Houston Cougars baseball
Houston Cougars | |
---|---|
2021 Houston Cougars baseball team | |
Founded | 1947 |
University | University of Houston |
Head coach | Todd Whitting (11th season) |
Conference | The American |
Location | Houston, Texas |
Home stadium | Schroeder Park (Capacity: 5,000) |
Nickname | Cougars |
Colors | Scarlet and white[1] |
College World Series runner-up | |
1967 | |
College World Series appearances | |
1953, 1967 | |
NCAA regional champions | |
1953, 1967, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2014 | |
NCAA Tournament appearances | |
1951, 1953, 1958, 1960, 1966, 1967, 1982, 1985, 1987, 1990, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2006, 2008, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2018 | |
Conference tournament champions | |
1951, 1997, 2000, 2008, 2014, 2017 | |
Regular season conference champions | |
1950, 1951, 1953, 1960, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2015, 2017, 2018 |
The Houston Cougars baseball team is the college baseball team of the University of Houston. Along with the university's other athletic teams, the baseball team is a member of the American Athletic Conference as a Division I team. They play their home games at Schroeder Park. In addition to numerous NCAA Tournament appearances, the Cougars have made two College World Series appearances. Houston has been led by head coach Todd Whitting since 2011.
History
Early years and Lovette Hill era
The University of Houston's baseball program started in 1947. Head coach Ned Thompson was hired from Pasadena High School, and became the first baseball coach for 1947, backfield coach in football from 1946–1948 for the University of Houston. He also served as associate athletic director in charge of business finances from 1946–1976. Among the players for his 1947 baseball team was pitcher Bill Henry who had been a forward on Thompson's state high school championship basketball team the year prior.[2] Following his 1947 efforts for Houston, Henry went on to become Houston's first player to play Major League Baseball, where he enjoyed a 17-year career.
During the first few years of the baseball team's existence, head coaches came and went, and after the third season, the team had already been through three. Houston's fourth head baseball coach, Lovette Hill broke this trend when taking over for the 1950 season. A year after Hill became coach, the Houston Cougars appeared in their first NCAA Regional. The 1953 season was one of the team's most historic and winningest years as they made their first College World Series appearance. Continuing with Lovette Hill, the Cougars appeared in several more NCAA Regionals throughout the 1950s and 1960s. Appearing in the 1967 College World Series against the Arizona State Sun Devils, the Cougars won runner-up and finished with a #2 national ranking. The team began by playing their home games at nearby Buffalo Stadium, before moving into an on-campus facility.
Walton era
After a 24-year tenure with the Cougars, Lovette Hill retired, and Rolan Walton took over as head coach. Walton had previously served with the Cougars in the early years under Hill as a player.[3] He later played as a shortstop for the Victoria Rosebuds, a Texas League team, before leaving in 1954. During Walton's time as coach, the Cougars appeared in two more NCAA Regionals throughout the 1980s. Also during this time, the University of Houston discontinued their stint as being independent from any college athletic conference, and joined the now defunct Southwest Conference in 1976.
Stockton era
In 1987, the University of Houston hired Bragg Stockton[4] as head coach, and appeared in another NCAA Regional the same year. Before Stockton retired after the 1993 season, the Cougars made one more appearance. Playing under Stockton were several standout players including Rayner Noble. After a brief stint of playing in Minor League Baseball, Noble returned to the University of Houston as an assistant coach under Stockton. In 1994, following Bragg Stockton's retirement, Rayner Noble was named head coach of the Cougars. Stockton however, was not completely done with the team, and returned for the 2002 season as a volunteer coach. Working with Noble for only a year, Stockton died.
Noble era
After becoming head coach of the Cougars in 1994, Rayner Noble launched the Cougars to more NCAA Regional appearances than any other coach in the team's history. In addition to eight of such appearances, the Cougars have appeared in three NCAA Super Regionals. In 1995, the Cougars baseball team received a newly constructed Cougar Field that seated 5,000. The following year was the last for the Southwest Conference, and in 1997 the Cougars joined Conference USA. In 2004, the Cougars played San Diego State at Petco Park in front of 40,106, the largest college baseball crowd to date.[5]
In 2006, pitcher Brad Lincoln won the Dick Howser Trophy. Lincoln was the first to receive this award in the program's history, and in Conference USA. He also received the Brooks Wallace Award that year among other honors.
In Conference USA, the Cougars appeared in every Conference USA Baseball Tournament, and held the second most number of tournament titles (behind Tulane).
Despite becoming the program's winningest coach, Noble's 2008 and 2009 records were back-to-back losing seasons, which Houston had not seen since 1974 and 1975.[6]
Whitting and modern era
In 2010, it was announced that Rayner Noble would not return as Houston's head coach.[7] Former assistant coach and player for Houston Todd Whitting was announced as his replacement. Whitting had served in various positions with TCU, ultimately serving as associate head coach before returning to his alma mater.[6]
In the 2013 season after rebuilding the team for two years, Whitting has led the Houston Cougar Baseball team to its best start in the last 24 seasons. In March 2013, for the first time in seven years, with Todd Whitting at the helm, Houston Cougar Baseball was ranked in the top twenty by Baseball America.
