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  1. Ryan Braun

    Ryan Zachary Braun (born July 29, 1980 in Kitchener, Ontario) is a right handed pitcher for the Kansas City Royals. He is 6'1 and weighs 215 lbs. Despite being born in Canada, Braun grew up in California, and played college baseball at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV). He made his major league debut on September 2, 2006. He made a total of 9 appearances during the 2006 season and had a 6.75 ERA and 6 strikeouts.

  2. Eric Wedge

    Eric Michael Wedge (born January 27, 1968 in Fort Wayne, Indiana) is the current manager of the Cleveland Indians of Major League Baseball's American League Central Division. He attended Northrop High School in Fort Wayne and played on the school's state champion baseball team in 1983. As a player, he led the Wichita State University Shockers to the 1989 College World Series championship. He was drafted by the Boston Red Sox that same year, …

  3. Mike Martin

    Mike Martin, Sr. (born February 12, 1944) is the sixth all-time winningest coach in NCAA Division I college baseball history, and second in all-time winning percentage. Heading into the 2006 season, Martin had compiled a record of 1,391 wins, 472 losses and four ties over 26 seasons of collegiate coaching. Ten games into his 26th season, on February 25, 2006, …

  4. Augie Garrido

    Augie Garrido (born February 6 1939) is a coach in NCAA Division I college baseball. As of the end of the 2006 season, Garrido has compiled a record of 1,542 wins, 717 losses, and 8 ties over 37 seasons of collegiate coaching (.682). No other coach in the division has recorded as many wins. Garrido is currently the coach of the Longhorns of The University of Texas at Austin, …

  5. Matt Wieters

    Matt Wieters (born May 21 1986) is a baseball catcher who was selected by the Baltimore Orioles of Major League Baseball 5th overall in the 2007 Major League Baseball Draft. He played in college for Georgia Tech, and his agent is Scott Boras. Wieters is a tall athletic hitter, standing 6 feet 5 inches tall. He has drawn comparisons to Boston Red Sox catcher Jason Varitek because of their size, skill, and ability to switch hit; in addition, both played for Georgia Tech.

  6. Wayne Graham

    Wayne Graham (born April 6, 1936 in Yoakum, Texas) is a former major-league baseball player and the college baseball coach at Rice University in Houston, Texas.

  7. Mike Gillespie

    Mike Gillespie (born May 7 1940 in Los Angeles, California) is a former college baseball coach who led the University of Southern California Trojans from 1987 to 2006. He coached the Trojans to the 1998 College World Series championship. Gillespie posted a 763-471-2 (.618) record as the coach of the Trojans. In addition to the 1998 champions, he also took USC to the College World Series in 1995, 2000 and 2001, with the 1995 team advancing to the title game.

  8. Ron Franklin

    Ron Franklin (born February 2, 1942 in Jackson, Mississippi) is an American sportscaster, who joined ESPN in 1987. He primarily works as a play-by-play commentator for ESPN's coverage of college basketball and college football. From 1987 to 2005, he anchored "ESPN College Football Primetime" primarily with Mike Gottfried, but in 2006, he moved over to ESPN2 College Football Primetime with Ed Cunningham.

  9. Kirk Saarloos

    Kirk Craig Saarloos (born May 23, 1979 in Long Beach, California) is a right-handed major-league pitcher for the Cincinnati Reds. He has been used both in starting and relief situations. Saarloos graduated from Valley Christian High School in Cerritos, California a three-sport (baseball, football, soccer) athlete.

  10. Rod Dedeaux

    Raoul Martial "Rod" Dedeaux (February 17 1914 - January 5 2006) was an American college baseball coach who compiled what is arguably the greatest record of any coach in the sport's amateur history. Born in New Orleans, Louisiana, Dedeaux attended the University of Southern California, and after playing professional baseball briefly - he appeared in two games as a shortstop for the 1935 Brooklyn Dodgers - he turned to playing and coaching in the semi-pro and amateur ranks.

  11. Kameron Loe

    Kameron David Loe (born September 10, 1981 in Simi Valley, California) is a Major League Baseball player for the Texas Rangers. At 6'7" tall, Loe is one of the tallest players in the game and also has a 7 foot boa constrictor named Angel which he keeps in the Rangers clubhouse. In 2005, Loe made 48 appearances, 8 of them starts compiling a won-loss record of 9-6, with a 3.42 ERA. Loe missed much of the 2006 due to a bone bruise in his right elbow.

  12. Warren Morris

    Warren Morris (born January 11, 1974) is a former college and Major League Baseball player. He is most remembered for his 9th inning walk-off home run that won the 1996 College World Series for the Louisiana State University Tigers.

  13. Rob Childress

    Rob Childress is the current college baseball coach of the Texas A&M Aggies at Texas A&M University. Before coming to Texas A&M for the 2006 season, he served as an associate head coach and pitching coach for the Nebraska Cornhuskers.

