opener, before Murphy and Brooks each tossed complete game victories against Illinois-Chicago and Long Beach State, respectively. Playing in the NCAA Super Regionals for the first time since 2000, UCLA dropped both games at Cal State Fullerton. The Bruins lost the first game, 12-2, but stepped up behind a herculean performance from Brooks in the elimination game the next night. The left-handed freshman totaled a career-high 12 strikeouts against the Titans, surrendering two runs and seven hits in eight innings. Brooks ended the year having thrown three consecutive complete games (vs. Oregon State, vs. Illinois-Chicago and at Cal State Fullerton). UCLA was led at the plate in 2007 by junior Alden Carrithers (.352, .455 OBP), freshman Gabe Cohen (.345, 10 HR, 36), junior Brandon Crawford (.335, 7 HR, 55 RBI), Curtis (.329, 4 HR, 33 RBI) and sophomore Cody Decker (.307, 14 HR, 57 RBI).
2008 – 33-27 Overall, 13-11 Pac-10 (3rd Place) UCLA earned its third consecutive postseason berth in 2008, becoming the first baseball team in school history to advance to three straight postseasons. The Bruins overcame a slow Pac-10 start to secure the No. 2 seed at the NCAA Fullerton Regional. Senior Alden Carrithers emerged as one of the Pac-10’s best hitters, leading the Bruins with a .377 batting average and .484 on-base percentage. Junior Tim Murphy capped a strong three-year career as a left-handed pitcher and outfielder, Third baseman Jermaine leading UCLA’s pitching staff with a 3.34 ERA Curtis (2006-08) helped and 111 strikeouts in 102.1 innings. lead UCLA to three The Bruins began the season ranked straight postseasons No. 1 and No. 3 in preseason polls for the first time in by Baseball America and Rivals.com, school history. respectively. Among the season’s most exciting weekends came during the first series of Pac-10 play, a three-game set at Arizona (March 27-29). The Bruins snapped a four-game skid with a 4-3 win in 10 innings in the series opener. The following night, sophomore Casey Haerther ignited his season and helped UCLA rout Arizona, 20-8, with a 7-for-7 effort. Haerther’s seven hits established new Pac10 and UCLA single-game records, as he finished the game with four doubles, three singles, four RBI and four runs. After consecutive series losses to USC and Stanford, the Bruins won the final two of three games at Washington (April 25-27) to even its Pac-10 mark at 6-6. UCLA’s conference record slipped to 8-10, its overall record to 25-23, after winning one game against Arizona State at home and one at Oregon State (May 9-11), leaving many pundits to question whether the Bruins’ postseason chances had all but evaporated. But UCLA responded by winning a nonconference game at UC Irvine before sweeping Washington State (May 16-18) in three games at Jackie Robinson Stadium, putting the Bruins at 29-23 with four games to play. After dropping a midweek contest at Cal State Fullerton, UCLA entered the season’s final weekend at California needing to win at least two games to secure a postseason berth. Murphy hurled a complete game on Friday afternoon, striking out 10 batters in an 8-0 victory. The following day, sophomore Charles Brewer and freshman Rob Rasmussen combined to shut out California, 7-0. UCLA lost the series opener, 7-6, in heartbreaking fashion in 10 innings.
Yet the series victory at California helped seal UCLA’s postseason berth, as the Bruins earned a No. 2 seed at the NCAA Fullerton Regional. Murphy pitched well in the Bruins’ opening regional contest, allowing two runs in 7.2 innings, as the Bruins earned a 3-2 victory in walk-off fashion in the bottom of the ninth inning over No. 3-seed Virginia. Brewer stepped up the next night, earning his team-leading ninth win as UCLA downed No. 1-seed Cal State Fullerton, 11-4. The host Titans responded with an 11-8 victory Sunday, forcing a winner-take-all contest Monday evening. In a closely-contested game, Cal State Fullerton edged the Bruins, 5-4, as UCLA stranded Murphy aboard third base in the ninth inning. Five players were selected in June’s Major League Draft, highlighted by three draft selections in the first five rounds – Murphy (third round, Texas), junior Brandon Crawford (fourth round, San Francisco) and junior Jermaine Curtis (fifth round, St. Louis).
2009 – 27-29, 15-12 Pac-10 (Tie – 3rd Place) UCLA finished third in the Pac-10 for the fourth straight year, but could not win enough games late in the spring to overcome a 10-game losing streak in early March. The 2009 team featured the emergence of freshman right-handers Trevor Bauer and Gerrit Cole and the resurgence of power-hitting first baseman Cody Decker. Bauer went 9-3 with a 2.99 ERA before earning National Freshman Pitcher of the Year honors from Collegiate Baseball. On a team fueled largely by its pitching, Decker provided a major spark in UCLA’s lineup. He led the Pac-10 with 21 home runs, finishing his senior season as UCLA’s leader in RBI (53), runs (55), slugging percentage (.683), walks (36) and total bases (136). By season’s end, Decker pushed himself into a tie for seventh place on UCLA’s career home runs list with 47 round-trippers. After winning the first two games of the season, the Bruins fell into a 10-game losing streak that spanned two weeks. UCLA spent three consectuive weekends playing away from the West Coast – at the Houston College Classic, at Oklahoma and at East Carolina – before opening Pac-10 play with three games at USC. UCLA snapped its losing streak with a midweek victory against UC Santa Barbara (March 10) before earning a series victory the following weekend at East Carolina. The Bruins opened Pac-10 play at USC the following weekend, securing a series victory with wins on Saturday (14-4) and Monday (17-2). UCLA’s 17-2 victory in the series’ rubber game marked the Bruins’ largest margin of victory in series history against the Trojans. The Bruins continued to try and climb back to the .500 mark throughout March and April, doing so against the nation’s No. 1-ranked schedule, as rated by Boyd’s World. Not until the series finale at Oregon did UCLA reach that goal. An 8-1 win against the Ducks on May 3 evened UCLA’s record to 22-22. With 12 games remaining on their schedule, including seven against top-5 competition, the stakes were high and the margin for error was slim. Consecutive series losses to California and Cal State Fullerton damaged the Bruins’ postseason chances before UCLA’s final week of the season. Bauer, Cole and Decker each earned All-Pac-10 team honors in 2009. Decker became UCLA’s first two-time All-Pac-10 selection since Wes Whisler (2002, 2003). Bauer and Cole were just two of three freshmen to be named All-Pac-10 selections. Cole finished his freshman campaign 4-8 with a 3.49 ERA, pitching in the Bruins’ starting rotation since the season’s opening weekend. Midway through the season, he emerged as UCLA’s Friday night pitcher, suffering a string of hard-luck losses due to a lack of run support. Junior Charles Brewer served as the Bruins’ third weekend starter, going 3-5 with a 4.52 ERA. Junior Gavin Brooks moved to the bullpen in his third season after having pitched in the rotation his first two years, going 0-4 with eight saves in a team-high 27 appearances. Two weeks after the regular season, eight Bruins were selected in the MLB Draft. Junior infielder Casey Haerther led the crop as a fifth-round selection by the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. Brooks went in the ninth round to the New York Yankees and Brewer was selected in the 12th round by the Arizona Diamondbacks. Rounding out the list included pitchers Brendan Lafferty, Garett Claypool and Jason Novak, Decker and junior outfielder Gabe Cohen.
THE 2010s – 134-57 (.702) 2010 – 51-17, 18-9 Pac-10 (2nd Place) UCLA had its most successful baseball season in school history in 2010, advancing to the finals of the College World Series for the first time ever. The Bruins totaled a school record 51 wins, established a program record with 43 regular-season wins and secured their third-ever trip to the College World Series (first trip since 1997). UCLA hosted postseason play for the first time since 1986 and an NCAA Super Regional for the first time since the NCAA adopted the current postseason format in 1999. The Bruins opened the season in sizzling fashion, winning their first 22 games. In that span, UCLA helped open the inaugural Dodgertown Classic, defeating USC at Dodger Stadium by a 6-1 margin on Feb. 28. UCLA entered its first weekend of Pac-10 play, hosting Stanford, riding a 21-game win streak. The Bruins won their 22nd consecutive game in extra innings, breaking a 5-5 tie with a walkoff bloop single in the bottom of the 10th. Stanford earned an 8-4 win the next day (April 2), ending UCLA’s historic streak at 22 games. UCLA lost its first series of the season to Oregon (April 16-18), dropping the first two games at Jackie Robinson Stadium. Two weeks later, the Bruins hosted a critical three-game series against defending conference champion Arizona State. Hailed as one of the season’s best matchups by numerous national college baseball outlets, the weekend series between UCLA and Arizona State failed to live up to its billing. The Bruins responded over the next three weeks by sweeping each of their next three Pac-10 series and winning 13 of their final 16 regular-season games. Among the Bruins’ most memorable highlights came in the series finale against USC. With two outs in the ninth inning, Brett Krill drew a two-out walk before Cody Keefer belted a walk-off home run to right field, sending the Bruins into a frenzy as they had earned their second sweep over USC since 2007. The Bruins entered the final weekend of the regular season knowing they had clinched a playoff berth – the question remained whether or not UCLA had earned one of college baseball’s coveted top-eight national seeds. The complete postseason field was revealed June 1, and the Bruins began preparations to face No. 4-seed Kent State that Friday. In addition, defending national champion LSU was designated as the Regional’s No. 2 seed, and UC Irvine as the No. 3 seed. UCLA swept through the Regional, defeating Kent State (15-1), LSU (6-3) and UC Irvine (6-2) to advance to the NCAA Super Regionals for the first time since 2007. The following weekend, the Bruins hosted Super Regional play at Jackie Robinson Stadium against Cal State Fullerton. After dropping the opening game to the Titans, 4-3, the Bruins had one of the most memorable games in program history. In Game 2, Tyler Rahmatulla hit one of the most clutch home runs in UCLA history. Trailing 6-5 with two outs and nobody on base in the top of the ninth inning, Blair Dunlap drew a walk. Rahmatulla followed, blasting a two-run homer to put UCLA ahead as the designated visiting team, 7-6. Cal State Fullerton tied the contest, 7-7, in the bottom of the inning, before UCLA added four runs in the 10th inning and held on for the win. The next night, Rob Rasmussen became the hero for UCLA in the decisive third game. The southpaw struck out nine batters and walked one in a complete game, allowing one run and two hits in an 8-1 UCLA victory. The Bruins earned their first College World Series berth since 1997. UCLA entered the College World Series as one of just three remaining national seeds to qualify for the final eight-team field. Bauer helped the No. 6-national seed Bruins defeated No. 4-national seed Florida, 11-3, in UCLA’s opening CWS game. The sophomore right-hander surrendered three runs and six hits in seven innings, totaling 11 strikeouts and two walks, to help UCLA record its first-ever win at the College World Series. The Bruins scored in each inning except for the second in the win over Florida. Two nights later, Cole registered 13 strikeouts in a 6-3 win over TCU. In that victory, UCLA received home runs from Regis and fellow freshman Jeff Gelalich in the third inning to open a 5-0 cushion. TCU inched closer with a two-out, bases-clearing triple by Taylor Featherston, but Cole kept the Horned Frogs at bay, striking out Aaron Schultz to end the seventh inning and adding two more strikeouts in the eighth. With a 2-0 start in the College World Series meant the Bruins got to wait three days before their
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UCLA BASEBALL HISTORY next game. UCLA faced TCU on June 25, after the Horned Frogs knocked off Florida State, 11-7, two days earlier in an elimination game. TCU freshman left-hander Matt Purke limited the Bruins to two runs and three hits in 6.1 innings earning the victory, as the Horned Frogs won a 6-2 decision. Playing in 110-degree heat in an elimination contest the next afternoon, UCLA outlasted TCU, 10-3, to earn a spot in the finals of the College World Series. Bauer had another sensational performance for the Bruins, recording 13 strikeouts and two walks in eight innings, to earn his third victory of the postseason, his second in the College World Series. The Bruins fell short in the best-of-three championship series against South Carolina. UCLA’s offense mustered just one run and three hits in a 7-1 loss in Game 1 on June 28. Cole allowed six runs (four earned) and 11 hits in seven innings and was tagged with his second loss of the postseason. The next night, UCLA lost to South Carolina, 2-1, in 11 innings. The Bruins led 1-0 through seven, before the Gamecocks tied the ballgame, 1-1, in the bottom of the eighth. UCLA manufactured baserunners in the ninth and 10th innings, but could not cross the plate. South Carolina’s Whit Merrifield lined a game-winning, walk-off single to right field in the bottom of the 11th, as the Gamecocks captured their first-ever baseball national championship. At the College World Series, Bauer, Regis and Beau Amaral were named to the All-Tournament Team. Bauer went 2-0 with a 3.00 ERA in Omaha, collecting 24 strikeouts and four walks in 15.1 innings. Amaral led the Bruins’ offense at the College World Series, posting a .375 batting average (9-for-24). Sporting a 51-17 final record, UCLA had finished its season 34 games over .500, the highest total over the .500 plateau in school history. The Bruins had established school and Pac-10 records for single-season strikeouts with 700 in 618.1 innings. UCLA’s pitching staff led the nation in strikeouts per nine innings (10.2), as three pitchers ranked in the top 30 in that category. Additionally, UCLA finished the year ranked No. 2 in all major polls, marking the highest top-25 finish in school history.
2011 – 35-24, 18-9 Pac-10 (1st Place) UCLA secured its first outright conference title in 2011 for the first time since 2010 and witnessed the continued rise of two of its top pitchers in program history. Trevor Bauer became the first UCLA ballplayer to earn the Golden Spikes Award, and Gerrit Cole was the school’s first-ever No. 1 selection in the MLB First-Year Player Draft (June draft). Bauer followed Cole’s selection as the No. 3 pick. Much of the spotlight was directed at both Cole and Bauer during UCLA’s 2011 campaign. Bauer was named the National Player of the Year by both Baseball America and Louisville Slugger/Collegiate Baseball. In addition to winning the Golden Spikes Award, he was named a first-team All-America selection by every publication and captured Pac-10 Pitcher of the Year acclaim. He went 13-2 with a 1.25 ERA, totaling a conference record 203 strikeouts in 136.2 innings. The Bruins opened the 2011 season ranked in the top five in virtually every major preseason ranking. After winning its first four games, UCLA struggled to maintain consistency through its non-conference schedule. The Bruins opened their Pac-10 slate at USC the final weekend of March and won their first four conference series (USC, Washington, Washington State and Arizona). After dropping consecutive weekend series against Stanford and Oregon State, UCLA got on a roll and worked toward winning the Pac-10 Championship despite having to gain ground in the standings. During the first weekend of May, the Bruins swept a three-game series at Oregon. The following weekend, UCLA rebounded from a Friday night loss against Cal State Bakersfield and won the series with victories on Saturday and Sunday. The Bruins won two of three games each of the next two weekends against California and Arizona State, respectively. In fact, UCLA traveled to Arizona State on the final weekend of the regular season trailing Oregon State by one game in the standings. The Bruins won the first two games of the series, losing on Sunday, and Oregon State was swept on the road at Oregon. UCLA had captured a one-game lead in the conference standings, won the Pac-10 title in outright fashion and was awarded a Regional host the same day. UCLA hosted the NCAA Los Angeles Regional for the second straight season. The Bruins were upset by San Francisco, 3-0, in their Regional opener on June 3, putting the team in less than familiar territory. UCLA had not fallen into the loser’s bracket at an NCAA Regional since 2006. The following day, Bauer struck out 14 batters in his ninth consecutive complete game of the season, helping UCLA defeat No. 2-seed Fresno State, 3-1. Adam Plutko led the charge the next afternoon, scattering one hit in 7.2 scoreless innings to pick up the win as UCLA knocked off San Francisco, 4-1. That same evening, the Bruins took a 3-0 lead against UC Irvine in the fifth inning before the Anteaters rallied back with two runs in the fifth and two more in the ninth. UC Irvine won the NCAA Los Angeles Regional, ending the Bruins’ season at Jackie Robinson Stadium. Feeling mixed emotions, the following day (June 6) continued to produce positive headlines for the UCLA baseball program, as Cole and Bauer were selected No. 1 and No. 3, respectively, in the first round of the 2011 MLB First-Year Player Draft. Cole was chosen by the Pittsburgh Pirates and Bauer was taken by the Arizona Diamondbacks. In all, UCLA had 11 players drafted in 2011, and all 11 Bruins signed with their respective pro organizations. UCLA’s pitching staff had once again topped the charts, totaling 572 strikeouts and a 2.44 ERA, the lowest mark in program history since 1969 (2.40). The Bruins ranked second in strikeouts per nine innings (9.8) and hits allowed per nine innings (6.61).
2012 – 48-16, 20-10 Pac-12 (t-1st Place) For the second time in three seasons, the UCLA baseball team reached the College World Series after securing its second consecutive Pac-12 championship in 2012. UCLA tied with Arizona at 20-10 in conference games and earned backto-back conference titles for the first time in school history after winning the Pac-12 championship outright in 2011. The Bruins also posted a 48-16 overall record, logging their third-highest single-season win total in program history. The Bruins came into the season ranked in the top 20 in every major preseason ranking and boasted a plethora of experience, returning all three starting outfielders and three starting infielders. Despite the preseason hype, UCLA started slow out of the gate, dropping three of its first five games. The Bruins won their next seven games though as they headed east to Athens, Ga. to take on the ninth-ranked Georgia Bulldogs. In the first matchup on March 9, sophomore right-hander Adam Plutko threw the second complete game of his career, leading UCLA to a 2-0 shutout win over the Bulldogs. Plutko struck out 11 batters with no walks in a dominating performance. The Bruins took the next two contests and left Georgia riding a wave of momentum.
After defeating crosstown rivals USC, 7-2, in the 2012 Dodgertown Classic, the Bruins entered conference play riding an 11-game winning streak. The Pac-12 opener would prove to be a tough one for the Bruins as 11th-ranked Arizona State came to Jackie Robinson Stadium for a three-game series. In the series opener on March 16, UCLA overcame a five-run deficit to the Sun Devils and in the bottom of the ninth, got a two-out walk-off home run from Kevin Williams to defeat the Sun Devils, 6-5. Despite dropping the next game, UCLA bounced back and took home a crucial series victory over Arizona State with a 4-2 win in the second game of a doubleheader on March 18. Freshman Grant Watson limited the Sun Devils to two runs and four hits in six-plus innings of work to earn the win. As April turned to May, UCLA continued its stellar play, taking series victories over No. 13 Purdue, Washington and California. Heading into the final series of the regular season against USC on May 25, the Bruins found themselves trailing Oregon by two games for the Pac-12 lead and Arizona by one game for second place. After defeating the Trojans 3-1 in the opener, the Bruins came back on Saturday and won again by a score of 6-5 after junior Cody Regis drew a walk-off walk in the ninth inning. Entering the final day of the season, UCLA, Oregon and Arizona all found themselves tied atop the Pac-12 standings. With Oregon losing to Oregon State and Arizona defeating Arizona State in the regular season finales, the Bruins needed a win to clinch a share of the Pac-12 Championship. UCLA would indeed find that win, defeating the Trojans, 7-6, to earn their second consecutive conference championship. Junior closer Scott Griggs picked up the victory after throwing 1.1 innings in relief. Following the three-game sweep of USC to close the regular season, UCLA earned the No. 2 national seed in the NCAA Tournament, the highest seed the program has ever received in its history. The Bruins hosted the NCAA Los Angeles Regional for the third consecutive season, which was also a first in school history. The Bruins went on to sweep all three games in the regional to advance to their third NCAA Super Regional in school history. UCLA blanked Creighton, 3-0, in the opener behind another outstanding pitching performance from Plutko, who threw a complete game two-hit shutout while striking out seven in a gem of a performance. Junior Beau Amaral led the Bruins at the plate, going 3-4 witn one RBI in the win. The next day against New Mexico, UCLA’s great pitching continued as sophomore Nick Vander Tuig propelled the Bruins to a 7-1 victory over the Lobos. Vander Tuig was simply dominant, striking out a career-high 11 batters in eight innings while allowing just one hit all night. He also carried a no-hitter into the eighth inning before finally relinquishing that lone hit. In the finale, a rematch against Creighton, the Blue Jays proved to be no match for UCLA, going quietly in a 13-5 loss to the Bruins. Junior outfielder Jeff Gelalich led the way, going 3-4 with four RBI and two home runs in the victory. Gelalich went on to be named the Most Outstanding Player of the Regional while Amaral, outfielder Cody Keefer, Plutko, Vander Tuig, second baseman Trevor Brown and shortstop Pat Valaika all joined him on the All-Regional Team. The next day continued to generate more buzz for the program, as Gelalich was selected in the supplemental first round (No. 57 overall) of the 2012 MLB Draft by the Cincinnati Reds, making him the 18th UCLA ballplayer to be drafted in the first round. Overall, seven UCLA players were drafted in 2012. In the Super Regionals at Jackie Robinson Stadium, the Bruins drew a familiar foe in TCU, whom they had faced three times in the College World Series two seasons ago. The Bruins swept both games against the Horned Frogs, winning by scores of 6-2 and 4-1 to advance to their second College World Series in three seasons.The pitching again was superb, with Plutko and Vander Tuig shutting down the TCU offense and freshman David Berg coming out of the bullpen to finish both games. In the first game of the College World Series the Bruins drew Stony Brook, a cinderella team that had upset LSU in the Super Regionals. There would be no upset this time as the Bruins defeated the Seawolves by a score of 9-1. Plutko again was fantastic, pitching seven strong innings to lead the way. Valaika, Williams and Gelalich spurred the offense, knocking in two RBI apiece in the victory. UCLA returned to the field two days later where they faced conference foes Arizona. But this time the Wildcats would get the better of the Bruins, defeating UCLA, 4-0, behind a complete game shutout from Konner Wade. In an elimination game two days later, the Bruins saw their outstanding season come to an end as Florida State defeated UCLA by a score of 4-1. In three College World Series contests, UCLA’s pitching staff posted a 3.24 ERA while holding the opposition to a .230 batting average. After the season, Gelalich, Griggs and Plutko all earned All-America honors while Berg and Watson earned Freshman All-America honors. Berg finished the season in second place on the all-time NCAA Division I single-season appearances list, making 50 appearances in 2012 and leading the Pac-12 with a 1.46 ERA. Berg also led the nation with a 0.80 WHIP. Plutko went 7-0 in his final seven starts, posting a 0.89 ERA with a .180 batting average in that span. Griggs set the school record for saves in a single-season with 15, which also was the second-highest total in the Pac-12. UCLA as a team finished the year having played the No. 1 ranked strength of schedule according to Boyd’s World. The team also reached the 40-win plateau for just the eighth time in program history and owned the nation’s top record in road/neutral site games, going 21-6. At the plate the Bruins had 341 strikeouts, which is the fewest total since 1986 and batted .304 as a team, marking a 41-point increase from 2011. Finally, led by its junior class, UCLA achieved its highest three-year win total, winning 134 games between 2010 and 2012.
UCLA celebrated its 8-1 victory over Cal State Fullerton on June 13, 2010, sending the Bruins to the College World Series for the third time in school history.
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UCLA BASEBALL HISTORY 2013 – 49-17, 21-9 Pac-12 (3rd Place), NCAA Champions After ending the 2012 season in disappointing fashion with a loss in the College World Series, the Bruins returned to Omaha for the third time in four years in 2013, this time finishing the job and earning the program’s first NCAA Championship in its 94-year history. UCLA finished the season with a 49-17 record, marking the second-highest single-season win total in school history and totaling at least 40 wins for the third time in four years. The Bruins also finished in the top three of the Pac-12 Conference for the eighth consecutive year (the only Pac-12 team to have done so in that time frame), placing third after going 21-9 in Pac-12 games. Their 21 wins matched a school record as well. UCLA came into the season with high expectations, being ranked as high as No. 2 in the preseason polls. The Bruins looked to be led by their pitching, returning 2012 starters Adam Plutko, Nick Vander Tuig, Zack Weiss and Grant Watson along with two key bullpen guys in David Berg and Ryan Deeter. The Bruins justified that hype from the get-go, winning 15 of their first 18 games. UCLA also got off to a strong start in conference play, kicking off the Pac-12 season with a three-game sweep of Washington. UCLA’s pitchers were dominant in the series, going 32.2 straight innings without allowing a run from March 15 to March 22. The Bruins came back down to earth a little bit after winning their series vs. California, going 7-7 in the next 14 games. Things seemed to reach a turning point on April 16, as UCLA found themselves two outs away from a defeat at UC Irvine that would drop them below .500 in their last 15 games. But then junior Brenton Allen stepped to the plate and smacked a game-tying two-run home run in the ninth to eventually spark the Bruins to a 6-4 victory in extra innings. UCLA took that momentum into a big series at Oregon from April 16-18 and took two of three from the Ducks behind the stellar pitching of Plutko and Vander Tuig, who combined to throw 14 innings of shutout baseball to lead the Bruins to back-to-back 1-0 victories. Berg earned saves in both games while Weiss came in in the eight inning of game two to help combine for the shutout. UCLA swept its next three Pac-12 series, dispatching Utah and Arizona at home before sweeping USC on the road. The Bruins finished the season by falling to Stanford in two out of three games, giving them a third-place finish in the conference. After the season ended, numerous UCLA players earned national and conference honors, headlined by Berg. Berg earned first-team All-America honors from Collegiate Baseball and was named the Pac-12 Pitcher of the Year, making him the third UCLA pitcher all-time to win the Pac-12 Pitcher of the Year award (Trevor Bauer, 2011; Pete Janicki, 1992), and the second UCLA pitcher to earn the honor in the last three years. Additionally, Berg became the first reliever to win the award. Junior Pat Valaika was also selected as the Pac12 Defensive Player of the Year, making him the first UCLA player to win the award in program history. Valaika and Berg received All-Conference honors as well along with Plutko and Vander Tuig. Despite dropping two of three at Stanford to end the season, the Bruins were selected to host an NCAA Regional for the fourth consecutive year, making UCLA one of three schools to have hosted NCAA Regionals the last four years (South Carolina and Virginia). UCLA drew San Diego State, San Diego and Cal Poly in the Regional round as they met the Aztecs in the first game of the Regional. Behind another strong performance from Plutko, who allowed only two runs in seven innings, the Bruins defeated the Aztecs, 5-3, to move to 1-0 in the Regional. Junior Pat Gallagher led UCLA at the plate, going 3-4 with two RBI. In the next game against Cal Poly, the Bruins found themselves in a bit of trouble as the Mustangs jumped out to a 4-0 lead after four innings. Things looked bleak for UCLA, but the Bruins struck back in the sixth with a four-run frame to tie the game. After a Kevin Kramer sacrifice fly made it 4-1, junior Kevin Williams stepped to the plate with the bases loaded and two outs. He hit a fly ball to right that looked to be an easy out, but the ball continued to carry and dropped right in front of the wall for a bases-clearing triple. UCLA took the lead for good in the seventh when sophomore Eric Filia knocked in senior Cody Regis with an infield single before Valaika drew a bases loaded walk to make it 6-4. For the second straight night, Berg closed the door in the ninth to hand UCLA the two-run win. The Bruins would prove to have no trouble in the finale against San Diego, defeating the Toreros, 6-0, to advance to the NCAA Super Regional round. Watson tossed seven shutout innings to lead the way while Weiss and Berg pitched two scoreless innings in relief to combine for a one-hitter. Valaika and Gallagher logged two RBI apiece to lead the offense. After the Regional, Gallagher was named the Most Outstanding Player after going 5-for-9 with two runs and four RBI in the Bruins’ three victories. Joining Gallagher on the 11-man All-NCAA Los Angeles Regional Team from UCLA was Valaika, Filia, Plutko and Watson. The Super Regional provided a familiar foe for the Bruins in No. 5 seed Cal State Fullerton, who had beaten the Bruins twice earlier in the year. The Titans proved to be no match for UCLA though, as the Bruins won in two games to advance to the College World Series for the fifth time in school history. The Bruins earned a dramatic 5-3 10-inning win over the Titans in the first game to take a 1-0 lead in the best-of-three series. Filia led UCLA with a 4-5 night that included the game-winning RBI in the top of the 10th. Plutko was terrific on the mound once again, pitching seven strong innings and allowing just one unearned run. Berg picked up the win with three innings in relief. Then on Saturday, the Bruins scored three runs in the bottom of the first to propel them to a 3-0 shutout win over Fullerton. Gallagher hit a two-run single in the bottom of the first to give UCLA the lead while Vander Tuig held the Titans scoreless on the mound for 6.1 innings. Freshman James Kaprielian, Weiss and Berg then combined to hold the lead for 2.2 innings in relief. As the Super Regional was going on, UCLA had to deal with the distraction of having the 2013 MLB Draft going on at the same time. A total of seven Bruins were selected in the draft in Vander Tuig (6th round, San Francisco Giants), Weiss (6th round, Cincinnati Reds), Valaika (9th round, Colorado Rockies), Plutko (11th round, Cleveland Indians), Allen (20th round, Washington Nationals), Williams (29th round, Miami Marlins) and Deeter (32nd round, Milwaukee Brewers). The Bruins arrived in Omaha a few days after defeating Fullerton, coming in as somewhat of an underdog with two national seeds on their side of the bracket. First up was No. 4 seed LSU and one of the top pitchers in the country in Aaron Nola. But behind their usual blend of strong pitching and timely hitting, the Bruins moved past the Tigers, 2-1. Plutko was masterful yet again, tossing seven innings and allowing just one run, as Berg slammed the door shut in the ninth for his 22nd save of the season. UCLA scored both of its runs thanks to two LSU errors, scoring one on a sac fly by Filia after junior Brian Carroll reached on an error before scoring the game-winner in the eighth when a ground ball by Filia got through the shortstop, allowing freshman Christoph Bono to score. Next up was North Carolina State, who UCLA defeated again by a score of, 2-1. Vander Tuig matched Plutko’s performance, striking out six in seven innings while allowing one run, before Berg cemented the victory with two innings of scoreless relief to notch his third straight save. UCLA scored both of its runs in the fifth, when Kramer knocked in Regis with a RBI single and Allen scored on a wild pitch. Things got tense in the eighth inning, as Berg put two runners on with nobody out. After getting the lead runner out at third base on a sacrifice bunt attempt, Berg got a little help from his defense, as Trea Turner smacked a ball to deep left that looked to be extra bases before Bono made a terrific leaping catch to rob Turner and preserve the Bruins’ lead. The next game proved to be a little less dramatic, as the Bruins took care of top seed North Carolina, 4-1, behind another gem on the mound from Watson. Watson struck out three in six scoreless innings while Regis, Williams and Valaika provided the runs for the Bruins at the plate, allowing UCLA to move on to the CWS Finals for the second time in four years. In the CWS Finals, the Bruins would meet the Mississippi State Bulldogs, a team they would take care of in two games to earn their first NCAA Championship. Plutko and Vander Tuig were the work horses once again, allowing one run in 14 combined innings vs. the Bulldogs to lead the way. Berg closed out both victories, earning his 24th save in the 3-1 victory in Game 1 to set the NCAA Division I single-season saves record. Valaika got the Bruins on the board in the first inning of Game 1 with a RBI single to score Kramer before Filia added two insurance runs with a two-run single in the fifth. In Game 2, UCLA jumped out to an early 5-0 lead after four innings and never looked back, cruising to an 8-0 victory to clinch the title. Filia led
the way with five RBI while Vander Tuig struck out six in eight innings of work. Four Bruins landed on the All-CWS team after the tournament, with Plutko earning Most Outstanding Player honors at the tournament. Plutko went 2-0 with a 1.38 ERA in 13 innings at the 2013 CWS, striking out four. Joining Plutko on the All-CWS team were Vander Tuig, Pat Valaika and Eric Filia. Vander Tuig also went 2-0 at the CWS, posting a 0.60 ERA and 12 strikeouts in 15 innings pitched while Filia batted .333 with eight RBI. Finally, Valaika anchored a UCLA defense that posted a .984 fielding percentage in the CWS while knocking in four runs at the plate. UCLA also set numerous records as a team in the College World Series, becoming the first team to go through the CWS without allowing more than one run in every game. UCLA also posted the lowest ERA in the aluminum bat era of the College World Series at 0.80 and became just the third team in NCAA history to go 10-0 in the postseason. Overall, UCLA outscored its opponents by a 44-14 margin in the postseason and defeated four national seeds en route to the national championship. Individually, Berg set the NCAA single-season saves record in 2013, recording 24 saves on the year, while also tying the NCAA record for most pitching appearances in a single season with 51. Vander Tuig (27) and Plutko (29) finished their careers as the winningest pitching tandem in UCLA history while the pitching staff as a whole posted a team ERA of 2.55, the second-lowest mark in school history. Additionally, Plutko became UCLA’s all-time postseason leader in wins (7), innings pitched (57.2) and ERA (0.94) while head coach John Savage became UCLA’s all-time winningest postseason manager with 32 postseason victories. Finally, UCLA’s defense proved to be strong all year, recording a school-record .980 fielding percentage in 2013.
