Michigan State Spartans baseball

The Michigan State Spartans baseball team is the varsity intercollegiate baseball team of Michigan State University in East Lansing, Michigan, United States. The team competes in the National Collegiate Athletic Association's Division I and are members of the Big Ten Conference.

Michigan State Spartans
2024 Michigan State Spartans baseball team
Founded1884 (1884)
UniversityMichigan State University
Head coachJake Boss (16th season)
ConferenceBig Ten
LocationEast Lansing, Michigan
Home stadiumDrayton McLane Baseball Stadium at John H. Kobs Field
(Capacity: 4,000)
NicknameSpartans
ColorsGreen and white[1]
   
College World Series appearances
1954
NCAA Tournament appearances
1954, 1971, 1978, 1979, 2012
Regular season conference champions
Big Ten: 1954, 1971, 1979, 2011
MIAA: 1888, 1889, 1893, 1894, 1902

Beginning play in 1884, the Spartans have made the NCAA Division I Baseball Championship 5 times, advancing to the College World Series once, in 1954, with a third-place finish. The team has won 4 Big Ten conference championships and 5 Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association titles.[2] The team played in the MIAA until 1907 and played as an independent until the university joined the Big Ten in 1949 and the Spartan baseball team began Big Ten play in 1951.[3]

Spartan baseball Hall of Famer

Robin Roberts, MSC

Robin Roberts initially came to East Lansing as part of a United States Army Air Corps training program in 1944. After the war ended in 1945, he took his leave of the service and returned to MSC (the name was Michigan State College at the time) to play basketball. Roberts was twice named captain, earning three varsity letters in basketball.[4] After his second season playing basketball, Roberts tried out for the Michigan State baseball team, becoming a pitcher because it was the position that coach John Kobs needed most. After playing for Michigan State, going 9–6 over two seasons, with 6 shutouts in the 1946 season, he was signed by the Philadelphia Phillies in 1948. Roberts would go on to win 286 games, with 7 Major League Baseball All-Star Game appearances in a 19-year Major League Baseball career. Roberts was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1976.[5][6]

In 1992, Roberts was one of 30 members of the charter class of former Michigan State Spartans athletes, coaches, and administrators inducted into the MSU Athletics Hall of Fame.[7] His number 36 is retired, one of only five Spartan baseball players to receive the honor.

Other notable Spartans

Ed "Peanuts" Pinnance

Ed Pinnance made history for Michigan State baseball as the first Spartan (the school was called State Agricultural College at the time with the nickname Aggies) to advance to the major leagues, appearing in 1903 for the Philadelphia Athletics, and was also among the first full-blooded Native Americans to play in MLB.[8] Tom Yewcic was named the College World Series Most Outstanding Player of the 1954 College World Series despite his team not reaching the championship game and would have a brief professional career with the Detroit Tigers.[9] Yewcic was a two-sport star at Michigan State, leading the 1953 football team to a Rose Bowl win. Earl Morrall was a teammates of Yewcic on the 1954 College World Series team, led the 1955 football team to a Rose Bowl victory, and chose a career in the National Football League where he won 4 Super Bowls and an NFL MVP trophy in a 21-year career.[10] Dick Radatz earned first-time All Big Ten honors in 1959, going 10–1, 1.12 ERA, and was a two-time MLB All-Star with the Boston Red Sox in 7-year pro career.[11] A teammate of Radatz, Ron Perranoski would leave a stellar collegiate career in East Lansing for an MLB career, twice leading the league in saves, and twice helping his team win the World Series in his 13-year stint in the majors.[12]

The Major League Baseball draft began in 1965 and the Spartans would be represented in the first year when Dick Billings was drafted in the 25th round by the Washington Senators as the first Michigan State player ever drafted. Billings would go on to a 8-year MLB career.[13][14] Steve Garvey was a two-sport athlete at Michigan State, earning a letter as a defensive back for the football team, and would earn All Big Ten and All American honors in 1968 on his way to the majors where he would earn a World Series ring with the Los Angeles Dodgers as a 10-time MLB All-Star.[15] Rick Miller was a Sporting News First Team All-American in 1969 for Michigan State and then won a Gold Glove for the California Angels in 1978 in his 15-year MLB career as a defensive standout.[16]

Steve Garvey, Michigan State, 1968

In 1974, Spartan coach Danny Litwhiler pioneered the use of radar to measure pitching velocity. Litwiler said, “One day in 1974 while I was the coach at Michigan State, I read an article in the student paper that said ‘Don’t Speed on Campus’ and there was a photo of an MSU policeman who had just received a new radar gun. That got me thinking—could we use it to check the velocity of the baseball? So I found out that the cops’ radar guns were powered by the cigarette lighters in their police cars. So, we got an MSU police car to drive out on the field to time the pitches and the readouts were accurate within one mph each time. Within one week, I had the prototype of the JUGS gun in my hands and today that same prototype is in the Hall of Fame." Litwhiler also invented 'Diamond Grit' to help dry out fields after rain.[17]

