Mississippi State Bulldogs baseball

The Mississippi State Bulldogs baseball team is the varsity intercollegiate baseball team representing Mississippi State University in NCAA Division I college baseball. The program is a member of the West Division of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). The current head coach is Chris Lemonis, who replaced interim head coach Gary Henderson. They have appeared in the College World Series 11 times, most recently in 2019. They earned their highest finish in their 2013 CWS appearance, losing in the finals to UCLA, finishing the season with a consensus No. 2 ranking, the highest in program history.

Mississippi State Bulldogs baseball
2020 Mississippi State Bulldogs baseball team
Founded1885
Overall record2,692–1,576–29 (.630)[1]
UniversityMississippi State University
Athletic directorJohn Cohen
Head coachChris Lemonis (2nd season)
ConferenceSEC
West Division
LocationStarkville, Mississippi
Home stadiumDudy Noble Field
(Capacity: 15,500)
NicknameBulldogs
ColorsMaroon and White[2]
         
College World Series runner-up
2013
College World Series appearances
1971, 1979, 1981, 1985, 1990, 1997, 1998, 2007, 2013, 2018, 2019
NCAA regional champions
1979, 1981, 1985, 1990, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2007, 2011, 2013, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019
NCAA Tournament appearances
1949, 1953, 1965, 1966, 1970, 1971, 1978, 1979, 1981, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019
Conference tournament champions
1979, 1985, 1987, 1990, 2001, 2005, 2012
Conference champions
1909, 1911, 1918, 1921, 1922, 1924, 1948, 1949, 1965, 1966, 1970, 1971, 1979, 1985, 1987, 1989, 2016

History

Mississippi State has won 11 SEC Championships in 1948, 1949, 1965, 1966, 1970, 1971, 1979, 1985, 1987, 1989, and 2016.

It has won the SEC Tournament seven times, in 1979, 1985, 1987, 1990, 2001, 2005, and 2012. As shown in the List of SEC champs, it has also won six SEC postseason two-team playoffs, in 1948, 1949, 1965, 1966, 1970, and 1971. The seven tournament championships and six playoff championships are a total of 13 SEC postseason championships, the most of any school.

Prior to the formation of the SEC, the program won the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association championship in 1909, 1911, 1918, 1921, and 1922 as well as the Southern Conference title in 1924.

The program has also appeared in 33 NCAA Regionals and 10 College World Series, with its highest finish being second place in 2013. Between 1992 and 2003, a Bulldogs pitcher was selected in the first round of the MLB draft 6 times.[3]

Venue

The Bulldogs play their home games at Dudy Noble Field, Polk-DeMent Stadium. Dubbed the "Carnegie Hall of College Baseball" by Nelle Cohen, wife of former MSU skipper and current Athletic Director John Cohen,[4] it was the host site of the first SEC tournament and holds the NCAA baseball on-campus attendance record of 15,586 spectators, set in a game against the University of Mississippi in 2014.[5] The stadium has hosted 9 of the top 10 largest crowds to attend an on-campus college baseball game.[3][6][7] In 2013, Paul Swaney of Stadium Journey ranked it as the number one collegiate ballpark.[8] One of the venue's most prominent features is the Left Field Lounge, an outfield area where spectators can gather and enjoy the games in a tailgate setting, including stands built on top of old pick-up trucks and trailers.[9][10][11][12]

(Old) Dudy Noble Field/Polk-Dement Stadium

In 2005, the Palmeiro Center, a 68,000-square-foot (6,300 m2) indoor practice facility, was built next to Dudy Noble. The facility, made possible by a gift from program alumnus Rafael Palmeiro and his wife Lynne, features an infield practice area, additional training area, and three batting cages. A baseball coaches' office complex located between the Palmeiro Center and Dudy Noble Field was also built in 2005. The complex, which includes a baseball heritage room, was made possible by contributions from former Bulldog players Jeff Brantley, Will Clark, Eric DuBose, Paul Maholm, Jay Powell and Bobby Thigpen, along with sports agent and former Bulldog manager Bo McKinnis.[13]

Attendance

The program has set many attendance records at Dudy Noble Field. SEC weekend games usually draw the largest crowds to Dudy Noble Field. Mississippi State currently holds the NCAA record for the largest single game on-campus baseball attendance at 15,586 and the largest SEC crowd for a 3-game weekend series at 39,181. In 2007, in a Super Regional against the Clemson Tigers, Mississippi State set NCAA attendance records for Super Regional games with 12,620 and 13,715 fans. More than 5 million spectators have attended games at the venue since the university started tracking attendance numbers in 1976.[6][14] Mississippi State holds nine of the top 10 and 17 of the top 25 on-campus crowds in college baseball history, including 14 crowds of over 12,000 and 42 crowds of over 10,000.

