Cal Poly Mustangs | |
---|---|
2024 Cal Poly Mustangs baseball team | |
Founded | 1948 |
University | California Polytechnic State University |
Head coach | Larry Lee (22nd season) |
Conference | Big West |
Location | San Luis Obispo, California |
Home stadium | Baggett Stadium (Capacity: 3,138) |
Nickname | Mustangs |
Colors | Poly green, copper gold, and stadium gold[1] |
NCAA Tournament appearances | |
2009, 2013, 2014 | |
Regular season conference champions | |
2014 |
The Cal Poly Mustangs baseball team represents California Polytechnic State University, which is located in San Luis Obispo, California. The Mustangs are an NCAA Division I college baseball program, and along with the other Cal Poly athletic teams with the exception of swimming, wrestling, indoor track and football, the baseball team competes in the Big West Conference.
The Cal Poly Mustangs play all home games on campus at Robin Baggett Stadium. Under the direction of Head Coach Larry Lee, the Mustangs have played in three NCAA tournaments—2009, 2013, and 2014—including hosting their first regional in 2014. The Mustangs also won their first Big West Conference title in 2014.
Prior to Lee's arrival and Cal Poly's move to Division I in all sports, the Mustangs played in multiple Division II regionals. Cal Poly initially won an NCAA Division II championship in 1989, although it was later vacated by the NCAA.
The main rival of the Cal Poly is UC Santa Barbara. The rivalry is a part of the larger Blue–Green Rivalry, which encompasses all sports between the two schools.
Robin Baggett Stadium is a baseball stadium on the Cal Poly campus in San Luis Obispo, California. It was opened on January 21, 2001, with a 6–5 victory over Stanford in 12 innings.[2] After renovations and expansion in 2018, it now seats 3,138. A record attendance of 3,284 was set on May 6, 2005, during a game against Cal State Fullerton.[3]
Tenure | Coach | Years | Record | Pct. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1995–2002 | Ritch Price | 8 | 217–228–1 | .488 |
2003–present | Larry Lee | 20 | 614–476–2 | .563 |
Totals | 2 coaches | 28 seasons | 831–704–3 | .536 |
Season | Coach | Overall | Conference | Standing | Postseason | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Western Athletic Conference (1995–1996) | ||||||||||
1995 | Ritch Price | 21–29 | 13–17 | 5th (Western) | ||||||
1996 | Ritch Price | 30–23 | 18–12 | 3rd (Western) | ||||||
Big West Conference (1997–present) | ||||||||||
1997 | Ritch Price | 37–21 | 15–15 | T–3rd (South) | BWC tournament (1–2) | |||||
1998 | Ritch Price | 16–42 | 7–21 | 4th (South) | ||||||
1999 | Ritch Price | 21–34 | 9–21 | 6th | ||||||
2000 | Ritch Price | 32–24 | 18–12 | T–3rd | ||||||
2001 | Ritch Price | 30–26 | 8–10 | 5th | ||||||
2002 | Ritch Price | 30–29–1 | 15–9 | 3rd | ||||||
2003 | Larry Lee | 27–28–1 | 9–12 | 4th | ||||||
2004 | Larry Lee | 38–23–1 | 10–11 | T–4th | ||||||
2005 | Larry Lee | 36–20 | 14–7 | T–2nd | ||||||
2006 | Larry Lee | 29–27 | 10–11 | 4th | ||||||
2007 | Larry Lee | 32–24 | 13–8 | 4th | ||||||
2008 | Larry Lee | 24–32 | 8–16 | T–7th | ||||||
2009 | Larry Lee | 37–21 | 14–10 | 3rd | NCAA Tempe Regional (0–2) | |||||
2010 | Larry Lee | 23–32 | 10–14 | 5th | ||||||
2011 | Larry Lee | 27–26 | 15–9 | 3rd | ||||||
2012 | Larry Lee | 36–20 | 16–8 | 2nd | ||||||
2013 | Larry Lee | 40–19 | 17–10 | 2nd | NCAA Los Angeles Regional (1–2) | |||||
2014 | Larry Lee | 47–12 | 19–5 | 1st | NCAA San Luis Obispo Regional (2–2) | |||||
2015 | Larry Lee | 27–27 | 14–10 | 4th | ||||||
2016 | Larry Lee | 32–25 | 12–12 | 4th | ||||||
2017 | Larry Lee | 28–28 | 16–8 | 2nd | ||||||
2018 | Larry Lee | 30–27 | 15–9 | 2nd | ||||||
2019 | Larry Lee | 28–28 | 17–7 | T–2nd | ||||||
2020* | Larry Lee | 5–11 | 0–0 | N/A | ||||||
2021 | Larry Lee | 31–25 | 21–19 | 4th | ||||||
2022 | Larry Lee | 37–21 | 22–8 | 2nd | ||||||
Total: | 831–704–3 | 375–311 | ||||||||
National champion
Postseason invitational champion
|
Year | Record | Pct | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2009 | 0–2 | .000 | Eliminated at 49th by Kent State in Tempe Regional |
2013 | 1–2 | .333 | Eliminated at 33rd by UCLA in Los Angeles Regional |
2014 | 2–2 | .500 | Eliminated at 17th by Pepperdine in San Luis Obispo Regional |
