1979 Miami Hurricanes baseball team

The 1979 Miami Hurricanes baseball team represented the University of Miami in the 1979 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Hurricanes played their home games at Mark Light Field. The team was coached by Ron Fraser in his 17th season at Miami.

1979 Miami Hurricanes baseball
ConferenceIndependent
1979 record55–11
Head coach
Home stadiumMark Light Field
1979 NCAA Division I baseball independents standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L PCT  W L PCT
No. 7 Miami (FL)  y    5511 .833
No. 11 Hawaii  y    6915 .821
No. 23 Texas–Pan American  y    5212 .813
Air Force      3313 .717
No. 27 Florida State  y    4317 .717
Mercer      3816 .704
Villanova      169 .640
Detroit      3422 .607
No. 11 Gonzaga      2517 .595
Stetson      2624 .520
Georgia Tech      1516 .484
Campbell      1720 .459
Notre Dame      1419 .424
Louisville      1827 .400
Northern Iowa      1117 .393
Lafayette      915 .375
Hofstra      618 .250
y Invited to the NCAA Tournament
As of June 30, 1979[1]; Rankings from Collegiate Baseball

The Hurricanes reached the College World Series, where they were eliminated after a pair of losses to Arizona and Pepperdine.[2]

Personnel

Roster

1979 Miami Hurricanes roster[3]
 

Pitchers

  • Mark Batten
  • Eddie Escribano
  • Randy Guerra
  • Neal Heaton
  • Jeff Morrison

Catchers

  • Frank Castro
 

Infielders

Outfielders

 

Unknown

  • Ron Batter
  • Walt Brooks
  • Dan Canevari
  • Alex DeJesus
  • Rick Del Giudice
  • Rick Diaz
  • Lou Duarte
  • Bobby Estrada
  • Dino Gale
  • Terry Gallagher
  • Leigh Gullette
  • Paul Hundhammer
  • Chuck Keller
  • Mike Kutner
  • Pat Patterson
  • Rich Pazo
  • Rob Rajisch
  • Steve Riese
  • Alfredo Rodriguez
  • Gary Ross
  • Howie Shapiro

Coaches

1979 Miami Hurricanes baseball coaching staff

Schedule and results

Legend
 Miami win
 Miami loss
1979 Miami Hurricanes Baseball Game Log[4]
Regular Season
Postseason

References

  1. "College Baseball Conference Standings -- 1979". Boyd's World. Retrieved January 18, 2021.
  2. "1979 College World Series". Omaha.com. Retrieved January 18, 2021.
  3. Miami Hurricanes Baseball Media Guide (PDF). Miami Hurricanes. p. 141–146. Retrieved January 18, 2021.
  4. Miami Hurricanes Baseball Media Guide (PDF). Miami Hurricanes. p. 54–55. Retrieved January 18, 2021.
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