Shown below are the 10 largest home crowds in Mississippi State history. Note that nine of these crowds are among the NCAA's 10 largest ever on-campus crowds.

RankAttendanceOpponentDateNote
115,586MississippiApril 12, 2014NCAA On-Campus Record
215,078Texas A&MApril 16, 2016#2 NCAA On-Campus Record
314,991FloridaApril 22, 1989#3 NCAA On-Campus Record
414,562AuburnApril 20, 2013#4 NCAA On-Campus Record
514,378Louisiana StateApril 16, 1988#5 NCAA On-Campus Record
613,761ArkansasApril 25, 1992#6 NCAA On-Campus Record
713,715ClemsonJune 9, 2007#8 NCAA On-Campus Record
NCAA Super Regional Single-Game Record
813,617GeorgiaApril 8, 2006#9 NCAA On-Campus Record
913,452ArizonaJune 11, 2016#10 NCAA On-Campus Record
1013,224MississippiApril 11, 2014#11 NCAA On-Campus Record

MLB First Round Draft Picks

Year Player Pick Team
1966 Del Unser 18 Washington Senators
1985 Rafael Palmeiro 22 Chicago Cubs via Padres
1985 Will Clark 2 San Francisco Giants
1992 B.J. Wallace 3 Montreal Expos
1993 Jay Powell 19 Baltimore Orioles
1994 Carlton Loewer 23 Philadelphia Phillies
1997 Eric Dubose 21 Oakland Athletics via Orioles
1999 Matt Ginter 22 Chicago White Sox via Mets
2003 Paul Maholm 8 Pittsburgh Pirates
2007 Ed Easley 61* Arizona Diamondbacks
2012 Chris Stratton 20 San Francisco Giants
2013 Hunter Renfroe 13 San Diego Padres
2016 Dakota Hudson 34 St. Louis Cardinals
2017 Brent Rooker 35** Minnesota Twins
2019 Ethan Small 28 Milwaukee Brewers
2020 Justin Foscue 14 Texas Rangers
2020 Jordan Westburg 30 Baltimore Orioles

* 1st round of the 2007 MLB Supplemental Draft

** Taken in the Competitive Balance 1st round of the 2017 MLB Draft

Mississippi State's 1st Team All-Americans

Player Position Year(s) Selectors
Del Unser Outfield 1966 SN
Philip Still Third Base 1971 ABCA
Nat "Buck" Showalter Outfield 1977 ABCA
Mike Kelly Outfield 1979 ABCA
Mark Gillaspie Outfield 1981 ABCA
Rafael Palmeiro First Base 1983, 1984, 1985 BA, ABCA, SN
Will Clark First Base 1984, 1985 SN, BA, ABCA
Jeff Brantley Pitcher 1985 ABCA, BA
Pete Young Utility player 1989 ABCA
Gary Rath Pitcher 1994 ABCA, BA
Brian Wiese Utility player 1998 NCBWA
Brad Corley Outfield 2004 BA
Edward Easley Catcher 2010 ABCA
Chris Stratton Pitcher 2012 ABCA, BA, CB, NCBWA
Jonathan Holder Pitcher 2013 CB, NCBWA
Hunter Renfroe Outfield 2013 ABCA, BA, CB, NCBWA
Jacob Lindgren Pitcher 2014 BA
Brent Rooker First Base 2017 ABCA, BA, CB, NCBWA
Source:"SEC All-Americas". secsports.com. Archived from the original on 2008-05-28. Retrieved 2008-07-24.

