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Sam Houston Bearkats baseball

The Sam Houston State Bearkats baseball team is a varsity intercollegiate athletic team of Sam Houston State University in Huntsville, Texas, United States.[2] The team is currently a member of Conference USA, an athletic conference in Division I of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). The team plays its home games at Don Sanders Stadium.

Sam Houston State Bearkats
2024 Sam Houston State Bearkats baseball team
Founded1906
UniversitySam Houston State University
Head coachJay Sirianni (5th season)
ConferenceC-USA
LocationHuntsville, Texas
Home stadiumDon Sanders Stadium
(Capacity: 2,500)
NicknameBearkats
ColorsOrange and white[1]
   
NCAA Tournament champions
NAIA: 1963
College World Series appearances
NAIA: 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1974, 1975
NCAA regional champions
2017
NCAA Tournament appearances
NCAA Division II: 1984, 1985, 1986,
NCAA Division I: 1987, 1989, 1996, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2023
Conference tournament champions
Southland: 1996, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2016, 2017
WAC: 2023
Regular season conference champions
Lone Star: 1954, 1955, 1981, 1982
Gulf Star: 1985, 1986, 1987
Southland: 1989, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2018

History edit

The first Sam Houston baseball team was fielded in 1906 and was the university's first collegiate athletic team.[3] After disbandment following their 1926 campaign, the Bearkats returned in 1947 as a member of the Lone Star Conference.[4] The modern era for the Bearkats baseball team began in 1949, as the Sam Houston athletic department does not include any statistics prior to the season in the program's record books.[5] Since 1949, however, Sam Houston State baseball has been one of the most productive sports out of all the university athletic programs. The Bearkats boast an overall 1732-1134-7 (.604) WLT record from 1949 through the 2012 season. The Bearkats claim one national title from the NAIA World Series in 1963.

The Malone years (1949–1956) edit

To begin the modern era, Hayden "Hap" Malone, former graduate and professor of Physical Education at SHSTC was hired as the head baseball coach in 1949.[6] As a NAIA independent in baseball, Hap Malone's Bearkats saw mixed results in his first 6 years as the Bearkats head coach. The program was quite successful from 1949 through 1950 as the Bearkats posted a combined 24–14 record in those two seasons (15–5 and 19–9 respectively). The next two seasons saw two losing records, (11–13 and 11–14). The 1953 and 1954 seasons were both winning seasons, with the Bearkats posting a 20 win record in 1954. However, the roller coaster ride was not over and the Kats once again fell into mediocrity in 1955–56. After the 1956 season resulting in 10–18 record, their lowest win total to date, Coach Malone was relieved of his duties.[5] Hap Malone was inducted into Sam Houston Hall of Honor in 1971.[7]

The Benge supremacy (1957–1968) edit

To right the ship left by Hap Malone, Sam Houston hired Ray Benge as the new head coach of the Bearkats. Ray Benge formerly pitched for Sam Houston in the early twenties before being drafted by the Phillies and playing 12 years in the Major Leagues.[8] Benge proved to be the cure to ail all of the Bearkats woes as his teams never saw a losing record.[5] Benge took the Bearkats to six straight NAIA Baseball World Series appearances including one national championship win in 1963 over Grambling.[9] He finished with a 237–102 record and was inducted into SHSU's Hall of Honor with Hap Malone in 1971.[10]

The Bob Britt years (1969–1975) edit

Despite being the university's shortest tenured coach (excluding current head coach David Pierce), Bob Britt continued the success of the baseball squad following Benge's departure. Like his predecessor, Britt also never head a losing season. He also coached the Bearkats to two NAIA Area Playoff berths in 1969 and 1970, and three NAIA World Series appearances in 1972, 1974, and in 1975 which all were top 3 finishes with the latter two seasons being national runner-up years. Britt also coached Sam Houston to its first two 40-win seasons in 1974 and 1975.[5] He retired from coaching following the 1975 season, but continued to teach Physical Education as a professor at Sam Houston until 1995.[11] Britt was inducted into Sam Houston Hall of Honor in 1979.[10]

The John Skeeters era (1976–2002) edit

Coach John Skeeters was Sam Houston longest tenured baseball coach with over 25 years as the Bearkats' head coach. He picked up right were Britt left off as the Skeeters led Bearkats to winning seasons in his first 16 years as head coach. During this stretch, the Bearkats saw post-season action in 9 different years, including 4 NAIA Area Playoff berths from 1979 through 1982.[12]

In 1984, the Bearkats moved into NCAA Division II and stayed here for three years as an independent and later as a member of the Gulf Star Conference. In Division II, the Bearkats were selected to the regional playoffs in all three years. The Bearkats also were the Gulf Star Champions in 1985 and 1986.[13]

In 1987, the Gulf Star Conference moved up into Division I. In addition to winning the Gulf Star Conference championship in 1987, Sam Houston State also earned a berth into its first Division I regional thanks to a 44–18–1 record, its highest win total to date.[12]

The Bearkats moved to the Southland Conference in 1988 and while they struggled in conference play (11–10 record), they still managed to earn a winning record, finishing 32–25. Despite a rough first season in the Southland, Sam Houston quickly acclimated to its new home and won the 1989 conference championship.[14] In addition to the championship, Sam Houston earned a berth to the NCAA regionals. Following the 1989 season, the Bearkats would not win another conference championship again until Coach Pierce took over in 2012, and would only go to the NCAA regionals once more under Coach Skeeters (1996).[13]

Following four straight losing seasons from 1999–2002, Skeeters decided to resign as head coach of the Sam Houston Bearkats. His overall mark of 860 wins and 628 losses will cement his legacy as the longest tenured coach for years to come.[15]

Chris Rupp's Bearkats (2003–2006) edit

Chris Rupp was hired following Skeeters' resignation prior to the 2003 season. In his four years as head coach, Rupp's teams failed to finish with a winning season. In 2006, he resigned as the head coach and finished with an overall record of 86–123 record.[16]

The Mark Johnson years (2007–2012) edit

Mark Johnson, former Texas A&M coaching legend and member of the American Baseball Coaches Association and Texas Baseball halls of fame, took over as head coach a little more than a month after Rupp's resignation and immediately began working on improving the baseball team. Johnson brought in two full-time assistants to his coaching staff, a luxury the previous two Bearkats coaches did not have.[17] There was seemingly no rebuilding stage for the Bearkats, as Johnson led Sam Houston to a 40–24 record his first year as coach, only a year removed from a 23–31 season under Chris Rupp. Since Johnson joined the Bearkat staff as head coach, the team saw post season action in 4 of his 5 seasons at Sam Houston, including 3 NCAA regional appearances.[5]