TOTALS | 3–6 | .333 |
Year | Round | Opponent | Result |
---|---|---|---|
2009 | Tempe Regional | Oral Roberts | L 3–13 |
Kent State | L 9–10 | ||
2013 | Los Angeles Regional | San Diego | W 9–2 |
UCLA | L 4–6 | ||
San Diego | L 5–8 | ||
2014 | San Luis Obispo Regional | Sacramento State | W 4–2 |
Pepperdine | L 1–2 | ||
Sacramento State | W 6–5 | ||
Pepperdine | L 6–10 |
Year | Position | Name | Team | Selector |
---|---|---|---|---|
1997 | 2B | Scott Kidd | 2nd | Collegiate Baseball |
2005 | C | Kyle Blumenthal | 3rd | Collegiate Baseball |
SP | Garrett Olson | 3rd | Collegiate Baseball | |
2007 | OF | Grant Desme | 1st | Baseball America |
2nd | Collegiate Baseball | |||
NCBWA | ||||
2012 | OF | Mitch Haniger | 2nd | Collegiate Baseball |
2014 | SP | Matt Imhof | 2nd | Collegiate Baseball |
NCBWA | ||||
Casey Bloomquist | 1st | Collegiate Baseball | ||
2nd | NCBWA | |||
2B | Mark Mathias | 2nd | Baseball America | |
3rd | Collegiate Baseball | |||
NCBWA | ||||
2017 | SP | Spencer Howard | 2nd | Collegiate Baseball |
2018 | OF | Alex McKenna | 3rd | Collegiate Baseball |
2021 | SS | Brooks Lee | 1st | Collegiate Baseball |
D1Baseball.com | ||||
2nd | Baseball America | |||
ABCA | ||||
2022 | SS | Brooks Lee | 1st | ABCA/Rawlings |
Collegiate Baseball | ||||
2nd | D1Baseball.com | |||
Perfect Game | ||||
Baseball America | ||||
2022 | SP | Drew Thorpe | 1st | NCBWA |
ABCA/Rawlings | ||||
D1Baseball.com | ||||
Perfect Game | ||||
Baseball America | ||||
Collegiate Baseball |
Year | Position | Name | Selector |
---|---|---|---|
2009 | 2B | Matt Jensen | NCBWA |
2012 | RP | Reed Reilly | Collegiate Baseball |
2013 | DH | Brian Mundell | Collegiate Baseball |
2016 | C | Nick Meyer | Collegiate Baseball |
SS | Kyle Marinconz | Collegiate Baseball | |
2017 | 3B | Bradlee Beesley | Collegiate Baseball |
2021 | SS | Brooks Lee | Collegiate Baseball |
2021 | SP | Drew Thorpe | Baseball America |
2022 | C | Ryan Stafford | Collegiate Baseball |
Baseball America |
Year | Position | Name |
---|---|---|
2005 | C | Kyle Blumenthal |
2007 | OF | Grant Desme |
2012 | OF | Mitch Haniger |
2014 | 2B | Mark Mathias |
2018 | OF | Alex McKenna |
2021 | SS | Brooks Lee |
2022 | SS | Brooks Lee |
Year | Name |
---|---|
2014 | Larry Lee |
Taken from the 2019 Cal Poly baseball media guide.[3] Updated August 17, 2019.
= All-Star | = Baseball Hall of Famer |
Athlete | Years in MLB | MLB Teams |
---|---|---|
Justin Bruihl | 2021-present | Los Angeles Dodgers |
Kevin Correia | 2003–2015 | San Francisco Giants, San Diego Padres, Pittsburgh Pirates, Minnesota Twins, Los Angeles Dodgers, Philadelphia Phillies |
Erich Uelmen | 2022-present | Chicago Cubs |
Casey Fien | 2009–2010, 2012–2017 | Detroit Tigers, Minnesota Twins, Los Angeles Dodgers, Seattle Mariners, Philadelphia Phillies |
Craig Gerber | 1985 | California Angels |
Lee Hancock | 1995–1996 | Pittsburgh Pirates |
Mitch Haniger | 2016–present | Arizona Diamondbacks, Seattle Mariners, San Francisco Giants |
Gorman Heimueller | 1983–1984 | Oakland Athletics |
Spencer Howard | 2020-present | Philadelphia Phillies, Texas Rangers |
Mike Krukow | 1976–1989 | Chicago Cubs, Philadelphia Phillies, San Francisco Giants |
Thornton Lee | 1933–1948 | Cleveland Indians, Chicago White Sox, New York Giants |
Mark Mathias | 2020-present | Milwaukee Brewers |
Mike Miller | 2016 | Boston Red Sox |
Brent Morel | 2010–2015 | Chicago White Sox, Pittsburgh Pirates |
Bud Norris | 2009–2018 | Houston Astros, Baltimore Orioles, San Diego Padres, Atlanta Braves, Los Angeles Dodgers, Los Angeles Angels, St. Louis Cardinals |
Dave Oliver | 1977 | Cleveland Indians |
Garrett Olson | 2007–2012 | Baltimore Orioles, Seattle Mariners, Pittsburgh Pirates, New York Mets |
John Orton | 1989–1993 | California Angels |
Evan Reed | 2013–2014 | Detroit Tigers |
Logan Schafer | 2011–2016 | Milwaukee Brewers, Minnesota Twins |
Ozzie Smith | 1978–1996 | San Diego Padres, St. Louis Cardinals |
Bryan Woo | 2023 | Seattle Mariners |
Taken from the 2019 Cal Poly baseball media guide.[3] Updated August 17, 2019.
Cal Poly was featured as a playable team in EA's MVP '06: NCAA Baseball game for PlayStation 2 and Xbox.[6]
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)