Southern Conference baseball awards

At the end of each regular season, the Southern Conference names major award winners in baseball. Currently, it names a Coach, Pitcher, Player, and Freshman of the Year. The Coach of the Year award and Player of the Year award, which date to 1972, are the oldest. The others– Freshman (1980), and Pitcher (1989)– were added later.[1]

Coach of the Year

The Coach of the Year award was first presented in 1972. It is given annually to the conference's best head coach, as chosen by a vote of the SoCon's coaches.

Pitcher of the Year

The Pitcher of the Year award was first presented in 1989. It is given annually to the conference's best pitcher, as chosen by a vote of the SoCon's coaches.

Player of the Year

The Player of the Year award was first presented in 1972. It is given annually to the conference's best position player, as chosen by a vote of the SoCon's coaches. From 1969 to 2004, both pitchers and position players were eligible.

Freshman of the Year

The Freshman of the Year award was first presented in 1980. It is given annually to the conference's best freshman pitcher or position player, as chosen by a vote of the SoCon's coaches.

gollark: You use a program (cmake) to write a configuration file for a program (make) which then runs various programs to compile your code.
gollark: The current process is kind of crazy in my opinion.
gollark: <@433072575221071872> If I wanted, for some stupid reason, to add a driver to a windows install USB I'd google it.
gollark: It's madness.
gollark: `cmake` converts configuration into `make`files, which are their own format for "scripts" describing how to make things, which *then* runs the actual compiler when `make` is used with a target.

References

  1. 2015 SoCon Baseball Media Guide. Southern Conference. p. 65. Retrieved May 21, 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.