Mike McRae (baseball)

Last updated
Mike McRae
Current position
TitleAssociate head coach/pitching coach
Team Rutgers Scarlet Knights
Biographical details
Born Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada
Alma mater Colby College '91
Niagara University '93
Playing career
1988–1991 Colby
Position(s) Pitcher
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1996–1997 Niagara (asst.)
1998 Winthrop (asst.)
1999–2001 Maine (asst.)
2002–2004Niagara
2005–2017 Canisius
2018–2021 VCU (asst.)
2022–2024 William & Mary
2025–present Rutgers (associate HC/P)
Head coaching record
Overall590–496 (.543)
TournamentsNCAA: 0–2
Accomplishments and honors
Awards
4× MAAC Coach of the Year (2003, 2008, 2010, 2014)

Mike McRae is a Canadian college baseball coach who is the associate head coach and pitching coach for the Rutgers Scarlet Knights. He was previously the head baseball coach at the College of William & Mary from 2022 to 2024. He was formerly an assistant coach at Virginia Commonwealth University and head coach of the Canisius Golden Griffins. McRae was Canisius's head coach from the start of the 2005 season to the end of the 2017 season. Under McRae in 2013, Canisius advanced to its first NCAA tournament. [1] Before becoming the head coach at Canisius, he was the head coach at Niagara from 2002–2004, and an assistant at several NCAA Division I programs from 1996–2001.

Contents

McRae attended Division III Colby College in Waterville, Maine. He played four seasons of baseball and one season of ice hockey for the Mules. [2]

Coaching career

Division I assistant

After starting a club baseball team at Brock University in Ontario, Canada and coaching it for the 1995 season, [3] McRae got his first NCAA coaching job as an assistant at Niagara. He coached there from 1996–1997, and Niagara won a MAAC North Division championship in his second season. In 1998, he was an assistant at Winthrop in Rock Hill, South Carolina, before returning to the northeast to become an assistant at Maine from 1999–2001. [2]

Niagara

On July 3, 2001, McRae was named head coach at Niagara, where he attended graduate school. In comments on his reasons for accepting the job, McRae said, "One, my aspirations to become a head coach, and there aren't that many Division I openings that come up each year. Also, it's near home and it gives me a chance to see friends and family again. And my wife is from that area as well." [4]

McRae was the head coach at Niagara for three seasons (2002–2004). In his first season, the team finished in 8th place in the MAAC. In both his second and third, Niagara qualified for the MAAC tournament by finishing the regular season in the top four of the conference. Both teams won 16 conference games, then a program record. In 2003, McRae was named the MAAC Coach of the Year. [5] [6] [7]

Canisius

Following the 2004 season, McRae became the head coach at Canisius. [5] In the three seasons prior to McRae's hiring (2002–2004), Canisius's record was 12–119. [6]

In his first two seasons, Canisius finished with a sub-.500 conference winning percentage and did not qualify for the postseason. In 2007, the team finished fourth in the MAAC to qualify for the program's first MAAC tournament since 1994. It went 0–2 in the tournament. [2] [8]

In 2008, Canisius went 41–13 and finished tied for first in the MAAC. The team finished third at the MAAC Tournament, but got the program's first postseason win, 16–7 over Manhattan in an elimination game. McRae won his second MAAC Coach of the Year Award. [2] [9] After finishing second in 2009, the team won the MAAC outright in 2010. The team lost in the MAAC championship game, and McRae won his third MAAC Coach of the Year Award. [2] [10] Canisius qualified for the 2011 and 2012 MAAC Tournaments, and it lost in the championship round again in 2012. It started the tournament with two wins, but lost two extra-inning games to Manhattan in the championship round. [11]

In the 2013 season, McRae's team set a program record for wins by going 42–17. McRae won his 300th game as a head coach on March 16, when Canisius defeated Ohio, 16–8. [12] The team finished tied for third in the MAAC to qualify for its seventh consecutive MAAC Tournament. As the third seed in the tournament, Canisius started off 2–0 by defeating second-seeded Marist, 2–1, and first-seeded Rider, 18–7. In the championship round, the team defeated fourth-seeded Siena, 12–11, to advance to the 2013 NCAA tournament. [1] Canisius was seeded fourth in the Chapel Hill Regional, hosted by #1 national seed North Carolina. The team went 0–2 in the regional, losing 6–3 to North Carolina in the opening game and 14–6 to second-seeded Florida Atlantic in an elimination game. [13] [14]

In 2014, Canisius finished the season 40–16 and won the MAAC regular season title. In the MAAC Tournament, the team won its first two games but lost twice to Siena in the championship round.

Seven of McRae's players at Canisius have been selected in the Major League Baseball Draft, most recently Garrett Cortright in 2013. Sean Jamieson, taken in the 17th round in 2011, is Canisius's highest overall pick under McRae. [15]

VCU

McRae was named an assistant baseball coach at Virginia Commonwealth University on September 1, 2017. [16]

William & Mary

McRae was named as the 53rd head coach in William & Mary's history by athletic director Brian Mann on the afternoon of October 27, 2021. [17] On May 25, 2024, William and Mary announced that McRae's contract would not be renewed after 3 seasons. [18]

Rutgers

On July 17, 2024, McRae was hired as the associate head coach and pitching coach for the Rutgers Scarlet Knights baseball team. [19]

Personal life

McRae has two teenage children, Madison and Mason. He was married for 20 years to his wife, Michelle (McDonald) McRae, before her death on September 5, 2015. [20]

Head coaching record

Below is a table of McRae's records as an NCAA head baseball coach. [6] [21]

Statistics overview
SeasonTeamOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
Niagara Purple Eagles (Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference)(2002–2004)
2002 Niagara 12–349–178th
2003 Niagara 26–2516–10t-3rdMAAC Tournament
2004 Niagara 27–2716–9t-2ndMAAC Tournament
Niagara:65–86 (.430)41–36 (.532)
Canisius Golden Griffins (Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference)(2005–2017)
2005 Canisius 9–385–219th
2006 Canisius 18–369–188th
2007 Canisius 20–3513–124thMAAC Tournament
2008 Canisius 41–1319–5t-1stMAAC Tournament
2009 Canisius 36–2216–82ndMAAC Tournament
2010 Canisius 39–2119–51stMAAC Tournament
2011 Canisius 26–3212–10t-4thMAAC Tournament
2012 Canisius 33–2716–82nd MAAC tournament
2013 Canisius 42–1715–9t-3rd NCAA Regional
2014 Canisius 40–1622–61st MAAC tournament
2015 Canisius 34–3016–82nd NCAA Regional
2016 Canisius 32–2716–8t-2nd MAAC tournament
2017 Canisius 35–2216–8t-2nd MAAC tournament
Canisius:405–336 (.547)194–126 (.606)
William & Mary Tribe (Colonial Athletic Association)(2022–2024)
2022 William & Mary 26–2314–104th CAA tournament
2023 William & Mary 32–2515–156th CAA tournament
2024 William & Mary 32–2613–14T–5th CAA tournament
William & Mary:90–74 (.549)42–39 (.519)
Total:590–496 (.543)

      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

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