2001 Miami Hurricanes baseball team

The 2001 Miami Hurricanes baseball team represented the University of Miami in the 2001 NCAA Division I baseball season. The team was coached by Jim Morris in his 8th season.

2001 Miami Hurricanes baseball
ConferenceIndependent
Ranking
CoachesNo. 1
CBNo. 1
2001 record53–12
Head coach
Assistant coaches
  • Lazaro Collazo (6th year)
  • Gino DiMare (5th year)
  • Mark Kingston (2nd year)
Home stadiumMark Light Field
2001 NCAA Division I baseball independents standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
No. 1 Miami (FL)  y  4712 .797
Belmont    2824 .538
Centenary    2336 .390
Texas A&M–Corpus Christi    1836 .333
Texas–Pan American    1240 .231
y Invited to the NCAA Tournament
As of June 30, 2001[1]; Rankings from Collegiate Baseball

The Hurricanes won the College World Series, defeating the Stanford Cardinal in the championship game.

Roster

2001 Miami Hurricanes roster
 

Pitchers

  • Kiki Bengochea
  • J. D. Cockroft
  • Andrew Cohn
  • Luke DeBold
  • Tom Farmer
  • George Huguet
  • Alex Prendes
  • T.J. Prunty
  • Troy Roberson
  • Chris Sheffield
  • Dan Smith
  • Dan Touchet
  • Vince Vazquez
  • Brian Walker
 

Infielders

  • Kevin Brown
  • Eric Moore
  • Kris Clute
  • Matt Dryer
  • Kevin Howard
  • Javy Rodriguez

Catchers

 

Outfielders

  • Jim Burt, Jr.
  • Charlton Jimerson
  • Marcus Nettles
  • Kevin Mannix
  • Mike Rodriguez
  • Brad Safchik
 

Schedule

2001 Miami Hurricanes Baseball Game Log
Regular Season
January/February
DateOpponentSite/StadiumScoreOverall Record
January 25Florida AtlanticMark Light Field9–31–0
January 26Florida AtlanticFAU Baseball Stadium10–111–1
January 27Florida AtlanticMark Light Field4–22–1
February 3at FloridaMcKethan Stadium14–53–1
February 7at Florida InternationalUniversity Park Stadium4–34–1
February 9FloridaMark Light Field10–45–1
February 10FloridaMark Light Field8–76–1
February 11Oklahoma StateMark Light Field3–96–2
February 16ElonMark Light Field4–27–2
February 17ElonMark Light Field10–98–2
February 18ElonMark Light Field7–49–2
February 21Florida InternationalMark Light Field10–179–3
February 23vs. Florida InternationalHomestead Sports Complex10–210–3
February 24vs. Florida InternationalHomestead Sports Complex2–011–3
February 25AlbanyMark Light Field14–012–3
March
DateOpponentSite/StadiumScoreOverall Record
March 2San Diego StateHubert H. Humphrey Metrodome8–613–3
March 3MinnesotaHubert H. Humphrey Metrodome10–114–3
March 4ArkansasHubert H. Humphrey Metrodome8–215–3
March 7PittsburghMark Light Field6–216–3
March 9RutgersMark Light Field4–616–4
March 10RutgersMark Light Field13–217–4
March 11RutgersMark Light Field6–917–5
March 13at South FloridaRed McEwen Field8–218–5
March 14at South FloridaRed McEwen Field13–919–5
March 16East CarolinaMark Light Field14–1320–5
March 17East CarolinaMark Light Field2–720–6
March 18East CarolinaMark Light Field8–421–6
March 21CornellMark Light Field2–122–6
March 23NortheasternMark Light Field5–323–6
March 24NortheasternMark Light Field5–224–6
March 25NortheasternMark Light Field5–325–6
March 30Cal State FullertonMark Light Field2–825–7
March 31Cal State FullertonMark Light Field5–825–8
April
DateOpponentSite/StadiumScoreOverall Record
April 1Cal State FullertonMark Light Field2–925–9
April 6Savannah StateMark Light Field13–426–9
April 7Savannah StateMark Light Field7–227–9
April 8Savannah StateMark Light Field16–528–9
April 13Florida StateMark Light Field9–1028–10
April 14Florida StateMark Light Field5–429–10
April 15Florida StateMark Light Field7–530–10
April 20at Florida StateMike Martin Field at Dick Howser Stadium7–531–10
April 21at Florida StateMike Martin Field at Dick Howser Stadium9–632–10
April 22at Florida StateMike Martin Field at Dick Howser Stadium7–433–10
April 27VirginiaMark Light Field0–534–11
April 28VirginiaMark Light Field5–135–11
April 29VirginiaMark Light Field12–636–11
May
DateOpponentSite/StadiumScoreOverall Record
May 4JacksonvilleMark Light Field2–336–12
May 5JacksonvilleMark Light Field13–337–12
May 6JacksonvilleMark Light Field6–238–12
May 11Florida SouthernMark Light Field12–439–12
May 12Florida SouthernMark Light Field16–340–12
May 13Florida SouthernMark Light Field5–441–12
May 18New York TechMark Light Field17–542–12
May 19New York TechMark Light Field14–743–12
May 20New York TechMark Light Field11–144–12
Postseason
DateOpponentSite/StadiumScoreOverall Record
May 25vs. BucknellMark Light Field14–645–12
May 26vs. FloridaMark Light Field6–246–12
May 27vs. StetsonMark Light Field16–847–12
DateOpponentSite/StadiumScoreOverall Record
June 1vs. ClemsonMark Light Field10–848–12
June 2vs. ClemsonMark Light Field14–649–12
DateOpponentSite/StadiumScoreOverall Record
June 9vs. TennesseeRosenblatt Stadium21–1350–12
June 11vs. Southern CaliforniaRosenblatt Stadium4–351–12
June 14vs. TennesseeRosenblatt Stadium12–652–12
June 16vs. StanfordRosenblatt Stadium12–153–12

Awards and honors

Javy Rodriguez
  • Team Most Valuable Player
  • All-American
  • NCAA Stolen Base Leader
Kevin Brown
  • College World Series All-Tournament Team[2]
Tom Farmer
  • College World Series All-Tournament Team[2]
George Huguet
  • Freshman All-America[3]
Charlton Jimerson
Danny Matienzo
  • College World Series All-Tournament Team[2]

Hurricanes in the 2001 MLB Draft

The following members of the Miami baseball program were drafted in the 2001 Major League Baseball Draft.[4]

Player Position Round Overall MLB Team
Mike RodriguezOF2nd54thHouston Astros
Chris SheffieldRHP4th121stToronto Blue Jays
Brian WalkerLHP4th132ndNew York Mets
Charlton JimersonOF5th146thHouston Astros
Tom FarmerRHP7th207thDetroit Tigers
Marcus NettlesOF11th330thSan Diego Padres
Mike DiRosaC16th488thArizona Diamondbacks
Dan SmithRHP17th507thDetroit Tigers
Kevin Brown1B19th585thAtlanta Braves
Troy RobersonRHP28th831stTexas Rangers
Kris Clute2B37th1112thFlorida Marlins

References

  1. "College Baseball Conference Standings -- 2001". Boyd's World. Retrieved May 13, 2015.
  2. "College World Series Record Book" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved 22 June 2012.
  3. "2012 Miami Hurricanes Baseball Media Guide" (PDF). HurricaneSports.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 14 July 2012.
  4. "MLB Amateur Draft Picks who came from "University of Miami"". Retrieved 14 July 2012.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.