Under David Pierce (2012–2014) edit

2012 edit

David Pierce, who joined the staff in 2011 from Rice, continued where Johnson left off, as the 2012 baseball team saw its best ever Regional finish (2nd) and coached the Bearkats to its first outright league title in 23 years.[18] The 2012 Bearkats lost in the regional title game to Arkansas, who would eventually go on to become a Super Regional Champion to earn a berth in the College World Series.[19] Coach Pierce would later win both the Southland Conference Coach of the Year and the ABCA Coach of the Year at the end of the season.[20]

2013 edit

The start of the 2013 season came with very high expectations for Coach Pierce and the Bearkats. Coming into the season, the Kats received votes in the NCBWA poll and was picked to repeat as Southland Conference champions by the Coaches' and SID polls.[21][22] After a disappointing 3–4 start, the Bearkats would go on to beat then #22 ranked Texas in Austin, and then #19 ranked Rice in Houston to right the ship. Following these big games, however, Sam Houston would lose back to back series' against UCONN and Dallas Baptist. Following these games, the Bearkats went 13–8 in their next 21, including wins over #17 Rice and #19 Houston, but lost a major home series to Oral Roberts which dropped SHSU's Ratings Percentage Index (RPI) far enough down to put an at-large bid for the 2013 regionals in jeopardy. Sam Houston accepted the challenge and worked its way back to finish the season going 13–1 after the Oral Roberts series, earning the #27 spot in the Collegiate Baseball poll.[23] On May 17, 2013, Sam Houston clinched its second straight outright Southland Conference Title with a 4–0 shutout of Central Arkansas.[24] Following the regular season, Coach Pierce would win the Conference Coach of the Year award yet again,[25] and would earn an at-large bid to the NCAA tournament Baton Rouge Regional after failing to win the Southland Conference Tournament.[26] In the NCAA tournament, the Bearkats defeated Louisiana-Lafayette in the first game 4–2 behind Luke Plucheck's 3 RBIs.[27] In the winner's bracket, Sam Houston faced regional host and #1 overall LSU Tigers. With the help of a 5 run first inning the Bearkats led the top ranked Tigers 5–4 until the 8th inning. Sam Houston could not upset the Tigers, losing in heartbreaking fashion 8–5.[28] In the last day of the Baton Rouge regional, Sam Houston faced the Ragin' Cajuns for the second time in three days. Sam Houston would jump out to a 3–0 lead, but errors would send the Bearkats home early, as they lost the final game of the season 5–7.[29]

SHSU career coaching records edit

Coach Number of Seasons Overall record Winning Percentage
Hap Malone 8; (1949–1956) 112–92 .549
Ray Benge 12; (1957–1968) 237–102 .699
Bob Britt 7; (1969–1975) 225–88 .719
John Skeeters 27; (1976–2002) 860–621 .581
Chris Rupp 4; (2003–2006) 86–123 .411
Mark Johnson 5; (2007–2011) 127–109 .538
David Pierce 3; (2012–2014) 122–63 .650
Matt Deggs 5; (2015–2019) 187–118 .613
Jay Sirianni 4; (2020–present) 106–80 .570

Year-by-year results edit

Year Division Overall Record Conference Record Notes
1949 Hap Malone 15–5 First season in modern era.
1950 Hap Malone 19–9
1951 Hap Malone 11–13
1952 Hap Malone 11–14
1953 Hap Malone 14–11
1954 Hap Malone 20–7
1955 Hap Malone 12–15
1956 Hap Malone 10–18
1957 Ray Benge 17–8
1958 Ray Benge 15–6
1959 Ray Benge 13–3
1960 Ray Benge 23–11 NAIA World Series
1961 Ray Benge 19–11 NAIA World Series
1962 Ray Benge 22–11 NAIA World Series
1963 Ray Benge 27–8 - NAIA National Champions
1964 Ray Benge 27–8 NAIA World Series
1965 Ray Benge 22–8 NAIA World Series
1966 Ray Benge 16–12
1967 Ray Benge 20–7
1968 Ray Benge 16–9
1969 Bob Britt 24–11 NAIA Area playoffs
1970 Bob Britt 33–9 NAIA Area playoffs
1971 Bob Britt 23–18
1972 Bob Britt 33–13 NAIA World Series
1973 Bob Britt 27–12
1974 Bob Britt 42–11 NAIA World Series
1975 Bob Britt 43–14 NAIA World Series
1976 John Skeeters 30–20
1977 John Skeeters 37–16
1978 John Skeeters 33–20–1
1979 John Skeeters 38–14 NAIA Area playoffs
1980 John Skeeters 40–16 NAIA Area playoffs
1981 John Skeeters 38–18 NAIA Area playoffs
1982 John Skeeters 33–23 NAIA Area playoffs
1983 John Skeeters 33–23–1
1984 John Skeeters 42–18 NCAA Division II Regionals
1985 John Skeeters 35–21 12–6 NCAA Division II Regionals
1986 John Skeeters 45–17 16–4 NCAA Division II Regionals
1987 John Skeeters 44–18–1 17–3 NCAA Regionals
1988 John Skeeters 32–25 11–10
1989 John Skeeters 31–23 13–5 Southland Conference Regular season champions, NCAA Regionals
1990 John Skeeters 34–22–1 11–6
1991 John Skeeters 33–17 9–5
1992 John Skeeters 28–28 10–11
1993 John Skeeters 30–26 13–9 Southland Tournament
1994 John Skeeters 29–24 15–9 Southland Tournament
1995 John Skeeters 22–32 10–14
1996 John Skeeters 31–29 15–15 Southland Tournament champions, NCAA Regionals
1997 John Skeeters 26–27 17–11 Southland Tournament, NCAA Regionals
1998 John Skeeters 29–28 12–10 Southland Tournament
1999 John Skeeters 22–23 8–19
2000 John Skeeters 25–29 14–13 Southland Tournament
2001 John Skeeters 19–31 8–19
2002 John Skeeters 21–33 9–18
2003 Chris Rupp 20–33 9–18
2004 Chris Rupp 19–30–1 11–14
2005 Chris Rupp 24–29–2 13–14
2006 Chris Rupp 23–31 12–18
2007 Mark Johnson 40–24 18–12 Southland Tournament champions, NCAA Regionals
2008 Mark Johnson 37–25 18–12 Southland Tournament champions, NCAA Regionals
2009 Mark Johnson 36–24 18–14 Southland Tournament champions, NCAA Regionals
2010 Mark Johnson 19–36 11–22
2011 Mark Johnson 35–24 17–16 Southland Tournament
2012 David Pierce 40–22 24–9 Southland Conference Regular season champions, Southland Tournament, NCAA Regionals
2013 David Pierce 38–22 20–7 Southland Conference Regular season champions, Southland Tournament, NCAA Regionals
2014 David Pierce 44–19 20–7 Southland Conference Regular season champions, Southland Tournament, NCAA Regionals
2015 Matt Deggs 31–28 17–12 Southland Tournament
2016 Matt Deggs 42–22 24–6 Southland Conference Regular season champions, Southland Tournament champions, NCAA Regionals
2017 Matt Deggs 44–23 19–11 Southland Tournament champions, NCAA Regionals champions, NCAA Super Regionals
2018 Matt Deggs 39–20 24–6 Southland Conference Regular season champions, Southland Tournament
2019 Matt Deggs 31–25 20–10 Southland Conference Regular season champions, Southland Tournament
2020 Jay Sirianni 7–7 1–2 Season cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
2021 Jay Sirianni 30–25 20–15 Southland Tournament
2022 Jay Sirianni 31–25 21–9 Western Athletic Conference Tournament
2023 Jay Sirianni 38–23 21–8 Western Athletic Conference Tournament champions, NCAA Regionals

