Michigan_Wolverines_baseball

Michigan Wolverines baseball

Michigan Wolverines baseball

Baseball team of the University of Michigan


The Michigan Wolverines baseball team represents the University of Michigan in NCAA Division I college baseball. Along with most other Michigan athletic teams, the baseball team participates in the Big Ten Conference. They play their home games at Ray Fisher Stadium.

Quick Facts Founded, University ...

The Wolverines have made the College World Series eight times, winning two national championships in 1953 and 1962. Michigan is the third winningest program in NCAA Division I baseball history, trailing only Fordham and Texas.[2] The team is currently coached by Tracy Smith, who replaced Erik Bakich who left Michigan to coach at Clemson.

1875 Michigan baseball team
1882 Michigan baseball team with Moses Fleetwood Walker.
1886 Michigan baseball team
1899 team – Michigan's first conference champions
1912 team – coached by Branch Rickey.
1914 team – starring George Sisler.
Michigan's 1953 NCAA national championship team.

Championships

NCAA College World Series National Championships

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Conference Championships

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Conference Tournament championships

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Stadium

The Wolverines play their home games in Ray Fisher Stadium. The stadium is named after Ray Fisher, who is the winningest coach in Michigan baseball history, with 636 victories and also the 1953 College World Series championship.

In 2008, alum and owner of the New York Mets MLB franchise, Fred Wilpon donated $9 million for the renovation of Fisher Stadium and Alumni Field. It is now known as the Wilpon Baseball and Softball Complex, but more commonly known as the Wilpon Baseball Complex.

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Head coaches

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Year-by-year results

Michigan in the NCAA tournament

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First Team All-Americans

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Individual honors

Retired numbers

Michigan has retired six uniform numbers to date. Below is the detailed list:[3]

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1 Never played for the Wolverines. He coached Michigan with a record 636 wins and led the team to 15 Big Ten championships apart from winning the 1953 College World Series.

National Awards

Golden Spikes Award Winner

Baseball America College Player of the Year

NCBWA National Coach of the Year

Conference Awards

Big Ten Player of the Year

Big Ten Pitcher of the Year

  • Larry Carroll (1984)
  • Jim Brauer (2005)
  • Zach Putnam (2008)
  • Connor O'Halloran (2023)

Big Ten Freshman of the Year

  • Scott Weaver (1993)
  • Jason Alcaraz (1996)
  • Jake Bivens (2015)

Big Ten Coach of the Year

Big Ten Batting Title

  • Bill Freehan (1961; .585 batting average)
  • Carl Cmejrek (1965; .453 batting average)
  • Elliott Maddox (1968; .467 batting average)
  • Rick Leach (1978; .473 batting average)
  • George Foussianes (1979; .452 batting average)
  • Tony Evans (1981; .465 batting average)
  • Jim Paciorek, Ken Hayward (1982; .462 batting average)
  • Fred Erdmann (1983; .500 batting average)
  • Randy Wolfe (1985; .514 batting average)
  • Casey Close (1986; .469 batting average)
  • Scott Timmerman (1993; .431 batting average)
  • Scott Weaver (1995; .500 batting average)
  • Dominic Clementi (2018; .413 batting average)

University of Michigan Athletic Hall of Honor

The following 35 Michigan Wolverines baseball players and coaches (listed in order of induction) have been inducted into the University of Michigan Athletic Hall of Honor:

Wolverines in the MLB

[6]

Barry Larkin
= Selected to the Major League Baseball Hall of Fame
= Major League Baseball All-Star Game participant
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Note: Charlie Gehringer, Derek Jeter, and Ted Simmons are Baseball Hall of Fame inductees who were enrolled at Michigan, but never played for the baseball team.

Source: Baseball Reference

First-Round MLB Draft Picks

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See also


References

  1. "University of Michigan Style Guide: Colors". July 7, 2015. Retrieved July 7, 2015.
  2. "2021 NCAA Baseball Record Book" (PDF). ncaa.org. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
  3. "Michigan Baseball Individual Honors". bentley.umich.edu. Bentley Historical Library. 2013-04-18. Retrieved 2013-04-18.
  4. "Michigan Baseball National Honors" (PDF). MGoBlue.com. University of Michigan Baseball Record Book. 2013-04-13. Retrieved 2013-04-13.

Media related to Michigan Wolverines baseball at Wikimedia Commons


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