Fordham Rams baseball

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Fordham Rams
Fordham Rams F Logo.png
Founded 1860 (1860)
University Fordham University
Conference A-10
Location Bronx, NY
Head coach Kevin Leighton (5th year)
Home stadium Jim Houlihan Park at Jack Coffey Field
(Capacity: 1,000)
Nickname Rams
Colors Maroon and White
         
NCAA Tournament appearances
1987, 1988, 1990, 1993, 1998
Conference tournament champions
Patriot League: 1993
Atlantic 10: 1998
Conference champions
MAAC: 1987, 1988, 1990
Patriot League: 1991, 1992

The Fordham Rams baseball team of Fordham University in New York City has been existence since its first game played against the now-defunct St. Francis Xavier College in Manhattan, the first collegiate baseball game played with nine-man teams as today.

The team's 4,010 wins as of the 2009 season are the most of any NCAA Division I baseball team. This is mainly because Fordham began playing baseball half a century before many other schools took up the sport. While they have reached five NCAA Tournaments, the last appearance was in 1998. Nonetheless, they heavily stress their record number of wins when recruiting.[1]

History

File:Fordham baseball c.1910.jpg
Tobacco card circa 1910

Founded in the late 1850s, the Fordham Rose Hill Baseball Club of St. John's College (the precursor to Fordham University, and of no connection at all to St. John's University) played against St. Francis Xavier College in the first ever college baseball game under modern nine-man-team rules (Knickerbocker Rules, or "The New York Game") on November 3, 1859.[1]

There have been 56 major leaguers who have played for Fordham, including All-Star pitcher Pete Harnisch and Baseball Hall of Famer Frankie Frisch. Frisch, a star athlete in four different sports at Fordham, was known as the "Fordham Flash".[2] Steve Bellán, a Cuban who attended what was then St. John's College from 1863 to 1868, played in the major leagues, primarily as a third baseman, and was the first Latin American in professional baseball.[3] Gil McDougald, who played for the New York Yankees, was a coach on the team. Announcer Vin Scully, who played outfield at Fordham before achieving greater fame in the broadcast booth, hit one home run in his Fordham career, which included a game against George H.W. Bush who was playing for Yale University.[1] Fordham's most recent Hall of Fame inductee class in 2012 included a member of the baseball team, Bob Cole.

In honor of the 150th anniversary of the team's first game, Fordham played Williams College, which was also celebrating its sesquicentennial of baseball play. University President Joseph M. McShane, who had conceived of the anniversary game, threw out the ceremonial first pitch of the game. Williams had lost to Amherst College July 1, 1859 and considered the first college baseball game under the now defunct Massachusetts rules, losing 73-32.[1]

Home field

The team plays home games at Jim Houlihan Park at Jack Coffey Field. Jack Coffey Field, a multisport facility, is named after Jack Coffey, former athletic director and baseball coach at the University. He amassed 817 wins as a baseball coach. Coffey is the only player to play with both Ty Cobb and Babe Ruth in the same season (1918 Detroit Tigers and Boston Red Sox). The baseball portion of the field was renamed "Houlihan Park" after renovations completed in 2005.

Year-by-year results

Season Coach Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Atlantic 10 Conference (2008–present)
2008[4] Nick Restaino 29-24-1 13-14
2009[5] Nick Restaino 22-32 16-11
2010[6] Nick Restaino 21-35 15-12
2011[7] Nick Restaino 31-23-1 12-11-1
2012[8] Nick Restaino 22-34 12-12
A-10:
Total:

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

See also

References