Source: Houston State University Baseball Record Book

Post season appearances edit

Conference tournaments edit

Year Conference Record % Finished
1993 Southland 2–2 .500 2nd
1994 Southland 0–2 .000 4th
1996 Southland 4–0 1.000 Champions
1997 Southland 2–2 .500 3rd
1998 Southland 2–2 .500 3rd
2000 Southland 1–2 .333 4th
2007 Southland 4–0 1.000 Champions
2008 Southland 4–0 1.000 Champions
2009 Southland 4–0 1.000 Champions
2011 Southland 1–2 .333 5th
2012 Southland 2–2 .500 3rd
2013 Southland 1–2 .333 5th
2014 Southland 1–2 .333 5th
2015 Southland 3–2 .600 2nd
2016 Southland 4–1 .800 Champions
2017 Southland 4-0 1.000 Champions
2018 Southland 1-2 .333 5th
2019 Southland 1-2 .333 5th
2021 Southland 3–1 .750 2nd
2022 Western Athletic 0–2 .000 8th
2023 Western Athletic 5–1 .833 Champions
Total 48–26 .648 20 Appearances

National tournaments edit

Year Division Record % Notes
1960 NAIA 2–2 .500 CWS 4th place
1961 NAIA 1–1 .500 CWS 5th place
1962 NAIA 1–2 .333 CWS 6th place
1963 NAIA 4–0 1.000 NAIA National Champions
1964 NAIA 1–2 .333 CWS 4th place
1965 NAIA 2–2 .500 CWS 4th place
1969 NAIA 2–2 .500 Area playoffs 2nd place
1970 NAIA 1–2 .333 Area playoffs 2nd place
1972 NAIA 5–3 .625 Area Champions, CWS 3rd place
1974 NAIA 6–2 .750 Area Champions, CWS Runner-Up
1975 NAIA 7–3 .700 Area Champions, CWS Runner-Up
1979 NAIA 2–2 .500 Area Runner-Up
1980 NAIA 1–2 .333 Area playoffs 3rd place
1981 NAIA 2–2 .500 Area Runner-Up
1982 NAIA 0–2 .000 Area playoffs 4th place
NAIA Total 31–25 .561 15 Appearances
1984 NCAA D-II 0–2 .000 Brookings Regional 5th place
1985 NCAA D-II 2–2 .500 Romeoville Regional 3rd place
1986 NCAA D-II 2–2 .500 Troy Regional 3rd place
1987 NCAA D-I 2–2 .500 Austin Regional 3rd place
1989 NCAA D-I 0–2 .000 Austin Regional 5th place
1996 NCAA D-I 1–2 .333 Austin Regional 3rd place
2007 NCAA D-I 2–2 .500 Oxford Regional Runner-Up
2008 NCAA D-I 0–2 .00 Houston Regional 4th place
2009 NCAA D-I 0–2 .000 Houston Regional 4th place
2012 NCAA D-I 2–2 .500 Houston Regional Runner-Up
2013 NCAA D-1 1–2 .333 Baton Rouge Regional 3rd place
2014 NCAA D-1 2–2 .500 Fort Worth regional Runner-Up
2016 NCAA D-1 1-2 .333 Lafayette Regional 3rd Place
2017 NCAA D-1 4-3 0.571 1st Place Lubbock Regional,

Tallahassee Super Regional

NCAA Total 18–29 .383 14 Appearances
Total 49–54 .475 29 Appearances

Source: Houston State Record Book: Post Season Results

Notable players edit

Many of Sam Houston baseball players earned various awards and honors, including 95 All-Conference players, 16 All-Americans, and 7 conference award winners. Film director Richard Linklater also played baseball at Sam Houston.

All-Americans edit

The Bearkats have produced 16 All-Americans across three different divisions (NAIA, NCAA D-I, and NCAA D-II). Four of these players earned the honor in multiple years.

1t denotes 1st Team selection, 2t denotes 2nd Team selection, 3t denotes 3rd Team selection, and hm denotes Honorable Mention and f denotes freshman selection

Post-season awards edit

Sam Houston has had multiple players earn end-of-the-season awards, such as Pitcher of the Year, Player of the Year, and Newcomer of the Year. These awards were handed out by the Gulf Star Conference from 1985 through 1987, the Southland Conference from 1988 through 2021, and the Western Athletic Conference in 2022 and 2023.

Conference honors

In 2001 the Bearkats set a new tournament record for runs scored in a game with 22. Third baseman Douglas Moulder and right fielder Josh Harrison both contributed with 2 home runs and 7 R.B.I.s each, also tying each other for the tournament record. Harrison also stole 3 bases in the game. For Moulder, it was his 9th multi-homer game of the season< a school record.