Following the two-sport tradition, Kirk Gibson would lead the 1978 Michigan State Spartans football team to a co-Big Ten championship. It was at the suggestion of Spartan football coach Darryl Rogers that Gibson play collegiate baseball.[18] Gibson played only one year of college baseball, but managed to hit .390 with 16 homers and 52 RBIs in 48 games.[19] He was drafted by both his hometown Detroit Tigers baseball team (first round)[20] and the St. Louis Cardinals football team (seventh round). He chose baseball and won two World Series titles (1984 with Detroit, 1988 with the Los Angeles Dodgers) and the 1988 National League MVP award in an illustrious 17-year career.

Mark Mulder would earn All Big Ten honors twice for the Spartans (1997, 1998) on his way to a professional career with two MLB All-Star appearances and a 21–8 2001 season for the Oakland Athletics which was captured in the book and film Moneyball. Bob Malek (2002) and Jeff Holm (2011) both were named the Big Ten Conference Baseball Player of the Year, the only two Spartans honored since the award was created in 1982. Malek finished his career as one of the most decorated Spartans ever with several national awards and is only the second Spartan in history to be a two-time member (2001-2002) of the .400 club (.400 or better batting average), joining Don Fleser, who did so in 1925-1926. Kurt Wunderlich was the Big Ten Pitcher of the Year in 2011, the only Spartan hurler to be so recognized since the award was created in 1994.[3] Second baseman Ryan Jones was named to the All-Big Ten team three consecutive seasons (2010–2012) and had a 33-game hitting streak, a Spartan record.[21]

Retired numbers on the outfield fence in 2018

Recognizing the combination of athletic and academic performance, a number of Spartan baseball players have won the prestigious Big Ten Medal of Honor, including Ty Willingham (1977), who would go on to a successful college football coaching career at Notre Dame and Stanford. Other winners from Spartan baseball are Mike Davidson (1988), Stuart Hirschman (1992), Brandon Eckerle (2011) and Bryce Kelley (2021).

Five Spartan players (Roberts, Garvey, Yewcic, Gibson, Mulder) and two coaches (John Kobs and Danny Litwhiler), have their numbers retired in East Lansing. In addition, the stadium is named after Drayton McLane, a Michigan State alumnus and former owner of the Houston Astros. McLane and his wife Elizabeth donated funds to begin renovations of the stadium, located at the historic Old College Field, and the updated facility quickly made history when, on April 4, 2009, the first official game in the new stadium was played, and Spartan pitcher Nolan Moody threw a no-hitter against Northwestern. McLane donated funds for the building of the football facility at Baylor University, also named McLane Stadium. The baseball field was named for Spartan coach John Kobs in 1969.[2]

Postseason results

Michigan State in the NCAA tournament

YearOpponentsRecordResults
1954Missouri, Ohio, UMass, Arizona, Rollins3–2Lost College World Series Preliminary Final
1971Ohio, Cincinnati0–2Lost Lower round one Quarterfinals
1978Oklahoma State, Southern Illinois0–2Lost Quarterfinals
1979San Diego State, Pepperdine, Miami University1–2Lost Regional semi-finals
2012Fresno State, Pepperdine0–2Lost Regional

Michigan State in the Big Ten tournament

YearOpponentsResultsRecordFinish
1983Minnesota
Iowa
0–2L 1–14
L 2–6
Lower Round 1
1984Minnesota
Northwestern
0–2L 7–8
L 4–9
Lower Round 1
1988Minnesota
Michigan
Minnesota
2–2W 10–5
W 4–1
L 4–17Game 1
L 3–5Game 2
Runner–up
1992Minnesota
Ohio State
Illinois
Minnesota
2–2L 0–5
W 10–5
W 4–2
L 5–11
Runner–up
1994Ohio State
Michigan
2–2L 5–12
L 1–5
Lower Round 1
2002Northwestern
Iowa
Indiana
Minnesota
2–2L 2–4
W 13–9
W 14–1
L 0–6
Lower Round 3
2004Purdue
Penn State
Ohio State
1–2L 5–6
W 8–7
L 3–8
Lower Round 2
2009Illinois
Purdue
0–2L 5–16
L 9–12
Lower Round 1
2011Purdue
Illinois
Minnesota
Illinois
2–2W 7–1
L 1–4
W 6–3
L 1–9
Runner–up
2012Nebraska
Indiana
Ohio State
Indiana
2–2W 10–9
L 4–6
W 6–2
L 3–4(11)
Lower Final
2014Illinois
Nebraska
Illinois
Indiana
2–2W 2–1
L 2–3
W 11–2
L 4–7
Semifinals
2015Nebraska
Illinois
Maryland
1–2W 9–7
L 0–2
L 1–2
First Round
2016Nebraska
Maryland
Ohio State
2–2W 5–1
W 4–3
L 2–3Game 1
L 3–7 Game 2
Semifinals
2018Indiana
Minnesota
0–2L 5–6(10)
L 2–3
First Round
2023Maryland
Rutgers
Nebraska
1–2L 2–3
W 6–4
L 0–4
Lower Final