ABCA: American Baseball Coaches Association BA: Baseball America CB: Collegiate Baseball NCBWA: National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association Denotes consensus All-American

Individual awards

National awards

  • Baseball America Freshman of the Year Award
Rafael Palmeiro (1983)[15]
Will Clark (1985)[16]
Ron Polk (1985)[17]
  • Johnny Bench Award
Ed Easley (2007)[18]
  • Collegiate Baseball Player of the Year Award
Brent Rooker (2017)[19]
  • NCBWA National Coach of the Year
Gary Henderson (2018)[20]
  • Rawlings Coach of the Year
Gary Henderson (2018)[21]

SEC Awards

Brent Rooker (2017)
Chris Stratton (2012)
Ethan Small (2019)
J.T. Ginn (2019)

Notable players

6x All Star Will Clark
AL Batting Champion and Stolen Base Champion Buddy Myer

Coaches

Only those who coached 3 or more seasons and 30 or more games.[22]

CoachYearsOverall%Conf%SECT%NCAA Post Season
Overall%Super Reg%CWS%
W. D. Chadwick1910–1918120–72–9.61957–50–6.531
C.R."Dudy"Noble1920–1947267–201–9.56970–82.461
R."Doc"Patty1948–1956116–73.61478–59.5696–3†.6672–4.333
Paul Gregory1957–1974328–200–1.621161–113.5889–5†.6437–9.4380–2.000
Ron Polk1976–1997
2002–2008
1139–590–2.659419–324.56444–35.55757–44.5642–01.006–12.333
Pat McMahon1998–2001164–88.65163–52.5488–7.53313–10.5650–4.0001–2.333
John Cohen2009–2016284–203–1.583108–130.45411–8.57918–11.6213–4.4293–2.600

† There was no SEC Baseball Tournament before 1977. Records are for the two team playoff that determined the SEC champion.

Year-by-year results

Statistics overview
Season Coach Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Independent (1885–1903)
1885 W.J. "Will" Jennings 3–0
1886 W.J. "Will" Jennings 2–0
1887 W.J. "Will" Jennings 2–0
1888 W.J. "Will" Jennings 5–1
1889 G.C. Creelman 3–0
1890 G.C. Creelman 4–0
1891 G.C. Creelman 3–0
1892 G.C. Creelman 2–0
1893 G.C. Creelman 2–0–2
1894 No Team
1895 G.C. Creelman 1–0–1
1896 G.C. Creelman 0–2
1897 unknown 2–1
1898 No Team
1899 unknown 1–1
1900 No Team
1901 No Team
1902 S.W. Scales 5–1
1903 unknown 9–3
Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association (1904–1920)
1904 unknown 6–54–5
1905 S.A. Jehl 11–54–2
1906 Bert Noblett 9–8–13–2–1
1907 F.P. Plass 8–61–5
1908 F.P. Plass 19–13–24–7
1909 Dolly Stark 22–410–21st
1910 W. D. Chadwick 16–112–5
1911 W. D. Chadwick 16–710–61st
1912 W. D. Chadwick 14–8–17–7
1913 W. D. Chadwick 16–10–28–6–1
1914 W. D. Chadwick 11–9–25–6–1
1915 W. D. Chadwick 12–9–28–6–2
1916 W. D. Chadwick 11–76–6
1917 W. D. Chadwick 14–3–29–1–2