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Pitchers Adam Plutko and Nick Vander Tuig combined to go 4-0 with 16 strikeouts and a 0.96 ERA in four starts at the 2013 College World Series. Plutko was named the 2013 CWS Most Outstanding Player while Vander Tuig received All-CWS honors.
NCAA TOURNAMENT HISTORY NCAA Tournament Breakdown Overall Record: 60-39 (19 appearances) NCAA Regional Record: 45-25 NCAA Super Regional Record: 7-5 College World Series Record: 9-9 Total Appearances: 1969, 1979, 1986, 1987, 1990, 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 NCAA Super Regional Appearances: ‘00, ‘07, ‘10, ‘12, ‘13 College World Series Appearances: ‘69, ‘97, ‘10, ‘12, ‘13 NCAA Championships: 2013
UCLA Head Coaches in the Postseason Head Coach Arthur Reichle Gary Adams John Savage TOTALS
Overall 2-2 26-23 32-14 60-39
Region 2-0 26-19 17-6 45-25
Supers 0-0 0-2 7-3 7-5
CWS 0-2 0-2 9-5 9-9
UCLA Postseason Records by Decade Years 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s 2010s TOTALS
Games 4 4 7 29 21 34 99
W 2 2 3 16 11 16 50
L 2 2 4 13 10 8 39
Pct. .500 .500 .429 .552 .524 .765 .606
UCLA has made 19 NCAA Tournament appearances, including eight in the last 10 seasons. The Bruins have advanced to the College World Series in three of the last four years, winning the NCAA Championship in 2013. Last season’s trip to Omaha, Neb. marked UCLA’s fifth College World Series berth. UCLA’s other College World Series appearances came in 1969, 1997, 2010 and 2012. Head coach John Savage has led UCLA to the postseason in seven of his nine seasons at the helm. Savage is the program’s only head coach to have led UCLA to postseason appearances in four consecutive seasons (2010-13), and to the NCAA Championship (2013). He coached the Bruins to the Super Regionals in 2007, 2010, 2012 and 2013. UCLA also hosted an NCAA Regional at Jackie Robinson Stadium in four consecutive seasons from 20102013, and the NCAA Los Angeles Super Regional in 2010 and 2012. Prior to those years, the Bruins had not hosted postseason action since 1986. Former head coach Gary Adams made 11 trips to the NCAA Tournament, including the Bruins’ 1997 trip to the College World Series. In six games at the 1997 NCAA Midwest Regional (at Oklahoma State), the Bruins outscored their opposition, 72-24. UCLA closed the six-game stretch with five victories, routing host Oklahoma State 14-2 and 22-2 on the same day. Eric Valent earned Tournament MVP honors after blasting six home runs, while Nick Theodorou batted .667 (16 hits in 24 at-bats).
UCLA’s 2013 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP TEAM June 25, 2013 at Omaha’s TD Ameritrade Park
DATE RESULT OPPONENT WINNING PITCHER 2013 - NCAA College World Series (at Omaha, Neb.)
LOSING PITCHER
6/16/13 W 2-1 LSU 6/18/13 W 2-1 North Carolina State 6/21/13 W 4-1 North Carolina 6/24/13 W 3-1 Mississippi State 6/25/13 W 8-0 Mississippi State College World Series Recap - Record (5-0), Finish (1st)
LP - Aaron Nola LP - Logan Jernigan LP - Kent Emanuel LP - Trevor Fitts LP - Luis Pollorena
WP - Adam Plutko WP - Nick Vander Tuig WP - Grant Watson WP - Adam Plutko WP - Nick Vander Tuig
UCLA Postseason Superlatives (Game)
2013 - NCAA Fullerton Super Regional (at Cal State Fullerton)
Most Runs Scored: 22, at Oklahoma State (5/25/97) Fewest Runs Scored: 0, five times (last 6/17/12) Most Runs Allowed: 17, vs. Oklahoma State (5/29/99) Fewest Runs Allowed: 0, five times (last 6/25/13) Longest Win Streak: 10 games (5/31/13 - Present)
6/7/13 W 5-3 (10) Cal State Fullerton 6/8/13 W 3-0 Cal State Fullerton Super Regional Recap - Record (2-0), Finish (1st)
UCLA Regional Round Superlatives (Series) Most Runs Scored: 72 (five games, 1997 Regional) Fewest Runs Scored: 4 (three games, 2006 Regional) Most Runs Allowed: 46 (four games, 1987 Regional) Fewest Runs Allowed: 6 (three times, 1969, 2010 & 2012 Reg.) Longest Win Streak: 6 games (6/1/12 - 6/2/13)
UCLA vs. Postseason Opponents Opponent Arizona Arizona State Cal Poly Cal State Fullerton Clemson Creighton Delaware Florida Florida State Fordham Fresno State Georgia Southern Harvard Hawaii Illinois-Chicago Kent State Lamar Long Beach State Loyola Marymount LSU Miami Mississippi State Missouri New Mexico North Carolina North Carolina State Ohio Oklahoma Oklahoma State Pepperdine Sam Houston State San Diego San Diego State San Francisco Santa Clara South Alabama South Carolina Southwest Missouri State Stony Brook TCU Tennessee Texas Texas A&M Tulsa UC Irvine Virginia Wichita State Yale TOTALS
Record 0-1 0-3 1-0 6-7 1-0 2-0 1-0 1-2 0-1 1-0 2-0 0-1 1-1 3-1 1-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 0-1 2-2 0-2 3-1 0-1 1-0 1-1 1-0 1-0 4-2 3-1 2-1 1-0 1-0 1-0 1-1 2-0 0-1 0-2 1-1 1-0 4-1 1-0 1-0 0-1 0-1 2-1 1-0 1-1 1-0 60-39
Last Meeting June 17, 2012 May 25, 1987 June 1, 2013 June 8, 2013 May 22, 1992 June 3, 2012 May 26, 2000 June 19, 2010 June 19, 2012 May 26, 1990 June 4, 2011 May 28, 1990 May 24, 1997 May 24, 1987 June 2, 2007 June 4, 2010 May 27, 1993 June 3, 2007 May 23, 1986 June 16, 2013 May 28, 1993 June 25, 2013 June 4, 2006 June 2, 2012 June 21, 2013 June 18, 2013 May 23, 1997 June 4, 2004 May 28, 1999 June 1, 2007 May 25, 1996 June 2, 2013 May 31, 2013 June 5, 2011 May 23, 1969 May 25, 1990 June 29, 2010 May 24, 1996 June 15, 2012 June 9, 2012 May 24, 1997 May 23, 1996 May 29, 1993 June 13, 1969 June 5, 2011 May 30, 2008 May 29, 1999 May 23, 1992 June 25, 2013
ATT. 26344 25543 25947 25690 27127
WP - David Berg WP - Nick Vander Tuig
LP - J.D. David LP - Thomas Eshelman
3244 3303
WP - Adam Plutko WP - Nick Vander Tuig WP - Grant Watson
LP - Ryan Doran LP - Reed Reilly LP - Max Homick
1690 1749 1220
WP - Adam Plutko WP - Konner Wade WP - Scott Sitz
LP - Tyler Johnson LP - Nick Vander Tuig LP - Zack Weiss
21662 19198 23409
WP - Adam Plutko WP - Nick Vander Tuig
LP - Brandon Finnegan LP - Preston Morrison
2042 2135
WP - Adam Plutko WP - Nick Vander Tuig WP - Zack Weiss
LP - Ty Blach LP - Gera Sanchez LP - Nick Musec
1570 1601 1291
WP - Kyle Zimmer WP - Trevor Bauer WP - Adam Plutko WP - Phillip Ferragamo
LP - Gerrit Cole LP - Josh Poytress LP - Jonathan Abramson LP - Nick Vander Tuig
1925 1949 1351 1461
WP - Trevor Bauer WP - Gerrit Cole WP - Matt Purke WP - Trevor Bauer WP - Blake Cooper WP - Matt Price
LP - Alex Pantaliodis LP - Kyle Winkler LP - Rob Rasmussen LP - Kyle Winkler LP - Gerrit Cole LP - Dan Klein
WP - Noe Ramirez WP - Dan Klein WP - Rob Rasmussen
LP - Gerrit Cole LP - Kevin Rath LP - Dylan Floro
2077 2005 1967
WP - Gerrit Cole WP - Trevor Bauer WP - Rob Rasmussen
LP - Robert Sabo LP - Anthony Ranaudo LP - Eric Pettis
1482 2613 1209
LP - Matt Packer LP - Jeff Kaplan LP - Gavin Brooks LP - Rob Rasmussen
1655 2912 1892 3012
LP - Tyson Brummett LP - Gavin Brooks
3394 3442
LP - Barry Enright LP - Zach Peterson LP - Shane Peterson
1647 1579 2089
2013 - NCAA Los Angeles Regional (at UCLA) 5/31/13 W 5-3 San Diego State 6/1/13 W 6-4 Cal Poly 6/2/13 W 6-0 San Diego Regional Recap - Record (3-0), Finish (1st)
2012 - NCAA College World Series (at Omaha, Neb.) 6/15/12 W 9-1 Stony Brook 6/17/12 L 4-0 Arizona 6/19/12 L 4-1 Florida State College World Series Recap - Record (1-2), Finish (t-5th)
2012 - NCAA Los Angeles Super Regional (at UCLA) 6/8/12 W 6-2 TCU 6/9/12 W 4-1 TCU Super Regional Recap - Record (2-0), Finish (1st)
2012 - NCAA Los Angeles Regional (at UCLA) 6/1/12 W 3-0 Creighton 6/2/12 W 7-1 New Mexico 6/3/12 W 13-5 Creighton Regional Recap - Record (3-0), Finish (1st)
2011 - NCAA Los Angeles Regional (at UCLA) 6/3/11 L 3-0 San Francisco 6/4/11 W 3-1 Fresno State 6/5/11 W 4-1 San Francisco 6/5/11 L 4-3 UC Irvine Regional Recap - Record (2-2), Finish (2nd)
2010 - NCAA College World Series (at Omaha, Neb.) 6/19/10 W 11-3 Florida 6/21/10 W 6-3 TCU 6/25/10 L 6-2 TCU 6/26/10 W 10-3 TCU 6/28/10 L 7-1 South Carolina 6/29/10 L 2-1 (11) South Carolina College World Series Recap - Record (3-3), Finish (2nd)
23271 23345 22334 10907 23181 24390
2010 - NCAA Los Angeles Super Regional (at UCLA) 6/11/10 L 4-3 Cal State Fullerton 6/12/10 W 11-7 (10) Cal State Fullerton 6/13/10 W 8-1 Cal State Fullerton Super Regional Recap - Record (2-1), Finish (1st)
2010 - NCAA Los Angeles Regional (at UCLA) 6/4/10 W 15-1 Kent State 6/5/10 W 6-3 LSU 6/6/10 W 6-2 UC Irvine Regional Recap - Record (3-0), Finish (1st)
2008 - NCAA Fullerton Regional (at Cal State Fullerton) 5/30/08 W 3-2 Virginia 5/31/08 W 11-4 Cal State Fullerton 6/1/08 L 11-8 Cal State Fullerton 6/2/08 L 5-4 Cal State Fullerton Regional Recap - Record (2-2), Finish (2nd)
WP - Brendan Lafferty WP - Charles Brewer WP - Michael Morrison WP - Brian Wilson
2007 - NCAA Fullerton Super Regional (at Cal State Fullerton) 6/9/07 L 12-2 Cal State Fullerton 6/10/07 L 2-1 Cal State Fullerton Super Regional Recap - Record (0-2), Finish (2nd)
WP - Wes Roemer WP - Adam Jorgenson
2007 - NCAA Long Beach Regional (at Long Beach State) 6/1/07 W 7-3 Pepperdine 6/2/07 W 3-1 Illinois-Chicago 6/3/07 W 7-4 Long Beach State Regional Recap - Record (3-0), Finish (1st)
109
WP - Tyson Brummett WP - Gavin Brooks WP - Tim Murphy
NCAA TOURNAMENT HISTORY DATE
RESULT
OPPONENT
WINNING PITCHER
LOSING PITCHER
ATT.
WP - Hector Ambriz WP - Paul Coleman WP - Rick Zagone
LP - Justin Cassel LP - David Huff LP - Tyson Brummett
1200 1500 685
WP - Casey Janssen WP - Connor Falkenbach WP - David Johnson WP - Tommy Boss
LP - Mark Roberts LP - Wes Whisler LP - Casey Brown LP - Dan Miltenberger
7792 1981 3056 2341
WP - Brian Tallet WP - Billy Brian
LP - Rob Henkel LP - Josh Karp
7624 7667
WP - Bobby Roe WP - Josh Karp WP - Ryan Carter
LP - Vic Sage LP - Logan Cuellar LP - Austin Mix
2584 4865 4144
5/28/99 W 12-6 Oklahoma State 5/29/99 L 4-2 Wichita State 5/29/99 L 17-10 Oklahoma State Regional Recap - Record (1-2), Finish (3rd)
WP - Josh Karp WP - Brandon Sloan WP - Dale Pearson
LP - Matt Smith LP - Jon Brandt LP - Ryan Carter
3598 5095 3058
1997 - College World Series (at Omaha, Neb.) 5/31/97 L 7-3 (12) Miami 6/2/97 L 7-5 Mississippi State CWS Recap - Record (0-2), Finish (t-7th)
WP - Robbie Morrison WP - Hank Thoms
LP - Jake Meyer LP - Rob Henkel
18049 20116
WP - Frank Hogan WP - Matt Klein WP - Peter Zamora WP - Nick St. George WP - Jim Parque WP - Tom Jacquez
LP - Tom Jacquez LP - Aaron Houdeshell LP - Michael Cosgrove LP - Donald Jamieson LP - Scott Williamson LP - Dave Maurer
2368 2382 2466 2387 3821 3329
WP - Jim Parque WP - John Hardin WP - Dan Keller WP - Kevin Sheredy WP - Clint Weibl
LP - Eric French LP - Peter Zamora LP - K. Hermes LP - Scott Geitz LP - Ryan Lynch
6649 5238 5238 4005 3753
WP - Tim Kubinski WP - Jon Van Zandt WP - Kelly Wunsch WP - Scott Wissel
LP - Mike Pasqualiccio LP - Gabe Sollecito LP - Gary Adcock
2786 2303 5189 2669
WP - Zack Krislock WP - Bill Craig WP - Tim Kubinski WP - Pete Janicki WP - Casey Mendenhall
LP - Gabe Sollecito LP - Aaron Jersild LP - Daniel Lock LP - Chuck Daniel LP - Gary Adcock
2019 2368 2475 6057 1332
WP - Mike Zimmerman WP - Pete Janicki WP - Dave Zancanaro WP - Joey Hamilton
LP - Tim Lindsay LP - Joe Maniscalco LP - Kennie Steenstra LP - Tim Lindsay
1223 3581 6881 573
WP - Alex Sanchez WP - Linty Ingram WP - Steve Stowell WP - Keith Shibata WP - David Cassidy
LP - Brown LP - Randy Hennis LP - Holt LP - Lewis LP - Alex Sanchez
6113 6537 6497 6497 7108
WP - Paul Brown WP - Keith Shibata
LP - Alex Sanchez WP - Jim Bruske
873 593
WP - Tim Leary
LP - Tony Hudson
384
WP - Tony Hudson WP - Larry Navilbon
LP - Matt Young LP - Tim Leary
420 392
WP - S. Rogers WP - Lerrin LaGrow
LP - Jim York LP - Jim York
WP - Al Hoops WP - Rick Pope
LP - Rich Troedson LP - Scott Davi
College World Series History
2006 - NCAA Malibu Regional (at Pepperdine) 6/2/06 W 3-2 UC Irvine 6/3/06 L 6-0 Pepperdine 6/4/06 L 2-1 Missouri Regional Recap - Record (1-2), Finish (3rd)
2004 - NCAA Oklahoma City Regional (at Oklahoma) 6/4/04 W 9-1 Oklahoma 6/5/04 L 4-3 Florida 6/5/04 W 17-7 Oklahoma 6/6/04 L 11-0 Florida Regional Recap - Record (2-2), Finish (2rd)
2000 - NCAA Baton Rouge Super Regional (at Louisiana State) 6/2/00 L 8-2 Louisiana State 6/3/00 L 14-8 Louisiana State Super Regional Recap - Record (0-2), Finish (2nd)
2000 - NCAA Oklahoma City Regional (at Oklahoma) 5/26/00 W 13-12 Delaware 5/27/00 W 10-5 Oklahoma 5/28/00 W 11-3 Oklahoma Regional Recap - Record (3-0), Finish (1st)
1999 - NCAA Wichita Regional (at Wichita State)
1997 - NCAA Midwest Regional (at Oklahoma State) 5/22/97 L 7-2 Harvard 5/23/97 W 15-1 Ohio 5/24/97 W 5-3 Tennessee 5/24/97 W 14-9 Harvard 5/25/97 W 14-2 Oklahoma State 5/25/97 W 22-2 Oklahoma State Regional Recap - Record (5-1), Finish (1st)
1996 - NCAA Central I Regional (at University of Texas) 5/23/96 W 5-2 Texas 5/24/96 L 13-2 Southwest Missouri State 5/25/96 W 10-8 Sam Houston State 5/25/96 W 9-4 Southwest Missouri State 5/26/96 L 8-4 Miami Regional Recap - Record (3-2), Finish (2nd)
1993 - NCAA Central I Regional (at Texas A&M) 5/27/93 W 6-1 Lamar 5/28/93 W 9-4 Hawaii 5/29/93 L 11-4 Texas A&M 5/29/93 L 8-5 North Carolina Regional Recap - Record (2-2), Finish (3rd)
1992 - NCAA Mideast Regional (at Mississippi State) 5/21/92 L 4-3 Oklahoma 5/22/92 W 6-5 Clemson 5/23/92 W 8-0 Yale 5/24/92 W 3-2 Mississippi State 5/24/92 L 10-0 Oklahoma Regional Recap - Record (3-2), Finish (2nd)
1990 - NCAA Midwest Regional (at Wichita State) 5/25/90 L 6-4 South Alabama 5/26/90 W 13-8 Fordham 5/27/90 W 7-5 Wichita State 5/28/90 L 5-4 Georgia Southern Regional Recap - Record (2-2), Finish (3rd)
1987 - NCAA West II Regional (at Arizona State) 5/22/87 W 12-11 Hawaii 5/23/87 L 9-3 Arizona State 5/24/87 W 16-7 Hawaii 5/24/87 W 21-5 Pepperdine 5/25/87 L 14-4 Arizona State Regional Recap - Record (3-2), Finish (2nd)
1986 - NCAA West I Regional (at UCLA) 5/22/86 L 6-3 Hawaii 5/23/86 L 12-10 Loyola Marymount Regional Recap - Record (0-2), Finish (4th)
1979 - NCAA West I Regional (at Fresno, Calif.) 5/25/79 W 5-4 Cal State Fullerton 5/26/79 W 5-4 Fresno State 5/27/79 L 9-2 Cal State Fullerton 5/28/79 L 9-5 Cal State Fullerton Regional Recap - Record (2-2), Finish (2nd)
1969 - College World Series (at Omaha, Neb.) 6/13/69 L 6-5 (10) Tulsa 6/14/69 L 2-1 (11) Arizona State CWS Recap - Record (0-2), Finish (t-7th)
1969 - NCAA Regional 5/23/69 W 7-5 Santa Clara 5/24/69 W 2-1 Santa Clara Regional Recap - Record (2-0), Finish (1st)
110
3320 2000
Year 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977 1976 1975 1974 1973 1972 1971 1970 1969 1968 1967 1966 1965 1964 1963 1962 1961 1960 1959 1958 1957 1956 1955 1954 1953 1952 1951 1950 1949 1948 1947
Champion UCLA Arizona South Carolina South Carolina LSU Fresno State Oregon State Oregon State Texas Cal State Fullerton Rice Texas Miami LSU Miami USC LSU LSU Cal State Fullerton Oklahoma LSU Pepperdine LSU Georgia Wichita State Stanford Stanford Arizona Miami Cal State Fullerton Texas Miami Arizona State Arizona Cal State Fullerton USC Arizona State Arizona Texas USC USC USC USC USC Arizona State USC Arizona State Ohio State Arizona State Minnesota USC Michigan USC Minnesota Oklahoma State USC California Minnesota Wake Forest Missouri Michigan Holy Cross Oklahoma Texas Texas USC California
Runner-Up Mississippi State South Carolina Florida UCLA Texas Georgia North Carolina North Carolina Florida Texas Stanford South Carolina Stanford Stanford Florida State Arizona State Alabama Miami USC Georgia Tech Wichita State Cal State Fullerton Wichita State Oklahoma State Texas Arizona State Oklahoma State Florida State Texas Texas Alabama Wichita State Oklahoma State Hawaii Arkansas Arizona State South Carolina Eastern Michigan South Carolina Miami Arizona State Arizona State Southern Illinois Florida State Tulsa Southern Illinois Houston Oklahoma State Ohio State Missouri Arizona Santa Clara Oklahoma State USC Arizona Missouri Penn State Arizona Western Michigan Rollins Texas Missouri Tennessee Washington State Wake Forest Yale Yale
ALL-TIME NCAA TOURNAMENT STATS Name
AB
R
Adams, Mannie Allen, Bob Allen, Brenton Amaral, Beau Ammirato, Zak Atkins, Garrett Auten, Jim Averill, Brandon Babineau, Ryan Baron, Brian Bjelland, Tim Berman, Gary Bono, Christoph Botterman, Barry Boyd, Travis Brown, Trevor Byrnes, Eric Canales, Josh Carrasco, Tony Carrithers, Alden Carroll, Brian Carty, Mike Chambliss, Chris Chatterton, Trent Cline, Scott Cloud, Casey Cohen, Gabe Coston, Roy Craig, Benny Crawford, Brandon Criss, Brian Curtis, Jermaine Dean, Brent DeCinces, Tim Decker, Cody Denove, Chris Dieter, Dave Dodson, Pat Dolak, John Dolan, Brady Dunlap, Blair Ellis, Paul Ervin, Gary Espy, Dean Fiacco, Charlie Filia, Eric Followell, Vern Gallagher, Pat Gallego, Mike Gallego, Niko Gausepohl, Dan Gelalich, Jeff Giovinazzo, Chris Giovinazzo, Matt Glantz, John Glaus, Troy Green, Jason Griffin, Preston Haerther, Casey Hamelin, Bob Hamill, Ryan Hankins, Mike Haselman, Billy Heineman, Tyler Heinrichs, Jon Hemming, Jim Hennis, Randy Hinds, Robert Hisey, Steve Holland, Wayne Holley, Bobby Holt, Dennis Hoops, Al Hymes, Mike Jensen, Chris Johnson, Forrest Joslyn, John Karros, Eric Katzaroff, Robbie Keck, Chris Keefer, Cody Kramer, Kevin Krill, Brett Kubinski, Tim Kuehnert, Anthony Lang, Roger LeBlanc, Bill
13 3 24 99 17 38 12 4 39 4 1 3 12 17 0 52 57 15 1 37 31 1 15 1 25 22 21 0 1 47 2 48 6 20 29 14 4 11 1 19 71 13 4 49 19 36 9 38 12 42 13 82 57 0 1 50 15 15 17 6 1 17 27 33 53 15 0 18 25 2 27 2 4 5 11 26 8 23 19 5 38 61 15 4 1 13 1
1 0 5 20 6 9 3 0 3 0 0 0 2 2 0 10 12 3 0 9 10 0 3 0 7 4 2 1 0 8 0 4 0 4 3 2 0 3 0 4 8 5 0 6 10 8 1 3 1 9 1 15 7 0 0 14 2 6 3 1 0 4 5 6 13 3 0 0 8 1 7 1 0 1 0 7 4 8 4 0 10 8 0 1 0 1 0
H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB AVG GP 1 0 5 33 6 15 5 1 10 2 0 1 1 6 0 17 16 4 0 13 7 0 5 0 12 6 5 0 0 14 0 19 1 7 9 5 0 4 0 7 21 6 0 14 6 16 2 13 5 12 1 24 12 0 0 18 4 7 5 2 0 4 8 6 16 4 0 4 10 0 8 1 1 2 3 8 3 6 5 2 11 17 4 0 0 2 0
0 0 1 8 3 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 5 1 0 2 0 2 0 2 0 0 6 0 6 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 4 1 0 1 0 2 1 2 1 1 0 5 2 0 0 3 0 1 3 1 0 0 1 1 5 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 0 0 2 3 1 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 1 2 3 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 2 1 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 5 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 5 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
2 2 2 0 0 1 2 3 11 12 7 22 4 3 1 12 2 2 3 0 0 2 0 0 5 3 10 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 2 --0 0 0 8 1 8 8 3 8 3 2 1 1 0 0 3 3 6 0 6 7 0 --1 --0 0 0 13 5 5 4 4 5 3 0 4 0 --0 0 0 7 3 9 0 0 1 4 3 5 1 0 1 9 1 1 5 2 8 4 1 3 0 0 2 1 1 2 0 0 0 1 0 5 9 5 17 2 2 1 0 1 2 8 2 11 4 7 2 11 2 1 0 1 0 7 1 7 1 0 2 7 5 9 2 0 5 17 6 24 4 3 16 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 13 12 3 2 2 2 1 3 2 0 4 5 1 1 0 0 1 1 4 2 9 4 4 3 5 1 16 6 6 1 4 4 0 0 0 2 2 2 14 3 6 0 --2 3 7 0 0 0 0 --0 0 0 1 0 2 7 1 4 3 1 2 8 2 2 1 3 0 1 1 1 4 11 3 7 5 12 2 0 4 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 ---