Harrison and Moulder are also tied for the longest home run at Bearkats Stadium. In 1998 Harrison blasted a shot 437 ft. The following year, Moulder launched a ball the same distance in his second hit as a Bearkat.

Seven players have also been selected as the conference tournament's Most Valuable Player:

  • Brent Bubela, 1996
  • Douglas Moulder, 1999
  • Luke Prihoda, 2007
  • Bobby Verbick, 2008
  • Matt Shelton, 2009
  • Heath Donica, 2016
  • Robie Rojas, 2017
  • Walker Janek, 2023


Source: Houston State Record Book: Postseason Honors

Players in Major League Baseball edit

As of the 2021 Major League Baseball season, Sam Houston has had 16 former members go on to play Major League Baseball:

Player Name Years at SHSU Years in MLB[30]
Ray Benge 1922–1925 1925–1938
Larry Miggins 1946–1946 1948, 1952
Ken Boswell 1965–1965 1967–1977
Fred Beene 1962–1964 1968–1975
Phil Hennigan 1965–1965 1969–1973
Jamie Easterly 1967–1970 1974–1987
Rick Matula 1973–1975 1979–1981
Billy Smith 1974–1977 1981-1981
Glenn Wilson 1978–1980 1982–1993
Don Welchel 1976–1978 1982–1983
Steve Sparks 1986–1987 1995–2004
Jordan Tata 2002–2003 2006–2007
Robert Manuel 2005–2005 2009–2010
Ryan Tepera 2006–2009 2015–present
Caleb Smith 2011–2013 2017–present
Ryan O'Hearn 2012–2014 2018–present
Colton Cowser 2019–2021 2021–present

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Athletic Branding". Sam Houston State University Department of Marketing and Communications. Retrieved May 15, 2021.
  2. ^ "Sam Houston State Bearkats". d1baseball.com. Retrieved 2013-03-15.
  3. ^ "Important Dates in Bearkat Athletic History". Sam Houston State Athletics. Retrieved 2013-05-31.
  4. ^ "First Bearkat Game Set". Fort Worth Star-Telegram. April 21, 1947. p. 13 – via newspapers.com.
  5. ^ a b c d e Sam Houston State Baseball Record Book: Year-By-Year (PDF). Sam Houston State Athletics. p. 2.
  6. ^ "Hayden Malone". BuildingSHSU. Retrieved 2013-05-31.
  7. ^ "SHSU Hall of Honor Members (M-N)". Sam Houston State Athletics. Retrieved 2013-05-31.
  8. ^ "Ray Benge". Baseball-Reference. Retrieved 2013-05-31.
  9. ^ "Sam Houston State National Titles". Sam Houston State Athletics. Retrieved 2013-05-31.
  10. ^ a b "SHSU Hall of Honor (A-C)". Sam Houston State Athletics. Retrieved 2013-05-31.
  11. ^ Matt Schwartz (2002-01-09). "Deaths: Bob Britt, 70, retired teacher, coach at Sam Houston State". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2013-05-31.
  12. ^ a b Post Season (PDF). Sam Houston State Athletics. p. 3.
  13. ^ a b "National Tournament Appearances". Sam Houston State Athletics. Retrieved 2013-05-31.
  14. ^ "Sam Houston Conference Championships". Sam Houston State Athletics. Retrieved 2013-05-31.
  15. ^ Lacy, Drew (2002-07-17). "Skeeters shocks players with news of resignation". The Huntsville Item.
  16. ^ Cody Stark (2006-05-26). "Rupp resigns as SHSU skipper". The Huntsville Item. Retrieved 2013-05-31.
  17. ^ Tom Waddill (2006-07-07). "Sam Houston lands former Aggie skipper". The Huntsville Item. Retrieved 2013-05-31.
  18. ^ "Southland Baseball Title A Team Effort". GoBearkats.com. 2012-05-14. Retrieved 2013-05-14.
  19. ^ Joseph Duarte (2012-06-03). "Arkansas tops Sam Houston State in regional final". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2013-05-14.
  20. ^ "Sam Houston State's Pierce Named ABCA Regional Coach of the Year". Southland Conference. 2012-07-26. Archived from the original on 2013-07-05. Retrieved 2013-05-18.
  21. ^ "Bearkats Receiving Votes in NCBWA Preseason Poll". GoBearkats. 2013-01-29. Retrieved 2013-05-18.
  22. ^ "Bearkats Picked to Win 2013 Southland Conference Baseball Title". Southland Conference. 2013-01-30. Retrieved 2013-05-18.
  23. ^ "Kats Move Up in Collegiate Baseball Poll". GoBearkats.com. 2013-05-13. Retrieved 2013-05-18.
  24. ^ "BEARKAT BASEBALL — Kats repeat as outright conference champs". Huntsville Item. 2013-05-17. Retrieved 2013-05-18.
  25. ^ "SFA Shortstop Dozier Named Southland Baseball Player of the Year". Southland Conference. Retrieved 2013-05-28.
  26. ^ Gene Schallenberg (2013-05-28). "BEARKAT BASEBALL: Kats in NCAA tourney again as at-large selection". The Huntsville Item. Retrieved 2013-05-28.
  27. ^ Gene Schallenberg (2013-06-01). "NCAA BASEBALL REGIONAL: So far so good for SHSU". Itemonline.com. The Huntsville Item. Retrieved 2013-06-04.
  28. ^ Gene Schallenberg (2013-06-02). "NCAA BASEBALL REGIONAL: Bearkats so close yet so far away". The Huntsville Item. Retrieved 2013-06-04.
  29. ^ Gene Schallenberg (2013-06-03). "NCAA BASEBALL REGIONAL: Bearkats make too many mistakes". The Huntsville Item. Retrieved 2013-06-04.
  30. ^ "Sam Houston State University Baseball Players Who Made it to the Major Leagues". 2013. Retrieved April 9, 2013.