1918 W. D. Chadwick 10–84–71st
1919 Stanley L. Robinson 13–66–4
1920 Dudy Noble 8–86–6
Southern Conference (1921–1932)
1921 Dudy Noble 13–86–61st
1922 Dudy Noble 16–6–37–1–11st
1923 Dudy Noble 14–911–7
1924 Dudy Noble 17–712–31st
1925 Dudy Noble 19–79–5
1926 Dudy Noble 18–1210–8
1927 Dudy Noble 13–8–19–7
1928 Dudy Noble 12–87–6
1929 Dudy Noble 9–6–33–5
1930 Dudy Noble 12–126–7
1931 Dudy Noble 12–98–5
1932 Dudy Noble 8–103–5
Southeastern Conference (1933–present)
1933 Dudy Noble 10–53–52nd
1934 Dudy Noble 11–58–42nd
1935 Dudy Noble 8–38–32nd
1936 Dudy Noble 8–5–16–43rd
1937 Dudy Noble 12–38–33rd
1938 Dudy Noble 5–73–710th
1939 Dudy Noble 7–103–1011th
1940 Dudy Noble 5–94–77th
1941 Dudy Noble 8–97–87th
1942 Dudy Noble 8–6–16–76th
1943 Dudy Noble 3–93–9T-7th
1944 No Team
1945 No Team
1946 Dudy Noble 3–122–96th
1947 Dudy Noble 8–87–88th
1948 R. P. "Doc" Patty 17–812–51stSEC Championship Series (3–0, Won)
1949 R. P. "Doc" Patty 19–613–31stSEC Championship Series (3–1, Won)
NCAA District III Tournament (1–2), 3rd
1950 R. P. "Doc" Patty 13–69–53rd
1951 R. P. "Doc" Patty 11–96–9T-8th
1952 R. P. "Doc" Patty 12–116–9T-9th
1953 R. P. "Doc" Patty 15–712–32ndSEC Championship Series (0–2, Lost)
NCAA District III Tournament (1–2), 3rd
1954 R. P. "Doc" Patty 9–77–78th
1955 R. P. "Doc" Patty 9–107–9T-7th
1956 R. P. "Doc" Patty 11–96–99th
1957 Paul Gregory 13–510–5T-4th
1958 Paul Gregory 14–108–65th
1959 Paul Gregory 12–135–10T-10th
1960 Paul Gregory 16–118–87th
1961 Paul Gregory 12–77–65th
1962 Paul Gregory 21–5–114–1–12ndSEC Championship Series (1–2, Lost)
1963 Paul Gregory 17–119–7T-4th
1964 Paul Gregory 17–127–75th
1965 Paul Gregory 16–1011–41stSEC Championship Series (2–0, Won)
NCAA District III Tournament (1–2)
1966 Paul Gregory 20–1111–41stSEC Championship Series (2–1, Won)
NCAA District III Tournament (1–2)
1967 Paul Gregory 17–149–9T-5th
1968 Paul Gregory 16–177–108th
1969 Paul Gregory 20–1011–74th
1970 Paul Gregory 32–811–41stSEC Championship Series (2–1, Won)
NCAA District III Tournament (2–2)
1971 Paul Gregory 32–1213–51stSEC Championship Series (2–0, Won)
NCAA District III Tournament (3–1)
College World Series (0–2)
1972 Paul Gregory 24–167–11T-6th
1973 Paul Gregory 16–14–15–99th
1974 Paul Gregory 13–148–96th
1975 Jimmy Bragan 16–246–1610th
1976 Ron Polk 28–1711–12T-5th
1977 Ron Polk 33–1511–9T-5thSEC Tournament (1–2, 3rd)
1978 Ron Polk 38–1813–83rdSEC Tournament (3–2, 2nd)
NCAA Regional (2–2, 2nd)
1979 Ron Polk 48–1217–21stSEC Tournament (3–0, Won)
NCAA Regional (4–1, Won)