0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 3 2 1 0 0 0 6 0 6 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 3 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
.077 .000 .250 .333 .353 .395 .417 .250 .256 .500 .000 .333 .083 .353 .000 .327 .281 .267 .000 .351 .226 .000 .333 .000 .480 .273 .238 .000 .000 .298 .000 .396 .167 .350 .310 .357 .000 .364 .000 .368 .296 .462 .000 .286 .316 .444 .222 .342 .417 .286 .077 .293 .211 .000 .000 .360 .267 .467 .294 .333 .000 .235 .296 .182 .302 .267 .000 .222 .400 .000 .296 .500 .250 .400 .273 .308 .375 .261 .263 .400 .289 .279 .267 .000 .000 .154 .000
Years
Name
AB
R
H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB AVG GP
Lohman, Chris 9 0 5 Lovullo, Torey 25 9 6 Lyon, Nick 12 1 3 Markel, Aaron 0 0 0 Matoian, Chad 44 10 12 McCarthy, Ryan 18 3 4 McGuire, Ryan 31 5 10 McMillan, Brett 15 2 2 Melhuse, Adam 27 7 7 Merricks, Charles 33 7 12 Miller, Mark 11 0 2 Mitchell, Freddie 0 0 0 Molina, Jake 17 0 1 Montanari, Dave 6 1 1 Moore, Michael 16 1 3 Moore, Ty 1 0 1 Murphy, Tim 13 3 3 Murray, Eddie 0 1 0 Myrow, John 26 4 8 Navarro, Marc 6 1 2 Nista, Brett 22 5 9 Norman, Anthony 1 0 1 Olson, Cass 3 0 0 Osborn, Jeff 15 1 0 Page, Jarrad 13 2 2 Pearl, Matt 29 8 7 Penniall, Will 19 1 4 Petretta, Bob 3 0 1 Pinto, Aldo 2 0 0 Pope, Rick 7 0 2 Price, Steve 17 2 6 Pritchett, Chris 15 6 5 Rahmatulla, Tyler 24 5 6 Ravitz, David 22 5 6 Reece, Eric 7 1 1 Regis, Cody 120 20 32 Reinbach, Mike 1 0 0 Roberts, David 30 2 11 Rodriguez, Jim 13 2 4 Rodriguez, Steve 42 7 9 Roenicke, Josh 11 0 1 Roques, Ryan 3 0 1 Runk, Steve 15 1 3 Sanserino, Gary 18 1 2 Santora, Jack 46 9 13 Schafer, Brett 2 0 0 Schult, Rob 0 0 0 Schwenke, Matt 17 1 1 Scott, Bill 39 11 17 Scruggs, Tony 15 4 5 Sealy, Don 1 0 0 Shaw, Tom 0 0 0 Shedd, Steve 16 2 3 Shelley, Randall 18 2 7 Shibata, Keith 0 0 0 Slaught, Don 11 2 6 Smith, Sean 9 0 1 Stewart, Tim 26 2 3 Stoll, Dave 0 0 0 Stowell, Steve 12 3 3 Susdorf, Billy 18 1 4 Svetlic, Mike 13 4 5 Taylor Jr., Eric 1 0 0 Thayer, Matt 14 4 4 Theodorou, Nick 44 10 23 Tokheim, David 16 2 4 Trott, Warren 0 0 0 Uribe, Justin 51 8 15 Utley, Chase 40 12 15 Valaika, Pat 78 6 16 Valent, Eric 56 13 16 Valent, Royce 2 0 0 Vallone, Gar 7 0 1 Webb, Kevin 15 1 3 Weisser, Mickey 15 0 4 Whisler, Wes 15 5 4 Williams, Adrian 2 1 1 Williams, Kevin 46 4 10 Wills, Shawn 24 2 2 Wolfe, Joel 18 3 5 York, Jim 1 0 0 Zamora, Pete 56 10 18 Zeile, Shane 40 3 8 Zeile, Todd 6 2 0
4 1990 2 1987 12 2011-13 24 2010-12 5 1996 8 1999, 00 3 1979 2 2004 12 2006-08 1 1999 1 1979 1 1986 10 2013 4 1969 1 1993 17 2010-12 13 1996, 97 5 2000 1 1993 9 2007, 08 11 2011-13 1 1969 4 1969 1 2013 7 1986, 87 7 1997 5 2007 2 1969 1 1996 12 2006-08 3 1992 12 2006-08 2 2008 5 1996 9 2006-08 4 2004 2 1993 3 1979 1 1987 6 2007, 08 19 2006, 08, 10 4 1990 2 1979 16 2010, 11 5 1987 10 2013 3 1979 11 2011-13 3 1979 12 2010 3 1979 23 2010-12 16 2008, 10, 11 1 2011, 12 1 1990 13 1996, 97 8 1997, 97, 99 4 2004 4 2008 2 1987 1 2000 5 1987, 90 7 1986, 87 12 2010-12 13 1996, 97 5 2000 1 1987 6 1990, 92 7 1986, 87 3 1969 7 1986, 87 2 2010 2 1969 5 1997 3 2006 6 1999, 00 2 1986 5 1987 5 1987, 90 6 2012, 13 12 2010-12 18 2012, 13 6 2010 4 1992, 93 1 1992 3 1979 1 1969
2 1 1 0 2 0 3 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 3 1 0 5 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 1 0 2 1 0 0 1 4 0 0 6 4 1 2 0 0 3 0 1 0 2 0 2 0 5 1 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 1 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 5 0 5 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0
5 0 1 1 10 4 2 2 5 0 0 0 6 4 4 4 0 4 7 2 3 1 4 1 1 6 7 4 3 4 1 1 2 0 0 0 3 0 0 2 0 2 6 4 9 0 0 0 0 2 3 0 0 0 1 2 3 1 1 0 1 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 1 2 5 2 6 8 2 0 1 0 --0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 2 2 4 4 5 1 4 5 0 2 1 22 20 31 0 --0 2 3 3 0 0 4 7 6 1 0 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 6 6 4 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 2 6 11 3 9 1 5 3 0 --0 --0 --8 3 3 0 0 0 2 1 1 0 0 1 1 3 5 0 0 0 3 1 3 3 0 3 2 1 5 0 0 1 4 2 3 5 6 8 2 1 2 0 0 0 3 5 7 11 3 8 17 8 17 20 4 10 0 0 1 0 0 2 3 2 5 1 0 4 2 1 4 0 0 0 7 2 13 1 0 8 4 0 3 0 --12 3 10 2 3 10 0 1 1
*records do not include three of UCLA’s 81 postseason games (5/27/93 vs. Lamar, 5/28/93 vs. Hawaii, 5/26/79 vs. Fresno State)
111
Years
0 .556 5 1992, 93 0 .240 7 1986, 87 1 .250 4 1999, 00 0 .000 1 2004 0 .273 11 1996, 97 1 .222 4 2004 1 .323 7 1992, 93 0 .133 5 2004, 06 1 .259 7 1992, 93 0 .364 8 1999, 00 0 .182 3 1979 0 .000 2 2000 0 .059 4 1969 0 .167 2 1979 0 .188 7 1990, 92 0 1.000 1 2013 0 .231 5 2006-08 0 .000 3 2007, 08 2 .308 7 1992, 93 0 .333 7 2010, 11 0 .409 8 1996, 97 0 1.000 1 2006 0 .000 5 1996, 97 0 .000 5 1986, 87 0 .154 4 2004 0 .241 7 1999, 00 0 .211 7 2004, 06, 07 0 .333 4 1969 0 .000 4 1997, 99 0 .286 2 1969 1 .353 4 1969 9 ,333 4 1990 1 .250 6 2010 1 .273 7 1992, 93 0 .143 3 1999, 00 3 .267 34 2010-13 0 .000 1 1969 3 .367 7 1992, 93 0 .308 4 1969 0 .214 15 2010, 11 0 .091 5 2004, 06 0 .333 4 1997 0 .200 4 1969 1 .111 4 1969 0 .283 13 1996, 97, 99 0 .000 1 1993 0 .000 1 1996 0 .059 7 1992, 93 0 .436 8 1999, 00 0 .333 5 1986, 87 0 .000 2 1969 0 .000 1 1969 0 .188 4 1969 0 .389 5 2000 0 .000 1 1987 0 .545 3 1979 0 .111 3 2006 0 .115 8 2006, 07 0 .000 1 1992 0 .250 4 1986, 87 0 .222 4 2004 0 .385 4 2004 0 .000 1 2006 0 .286 4 2004 0 .523 12 1996, 97 4 .250 4 1990 0 .000 3 2000 1 .294 16 2007, 10 2 .375 8 1999, 00 2 .205 22 2011-13 1 .286 13 1996, 97 0 .000 3 1996, 97 0 .143 3 1992, 93 0 .200 4 1990 0 .267 5 2007, 08 0 .267 4 2004 0 .500 4 2010 3 .217 16 2011-13 1 .083 8 1990, 92 0 .278 4 1990 0 .000 2 1969 0 .321 13 1996, 97 0 .200 14 2012, 13 0 .000 2 1986
ALL-TIME NCAA TOURNAMENT STATS Name Adcock, Gary Ambriz, Hector Arrasmith, Scott Bauer, Trevor Berg, David Bollens, Scott Brandt, Jon Brewer, Charles Brooks, Gavin Brophy, Kevin Brummett, Tyson Carter, Ryan Cislak, Chad Claypool, Garett Cole, Gerrit Conine, Jeff Craig, Bill Dale, David Deeter, Ryan Dersom, Tyler Drummond, Matt Goeddel, Erik Grace, Matt Griggs, Scott Hale, Jeffrey Hansen, Guy Heineman, Rick Henkel, Rob Hennis, Randy Hoops, Al Howatt, Jeff Huff, Dave Jacquez, Tom Janicki, Pete Janssen, Casey Jerkens, Kevin Johnson, David Kaprielian, James Karp, Josh Keller, Dan Klein, Dan Klein, Matt Kramer, Dan Kubinski, Tim Lafferty, Brendan Leary, Tim Lindsay, Tim
W L SV 0 1 0 4 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 2 1 0 1 0 2 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 0
2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 2 1 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 2
0 0 0 0 7 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
IP
H
12.2 9.0 1.0 39.0 27.2 3.1 15.2 5.0 18.2 2.2 19.2 13.2 1.2 3.2 34.0 1.0 5.0 6.0 2.2 2.1 5.0 6.0 4.1 3.1 1.0 3.0 6.2 19.1 8.0 11.2 0.0 8.1 13.0 28.0 8.0 0.0 7.1 5.2 17.1 14.0 12.1 4.0 3.2 9.0 8.0 16.2 15.2
16 4 0 32 17 3 19 7 10 7 22 14 5 3 33 0 8 7 2 0 9 4 4 5 2 2 10 21 10 10 0 9 15 28 2 1 11 0 15 12 9 6 6 5 2 19 19
R ER BB SO 14 2 0 16 3 0 10 3 7 5 14 16 7 3 16 0 3 7 0 0 3 1 2 2 1 0 5 18 9 6 0 5 7 11 0 2 4 1 11 5 5 4 5 0 1 13 11
ERA AP GS
10 6 7 7.11 2 0 4 5 0.00 1 0 1 0 0.00 1 13 10 55 3.00 5 3 6 26 0.98 17 0 1 1 0.00 2 6 9 10 3.45 4 3 2 5 5.40 1 4 6 19 1.93 3 5 3 0 16.87 3 14 6 14 6.41 3 15 9 10 9.88 4 5 1 1 27.00 1 3 2 2 7.36 1 14 7 40 3.71 5 0 0 1 0.00 1 3 4 2 5.40 3 7 4 1 10.50 4 0 2 2 0.00 2 0 2 3 0.00 1 3 3 5 5.40 2 0 3 6 0.00 4 2 2 5 4.15 4 2 2 5 5.40 4 1 0 0 9.00 1 0 0 4 0.00 1 5 3 4 6.75 2 11 10 19 5.12 6 8 3 6 9.00 1 6 7 7 4.63 2 0 1 0 0.00 1 5 2 1 5.40 1 6 3 8 4.15 3 11 9 23 3.54 3 0 1 7 0.00 1 0 0 0 0.00 1 4 3 5 4.91 1 1 3 7 1.59 6 8 11 17 4.15 3 5 5 5 3.21 4 4 5 7 2.92 7 2 4 2 4.50 4 4 1 3 9.82 3 0 2 5 0.00 1 1 4 3 1.13 3 13 4 6 7.02 2 11 6 7 6.32 2
2 1 0 5 0 0 1 1 3 0 3 2 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 2 0 1 1 3 1 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 2
Years
Name
1992, 93 2006 2000 2010, 11 2012, 13 1979 1999, 00 2008 2007, 08 2004, 07 2006, 07 1999, 00 1999 2010 2010, 11 1987 1992 1986, 87 2011-12 1999 2008, 10 2010 2008, 10 2010-12 1992 1969 1996 1997, 00 1987 1969 1993 2006 1997 1990, 92 2004 2000 2004 2013 1999, 00 1996, 97 2008, 10 1996, 97 1992, 93 1992 2007, 08 1979 1990
W L SV
Lodge, Brandon Lynch, Ryan Magnante, Mike Meyer, Jake Miltenberger, Dan Mitchell, John Murphy, Tim Novak, Jason Oseguera, Paul O’Toole, Ryan Parque, Jim Phillips, John Pinto, Aldo Plutko, Adam Pope, Rick Rasmussen, Rob Ridenour, Dana Righetti, Tony Roe, Bobby Rustich, Brant Sanchez, Alex Schanz, Scott Schmidt, Paul Schroeder, Brian Schulhofer, Adam Schwengel, Kris Sheredy, Kevin Shibata, Keith Simon, Adam Sollecito, Gabe St. George, Nick Stoll, Dave Stowell, Steve Strelitz, Brian Vander Tuig, Nick Vdovkin, Michael Watson, Grant Weiss, Zack Wenrick, Bill Whisler, Wes White, Garett Wilson, Kyle York, Jim Young, Matt Zamora, Pete Zancanaro, Dave
0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 7 1 2 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 6 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1
0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 2 1 1 0
0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0
IP
H
1.0 0.1 10.1 2.1 1.0 2.1 17.0 8.1 1.1 1.0 28.1 2.2 1.0 57.2 17.1 28.1 2.0 2.1 7.1 2.0 15.1 0.1 0.1 0.2 5.1 0.2 9.0 10.2 5.0 5.1 9.1 0.2 5.2 1.0 50.2 1.2 16.1 17.1 4.0 7.0 1.0 1.1 7.1 7.1 15.2 8.1
3 1 18 1 4 1 16 6 1 1 21 6 0 35 17 25 2 1 8 1 22 1 0 0 8 1 9 9 5 6 16 0 8 2 42 0 10 18 6 7 3 2 8 11 23 9
R ER BB SO
ERA AP GS
1 1 0 1 9.00 1 5 5 3 0 135.14 1 16 14 5 4 12.19 3 5 5 5 2 19.29 3 4 4 1 1 36.00 1 2 2 1 2 7.72 2 6 5 5 12 2.65 3 4 3 3 4 3.24 5 0 0 0 1 0.00 1 1 1 1 1 9.00 1 7 7 13 33 2.22 5 5 5 2 3 16.87 1 0 0 0 1 0.00 1 8 6 14 37 0.94 8 6 2 5 16 1.04 2 9 9 9 28 2.86 5 1 1 2 1 4.50 1 1 0 1 1 0.00 2 4 3 4 2 3.68 3 0 0 1 2 0.00 1 17 16 17 13 9.39 3 0 0 2 1 0.00 1 0 0 0 0 0.00 1 0 0 0 1 0.00 1 5 4 4 1 6.75 1 1 0 0 0 0.00 1 4 4 6 9 4.00 1 7 7 6 8 5.91 2 4 4 3 5 7.20 1 6 3 6 3 5.06 3 9 7 3 2 6.75 3 0 0 1 0 0.00 1 5 4 4 1 6.35 1 4 4 3 0 36.00 1 13 12 8 45 2.13 10 0 0 0 2 0.00 1 2 2 5 10 1.10 4 8 8 10 12 4.15 8 2 2 0 2 4.50 5 4 4 1 7 5.14 1 2 2 0 1 18.00 2 2 2 2 3 13.50 1 2 0 5 9 0.00 3 9 7 4 5 8.59 1 12 8 5 5 4.60 3 5 5 6 6 5.40 2
0 1 1 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 4 0 0 8 2 5 0 1 0 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 2 0 1 0 6 0 2 3 0 1 0 0 0 1 3 1
Years 2010 1996 1986, 87 1996, 97 2004 1993 2007, 08 2006-08 2006 1996 1996, 97 1997 1997 2011-13 1969 2008, 10 1986 1997 1999, 00 2004 1986, 87 1990 2006 2004 1992 1993 1996 1986, 87 2004 1992, 93 1996, 97 1992 1987 1999 2011-13 1990 2012, 13 2011-13 1986, 87 2004 2004 2004 1969 1979 1996, 97 1990
UCLA’S CUMULATIVE POSTSEASON STATS (2014 ROSTER) Player Ty Moore Eric Filia Chris Keck Pat Gallagher Kevin Kramer Brian Carroll Kevin Williams Shane Zeile Christoph Bono Trent Chatterton Brett Urabe Totals
AVG 1.000 .444 .400 .342 .279 .226 .217 .200 .083 .000 .000 .277
Player David Berg Grant Watson James Kaprielian Totals
ERA 0.98 1.10 1.59 2.07
GP-GS 1-0 10-10 6-0 11-10 18-18 11-10 16-15 14-12 10-1 1-0 3-0 ---W-L 1-0 2-0 0-0 3-0
AB 1 36 5 38 61 31 46 40 12 1 0 271 APP 17 4 6 27
R 0 8 0 3 8 10 4 3 2 0 1 39 GS 0 2 0 2
CG 0 0 0 0
H 1 16 2 13 17 7 10 8 1 0 0 75
2B 0 2 0 2 3 1 2 1 0 0 0 11
3B 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1
HR 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
RBI 0 11 1 7 7 0 7 2 0 0 0 35
SHO/CBO 0/3 0/1 0/1 0/5
SV 7 0 0 7
IP 27.2 16.1 5.2 49.2
H 17 10 0 27
112
TB 1 18 2 15 20 8 15 9 1 0 0 89 R 3 2 1 6
SLG 1.000 .500 .400 .395 .328 .258 .326 .225 .083 .000 .000 .328
BB 0 2 1 1 5 6 2 3 0 0 2 22
HBP 0 1 0 0 0 4 2 1 0 0 0 8
SO 0 1 1 7 12 7 13 10 6 0 0 57
GDP 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1
ER 3 2 1 6
BB 6 5 3 14
SO 26 10 7 43
2B 2 1 0 3
3B 0 0 0 0
OBP 1.000 .463 .429 .350 .319 .415 .280 .273 .000 .000 1.000 .341 HR 0 0 0 0
SF 0 2 1 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 7
AB 95 56 16 167
SH 0 2 0 2 4 4 1 3 0 0 0 16 OAV .179 .179 .000 .162
SB-AT 0-0 1-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 3-4 3-3 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 7-8
FLD% .000 1.000 .000 .989 .960 1.000 1.000 .986 1.000 .000 .000 .986
WP HBP BK 0 2 0 1 3 0 0 1 0 1 6 0
SINGLE-GAME POSTSEASON RECORDS HITTING HITS 1. Nick Theodorou 2. 16 times
5 4
at Oklahoma State NCAA Regional last, Eric Filia at Cal St. Fullerton (2013 Supers)
5/25/97 6/7/13
HOME RUNS 1. Jeff Gelalich Cody Regis Ryan McCarthy Bill Scott Jon Heinrichs Steve Hisey Jim Auten
2 2 2 2 2 2 2
vs. Creighton vs. Cal State Fullerton at Oklahoma vs. Oklahoma State at Oklahoma State at Arizona State vs. Cal State Fullerton
NCAA Regional NCAA Super Reg. NCAA Regional NCAA Regional NCAA Regional NCAA Regional NCAA Regional
6/3/12 6/12/10 6/5/04 5/29/99 5/25/97 5/25/87 5/28/79
2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
vs. TCU College World Series vs. Cal State Fullerton NCAA Super Reg. at Cal State Fullerton NCAA Super Reg. at Oklahoma NCAA Regional at Oklahoma NCAA Regional at Wichita State NCAA Regional at Oklahoma State NCAA Regional at Oklahoma State NCAA Regional vs. Harvard NCAA Regional at Texas A&M NCAA Regional vs. Oklahoma NCAA Regional
6/21/10 6/11/10 6/10/07 5/28/00 5/27/00 5/29/99 5/25/97 5/25/97 5/24/97 5/29/93 5/24/92
4 4 4 4 4 3
at Oklahoma NCAA Regional at Oklahoma State NCAA Regional vs. Ohio NCAA Regional vs. Pepperdine NCAA Regional vs. Pepperdine NCAA Regional last, Brian Carroll vs. Miss. State (2013 CWS)
6/5/04 5/25/97 5/23/97 5/24/87 5/24/87 6/25/13
8 6 6 5 5 5 5 5
at Oklahoma State NCAA Regional vs. Yale NCAA Regional vs. Pepperdine NCAA Regional vs. Mississippi State College World Series vs. Delaware NCAA Regional vs. Ohio NCAA Regional vs. Fordham NCAA Regional vs. Hawaii NCAA Regional
5/25/97 5/23/92 5/24/87 6/25/13 5/26/00 5/23/97 5/26/90 5/22/87
DOUBLES 1. Beau Amaral Tyler Rahmatulla Justin Uribe Randall Shelley Bill Scott Brian Baron Pete Zamora Troy Glaus Chad Matoian Adam Melhuse Ryan McGuire
Jon Heinrichs, OF (1994-1997)
WALKS 1. Cody Keefer Cody Regis Blair Dunlap Tyler Rahmatulla Troy Glaus Torey Lovullo Charlie Fiacco Torey Lovullo 9. 45 times
RUNS SCORED 1. Preston Griffin Eric Valent Eric Byrnes Charlie Fiacco Eric Karros 6. 27 times
RUNS BATTED IN 1. Jon Heinrichs 2. Ryan McGuire Eric Karros 4. Eric Filia Garrett Atkins Eric Valent Mike Moore Scott Cline
Beau Amaral, OF (2010-2012)
3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 2
vs. Stony Brook College World Series vs. TCU College World Series vs. Cal State Fullerton NCAA Super Reg. vs. Kent State NCAA Regional vs. Ohio NCAA Regional vs. Pepperdine NCAA Regional vs. Pepperdine NCAA Regional vs. Hawaii NCAA Regional last, Brian Carroll vs. Miss. State (2013 CWS)
6/15/12 6/26/10 6/12/10 6/4/10 5/23/97 5/24/87 5/24/87 5/24/87 6/25/13
3 2
vs. Fordham NCAA Regional last, Brian Carroll vs. Miss. State (2013 CWS)
5/26/90 6/25/13
vs. Oklahoma vs. Santa Clara vs. Creighton vs. Fresno State vs. Cal State Fullerton at Long Beach State vs. Illinois-Chicago vs. Pepperdine vs. UC Irvine at Wichita State vs. S.W. Missouri State at Texas vs. Yale vs. Georgia Southern vs. Fordham vs. Cal State Fullerton
NCAA Regional NCAA Regional NCAA Regional NCAA Regional NCAA Super Reg. NCAA Regional NCAA Regional NCAA Regional NCAA Regional NCAA Regional NCAA Regional NCAA Regional NCAA Regional NCAA Regional NCAA Regional NCAA Regional
5/21/92 5/24/69 6/1/12 6/4/11 6/13/10 6/3/07 6/2/07 6/1/07 6/2/06 5/29/99 5/25/96 5/23/96 5/23/92 5/28/90 5/26/90 5/25/79
14 13 13 12 11 11 11 11 11 9 9 9 9 9
vs. Fresno State NCAA Regional vs. TCU College World Series vs. TCU College World Series at Cal State Fullerton NCAA Super Reg. vs. New Mexico NCAA Regional vs. San Francisco NCAA Regional vs. Florida College World Series vs. LSU NCAA Regional at Texas NCAA Regional vs. Cal State Fullerton NCAA Super Reg. vs. Delaware NCAA Regional at Oklahoma State NCAA Regional vs. S.W. Missouri State NCAA Regional vs. Oklahoma NCAA Regional
6/4/11 6/26/10 6/21/10 6/10/07 6/2/12 6/3/11 6/19/10 6/5/10 5/23/96 6/13/10 5/26/00 5/25/97 5/25/96 5/21/92
8 6 6 6 6 5 5 5 5 5
vs. Hawaii NCAA Regional vs. Miami College World Series vs. S.W. Missouri State NCAA Regional vs. Hawaii NCAA Regional vs. S.W. Missouri State NCAA Regional at Wichita State NCAA Regional vs. Oklahoma State NCAA Regional vs. Miami College World Series at Wichita State NCAA Regional vs. South Alabama NCAA Regional
5/22/87 5/31/97 5/25/96 5/22/86 5/25/96 5/29/99 5/28/99 5/31/97 5/27/90 5/25/90
STOLEN BASES 1. Robbie Katzaroff 2. 8 times
PITCHING INNINGS PITCHED 1. Pete Janicki 2. Rick Pope 3. Adam Plutko Trevor Bauer Rob Rasmussen Tim Murphy Gavin Brooks Keith Shibata Hector Ambriz Jon Brandt Kevin Sheredy Jim Parque Tim Kubinski Tim Lindsay Pete Janicki Tim Leary
12.0 10.0 9.0 9.0 9.0 9.0 9.0 9.0 9.0 9.0 9.0 9.0 9.0 9.0 9.0 9.0
STRIKEOUTS Pete Janicki, RHP (1990-1992)
1. Trevor Bauer 2. Trevor Bauer Gerrit Cole 4. Gavin Brooks 5. Nick Vander Tuig Gerrit Cole Trevor Bauer Trevor Bauer Jim Parque 10. Rob Rasmussen Rob Henkel Jim Parque Kevin Sheredy Pete Janicki
WALKS 1. Alex Sanchez 2. Jim Parque Kevin Sheredy Alex Sanchez Kevin Sheredy 6. Jon Brandt Josh Karp Jake Meyer Dave Zancanaro Tim Lindsay
Tim Murphy, LHP (2006-2008)
*records do not include three of UCLA’s 81 postseason games (5/27/93 vs. Lamar, 5/28/93 vs. Hawaii, 5/26/79 vs. Fresno State)
113
CAREER POSTSEASON RECORDS HITTING GAMES PLAYED 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.
DOUBLES
Cody Regis (2010-13) Beau Amaral (2010-12) Jeff Gelalich (2010-12) Pat Valaika (2011-13) Blair Dunlap (2006, 08, 10) Kevin Kramer (2012, 13) Trevor Brown (2010-12) 4 players
34 24 23 22 19 18 17 16
1. Beau Amaral (2010-12) 2. Justin Uribe (2007, 10) 3. Jeff Gelalich (2010-12) Cody Regis (2010-13) Bill Scott (1999, 00) 2 players
8 6 5 5 5 5
TRIPLES 1. 17 players
HITS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Beau Amaral (2010-12) Cody Regis (2010-13) Jeff Gelalich (2010-12) Nick Theodorou (1996, 97) Blair Dunlap (2006, 08, 10)
33 32 24 23 21
AT-BATS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
Cody Regis (2010-13) Beau Amaral (2010-12) Jeff Gelalich (2010-12) Pat Valaika (2011-13) Blair Dunlap (2006, 08, 10) Kevin Kramer (2012, 13)
120 99 82 78 71 61
BATTING AVERAGE 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
(min. 20 at-bats)
Hits
At-bats
Games
AVG.