External links edit

  • Official website

houston, bearkats, baseball, houston, state, bearkats, baseball, team, varsity, intercollegiate, athletic, team, houston, state, university, huntsville, texas, united, states, team, currently, member, conference, athletic, conference, division, national, colle. The Sam Houston State Bearkats baseball team is a varsity intercollegiate athletic team of Sam Houston State University in Huntsville Texas United States 2 The team is currently a member of Conference USA an athletic conference in Division I of the National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA The team plays its home games at Don Sanders Stadium Sam Houston State Bearkats2024 Sam Houston State Bearkats baseball teamFounded1906UniversitySam Houston State UniversityHead coachJay Sirianni 5th season ConferenceC USALocationHuntsville TexasHome stadiumDon Sanders Stadium Capacity 2 500 NicknameBearkatsColorsOrange and white 1 NCAA Tournament championsNAIA 1963College World Series appearancesNAIA 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1974 1975NCAA regional champions2017NCAA Tournament appearancesNCAA Division II 1984 1985 1986 NCAA Division I 1987 1989 1996 2007 2008 2009 2012 2013 2014 2016 2017 2023Conference tournament championsSouthland 1996 2007 2008 2009 2016 2017WAC 2023Regular season conference championsLone Star 1954 1955 1981 1982Gulf Star 1985 1986 1987Southland 1989 2012 2013 2014 2016 2018 Contents 1 History 1 1 The Malone years 1949 1956 1 2 The Benge supremacy 1957 1968 1 3 The Bob Britt years 1969 1975 1 4 The John Skeeters era 1976 2002 1 5 Chris Rupp s Bearkats 2003 2006 1 6 The Mark Johnson years 2007 2012 1 7 Under David Pierce 2012 2014 1 7 1 2012 1 7 2 2013 2 SHSU career coaching records 3 Year by year results 4 Post season appearances 4 1 Conference tournaments 4 2 National tournaments 5 Notable players 5 1 All Americans 5 2 Post season awards 5 3 Players in Major League Baseball 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory editThe first Sam Houston baseball team was fielded in 1906 and was the university s first collegiate athletic team 3 After disbandment following their 1926 campaign the Bearkats returned in 1947 as a member of the Lone Star Conference 4 The modern era for the Bearkats baseball team began in 1949 as the Sam Houston athletic department does not include any statistics prior to the season in the program s record books 5 Since 1949 however Sam Houston State baseball has been one of the most productive sports out of all the university athletic programs The Bearkats boast an overall 1732 1134 7 604 WLT record from 1949 through the 2012 season The Bearkats claim one national title from the NAIA World Series in 1963 The Malone years 1949 1956 edit To begin the modern era Hayden Hap Malone former graduate and professor of Physical Education at SHSTC was hired as the head baseball coach in 1949 6 As a NAIA independent in baseball Hap Malone s Bearkats saw mixed results in his first 6 years as the Bearkats head coach The program was quite successful from 1949 through 1950 as the Bearkats posted a combined 24 14 record in those two seasons 15 5 and 19 9 respectively The next two seasons saw two losing records 11 13 and 11 14 The 1953 and 1954 seasons were both winning seasons with the Bearkats posting a 20 win record in 1954 However the roller coaster ride was not over and the Kats once again fell into mediocrity in 1955 56 After the 1956 season resulting in 10 18 record their lowest win total to date Coach Malone was relieved of his duties 5 Hap Malone was inducted into Sam Houston Hall of Honor in 1971 7 The Benge supremacy 1957 1968 edit To right the ship left by Hap Malone Sam Houston hired Ray Benge as the new head coach of the Bearkats Ray Benge formerly pitched for Sam Houston in the early twenties before being drafted by the Phillies and playing 12 years in the Major Leagues 8 Benge proved to be the cure to ail all of the Bearkats woes as his teams never saw a losing record 5 Benge took the Bearkats to six straight NAIA Baseball World Series appearances including one national championship win in 1963 over Grambling 9 He finished with a 237 102 record and was inducted into SHSU s Hall of Honor with Hap Malone in 1971 10 The Bob Britt years 1969 1975 edit Despite being the university s shortest tenured coach excluding current head coach David Pierce Bob Britt continued the success of the baseball squad following Benge s departure Like his predecessor Britt also never head a losing season He also coached the Bearkats to two NAIA Area Playoff berths in 1969 and 1970 and three NAIA World Series appearances in 1972 1974 and in 1975 which all were top 3 finishes with the latter two seasons being national runner up years Britt also coached Sam Houston to its first two 40 win seasons in 1974 and 1975 5 He retired from coaching following the 1975 season but continued to teach Physical Education as a professor at Sam Houston until 1995 11 Britt was inducted into Sam Houston Hall of Honor in 1979 10 The John Skeeters era 1976 2002 edit Coach John Skeeters was Sam Houston longest tenured baseball coach with over 25 years as the Bearkats head coach He picked up right were Britt left off as the Skeeters led Bearkats to winning seasons in his first 16 years as head coach During this stretch the Bearkats saw post season action in 9 different years including 4 NAIA Area Playoff berths from 1979 through 1982 12 In 1984 the Bearkats moved into NCAA Division II and stayed here for three years as an independent and later as a member of the Gulf Star Conference In Division II the Bearkats were selected to the regional playoffs in all three years The Bearkats also were the Gulf Star Champions in 1985 and 1986 13 In 1987 the Gulf Star Conference moved up into Division I In addition to winning the Gulf Star Conference championship in 1987 Sam Houston State also earned a berth into its first