Stetson Hatters baseball

The Stetson Hatters baseball team represents Stetson University, which is located in DeLand, Florida. The Hatters are an NCAA Division I college baseball program that competes in the ASUN Conference. They began competing in Division I in 1972 and joined the ASUN Conference in 1986.

Stetson Hatters
2024 Stetson Hatters baseball team
Founded1901
Overall record1,702–1,161–3
UniversityStetson University
Head coachSteve Trimper (8th season)
ConferenceASUN Conference
LocationDeLand, Florida
Home stadiumMelching Field at Conrad Park
(Capacity: 2,500)
NicknameHatters
ColorsHunter green and white[1]
   
NCAA regional champions
2018
NCAA Tournament appearances
1982, 1984, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1992, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2011, 2016, 2018
Conference tournament champions
1988, 1989, 1990, 2000, 2005, 2006, 2016, 2018
Regular season conference champions
1989, 1991, 1996, 2007, 2011, 2018

The Stetson Hatters play all home games off-campus at Melching Field at Conrad Park. Since their promotion to Division I in 1972, the Hatters have played in 18 NCAA tournaments and hosted and won their first regional in 2018. Over their 34 seasons in the ASUN Conference (formerly the Trans America Athletic Conference), they have won six conference regular season titles and eight conference tournaments.

Since the program's inception in 1901, 10 Hatters have gone on to play in Major League Baseball, highlighted by recent Cy Young Award winners Jacob deGrom and Corey Kluber. Under current head coach Steve Trimper, nine Hatters have been drafted, including Logan Gilbert who was selected in the first round of the 2018 Major League Baseball draft.

Conference membership history (Division I only)

Melching Field at Conrad Park

Melching Field at Conrad Park is a baseball stadium in DeLand, Florida, that seats 2,500 people. It was opened on February 12, 1999, with a 4–3 win over Louisville. A record attendance of 2,975 was set on March 20, 2007, during a non-conference game against Florida.[2]

Head coaches (Division I only)

Records taken from the 2019 Stetson Baseball Guide[2]

SeasonCoachYearsRecordPct.
1972–1979Jim Ward8225–143.611
1980–2016Pete Dunn371312–888–3.596
2017–presentSteve Trimper6165–128.563
Totals3 coaches51 seasons1,702–1,161–3.594

Year-by-year NCAA Division I results

Records taken from the 2019 Stetson Baseball Guide[2]

Statistics overview
SeasonCoachOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
Independent (1972–1985)
1972Jim Ward27–17
1973Jim Ward24–23
1974Jim Ward30–13
1975Jim Ward28–19
1976Jim Ward23–15
1977Jim Ward34–15
1978Jim Ward33–17
1979Jim Ward26–24
1980Pete Dunn34–18
1981Pete Dunn36–20
1982Pete Dunn40–18NCAA Regional
1983Pete Dunn31–20
1984Pete Dunn46–13NCAA Regional
1985Pete Dunn36–22
Trans America Athletic Conference / ASUN Conference (1986–present)
1986Pete Dunn36–22N/AN/A
1987Pete Dunn37–2212–62nd (East)
1988Pete Dunn35–269–82nd (East)NCAA Regional
1989Pete Dunn38–2313–51st (East)NCAA Regional
1990Pete Dunn33–3110–82nd (East)NCAA Regional
1991Pete Dunn36–22–113–51st (East)
1992Pete Dunn38–2113–5T-1st (East)NCAA Regional
1993Pete Dunn38–1711–71st (East)
1994Pete Dunn37–219–92nd (East)
1995Pete Dunn34–2519–113rd
1996Pete Dunn42–2312–61st (South)NCAA Regional
1997Pete Dunn37–26–110–8T-1st (South)NCAA Regional
1998Pete Dunn30–31–19–123rd (South)
1999Pete Dunn23–3111–199th
2000Pete Dunn48–1620–7T-2ndNCAA Regional
2001Pete Dunn43–1719–82ndNCAA Regional
2002Pete Dunn42–1919–93rdNCAA Regional
2003Pete Dunn41–2421–122ndNCAA Regional
2004Pete Dunn36–2320–10T-2nd
2005Pete Dunn35–2816–144thNCAA Regional
2006Pete Dunn38–2416–144thNCAA Regional
2007Pete Dunn42–2121–61stNCAA Regional
2008Pete Dunn26–3315–18T-8th
2009Pete Dunn27–3016–145th
2010Pete Dunn27–3114–136th
2011Pete Dunn43–2023–71stNCAA Regional
2012Pete Dunn35–2315–12T-4th
2013Pete Dunn26–3115–125th
2014Pete Dunn26–3413–147th
2015Pete Dunn29–3012–9T-3rd
2016Pete Dunn29–319–12T-5thNCAA Regional
2017Steve Trimper27–2915–62nd
2018Steve Trimper48–1115–31stNCAA Super Regional
2019Steve Trimper27–3211–126th
2020Steve Trimper11–4Season canceled on March 12
due to Coronavirus pandemic
[3]
Total:1,650–1,109–3