23 12 16 17 9 10 19 15 15 10
44 25 36 39 22 25 48 38 40 27
12 7 10 8 8 7 12 8 8 6
.523 .480 .444 .436 .409 .400 .396 .395 .375 .370
1. Cody Regis (2010-13) 2. Eric Valent (1996, 97) 3. Jeff Gelalich (2010-12) Pat Valaika (2011-13) 4. Jon Heinrichs (1996, 97)
22 20 17 17 16
Nick Theodorou (1996, 97) Scott Cline (1986, 87) Eric Filia (2013) Bill Scott (1999, 00) Brett Nista (1996, 97) Steve Hisey (1986, 87) Jermaine Curtis (2006-08) Garrett Atkins (1999, 00) Chase Utley (1999, 00) Mike Mitchell (1992, 93)
HOME RUNS
WALKS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Cody Regis (2010-13) Troy Glaus (1996, 97) Cody Keefer (2010-12) Torey Lovullo (1986, 87) Pat Valaika (2011-13)
20 13 11 10 8
STOLEN BASES 1. Jeff Gelalich (2010-12) Niko Gallego (2010) 3. Robbie Katzaroff (1987, 90) 4. Beau Amaral (2010-12) David Tokheim (1990)
6 6 5 4 4
STRIKEOUTS
RUNS SCORED 1. Beau Amaral (2010-12) Cody Regis (2010-13) 3. Jeff Gelalich (2010-12) 4. Troy Glaus (1996, 97) 5. Jon Heinrichs (1996, 97) Eric Valent (1996, 97)
Nick Theodorou, INF (1995-1998)
1
1. 2. 3. 4.
20 20 15 14 13 13
Cody Regis (2010-13) Jeff Gelalich (2010-12) Beau Amaral (2010-12) Blair Dunlap (2006, 08, 10) Pat Valaika (2011-13)
31 24 22 17 17
RUNS BATTED IN
1. Jeff Gelalich (2010-12) Cody Regis (2010-13) Chase Utley (1999, 00) Eric Valent (1996, 97) Steve Hisey (1986, 87)
5 5 5 5 5
Cody Regis, INF (2010-2013)
PITCHING EARNED RUN AVERAGE 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
(min. 12.0 innings)
Adam Plutko (2011-13) David Berg (2012, 13) Rick Pope (1969) Grant Watson (2012, 13) Gavin Brooks (2007, 08) Nick Vander Tuig (2011-13) Jim Parque (1996, 97) Tim Murphy (2007, 08) Rob Rasmussen (2008, 10) Dan Klein (2008, 10)
INNINGS PITCHED 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
ER
IP
App.
ERA
6 3 2 2 4 12 7 5 9 4
57.2 27.2 17.1 16.1 18.2 50.2 28.1 17.0 28.1 12.1
8 17 2 4 3 10 5 3 5 7
0.94 0.98 1.04 1.10 1.13 2.13 2.22 2.65 2.86 2.92
STRIKEOUTS
Adam Plutko (2011-13) Nick Vander Tuig (2011-13) Trevor Bauer (2010) Gerrit Cole (2010) 2 players
57.2 50.2 39.0 35.0 28.1
1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Trevor Bauer (2010, 11) Nick Vander Tuig (2011-13) Gerrit Cole (2010, 11) Adam Plutko (2011-13) Jim Parque (1996, 97)
Adam Plutko, RHP (2011-2013) APPEARANCES 1. David Berg (2012, 13) 2. Nick Vander Tuig (2011-13) 3. Adam Plutko (2011-13) Zack Weiss (2011-13)
SAVES 17 10 8 8
GAMES STARTED 1. Adam Plutko (2011-13) 2. Nick Vander Tuig (2011-13) 3. Trevor Bauer (2010, 11) Gerrit Cole (2010, 11) Rob Rasmussen (2008, 10) 6. Jim Parque (1996, 97)
8 7 5 5 5 4
1. David Berg (2012, 13) 2. Gabe Sollecito (1992, 93)
6 2
WINS 1. 2. 3. 4.
Adam Plutko (2011-13) Nick Vander Tuig (2011-13) Trevor Bauer (2010) Gerrit Cole (2010) Rob Rasmussen (2008, 10) Josh Karp (1999, 00) Jim Parque (1996, 97) Pete Janicki (1992, 93)
7 6 4 2 2 2 2 2
114
Jim Parque, LHP (1995-97)
55 45 40 37 33
JERSEY NUMBER HISTORY (since 1977)
1 Andrew Schmidt Jeff Turley Chris Keck Adrian Williams Jermaine Curtis Jarrad Page Chad Concolino Ben Francisco Billy Pieper Peter Zamora Glenn Mickens (AC)
2014 2013 2012 2009-2011 2006-2008 2003, 2005 2004 2001-2002 1998-1999 1995-1997 1977-1989
2 T.J. Bruce (AC) Niko Gallego Brian Green (AC) Tommy Lansdon Ryan McCarthy Chad Concolino Gary Adcock (AC) Robert Hinds (AC) Tom Jacquez Zak Amirato Robert Hinds (AC) Tom Jacquez Chris Pritchett Hiro Watada (AC) Hector Cano Chris Vatcher (AC) Mark Blesius Steve Moscaret Steve Sakowski Don Slaught Artie Harris
2011-2014 2009-2010 2006-2008 2005 2004 2002-2003 2001 1999-2000 1997 1993-1996 1992 1997 1990-1991 1989 1985 1984 1983 1981 1979-1980 1977 1957-1959
3 Christoph Bono Kevin Kramer Steve Rodriguez Brandon Crawford Sean Smith Matt Thayer Eric Reece Eric Valent Travis Boyd Torey Lovullo Gary Crabtree Mike Gallego
2013-2014 2012 2009-2011 2007-2008 2005-2006 2002-2004 1999-2001 1996-1998 1991-1995 1984-1987 1982 1979-1981
4 Eric Filia Aaron Weimer Chris Amezquita Brent Dean Will Penniall Khelyn Smith (UAC) Khelyn Smith Brennan Burns Dave Schmidt Adam Melhuse David Roberts Robbie Katzaroff David Alarid Rich Amaral Chris Smith Mark Miller Gary Rasmussen
2012-2014 2010-2011 2009 2008 2003-2007 2002 2001 1997 1994-1996 1992-1993 1991 1987, 1989-1990 1984-1985 1982 1980-1981 1979 1977
5 Kevin Williams Tyler Rahmatulla Brady Dolan Mike Metzger Preston Griffin Ryan Hamill Jason Green Scott Seal Ryan McGuire Mike Hankins Brent Brakebill Julian DeLaTorre Bob Lockwood Tim Ammentorp
2012-2014 2009-2011 2007-2008 2005-2006 2001-2004 2000 1996-1999 1994-1995 1991-1993 1988-1990 1983-1985 1981-1982 1980 1977-1979
6 Jacob Shirley P.C. Shaw (AC) Cody Decker Sean Carpenter Josh Arhart Jon Brandt Eric Byrnes Jeff Marquez Gary Hagy
2011 2010 2007-2000 2003-2006 2002 1999-2001 1995-1998 1994 1991
John Giantz Mike Fyhrie Gary Gorski Ken Gaylor (AC) Tim Bjelland Jim Auten
1990 1988-1989 1985 1980-1984 1978-1979 1977
Kevin Webb Scott Cline Steve Stowell Vince Beringhele Dave Will Raymond Townsend
2013-2014 2010-2012 2007-2009 2006 2003-2005 2001-2002 2000 1995-1999 1994 1991-1993 1988-1990 1986-1987 1985 1983-1984 1980-1982 1978-1979 1977
Grant Watson Gerrit Cole Ryan Babineau Kris Kasarjian Mike Svetlic Ryan McCarthy Paul Diaz Gabe Crecion Kamau Edwards Vince Beringhele (AC) Joel Wolfe Scott St. John Gary Berman Rich Amaral Tim Gudim Roger Lang Kelly Combs
2013-2014 2011-2012 2007-2010 2006 2002-2005 1999-2001 1997-1998 1995-1996 1992-1994 1989-1990 1987 1986 1985 1984 1982 1980-1981 1979 1977-1978 1972-1973
Gary Adams (HC)
7 Kevin Kramer Cody Keefer Gavin Brooks Cody Decker Chris Denove Adam Berry Chase Utley Jack Santora Malcolm Breaux David Ravitz Dave Zancanaro David Dale Sean Berry Matt Morrison Jeff McDonald Vern Followell Steve Sakowski
12
8 Trent Chatterton Tyler Heineman Matt Drummond Brandon Crawford Kevin Conlin Matt Pearl Al Thielemann Tom Jacquez Tony Carasco David Ravitz Mike Hankins Gary Berman John Barry Vince Lopez Brent Brakebill Greg Norman Mark Miller Mobil Cox Dan Guerrero
2014 2011-2013 2007-2010 2004-2006 2002-2003 1999-2001 1998 1994-1997 1991-1993 1986-1990 1982-1984 1979-1981 1977-1978
10 Scott Burke Pat Valaika Steve Pearse (AC) Corey Ashner Parker Hanks Brandon Averill Doug Silva Josh Arhart Rob Henkel Mike Seal David Roberts Chris Lohman Tony Darden Dave Tokheim Mike Ephraim Vince Lopez Michael Alexander Mike Young Rick Krikorian Don Slaught Phil Varner Ernie Rodriguez
2014 2011-2013 2009-2010 2007 2005 2004 2002-2003 2001 1997-2000 1995 1992-1994 1991 1989-1990 1988 1986-1987 1985 1984 1983 1981-1982 1979-1980 1977 1957-59
11 James Kaprielian Trevor Brown Trevor Bauer Alden Carrithers David Huff Brian Green (AC) Vince Beringhele (AC) Mike Mitchell
2012-2014 2009-2011 2006-2008 2005 2004 2002-2003 1999-2001 1997-1998 1996 1992-1994 1989-1991 1986-1987 1985 1983 1981-1982 1979-1980 1977
13
9 Shane Zeile Adam Plutko Blair Dunlap Brian Schroeder Gary Adcock (AC) Randall Shelley Jon Brandt Chad Matoian John Myrow Brian Schwartz Chuck Yaeger Ken Trammell Matt Odeski
1990-1991 1988-1989 1984-1987 1981-1983 1979-1980 1977-1978
2013-2014 2010-2012 2009 2007-2008 2006 2005 1995-2004 1992-1994
1977-2004
14 Shane Zeile Dean Espy Casey Haerther Eric Taylor, Jr. Wes Whisler Doug Silva Brian Baron Royce Valent (UAC) Royce Valent Kamau Edwards Dave Stoll Chris Lohman Bob Allen Tony Scruggs Dana Ridenour Matt Morrison Robin Coates Ron Cummings Gary Ervin Louis Rodriguez
2012-2013 2010-2011 2007-2009 2005-2006 2002-2004 2001 1999-2000 1998 1996-1997 1994-1995 1991 1990 1988-1989 1987 1984-1986 1982 1981 1980 1978-1979 1977
15 Kevin Williams Justin Uribe Paul Oseguera Sean Smith Chris Cordeiro Nick Lyon Matt Walker Tim DeCinces Michael Moore John Dishon Tony Scruggs Pete Beall Todd Gauntlett Jim Auten Mike Ortega
2011 2007-2010 2005-2006 2004 2003 1998-2002 1997 1993-1996 1990-1992 1988 1986 1981-1984 1980 1978-1979 1977
16 Nick Kern Richard Brehaut Ian Williams Alex Weber-Shapiro Brett Krill Brent Dean Corey Ashner Daniel Reid Sean Smith Daniel Reid Jason Green (AC) Shane Miranda Dan Keller Rob Schult John Ellis Chris Lillich (UAC) Jeff Osborn Jim Ramsey Tom Baine Steve Bono Phil Mack Tim Leary
2013-2014 2011-2012 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2000-2001 1998-1999 1995-1997 1993-1994 1989-1990 1985-1988 1984 1983 1982 1981 1977-1979
17 Rex Peters (AC) Dennis Holt P.C. Shaw (AC)
115
2012-2014 2010-2011 2007-2009
Josh Roenicke Daniel Reid Mike Kunes Derek Fowler Nick Dieter Brian Stephenson Matt Schwenke Tip Lefebvre (AC) Scott Cline Chip Graham David Alarid David Montanari Dan Gausepohl Ron Roenicke
2005-2006 2004 2000-2003 1997-1998 1996 1994 1991-1993 1987-1990 1986 1984 1982-1983 1981 1978-1979 1977
18 Kort Peterson Cody Regis Gino Aielli Mickey Weisser Anthony Norman Jeff Abney Scott Arrasmith Rich Hofman Casey Cloud Allen Jerkens Mike Jaramillo Tim Kubinski Mannie Adams Randy Hennis Steve Hisey Scott Nolind Dave Schmidt
2014 2010-2013 2009 2007-2008 2004-2006 2002-2003 2000 1999 1998 1995-1996 1994 1991-1993 1988-1990 1985-1987 1984 1980 1977
19 Jake Silverman (AC) Eddie Murray Matt Sharp Mike Davern Chad Cislak Mike Hymes Derek Fowler Anthony Kuehnert Paul Ellis Eric Nolte Jeff Hirsch Dan Bridges (AC) Pat Clements Loren Drake Matt Young John Violette
2011-2014 2006-2009 2003-2005 2001-2002 1998-2000 1997 1996 1991-1994 1988-1990 1985 1984 1982 1981 1980 1979 1977-1978
20 Dominic Miroglio Jeff Gelalich Raul Duran Brett McMillan Jason Green (AC) Charles Merricks Matt Klein Derek Tamburro Robert Hinds David Keating Guy Hansen (AC) Neal Newns John Nero Tony Perri Neal Marder Mike Gerakos (AC) Alan (Lani) Exton
2014 2010-2012 2007-2009 2003-2006 2001 1999-2000 1996-1998 1993-1994 1990-1991 1988-1989 1986 1985 1984 1982 1981 1977-1980 1957-1958
21 Luke Persico Nick Vander Tuig Chris Giovinazzo Tim Schlatter Nolan Rouse Kyle Wilson Josh Karp Brian Kriss Glenn Thompkins John Lukin Jeff Huberts Gary Adcock (UAC) Gary Adcock Mike Fyhrie Charlie Fiacco Guy Hansen (AC) Shane Mack Andy Center Jim Thomas Floyd Chiffer
2014 2012-2013 2010-2011 2008-2009 2005-2007 2002-2004 1999-2001 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1992-1993 1990-1991 1986-1989 1985 1982-1984 1981 1979-1980 1977-1978
JERSEY NUMBER HISTORY (since 1977)
22 John Savage (HC) Casey Janssen Rich Hofman Brian Strelitz Brett Nista Brian Criss David Tokheim Robbie Katzaroff Bobby Holley Daniel Sullivan Pat Clements Paul Conley Reggie West Ron Cummings Brian Viselli
27 2005-2014 2001-2004 2000 1999 1995-1998 1992 1989-1991 1988 1986-1987 1984 1982-1983 1981 1980 1979 1977
23 Brett Stephens Brenton Allen Dan Klein Tyson Brummett Pat Shine (AC) Adam Simon Casey Grzecka Aldo Pinto Kevin Sheredy Brett Schafer Dave Stoll Don Tamburro (AC) Tim Byrne Alex Sanchez Lindsay Meggs Jim Thomas
2014 2011-2013 2008-2010 2007 2006 2003-2005 2001-2002 1997-2000 1996 1993-1995 1992 1989-1990 1988 1985-1987 1981-1984 1977-1978
24 Brian Carroll Brett Krill Tim Murphy Pat Shine (AC) John Violette Christian Lewis Michael Hymes Brian Criss (AC) Jason Green Jeffrey Hale Derek Vaughn Tim Lindsay John Joslyn Ken Bloom Brian Graham John Peel Robbie Henderson
2011-2014 2009-2010 2006-2008 2005 2004 2000-2003 1998-1999 1996-1997 1995 1991-1992 1989-1990 1987 1985-1986 1983-1984 1979-1982 1978 1977
25 Chris Keck Beau Amaral Charles Brewer Garett White Daniel Reid Ryan Cheo Ryan Carter Troy Glaus Dave Dieter David Schultz Shawn Wills Joe James Craig Good Jeff Hirsch Chris Krug (AC) Craig Johnson
2013-2014 2010-2012 2007-2009 2003-2006 2002 2001 1998-2000 1995-1997 1993-1994 1991 1990 1988 1986 1985 1977, 1980-1984 1978
26 David Berg Jordan Haver Blair Dunlap Jonathan Medici Josh Roenicke Freddie Mitchell Kurt Birkins Nick Theodorou Chris Lohman Derek Tamburro Mike Kerber Eric Karros Scott Kershaw Andy Naworski Jeff Scott Joe Smalls Dave Schmidt Dave Rucker Arthur Reichle (HC)
2012-2014 2007-2011 2006 2004-2005 2003 2000 1999 1995-1998 1993-1994 1990-1991 1989 1986-1988 1985 1984 1983 1982 1978-1979 1977 1941, 1946-74
Pat Gallagher Rob Rasmussen Tim Stewart Jarrad Page Warren Trott Chase Utley Michael Caravelli Brett Schafer Zac Reeder Scott Cline Rich Smith Bruce Elkins Mark Wiede Andy Center Eric Broersma Ray Tromba
2011-2014 2008-2010 2006-2007 2004 2000-2003 1998-1999 1993-1994, 1997 1992 1989-1991 1987 1985-1986 1984 1981-1982 1979-1980 1978 1977
28 Justin Hazard Rick Vanderhook (AC) Marc Navarro Brant Rustich Kevin Jerkens Matt Pearl Jim Parque Ryan Berry Kurt Schwengel Chris Pritchett Bob Allen Jim Ramsey David Bond Doug Cole Tim Page John Peel
2012-2014 2009-2011 2008 2004-2007 2000-2003 1998 1995-1997 1994 1990-1993 1989 1987 1986 1984-1985 1981-1982 1979-1980 1977 2013-2014 2009 2007-2008 2002-2006 2001 2000 1998 1996-1997 1995 1994 1989-1992 1985-197 1984 1982 1981 1978-1980 1977
30 Jake Ehret Marc Navarro Hector Ambriz Mike Castillo Tyler Dersom Justin Alumbaugh Charles Merricks Mike Jaramillo Gar Vallone Scott Schanz Andy Naworski Chris Schultz Bob Larimer Barry Silver Dave Baker
2012-2014 2009-2011 2004-2006 2002-2003 2000 1999 1998 1996-1997 1992-1995 1998-1990 1985 1983-1984 1981-1982 1980 1977, 1979
31 Darrell Miller Jr. Michael Kerman Nick Vander Tuig Matt Grace Matt Jones (AC) Kyle Mowery Josh Canales Sam Madrid Robin Dreizler (AC) John Sutherland Dennis Delany (AC) Neal Newns Tom Harmon Kip Long Dennis Delany
2013-2014 2012 2011 2009-2010 2005-2008 2002-2004 2000-2001 1997 1991-1995 1987-1990 1985 1984 1983 1979-1980 1977-1978
32 Grant Dyer Zack Weiss Chase Brewer Matt Grace Andy Suiter Sam Ray Hector Ambriz
2001-2002 1998-2000 1995-1997 1993 1989-1991 1985-1987 1983-1984 1981-1982 1979-1980 1977-1978
33 Hunter Virant Eric Jaffe Erik Goeddel Sam Ray Scott Botterman Rashad Parker Justin Wade Ryan Roques Dan Keller Bobby Kazmirski John Dolak Dick Foreman (AC) Larry Silver
2013-2014 2011-2012 2008-2010 2007 2003-2006 2001-2002 2000 1998-1999 1996-1997 1993-1995 1987-1990 1979, 1981 1977
34 Cody Poteet Chase Brewer Brendan Lafferty David Johnson Wade Clark Tony Righetti Ryan Lynch Kris Schwengel Chris Spears Tim Gudim Doug LaValley
2013-2014 2010-2012 2005-2009 2003-2004 1999-2002 1997-1998 1994-1996 1990-1993 1988 1980 1977
35
29 Ty Moore Brent Dean (UAC) Jeff Rapoport Chris Jensen Matt Thayer Ryan McCann Freddie Mitchell Sam Brownell Josh Morton Scott Berger Adam Schulhofer Steve Hisey Eric Nolte Altie Schmitt Chuck Yaeger Dave Montanari Tim Bjelland
Ryan Rasmussen Garrett Atkins Jon Heinrichs Jon Van Zandt Tim Lindsay Keith Shibata Bob Larimer Colin Ward Pat Dodson Tim O’Neill
2014 2011-2013 2009 2008 2007 2004-2006 2003
Chase Radan Zack Ortiz Mitchell Beacom Jason Zinser David Johnson Brian Baron Adam Berry Rick Heineman Mike Lewis Bill Haselman Jeff Pries Herb Fauland David Will
2013-2014 2012 2008-2011 2005-2007 2002 2001 1998-2000 1992-1996 1988-1991 1985-1987 1982-1984 1979-1980 1977-1978
36 Matt Giovinazzo Dustin Quist Nick Palchikoff Brandon Averill Forrest Johnson Ryan O’Toole Pete Janicki Kevin Webb Eric Bates Jeff Conine Mike Young Eric Broersma Craig Johnson
2010-2012 2006-2009 2005 2001-2003 1998-2000 1994-1997 1990-1992 1989 1988 1985-1987 1982 1980-1981 1977
37 Andy Suiter Aaron Markel Matt Sharp John Phillips Jeff Howatt Shawn Wills Tom Szymanski Todd Zeile Mike Burkland Gary Fradella Scott Bollens
2006 2003-2005 2001-2002 1994-1998 1993 1991-1992 1989-1990 1984-1986 1982-1983 1980 1977-1979
40 Moises Ceja Ryan Deeter Jason Novak Tyler Dersom Brandon Rogers Bill Craig Vince Beringhele (AC) Mike Magnante Scott Marsh Colin Morisako
41
116
2014 2010-2013 2006-2009 1998-1999 1997 1992-1994 1990-1991 1987-1988 1984-1985 1982
Keenan Pierandozzi-Howes 2013-2014 Jason D’Andrea 2012 Brandon Lodge 2008, 2010-2011 Kevin Brophy 2004-2007 Warren Trott 1999 Darren Chandler 1996 Seth Bean 1994 Michael Caravelli 1992
42 Ryan Reightley John Mitchell
1996-1997 1994
43 Niko Gallego Robert Dickmann Jim Hemming Billy Pieper Dan Kramer
2008 2006 1999-2001 1997 1993-1994
44 Brett Urabe Madison Poole Matt Mosher Gabe Cohen Daniel Miltenberger Bill Scott Benny Craig Jamie Nelson (AC) Don Tamburro (AC)
2013-2014 2012 2010-2011 2007-2009 2004-2006 1998-2000 1994-1996 1993 1991-1992
45 Max Schuh Christoph Bono Brady Dolan Billy Susdorf Edward Jung Ryan Roques Jon Cannon Sal Moreno Brian Criss
2013-2014 2012 2006 2002-2004 2000 1997 1994 1992-1993 1991
46 Jeff Howatt Gabe Sollecito John Winnek
1994-1995 1992-1993 1991
47 Aaron Weimer Trevor Bauer Leandro Dottavio Cody Joyce Scott Fitterer Jim Bonds
2012-2014 2010-2011 2005 1998-1999 1994 1991-1992
48 Tucker Forbes Scott Griggs Matt Mosher Paul Diaz Doug Jarvis
2013-2014 2010-2012 2009 1998 1994
49 Chris Giovinazzo Brent Concolino Cassidy Olson
2012-2014 2007-2010 2005 2002 1998 1997 1994 1991 1990 1988 1987 1984 1981-1983 1980
Gino Aielli Paul Schmidt Bryan Beck Bobby Roe Nick Theodorou
2008-09 2006 1994-1998
2006 1999 1994-1997 1990-1991
Jake Meyer
2008 2006-2007 2002-2005 1998-2001 1994
51 Chris Cordeiro Ryan Reightley Jeff Lassiter Pat Bennett
2001-2002 1998 1997 1994
52 Eric Reece Jeff Huberts
39 Tyson Brummett Christian Lewis Nick St. George Ian Calip
1989 1984-1987 1982
50
38 Tyler Scott Garett Claypool Tim Baker Chris Denove Khelyn Smith Casey Cloud David Bourne Mike Eby Michael Vdovkin Bobby Holley Bob Hamelin Mitch Miller (AC) Bob Westland Matt Young
Dave Gorrie (AC) Bill Wenrick Tom Grinstead
1998 1994
53 1994, 1996-1997
54 Tim Leary (AC) John Violette
1997-2002, 2004 2003
ALL-TIME BATTING STATS (since 1975) Name Abney, Jeff Adams, Mannie Aielli, Gino Alarid, David Alexander, Michael Allen, Bob Allen, Brenton Amaral, Beau Amaral, Rich Ambriz, Hector Amezquita, Chris Ammentorp, Tim Ammirato, Zak Arhart, Josh Ashner, Corey Atkins, Garrett Auten, Jim Averill, Brandon Babineau, Ryan Baine, Tom Baker, Dave Baron, Brian Barry, John Battey, Earl Beall, Pete Berger, Scott Beringhele, Vince Berry, Adam Berry, Sean Berman, Gary Bjelland, Tim Blesius, Mark Bollens, Scott Bono, Christoph Bono, Steve Boyd, Travis Brakebill, Brent Brandt, Jon Brown, Trevor Byrne, Tim Byrnes, Eric Campanella, John Canales, Josh Cano, Hector Carpenter, Mike Carpenter, Sean Carrasco, Tony Carrithers, Alden Carroll, Brian Chatterton, Trent Cline, Scott Cloud, Casey Coates, Robin Cohen, Gabe Combs, Kelly Concolino, Chad Conley, Paul Conlin, Kevin Connors, Steve Cowan, Ed Cox, Mobil Craig, Benny Crabtree, Gary Crawford, Brandon Criss, Brian Curtis, Jermaine Dallas, Bobby Dean, Brent DeCinces, Tim Decker, Cody Delaney, Dennis DeLaTorre, Julian Denove, Chris Dieter, Dave Dodson, Pat Dolak, John Dolan, Brady Dunlap, Blair Duran, Raul Edwards, Kamau Elkins, Bruce Ellis, Paul Ephraim, Mike Espy, Dean Ervin, Gary Fiacco, Charlie Filia, Eric Finkenberg, John Followell, Vern Fradella, Gary Francisco, Ben Gallagher, Pat Gallego, Mike Gallego, Niko Garrison, Venoy Gausepohl, Dan Gaylord, Ken Gelalich, Jeff Giovinazzo, Chris Giovinazzo, Matt Glantz, John Glaus, Troy
Years
AVG
GP
GS
AB
R
H
2003 1988-90 2008-09 1982-85 1984 1987-89 2011-13 2010-12 1982-83 2003-06 2009 1976-79 1993-96 2001-02 2007 1998-00 1976-79 2001-04 2006-08 1983 1975-78 1999-01 1985 1976 1981-84 1994 1981-83 1999-02 1985 1983-86 1977-79 1983 1977-79 2013 1982 1992-95 1982-85 1999 2010-12 1988 1995-98 2001 2000-01 1985 1978 2003-06 1993-94 2007-08 2011-13 2013 1986-89 1997-98 1981 2007-09 1977 2004 1981 2002-03, 2005 1974-75 1974 1976-78 1994-96 1982 2006-08 1991-92 2006-08 1975-76 2007-08 1994-96 2006-09 1975-78 1981-82 2003-05 1993-94 1978-80 1987-90 2006-08 2006, 2008-10 2008 1995-96 1984 1988-90 1987 2010-11 1978-79 1986-89 2012-13 1973-75 1978-79 1980 2001-02 2011-13 1979-81 2008-10 1973-75 1978-79 1975-76 2010-12 2008-11 2011-12 1990 1995-1997