Division I regional thanks to a 44 18 1 record its highest win total to date 12 The Bearkats moved to the Southland Conference in 1988 and while they struggled in conference play 11 10 record they still managed to earn a winning record finishing 32 25 Despite a rough first season in the Southland Sam Houston quickly acclimated to its new home and won the 1989 conference championship 14 In addition to the championship Sam Houston earned a berth to the NCAA regionals Following the 1989 season the Bearkats would not win another conference championship again until Coach Pierce took over in 2012 and would only go to the NCAA regionals once more under Coach Skeeters 1996 13 Following four straight losing seasons from 1999 2002 Skeeters decided to resign as head coach of the Sam Houston Bearkats His overall mark of 860 wins and 628 losses will cement his legacy as the longest tenured coach for years to come 15 Chris Rupp s Bearkats 2003 2006 edit Chris Rupp was hired following Skeeters resignation prior to the 2003 season In his four years as head coach Rupp s teams failed to finish with a winning season In 2006 he resigned as the head coach and finished with an overall record of 86 123 record 16 The Mark Johnson years 2007 2012 edit Mark Johnson former Texas A amp M coaching legend and member of the American Baseball Coaches Association and Texas Baseball halls of fame took over as head coach a little more than a month after Rupp s resignation and immediately began working on improving the baseball team Johnson brought in two full time assistants to his coaching staff a luxury the previous two Bearkats coaches did not have 17 There was seemingly no rebuilding stage for the Bearkats as Johnson led Sam Houston to a 40 24 record his first year as coach only a year removed from a 23 31 season under Chris Rupp Since Johnson joined the Bearkat staff as head coach the team saw post season action in 4 of his 5 seasons at Sam Houston including 3 NCAA regional appearances 5 Under David Pierce 2012 2014 edit 2012 edit David Pierce who joined the staff in 2011 from Rice continued where Johnson left off as the 2012 baseball team saw its best ever Regional finish 2nd and coached the Bearkats to its first outright league title in 23 years 18 The 2012 Bearkats lost in the regional title game to Arkansas who would eventually go on to become a Super Regional Champion to earn a berth in the College World Series 19 Coach Pierce would later win both the Southland Conference Coach of the Year and the ABCA Coach of the Year at the end of the season 20 2013 edit The start of the 2013 season came with very high expectations for Coach Pierce and the Bearkats Coming into the season the Kats received votes in the NCBWA poll and was picked to repeat as Southland Conference champions by the Coaches and SID polls 21 22 After a disappointing 3 4 start the Bearkats would go on to beat then 22 ranked Texas in Austin and then 19 ranked Rice in Houston to right the ship Following these big games however Sam Houston would lose back to back series against UCONN and Dallas Baptist Following these games the Bearkats went 13 8 in their next 21 including wins over 17 Rice and 19 Houston but lost a major home series to Oral Roberts which dropped SHSU s Ratings Percentage Index RPI far enough down to put an at large bid for the 2013 regionals in jeopardy Sam Houston accepted the challenge and worked its way back to finish the season going 13 1 after the Oral Roberts series earning the 27 spot in the Collegiate Baseball poll 23 On May 17 2013 Sam Houston clinched its second straight outright Southland Conference Title with a 4 0 shutout of Central Arkansas 24 Following the regular season Coach Pierce would win the Conference Coach of the Year award yet again 25 and would earn an at large bid to the NCAA tournament Baton Rouge Regional after failing to win the Southland Conference Tournament 26 In the NCAA tournament the Bearkats defeated Louisiana Lafayette in the first game 4 2 behind Luke Plucheck s 3 RBIs 27 In the winner s bracket Sam Houston faced regional host and 1 overall LSU Tigers With the help of a 5 run first inning the Bearkats led the top ranked Tigers 5 4 until the 8th inning Sam Houston could not upset the Tigers losing in heartbreaking fashion 8 5 28 In the last day of the Baton Rouge regional Sam Houston faced the Ragin Cajuns for the second time in three days Sam Houston would jump out to a 3 0 lead but errors would send the Bearkats home early as they lost the final game of the season 5 7 29 SHSU career coaching records editCoach Number of Seasons Overall record Winning Percentage Hap Malone 8 1949 1956 112 92 549 Ray Benge 12 1957 1968 237 102 699 Bob Britt 7 1969 1975 225 88 719 John Skeeters 27 1976 2002 860 621 581 Chris Rupp 4 2003 2006 86 123 411 Mark Johnson 5 2007 2011 127 109 538 David Pierce 3 2012 2014 122 63 650 Matt Deggs 5 2015 2019 187 118 613 Jay Sirianni 4 2020 present 106 80 570Year by year results editYear Division Overall Record Conference Record Notes 1949 Hap Malone 15 5 First season in modern era 1950 Hap Malone 19 9 1951 Hap Malone 11 13 1952 Hap Malone 11 14 1953 Hap Malone 14 11 1954 Hap Malone 20 7 1955 Hap Malone 12 15 1956 Hap Malone 10 18 1957 Ray Benge 17 8 1958 Ray Benge 15 6 1959 Ray Benge 13 3 1960 Ray Benge 23 11 NAIA World Series 1961 Ray Benge 19 11 NAIA World Series 1962 Ray Benge 22 11 NAIA World Series 1963 Ray Benge 27 8 NAIA National Champions 1964 Ray Benge 27 8 NAIA World Series 1965 Ray Benge 22 8 NAIA World Series 1966 Ray Benge 16 12 1967 Ray Benge 20 7 1968 Ray Benge 16 9 1969 Bob Britt 24 11 NAIA Area playoffs 1970 Bob Britt 33 9 NAIA Area playoffs 1971 Bob Britt 23 18 1972 Bob Britt 33 13 NAIA World Series 1973 Bob Britt 27 12 1974 Bob Britt 42 11 NAIA World Series 1975 Bob Britt 43 14 NAIA World Series 1976 John Skeeters 30 20 1977 John Skeeters 37 16 1978 John Skeeters 33 20 1 1979 John Skeeters 38 14 NAIA Area playoffs 