Big Ten Conference Championships

YearConferenceRecordCoachAll Big Ten First-Team Players
1954Big Ten25–10–1John KobsChuck Mathews, Jack Risch, Tom Yewcic
1971Big Ten36–10Danny LitwhilerRob Clancy, Rob Ellis, Ron Pruitt
1979Big Ten28–27Danny LitwhilerChris Dorr
2011Big Ten36–21Jake BossBrandon Eckerle, Jeff Holm, Ryan Jones, Torsten Boss, Kurt Wunderlich, Tony Bucciferro

College Baseball All-Americans

PlayerPositionYear(s)Team, Selector(s)
Jack KinneyOutfielder1949Second Team ABCA
George RutenbarOutfielder1949Third Team ABCA
Albert CumminsSecond Base1950Second Team ABCA
Darrell LindleyOutfielder1951Third Team ABCA
Jack RischOutfielder1954Second Team ABCA
Tom YewcicCatcher1954First Team ABCA
Bob PowellOutfielder1955Second Team ABCA
George SmithSecond Base1955Third Team ABCA
Jim SackOutfielder1956Second Team ABCA
Dick RadatzPitcher1959Second Team ABCA
Tom RileyOutfielder1961Second Team ABCA
Jerry SuttonFirst Base1963Third Team,ABCA
John BiedenbachThird Base1965Second Team ABCA
Steve GarveyThird Base1968Second Team ABCA; First Team SN
Harry KendrickCatcher1969First Team SN
Rick MillerOutfielder1969Third Team,ABCA; First Team SN
Rob EllisOutfielder1971First Team ABCA
Ron PruittCatcher1972First Team ABCA; First Team SN
Dale FrietchDesignated Hitter1974Third Team ABCA
Joe PalamaraSecond Base1975Second Team ABCA
Al WestonOutfielder1976-77Third Team 1976 ABCA; First Team 1977 ABCA
Kirk GibsonOutfielder1978First Team ABCA
Mike EddingtonDesignated Hitter1984Third Team ABCA
Mike DavidsonOutfielder1988Third Team ABCA
Scott AyotteOutfielder1995Third Team ABCA
Mark MulderPitcher1998Third Team ABCA; Third Team CB
Bob MalekOutfielder2001-2002Third Team 2001 ABCA; First Team 2002 ABCA; First Team 2002 CB; Third Team 2002 NCBWA
Jeff HolmFirst Base2011Third Team ABCA; Third Team CB
Blaise SalterOutfielder2014Third Team NCBWA
Dakota MekkesPitcher2015Third Team NCBWA
Mason ErlaPitcher2020Second Team CB
Brock VradenbergOutfielder2023Third Team CB, Third Team NCBWA
Source:[2]

ABCA: American Baseball Coaches AssociationCB: Collegiate BaseballNCBWA: National Collegiate Baseball Writers AssociationSN: Sporting News

Head coaches

Year(s)CoachSeasonsW–L–TPct
1884–1886No coach310–6.625
1887–1888R. Carpenter216–8.667
1889–1895No coach724–25–1.490
1896–1898Robert T. Gale313–20–1.397
1899Charles Ferguson15–4.556
1900–1901Charles Bemies24–11.267
1902–1903George Denman29–15–1.380
1904–1910, 1918–1920Chester Brewer1078–62–1.557
1911–1915John Macklin553–27.663
1916–1917, 1922John Morrissey325–18.581
1921George Clark16–8.429
1923–1924Mysterious Walker220–11.645
1925–1963John Kobs39576–377–16.603
1964–1982Danny Litwhiler19489–362–8.574
1983–1995Tom Smith13377–332–2.532
1996–2005Ted Mahan10256–294.465
2006–2008David Grewe375–85.469
2009–presentJake Boss14383–332.536

References