  14. Ron Fraser

    Ron Fraser (born in Nutley, New Jersey) was the college baseball coach at the University of Miami from 1963 to 1992. Nicknamed the "Wizard of College Baseball," he was one of the most successful coaches in NCAA baseball history, and was also responsible for bringing college baseball to a new level of public awareness. The Miami Hurricanes baseball team went from being on the brink of being "contracted" to being the toast of college baseball under Fraser's tenure.

  15. Cliff Gustafson

    Cliff Gustafson is a former Texas high school & college baseball coach who was, for twenty-nine seasons, the head coach of The University of Texas at Austin Longhorn baseball team. During this time he became the most successful head coach in NCAA Division I baseball history, a record relinquished in 2005 to his successor as UT baseball head coach, Augie Garrido. Gustafson, born February 17, 1931, is a native of Kenedy, Texas.

  16. Jerry Reuss

    Jerry Reuss (born July 19 1949 in St. Louis, Missouri) -- pronounced "royce" -- is a former left-handed pitcher in Major League Baseball, best known for his years with the Los Angeles Dodgers in the United States, who had a 22-year career from 1969 to 1990. Reuss played for eight teams in his major league career; along with the Dodgers (1979-87), he played for the St. Louis Cardinals (1969-71), Houston Astros (1972-73), and Pittsburgh Pirates (1974-78).

  17. Lance Painter

    Lance Telford Painter (b. July 21 1967 in Bedford, England) is the current Pitching Coach for the Wisconsin Timber Rattlers baseball club of the Class A Midwest League. He is a former major league left handed pitcher who played for the Colorado Rockies (1993-1996), Milwaukee Brewers (2001), St. Louis Cardinals (1997-1999) (2003), and the Toronto Blue Jays (2000-2001). Although he started 28 games, Painter is most known as a reliever.

  18. Bob Carpenter

    Bob Carpenter is a long-time sportscaster, widely associated with the St. Louis Cardinals baseball television broadcast team. Carpenter currently serves as the television play-by-play announcer for the Washington Nationals on MASN. He was teamed with former major-league oufielder Tom Paciorek in the 2006 season but Paciorek's contract was not renewed for 2007. For the 2007 season, he will be teamed with Hall-of-Fame pitcher Don Sutton.

  19. Jerry Meyers

    Jerry Meyers (born March 8, 1965) was named the head baseball coach at Old Dominion University after the 2004 college baseball season. He spent the previous eight seasons as the pitching coach the University of South Carolina under Ray Tanner. Meyers attended the Iowa State University from 1984-1987 before starting his coaching career as a graduate assistant at South Alabama. Later he was an assistant coach at Gulf Coast Community College, UNC-Wilmington, and Old Dominion.

  20. Robbie Widlansky

    Robbie Widlansky (born November 6, 1984, in Coral Springs, FL) is an American baseball outfielder. Projected to be a selection in the 2007 MLB First-Year Player Draft, it is believed Widlansky will forego his final year of eligibility in college baseball at Florida Atlantic University.

  21. Bob Cerv

    Robert Henry Cerv (born 5 May 1926 in Weston, Nebraska) was an American baseball player. Prior to his professional career he was a standout baseball and basketball player at the University of Nebraska. He signed with the New York Yankees in 1950, and was a little used reserve outfielder on the powerful Yankee teams of the early 1950s. Following the 1956 season, he was sold to the Kansas City Athletics, where he became a regular.

  22. Al Orth

    Albert Lewis Orth (September 5 1872 - October 8 1948) was an American right-handed pitcher in Major League Baseball. He was born in Tipton, Indiana and died at age 76 in Lynchburg, Virginia. He went to DePauw University. When Orth was traded to the New York Highlanders in 1904 after struggling the year before, he picked up the spitball from Jack Chesbro and had his best year in 1906, going 27-17 in 45 games (39 starts), and leading the American League in wins.

  23. Marv Owen

    Marvin James Owen was an American third baseman in Major League Baseball. He played nine seasons in the American League with the Detroit Tigers (1931; 1933-37), Chicago White Sox (1938-39), and Boston Red Sox (1940). Owen was born in Agnew, California and played college baseball for the Santa Clara Broncos. After he joined the Tigers in 1931, Owen played a full season in the minor leagues before rejoining the team in 1933.

  24. Clint Evans

    Clinton W. Evans (April 2 1889 - March 10 1975) was an American college baseball coach at the University of California, Berkeley from 1930 to 1954. A graduate of the university, he led the Bears to the first College World Series championship in 1947. He retired with a career record of 547-256. Cal's baseball field was renamed Evans Diamond in his honor. Evans died at age 85 in Orinda, California. He was elected to the University of California Hall of Fame in 1986.

  25. Victor Rojas

    Victor Rojas is a member of the Texas Rangers radio broadcast team. He joined the Rangers in 2004, replacing Vince Cotroneo (now with the Oakland Athletics). Rojas works with lead announcer Eric Nadel on all regular-season games and a number of spring training games. Currently he does play-by-play for the middle innings (4-7) and provides color commentary for Nadel during the other innings.