College World Series (1–2, T-5th)
1980 Ron Polk 31–1910–115th
1981 Ron Polk 46–1717–61stSEC Tournament (1–2, 3rd)
NCAA Regional (3–0, Won)
College World Series (1–2, T-5th)
1982 Ron Polk 28–2311–137th
1983 Ron Polk 42–1517–51stSEC Tournament (2–2, 2nd)
NCAA Regional (3–2, 2nd)
1984 Ron Polk 45–1618–52ndSEC Tournament (1–2, 3rd)
NCAA Regional (3–2, 2nd)
1985 Ron Polk 50–1516–81stSEC Tournament (3–0, Won)
NCAA Regional (3–1, Won)

College World Series (2–2, T-3rd)
1986 Ron Polk 34–2112–157th
1987 Ron Polk 39–2213–136thSEC Tournament (4–0, Won)
NCAA Regional (1–2, 4th)
1988 Ron Polk 44–2017–103rdSEC Tournament (3–2, 2nd)
NCAA Regional (2–2, 3rd)
1989 Ron Polk 54–1420–51stSEC Tournament (1–2, T-4th)
NCAA Regional (4–2, 2nd)
1990 Ron Polk 50–2117–93rdSEC Tournament (4–1, T-1st)
NCAA Regional (4–1, Won)
College World Series (1–2, T-5th)
1991 Ron Polk 42–2112–93rdSEC Tournament (2–2, 3rd)
NCAA Regional (2–2, 3rd)
1992 Ron Polk 40–2215–93rdSEC Tournament (1–2, T-5th)
NCAA Regional (2–2, 3rd)
1993 Ron Polk 41–2117–124thSEC Tournament (West) (3–2, 2nd)
NCAA Regional (0–2, T-5th)
1994 Ron Polk 36–2315–124thSEC Tournament (West) (2–2, 3rd)
1995 Ron Polk 34–2511–169thSEC Tournament (West) (1–2, 5th)
1996 Ron Polk 38–2417–135thSEC Tournament (1–2, T-5th)
NCAA Regional (1–2, 4th)
1997 Ron Polk 47–2119–113rdSEC Tournament (1–2, T-5th)
NCAA Regional (5–1, Won)
College World Series (1–2, T-5th)
1998 Pat McMahon 42–2314–156thSEC Tournament (2–2, T-3rd)
NCAA Regional (4–1, Won)
College World Series (1–2, T-5th)
1999 Pat McMahon 42–2115–136thSEC Tournament (2–2, T-3rd)
NCAA Regional (2–2, 2nd)
2000 Pat McMahon 41–2017–104thSEC Tournament (0–2, T-7th)
NCAA Regional (3–1, Won)
NCAA Super Regional (0–2, Lost)
2001 Pat McMahon 39–2417–13T-4thSEC Tournament (4–0, Won)
NCAA Regional (3–0, Won)
NCAA Super Regional (0–2, Lost)
2002 Ron Polk 34–24–114–157thSEC Tournament (1–2, T-5th)
2003 Ron Polk 42–20–117–124thSEC Tournament (2–2, T-3rd)
NCAA Regional (2–2, 2nd)
2004 Ron Polk 35–2413–179thNCAA Regional (1–2, 3rd)
2005 Ron Polk 42–2213–167thSEC Tournament (4–0, Won)
NCAA Regional (2–2, 2nd)
2006 Ron Polk 37–2312–179thNCAA Regional (2–2, 2nd)
2007 Ron Polk 38–2215–134thSEC Tournament (0–2, T-7th)
NCAA Regional (3–0, Won)
NCAA Super Regional (2–0, Won)
College World Series (0–2, T-7th)
2008 Ron Polk 23–339–2112th
2009 John Cohen 25–299–2012th
2010 John Cohen 23–336–2411th
2011 John Cohen 38–2514–166thSEC Tournament (0–2, T-7th)
NCAA Regional (3–0, Won)
NCAA Super Regional (1–2, Lost)
2012 John Cohen 40–2416–14T-5thSEC Tournament (5–1, Won)
NCAA Regional (1–2, 3rd)
2013 John Cohen 51–2016–145thSEC Tournament (3–1, T-3rd)
NCAA Regional (3–1, Won)
NCAA Super Regional (2–0, Won)
College World Series (3–2, 2nd)
2014 John Cohen 39–2418–12T-3rdSEC Tournament (2–2, T-5th)
NCAA Regional (2–2, 2nd)
2015 John Cohen 24–308–2214th
2016 John Cohen 44–18–121–91stSEC Tournament (1–2, T-5th)
NCAA Regional (3–0, Won) (#6 National Seed)
NCAA Super Regional (0–2, Lost)
2017 Andy Cannizaro 40–2717–135thSEC Tournament (2–2, T-5th)
NCAA Regional (4–1, Won)
NCAA Super Regional (0–2, Lost)
2018 Andy Cannizaro
Gary Henderson
39–2915–15T-7thSEC Tournament (0–1, T-9th)
NCAA Regional (4–1, Won)
NCAA Super Regional (2–1, Won)
College World Series (2–2, T-3rd)
2019 Chris Lemonis 52–1520–10T-3rdSEC Tournament (1–2, T-5th)
NCAA Regional (3–0, Won) (#6 National Seed)
NCAA Super Regional (2–0, Won)
College World Series (1–2, T-5th)
2020 Chris Lemonis 12–40–0Postseason Canceled by NCAA†
Total:2,709–1,582–29

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

†NCAA canceled all postseason activities for all college sports due to the COVID-19 virus.

50 Win Seasons

Year Coach W L SEC Champ SECT Champ Postseason Result CWS Final Rank CWS Record Total Postseason Record†
1985 Ron Polk 50 15 College World Series 3rd 2–2 5–3
1989 Ron Polk 54 14 Regionals N/A N/A 4–2
1990 Ron Polk 50 21 College World Series 5th 1–2 5–3
2013 John Cohen 51 20 College World Series Runner-Up 2nd 3–2 8–3
2019 Chris Lemonis 52 15 †† College World Series T-5th 1–2 6–2

† Does not include SEC Tourney Record
†† Division Champ

All-time record vs. SEC teams

Opponent Won Lost Tied Percentage First Last
Alabama1992144.48218962019
Arkansas56510.52319602019
Auburn110931.54219082019
Florida50650.43519232019
Georgia50480.51019152019
Kentucky62410.60219252018
LSU2141850.53619072019
Missouri920.81820032018
Ole Miss2572075.55318932019
South Carolina36390.48019812019
Tennessee60290.67419072019
Texas A&M18150.54519072019
Vanderbilt71502.58519132019
Totals 1191 1035 12 .535

Rivalries

In baseball, MSU has two main rivals, LSU and Ole Miss.

