Collegiate Baseball Newspaper: Difference between revisions
Dmoore5556 (talk | contribs) →top: hatnote |
m Substing/adjusting templates to reduce #ifexist parserfunction usage: {{Cbsb link}} |
||
(5 intermediate revisions by 5 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Short description|American publication based in Arizona}} |
{{Short description|American publication based in Arizona}} |
||
{{italic title}} |
{{italic title}} |
||
{{redirect|Collegiate |
{{redirect|Collegiate Baseball|the general topic of baseball played at institutions of higher education|college baseball}} |
||
'''''Collegiate Baseball Newspaper''''' (also known as '''''Collegiate Baseball Magazine''''' and '''''Collegiate Baseball''''') was an American publication based in [[Arizona]] that |
'''''Collegiate Baseball Newspaper''''' (also known as '''''Collegiate Baseball Magazine''''' and '''''Collegiate Baseball''''') was an American publication based in [[Arizona]] that considered itself the "voice of [[Amateur baseball in the United States|amateur baseball]]" and was published for over 40 years. The publication gave out several awards: ''Collegiate Baseball'' Player of the Year, ''Collegiate Baseball'' Coach of the Year, and ''Collegiate Baseball'' All-Americans.{{cn|date=June 2022}} |
||
It |
It was published twice a month from January until June, and then once each in September and October.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.baseballnews.com/aboutcbn/aboutcbn.htm |title=About Collegiate Baseball Newspaper |publisher=Baseballnews.com |access-date=May 17, 2010}}</ref> |
||
The "Collegiate Baseball" newspaper poll |
The "Collegiate Baseball" newspaper poll was college sports' oldest baseball poll.<ref name="thetigernet1">{{cite web|url=http://www.thetigernet.com/view/story.do?id=8437 |title=Baseball News – Clemson moves into top 15 in both baseball polls |publisher=TigerNet.com |date=February 22, 2010 |access-date=May 17, 2010}}</ref><ref name="mstateathletics1">{{cite web|url=http://www.mstateathletics.com/ViewArticle.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=16800&ATCLID=930015 |title=Rice No. 1, MSU 24th In Final Collegiate Baseball Newspaper Poll – Mississippi State University Bulldogs Official Athletic Site |publisher=mstateathletics.com |access-date=May 17, 2010}}</ref> A ranking of the top 30 teams was released prior to the season, weekly throughout the season, and after the conclusion of the [[College World Series]]. It started with the 1957 [[college baseball]] season.<ref name="thetigernet1"/><ref name="mstateathletics1"/> The publication has ceased operation as of November 2023. |
||
==Collegiate Baseball Player of the Year== |
==Collegiate Baseball Player of the Year== |
||
The ''Collegiate Baseball'' [[Player of the Year]] award |
The ''Collegiate Baseball'' [[Player of the Year]] award was given to the best [[baseball positions|player]] in [[NCAA]] [[Division I (NCAA)|Division I]]. It was first awarded in 1984.{{cn|date=June 2022}} |
||
{| class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" |
{| class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" |
||
Line 46: | Line 46: | ||
! scope="row"| {{sortname|Andy|Benes}} |
! scope="row"| {{sortname|Andy|Benes}} |
||
| P |
| P |
||
| |
| [[1988 Evansville Purple Aces baseball team|Evansville]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| rowspan="2" | 1989 |
| rowspan="2" | 1989 |
||
Line 226: | Line 226: | ||
! scope="row"| {{sortname|Nick|Gonzales}} |
! scope="row"| {{sortname|Nick|Gonzales}} |
||
| SS |
| SS |
||
| [[ |
| [[New Mexico State University|New Mexico State]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 2021 |
| 2021 |
||
Line 238: | Line 238: | ||
| [[2022 Texas Longhorns baseball team|Texas]] |
| [[2022 Texas Longhorns baseball team|Texas]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 2023 |
||
! scope="row"| {{sortname|Paul|Skenes}} |
! scope="row"| {{sortname|Paul|Skenes}} |
||
| P |
| P |
||
Line 245: | Line 245: | ||
==Collegiate Baseball Coach of the Year== |
==Collegiate Baseball Coach of the Year== |
||
The ''Collegiate Baseball'' Coach of the Year award |
The ''Collegiate Baseball'' Coach of the Year award was given to the best [[manager (baseball)|coach]] in NCAA Division I. It was first awarded in 1980.{{cn|date=June 2022}} |
||
{| class="wikitable sortable" |
{| class="wikitable sortable" |
||
Line 288: | Line 288: | ||
| 1988 |
| 1988 |
||
| {{sortname|Larry|Cochell}} |
| {{sortname|Larry|Cochell}} |
||
| |
| [[1988 Cal State Fullerton Titans baseball team|Cal State Fullerton]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 1989 |
| 1989 |
||
Line 440: | Line 440: | ||
==Collegiate Baseball All-Americans== |
==Collegiate Baseball All-Americans== |
||
{{see also|College Baseball All-America Team}} |
{{see also|College Baseball All-America Team}} |
||
The ''Collegiate Baseball'' [[All-Americans]] award |
The ''Collegiate Baseball'' [[All-Americans]] award was given to the best players at various positions in NCAA Division I. It was first awarded in 1981.{{cn|date=June 2022}} |
||
==Collegiate Baseball Freshmen All-Americans== |
==Collegiate Baseball Freshmen All-Americans== |
Latest revision as of 10:00, 2 November 2024
Collegiate Baseball Newspaper (also known as Collegiate Baseball Magazine and Collegiate Baseball) was an American publication based in Arizona that considered itself the "voice of amateur baseball" and was published for over 40 years. The publication gave out several awards: Collegiate Baseball Player of the Year, Collegiate Baseball Coach of the Year, and Collegiate Baseball All-Americans.[citation needed]
It was published twice a month from January until June, and then once each in September and October.[1]
The "Collegiate Baseball" newspaper poll was college sports' oldest baseball poll.[2][3] A ranking of the top 30 teams was released prior to the season, weekly throughout the season, and after the conclusion of the College World Series. It started with the 1957 college baseball season.[2][3] The publication has ceased operation as of November 2023.
