1985 Miami Hurricanes baseball team

Last updated

1985 Miami Hurricanes baseball
Miami Hurricanes logo.svg
ConferenceIndependent
CB No. 1
Record64–16
Head coach
Home stadium Mark Light Field
Seasons
  1984
1986  
1985 NCAA Division I baseball independents standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
No. 1 Miami (FL)  y 6416 .800
Campbell   3217 .653
Stetson   3823 .623
No. 21 New Orleans  y 4328 .606
UCF   5234 .605
Hofstra   1316 .448
Lafayette   1723 .425
Richmond   2029 .408
y Invited to the NCAA tournament
As of June 30, 1985 [1]
Rankings from Collegiate Baseball

The 1985 Miami Hurricanes baseball team represented the University of Miami in the 1985 NCAA Division I baseball season. The team was coached by Ron Fraser in his 23rd season.

Contents

The Hurricanes won the College World Series, defeating the Texas Longhorns in the championship game.

Roster

1985 Miami Hurricanes roster
 

Pitchers

  • Lozaro Collazo
  • Dan Davies
  • Rick Kosek
  • Steffen Majer
  • Gus Meizoso
  • Bob O'Brien
  • Alain Patenaude
  • Bill Phillips
  • Rick Raether
  • Kevin Ryan
  • Chris Sarmiento
  • Kevin Sheary
 

Infielders

  • Rusty DeBold
  • Steve Fauci
  • Chris Hart
  • Bruce Roberts
  • Jon Leake
  • Joe Nelson
  • John Noce
  • Donald Rowland
 

Outfielders

Catchers

Schedule

1985 Miami Hurricanes baseball game log
Regular season
February
DateOpponentSite/stadiumScoreOverall record
February 1 South Alabama Mark Light Field 14–51–0
February 2South Alabama Mark Light Field 12–92–0
February 3South Alabama Mark Light Field 5–72–1
February 5at South Florida Red McEwen Field 3–42–2
February 9 Arkansas Mark Light Field5–23–2
February 9ArkansasMark Light Field2–14–2
February 10ArkansasMark Light Field4–05–2
February 12 Armstrong State Mark Light Field14–76–2
February 13Armstrong StateMark Light Field15–37–2
February 15 Florida Mark Light Field5–28–2
February 16FloridaMark Light Field2–48–3
February 17FloridaMark Light Field5–29–3
February 18 Seton Hall Mark Light Field9–410–3
February 20 St. Thomas Mark Light Field1–410–4
February 22 Florida State Mark Light Field2–510–5
February 23Florida StateMark Light Field15–411–5
February 24Florida StateMark Light Field6–512–5
February 27 Tampa Mark Light Field17–413–5
February 28 New Orleans Mark Light Field8–614–5
March
DateOpponentSite/stadiumScoreOverall record
March 1New OrleansMark Light Field10–015–5
March 2New OrleansMark Light Field8–316–5
March 3New OrleansMark Light Field5–317–5
March 5 Rice Mark Light Field7–318–5
March 5RiceMark Light Field11–319–5
March 8 Maine Mark Light Field10–120–5
March 9MaineMark Light Field9–321–5
March 10 James Madison Mark Light Field3–222–5
March 12 Creighton Mark Light Field6–523–5
March 13CreightonMark Light Field14–724–5
March 14 Southern Illinois Mark Light Field12–425–5
March 15Southern IllinoisMark Light Field2–026–5
March 16Southern IllinoisMark Light Field7–627–5
March 17 Rutgers Mark Light Field9–328–5
March 18 Mercer Mark Light Field14–229–5
March 19 Michigan State Mark Light Field11–330–5
March 20MaineMark Light Field5–331–5
March 22Michigan StateMark Light Field18–532–5
March 23MercerMark Light Field5–133–5
March 23MaineMark Light Field9–434–5
March 24MaineMark Light Field2–334–6
March 27Michigan StateMark Light Field6–335–6
March 29Michigan StateMark Light Field5–136–6
March 30Michigan StateMark Light Field6–736–7
April
DateOpponentSite/stadiumScoreOverall record
April 3 Florida Atlantic Mark Light Field6–237–7
April 5vs. Southern California All Sports Stadium 11–138–7
April 6vs. Oklahoma All Sports Stadium1–738–8
April 6vs. Cal State Fullerton All Sports Stadium6–339–8
April 7vs. Southern CaliforniaAll Sports Stadium8–640–8
April 9 Barry Mark Light Field12–141–8
April 10 Florida International Mark Light Field6–342–8
April 12at Florida State Seminole Stadium 3–243–8
April 13at Florida StateSeminole Stadium5–1343–9
April 14at Florida StateSeminole Stadium8–544–9
April 16BarryMark Light Field5–045–9
April 17at Florida International4–346–9
April 19at Florida Perry Field 11–047–9
April 20at FloridaPerry Field6–448–9
April 24Florida AtlanticMark Light Stadium11–349–9
April 29at Stetson Conrad Park12–1050–9
April 30at StetsonConrad Park2–1350–10
April 30at StetsonConrad Park4–351–10
May
DateOpponentSite/stadiumScoreOverall record
May 3at Alabama Sewell–Thomas Stadium 14–1052–10
May 4at AlabamaSewell–Thomas Stadium6–1252–11
May 5at AlabamaSewell–Thomas Stadium7–1152–12
May 11 Central Florida Mark Light Field6–752–13
May 12Central FloridaMark Light Field18–553–13
May 12Central FloridaMark Light Field28–554–13
May 17 South Florida Mark Light Field9–055–13
May 18South FloridaMark Light Field1–255–14
May 19South FloridaMark Light Field8–356–14
Post-season
DateOpponentSite/stadiumScoreOverall record
May 24vs. Princeton Mark Light Field22–657–14
May 26vs. Virginia Mark Light Field11–658–14
May 27vs. FloridaMark Light Field1–858–15
May 28vs. FloridaMark Light Field12–959–15
DateOpponentSite/stadiumScoreOverall record
June 1vs. Stanford Rosenblatt Stadium 17–360–15
June 5vs. Texas Rosenblatt Stadium4–861–16
June 6vs. Oklahoma State Rosenblatt Stadium2–161–16
June 8vs. Mississippi State Rosenblatt Stadium6–562–16
June 9vs. TexasRosenblatt Stadium2–163–16
June 11vs. TexasRosenblatt Stadium10–664–16

Awards and honors

Greg Ellena
Mike Fiore
Chris Magno
Rick Raether
Kevin Sheary

Hurricanes in the 1985 MLB Draft

The following members of the Miami baseball program were drafted in the 1985 Major League Baseball Draft. [4]

PlayerPositionRoundOverallMLB Team
Donald Rowland2B8th210th Detroit Tigers
Calvin JamesOF13th326th Houston Astros
Alan PatenaudeRHP13th340th Detroit Tigers
Rick RaetherRHP18th459th California Angels
Kevin ShearyRHP30th760th St. Louis Cardinals

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References

  1. "College Baseball Conference Standings – 1985". Boyd's World. Retrieved October 25, 2014.
  2. 1 2 3 "College World Series record Book" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved June 22, 2012.
  3. 1 2 "2012 Miami Hurricanes Baseball Media Guide" (PDF). HurricaneSports.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 3, 2016. Retrieved July 14, 2012.
  4. "MLB Amateur Draft Picks who came from "University of Miami"" . Retrieved July 14, 2012.