Against LSU, the Bulldogs hold a 207–175–1 all-time series lead over LSU in a series that got its start in 1907.

Against Mississippi, Mississippi State now leads the series 248–204–5. Retired Mississippi State head baseball coach, Ron Polk, was 85–49 against Mississippi. John Cohen, MSU's former coach, was 8–11 in SEC Conference games and 11–17 overall against Mississippi. Andy Cannizaro was 4-0 against Mississippi in 2017. Gary Henderson was 3-1 against Mississippi in 2018, while MSU's current coach Chris Lemonis has a 4-0 mark. The two teams play a 3-game series each year that counts in the SEC standings and one non-conference game in Jackson, MS. The game in Jackson was called the Mayor's Trophy from 1980 to 2006, and from 2007 to present the game has been called the Governor's Cup. The Mayor's Trophy series ended 14–13 in favor of the Rebels. With the 2007 season, the non-conference meeting between the two teams moved to Trustmark Park in Pearl, Mississippi – which is the home to the Mississippi Braves. Mississippi State holds the lead in the Governor's Cup 9–4.

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See also

References

  1. "2016 MISSISSIPPI STATE BASEBALL MEDIA GUIDE". Mississippi State University Athletics 2016. p. 2. Retrieved June 30, 2016.
  2. Mississippi State University Color Palette (PDF). Retrieved April 21, 2020.
  3. Mississippi State University 2013 Baseball Media Guide Archived 2013-12-10 at the Wayback Machine
  4. "Cohen tries to continue revival of MSU baseball". Retrieved 30 March 2017.
  5. Bonner, Michael (13 April 2014). "Mississippi State rallies in 10th to steal win from Ole Miss". Jackson Clarion Ledger. Retrieved 13 April 2014.
  6. "This is Mississippi State Baseball by the Numbers..." (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-01-10. Retrieved 2014-01-10.
  7. "MSU now holds top ten on-campus attendances". 2013-04-22. Retrieved 30 March 2017.
  8. 2013 College Baseball Ballpark Rankings
  9. Photo of Left Field Lounge from http://www.glimpseofourlife.com/2012/06/4h-club-congress-at-mississippi-state.html
  10. Miller, Jennifer. "4H Club Congress at Mississippi State University". Retrieved 30 March 2017.
  11. "BRAD LOCKE: Passion for baseball runs deep at Mississippi State – Daily Journal". 5 February 2013. Retrieved 30 March 2017.
  12. "Leftfield Lounge News – College baseball...Lounge Lizard style". Retrieved 30 March 2017.
  13. "COACHES & STAFF" (PDF). Mississippi State. 2008. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
  14. "Dudy Noble Field, Polk-DeMent Stadium – Mississippi State Athletics". Retrieved 30 March 2017.
  15. "Baseball America Awards - BaseballAmerica.com". 20 July 2016. Retrieved 30 March 2017.
  16. "Golden Spikes Award Home".
  17. "Coach Of The Year - BaseballAmerica.com". 30 June 2008. Retrieved 30 March 2017.
  18. "MSU's Edward Easley Wins Bench Award As Nation's Top Catcher – Mississippi State Athletics". Retrieved 30 March 2017.
  19. "2017 NCAA Div 1 Baseball All-Americans - Collegiate Baseball Newspaper".
  20. "Mississippi State's Gary Henderson named NCBWA National Coach of the Year". 16 June 2018. Archived from the original on 25 June 2018. Retrieved 25 June 2018.
  21. "Henderson Named 2018 Perfect Game/Rawlings Coach Of The Year". MSU Athletics. Retrieved 13 June 2018.
  22. "2016 MISSISSIPPI STATE BASEBALL MEDIA GUIDE". Mississippi State University Athletics 2016. Retrieved June 30, 2016.
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