Collegiate Baseball Player of the Year
[edit]The Collegiate Baseball Player of the Year award was given to the best player in NCAA Division I. It was first awarded in 1984.[citation needed]
Collegiate Baseball Coach of the Year
[edit]The Collegiate Baseball Coach of the Year award was given to the best coach in NCAA Division I. It was first awarded in 1980.[citation needed]
Collegiate Baseball All-Americans
[edit]The Collegiate Baseball All-Americans award was given to the best players at various positions in NCAA Division I. It was first awarded in 1981.[citation needed]
Collegiate Baseball Freshmen All-Americans
[edit]Louisville Slugger's Freshmen All-American Baseball Team
[edit]- See footnote[4]
Collegiate Baseball Freshman Pitcher of the Year
[edit]Beginning in 2016, the magazine began awarding honors to freshman starting pitchers and freshman relief pitchers.
- 2005 – Mickey Storey (RHP, Florida Atlantic)
- 2006 – Alex Wilson (RHP, Winthrop)
- 2007 – Ryan Berry (RHP, Rice)
- 2008 – Chris Hernandez (LHP, University of Miami)
- 2009 – Trevor Bauer (RHP, UCLA)
- 2010 – Matt Purke (LHP, Texas Christian)[4]
- 2011 – Corey Knebel (RHP, Texas)
- 2012 – Carlos Rodon (LHP, N.C. State)
- 2013 – Thomas Eshelman (RHP, Cal St. Fullerton)
- 2014 – Zach Plesac (RHP, Ball State)
- 2015 – Alex Lange (RHP, LSU)
- 2017 – SP Sean Mooney (RHP, St. John's); RP Kenyon Yovan (RHP, Oregon)
- 2018 – SP Patrick Fredrickson (RHP, Minnesota); RP Max Meyer, (RHP, Minnesota)
- 2019 – SP Tyler Thornton (RHP, St. Mary’s); SP J. T. Ginn (RHP, Mississippi St.)
Collegiate Baseball Freshman Player of the Year
[edit]Before 2005, there was not a specific award known as the "Freshmen Pitcher of the Year." Rather, there were multiple Players of the Year awarded each season.
- 1998 – Hayden Gliemmo (LHP, Auburn), Aaron Heilman (RHP Notre Dame), Xavier Nady (2B, California)
- 1999 – James Jurries (2B, Tulane), Mark Teixeira (3B, Georgia Tech), Blair Varnes (RHP, Florida State)
- 2000 – Kevin Howard (3B, Miami), Zane Carlson (RP, Baylor), Mike Fontenot (2B, Louisiana State)
- 2001 – Lane Mestepey (LHP, Louisiana State), Jamie D'Antona (1B, Wake Forest)
- 2002 – Philip Humber (RHP, Rice), Vincent Sinisi (1B, Rice), Darryl Lawhorn (1B, East Carolina)
- 2003 – Mark Romanczuk (LHP, Stanford), Glen Perkins (LHP, Minnesota), Jeff Clement (Southern California), Stephen Head (Mississippi)
- 2004 – Wade LeBlanc (LHP, Alabama), Tim Lincecum (RHP, Washington), Blair Erickson (U.C. Irvine)
- 2005 – Joe Savery (Rice)
- 2006 – Pedro Alvarez (3B, Vanderbilt)
- 2007 – Dustin Ackley (1B, North Carolina)
- 2008 – Ryan Lockwood (OF, South Florida)
- 2009 – Anthony Rendon (3B, Rice)
- 2010 – Jeremy Baltz (OF, St. John’s)[4]
- 2012 – Michael Conforto (OF, Oregon State)
- 2013 – Alex Bregman (SS, Louisiana State)
- 2014 – Jake Noll (2B, Florida Gulf Coast)
- 2015 – Brendan McKay (Louisville), J. J. Schwarz, (Florida)
- 2016 – Seth Beer (Clemson), Kevin Strohschein (Tennessee Tech)
- 2017 – Kevin Milam (DH/RHP, Saint Mary's), Braden Shewmake (2B, Texas A&M)
- 2018 – Spencer Torkelson (1B, Arizona State), Ryan Ward (OF, Bryant)
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "About Collegiate Baseball Newspaper". Baseballnews.com. Retrieved May 17, 2010.
- ^ a b "Baseball News – Clemson moves into top 15 in both baseball polls". TigerNet.com. February 22, 2010. Retrieved May 17, 2010.
- ^ a b "Rice No. 1, MSU 24th In Final Collegiate Baseball Newspaper Poll – Mississippi State University Bulldogs Official Athletic Site". mstateathletics.com. Retrieved May 17, 2010.
- ^ a b c ""Louisville Slugger's" Freshmen All-American Baseball Team". Collegiate Baseball Newspaper Inc. June 9, 2010. Retrieved July 2, 2010.