1980 John Skeeters 40 16 NAIA Area playoffs 1981 John Skeeters 38 18 NAIA Area playoffs 1982 John Skeeters 33 23 NAIA Area playoffs 1983 John Skeeters 33 23 1 1984 John Skeeters 42 18 NCAA Division II Regionals 1985 John Skeeters 35 21 12 6 NCAA Division II Regionals 1986 John Skeeters 45 17 16 4 NCAA Division II Regionals 1987 John Skeeters 44 18 1 17 3 NCAA Regionals 1988 John Skeeters 32 25 11 10 1989 John Skeeters 31 23 13 5 Southland Conference Regular season champions NCAA Regionals 1990 John Skeeters 34 22 1 11 6 1991 John Skeeters 33 17 9 5 1992 John Skeeters 28 28 10 11 1993 John Skeeters 30 26 13 9 Southland Tournament 1994 John Skeeters 29 24 15 9 Southland Tournament 1995 John Skeeters 22 32 10 14 1996 John Skeeters 31 29 15 15 Southland Tournament champions NCAA Regionals 1997 John Skeeters 26 27 17 11 Southland Tournament NCAA Regionals 1998 John Skeeters 29 28 12 10 Southland Tournament 1999 John Skeeters 22 23 8 19 2000 John Skeeters 25 29 14 13 Southland Tournament 2001 John Skeeters 19 31 8 19 2002 John Skeeters 21 33 9 18 2003 Chris Rupp 20 33 9 18 2004 Chris Rupp 19 30 1 11 14 2005 Chris Rupp 24 29 2 13 14 2006 Chris Rupp 23 31 12 18 2007 Mark Johnson 40 24 18 12 Southland Tournament champions NCAA Regionals 2008 Mark Johnson 37 25 18 12 Southland Tournament champions NCAA Regionals 2009 Mark Johnson 36 24 18 14 Southland Tournament champions NCAA Regionals 2010 Mark Johnson 19 36 11 22 2011 Mark Johnson 35 24 17 16 Southland Tournament 2012 David Pierce 40 22 24 9 Southland Conference Regular season champions Southland Tournament NCAA Regionals 2013 David Pierce 38 22 20 7 Southland Conference Regular season champions Southland Tournament NCAA Regionals 2014 David Pierce 44 19 20 7 Southland Conference Regular season champions Southland Tournament NCAA Regionals 2015 Matt Deggs 31 28 17 12 Southland Tournament 2016 Matt Deggs 42 22 24 6 Southland Conference Regular season champions Southland Tournament champions NCAA Regionals 2017 Matt Deggs 44 23 19 11 Southland Tournament champions NCAA Regionals champions NCAA Super Regionals 2018 Matt Deggs 39 20 24 6 Southland Conference Regular season champions Southland Tournament 2019 Matt Deggs 31 25 20 10 Southland Conference Regular season champions Southland Tournament 2020 Jay Sirianni 7 7 1 2 Season cancelled due to the COVID 19 pandemic 2021 Jay Sirianni 30 25 20 15 Southland Tournament 2022 Jay Sirianni 31 25 21 9 Western Athletic Conference Tournament 2023 Jay Sirianni 38 23 21 8 Western Athletic Conference Tournament champions NCAA Regionals Source Houston State University Baseball Record BookPost season appearances editConference tournaments edit See also Southland Conference Baseball Tournament Year Conference Record Finished 1993 Southland 2 2 500 2nd 1994 Southland 0 2 000 4th 1996 Southland 4 0 1 000 Champions 1997 Southland 2 2 500 3rd 1998 Southland 2 2 500 3rd 2000 Southland 1 2 333 4th 2007 Southland 4 0 1 000 Champions 2008 Southland 4 0 1 000 Champions 2009 Southland 4 0 1 000 Champions 2011 Southland 1 2 333 5th 2012 Southland 2 2 500 3rd 2013 Southland 1 2 333 5th 2014 Southland 1 2 333 5th 2015 Southland 3 2 600 2nd 2016 Southland 4 1 800 Champions 2017 Southland 4 0 1 000 Champions 2018 Southland 1 2 333 5th 2019 Southland 1 2 333 5th 2021 Southland 3 1 750 2nd 2022 Western Athletic 0 2 000 8th 2023 Western Athletic 5 1 833 Champions Total 48 26 648 20 Appearances National tournaments edit See also NCAA Division I Baseball Championship and NAIA Baseball World Series Year Division Record Notes 1960 NAIA 2 2 500 CWS 4th place 1961 NAIA 1 1 500 CWS 5th place 1962 NAIA 1 2 333 CWS 6th place 1963 NAIA 4 0 1 000 NAIA National Champions 1964 NAIA 1 2 333 CWS 4th place 1965 NAIA 2 2 500 CWS 4th place 1969 NAIA 2 2 500 Area playoffs 2nd place 1970 NAIA 1 2 333 Area playoffs 2nd place 1972 NAIA 5 3 625 Area Champions CWS 3rd place 1974 NAIA 6 2 750 Area Champions CWS Runner Up 1975 NAIA 7 3 700 Area Champions CWS Runner Up 1979 NAIA 2 2 500 Area Runner Up 1980 NAIA 1 2 333 Area playoffs 3rd place 1981 NAIA 2 2 500 Area Runner Up 1982 NAIA 0 2 000 Area playoffs 4th place NAIA Total 31 25 561 15 Appearances 1984 NCAA D II 0 2 000 Brookings Regional 5th place 1985 NCAA D II 2 2 500 Romeoville Regional 3rd place 1986 NCAA D II 2 2 500 Troy Regional 3rd place 1987 NCAA D I 2 2 500 Austin Regional 3rd place 1989 NCAA D I 0 2 000 Austin Regional 5th place 1996 NCAA D I 1 2 333 Austin Regional 3rd place 2007 NCAA D I 2 2 500 Oxford Regional Runner Up 2008 NCAA D I 0 2 00 Houston Regional 4th place 2009 NCAA D I 0 2 000 Houston Regional 4th place 2012 NCAA D I 2 2 500 Houston Regional Runner Up 2013 NCAA D 1 1 2 333 Baton Rouge Regional 3rd place 2014 NCAA D 1 2 2 500 Fort Worth regional Runner Up 2016 NCAA D 1 1 2 333 Lafayette Regional 3rd Place 2017 NCAA D 1 4 3 0 571 1st Place Lubbock Regional Tallahassee Super Regional NCAA Total 18 29 383 14 Appearances Total 49 54 475 29 Appearances Source Houston State Record Book Post Season ResultsNotable players editMany of Sam Houston baseball players earned various awards and honors including 95 All Conference players 16 All Americans and 7 conference award winners Film director Richard Linklater also played baseball at Sam Houston All Americans edit The Bearkats have produced 16 All Americans across three different divisions NAIA NCAA D I and NCAA D II Four of these players earned the honor in multiple years NAIA All America Alton Arnold 1960 hm 1961 1t 1962 hm Fred Beene 1963 1t 1964 1t Doyle Campbell 1975 hm Jud Chamblee 1981 hm Albert Choate 1965 2t Floyd Ciruti 1972 1t Richard Dyer 1961 hm Jimmy Dodd 1963 2t 1965 1t David Woolley 19741t Jackie Heard 19741t Jim Miller 19741t NCAA D II All America Richard Johnson 1983 3t 1985 1t Bryan McDonald 1986 1t Terry Pirtle 1986 1t NCAA D I All America Kelly Eddlemon 1999 1t Douglas Moulder 1999 2t Luke Prihoda 2007 1t Bobby Verbick 2007 1t Todd Sebek 2008 3t Nick Zaleski 2009 