.143 .301 .340 .267 .179 .179 .258 .322 .334 .311 .259 .257 .307 .333 .071 .369 .303 .307 .260 .304 .280 .276 .282 .275 .318 .500 .319 .278 .293 .313 .305 .000 .000 .216 .231 .186 .264 .000 .291 .286 .331 .317 .322 .297 .343 .249 .212 .364 .251 .257 .313 .232 .000 .283 .267 .256 .213 .226 .310 .326 .250 .174 .083 .319 .256 .321 .288 .276 .321 .288 .302 .226 .277 .252 .299 .251 .277 .295 .182 .067 .300 .324 .286 .331 .226 .304 .275 .250 .319 .298 .332 .246 .261 .274 .331 .310 .274 .316 .255 .240 .178 .344
21 147 49 133 7 58 68 186 117 146 28 101 175 91 6 180 178 189 161 12 214 112 44 39 209 7 163 155 48 158 52 9 1 55 11 67 168 75 136 10 242 38 105 60 47 98 47 120 104 41 175 89 1 139 21 26 44 62 61 19 145 52 19 179 74 147 96 35 174 191 165 33 151 58 110 109 103 201 25 14 25 144 8 122 87 184 86 33 117 52 93 81 158 141 120 112 95 159 180 19 28 179
11 --36 --0 --43 179 115 109 13 ----83 4 180 --154 155 5 --107 ----200 --156 128 ------1 --15 2 ----38 108 --240 18 96 ----65 --120 74 30 --65 0 129 --25 39 36 --------14 179 --141 --28 --163 --16 147 ------57 174 2 0 13 ----98 ----77 ------91 52 46 133 ------141 116 4 --178
42 472 144 300 39 67 132 712 437 367 58 101 560 330 14 748 607 583 534 23 738 436 142 109 773 2 576 515 150 524 118 6 1 74 13 140 473 0 412 7 984 82 366 222 178 237 66 456 279 105 572 237 0 488 30 78 150 146 200 43 452 86 48 722 78 533 371 87 654 619 553 62 530 151 334 259 213 706 22 15 50 450 7 405 226 672 295 48 405 141 388 207 597 460 372 390 303 506 486 25 45 697
4 81 24 60 9 16 23 145 112 54 8 14 101 64 0 180 116 96 83 8 127 66 24 23 140 1 120 107 37 85 26 1 0 10 0 26 107 1 59 3 235 12 72 42 32 45 11 104 59 18 111 46 1 87 6 13 19 19 25 2 60 9 17 145 8 110 75 12 129 118 117 9 77 17 76 37 46 130 3 2 8 84 0 70 30 184 48 6 56 14 90 20 114 81 75 99 45 108 84 1 6 211
6 142 49 80 7 12 34 229 146 144 15 26 172 110 1 276 184 179 139 7 207 164 40 30 246 1 184 143 44 164 36 0 0 16 3 26 125 0 120 2 326 26 118 66 61 59 14 166 70 27 179 55 0 138 8 20 32 33 62 14 113 15 4 230 20 171 107 24 210 178 167 14 147 38 100 65 59 208 4 1 15 146 2 134 51 204 81 12 129 42 129 51 156 126 123 121 83 160 124 6 8 240
2B 3B 1 21 10 10 4 1 5 38 22 26 5 3 36 25 0 56 33 31 23 2 36 28 5 2 43 0 31 27 7 32 5 0 0 2 0 7 27 0 17 0 75 3 12 16 7 13 1 32 5 4 42 13 0 23 2 3 8 4 14 2 11 2 0 44 4 38 14 1 54 28 23 2 21 3 14 12 8 48 0 1 3 19 0 22 13 43 15 1 19 11 31 8 32 24 17 23 14 27 24 0 1 39
117
0 5 0 2 0 0 1 8 1 0 1 0 4 1 0 4 2 4 3 0 6 1 1 2 4 0 6 2 1 5 0 0 0 0 1 0 3 0 2 0 6 0 1 5 5 1 1 3 2 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 1 3 0 0 13 0 6 3 0 0 0 2 0 2 0 1 0 2 5 0 0 0 1 0 3 1 4 1 0 3 0 2 0 9 4 3 4 3 6 8 0 0 2
HR
RBI
TB
SLG
BB HP
SO
OBP SF SH SB SBA
2 4 2 7 0 4 2 10 5 8 1 1 14 10 0 40 38 27 11 0 34 3 0 5 20 0 10 31 3 13 0 0 0 2 0 1 14 0 4 0 48 3 0 5 0 1 0 7 0 0 25 3 0 24 0 2 4 0 4 0 14 2 0 20 0 6 12 1 37 47 28 1 14 3 20 8 3 17 1 0 3 34 0 12 2 37 1 1 6 4 12 1 11 3 9 12 11 15 6 0 1 62
7 62 16 47 7 14 15 106 64 62 9 6 100 61 0 167 129 103 87 3 152 74 12 28 149 0 94 102 23 95 19 0 0 10 2 14 77 0 69 1 203 14 40 42 16 20 7 79 24 10 130 24 0 93 0 11 23 16 38 8 67 11 5 136 10 80 62 11 166 153 114 8 95 24 74 53 25 92 4 1 9 116 2 92 37 146 41 8 77 31 79 26 88 64 68 57 55 74 51 7 8 180
13 185 65 115 11 25 47 313 185 164 25 32 258 167 1 460 355 299 201 9 357 203 47 51 357 1 257 267 62 263 41 0 0 24 5 36 200 0 153 2 557 38 132 107 78 77 17 225 79 31 298 77 0 237 10 29 52 37 90 18 172 23 4 260 24 239 163 28 375 347 278 19 214 50 176 101 80 317 7 2 27 269 2 198 72 366 101 16 172 65 200 62 239 167 173 188 136 244 184 6 12 469
.310 .392 .451 .383 .282 .526 .356 .440 .423 .447 .431 .317 .461 .506 .071 .615 .552 .513 .376 .391 .484 .466 .331 .468 .462 .500 .446 .518 .413 .502 .347 .000 .000 .324 .385 .257 .423 .000 .371 .286 .566 .463 .361 .482 .438 .325 .258 .493 .283 .295 .521 .325 .000 .486 .333 .372 .347 .253 .450 .419 .381 .267 .083 .499 .308 .448 .439 .322 .573 .561 .503 .306 .404 .331 .527 .390 .376 .449 .318 .133 .540 .598 .286 .489 .319 .545 .342 .333 .425 .461 .515 .300 .400 .363 .465 .482 .449 .482 .379 .240 .267 .673
1 67 18 61 6 2 21 66 103 47 7 13 85 31 0 84 76 48 55 3 98 31 10 19 106 1 138 57 19 51 16 2 0 9 2 14 76 0 27 1 120 14 37 29 19 28 11 72 36 12 104 42 0 53 4 16 14 21 16 2 32 5 23 80 20 81 75 6 96 83 74 7 35 8 87 34 18 47 1 0 6 52 1 31 34 129 39 4 27 16 30 23 73 45 51 60 36 74 46 3 4 123
15 53 29 63 9 11 52 141 63 68 22 18 122 45 4 78 70 180 106 1 125 45 22 15 137 1 58 152 28 61 17 2 1 27 2 32 72 0 76 3 154 24 63 41 11 49 18 58 51 16 100 51 0 143 7 19 34 36 30 10 57 39 14 163 16 71 39 22 87 172 45 15 93 23 83 61 71 152 7 7 12 44 0 68 41 152 30 10 31 25 41 57 82 81 45 61 17 126 119 7 16 144
.159 .393 .418 .395 .283 .273 .369 .410 .461 .405 .368 .348 .403 .402 .071 .433 .381 .372 .337 .385 .374 .420 .327 .391 .405 .667 .452 .359 .376 .373 .386 .250 .000 .337 .353 .275 .368 .000 .354 .375 .410 .423 .399 .388 .410 .331 .338 .464 .376 .358 .424 .350 .000 .364 .353 .398 .280 .352 .361 .356 .312 .226 .375 .393 .404 .431 .412 .359 .403 .382 .382 .319 .327 .291 .442 .340 .355 .349 .208 .063 .386 .414 .375 .383 .326 .435 .381 .307 .361 .379 .388 .338 .348 .373 .411 .400 .359 .428 .328 .300 .260 .448
0 8 2 3 0 1 3 46 5 14 3 1 14 11 0 6 5 15 11 0 13 8 0 3 10 0 6 11 2 3 2 0 1 5 1 4 6 0 16 0 18 1 10 5 2 2 2 22 20 5 14 2 0 11 0 3 1 8 --0 12 1 0 10 0 29 3 7 2 16 2 2 8 2 2 3 9 14 0 0 1 18 0 7 1 33 13 0 4 3 10 7 9 32 --3 4 26 8 0 1 14
1 5 1 1 1 0 1 7 6 4 0 0 13 6 0 7 8 4 9 0 1 8 1 2 5 0 6 4 2 6 4 0 0 1 1 2 8 0 6 0 9 0 1 2 1 2 1 10 0 1 10 2 0 3 0 1 3 1 --0 7 1 1 3 1 9 0 3 13 7 7 1 8 4 5 4 2 4 1 1 0 2 0 6 3 8 2 --7 1 8 3 5 7 --7 0 2 2 2 0 7
0 4 3 3 0 0 5 12 4 4 0 1 6 1 0 5 2 4 18 0 4 0 3 1 8 0 6 3 2 1 1 1 0 2 0 1 8 0 13 0 18 0 19 3 2 3 0 6 19 2 0 3 0 3 1 1 1 1 --0 11 0 0 12 0 18 4 4 3 2 2 0 6 1 2 3 6 18 0 0 0 0 0 8 3 6 11 --6 0 4 7 2 15 --3 2 9 12 0 0 2
0 12 5 13 2 1 1 30 45 0 2 0 17 2 0 5 5 3 12 0 7 2 1 14 11 1 46 8 13 3 1 1 0 2 0 1 11 0 8 0 81 0 18 3 36 10 4 26 34 2 10 0 0 17 0 2 0 3 4 2 9 0 3 29 2 15 25 2 20 5 18 1 3 0 6 2 6 28 1 0 0 3 0 15 1 55 12 0 3 1 35 0 20 34 32 33 6 33 24 1 0 24
0 18 7 22 2 1 3 50 61 1 3 0 30 5 0 7 5 8 17 0 11 3 2 19 17 1 64 11 17 7 1 1 0 4 0 2 13 0 13 0 126 0 23 4 36 12 7 33 44 2 17 1 0 27 0 4 1 3 4 2 9 0 5 41 2 18 38 3 31 9 20 2 6 2 6 4 8 39 1 0 0 4 0 21 1 66 19 --3 1 40 1 25 41 --33 6 40 30 1 0 51
ALL-TIME BATTING STATS (since 1975) Name
Years
AVG
GP
GS
AB
R
H
Gordon, Joe 1992 Gorski, Gary 1985 Graham, Brian 1979-82 Green, Jason 1996-99 Griffin, Preston 2001-04 Grzecka, Casey 2001-02 Gudim, Tim 1979-82 Haerther, Casey 2007-09 Hagy, Gary 1991 Hamelin, Bob 1987 Hamill, Ryan 2000 Hankins, Mike 1987-90 Hanks, Parker 2005 Haselman, Billy 1986-87 Hazard, Justin 2013 Heineman, Rick 1996 Heineman, Tyler 2010-12 Hemming, Jim 2000 Henderson, Robbie 1975-77 Henrichs, Jon 1994-1997 Hill, Dave 1975 Hinds, Robert 1990-92 Hisey, Steve 1984-87 Hofman, Rich 2000 Holley, Bobby 1986-88 Holt, Dennis 2010-11 Hufferd, John 1975 Hymes, Michael 1997-99 James, Joe 1988 Janssen, Casey 2001-04 Jarramillo, Mike 1996-97 Jensen, Chris 2002-03, 05-06 Jerkens, Allen 1996 Johnson, Craig 1977-78 Johnson, Forrest 1998-00 Joslyn, John 1985-86 Joyce, Cody 1999 Karros, Eric 1986-88 Kasarjian, Kris 2005 Katzaroff, Robbie 1987-90 Kazmirski, Bobby 1995 Keating, Dave 1988-89 Keck, Chris 2012-13 Keefer, Cody 2010-12 Keller, Dan 1998-99 Kerber, Mike 1989 Kiner, Mike 1973-75 Klein, Matt 1996-98 Kramer, Kevin 2012-13 Krikorian, Rick 1981-82 Krill, Brett 2008-10 Kubinski, Tim 1991-93 Kuenhert, Anthony 1992-94 Lafferty, Brendan 2005-08 Lansdon, Tommy 2005 Larimer, Bob 1981-84 LaValley, Doug 1977 Lewis, Christian 2000-03 Lewis, Mike 1989-91 Lockwood, Bob 1980 Lohman, Chris 1991-93 Lopez, Andy 1974-75 Lopez, Vince 1983, 1985 Lovullo, Torey 1984-87 Lynch, Ryan 1995 Lyon, Nick 1998-2000, 2002 Mack, Shane 1982-84 Marder, Neal 1981 Markel, Aaron 2003-05 Marquez, Jeff 1994 Matoian, Chad 1994-1997 McCarthy, Ryan 2002-04 McGuire, Ryan 1991-93 McMillan, Brett 2003-06 Medici, Jonathan 2004-05 Meggs, Lindsey 1981-84 Melhuse, Adam 1992-93 Merricks, Charles 1998-00 Metzger, Mike 2005-06 Miller Jr., Darrell 2013 Miller, Mark 1978-79 Miranda, Shane 2000-01 Mitchell, Freddie 2000 Mitchell, Mike 1992-94 Montanari, David 1978-81 Moore, Mike 1990-92 Moore, Ty 2013 Morris, Dave 1974-75 Morrison, Matt 1981-84 Moscaret, Steve 1981 Mosher, Matt 2010 Mowery, Kyle 2003 Murphy, Tim 2006-08 Murray, Eddie 2006-09 Myrow, John 1991-93 Navarro, Marc 2009-11 Naworski, Andy 1985 Nero, John 1984 Nista, Brett 1995-98 Nolind, Scott 1980 Norman, Anthony 2004-06 Norman, Greg 1978-81
.000 .284 .330 .323 .267 .346 .247 .305 .305 .362 .246 .278 .200 .324 .333 .000 .313 .273 .283 .315 .293 .276 .310 .167 .279 .600 .200 .276 .300 .225 .255 .319 .000 .323 .347 .358 .000 .365 .222 .306 .000 .259 .225 .319 .000 .500 .254 .000 .279 .248 .280 .246 .267 .000 .269 .278 .000 .227 .252 .100 .280 .267 .278 .311 1.000 .286 .361 .176 .208 .000 .280 .276 .339 .276 .200 .290 .303 .267 .204 .143 .233 .105 .235 .333 .318 .318 .219 .227 .302 .231 .000 .200 .251 .245 .328 .195 .000 .258 .275 .282 .232 .338
2 40 206 150 194 71 87 147 59 51 27 210 9 106 14 7 96 35 119 209 26 134 188 12 165 10 6 97 58 104 22 152 2 84 91 118 1 136 20 214 17 96 59 166 2 3 108 48 110 64 78 89 22 1 39 115 2 86 74 7 163 77 86 240 20 138 159 14 31 13 165 165 174 213 12 222 123 109 62 10 34 17 26 163 150 124 28 60 111 32 2 5 72 115 111 90 1 46 180 39 98 82
----113 107 172 52 64 134 ----14 --1 --6 --73 23 ----------0 --0 --29 --74 13 120 0 --68 --0 --5 ------32 164 0 ----5 101 38 57 ----0 33 62 --23 -------------12 88 153 3 11 ----160 --193 0 218 --100 23 6 --1 3 --54 --19 --63 6 0 0 57 71 --19 --35 143 ---46 ---
2 109 737 418 640 212 227 555 223 130 61 670 15 386 21 1 265 88 364 778 82 453 652 6 544 10 5 152 203 138 55 511 1 251 308 402 1 532 36 821 1 266 111 589 1 2 268 1 366 149 239 69 15 1 104 248 0 119 151 10 410 180 281 856 1 336 606 17 53 1 517 606 590 738 5 815 478 359 98 14 30 19 17 582 466 400 73 128 258 39 2 5 203 257 405 118 0 128 586 71 207 272
0 25 146 74 118 30 29 88 32 37 6 106 1 84 2 0 52 16 66 187 13 95 137 1 125 2 0 33 36 25 7 90 0 70 72 114 0 121 2 182 0 56 12 102 0 1 28 0 59 25 50 13 2 0 18 43 1 23 19 6 61 30 49 211 0 74 158 4 6 4 85 100 157 122 5 158 107 60 14 1 10 2 5 114 83 106 10 23 61 7 0 0 30 52 74 15 0 22 961 9 19 53
0 31 243 135 171 65 56 169 68 47 15 186 3 125 7 0 83 24 103 245 24 125 202 1 152 6 1 42 61 31 14 163 0 81 107 144 0 194 8 264 0 69 25 188 0 1 68 0 102 37 67 17 4 0 28 69 0 27 38 1 115 48 78 266 1 96 219 3 11 0 145 167 200 204 1 236 145 96 20 2 7 2 4 194 148 127 16 29 78 9 0 1 51 63 133 23 0 33 161 20 48 92
2B 3B 0 5 30 33 27 17 9 34 10 13 8 27 1 25 1 0 9 5 13 57 5 19 30 0 30 0 0 1 11 4 3 25 0 12 22 38 0 38 1 35 0 10 6 34 0 1 9 0 16 7 16 2 0 0 4 16 0 7 9 1 21 8 17 45 1 20 38 1 5 0 29 31 43 37 0 49 29 14 2 1 0 1 1 45 29 18 4 2 9 0 0 0 16 14 17 5 0 5 26 2 4 19
118
0 2 5 1 2 0 1 1 4 0 0 4 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 8 1 4 6 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 5 3 0 5 0 20 0 6 1 2 0 0 1 0 2 0 1 1 0 0 1 2 0 1 2 0 0 1 2 6 0 3 10 0 0 0 0 1 2 5 0 3 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 5 4 1 0 5 1 0 0 0 3 8 1 0 2 4 0 5 4
HR
RBI
TB
SLG
0 2 7 9 15 3 4 22 9 13 1 8 0 20 0 0 1 6 12 32 2 2 39 1 15 0 0 0 14 4 1 16 0 22 28 24 0 26 0 3 0 8 1 3 0 0 13 0 3 1 7 2 0 0 1 6 0 3 1 0 12 0 4 51 0 16 29 0 0 0 3 22 47 27 0 29 20 3 1 0 1 0 0 36 7 19 0 5 3 0 0 0 1 2 7 1 0 3 16 1 1 10
0 18 108 83 95 41 31 109 48 47 13 108 0 95 1 0 34 18 57 151 18 43 176 1 70 3 0 16 47 20 7 77 0 62 89 95 0 123 4 99 0 35 15 86 0 1 45 0 55 21 40 14 1 0 8 47 0 16 19 1 87 13 49 188 0 66 142 0 6 0 74 107 182 129 0 168 91 49 15 3 2 2 1 135 83 76 10 22 44 8 0 0 17 32 62 15 0 20 100 6 22 57
0 46 304 197 247 91 79 271 113 99 26 245 4 212 8 0 97 47 154 414 37 158 361 4 237 6 1 43 114 47 20 236 0 161 223 260 0 320 9 348 0 115 36 235 0 2 118 0 131 47 106 27 4 0 37 107 0 45 54 2 172 58 111 476 2 170 364 4 16 0 183 266 388 332 1 378 244 119 25 3 10 3 5 349 208 210 22 46 106 11 0 1 70 89 187 33 0 51 243 25 65 149
.000 .422 .412 .471 .386 .429 .348 .488 .507 .762 .426 .366 .267 .549 .381 .000 .366 .534 .423 .532 .451 .349 .554 .667 .436 .600 .200 .283 .562 .341 .364 .462 .000 .641 .724 .647 .000 .602 .250 .424 .000 .432 .324 .399 .000 1.000 .440 .000 .358 .315 .444 .391 .267 .000 .356 .431 .000 .378 .358 .200 .420 .322 .395 .556 2.000 .506 .601 .235 .302 .000 .354 .439 .658 .450 .200 .464 .510 .331 .255 .214 .333 .158 .294 .600 .446 .525 .301 .359 .411 .282 .000 .200 .345 .346 .462 .280 .000 .398 .415 .352 .314 .548
BB HBP
SO
0 14 71 60 62 18 20 40 17 33 7 89 0 37 3 0 29 24 50 104 6 62 100 1 108 0 1 16 34 21 3 46 0 34 25 86 0 68 2 92 0 22 17 94 0 0 24 0 37 30 17 6 7 0 11 34 0 6 19 2 71 37 49 180 0 43 81 3 1 0 40 59 135 81 0 125 81 44 8 2 4 3 2 84 44 57 7 18 39 12 0 0 19 38 10 18 1 19 23 4 18 32
2 .000 22 .368 55 .389 58 .411 122 .360 37 .371 45 .311 94 .359 43 .355 43 .491 19 .310 87 .364 6 .200 67 .390 4 .400 0 .000 22 .423 26 .429 45 .370 103 .396 8 .341 87 .377 141 .404 1 .286 103 .401 2 .600 3 .333 27 .355 50 .410 51 .341 7 .293 72 .385 0 .000 69 .408 53 .406 52 .470 0 .000 65 .442 3 .282 85 .396 0 .000 77 .328 17 .323 116 .423 0 .000 1 .500 47 .316 1 .000 66 .372 15 .373 49 .345 10 .307 5 .522 0 .000 29 .367 67 .360 0 .000 32 .276 37 .351 2 .250 102 .389 29 .392 53 .391 94 .429 0 1.000 101 .384 77 .438 3 .300 19 .236 1 .000 52 .340 114 .344 108 .462 158 .355 2 .200 84 .393 80 .401 71 .360 31 .284 5 .235 5 .314 7 .227 8 .350 86 .421 42 .374 127 .412 20 .301 33 .322 52 .390 9 .412 1 .000 2 .200 49 .342 52 .399 57 .350 27 .340 0 1.000 26 .358 96 .312 5 .320 37 .303 24 .415
0 1 7 7 38 5 2 8 3 4 0 10 0 9 0 0 23 0 3 8 0 13 9 0 8 0 --3 5 4 0 12 0 4 7 3 0 9 1 15 0 7 1 17 0 0 --0 20 2 7 0 1 0 5 0 0 2 4 0 4 --6 4 0 14 9 0 1 0 9 8 7 15 0 19 2 10 3 0 0 0 1 7 3 9 2 --0 0 0 0 9 29 7 9 0 1 11 0 4 6
OBP SF SH SB SBA 0 1 10 7 12 2 2 1 5 4 3 14 0 6 1 0 2 0 5 11 --3 8 0 9 0 --1 2 1 0 5 0 3 2 5 0 4 0 8 0 4 4 7 0 0 --0 4 4 1 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 3 --4 10 0 5 9 0 0 0 4 8 9 10 0 8 7 4 0 1 1 0 0 4 8 3 1 --3 0 0 0 0 2 7 2 0 0 5 0 2 3
0 0 15 3 9 2 5 3 1 0 0 13 0 1 1 0 20 0 2 6 --9 5 0 3 0 --3 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 8 0 2 1 16 0 0 --0 18 2 8 0 0 0 5 0 0 1 5 0 2 --4 18 0 5 1 0 2 0 9 7 1 8 0 5 0 9 2 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 --4 0 0 0 4 11 6 1 0 1 16 1 3 2
0 7 54 3 5 2 3 18 8 10 1 7 0 21 0 0 3 0 4 52 0 38 12 0 15 0 0 9 1 3 1 3 0 17 4 6 0 19 0 96 0 26 0 15 0 0 2 0 10 2 9 1 0 0 7 1 0 1 0 2 8 2 7 15 0 10 44 0 0 0 5 10 30 2 0 12 14 0 3 0 6 0 1 3 13 41 0 6 10 3 0 0 5 8 15 5 0 8 12 1 11 5
0 8 65 6 11 4 5 22 12 12 2 15 0 27 0 0 6 0 7 99 --55 17 0 21 0 --11 2 5 2 7 0 17 9 9 0 24 0 120 0 30 0 25 0 0 --0 20 3 9 3 0 0 9 2 0 2 1 2 11 2 12 23 0 12 55 0 0 1 10 11 37 7 0 19 23 4 7 0 6 0 2 5 21 49 1 --14 4 0 0 8 14 22 7 0 10 25 1 14 8
ALL-TIME BATTING STATS (since 1975) Name
Years
AVG
GP
GS
AB
R
H
Odeski, Matt 1976-78 Osborn, Jeff 1985-88 Oseguera, Paul 2006 Page, Jarrad 2004-05 Parker, Rashad 2001-02 Parma, Tom 1973-76 Pearl, Matt 1998-01 Penniall, Dave 1975-76 Penniall, Will 2004-07 Perri, Tony 1981-83 Peterson, Curt 1975 Phillips, John 1998 Pieper, Billy 1997 Pinto, Aldo 1997-00 Pritchett, Chris 1989-91 Quist, Dustin 2007-09 Rahmatulla, Tyler 2009-111 Rasmussen, Gary 1977 Rasmussen, Ryan 2001-02 Ravitz, David 1989-93 Ray, Sam 2004-07 Reece, Eric 1998-01 Regis, Cody 2010-13 Ridenour, Dana 1985 Roberts, David 1991-94 Rodriguez, Steve 2009-11 Roenicke, Josh 2003-06 Roenicke, Ron 1977 Rogers, Brandon 1997 Roques, Ryan 1997-98 Rouse, Nolan 2005-07 Rustich, Brant 2004-05 Sakowski, Steve 1977-80 Sanchez, Alex 1985-86 Santora, Jack 1995-99 Schafer, Brett 1993-95 Schleppenbach, Dave 1974-75 Schmitt, Altie 1982 Schulhofer, Adam 1990-92 Schult, Rob 1996-97 Schulz, Chris 1983-84 Schwartz, Brian 1987-90 Schwenke, Matt 1991-93 Scott, Bill 1998-00 Scott, Tyler 2013 Scruggs, Tony 1986-87 Seal, Mike 1995 Seal, Scott 1994-95 Sharp, Matt 2002-05 Shelley, Randall 1999-01 Silver, Larry 1976-77 Simon, Adam 2003 Slaught, Don 1978-80 Smith, Chris 1980-81 Smith, Khelyn 1999-00 Smith, Richard 1985 Smith, Sean 2004-06 Splitt, Steve 1976 St. John, Scott 1986-87 Stewart, Tim 2006-07 Stowell, Steve 1984-87 Sullivan, Daniel 1984 Susdorf, Billy 2002-04 Svetlic, Mike 2004 Szymanski, Tom 1989-90 Tamburro, Dave 1990-91, 1993 Taylor, Jr., Eric 2005-06 Thayer, Matt 2002-04 Theodorou, Nick 1995-98 Thomas, Jim 1978-80 Tokheim, Dave 1988-91 Townsend, Raymond 1976-78 Trammell, Ken 1979-81 Trott, Warren 2000-03 Urabe, Brett 2013 Uribe, Justin 2007-10 Utley, Chase 1998-00 Valaika, Pat 2011-13 Valent, Eric 1996-98 Valent, Royce 1996-97 Vallone, Gar 1992-95 Varner, Phil 1977 Vaughn, Derek 1989 Vdovkin, Mike 1990 Violette, John 1977-78 Viselli, Brian 1975-77 Waters, Jerry 1975-76 Webb, Kevin 1989, 1991 Weber-Shapiro, Alex 2009 Weimer, Aaron 2011-13 Weisser, Mickey 2007-08 West, Reggie 1980 Whisler, Wes 2002-04 Williams, Adrian 2009-11 Williams, Kevin 2011-13 Wills, Shawn 1990-92 Winnek, John 1991 Wolfe, Joel 1989-91 Young, Mike 1982-83 Zamora, Peter 1995-97 Zancanaro, Dave 1988-90 Zeile, Shane 2012-13 Zeile, Todd 1984-86
.275 .280 .000 .195 .268 .189 .310 .293 .276 .257 .285 .000 .091 .272 .341 .212 .290 .254 .281 .271 .182 .277 .268 .000 .325 .215 .262 .284 .333 .125 .138 .222 .196 .319 .281 .276 .125 .250 .330 .209 .294 .257 .226 .392 .111 .332 .268 .151 .225 .258 .262 .091 .342 .308 .000 .235 .283 .267 .229 .255 .287 .300 .318 .258 .268 .205 .264 .298 .339 .263 .310 .319 .297 .314 .083 .303 .342 .254 .323 .120 .284 .145 .231 .000 .216 .308 .289 .290 .228 .000 .250 .269 .304 .231 .258 .300 .000 .348 .298 .310 .267 .261 .331
82 200 1 90 41 76 161 101 137 68 45 4 9 131 150 32 114 53 72 191 17 138 232 1 190 147 123 52 5 48 58 31 48 26 194 108 8 4 67 36 60 61 172 151 6 90 49 39 66 139 95 33 110 104 7 20 77 7 32 82 169 60 127 60 38 33 73 172 174 97 195 75 74 87 25 163 179 180 188 28 187 22 16 17 59 98 82 55 26 2 81 51 177 52 125 152 1 166 93 170 126 91 137
----0 57 34 --118 --98 50 --3 1 63 --3 101 --68 --0 106 218 ----137 81 --0 0 30 2 ----170 ----0 --6 43 ----140 1 --38 --24 115 --9 --51 0 --72 ----67 --57 103 54 ----51 146 142 ------6 48 5 139 170 177 186 1 ----------------16 0 51 --174 11 108 ------80 163 --72 ---
255 679 0 221 127 95 522 396 406 191 144 1 11 276 560 33 390 177 267 535 11 437 742 1 744 424 313 197 6 24 87 9 51 72 694 351 8 4 103 43 163 101 478 576 9 289 164 73 111 418 271 33 392 325 0 34 254 15 35 235 436 220 415 198 71 44 182 544 511 251 677 270 158 191 12 499 748 638 722 25 617 55 13 17 167 302 228 183 57 2 184 182 629 65 349 437 1 601 325 651 221 261 468
55 120 0 37 24 30 107 94 55 29 21 0 0 44 130 5 77 18 57 94 0 77 111 0 177 58 37 36 1 15 10 0 14 15 140 76 1 1 21 7 25 18 58 155 1 68 22 9 15 80 52 4 67 75 1 6 45 2 8 36 100 32 73 35 11 5 24 117 140 44 115 43 47 38 4 80 182 90 199 1 111 2 3 1 20 54 46 26 9 0 22 25 109 10 49 73 0 129 57 108 44 34 102
70 190 0 43 34 18 162 116 112 49 41 0 1 75 191 7 113 45 75 145 2 121 199 0 242 91 82 56 2 3 12 2 10 23 195 97 1 1 34 9 48 26 108 226 1 96 44 11 25 108 71 3 134 100 0 8 72 4 8 60 125 66 132 51 19 9 48 162 173 66 210 86 47 60 1 151 256 162 233 3 175 8 3 0 36 93 66 53 13 0 46 49 191 15 90 131 0 209 97 202 59 68 155
2B 3B 12 47 0 6 5 3 28 19 20 8 13 0 0 16 27 2 24 3 9 33 0 21 39 0 35 15 14 8 1 0 4 0 4 3 22 14 0 1 4 4 9 5 19 47 0 20 12 3 4 25 11 0 24 11 0 1 24 2 1 16 33 20 31 8 1 2 7 27 40 12 35 14 2 13 0 29 41 35 38 1 37 3 2 0 3 17 9 11 5 0 6 5 25 1 11 13 0 36 10 44 6 12 26
119
1 3 0 1 1 0 2 3 3 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 2 0 0 3 4 0 10 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 1 2 5 1 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 3 0 3 3 0 1 1 4 0 4 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 2 1 0 0 1 0 3 6 3 4 7 1 2 2 0 2 4 7 4 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 3 2 0 1 4 0 13 4 1 1 1 2
HR
RBI
TB
SLG
BB HBP
SO
OBP SF SH SB SBA
4 23 0 4 4 0 11 8 5 5 4 0 0 4 31 0 7 3 1 7 0 15 16 0 8 10 1 9 0 1 0 0 0 2 10 4 0 0 3 1 1 4 8 53 0 8 1 1 1 11 10 0 11 0 0 1 6 1 1 9 12 5 15 0 0 1 4 10 9 9 15 0 1 3 1 8 53 7 69 0 11 0 0 0 4 9 3 7 1 0 2 0 34 0 3 5 0 18 5 28 5 2 26
