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Baseball
McDonnell Named Head Coach Of Louisville Baseball Program
June 27, 2006 LOUISVILLE, Ky. -
Dan McDonnell, one of the top young minds in
college baseball, has been named the 18th head coach of the University
of Louisville baseball team.
"I am ecstatic with the calibre of coach we are bringing to the
University of Louisville in Dan McDonnell. He is a high energy guy who
has a vast baseball background," said Vice President of Athletics Tom
Jurich.
"When we met him, he was the most prepared of any candidate that
I have brought in on an interview in any sport. Recommendations for him
came from across the country about his ability to recruit and handle
student athletes. He reminds me a lot of Bobby Petrino," Jurich added.
"Dan McDonnell has meant the world to this program," said Ole Miss head coach Mike Bianco. "It is quite evident he has forever left his mark on this program when you look at the players and recruiting classes to come through Ole Miss the past six years. We would not be where we are without him. The University of Louisville baseball program just got a lot better today."
The top assistant and recruiting coordinator for Mike Bianco at
the University of Mississippi for the last six seasons, McDonnell and
the Rebels have had four top-20 recruiting classes, and three groups
that ranked in the top ten nationally. The first full recruiting class
for the Rebels under McDonnell's direction was ranked #6 in the nation
by Collegiate Baseball.
In McDonnell's 18 seasons in NCAA baseball as a player and
coach, teams he has been a part of have averaged 37.6 wins per season
and have advanced to a NCAA regional in 10 of those seasons, including
seven of the last nine. In each of the last two seasons, Ole Miss has
been one win away from advancing to the College World Series in Omaha.
As the Rebels' infield coach, McDonnell has helped coach Head to
All-America honors in 2003, 2004 and 2005 to become the first three-time
All-American in school history. Head also earned SEC Co-Player of the
Year honors in 2004 and was a finalist for the Golden Spikes Award, the
most prestigious in college baseball.
In the five seasons that preceded McDonnell's arrival at Ole
Miss, the team averaged just 28 wins per season and finished no higher
than fifth in the SEC Western Division. In his six seasons in Oxford,
the team has averaged just over 40 wins per seasons and has finished in
the top three on four occasions, winning the 2006 SEC Tournament, and
sharing the 2005 regular season title.
Infielders Josh Christian, Cooper Osteen, Brian Pettway, Jon
Swearingen, Matt Tolbert and Head have all advanced to play professional
baseball following their tutelage under McDonnell. Head and Pettway
were both First Team All-America selections in 2005, while Head was
joined by Smith on the US National Team that took home the silver medal
in the 2003 Pan American Games.
In the 2005 MLB draft, Ole Miss was the only team in the nation
with four players selected in the top 100. A total of 21 Mississippi
players have been drafted over the past three seasons including six
Rebels in the 2006 draft.
Before his arrival in Oxford, Mississippi, McDonnell was an
assistant and recruiting coordinator at his alma mater, The Citadel for
eight seasons. The Bulldogs advanced to four NCAA Regionals and won
five Southern Conference titles during that span. He was the top
assistant from 1995-2000.
Primarily working with the Bulldog infielders and hitters,
McDonnell also worked with the baserunners, establishing a conference
record for steals in a single season in 2000 with 198 in 240 attempts
over 59 games. The Citadel was paced by junior outfielder Chris Morris,
who lead the nation with 84 bags.
During his playing days for the Bulldogs McDonnell earned four
letters, helping The Citadel to the 1990 College World Series, marking
the first time a military school has made the trip to Omaha. He was a
member of the All-Atlantic Regional team in Miami that same season.
As a second baseman he was named first team All-Southern
Conference as a junior. He finished his career as the league's all-time
leader in stolen bases with 99, a total that now places him fourth in
school history. He is the school's all-time leader in walks, picking up
185 bases on balls, and is ninth in runs scored in Bulldog history with
165.
The Port Chester, N.Y. native, McDonnell, 35, graduated from The
Citadel in 1992 and later completed his master's degree in business
administration in 1995. He is married to the former Julie Anne
Underwood of Charlotte, N.C. The couple has two sons, Jake (8) and
Justin (4).
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