1983 College Baseball All-America Team

An All-American team is an honorary sports team composed of the best amateur players of a specific season for each team position—who in turn are given the honorific "All-America" and typically referred to as "All-American athletes", or simply "All-Americans". Although the honorees generally do not compete together as a unit, the term is used in United States team sports to refer to players who are selected by members of the national media. Walter Camp selected the first All-America team in the early days of American football in 1889.[1]

1984 All-Americans included four-time MLB All-Star Rafael Palmeiro (left) and current Houston Cougars baseball head coach Rayner Noble (right).

The NCAA recognizes two different All-America selectors for the 1983 college baseball season: the American Baseball Coaches Association (since 1947) and Baseball America (since 1981).[2]

Key

ABCA American Baseball Coaches Association[2]
BA Baseball America[2]
Awarded the Golden Spikes Award as national Player of the Year[2]
Player (X) Denotes the number of times the player had been named an All-American at that point
Inducted into the National College Baseball Hall of Fame

All-Americans

Position Name School ABCA BA Notes
PitcherMike CherryThe Citadel
Y
Y
PitcherJim HickeyTexas – Pan American
Y
Y
16 complete games in a single season (1983) (T-4th in Division I)[3]
PitcherCalvin SchiraldiTexas
Y
Y
BA Pitcher of the Year[2]
PitcherDennis LivingstonOklahoma State
Y
CatcherAndy AllansonRichmond
Y
CatcherTerry BellOld Dominion
Y
First basemanDave MagadanAlabama
Y
Y
BA POY,[2] Single-season (1983) .525 batting average (5th in Division I),[3] Career .439 batting average (11th in Division I)[3]
Second basemanJeff TroutDelaware
Y
Y
Single-season (1983) .519 batting average (T-6th in Division I)[3]
Third basemanCarey RossCentral Michigan
Y
Third basemanChris SaboMichigan
Y
3x MLB All-Star,[4] 1988 NL Rookie of the Year,[4] 1990 World Series Champion[4]
ShortstopJeff KunkelRider
Y
ShortstopBill MerrifieldWake Forest
Y
OutfielderBen AbnerGeorgia Southern
Y
Y
OutfielderShane MackUCLA
Y
Y
OutfielderKerwin DanleySan Diego State
Y
OutfielderRafael PalmeiroMississippi State
Y
4x MLB All-Star,[5] 3x Gold Glove Award winner,[5] 2x Silver Slugger Award Winner[5]
Designated hitterEric HardgraveStanford
Y
Designated hitterRuss MormanWichita State
Y
130 RBI in a single season (1982) (3rd in Division I)[3]
Utility playerRayner NobleHouston
Y
gollark: The distinction is that in C or whatever arrays are basically just pointers but vectors are proper resizable lists which handle the whatevering of memory.
gollark: Also C.
gollark: C++ and Rust also call them vectors.
gollark: The OS they ship on them is a bit bad, so I used a somewhat accursed bootstrapping process to install Alpine on them.
gollark: I didn't try any of the more managed services.

See also

References

  1. The Michigan alumnus. University of Michigan Library. 2010. p. 495. ASIN B0037HO8MY.
  2. "NCAA Baseball Award Winners" (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved 9 April 2012.
  3. "Division I Record Book" (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved 14 April 2012.
  4. "Chris Sabo". Baseball Reference. Retrieved 12 April 2012.
  5. "Rafael Palmeiro". Baseball Reference. Retrieved 11 April 2012.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.