26 109 0 28 17 13 89 50 43 41 18 0 1 38 129 4 59 23 24 61 1 85 137 0 82 64 45 40 1 3 7 0 6 16 75 39 0 0 27 5 20 15 68 173 2 46 23 8 4 53 47 3 80 20 0 6 42 5 10 42 81 42 75 23 7 9 26 82 93 41 99 29 19 21 4 76 174 107 219 3 113 3 1 0 28 58 34 32 3 0 27 21 129 2 39 52 0 119 54 152 35 30 94
96 312 0 63 53 21 227 165 153 74 66 0 1 105 313 9 160 59 91 199 2 193 294 0 321 138 101 95 3 6 16 2 16 36 257 125 1 2 51 18 60 43 151 438 1 146 65 17 34 168 120 3 199 113 0 12 116 9 12 105 198 103 208 59 22 14 73 231 246 113 304 102 56 86 4 208 464 232 486 4 251 11 5 0 51 137 88 85 21 0 60 60 322 16 112 167 0 325 130 332 82 88 263
.376 .460 .000 .285 .417 .221 .435 .417 .377 .387 .458 .000 .091 .380 .559 .273 .410 .333 .341 .372 .182 .442 .396 0 .431 .325 .323 .482 .500 .250 .184 .222 .314 .500 .370 .356 .125 .500 .495 .419 .368 .426 .316 .760 .111 .505 .396 .233 .306 .402 .443 .091 .508 .348 .000 .353 .457 .600 .343 .447 .454 .468 .501 .298 .310 .318 .401 .425 .481 .450 .449 .378 .354 .450 .333 .417 .620 .364 .673 .160 .407 .200 .385 .000 .305 .454 .386 .464 .368 .000 .326 .330 .512 .246 .321 .382 .000 .541 .400 .510 .371 .337 .562
38 74 0 22 11 10 78 51 31 33 16 0 1 40 61 5 58 16 22 56 0 41 129 0 128 48 23 35 0 1 11 0 7 5 103 56 0 0 7 3 18 17 61 75 2 31 10 8 18 55 36 2 38 95 0 2 26 0 6 28 80 26 36 27 6 2 18 83 128 53 76 16 29 22 6 69 65 61 108 3 107 1 2 0 17 40 18 17 15 0 31 19 73 5 37 27 0 73 30 73 39 28 46
43 85 1 94 33 17 93 51 67 43 23 0 3 33 90 15 74 23 29 64 0 88 184 1 87 65 61 27 3 11 24 5 22 9 119 56 4 1 33 19 13 29 154 109 3 56 14 29 24 120 45 8 25 29 0 9 34 4 11 46 81 18 64 47 25 17 40 120 116 60 83 18 16 42 4 84 122 102 116 7 134 5 4 1 33 32 41 55 20 1 44 22 135 20 82 82 1 121 60 98 45 49 57
.371 .360 .000 .269 .359 .267 .408 .372 .334 .366 .356 .000 .167 .364 .406 .366 .401 .325 .338 .344 .167 .344 .379 .000 .426 .322 .317 .391 .333 .160 .260 .300 .293 .354 .376 .388 .125 .250 .363 .271 .368 .367 .336 .462 .273 .398 .322 .253 .348 .366 .357 .143 .399 .469 .000 .278 .380 .267 .318 .375 .416 .378 .377 .359 .325 .255 .340 .399 .475 .391 .379 .352 .411 .402 .400 .411 .403 .330 .413 .233 .394 .172 .333 .000 .294 .389 .343 .367 .397 .000 .399 .342 .387 .306 .352 .349 .000 .419 .352 .379 .383 .364 .392
4 14 0 1 7 --12 2 6 1 0 0 0 2 5 3 19 3 5 10 0 6 11 0 10 20 3 0 0 0 4 1 0 0 8 9 --0 0 1 1 1 19 6 0 3 4 2 3 19 5 0 4 4 0 0 16 0 0 18 19 2 4 5 0 1 4 14 8 1 4 0 2 6 1 27 16 16 9 1 9 1 0 0 2 2 2 6 1 0 16 1 16 2 15 7 0 7 0 4 3 16 3
5 6 0 1 0 --5 5 3 2 0 0 0 3 7 0 7 1 8 13 1 5 13 0 10 2 2 1 0 0 2 0 0 2 8 1 --0 3 1 0 1 2 7 0 4 2 0 0 5 2 0 7 0 0 0 4 0 3 2 4 1 1 1 0 0 2 8 3 2 8 4 1 0 1 6 7 9 8 1 5 1 0 0 1 3 --1 0 0 2 0 6 0 2 2 0 8 6 8 1 3 3
4 18 4 13 0 0 1 10 8 7 ----4 10 2 48 12 20 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 9 2 1 2 20 2 2 1 21 15 8 0 0 2 4 19 15 0 0 8 109 24 3 7 3 1 9 0 0 0 5 8 0 0 0 2 1 0 5 22 19 12 32 --0 0 0 0 4 0 0 3 0 1 1 10 3 1 2 0 0 0 10 1 1 0 0 0 1 6 4 3 14 1 0 3 16 6 40 0 0 0 0 5 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 4 15 1 0 4 12 11 5 1 1 0 1 5 9 8 27 8 32 1 2 5 50 5 6 2 14 2 3 3 1 10 6 3 21 20 15 8 13 0 0 15 11 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 9 --- 15 1 1 0 0 0 0 7 0 5 19 0 3 3 2 13 8 7 26 0 0 3 83 1 32 2 2 1 21 11 3 1 1
18 16 0 12 9 --18 53 29 1 0 0 0 3 12 1 30 2 23 18 0 9 26 0 143 10 9 9 0 10 2 0 1 7 30 39 --1 5 0 1 1 13 8 0 14 2 1 2 8 16 0 16 49 0 0 3 0 1 3 19 0 17 8 3 1 11 37 61 2 67 8 14 4 2 12 40 23 26 0 18 0 0 0 0 10 16 4 0 0 0 19 6 5 12 41 0 106 35 5 25 7 2
ALL-TIME PITCHING STATS (since 1975) Name Adcock, Gary Ambriz, Hector Arrasmith, Scott Averill, Brandon Bates, Eric Bauer, Trevor Bean, Seth Beacom, Mitchell Beck, Bryan Bennett, Pat Berg, David Bianchi, Steve Birkins, Kurt Bloom, Ken Bollens, Scott Bond, David Bonds, Jim Botterman, Scott Brandt, Jon Brewer, Charles Brewer, Chase Broersma, Eric Brooks, Gavin Brophy, Kevin Brummett, Tyson Burkland, Mike Calip, Ian Cannon, Jon Caravelli, Michael Carter, Ryan Castillo, Mike Center, Andy Cislak, Chad Clark, Wade Claypool, Garett Clements, Pat Cole, Doug Cole, Gerrit Concolino, Brett Conine, Jeff Cordeiro, Chris Cowan, Ed Craig, Bill Crawford, Brandon Crecion, Gabe Dale, David D’Amico, J.T. Darden, Tony Davern, Mike Deeter, Ryan Dersom, Tyler Diaz, Paul Dickmann, Robert Dishon, John Drummond, Matt Eby, Mike Ehret, Jake Ellis, John Espinoza, Pat Ervin, Gary Fauland, Herb Fitterer, Scott Fyhrie, Mike Glaus, Troy Goeddel, Erik Good, Craig Gorski, Gary Grace, Matt Griggs, Scott Hale, Jeff Hamill, Ryan Harmon, Tom Haver, Jordan Heineman, Rick Henderson, Robbie Henkel, Rob Hennis, Randy Hirsch, Jeff Holt, Dennis Howatt, Jeff Huberts, Jeff Huff, David Jacquez, Tom Jaffe, Eric Janicki, Pete Janssen, Casey Jerkens, Allen Jerkens, Kevin Johnson, David Joslyn, John Kaprielian, James Karp, Josh Kazmirski, Bobby Keating, Dave Keller, Dan Kerber, Mike Kershaw, Scott Klein, Dan Klein, Matt Kramer, Dan Krikorian, Rick Kubinski, Tim
ERA
W-L
APP
GS
CG
SV
IP
H
R
ER
BB
SO
OAV
WP
HBP
BK
1992-93 6.22 2003-06 4.41 2000 3.07 2001-02 4.67 1988 6.62 2009-11 2.36 1994 6.75 2009-11 3.49 2002-05 5.65 1994 0.00 2012-13 1.18 1974-76 4.54 1999 4.05 1983-84 3.35 1977-79 2.78 1985 5.13 1991-92 3.69 2003-06 6.47 1998-01 5.08 2007-09 4.88 2010-12 1.83 1978, 1980-81 3.28 2007-09 4.71 2004-07 4.58 2006-07 4.24 1982-83 5.75 1991 108.00 1994 12.00 1992-95 6.02 1998-00 6.79 2001-03 4.41 1979-81 4.62 1998-00 7.97 2000-02 6.88 2007-10 3.12 1981-83 5.78 1980-82 5.60 2009-11 3.38 2006 4.50 1985-87 6.07 2001-03 4.96 1974-76 4.10 1992 2.95 2008 10.38 1997-98 10.23 1986-87 6.54 1990 10.80 1989-90 7.96 2001-02 9.34 2011-13 2.68 1998-00 7.51 1998-01 7.11 2006 10.38 1988 5.33 2007-08, 2010 5.74 1991 9.00 2013 16.20 1993-94 8.22 1975 4.79 1978-79 3.00 1979-80 4.28 1994 4.76 1988-91 3.79 1996 18.00 2009-10 3.10 1986 24.55 1985 3.00 2008-10 3.91 2010-12 4.00 1991-92 5.91 2000 18.00 1983 7.15 2007-09 3.38 1993-96 5.74 1975-77 13.50 1997-00 5.56 1985-87 5.56 1985 4.58 2010-11 0.00 1993-95 5.29 1995 40.50 2006 2.98 1995-97 3.48 2012 0.00 1990-92 4.38 2001-04 4.34 1996 9.82 2000-03 6.53 2002-04 6.24 1986 12.00 2013 1.55 1999-01 4.21 1994-95 4.33 1988 13.50 1996-97, 1999 5.16 1989 0.00 1985 4.86 2008, 2010 3.36 1996-98 7.13 1992-94 4.64 1981-82 6.75 1991-93 4.22
Years
9-10 13-21 0-1 0-1 0-0 34-8 0-0 1-3 6-16 0-0 12-3 19-9 0-1 4-4 13-6 3-0 2-3 2-3 21-14 12-10 2-0 15-12 12-14 6-3 16-13 1-4 0-0 0-0 3-6 7-10 3-3 10-13 9-16 2-4 14-7 18-18 1-2 21-20 0-0 5-4 4-10 22-11 3-1 1-2 2-4 3-2 0-1 1-1 0-3 3-0 4-1 7-10 0-0 1-0 2-4 0-0 1-0 0-0 5-3 0-0 10-5 4-1 12-15 0-0 2-0 0-1 0-0 4-4 4-2 3-3 0-0 5-6 0-0 10-17 0-0 10-10 19-11 1-1 0-0 3-5 0-0 7-4 11-6 1-0 23-12 22-15 0-0 7-5 8-7 0-0 0-0 23-7 2-4 0-1 12-10 0-0 3-2 8-3 6-3 8-3 0-0 20-6
34 57 14 11 9 54 3 47 51 2 101 51 19 53 80 15 23 32 75 39 20 42 59 75 37 28 1 3 41 61 41 63 56 40 74 66 18 50 3 43 50 53 22 3 21 47 2 20 22 62 51 63 6 18 37 1 5 12 16 4 55 15 67 1 45 5 2 72 53 31 1 18 11 62 1 55 51 14 3 54 1 16 37 8 55 54 2 77 55 2 34 47 32 2 50 1 17 46 48 46 2 53
22 43 0 2 0 44 0 0 27 0 0 14 0 3 0 2 3 0 38 27 0 36 33 0 33 2 0 0 2 25 2 13 17 3 33 40 2 49 0 16 15 11 2 0 9 0 1 3 5 0 0 19 0 0 5 0 0 1 --0 5 4 20 0 0 0 0 6 3 1 0 15 0 26 0 20 37 0 0 5 0 16 18 0 44 43 0 1 16 0 0 44 4 1 20 0 5 2 5 10 0 27
2 4 0 0 0 15 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 5 3 0 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 5 0 5 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 7 0 0 0 0 3 2 0 11 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5
1 3 0 0 0 2 0 1 1 0 25 1 0 7 15 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 8 1 1 2 0 0 1 5 2 5 8 0 4 0 2 0 0 2 7 1 1 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 11 2 10 0 1 0 0 1 15 1 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 7 2 0 2 0 5 0 2 0 0 10 3 0 0 0
153.1 296.0 14.2 17.1 17.2 373.1 4.0 59.1 188.0 1.1 152.0 244.0 20.0 115.2 148.2 33.1 46.1 40.1 296.0 175.1 19.2 206.0 218.0 76.2 235.2 61.0 0.1 3.0 58.1 202.2 51.0 167.2 157.0 69.1 207.2 291.1 35.1 322.1 2.0 121.2 143.1 270.0 39.2 4.1 44.0 53.2 5.0 37.1 35.2 53.2 56.1 152.0 4.1 25.1 69.0 2.0 3.1 15.1 35.2 3.0 109.1 34.0 206.1 1.0 58.0 3.2 3.0 101.1 63.0 45.2 1.0 73.0 13.1 207.0 0.2 153.2 238.0 19.2 1.0 97.0 0.2 129.2 165.1 7.2 324.2 265.1 3.2 113.0 140.0 3.0 40.2 252.0 68.2 2.2 155.1 2.1 37.0 69.2 82.0 118.1 2.2 226.1
163 299 11 20 21 279 2 55 212 2 97 270 26 110 131 37 47 46 304 200 16 177 215 75 249 71 3 4 69 226 55 176 209 92 154 327 43 252 2 122 165 263 38 5 64 57 7 40 52 40 60 207 8 30 70 3 7 17 35 2 127 38 214 3 54 8 5 102 42 61 2 98 10 262 2 153 264 16 0 121 3 121 157 6 360 262 5 160 161 6 19 231 61 4 183 2 36 67 117 142 3 223
134 173 5 11 17 125 3 28 138 0 22 164 17 66 60 24 33 31 219 119 5 100 148 53 130 50 4 4 46 184 30 112 190 73 80 230 37 143 3 106 93 148 17 5 57 42 6 41 44 20 64 126 5 17 48 2 6 14 22 2 65 21 123 2 27 10 1 59 32 34 2 65 6 163 1 88 176 15 0 70 3 50 89 0 214 151 4 101 104 4 12 155 37 4 116 2 30 28 81 71 3 124
106 145 5 9 13 98 3 23 118 0 20 123 9 43 46 19 19 29 167 95 4 75 114 39 111 39 4 4 39 153 25 86 139 53 72 187 22 121 1 82 79 123 13 5 50 39 6 33 37 16 47 120 5 15 44 2 6 14 19 1 52 18 87 2 20 10 1 44 28 30 2 58 5 132 1 95 147 10 0 57 3 43 64 0 158 128 4 82 97 4 7 118 33 4 89 0 20 26 65 61 2 106
101 114 12 10 6 104 5 16 81 0 28 120 16 55 52 18 23 28 167 57 14 103 103 54 65 40 3 3 28 136 21 86 113 48 80 186 31 114 3 89 51 153 25 2 36 42 5 36 27 33 57 74 3 17 47 0 1 12 23 4 40 15 89 0 27 9 1 39 60 16 0 36 6 113 1 77 120 14 4 60 0 27 54 10 233 97 5 40 73 0 24 122 23 4 82 2 35 14 48 35 2 84
85 249 13 16 7 460 2 74 128 0 141 152 18 79 97 28 37 27 265 138 8 165 196 64 194 35 1 4 37 209 35 92 137 42 181 160 15 376 1 66 96 223 26 5 33 44 1 20 19 43 58 86 1 14 55 1 1 20 36 0 54 25 139 2 65 2 3 75 95 13 2 30 8 137 0 208 150 10 1 63 0 100 118 3 215 245 1 69 105 1 53 222 56 1 85 0 28 68 48 71 1 150
--.264 .212 .282 --.207 --.243 .287 --.182 --.317 --------.301 --.291 .250 --.262 .257 .280 ----------.279 ----.329 .210 ----.215 .250 --.287 ----.263 --------.340 .211 ----.421 --.273 --.438 --------------.248 ----.258 .188 --.400 --.222 ----------.000 ----.249 --.250 --.258 --.333 .295 --.141 .243 ----------.252 ---------
18 30 3 2 2 30 0 2 7 0 3 --3 9 4 6 4 5 21 5 1 10 27 15 17 5 0 0 3 31 7 6 30 8 12 30 2 22 0 10 12 --9 0 5 3 0 6 11 3 6 10 1 1 8 1 0 4 --0 2 1 10 0 6 3 2 10 15 4 0 8 6 20 2 18 16 1 2 8 0 7 7 1 40 18 0 10 16 1 10 28 1 0 3 0 0 9 11 7 0 17
19 19 5 1 2 19 2 13 21 0 14 --7 10 3 3 4 5 33 28 6 18 34 14 16 4 0 1 4 24 4 11 25 15 17 6 1 27 0 8 6 --2 0 5 3 0 3 2 10 11 10 1 1 11 0 1 14 --0 1 3 15 1 8 0 0 10 5 7 0 4 0 27 0 6 16 4 1 11 0 6 13 1 22 15 0 15 13 0 5 31 5 0 2 0 3 10 5 7 0 18
0 9 0 2 0 8 0 1 9 0 1 --0 2 2 0 0 1 6 1 0 3 1 1 9 0 0 0 0 1 2 5 0 0 3 4 0 4 0 0 5 --0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 4 1 0 4 0 1 0 --0 6 0 2 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 1 3 0 4 3 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0
120
ALL-TIME PITCHING STATS (since 1975) Name Lafferty, Brendan Leary, Tim Lewis, Mike Lindsay, Tim Lizarraga, Bob Lodge, Brandon Long, Kip Lynch, Ryan Lyon, Nick Mack, Phil Madrid, Sam Magnante, Mike Marsh, Scott McDonald, Jeff McGuire, Ryan Merricks, Charles Meyer, Jake Miltenberger, Dan Mitchell, John Moreno, Sal Morisako, Colin Murphy, Tim Naworski, Andy Newns, Neal Nolte, Eric Novak, Jason Ortega, Mike Ortiz, Zack Oseguera, Paul O’Toole, Ryan Page, Tim Parque, Jim Peterson, Curt Phillips, John Pifer, Griff Pinto, Aldo Plutko, Adam Poole, Madison Poteet, Cofy Pries, Jeff Ramsey, Jim Rasmussen, Rob Reeder, Zac Reid, Daniel Reightley, Ryan Ridenour, Dana Righetti, Tony Rodriguez, Louis Roe, Bobby Roenicke, Josh Ross, Brad Rucker, Dave Rustich, Brant Sanchez, Alex Schanz, Scott Schmidt, Dave Schmidt, Paul Schroeder, Brian Schuh, Max Schulhofer, Adam Schwengel, Kris Schwengel, Kurt Sentlinger, Rick Sharp, Matt Sheredy, Kevin Shibata, Keith Simon, Adam Silva, Doug Silver, Barry Smalls, Joe Sollecito, Gabe Soroko, Mark Spears, Chris St. George, Nick Stephenson, Brian Strelitz, Brian Stoll, Dave Stowell, Steve Susdorf, Billy Sutherland, John Thielemann, Al Trombs, Ray Uribe, Justin Van Zandt, Jon Vander Tuig, Nick Vdovkin, Mike Virant, Hunter Ward, Colin Watson, Grant Weiss, Zack Wenrick, Bill Westland, Bob Whisler, Wes White, Garett Wiede, Mark Will, Dave Wills, Shawn Wilson, Kyle Yaeger, Chuck Young, Matt Zamora, Peter Zancanaro, Dave Zinser, Jason
Years
ERA
W-L
APP
GS
CG
SV
IP
H
R
ER
BB
SO
OAV
WP
HBP
BK
2005, 2007-09 1977-79 1988-91 1987-91 1974, 1976 2010-11 1979 1994-96 2000, 2002 1981 1997 1984-88 1985 1980-82 1991-93 1998, 2000 1996-97 2003-06 1993-94 1993 1982 2007-08 1984-85 1984-85 1984-85 2006-09 1974-77 2012 2005-06 1995-97 1979-80 1995-97 1975-76 1994-98 1974-75 1997-98, 2000 2011-13 2012 2013 1982-84 1984, 1986 2008-10 1988-91 2002-04, 2005 1998 1984-86 1997-98 1977 1998-01 2004, 2006 1974-76 1976-77 2004-07 1985-87 1988-90 1977-79 2006-07 2004-06 2013 1989-92 1990-91, 1993 1990-92 1974-75 2004 1996 1985-87 2003-05 2001-03 1980 1980, 1982 1992-93 1973-75 1988 1994-97 1994 1999 1991-92 1986-87 2002 1987-90 1997-98 1977 2007-10 1993 2011-13 1990 2013 1981-82 2012-13 2011-13 1984-87 1981-83 2002-04 2003-06 1981-82 1980 1991 2002-04 1981-84 1979-80 1995-97 1988-90 2007
5.50 3.09 4.41 4.29 4.77 2.70 8.66 6.46 12.15 8.03 8.10 4.30 3.20 5.42 1.74 15.19 3.41 6.95 7.19 5.79 3.97 4.34 5.74 5.40 6.86 4.98 7.36 2.92 3.05 4.93 5.17 3.55 3.03 7.55 5.81 3.00 2.25 0.00 4.84 4.83 7.41 3.98 6.39 11.25 14.90 4.93 2.72 7.50 5.18 2.93 5.28 3.61 6.10 4.98 4.94 4.00 6.75 4.89 0.00 4.04 8.12 3.72 5.05 0.00 4.59 5.11 6.03 4.47 3.74 3.60 4.76 3.96 15.12 5.23 4.97 11.15 6.95 5.73 5.40 5.38 11.17 8.65 7.27 5.70 3.17 4.71 0.00 5.66 3.72 3.29 4.41 4.72 4.99 9.37 6.11 8.22 0.00 5.12 5.01 3.99 4.66 3.72 18.00
7-8 21-15 8-8 18-13 4-3 0-0 1-2 5-9 1-0 0-2 1-0 22-5 2-3 11-10 4-0 0-0 4-5 5-4 3-7 1-0 0-0 10-10 4-11 4-4 6-2 6-3 2-2 2-0 4-1 2-3 4-7 25-11 4-6 8-3 4-7 0-1 29-10 0-0 4-6 16-15 3-2 15-7 2-3 0-0 0-1 7-11 3-1 0-0 18-14 2-3 10-12 6-3 9-11 27-17 10-20 24-7 0-2 8-10 0-0 9-9 2-3 0-1 5-7 0-0 4-2 7-4 4-11 8-9 1-1 2-1 5-8 9-5 0-0 9-12 5-5 1-3 2-1 13-7 0-3 15-14 1-1 0-1 2-1 7-7 27-12 1-2 0-0 10-11 18-5 10-7 10-10 10-2 11-14 0-0 1-0 0-1 0-0 2-2 15-15 10-7 15-6 23-13 0-0
94 53 65 63 36 18 11 49 5 5 4 53 18 62 17 10 43 38 41 3 7 37 45 45 30 86 15 12 35 36 29 51 23 37 38 10 53 4 29 55 25 46 37 42 14 70 24 4 87 19 52 27 72 73 54 46 22 70 12 50 26 10 24 1 24 45 59 57 15 6 48 49 8 60 15 15 19 38 14 71 16 10 7 20 65 17 5 45 53 82 119 62 49 46 10 21 2 45 111 33 48 78 1
3 40 19 46 4 0 0 20 1 0 0 25 10 29 1 0 1 7 7 1 0 27 10 4 14 4 2 0 3 6 17 50 8 16 --0 52 0 11 37 4 27 3 0 4 11 5 0 34 0 4 4 13 58 39 39 1 11 0 18 9 0 0 0 4 5 7 5 3 3 6 --1 20 15 2 0 23 0 30 1 0 2 15 37 0 0 32 32 22 7 2 43 0 0 1 0 1 25 26 31 23 0
0 15 2 13 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 1 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 1 0 0 0 00 0 1 10 0 1 --0 4 0 0 10 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 6 4 3 0 1 0 3 0 0 --0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 --0 0 4 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 5 2 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 4 0 0 0 0 0 4 6 1 4 0
3 0 7 1 4 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 1 2 0 8 0 0 0 1 3 6 1 0 4 1 0 3 2 0 0 5 0 2 0 0 0 0 4 1 1 3 0 0 9 0 0 13 4 4 3 10 1 2 0 0 3 0 4 1 0 0 0 8 3 8 8 1 0 21 5 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 4 0 0 0 1 9 4 0 0 0 0 16 8 0 0 0 0 0 6 7 1 7 8 0
147.1 306.0 216.1 302.1 83.0 16.2 17.2 133.2 6.2 12.1 3.1 203.0 59.0 219.0 31.0 10.2 60.2 55.2 81.1 4.2 11.1 178.1 105.0 71.2 84.0 137.1 22.0 12.1 62.0 65.2 94.0 334.2 77.1 101.1 114.2 12.0 351.1 2.2 70.2 247.2 54.2 171.2 80.1 20.0 29.0 184.1 49.2 6.0 283.1 15.1 167.0 72.1 124.0 341.1 253.0 223.0 18.2 130.2 2.1 158.0 51.0 19.1 82.0 1.1 49.0 112.2 118.0 118.2 33.2 25.0 92.2 120.1 8.1 160.0 105.0 30.2 22.0 130.1 16.2 229.0 29.0 26.0 8.2 113.2 269.2 28.2 3.1 194.0 181.2 175.1 192.0 116.1 259.2 32.2 17.2 38.1 1.1 70.1 237.1 164.2 202.2 263.2 1.0
172 277 223 347 89 27 23 171 8 19 2 209 48 252 18 15 55 65 85 4 14 167 116 72 85 138 21 16 63 78 99 349 76 123 129 11 256 1 57 282 79 165 113 35 63 193 47 5 327 14 174 80 148 338 279 218 24 139 1 142 70 23 93 1 41 119 120 119 37 24 88 113 17 207 106 52 27 169 14 283 44 38 10 128 258 29 2 191 187 153 217 119 293 45 29 43 1 71 304 152 232 254 3
104 149 142 213 55 7 19 112 8 13 3 121 27 160 6 22 35 59 74 3 8 96 87 51 71 83 23 7 23 52 57 172 35 97 95 4 98 0 42 168 49 84 70 39 59 120 30 7 226 7 114 33 108 238 182 118 17 75 1 88 50 9 54 0 37 76 89 75 18 10 43 69 17 132 60 46 20 115 11 178 41 30 7 80 107 17 1 149 88 79 114 80 173 42 17 47 0 49 180 96 139 161 2
90 105 106 144 44 5 17 96 8 11 3 97 21 132 6 18 23 43 65 3 5 86 67 43 64 76 18 4 21 36 54 132 26 85 74 4 88 0 38 133 45 76 57 25 48 101 15 5 163 5 98 29 84 189 139 99 14 71 0 71 46 8 46 0 25 64 79 59 14 10 49 53 14 93 58 38 17 83 10 137 36 25 7 72 95 15 0 122 75 64 94 61 144 34 12 35 0 40 132 73 105 109 2
64 146 109 121 45 3 20 74 7 8 3 98 39 154 14 16 44 41 54 4 9 79 75 49 75 63 20 9 18 33 61 136 30 63 72 7 101 2 31 123 33 72 27 17 15 86 34 6 152 9 101 42 75 212 138 117 13 59 4 99 24 8 54 1 34 46 90 56 9 8 45 52 9 65 49 12 11 98 9 103 19 13 6 40 51 14 4 157 50 66 69 74 105 21 2 32 1 41 124 113 72 152 2
119 258 142 161 57 8 11 80 2 7 2 142 31 123 34 8 66 35 60 5 3 207 72 64 53 121 17 6 60 35 47 319 61 84 53 7 272 2 56 114 27 187 48 22 16 158 55 3 197 14 119 39 114 328 177 171 15 95 2 110 30 9 57 0 55 107 104 83 23 9 51 70 7 111 79 9 11 95 13 141 17 15 7 70 201 15 1 151 101 124 132 84 172 21 9 29 0 58 131 104 140 198 1
.297 --------.365 ----.345 ----------------.293 ------.250 ------.263 --.320 .272 --------------.206 .111 .227 ----.252 --.389 ----------.237 ----.294 ------.324 .277 .143 --------.250 ----.270 .260 .268 ------------.361 ----.233 ------.270 --.252 --.167 --.276 .238 ----.291 .338 ------.273 --------.600
25 14 15 19 --2 1 7 0 2 0 7 5 28 4 1 6 10 6 1 1 10 20 7 3 16 3 1 5 10 5 27 --15 --3 6 0 7 20 8 20 4 2 2 10 5 0 37 4 --5 23 22 15 14 3 6 1 14 4 0 --0 7 4 8 9 2 2 5 --3 13 2 5 5 10 5 13 2 4 2 9 14 1 1 19 9 15 7 12 13 8 0 2 1 8 15 5 15 11 0
22 13 10 27 --1 1 15 1 0 0 14 0 14 1 2 6 3 10 0 1 18 12 7 3 8 --0 7 7 3 15 --8 --2 20 0 9 21 6 12 6 13 6 3 4 0 40 2 --2 20 15 22 5 5 18 1 13 5 1 --0 8 2 32 13 0 0 18 --1 6 11 5 2 12 1 23 4 3 0 5 17 4 1 8 10 35 12 9 28 8 0 0 0 10 3 9 13 22 0
7 7 1 2 --1 2 0 0 0 0 2 1 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 10 0 1 3 3 2 0 2 0 2 7 --0 --0 3 0 0 4 1 0 1 1 0 2 0 0 2 0 --0 1 3 3 2 0 1 0 1 1 0 --0 0 1 4 1 1 0 0 --0 2 0 0 0 2 1 1 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 1 1 2 4 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 3 4 1 3 0
121
UCLA BASEBALL ALUMNI
UCLA Baseball Hall of Fame 81 MEMBERS Bob Adams Lee Alarid Earl Altshuler Rich Amaral Bob Andrews Ray Arrington Jim Auten Dave Baker Steve Bailey* Ted Bashore Bill Bonham Bill Brasher Dr. Bobby Brown Joe E. Brown* Judge Lynn “Buc”Compton Chris Chambliss Floyd Chiffer Jim Colletto Jeff Conine Curt Counts Mickey Croft Dennis Delaney James Devere* Pat Dodson Tim Doerr Vern Followell Tebbie Fowler Mike Frankovich
Mike Gallego Rick Ganulin Mike Gerakos Jack Gifford Sid Gilmore Brian Graham Dan Guerrero Guy Hansen Wayne Harding Bill Haselman Joe Hicks Alan Hoops Eric Karros Rick Kester Steve Klausen Tim Leary Andy Lopez Sam Lovullo Torey Lovullo Shane Mack Mike Magnante Ryan McGuire Glenn Mickens Jack “Moose” Myers Tim O’Neill Hoyt Pardee David Penniall Ken Proctor
Rick Pope Art Reichle Mike Riskas Jackie Robinson Gary Robson Ernie Rodriguez Ron Roenicke Gene “Skip” Rowland Steve Runk Gary Sanserino Dave Schmidt Randy Schwartz Frank Schwengel Don Sealy Don Slaught George Stanich Phil Steinberg Ed Stewart Jack Theriault* Kenny Washington David Weiner Jim York Matt Young John Zaby Todd Zeile
Ron Roenicke was drafted by the Los Angeles Dodgers in June 1977.