  26. Slats Gill

    Amory T. "Slats" Gill (May 1, 1901 - April 5, 1966) was a men's basketball and baseball coach at Oregon State University, his alma mater.

  27. Rich Waltz

    Rich Waltz enters his fourth season as the Marlins play-by-play announcer. 2008 will mark Waltz's 12th consecutive year covering Major League Baseball. Waltz has also called Major League Baseball on a national basis for ESPN, ESPN Radio, and FX. Prior to joining the Marlins, Waltz served as the fill-in announcer and pregame host for the Seattle Mariners television and radio networks. In 2000, he served as the fill-in voice of the Toronto Blue Jays on CBC across Canada.

  28. Joe Bedenk

    Fred Joseph Bedenk (died May 2, 1978 in State College, Pennsylvania) was a legendary college baseball coach at Rice University (1925-1926) and Penn State University (1931-1962). The #30 all time winningest Division I baseball coach, he was inducted into the College Baseball Hall of Fame in 1966. Bedenk played guard for the Penn State Nittany Lions football team. He was elected team captain and earned All-America honors in 1923.

  29. Jess Hill

    Jesse Terrill Hill (January 20 1907 - August 31 1993) was an American athlete, coach and college administrator who was best known for his tenure as a coach and athletic director at the University of Southern California. His career spanned six decades. He played as an outfielder in Major League Baseball from 1935 to 1937, coached two national championship teams in track and field, and went on to become the first person to both play for and coach Rose Bowl champions.

  30. Floyd Stahl

    Floyd S. Stahl (July 18 1899 - July 15 1996) was an American collegiate athletic coach, serving in many coaching and administrative positions at Harvard University and the Ohio State University. Stahl was the head coach of the Ohio State baseball team from 1933 to 1938. During this same period Stahl was the backfield coach for the Ohio State football team under head coach Francis Schmidt. In 1939 Stahl joined the staff at Harvard.

  31. Lewis R. Freeman

    Lewis Ransome Freeman (October 4 1878 - November 6 1960) was an American explorer, journalist and war correspondent who wrote over twenty books chronicling his many travels, as well as numerous articles. Freeman was born in Genoa Junction, Wisconsin, the son of Otto Freeman and Maria (Clary) Freeman, and moved with his family to Pasadena, California as a boy. He attended Stanford University, where he earned letters in football, baseball, tennis and track, …

  32. Doug

    Sofine from ice-t rap school. shes the hottest 8th grader Ive seen.Id do her.

  33. Tommy

    Hi my name is Tommy B and I am attending Limestone College in Gaffney, SC. I am knew to this whole My-Space thing so bear with me. I am only doing it because so of my friends are doing i and I have a little bit of spare time. Anyway I am a thrill seaker and I am never content to do the same thing everyday. Most girls I met call me a sweatheart but I would rather them call me hot because in the end nice guys always finish last.

  34. Ian

    uh someone got on my profile and put the milkshake song on there, i cant get if off right now. thanks, whoever put that on there. I like to be chill. so leave me a chill comment or whatever you'd like later. oh i attend Pacific Lutheran University( i know, i go to college?) I play baseball their, maybe golf. I love to party, but have overdone myself in the past so i am sort of settling down a bit to get in shape and kick some ass next year. i love music.

  35. David Coulon

    Well for those that do not know me my name is David Coulon but everyone calls me DC! I go to the University of Arizona in which I play for the UA baseball team. I enjoy college for the most part and enjoy meeting new people! I am an extremely outgoing guy and love to do pretty much anything and everything.

  36. Michael Hallam

    Well lets see.. i just finished my sophomore year at paris junior college n im now goin to central missouri to pursue my baseball career n finish my schooling... im a pretty easy going guy and im just all about trying to have fun no matter what it is im doing... if u want to know anything else just let me know...

  37. Bobby Fortune

    there aint to much about me. im a pretty chilled out guy. i got the dream of playing college baseball, which im doing now at University of Pittsburgh at Bradford looking for that AMCC conference title to get my ring and a bid to the NCAA tournament and then pro ball would be considered my life goal. I got a best friend in Bruce and we going to chill for a couple years riding our crotch rockets where ever life takes us.

  38. Torrie Cradeur

    My names chad I will be attending Shreveport in the fall to play baseball for LSUS. I am 6-4 185, I play baseball and football and I run track.

  39. Jimmy

    I am currently working right now trying to get back into school and baseball. I have two crazy little brothers. One is a chubby Autistic kid who will blow ur mind with his crazy personality and vocabulary, and another one who is basically a fuckin goof off. Im always busy in my family because i try to help my dad and brothers as much as i can and i usually have something to do for them most of the time.

  40. Chris Tate

    Hello to everyone and welcome to my page. This is Chris and I reside in Augusta, GA...Richmond County to be exact. I just finished up my college baseball career at North Greenville University in South Carolina and I'm patiently looking forward to what God has for me next. I could type for a good minute about myself, but all-in-all, I'm a very interesting person to know and most importantly a child of God.

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