Virginia Cavaliers baseball

The Virginia Cavaliers baseball team represents the University of Virginia in NCAA Division I college baseball. Established in 1889, the team participates in the Coastal division of the Atlantic Coast Conference and plays its home games at Davenport Field. The team's head coach is Brian O'Connor. The team won the College World Series championship in 2015.

Virginia Cavaliers
2020 Virginia Cavaliers baseball team
Founded1889 (1889)
UniversityUniversity of Virginia
Head coachBrian O'Connor (17th season)
ConferenceACC
Coastal Division
LocationCharlottesville, Virginia
Home stadiumDavenport Field
(Capacity: 4,825)
NicknameCavaliers
ColorsOrange and Blue[1]
         
NCAA Tournament champions
2015
College World Series runner-up
2014
College World Series appearances
2009, 2011, 2014, 2015
NCAA Tournament appearances
1972, 1985, 1996, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017
Conference tournament champions
1996, 2009, 2011
Conference champions
1972, 2010, 2011

History

Virginia played its first baseball game, a 13–4 win over Richmond College, in 1889. The Cavaliers had limited success in their first 100 years of play, making their NCAA tournament debut in 1972 under Jim West and returning in 1985 and 1996 under Dennis Womack, failing to advance past regional play. They won their first ACC tournament championship in 1996 behind the pitching of All-America righthander Seth Greisinger. One highlight was the performance of left-handed pitcher Eppa Rixey, who won 266 games for the Philadelphia Phillies and Cincinnati Reds from 1912–1933 and was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame as a Veterans Committee selection in 1963.

In 1966, left-handed pitcher Edward Turnbull became the program's first MLB draft pick, going to the Baltimore Orioles in the 17th round. Outfielder Brian Buchanan was the first Virginia player to become a first-round pick, going to the New York Yankees in the 1994 draft.

Tiering proposal and Davenport Field

In 2001, the program was threatened by recommendations from a university task force that would have split the school's sports into four tiers, with each tier funded differently. The baseball program was placed in the lowest tier and would have lost the ability to offer athletic scholarships if the recommendation was implemented, but the university's Board of Visitors rejected the proposal.[2]

The next year, the Virginia athletic department took steps to increase the program's competitiveness, notably renovating the team's stadium, which was renamed Davenport Field after longtime athletic administrator and former baseball coach Ted Davenport, who had died in 2001. The expansion was funded by $2 million in anonymous donations, believed to have come from bestselling author John Grisham,[3] a Charlottesville resident whose son, Ty, played for the team. Before the renovation, the field did not have lights, and the infield was made of artificial turf handed down from an old football facility. Bermuda grass was installed during the renovations.

Brian O'Connor era

Womack stepped down in 2004, and Notre Dame associate head coach Brian O'Connor took over and made an immediate impact, with the program hosting its first NCAA regional in his first season. As of the 2017 season, the Cavaliers have made the NCAA tournament every year of O'Connor's tenure and captured ACC tournament championships in 2009 and 2011.

Virginia hosted NCAA regionals again in 2006 and 2007, but did not advance until 2009. That year, the Cavaliers won the Irvine Regional, defeating San Diego State ace Stephen Strasburg in the process, and defeated Ole Miss in the Oxford Super Regional to advance to the program's first College World Series, where they finished fifth, bowing out in a 12-inning loss to Arkansas.

The Cavaliers won the Charlottesville Regional again in 2010, but lost to Oklahoma in the Charlottesville Super Regional. In 2011, entering the NCAA Tournament as the top overall seed, they swept the Charlottesville Regional and rallied from a ninth-inning deficit to defeat UC Irvine on a two-run single from Chris Taylor in the Charlottesville Super Regional. They finished third in the College World Series, losing to eventual champion South Carolina in 13 innings.

In 2013, Virginia swept the Charlottesville Regional before losing to Mississippi State in the Charlottesville Super Regional. In 2014, the Cavaliers reached previously unprecedented heights, losing 3–2 to Vanderbilt in a decisive Game 3 of the College World Series finals. They had swept the Charlottesville Regional and defeated Maryland in the Charlottesville Super Regional.

2015 NCAA Champions

In 2015, an injury-riddled Virginia team slumped in the regular season and needed a series win in the final regular-season series at North Carolina to sew up a bid in the ACC tournament. They made the NCAA tournament as a No. 3 seed and swept through the Lake Elsinore Regional, defeating Southern California (twice) and San Diego State. They hosted Maryland in the Charlottesville Super Regional and clinched a trip to the College World Series on Ernie Clement's two-run single in the bottom of the ninth of the second game.

In Omaha, Virginia defeated Arkansas and Florida (twice) to set up a finals rematch with Vanderbilt. The Commodores won the first game 5–1 before the Cavaliers evened the series with a 3–0 victory behind five innings from surprise starter Adam Haseley and four from Josh Sborz. Virginia fell behind early in the decisive third game, giving up two runs in the first inning, but Pavin Smith homered to pull the Cavaliers even and singled to score Haseley with the eventual winning run. Brandon Waddell threw seven strong innings, aided by an acrobatic, run-saving stop from third baseman Kenny Towns, as the Cavaliers won 4–2 to capture the program's first national championship and the first for an ACC program since Wake Forest in 1955.