*honorary members
Grant-in-aid Donors Gene and Jackie Autry James E. Brakebill Memorial Jim Devere Harold and Roslyn Ganulin Memorial Rick and Karen Ganulin Jack Gifford Dennis Gilbert Mary Jo Greenberg (memory of Hank Greenberg) Wayne and Dixie Harding
Tracy Gifford Jones & Cameron Jones Eric Karros Tim Leary Shane Mack Jeff Moorad Arn and Nancy Tellem David Weiner Bruin Baseball Foundation Parent’s Fund Shane Mack batted .361 in three seasons (1982-1984) at UCLA.
Bruin Varsity Club
Bruin Baseball Fund
The mission of the Bruin Varsity Club is to connect the UCLA family of alumni athletes to the University and enhance their relationships with the Department of Intercollegiate Athletics. We seek to uphold the tradition and legacy of UCLA Athletics through a united and engaged alumni community and to establish a culture of philanthropy and participation. Whether your collegiate athletic career ended last season or 60 years ago, whether you live in California or on the other side of the country, you are forever connected to the champions that are UCLA.
The Bruin Baseball Fund, formerly known as the 10th Player Club, invites you to become a member of this meaningful and worthwhile organization. Your financial support and commitment to the program enables UCLA Baseball to better serve its student-athletes by offering them the best possible facilities and state-of-the-art equipment. To join the Bruin Baseball Fund, please call Scott Wandzilak in the Athletic Development office at (310) 206-3302. Hall of Fame — $5,000+ (100% Tax-deductible) • All-Star benefits and game-day program recognition
Members who pay their annual dues will receive the following Bruin Varsity Club PREMIER benefits and club card: Complimentary invitation to the annual Bruin Varsity Club Homecoming Tailgate Party and other sponsored events. One free admission to ALL regularly-scheduled UCLA home football games in a priority seating area. The option to purchase up to three additionally priority season tickets normally offered exclusively to donors in the blue section. One annual Olympic Sport Card Passes* Bowl Game Ticket Purchasing Opportunities Exclusive Bruin Varsity Club annual gift Invitation to sport specific reunions, receptions and other special events Ticket purchasing opportunities for otherwise limited UCLA sporting events Menotring and networking opportunities with other fellow Bruin Varsity Club members and current student athletes Subscription to Bruin Blue, a monthly UCLA athletics newsletter
All-Star — $2,500-$4,999 (100% Tax-deductible) • Major League benefits and the opportunity to have your child/grandchild serve as a batboy at a home UCLA baseball game Major League — $1000-$2499 (100% Tax-deductible) • College World Series benefits and an autographed team UCLA batting helmet College World Series — $500-$999 (100% Tax-deductible) • Bruin captain benefits and an autographed team picture Bruin Captain — $100-$499 (100% Tax-deductible) • Two Olympic sport cards All Bruin Baseball Fund members will receive a coaches newsletter and invitations to UCLA baseball’s social and banquet events. *Excludes admission to men’s basketball, NCAA Championships and/or special events.
*Excludes admission to men’s basketball, NCAA Championships and/or special events.
**For more information please contact Courteney Cosso, Director of the Bruin Varsity Club, at 310-206-4458 or via email at ccosso@athletics.ucla.edu**
122
ALL-TIME LETTERWINNERS CAREER STATS Hitters: Batting Average, Home Runs, RBI, R = Runs Scored, SB = Stolen Bases; Pitchers: W-L, ERA, Strikeouts; S = Saves NA = Stats Not Available
A Abney, Jeff, C ’03 .143, 2, 7 Adams, Bob, 3B ’70-’73 .315, 23, 140, 131R Adams, Gary, INF ’59-’60, ’62 N/A Adams, Gene, INF ’59-’61 N/A Adams, Mannie, INF ’88-’90 .301, 4, 62 Adcock, Gary, P ’92-’93 9-10, 1S, 6.22, 85K Aielli, Gino, C/INF ’08-’09 .340, 2, 16, 24R, 5SB Alarid, David, OF ’82-’85 .267, 7, 47 Alexander, Michael, OF ’84 .179, 0, 7 Allen, Bob, OF ’87-’89 .179, 4, 14 Allen, Brenton, OF ’11-’13 .258, 2, 15, 23R, 1SB Altshuler, Earl, OF ’70-’72 .362 Amaral, Beau, OF ’10-’12 .322, 10, 106, 145R, 30SB Amaral, Rich, 2B ’82-’83 .334, 5, 64, 112R, 45SB Ambriz, Hector, DH/P ’03, ’05-’06 .311, 8, 62, 54R; 13-21, 4.41, 249K Amezquita, Chris, 3B ’09 .259, 1, 9, 8R, 2SB Ammentorp, Tim, C ’76-’79 .257, 1, 6 Ammirato, Zak, INF/OF/C ’93-’96 .307, 14, 100, 101R Anderson, Tom, INF ’62 .214, 0, 6 Andrews, Bob ’48-50 N/A Anglin, Gary, OF/P ’73-’74 .238, 7, 17; 5-5, 6.14, 55K Ardell, Dave, OF ’63-’64 .274, 4, 21 Arens, Jim, P ’63-’65 10-10, 3.70, 130K Arhart, Josh, C ’01-’02 .333, 10, 61 Arrasmith, Scott, P ’00 0-1, 3.07, 13 K Arrington, Ray, OF ’65-’66 .334, 12, 62 Ash, Mike, C ’64 .228, 4, 16 Ashner, Corey ’07 .071, 0, 0 Atkins, Garrett, 1B/3B ’98-’00 .369, 40, 167, 180R Auten, Jim, OF ’76-’79 .320, 38, 129, 116R Averill, Brandon, INF ’01-’04 .307, 27, 103; 0-1, 4.67, 16K
B Babineau, Ryan, C ’06-08 Baker, Dave, INF ’75-’78 Baranick, Bruce, P ’72-’73 Baron, Brian, OF ’99, ’01 Barry, John, INF ’85 Bashore, Ted, 1B ’65 Bates, Eric, P ’88 Battey, Earl, 3B ’76 Bauer, Trevor, P ’09-’11 Beacom, Mitchell, P ’09-’11 Beall, Pete, INF ’81-’84 Bean, Seth, P ’94 Beck, Bryan, P ’02-’05 Bennett, Pat, P ’94 Berg, David, P ’12-’13 Berger, Scott, OF ’94 Bergeron, Tom, INF ’59-’60 Beringhele, Vince, OF ’81-’83 Berman, Gary, INF ’83-’86 Berry, Adam, C/DH/1B/OF ’99-’02 Berry, Sean, INF/OF ’85 Berson, Barry, OF ’68-’69 Bessey, Jim, INF ’71 Bianchi, Steve, P ’74-’76 Bjelland, Tim, INF ’77-’79 Blazek, Chuck, C ’64 Block, Carl, P ’59 Bloom, Ken, P ’83-’84 Bollens, Scott, P ’77-’79 Bond, David, P ’85 Bondy, Ken, P ’61 Bonds, Jim, P ’91-’92 Bonham, Bill, P ’69-’70 Bono, Christoph, OF ‘13 Bono, Steve, C ’82 Botterman, Barry, OF ’67-’69 Botterman, Scott, P ’03-’06 Bottoms, Tim, P ’61-’63 Boyd, Travis, INF/OF ’92-’95 Boyer, Bob, P ’67 Brakebill, Brent, C-OF ’82-’85 Brandt, Jon, P ’98-’01 Brasher, Bill, P ’64-’66 Brewer, Charles, P ’07-’09 Brewer, Chase, P ’10-’12 Brock, Vern, OF ’63 Broersma, Eric, P ’78, ’80-’81 Brooks, Gavin, P ’07-’09 Brophy, Kevin, P ’04-’07 Brown, Jerry, P ’63-’65 Brown, Trevor, INF/C ’10-’12 Bruckner, Ron, P ’60-’61 Brummett, Tyson, P ’06-07 Burkins, Kurt, P ’99 Burkland, Mike, P ’82-’83 Byrne, Tim, OF ’88 Byrnes, Eric, OF ’95-’98
.260, 11, 87, 83R .280, 34, 152, 127R 4-5, 2.69, 61K .375, 3, 74 .281, 0, 12 .300, 11, 39 0-0, 6.62 .275, 5, 28. 14SB 2.36, 34-8, 460K, 2SV 3.49, 1-3, 74K, 1S .318, 20, 149, 140R 0-0, 6.75 6-16, 5.65, 128 K) 0-0, 0.00 12-3, 1.18, 141K, 25S .500, 0, 0 N/A .319, 10, 94 .313, 13, 95 .277, 31, 102 .293, 3, 23, 13SB .143, 0, 0 N/A 19-9, 4.54, 152K .305, 0, 19 .281, 0, 6 N/A 4-4, 7S, 3.35, 79K 13-6, 15S, 2.78) 3-0, 1S, 5.13, 28K) 3-2, 3.54, 42K 2-3, 1S, 3.69, 37K 9-7, 2.88, 168K .216, 2, 10, 10R, 2SB .231, 0, 2 .283, 2, 39) 2-3, 6.47, 27K, 1S 17-10, 1.81, 190K .180, 1, 14 9-4, 3.00, 69K .264, 14, 77 19-19, 3S, 5.08, 209K 26-15, 3.22, 254K 12-10, 4.88, 138K, 1S 2-0, 1.83, 8K .200, 0, 4 15-12, 3.28 4.71, 12-14, 196K, 8S 6-3, 4.58, 64K, 1S 9-5, 3.88, 141K .291, 4, 69, 59R, 8SB 7-7, 2.24 16-13, 4.24, 194K, 1S 0-1, 4.05, 18 1-4, 2S, 5.75 .286, 0, 1 .331, 48, 203, 81SB, 235R
C Campanella, John, OF Canales, Josh, SS Cannon, Jon, P Cano, Hector, INF Caravelli, Michael, P Carpenter, Mike, OF Carpenter, Sean, 3B/OF, UTL Carrasco, Tony, 2B Carrithers, Alden, 2B Carroll, Brian, OF Carter, Ryan, P Carty, Mike, OF
’01 ’00-’01 ’94 ’85 ’92-’95 ’78 ’03-’06 ’93-’94 ’07-08 ’11-’13 ’98-’00 ’67-’69
.317, 3, 14 .322, 0, 40 0-0, 12.00 .297, 5, 42. 42R 3-6, 1S, 6.02 .343, 0, 16, 36SB .249, 1, 20, 45R, 10SB) .200, 0, 7 .364, 7, 79, 104R .251, 0, 24, 59R, 34SB 6-10, 5S, 6.36, 209K .222, 3, 17
Castillo, Mike, P Center, Andy, P Chambliss, Chris, 1B Chase, Mike, P Chatterton, Trent, INF Chiffer, Floyd, P Cislak, Chad, P Clark, Wade, P Claypool, Garett, P Clements, Pat, P Cline, Scott, INF Cloud, Casey, C Cohen, Gabe, OF Cole, Doug, P Cole, Gerrit, P Colletto, Jim, OF Colins, Howard, 3B/P Combs, Kelly, INF Concolino, Brent, P Concolino, Chad, OF Conine, Jeff, P Conley, Paul, INF Conlin, Kevin, INF Connors, Steve, OF Cooper, Gene, OF Cordeiro, Chris, P Coston, Roy, P Cowan, Ed, P, Cox, Mobil, SS Craig, Benny, 1B/OF Craig, Bill, P Crater, Tim, OF Crawford, Brandon, SS Crecion, Gabe, P Criss, Brian, C Croft, Mickey, C Cumberland, Dave, C Cummings, Ron, OF Curtis, Jermaine, 3B
’01-’03 ’79-’81 ’69 ’67 ‘13 ’75-’78 ’98-’00 ’00-’02 ’07-’10 ’81-’83 ’86-’89 ’97-’98 ’07-’09 ’81-’82 ’09-’11 ’64-’67 ’59-’61 ’77 ’06 ’04 ’85-’87 ’81 ’02-’05 ’74-’75 ’67-’68 ’01-’03 ’66,’69 74-’76 ’76-’78 ’94-’96 ’92 ’65 ’06-’08 ’97-’98 ’91-’92 ’73-’74 ’72 ’79-’80 ’06-’08
2-2, 2S, 4.79, 32K 10-13, 5S, 4.62 .340, 15, 45 0-0, 5.40 .257, 0, 18R, 2SB 17-11, 3S, 3.64 9-16, 8S, 7.97, 127K 2-4, 6.90, 42K 3.12, 15-7, 181K, 4S 18-18, 5.78, 160K .313, 25, 130 .232, 3, 24 .283, 24, 93, 87R, 17SB 1-2, 2S, 6.60 21-20, 3.38, 376K .306, 13, 97 N/A .267, 0, 0 0-0, 4.50, 1K .256, 2, 11 5-4, 2S, 6.07, 61K .213, 4, 23 .226, 0, 16 .310, 6, 35 .264, 5, 37, 50R 3-8, 3S, 5.17, 54K 10-1, 2.74, 77K 22-11, 4.10, 223K .250, 14, 67 .174, 2, 11 3-1, 1S, 2.95 .157, 0, 3 .319, 20, 136, 145R 2-4, 10.23 .231, 0, 10 .268, 3, 17 .226, 0, 13 .500, 0, 2 .321, 6, 80, 110R
D D’Amico, J.T., P Dale, David, P Dallas, Bobby, 2B Darden, Tony, P Davern, Mike, P Dean, Brent, C DeCinces, Tim, C Decker, Cody, 1B/DH Decker, Jim, INF Deeter, Ryan, P Delany, Dennis, C DeLaTorre, Julian, C Denove, Chris, C Dersom, Tyler, P Diaz, Paul, P Dickmann, Robert, P Dieter, Dave, C Diggle, Ron, OF Dishon, Jon, P Dodson, Pat, 1B Doerr, Tim, INF Dolak, John, C Dolan, Brady, OF Donner, Joe, OF Drummond, Matt, P Dunlap, Blair, OF Duran, Raul, OF Dyer, Fred, INF
’90 ’86-’87 ’75-’76 ’89 ’01-’02 ’07-08 ’94-’96 ’06-’09 ’55-’56 ’11-’13 ’75-’78 ’81-’82 ’03-’05 ’98-’00 ’98-’01 ’06 ’93-’94 ’71 ’88 ’79-’80 ’72-’74 ’87-’90 ’06-’08 ’73 ’07-’08, ’10 ’06, ’08-’10 ’08 ’64-’66
Edwards, Kamau, OF Edwards, Marshall, OF Edwards, Mike, 2B Ehret, Jake, P Elkins, Bruce, 1B Ellis, John, P Ellis, Paul, C Ephraim, Mike, C/INF Erickson, Keith, INF Ervin, Gary, INF Espinoza, Pat, P Espy, Dean, INF Exton, Alan (Lani), P
’95-’96 ’73-’74 ’73-’74 ‘13 ’84 ’93-’94 ’88-’90 ’87 ’63 ’78-’79 ’75 ‘10 ‘11 ’57 ’58
0-1, 10.80 3-2, 6S, 6.54, 44K .288, 12, 62 1-1, 8.24 0-3, 9.46, 19K .276, 1, 11, 12R .321, 37, 166, 130R .288, 47, 153, 118R, 5SB .278, 4, 26 3-0, 2.68, 43K .302, 28, 114 .226, 1, 8 .277, 14, 95 4-1, 7.54, 58K 7-10, 5S, 7.10, 86K 0-0, 10.38, 1K .252, 3, 24 NA 1-0, 1S, 5.33 .299, 20, 74, 76 .301, 21, 108, 101R .251, 8, 53 .277, 3, 25, 46R .245, 2, 8 5.74, 2-4, 55K, 3S .295, 17, 92, 130R, 28SB .182, 1, 4, 3R, 1SB .291, 21, 97, 106R
E .091, 0, 1 .274, 2, 21 .331, 15, 54 1-0, 16.20, 1K .300, 3, 9 0-0, 8.22 .324, 34, 116, 84R .286, 0, 2 .250, 1, 5 .226, 2, 37 5-3, 4.79 .331, 12, 92, 70R, 15SB 6-5, 4.38, 53
F Fauland, Herb, P Fiacco, Charlie, INF/OF Figsten, Len, OF Filia, Eric, OF Finkenberg, John, INF Fishman, Ira, OF Fitch, Tom, OF Fitterer, Scott, P Floyd, Bob, INF Followell, Vern, INF Fowler, Tebbie, OF Fradella, Gary, 1B Francisco, Ben, OF Fyhrie, Mike, P
’79-’80 ’86-’89 ’62 ’12-’13 ’74-’75 ’59 ’73-’74 ’94 ’63 ’78-’79 ’60-’62 ’80 ’01-’02 ’88-’89, ’91
10-5, 4.28, 11S .304,37,146 .226, 1, 9 .275, 1, 41, 48R, 12SB .250, 1, 8 NA .171, 0, 2 4-1, 2S, 4.76 .291, 3, 26 .319, 6, 77 .277, 12, 94 .298, 4, 31 .358, 12, 79 12-14, 3.79, 10S
G Gallagher, Pat, INF Gallego, Mike, INF Gallego, Niko, INF Ganulin, Rick, 1B/OF Garrison, Venoy, C-OF Gauntlett, Todd, 3B Gausepohl, Dan, OF Gaylord, Ken, 1B Gelalich, Jeff, OF Gerakos, Mike, INF
’11-’13 ’79-’81 ’08-’10 ’65-’66 ’73-’75 ’80 ’78-’79 ’75-’76 ’10-’12 ’71-’72
123
.246, 1, 26, 20R .261, 11, 88 .274, 3, 64, 81R, 34SB .303, 15, 92 .331, 9, 68 .267, 3, 34 .310, 12, 57 .274, 11, 55 .316, 15, 74, 108S, 33SB NA
Gershon, Joel, C Gifford, Jack, 1B Giovinazzo, Chris, OF Giovinazzo, Matt, 1B Glantz, John, 1B Glaus, Troy, INF Goeddel, Erik, P Gomez, Luis, SS Good, Craig, P Goodrich, Gail, 1B Gore, Ken, P Gorski, Gary, INF/OF/P Grace, Matt, P Graham, Brian, INF/OF Graham, Danny, OF Green, Jason, C Griffin, Preston, INF Griggs, Scott, P Grzecka, Casey, C Gudim, Tim, C Guerrero, Dan, INF
’63-’64 ’60-’61 ’08-’11 ’11-’12 ’90 ’95-’97 ’09-’10 ’71-’73 ’86 ’62 ’64-’65 ’85 ’08-’10 ’79-’82 ’70 ’96-’99 ’01-’04 ’10-’12 ’01-’02 ’81-’82 ’72-’73
Haerther, Casey, INF Hagy, Gary, SS Hale, Jeffrey, P Hamelin, Bob, 1B Hamill, Ryan, C Hankins, Mike, INF Hanks, Parker, C Hansen, Guy, P Harmon, Jerry, INF Harmon, Tom, P Harris, Art, INF Haselman, Billy, C/OF Haver, Jordan, P Hazard, Justin, INF/C Heineman, Rick, P Heineman, Tyler, C Heinrichs, Jon, OF Helfrick, John, 1B Hemming, Jim, DH Henderson, Robbie, INF Henkel, Rob, P Hennis, Randy, P Hill, Dave, C Hinds, Robert, INF Hirsch, Jeff, P Hisey, Steve, 1B/OF Hobbs, Bill, OF/1B Hoey, Mike, P Hoffman, Ross, 1B Hofman, Rich, INF Hokenson, Gary, 1B/OF Holland, Wayne, INF/OF Holley, Bobby, INF/OF Holt, Dennis, OF/LHP Hoops, Al, P Howatt, Jeff, P Huberts, Jeff, P Huff, David, P Hume, Ed, INF Hymes, Michael, OF
’07-’09 ’91 ’91-’92 ’87 ’00 ’87-’90 ‘05 ’67-’69 ’64 ’83 ’59 ’86-’87 ’07-’09, ’11 ‘13 ’93-’96 ’10-’12 ’94-’97 ’70 ’00 ’75-’77 ’97-’98, ’00 ’85-’87 ’75 ’90-’92 ’85 ’84-’87 ’73 ’62-’63 ’67-’68 ’00 ’62 ’68-’69 ’86-’88 ’10-’11 ’67-’69 ’93-’95 ’95 ’06 ’69-’71 ’97-’99
.141, 1, 12 .203, 1, 17 .255, 6, 51, 84R, 24SB .240, 0, 7, 1R, 1SB .178, 1, 8 .344, 62, 180, 211R 3.10, 2-0, 65K, 1SV .272, 2, 34 0-1. 24.52 .177, 0, 14 15-5, 3.08, 201K .284, 2, 18; 0-0, 3.00 3.91, 4-4, 75K, 1SV .330, 7, 108 .286, 8, 28 .323, 9, 83 .267, 15, 95 4-2, 4.00, 95K, 15S .306, 3, 41 .248, 4, 31 .273, 4, 31
H .305, 22, 109, 88R, 18SB .305, 9, 48 3-3, 1S, 5.91 .362, 13, 47, 10SB .246, 1, 13 .278, 8, 108 .200, 0, 0 22-9, 2.85, 246K .320, 6, 29, 14SB 5-6, 7.15 N/A .324, 20, 95 0-0, 3.38, 8K .333, 0, 1, 2R 10-17, 5.74 .313, 1, 34, 52R, 3SB .314, 32, 151 .322, 0, 9 .274, 6, 18 .283, 12, 57 10-10, 2S, 5.58, 208K 19-11,5.56,150K .293, 2, 18 .276, 2, 43, 95R 1-1, 4.52 .310, 39, 175 .356, 4, 31 7-7, 2.86, 83K .301, 16, 66 .167, 1, 1 .175, 0, 7 .254, 0, 10 .279, 15, 70 .600, 0, 3, 2R; 0-0, 0.00, 1K 19-5, 2.81, 192K 3-5, 4S, 5.29 0-0, 40.50 7-4, 2.98, 100K N/A .276, 0, 16
J Jacquez, Tom, P ’95-’97 Jaffe, Eric, P ’12 James, Joey, DH ’88 Janicki, Pete, P ’90-’92 Janssen, Casey, 1B/P ’01-’04 Jaramillo, Mike, C ’94, ’96-’97 Jensen, Chris, OF ’02-’03, ‘05-06 Jerkens, Allen, P ’96 Jerkens, Kevin, P ’00-’03 Johnson, Craig, OF ’77-’78 Johnson, David, P ’02-’04 Johnson, Forrest, C/DH ’98-’00 Jones, Johnny, SS ’64-’65 Joslyn, John, 1B ’85-’86 Junis, Skip, P ’70-’71
11-6, 3.48, 118K 0-0, 0.00, 3K .300, 14, 47 23-12, 2S, 4.38, 307K .225, 4, 20; 22-15, 4.34, 245K .255, 1, 7 .319, 16, 77, 90R, 3SB 0-0, 9.82 7-5, 7S, 6.53, 69K .323, 22, 62 8-7, 6.24, 105 K .331, 29, 95 .258, 1, 33 .358, 24, 95 N/A
K Kaprielian, James, P ‘13 Karp, Josh, P ’99-’01 Karros, Eric, 1B ’86-’88 Kasarjian, Kris, OF/DH ‘05 Katzaroff, Robbie, INF/OF ’87-’90 Kazmirski, Bobby, P ’94-’95 Keating, Dave, OF ’88-’89 Keck, Chris, INF ’12-’13 Keefer, Cody, OF ’10-’12 Keller, Bill, INF/OF ’64-’65 Keller, Dan, P ’96-’97, ’99 Kerr, Gene, P ’71 Kershaw, Scott, P ’85 Kester, Rick, P ’66-’67 Kinder, Chris, INF ’73-’74 Kiner, Mike, OF ’73-’75 Klausen, Steve, OF ’66-’68 Klein, Dan, P ’08, ’10 Klein, Matt, P ’96-’98 Kramer, Dan, P ’92-’94 Kramer, Kevin, INF ’12-’13 Krikorian, Rick, INF ’81-’82 Krill, Brett, OF ’08-’10 Kubinski, Tim, P ’91-’93 Kuehnert, Anthony, C ’92-’94 Kunes, Mike, P ’00-’03
0-0, 1.55, 53K, 2S 23-7, 4.21, 262K .365, 26, 123 .222, 0, 4 .322, 3, 99 2-4, 5S, 4.33 .259, 8, 35 .225, 1, 15, 12R .319, 3, 86, 102R, 15SB .277, 2, 23 12-10, 2SV, 5.16 N/A 3-2, 4.86 14-9, 2.51, 202K .290, 1, 20 .291, 13, 45 .320, 12, 72 3.36, 8-3, 68K, 10SV 6-3, 7.13, 3SV 8-3, 4.64 .279, 3, 55, 59R, 10SB .248, 1, 21 .280, 7, 40, 50R, 9SB 20-6, 4.22, 150K .267, 0, 1 18-10, 3S, 5.72, 194K
L Lafferty, Brendan, LHP Landress, Dave, 1B
‘05, ’07-’09 ’70-’71
7-8, 5.50, 119K, 3SV N/A
ALL-TIME LETTERWINNERS Lang, Roger, 3B Lansdon, Tommy, SS Larimer, Bob, C/OF Leary, Tim, P LeBlanc, Bill, C Leonard, Terry, OF Levi, Ty, OF Lewis, Christian, OF Lewis, Mike, P/1B Lindsay, Tim, P Lizarraga, Bob, P LoCurto, John, OF Lodge, Brandon, P Lohman, Chris, 3B Lopez, Andy, INF Lopez, Vince, INF Lovullo, Torey, INF Lung, John, INF Lynch, Ryan, P Lyon, Nick, OF/P
’79-’80 ‘05 ’81-’84 ’77-’79 ’69-’70 ’63-’64 ’63-’64 ’00-’03 ’88-’91 ’87, ’89-’91 ’74,’76 ’62-’63 ’10-’11 ’91-’94 ’74-’75 ’83-’85 ’84-’87 ’67 ’94-’96 ’98-’00, ’02
.296, 2, 23 .269, 1, 8, 18R, 7SB .278, 6, 47 21-15, 3.09, 258K .198. 1, 11 .250, 0, 3 .225, 5, 20 .227, 3, 16 8-8, 7S, 4.41; .252, 1, 19 18-12, 1SV, 4.59 4-3, 4S, 4.77 .155, 0, 5 0-0, 2.70, 8K .280, 12, 87 .267, 0, 13 .278, 4, 49 .311, 51, 188 .304, 5, 44 5-9, 2S, 6.53 .285, 16, 66; 1-0, 15.43, 2K
M Mack, Shane, OF/INF ’82-’84 .361, 29, 142 Macri, Bill, INF ’63-’65 .267, 5, 56 Madrid, Sam, P ’97 1-0, 8.10 Magnante, Mike, P ’84, ‘86-’88 22-5, 1S, 4.30 Manning, Don, C/OF ’66 .322, 1, 29 Marder, Neal, OF ’81 .176, 0, 0 Markel, Aaron, C ’03-’05 .208, 0, 6 Marks, Sandy, P ’68-’69 4-2, 3.26 Marquez, Jeff, OF ’94 .000, 0, 0 Marsh, Scott, P ’85 2-3, 3.20 Matoian, Chad, 2B ’94-’97 .281, 3, 74 McCallum, Jim, C ’59 N/A McCarthy, Ryan, INF ’02-’04 .276, 22, 107 McDonald, Jeff, P ’80-’82 11-10, 1S, 5.42 McGinnis, Chuck, OF ’64-’66 .281, 10, 46 McGuire, Aaron, C ’67-’68 .277, 6, 67 McGuire, Ryan, 1B/P ’91-’93 .339, 47, 182; 4-0, 2S, 1.74 McMillan, Brett, 1B/3B ’03-’06 .276, 27, 129, 122R, 2SB McQuarn, George, C ’62-’63 .238, 2, 38 Medici, Jonathan, OF ’04-’05 .200, 0, 0 Meggs, Lindsay, INF ’81-’84 .265, 29, 118 Melhuse, Adam, INF ’92-’93 .303, 20, 91 Merricks, Charles, OF/P ’98-’00 .267, 3, 49; 0-0, 15.88, 8K Mesa, Bob, INF ’56-’57 .329, 0, 12 Metzger, Mike, OF ‘05-06 .204, 1, 15, 14R, 3SB Meyer, Jake, P ’96-’97 4-5, 8S, 3.41 Miles, Tom, P ’69-’71 N/A Miller, Bill, 1B/OF ’60 .244, 1, 15 Miller Jr., Darrell, C ‘13 .143, 0, 3, 1R Miller, Mark, OF ’78-’79 .286, 4, 26 Mills, Bill, 2B ’55-’57 .292, 1, 38 Miltenberger, Daniel, RHP ’03-’06 5-4, 6.95, 35K Miranda, Shane, C ’00-’01 .167, 0, 2 Mitchell, Freddie, OF ’00 .235, 0, 1 Mitchell, John, P ’93-’94 3-7, 7.19 Mitchell, Mike, 1B/DH ’92-’94 .333, 36, 135 Molina, Jake, INF ’69-’70 .260, 5, 48 Montanari, David, OF ’78-’81 .318, 7, 83 Moore, Michael, OF ’90-’92 .318, 19, 76 Moore, Ty, OF ‘13 .219, 0, 10, 10R Moranda, Dave, P ’74 0-3, 7.48 Moreno, Sal, P ’93 1-0, 5.79 Morisako, Colin, P ’82 0-0, 1S. 3.97 Morris, Dave, OF ’74-’75 .227, 5, 22 Morrison, Matt, OF ’82-’84 .302, 3, 44 Moscaret, Steve, OF ’81 .231, 0, 8 Mosher, Matt, INF ’10-’11 .000, 0, 0 Mousalam, Fadio, 1B ’59-’61 N/A Mowery, Kyle, C/OF ’03 .200, 0, 0 Myrow, John, OF ’92-’93 .328, 7, 62 Murphy, Tim, LHP/OF ’06-08 10-10, 4.34, 207K, 3S; .251, 1, 17, 30R Murray, Eddie, INF ’06-’09 .245, 2, 32, 52R, 8SB
