The Kansas State Wildcats baseball team is a member of the NCAA and the Big 12 Conference. The program's first official game was in 1897.
Kansas State Wildcats | |
---|---|
2024 Kansas State Wildcats baseball team | |
Founded | 1897 |
Overall record | 1,933-1,926-10 |
University | Kansas State University |
Athletic director | Gene Taylor |
Head coach | Pete Hughes (6th season) |
Conference | Big 12 |
Location | Manhattan, Kansas |
Home stadium | Frank Myers Field at Tointon Family Stadium (Capacity: 2,331) |
Nickname | Wildcats |
Colors | Royal purple and white[1] |
NCAA regional champions | |
2013 • 2024 | |
NCAA Tournament appearances | |
2009 • 2010 • 2011 • 2013 • 2024 | |
Regular season conference champions | |
1907 • 1908 • 1928 • 1930 • 1933 • 2013 |
Following the completion of the 2021 season, Kansas State's all-time record is 1,904–1,897–10 (.501).
Home field
editKansas State plays its home games at Frank Myers Field at Tointon Family Stadium. The stadium was built in 1961, and re-dedicated in 2002 with major improvements including a digital scoreboard, upgraded locker-room facilities, coaches' offices, and more.
The team's first official home field was an open public square in Manhattan located at Bluemont Avenue and 8th Street, which it began using in the 1898 season, called Athletic Field.[2] Construction of Bluemont Elementary School on that plot of land forced Kansas State to move its athletics on campus beginning in 1911.[2] The team's on-campus baseball diamond was initially located at the southwest corner of the campus, at the current location of Memorial Stadium.[2] However, in the following decades the squad played at numerous locations around Manhattan, including City Park and (for many years) Griffith Park, before the opening of the current ballpark.
History
editAccording to most sources, Kansas State began intercollegiate competition with a match against St. Mary's College on May 26, 1894.[2][3] (St. Mary's was a regional athletics powerhouse, whose recent graduates included baseball pioneers Charles Comiskey and Ted Sullivan.) However, the first game reflected in the school's official history is a 4–3 win over Fort Riley on April 10, 1897.[4] Playing in the old Kansas Intercollegiate Athletic Association, the baseball team earned its first varsity championship in 1907 under coach Mike Ahearn.[4]
After joining the Missouri Valley Conference in 1913, the Kansas State baseball team won major conference titles in 1928, 1930 and 1933.[4] The school's most recent championship was the Big 12 Conference regular season championship in 2013. Kansas State's best finish at the Big 12 Conference baseball tournament was runner-up at the 2008 tournament.
Transcending results on the field, the team established an important milestone when Kansas State catcher Earl Woods, the father of golfer Tiger Woods, became the first African-American baseball player in the Big Seven Conference in 1951.[5][6]
Recent seasons
editThe Wildcats have established a number of firsts for the program in recent years. The team qualified for its first NCAA tournament in 2009, and has returned three times since. Kansas State also earned its first national rankings in the USA Today/ESPN Coach's Poll in 2009,[7] and set a new school record for wins with 43 in 2009, breaking the previous mark of 35 set in 1976.
In 2013, the Wildcats won the Big 12 Conference title and reestablished a new team record for wins. The school also was awarded the right to host the program's first NCAA regional. After winning the Manhattan Regional, Kansas State advanced to its first ever NCAA Super Regional. The team played at the Corvallis Super Regional, falling to the host and Pac-12 champion Oregon State Beavers. Kansas State finished ranked in the top 15 of all the major polls, the team's highest final rankings in history.
In 2024, the Wildcats finished 6th in the Big 12 and were awarded a 3-seed in the Fayetteville Regional, where they would handle Louisiana Tech, upset #5 national seed Arkansas 7-6, and then defeat Southeast Missouri State 7-2 to advance to the Super Regionals for the second time in school history. They would fall to #12 national seed Virginia in the Charlottesville Super Regional to end the season at 35-26.