      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

NCAA Division I Tournament history

YearRecordPctNotes
19822–2.500Eliminated by Miami (FL) in Atlantic Regional
19841–2.333Eliminated by South Alabama in South I Regional
19883–2.600Eliminated by Florida in East Regional
19891–2.333Eliminated by Clemson in Atlantic Regional
19900–2.000Eliminated by NC State in Atlantic Regional
19920–2.000Eliminated by Florida State in South II Regional
19962–2.500Eliminated by Virginia in South I Regional
19970–2.000Eliminated by Harvard in Midwest Regional
20002–2.500Eliminated by Georgia Tech in Atlanta Regional
20012–2.500Eliminated by Miami (FL) in Coral Gables Regional
20020–2.000Eliminated by South Florida in Tallahassee Regional
20032–2.500Eliminated by South Carolina in Columbia Regional
20050–2.000Eliminated by Notre Dame in Gainesville Regional
20060–2.000Eliminated by Michigan in Atlanta Regional
20071–2.333Eliminated by Florida State in Tallahassee Regional
20112–2.500Eliminated by South Carolina in Columbia Regional
20160–2.000Eliminated by Florida Atlantic in Coral Gables Regional
20183–2.600Eliminated by North Carolina in Chapel Hill Super Regional
Totals21–36.368

Awards and honors (Division I only)

All-Americans

YearPositionNameTeamSelector
1989PTom Hickox3rdBA
1997SSKevin Nicholson2ndBA
3rdABCA
1998CSammy Serrano1stBA
CB
2ndABCA
2000OFFrank Corr1stABCA
2ndBA
CB
PLenny DiNardo1stABCA
BA
CB
2001OFFrank Corr2ndNCBWA
PLenny DiNardo3rdCB
2002CChris Westervelt2ndCB
3rdBA
20033BBrian Snyder1stBA
3rdCB
2004CChris Westervelt3rdCB
20061BChris Johnson3rdCB
2007PCorey Kluber2ndCB
2009OFJeremy Cruz2ndABCA
CB
2011CNick Rickles2ndBA
3rdCB
PKurt Schluter3rdCB
2012PRobbie Powell3rdCB
2017PLogan Gilbert2ndCB
NCBWA
20181stBA
CB
NCBWA
PJoey Gonzalez3rdNCBWA
P/UT/DHBrooks Wilson1stABCA
BA
CB
NCBWA
2019PMitchell Senger2ndCB

Freshman First-Team All-Americans

YearPositionNameSelector
1996CSammy SerranoCB
1998UTFrank CorrCB
1999PLenny DiNardoBA
2001PJack CollinsCB
3BBrian SnyderCB
1BBryan ZenchykCB
2004PChris IngogliaCB
OFShane JordanCB
2005CDavid GollinerCB
1BChris JohnsonCB
2007SSCasey FrawleyCB
20083BRobert CrewsCB
20092BMark JonesCB
CNick RicklesCB
2010SSRyan LashleyCB
2013INF/PKevin FaganCB
1BPatrick MazeikaBA
CB
NCBWA
2015PBrooks WilsonCB
2019PDanny GarciaCB
PDaniel ParetCB

Trans America Athletic Conference / ASUN Conference Player of the Year

YearPositionName
1989PGeorge Tsamis
1991SSWes Weger
1992
1993OFAaron Iatarola
1994PChuck Beale
1997SSKevin Nicholson
1998CSammy Serrano
2000OFFrank Corr
2002CChris Westervelt
2004
2009OFJeremy Cruz
2018P/DHBrooks Wilson

Trans America Athletic Conference / ASUN Conference Pitcher of the Year

YearHandednessName
2007RightCorey Kluber
2011RightKurt Schluter
2017RightLogan Gilbert
2018

Trans America Athletic Conference / ASUN Conference Freshman of the Year

YearPositionName
20011BBryan Zenchyk
20043BBraedyn Pruitt
20051BChris Johnson
20083BRobert Crews
20131BPatrick Mazeika
2019PDaniel Paret

Taken from the 2019 Stetson baseball guide.[2] Updated September 7, 2019.

Hatters in the Major Leagues

= All-Star= Baseball Hall of Famer
AthleteYears in MLBMLB Teams
Brian Bocock2008, 2010San Francisco Giants, Philadelphia Phillies
Jacob deGrom2014–presentNew York Mets, Texas Rangers
Lenny DiNardo2004–2009Boston Red Sox, Oakland Athletics, Kansas City Royals
Logan Gilbert2021–presentSeattle Mariners
Chris Johnson2009–2016Houston Astros, Arizona Diamondbacks, Atlanta Braves, Cleveland Indians, Miami Marlins
Corey Kluber2011–presentCleveland Indians, Texas Rangers, New York Yankees, Tampa Bay Rays, Boston Red Sox
Eric Knott2001, 2003Arizona Diamondbacks, Montreal Expos
Patrick Mazeika2021–2022New York Mets
Kevin Nicholson2000San Diego Padres
Wade Rowdon1984–1988Cincinnati Reds, Chicago Cubs, Baltimore Orioles
Bill Swaggerty1983–1986Baltimore Orioles
George Tsamis1993Minnesota Twins

Taken from the 2019 Stetson baseball guide.[2] Updated September 6, 2019.

References