N Navarro, Marc, OF Naworski, Andy, P Nero, John, OF Newns, Neal, P Nista, Brett, INF/OF Nocciolo, Albert, C Nolind, Scott, OF Nolte, Eric, P Norman, Anthony, OF Norman, Greg, INF Noteboom, Spencer, P Novak, Jason, P
’09-’11 ’84-’85 ’84 ’84-’85 ’95-’98 ’72 ’80 ’84-’85 ’04-06 ’80-’81 ’63 ’06-’09
Odeski, Matt, OF O’Leary, Scott, C Olson, Cassidy, 1B O’Neill, Tim, P Ortega, Mike, P Ortiz, Zack, P Osborn, Jeff, OF Oseguera, Paul, LHP O’Toole, Ryan, P
’76-’78 ’60-’61 ’95-’98 ’76-’78 ’76 ’12 ’85-’88 ‘05-‘06 ’94-’97
Page, Jarrad, OF Page, Tim, P Panick, Frank, P Parma, Tom, OF Parker, Rashad, 2B Parque, Jim, P Pearl, Matt, 2B/OF Peel, John, P Pederson, Tom, P Penniall, Dave, OF Penniall, Will, OF Perri, Tony, 1B
’04-’05 ’79-’80 ’73 ’75-’76 ’01-’02 ’95-’97 ’98-’01 ’77-’78 ’62-’64 ’75-’76 ’04-’07 ’82-’83
.195, 1, 15, 15R, 5SB 4-11, 5S, 4.74 .257, 3, 20 4-4, 1S, 5.40 .275, 16, 100) .189, 1, 6 .278, 1, 6 6-2, 6.86 .232, 1, 22, 19R, 11SB .338, 10, 57 5-3, 3.19 4.98, 6-3, 121K, 4S
O .275, 4, 26 .238, 0, 30 .289, 12, 73 19-16, 1S, 3.46 2-2, 7.98, 1S 2-0, 2.92, 6K .285, 23, 109 4-1, 3.05, 60K, 3S 2-3, 4.93, 2S
P .195, 4, 28 4-7, 5.17 6-5, 2.93, 64K .189, 0, 13 .267, 4, 17 25-11, 3.55, 319K .310, 11, 89 6-6, 5.28, 76K 11-8, 2.45, 129 .293, 8, 50 .276, 5, 43, 55R, 20SB .250, 5, 41
Peterson, Curt, P Petretta, Bob, C Petrilla, Charlie, INF Phillips, John, P Pieper, Billy, 1B Pifer, Griff, P Pifferini, Bob, C Pinto, Aldo, INF/P Plutko, Adam, P Poehler, Chuck, OF Pollard, Blair, 1B Poole, Madison, P Pope, Rick, P Poteet, Cody, P Preheim, Arnie, OF Price, Steve, OF Pries, Jeff, P/DH Pritchett, Chris, INF Pritchett, Verne, P Punaro, Ralph, INF
’75-’76 ’69-’71 ’66-’67 ’94-’95, ’97-’98 ’97 ’74-’75 ’70 ’97-’00 ’11-’13 ’62 ’61 ’12 ’69-’70 ‘13 ’63 ’69-’70 ’82-’84 ’89-’91 ’59-’60 ’70-’71
4-6, 5S, 3.03 N/A .313, 9, 59 8-23 7.55 .091, 0, 1 4-7, 2S, 5.81 .308, 8, 30 .272, 4, 38; 0-1, 3.00, 6K 29-10, 2.25, 272K .118, 0, 4 .163, 1, 9 0-0, 0.00, 2K 12-5, 2.71, 154K 4-6, 4.84, 56K .255, 1, 9 .308, 10, 46 16-15, 4S, 4.83; .285, 2, 7 .341, 31, 129 N/A N/A
Q Quist, Dustin, OF
’07-’09
.212, 0, 4, 5R, 1SB
R Radican, Pete, C Rahmatulla, Tyler, INF Ramsey, Jim, P Rasmussen, Gary, INF Rasmussen, Rob, P Rasmussen, Ryan, 2B Ratcovic, Bill, OF Ravitz, Dave, INF Ray, Sam, C Reece, Eric, 1B Reeder, Zac, P Regis, Cody, INF Reichle, Arthur, P Reid, Daniel, LHP Reightley, Ryan, P Reinbach, Mike, OF Ridenour, Dana, P Righetti, Tony, P Riskas, Mike, OF Roberts, David, OF Robinson, Jackie, INF Robson, Gary, P Rodriguez, Ernie, OF Rodriguez, Jim, C Rodriguez, Louis, P Rodriguez, Steve, C Roe, Bobby, P Rogers, Brandon, C Roenicke, Josh, OF Roenicke, Ron, OF Roma, Gary, INF Roques, Ryan, OF Rosenkrans, Joel, OF Ross, Brad, P Ross, Steve, 1B Rouse, John, P Rouse, Nolan, SS Rucker, Dave, P Runk, Steve, INF Runyon, Gerry, 1B Rustich, Brant, P
’65-’66 .258, 6, 21 ’09-’11 .290, 7, 59, 77R, 20SB ’84,’86 3-2, 1S, 7.41 ’77 .254, 3, 23 ’08-’10 3.98, 15-7, 187K, 1SV ’00-’02 .280, 1, 24 ’67-’68 .284, 1, 13 ’90-’93 .270, 7, 61 ‘05-07 .182, 0, 1 ’98-’01 .277, 15, 85 ’88-’91 2-3, 3S, 6.39 ’10-’13 .268, 16, 137, 111R, 15SB ‘35-’37 N/A ’02, ’04-’05 0-0. 11.25, 22K ’98 0-1, 14.90 ’69 .263, 1, 13 ’84-’86 7-11, 4.93, 9S ’97-’98 3-1, 2.72 ’59 N/A ’91-’94 .325, 8, 82 ‘40 N/A ’70-’72 N/A ‘57-’59 .276, 0, 10, 30R, 17SB ’68-’69 .191, 0, 17 ’77 0-0, 7.50 ’09-’11 .215, 10, 64, 58R, 3SB ’98-’01 18-14, 12S, 5.18, 197K ’97 .333, 0, 1 ’03-’06 .262, 1, 45, 37R; 2-3, 2.93, 14K, 4S ’77 .284, 9, 40 ’73-’74 .229, 2, 16 ’97-’98 .125, 1, 3 ’61 .116, 1, 10 ’74-’76 10-12, 4S, 5.28 ’74 .158, 0, 4 ’72-’73 5-8, 1S, 3.55 ’05-07 .138, 0, 7, 10R ’76-’77 6-3, 3S, 3.61 ’68-’69 .320, 13, 65 ’59 N/A ’04-’05, ’07 9-11, 6.10, 114K, 10SV
Saarloos, Larry, P St. George, Nick, P Sakowski, Steve, OF Sanchez, Alex, P/OF Sandford, Mike, P Sanserino, Gary, SS Santora, Jack, INF Sapp, Tom, P Schafer, Brett, OF Schanz, Scott, P Schellenberg, Bob, C Schmidt, Dave, P Schmidt, Paul, P Schroeder, Brian, LHP Schuh, Max, LHP Schulhofer, Adam, P Schult, Rob, 3B Schultz, C Schwartz, Brian, C/INF Schwartz, Randy, 1B Schwengel, Kris, P Schwengel, Kurt, P Schwenke, Matt, C Schwertfeger, R.C., C Scott, Bill, OF/DH Scott, Jeff, P Scott, Tyler, OF Scruggs, Tony, OF Seal, Mike, OF Seal, Scott, OF Sealy, Don, INF Sentinger, Rick, P Sharp, Matt, C/1B/OF Shedd, Steve, OF Shelley, Randall, 3B Sheredy, Kevin, P Shibata, Keith, P Silva, Doug, P Silver, Barry, P Silver, Larry, OF Simon, Adam, RHP Singleton, Ezell, INF Slaught, Don, C
’73 0-3, 3S, 6.95 ’94-’97 9-12, 1S, 5.23 ’77,’79-’80 .196, 0, 6 ’85-’87 27-17, 5.00, 1S; .319, 2, 16 ’69-’71 4-2, 3.15, 44K (1971 not included) ’67-’69 .319, 12, 98 ’95-’99 .281, 10, 75 ’61 7-6, 2.03, 89K ’93-’95 .276, 4, 39 ’88-’90 10-9, 4.94, 177K, 4S ’66 .231, 3, 14 ’77-’79 24-7, 4.00, 171K ’06-07 0-2, 6.75, 15K ’04-06 8-10, 4.89, 95K, 3S ‘13 0-0, 0.00, 2K ’89, ’91-’92 11-11, 8S, 4.04 ’96-’97 .209, 1, 5 ’83-’84 .233, 1, 20 ’87-’90 .257, 4, 15 ’63-’64 .369, 18, 85 ’90-’93 2-3, 1S, 8.12 ’90-’92 0-1, 3.72 ’91-’93 .226, 8, 68 ’72-’73 .242, 1, 17 ’98-’00 .389, 53, 173, 224H, 155R ‘83 0-0, 7.88 ‘13 .111, 0, 2, 1R ’86-’87 .332, 8, 46 ’95 .268, 1, 23 ’94-’95 .151, 1, 8 ’68-’69 .262, 2, 21 ’74-’75 5-7, 5.05 ’02-’05 225, 1, 4 ’67-’68 .329, 3, 25 ’99-’01 .258, 11, 53 ’96 4-2, 4.59, 8S ’86-’87 7-4, 5.11, 3S ’01-’03 8-9, 8S, 4.49, 83K ’80 1-1, 1SV, 3.74 ’76-’77 .262, 10, 47 ’03-’05 4-11, 6.03, 104K ’61-’63 .242, 0, 61 ’77,’79-’80 .342, 11, 80
S
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Slotnick, George, P Smith, Chris, OF Smith, Ray, ’3B Smith, Richard, C Smith, Sean, INF Smith, Steve, P Sollecito, Gabe, P Soroko, Mark, P Stacy, Dave, P Stapenhorst, Fred, C Stephenson, Brian, P Stewart, Tim, 1B Stoll, Dave, P Stoltz, Nick, OF Stowell, Steve, OF/P Strelitz, Brian, P Stuka, Martin, P Sullivan, Daniel, INF Susa, Bill, P Susdorf, Billy, OF/P Sutherland, John, P Svetlic, Mike, 2B Swanson, Eric Swedlow, Mark, OF Swenson, Bob, OF Swindell, Carl, C Szymanski, Tom, OF
’72 5-3, 4.91 ’80-’81 .253, 0, 20 ’59 N/A ’85 .235, 1, 6 ’04-’06 .283, 6, 42, 45R, 1SB ’72 4-4, 1.69 ’92-’93 5-8, 21S, 4.08 ’74-’75 9-5, 5S, 3.96 ’74 1-2, 8.71 ’67 .250, 1, 9 ’94 5-5, 4.97, 79K ’06-’07 .255, 9, 42, 36R ’91-’92 2-1, 6.95 ’70-’71 N/A ’84-’87 .287, 12, 81 ’99 1-3, 11.15, 9K ’81-’82 N/A ’84 .300, 5, 42 ’70-’72 N/A ’02-’04 .319, 15, 75; 0-3, 5.40, 64K, 3S ’87-’89 11-12, 5.45, 4S ’04 .258, 0, 23 ’70-’72 N/A ’72-’74 .267, 23, 81 ’60 .191, 0, 1 ’66 .167, 1, 7 ’89 .268, 0, 7
T Tallman, Dave, P Tamburro, Derek, C Taylor, Jr., Eric, 3B Thayer, Matt, OF Theodorou, Nick, 2B/OF Thielemann, Al, P Thomas, Bill, P Thomas, Jim, C Tokheim, David, 1B/OF Townsend, Raymond, INF Trammell, Ken, OF Tromba, Ray, P Trott, Warren, INF/C Tysdal, Rod, P
’65-’67 ’91,’93-’94 ‘05-06 ’02-’04 ’95-’98 ’97-’98 ’73 ’77-’80 ’88-’91 ’76-’78 ’79-’81 ’77 ’00-’03 ’67-’69
11-5, 3.92, 103K .230, 7, 31 .264, 4, 26, 24R, 9SB .298, 10, 82 .339, 9, 93 1-1, 11.17 4-3, 1.66, 1S .269, 12, 60 .310,15,99 .319, 0, 29 .297, 1, 19 0-1, 8.65 .314, 3, 21 7-5, 3.22, 97K
U Urabe, Brett, INF Uribe, Justin, OF/P Utley, Chase, INF
‘13 ’07-’10 ’98-’00
.083, 1, 4, 4R, 1SB .303, 8, 76, 80R, 6SB .342, 53, 174, 256H, 182R
Valaika, Pat, INF Valent, Eric, OF Valent, Royce, C Vallone, Gar, INF Vander Tuig, Nick, P Van Patten, Frank, OF Van Zandt, Jon, P Varner, Phil, INF Vaughn, Derek, OF Vdovkin, Michael, P Vine, Steve, OF Violette, John, 1B Virant, Hunter, LHP Viselli, Brian, 1B
’11-’13 ’96-’98 ’96-’97 ’92-’95 ’11-’13 ’63 ’93 ’77 ’89 ’90 ’63 ’77-’78 ‘13 ’75-’77
Wahl, Steve, INF Ward, Colin, P Waters, Jerry, 3B Watson, Grant, P Webb, Kevin, INF Weber-Shapiro, Alex, 1B Weikel, Dick, OF Weimer, Aaron, C Weiner, Dave, P Weinstein, Jerry, C Weiss, Zack, P Weisser, Mickey, OF Wenrick, Bill, P West, Reggie, OF Westland, Bob, P Whisler, Wes, 1B/P White, Garett, LHP Wiede, Mark, P Will, Dave, P Williams, Adrian, INF Williams, Kevin, INF Willis, Dick, SS Wills, Shawn, OF Wilson, Kyle, P Wiswell, Bob, P Wolfe, Joel, INF/OF Woodruff, Barry, P Wright, Butch, OF
’72 .255, 1, 15 ’81-’82 10-11, 5.66, 151K ’75-’76 .289, 3, 34 ’12-’13 18-5, 3.72, 101K ’89,’91 .290, 7, 32 ’09 .228, 1, 3, 9R ’59-’60 N/A ’11-’13 .000, 0, 0 ’59-’61 N/A ’65 .190, 0, 0 ’11-’13 10-7, 3.29, 124K ’07-’08 .250, 2, 27, 22R ’84-’87 10-10, 4.41, 16S ’80 .269, 0, 21 ’81-’83 10-2, 4.72, 8S ’02-’04 .304, 34, 129; 11-14, 4.99, 172K ’03-’06 0-0, 9.37, 21K ’81 1-0, 6.35 ’78-’80 1-1, 5.98, 42K ’09-’11 .231, 0, 2, 10R, 2SB ’11-’13 .258, 2, 30, 34R, 8SB ’59-’60 N/A ’90-’92 .277, 5, 26 ’02-’04 2-2, 5.12, 58K ’66-’67 13-8, 3.11, 134K ’89-’91 .348, 18, 119 ’72 2-4, 4.02 ’61 .306, 2, 24
Yaeger, Chuck, P York, Jim, P Young, Matt, P Young, Mike, OF Yusem, Al, P
’81-’84 ’68-’69 ’79-’80 ’82-’83 ’59
Zail, Greg, P Zak, Ray, INF Zamora, Peter, P/1B Zancanaro, Dave, P/OF Zeile, Shane, C/INF Zeile, Todd, C Zeno, Larry, P
70-73 61-63 ’95-’97 ’88-’90 ’12-’13 ’84-’86 ’63-’64
V .254, 7, 107, 90R, 15SB .323, 69, 219 .120, 0, 3 .284, 11, 113 27-12, 3.17, 201K, 9S .261, 0, 7 7-7, 5.70, 1S .145, 0, 3 .231, 0, 1 1-2, 4S, 4.71 .179, 0, 8 .216, 4, 28 0-0, 0.00, 1K .308, 9, 58
W
Y 15-15, 5.01, 7S 9-6, 2.01, 102K 10-7, 3.99, 1S .298, 5, 54 N/A
Z 15-5, 3.34, 177K .257, 2, 39 15-6, 4.66, 7S; .310, 28, 152 23-13, 3.72, 3S; 267, 5, 35 .261, 2, 30, 34R, 3SB .331, 26, 94 10-4, 1.87, 106K
UCLA ADMINISTRATORS
GENE
BLOCK CHANCELLOR • 7th Year Alma Mater: Stanford ’70 Dr. Gene Block became chancellor of UCLA in summer 2007, taking the helm of a world-class institution comprising 37,000 students and 27,000 faculty and staff, with an annual budget of $3.6 billion. As chief executive officer, he oversees all aspects of the university’s three-part mission of education, research and service. Previously, Dr. Block served as vice president and provost of the University of Virginia, where he also held the Alumni Council Thomas Jefferson Professorship in Biology. With academic expertise in biological clocks, he conducts research on the neurobiology of circadian rhythms in higher organisms, leading a research lab funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). From 1991 to 2002, he directed the National Science Foun-
DAN
GUERRERO O ATHLETIC DIRECTOR • 12th Year Alma Mater: UCLA ’74 In 11 years, Dan Guerrero has clearly established a pattern of “image and substance” that few in his profession can match. UCLA has won 110 NCAA team championships, a figure unmatched by any institution in the nation. UCLA teams have won 24 NCAA championships since his appointment, another national leader, finished second 21 times and have enjoyed an additional 43 Top Five finishes. More than 80% of UCLA teams have qualified for NCAA post-season competition since 2002. The football team has appeared in nine bowl games and the men’s basketball team advanced to consecutive Final Fours from 2006-08. The program has also won 55 conference championships in 15 different sports, produced over 500 All-Americans and featured four Honda Award winners, including the 2003-04 Collegiate Woman Athlete of the Year. Furthermore, during the 2012 Summer Olympic Games in London, 32 Bruins participated as athletes or coaches, representing the United States and eight other nations. They won nine medals, including six golds. In the last 11 years, UCLA has finished second three times (2007-08, 2006-07 and 2005-06), third four times (2004-05, 2003-04, 2011-12, 2012-13), fourth (2009-10), sixth (2002-03), 11th (2010-11) and 16th (2008-09) in the race for the Learfield Sports Directors’ Cup. In 2013, UCLA won its first Capital One Cup for men’s sports, vaulting to the top of the standings after winning the 2013 College World Series. Last year in NCAA competition, UCLA won its 109th NCAA title when the baseball team captured its first College World Series title, and eight teams finished among the Top 5 nationally. Men’s water polo and men’s tennis finished second, women’s water polo and women’s tennis (tied) placed third, women’s golf and women’s gymnastics finished fourth and women’s soccer tied for fifth. This past fall, UCLA brought home title No. 110 after women’s soccer won the first NCAA title in program history. Finally, 57 student-athletes earned All-America honors and 57 were selected to various all-conference teams. Academically in 2012-13, three UCLA student-athletes received CoSIDA Academic All-America honors bringing the school’s total to 116. In addition, graduating senior Jeff Locke, an All-Pac-12 first-team selection as a punter, earned the football program’s 18th NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship and UCLA’s 68th overall. Finally, pitcher Ryan Deeter became the first UCLA student-athlete to win the NCAA’s prestigious Elite 89 Award in any sport. Over the past decade, Guerrero has earned numerous honors. In May 2010, he was honored by the Black Coaches and Administrators organization as the Dr. Myles Brand BCA Administrator of the Year. In April 2010, he was honored by CORO Southern California, a non-profit organization that trains civic leaders. In June of 2010, Guerrero completed a five-year term on the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Committee. As the chair in 2009-10, he was involved with the
dation’s Science and Technology Center for Biological Timing. In 1997, he was named a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He has invented a number of devices and holds a patent for a non-contact respiratory monitor for the prevention of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. Dr. Block joined the faculty of the University of Virginia in 1978 as an assistant professor of biology. He served as vice provost for research from 1993 to 1998 and then as vice president for research and public service until his appointment as vice president and provost in 2001. He also headed an NIH graduate training program aimed at increasing the number of scientists from underrepresented groups. In 1998, he received the Commonwealth of Virginia’s Outstanding Public Service Award for his work with Virginia’s business community. A native of Monticello, NY, Dr. Block holds a bachelor’s degree in psychology from Stanford University and a master’s and Ph.D. in psychology from the University of Oregon. He also completed a postdoctoral fellowship at Stanford, working with the late Colin Pittendrigh, “the father of biological timing” and distinguished biologist and former Stanford President, Donald Kennedy. Dr. Block and his wife, Carol, have two adult children.
negotiation of the new $10.8 billion, 14-year NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament television package, as well as the decision to expand the Tournament to 68 teams. In June of 2007, he was named the NACDA Division I West Region Athletic Director of the Year. His other honors include 2002 UCLA Latino Alumnus of the Year (October 2002); Cal State Dominguez Hills’ Alumnus of the Year (March 2003); and 2003 “Father of the Year” by the Father’s Day Council of the American Diabetes Association. On September 10, 2002, the Los Angeles City Council honored him with Dan Guerrero Day. He also became the first athlete in any sport at Banning (Wilmington, CA) High School to have his jersey (#8 in baseball) retired in 2003. Guerrero was named one of the nation’s 100 Most Influential Hispanics by Hispanic Business Magazine (October 2004) and the May 5, 2003 issue of Sports Illustrated listed him #28 among the 101 Most Influential Minorities in Sports. He was one of 28 people whose photo was featured on that issue’s cover. In addition to unparalleled success in the playing arena, his decade at the helm has also produced unmatched success in academics. In Guerrero’s 10 years (30 quarters), student-athletes have earned 6,567 spots on the Director’s Honor Roll (3.0 or higher grade-point average for a quarter). In 2011-12, 140 UCLA student-athletes earned all-conference academic acclaim. Finally, community service activities for the program are at an all-time high. Under Guerrero’s guidance, UCLA continues to aggressively enhance its athletic facilities, including the completion of the Bud Knapp Football wing of the Acosta Center. In the same complex, the sports medicine and athletic performance centers were renovated and redesigned, and the Olympic sports locker rooms were added on a third level. A new golf practice facility and the Easton Softball Stadium renovation were completed during the 2004-05 season. Spieker Aquatic Center was completed in the summer of 2009. Improvements to Spaulding Field, the Bruins’ football practice facility, and Jackie Robinson Stadium, the Bruins’ baseball venue, continue to take place. Finally, the renovation of Pauley Pavilion was completed in October 2012, on time and under budget. Guerrero came to UCLA from UC Irvine, where he had served as UCI’s fifth permanent Director of Athletics for 10 years (1992-2002). During his tenure, the program accumulated conference championships, garnered national rankings, featured graduation rates among the nation’s best, and won numerous postseason honors for its student-athletes. In June of 2002 while still at UC Irvine, he was named the 2001-02 Division I-AA/I-AAA West Region NACDA Athletic Director of the Year. Prior to arriving at UC Irvine, Guerrero worked at Cal State Dominguez Hills, where he led that program to national prominence while serving as Athletic Director for five years (1988-92). Guerrero received his Bachelor’s degree from UCLA in 1974 and played second base for the Bruins for four years. His three-year batting average in Pacific-8 Conference games was .343. Guerrero, known as “Warrior” during his playing career, was inducted into the UCLA Baseball Hall of Fame in 1996. The Bruin Athletic Director earned a Master’s degree in Public Administration in 1982 from Cal State Dominguez Hills and was named to the Pi Alpha Alpha Honor Society for Public Affairs and Public Policy that same year. Guerrero, 61, was raised in Wilmington, CA. He is married to the former Anne Marie Aniello and they have two grown daughters.
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