1964 Texas A&M Aggies baseball team

Last updated

1964 Texas A&M Aggies baseball
College World Series, T-5th
Conference Southwest Conference
Ranking
CoachesNo. 8
Record19–8–1 (12–3 SWC)
Head coach
Captains
  • Bill Hancock
  • Bill Grochett
Home stadium Travis Park
Seasons
 1963
1965 
1964 Southwest Conference baseball standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L T PCTW L T PCT
No. 8 Texas A&M  y1231 .7811981 .696
No. 26 Baylor  1050 .6671870 .720
No. 12 Texas  1051 .6561671 .688
TCU  580 .38511120 .478
SMU  3100 .2316140 .300
Rice  3120 .2005180 .217
Conference champion
y Invited to the NCAA tournament
As of June 30, 1964 [1]
Rankings from Collegiate Baseball

The 1964 Texas A&M Aggies baseball team represented Texas A&M University in the 1964 NCAA University Division baseball season. The Aggies played their home games at Travis Park. The team was coached by Tom Chandler in his 6th year at Texas A&M.

Contents

The Aggies won the District VI playoff to advance to the College World Series, where they were defeated by the Seton Hall.

Roster

1964 Texas A&M Aggies baseball team
PlayersCoaches
#Pos.NameB/THeightWeightYearHome town
Jerry Ballard/
6Richard Beller/
Sr
23R Byrd/
24F Carlton/
Lance Cobb/
So
INF Billy Crain/
So
12John Crain/
Sr
20M Dawkins/
4Bill Grochett (C)/
10 C Bill Hancock (C)/
1George Hargett/
Sr
9 P Steve Hillhouse/
So
Allen Koonce/
So
14J Lee/
16R McAdams/
Mike McClure/
18 P Chuck McGuire/
Sr Dallas, Texas
15 C Jerry Pizzatola/
Sr
INF Bob Sanders/
7 INF Frank Stark/
Sr
17Dewayne Stewart/
5N Thompson/
Head coach

19 Tom Chandler

Assistant coach(es)

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (S) Suspended
  • (I) Ineligible
  • Cruz Roja.svg Injured
  • Redshirt.svg Current redshirt

Schedule

1964 Texas A&M Aggies baseball game log
Regular season
March (6–4)
#DateOpponentSite/stadiumScoreOverall recordSWC record
1March Texas Lutheran Travis ParkCollege Station, Texas 3–60–1
2March 7 St. Mary's (TX) Travis Park • College Station, Texas0–20–2
3March Sul Ross State Travis Park • College Station, Texas5–41–2
4MarchSul Ross StateTravis Park • College Station, Texas0–31–3
5March 14 St. Edward's Travis Park • College Station, Texas9–22–3
6MarchTexas LutheranTravis Park • College Station, Texas13–43–3
7March 18at TCU Unknown • Fort Worth, Texas 7–143–40–1
8March 21 Texas Travis Park • College Station, Texas5–24–41–1
9March Minnesota Travis Park • College Station, Texas7–25–41–1
10MarchMinnesotaTravis Park • College Station, Texas3–26–41–1
April (10–1)
#DateOpponentSite/stadiumScoreOverall recordSWC record
11April 1at Baylor Unknown • Waco, Texas 7–86–51–2
12April 4at Rice Rice Baseball Field • Houston, Texas 9–57–52–2
13April 6 Texas Tech Travis Park • College Station, Texas12–28–52–2
14April 7 SMU Travis Park • College Station, Texas3–29–53–2
15April 10TCUTravis Park • College Station, Texas5–110–54–2
16April 11TCUTravis Park • College Station, Texas5–111–55–2
17April 14at St. Mary's (TX)Unknown • San Antonio, Texas 9–112–55–2
18AprilSMUTravis Park • College Station, Texas6–113–56–2
19April 18at SMUUnknown • Dallas, Texas 7–214–57–2
20April 24RiceTravis Park • College Station, Texas2–015–58–2
21April 28RiceTravis Park • College Station, Texas11–416–59–2
May (3–1–1)
#DateOpponentSite/stadiumScoreOverall recordSWC record
22May 1BaylorTravis Park • College Station, Texas7–417–510–2
23May 2BaylorTravis Park • College Station, Texas2–018–511–2
24May 7at Texas Clark Field • Austin, Texas5–518–5–111–2–1
25May 8at TexasClark Field • Austin, Texas2–318–6–111–3–1
26May 8at TexasClark Field • Austin, Texas5–219–6–112–3–1
Postseason
College World Series (0–2)
#DateOpponentSite/stadiumScoreOverall recordSWC record
27June 8vs Minnesota Omaha Municipal StadiumOmaha, Nebraska 3–719–7–112–3–1
28June 10vs Seton Hall Omaha Municipal Stadium • Omaha, Nebraska5–1419–8–112–3–1

Awards and honors

Jerry Ballard
Bill Grochett
Jerry Koonce
Bill Hancock
George Hargett
Steve Hillhouse
Frank Stark

References

  1. "College Baseball Conference Standings – 1964". boydsworld.com. Retrieved October 22, 2020.
  2. "1964 Aggieland". www.bookreader.library.tamu.edu. Texas A&M University. Retrieved October 23, 2020.