Houston's Cougar Field (now Schroeder Park) received substantial renovations at the end of the 2013 calendar year thanks to major donations from Alumni and former players. FieldTurf was installed to replace the natural grass and bullpens were upgraded giving the stadium a nice makeover.
In 2014 season, the Houston Cougars joined the American Athletic Conference for its inaugural season. Riding the momentum of the 2013 season, the Cougars continued their success into 2014 and won the AAC conference tournament to become the first American Athletic Conference Baseball Champions. The Cougars finished the 2014 regular season with an impressive 44–15 record and ranking as high as number 9 nationally. This was also the first season since 1993 the Cougars have swept baseball powerhouse Rice and claimed the Silver Glove Series.
Conference affiliations
- 1947, Independent
- 1948, Lone Star Conference
- 1949, Independent
- 1950, Gulf Coast Conference
- 1951–1960, Missouri Valley Conference
- 1961–1972, Independent
- 1973–1996, Southwest Conference
- 1997–2013, Conference USA
- 2014–present, American Athletic Conference
Year-by-Year results
Head coaches
Years | Coach | Wins | Losses | Ties | Pct. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1947 | Ned Thompson | 1 | 5 | 0 | .167 |
1948 | Dalton Albert | 4 | 7 | 1 | .375 |
1949 | BIll Lutz | 7 | 9 | 0 | .438 |
1950–1974 | Lovette Hill | 343 | 325 | 5 | .515 |
1975–1986 | Rolan Walton | 378 | 235 | 5 | .616 |
1987–1994 | Bragg Stockton | 283 | 183 | 4 | .606 |
1995–2010 | Rayner Noble | 454 | 337 | 0 | .573 |
2011–present | Todd Whitting | 175 | 127 | 1 | .575 |
Rivalries
Each year Houston competes in the Silver Glove series against the Rice University Owls.
MLB Draft history
Bold italics indicates player competed or currently plays in the Major Leagues
#- Active in 2016 ^- Returned to school ()- Indicates overall pick FA – Free agent signee
2006
- #Brad Lincoln Pi Pittsburgh 1st (No. 4) Major Leagues Pos. SP Years at UH 2004–06 Organization Toronto Blue Jays
2004
- Garrett Mock Ar Arizona 3rd Major Leagues Pos. SP Years at UH 2003–04
- Rob Johnson Se Seattle 4th Pos. C Years at UH 2004
2003
- #Michael Bourn Ph Philadelphia 4th Major Leagues Pos. OF Years at UH 2001–03 Organization Free Agent (Atlanta Braves 2012) MLB ALL-STARS 2012 – Atlanta Braves 2010 – Houston Astros
2002
- #Jesse Crain Mi Minnesota 2nd Major Leagues Pos. RP Years at UH 2002 Organization Chicago White Sox
- Chris Snyder Ar Arizona 2nd Pos. C Years at UH 2000–02
2000
- Shane Nance Los Angeles 11th
1999
- ^Shane Nance Los Angeles 24th
1994
- Matt Beech Philadelphia 7th
1993
- Jason McDonald Oakland 4th
- Matt Beech Detroit 24th
1992
- Chris Tremie Chicago (A) 39th
1991
- Vaughn Eshelman Baltimore 4th
- Scott Sheldon Oakland 8th
- Ben Weber Toronto 20th
1988
- Woody Williams To Toronto 28th MLB All-Stars 2003 – St. Louis Cardinals
1987
- Anthony Young New York (N) 38th
1986
- Mike Walker Pittsburgh 2nd
- Steve Cummings Toronto 2nd
- Mike Basso San Diego 18th
- Jeff Banister Pittsburgh 25th
1983
- Rayner Noble Houston 5th
- Doug Drabek Ch Chicago (A) 11th MLB All-Stars 1994 – Pittsburgh Pirates
- David Miller St. Louis (A) 229th
1982 Jeff Jacobson Houston 17th
1978
- Gary Weiss Los Angeles 19th
1968
- Tom Paciorek Lo Los Angeles 5th MLB All-Stars 1981 – Seattle Mariners
See also
References
- ^ "Logos - University of Houston Athletics". June 12, 2018. Retrieved March 23, 2019.
- ^ Avery, Robert (January 11, 2010). "Happy 100th birthday, coach Thompson". Pasadena Citizen. Retrieved March 3, 2014.
- ^ Lyons, John (1954-06-04). "Roland Walton Leaves Rosebuds". Victoria Advocate. Retrieved 2009-07-22.
- ^ "Bragg Stockton Baseball Biography". Archived from the original on 2009-11-06. Retrieved 2010-02-18.
- ^ "Baseball Falls to San Diego State in Aztec Invitational Opener". March 11, 2004.
- ^ a b Campbell, Steve (2010-07-02). "Whitting returns to Houston dugout". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2010-07-05.
- ^ Royal, John (2010-06-08). "Rayner Noble Gone After 16 Years As UH Baseball Coach; Who's Next?". Houston Press. Retrieved 2010-07-05.