Notable former players

Active Major League Baseball (MLB) players

Notable former MLB players

First-Round MLB Draft Picks

(Includes supplemental and competitive-balance picks)

Honors

First-Team All-Americans

  • 1994: Brian Buchanan, OF (BA)
  • 1996: Seth Greisinger, RHP (ABCA, BA, CB)
  • 2007: Jacob Thompson, RHP (ABCA, BA, CB)
  • 2009: Danny Hultzen, UTIL (ABCA)
  • 2010: Kevin Arico, RHP (NCBWA, CB)
  • 2010: Danny Hultzen, LHP (ABCA, CB, NCBWA)
  • 2011: Danny Hultzen, UTIL (BA, CB), LHP (ABCA)
  • 2013: Mike Papi, OF (ABCA, BA)
  • 2014: Nathan Kirby, LHP (ABCA, BA, CB)
  • 2016: Connor Jones, RHP (ABCA)
  • 2017: Adam Haseley, OF (ABCA, BA)

National Coach of the Year

  • 2006: Brian O'Connor (CBF)
  • 2009: Brian O'Connor (NCBWA, CBI)
  • 2015: Brian O'Connor (CB, PG, BA)

Legend:

College World Series All-Tournament Team

  • 2009
Tyler Cannon, SS
  • 2014
Branden Cogswell, 2B
Brandon Downes, OF
Nate Irving, C
Artie Lewicki, P
Brandon Waddell, P
  • 2015
Ernie Clement, 2B
Daniel Pinero, SS
Kenny Towns, 3B
Josh Sborz, P
Brandon Waddell, P

College World Series Most Outstanding Player

  • 2015: Josh Sborz, P

ACC Player of the Year

ACC Pitcher of the Year

  • 2010: Danny Hultzen
  • 2011: Danny Hultzen
  • 2014: Nathan Kirby (co-winner)

ACC Coach of the Year

  • 1987: Dennis Womack
  • 2004: Brian O'Connor
  • 2010: Brian O'Connor
  • 2011: Brian O'Connor
  • 2013: Brian O'Connor
  • 2014: Brian O'Connor

Head coaches

  • Unknown (1889–1909) 288–167–9
  • Charles Rigler (1910–12) 32–32–2
  • Jack Ryan (1913–1916, 1922) 60–43–1
  • James L. White (1917, 1920) 13–9–1
  • Henry Lannigan (1918) 7–4–0
  • E. W. Smith (1919) 8–8–1
  • W. Rice Warren (1921) 7–15–0
  • Earle "Greasy" Neale (1923–29) 80–73–2
  • Roy Randall (1930) 2–12–0
  • Gus Tebell (1931–43, 1945–55) 266–189–9
  • A. A. Corcoran (1944) 6–5–1
  • Evan "Bus" Male (1956–59) 36–50–0
  • Ted Davenport (1960–61) 10–26–2
  • James West (1962–80) 281–276–5
  • Dennis Womack (1981–2003) 594–605–7
  • Brian O'Connor (2004–present) 700–288–2

Note: When West died on May 24, 2009, the Cavaliers added a black circle with the number "24" above the team name on their uniforms for the rest of the season. West had worn that number when he was coach.

Virginia in the NCAA Tournament

Year Record Pct Notes
1972 2–2 .500
1985 1–2 .333
1996 3–2 .600
2004 2–2 .500 Hosted Charlottesville Regional
2005 0–2 .000
2006 1–2 .333 Hosted Charlottesville Regional
2007 2–2 .500 Hosted Charlottesville Regional
2008 1–2 .333
2009 6–3 .667 College World Series 5th Place
2010 4–3 .571 Hosted Charlottesville Regional and Super Regional
2011 7–3 .700 College World Series 3rd Place
2012 1–2 .333 Hosted Charlottesville Regional
2013 3–2 .600 Hosted Charlottesville Regional and Super Regional
2014 9–3 .750 College World Series 2nd Place
2015 10–2 .833 College World Series Champion
2016 1–2 .333 Hosted Charlottesville Regional
2017 1–2 .333
TOTALS
54–38 .587
gollark: Hmmm, ESOLANG TIME!
gollark: as well as apparently several other instructions.
gollark: Oh, and MOV is Turing-complete.
gollark: Apparently LEA can substitute for ADD in some cases.
gollark: Wouldn't steganographically storing data in instructions probably require somewhat complex analysis of program function and stuff?

See also

References

  1. "University of Virginia Cavalier Orange". July 15, 2019. Retrieved April 25, 2020.
  2. "Athletics Task Force Report Recommends Restructuring Of Sports Program, Finances, Academic Support". University of Virginia - Official Athletics Website. University of Virginia. April 6, 2001. Retrieved 10 June 2016.
  3. Reedy, Jim (June 7, 2004). "Grisham Helps Cavs Open New Chapter". The Washington Post. Retrieved 10 June 2016.
  4. "Vandy wins 1st CWS championship". ESPN.com. June 26, 2014. Retrieved June 26, 2015.
  5. Axisa, Mike (June 24, 2015). "College World Series, Day 12: Virginia wins first national championship". CBSSports.com. Retrieved June 26, 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.