hm Sam Odom 2014 Riley Gossett 2016 f Heath Donica 2017 3t Hayden Wesneski 2015 f Colton Cowser 2019 f 2021 1t 2022 1t 1t denotes 1st Team selection 2t denotes 2nd Team selection 3t denotes 3rd Team selection and hm denotes Honorable Mention and f denotes freshman selection Post season awards edit Sam Houston has had multiple players earn end of the season awards such as Pitcher of the Year Player of the Year and Newcomer of the Year These awards were handed out by the Gulf Star Conference from 1985 through 1987 the Southland Conference from 1988 through 2021 and the Western Athletic Conference in 2022 and 2023 Conference honors Player of the Year Richard Johnson 1985 Terry Pirtle 1986 and 1987 Anthony Azar 2014 Colton Cowser 2021 and 2022 Hitter of the Year Colton Cowser 2019 Pitcher of the Year Kenneth Garza 1989 Steve Prihoda 1994 Greg Kubes 1997 Luke Prihoda 2007 Heath Donica 2017 Coach of the Year John Skeeters 1989 David Pierce 2013 amp 2014 Matt Deggs 2016 Newcomer of the Year Isaias Garcia 2005 Relief Pitcher of the Year Dakota Mills 2018 Freshman of the Year Hayden Wesneski 2017 In 2001 the Bearkats set a new tournament record for runs scored in a game with 22 Third baseman Douglas Moulder and right fielder Josh Harrison both contributed with 2 home runs and 7 R B I s each also tying each other for the tournament record Harrison also stole 3 bases in the game For Moulder it was his 9th multi homer game of the season lt a school record Harrison and Moulder are also tied for the longest home run at Bearkats Stadium In 1998 Harrison blasted a shot 437 ft The following year Moulder launched a ball the same distance in his second hit as a Bearkat Seven players have also been selected as the conference tournament s Most Valuable Player Brent Bubela 1996 Douglas Moulder 1999 Luke Prihoda 2007 Bobby Verbick 2008 Matt Shelton 2009 Heath Donica 2016 Robie Rojas 2017 Walker Janek 2023 Source Houston State Record Book Postseason Honors Players in Major League Baseball edit As of the 2021 Major League Baseball season Sam Houston has had 16 former members go on to play Major League Baseball Player Name Years at SHSU Years in MLB 30 Ray Benge 1922 1925 1925 1938 Larry Miggins 1946 1946 1948 1952 Ken Boswell 1965 1965 1967 1977 Fred Beene 1962 1964 1968 1975 Phil Hennigan 1965 1965 1969 1973 Jamie Easterly 1967 1970 1974 1987 Rick Matula 1973 1975 1979 1981 Billy Smith 1974 1977 1981 1981 Glenn Wilson 1978 1980 1982 1993 Don Welchel 1976 1978 1982 1983 Steve Sparks 1986 1987 1995 2004 Jordan Tata 2002 2003 2006 2007 Robert Manuel 2005 2005 2009 2010 Ryan Tepera 2006 2009 2015 present Caleb Smith 2011 2013 2017 present Ryan O Hearn 2012 2014 2018 present Colton Cowser 2019 2021 2021 presentSee also editList of NCAA Division I baseball programsReferences edit Athletic Branding Sam Houston State University Department of Marketing and Communications Retrieved May 15 2021 Sam Houston State Bearkats d1baseball com Retrieved 2013 03 15 Important Dates in Bearkat Athletic History Sam Houston State Athletics Retrieved 2013 05 31 First Bearkat Game Set Fort Worth Star Telegram April 21 1947 p 13 via newspapers com a b c d e Sam Houston State Baseball Record Book Year By Year PDF Sam Houston State Athletics p 2 Hayden Malone BuildingSHSU Retrieved 2013 05 31 SHSU Hall of Honor Members M N Sam Houston State Athletics Retrieved 2013 05 31 Ray Benge Baseball Reference Retrieved 2013 05 31 Sam Houston State National Titles Sam Houston State Athletics Retrieved 2013 05 31 a b SHSU Hall of Honor A C Sam Houston State Athletics Retrieved 2013 05 31 Matt Schwartz 2002 01 09 Deaths Bob Britt 70 retired teacher coach at Sam Houston State Houston Chronicle Retrieved 2013 05 31 a b Post Season PDF Sam Houston State Athletics p 3 a b National Tournament Appearances Sam Houston State Athletics Retrieved 2013 05 31 Sam Houston Conference Championships Sam Houston State Athletics Retrieved 2013 05 31 Lacy Drew 2002 07 17 Skeeters shocks players with news of resignation The Huntsville Item Cody Stark 2006 05 26 Rupp resigns as SHSU skipper The Huntsville Item Retrieved 2013 05 31 Tom Waddill 2006 07 07 Sam Houston lands former Aggie skipper The Huntsville Item Retrieved 2013 05 31 Southland Baseball Title A Team Effort GoBearkats com 2012 05 14 Retrieved 2013 05 14 Joseph Duarte 2012 06 03 Arkansas tops Sam Houston State in regional final Houston Chronicle Retrieved 2013 05 14 Sam Houston State s Pierce Named ABCA Regional Coach of the Year Southland Conference 2012 07 26 Archived from the original on 2013 07 05 Retrieved 2013 05 18 Bearkats Receiving Votes in NCBWA Preseason Poll GoBearkats 2013 01 29 Retrieved 2013 05 18 Bearkats Picked to Win 2013 Southland Conference Baseball Title Southland Conference 2013 01 30 Retrieved 2013 05 18 Kats Move Up in Collegiate Baseball Poll GoBearkats com 2013 05 13 Retrieved 2013 05 18 BEARKAT BASEBALL Kats repeat as outright conference champs Huntsville Item 2013 05 17 Retrieved 2013 05 18 SFA Shortstop Dozier Named Southland Baseball Player of the Year Southland Conference Retrieved 2013 05 28 Gene Schallenberg 2013 05 28 BEARKAT BASEBALL Kats in NCAA tourney again as at large selection The Huntsville Item Retrieved 2013 05 28 Gene Schallenberg 2013 06 01 NCAA BASEBALL REGIONAL So far so good for SHSU Itemonline com The Huntsville Item Retrieved 2013 06 04 Gene Schallenberg 2013 06 02 NCAA BASEBALL REGIONAL Bearkats so close yet so far away The Huntsville Item Retrieved 2013 06 04 Gene Schallenberg 2013 06 03 NCAA BASEBALL REGIONAL Bearkats make too many mistakes The Huntsville Item Retrieved 2013 06 04 Sam Houston State University Baseball Players Who Made it to the Major Leagues 2013 Retrieved April 9 2013 External links editOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sam Houston Bearkats baseball amp oldid 1222468436, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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