Year | Record | Conference Record | Standing | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
2009 | 43–17–1 | 14–10–1 | 4th | Big 12 tournament NCAA tournament |
2010 | 37–22 | 14–12 | 3rd | Big 12 tournament NCAA tournament |
2011 | 36–23 | 12–14 | 6th | Big 12 tournament NCAA tournament |
2012 | 27–31 | 7–17 | 8th | Big 12 tournament |
2013 | 45–19 | 16–8 | 1st | Big 12 tournament NCAA tournament |
2014 | 25–30 | 5–19 | 9th | |
2015 | 27–30 | 10–14 | 6th | Big 12 tournament |
2016 | 26–31 | 8–16 | 8th | Big 12 tournament |
2017 | 29–26 | 8–16 | 9th | |
2018 | 23–31 | 5–19 | 9th | |
2019 | 25–33 | 8–16 | 8th | Big 12 tournament |
2020 | 10-7 | 0-0 | – | Season canceled due to COVID-19 |
2021 | 34–23 | 10–14 | 7th | Big 12 tournament |
2022 | 29-29 | 8-16 | 7th | Big 12 tournament |
2023 | 33-22 | 13-11 | 5th | Big 12 tournament |
2024 | 35-26 | 15-15 | 6th | Big 12 tournament NCAA tournament |
Kansas State in the NCAA tournament
editThe NCAA Division I baseball tournament started in 1947. The Wildcats have played in 5 tournaments and advanced to the Super Regionals in 2013 and 2024.
Year | Record | Pct | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2009 | 2–2 | .500 | Houston Regional |
2010 | 1–2 | .333 | Fayetteville Regional |
2011 | 0–2 | .000 | Fullerton Regional |
2013 | 4–2 | .667 | Hosted Manhattan Regional, Corvallis Super Regional |
2024 | 3–2 | .600 | Fayetteville Regional Champions, Charlottesville Super Regional |
TOTALS
|
10–10 | .500 |
Individual honors
edit- Craig Wilson played for the U.S. baseball team at the 1992 Olympics.
Conference honors
edit
|
|
- Newcomer of the Year
- Jake Scudder – 2016
Rivalry
editKansas State's main rival is the Kansas Jayhawks. The teams play every year in the Sunflower Showdown.
Former Wildcats in Major League Baseball
edit- As of the 2019 Major League Baseball draft, at least 1 Wildcat has been drafted every year under the tutelage of current coach Pete Hughes.[8]
- 12 former Wildcats have played at least one game in the Majors.[9][10]
Conference membership history
edit- 1905–1912: Kansas Intercollegiate Athletic Association[11]
- 1913–1927: Missouri Valley Conference
- 1928–1995: Big Eight Conference (known as Big Six 1928–47 and Big Seven 1948–57)
- 1996–present: Big 12 Conference
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Kansas State University Athletics Public Branding Guide (PDF). May 18, 2020. Retrieved June 26, 2022.
- ^ a b c d Willard, Julius (1940). History of Kansas State College of Agriculture and Applied Science. Kansas State College Press.
- ^ Olson, Kevin (2012). Frontier Manhattan. University Press of Kansas. p. 196. ISBN 978-0-7006-1832-3.
- ^ a b c "Wildcat Baseball Through the Years". Retrieved 2013-06-04.
- ^ Woods, Earl; McDaniel, Pete (1997). Training a Tiger: A Father's Guide to Raising a Winner in Both Golf and Life. HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-06-270178-7.
- ^ "Tiger Woods' Father, Earl, Succumbs to Cancer". 3 May 2006. Retrieved 2013-06-09.
- ^ K-State Baseball Enters Top 25 Archived 2013-01-27 at archive.today
- ^ MLB Draft Tracker
- ^ Kansas State Baseball Players Who Made it to the Major Leagues
- ^ Wildcats in Major League Baseball
- ^ Willard, Julius (1940). History of Kansas State College of Agriculture and Applied Science. Kansas State College Press. pp. 499, 505–06.