IU Baseball Coach Heading West
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As a subscriber you can listen to articles at work, in the car, or while you work out. Subscribe NowThe coach who led Indiana University baseball to its only College World Series appearance is leaving for another job. Tracy Smith will become the coach at Arizona State University. IU Athletic Director Fred Glass says the search for a successor will begin immediately.
June 24, 2014
News release
Bloomington, Ind. — IU Vice President and Director of Intercollegiate Athletics Fred Glass Tuesday expressed his deep appreciation for what Tracy Smith helped build at Indiana and announced a national search for Smith's successor will begin immediately.
“Tracy's vision for baseball at Indiana came to fruition with the completion of Bart Kaufman Field, standing room only attendance, three Big Ten Championships, three NCAA berths and a trip to the College World Series,” Glass said. “His leadership and dedication to building a program the right way was obviously not lost on the college baseball community. We will all miss his immense talent and knack for leadership. As his friend, I will also greatly miss just having him around.
“We will begin a diligent and thorough search for the next leader of the IU baseball program and believe that with the program's recent success and the substantial investments we have – and will continue – to make in it, including new facilities, this is one of the most attractive openings in the country.”
Today, Smith accepted the position of head baseball coach at Arizona State University.
“This was one of the most difficult decisions I have ever faced,” Smith said. “The truth of the matter is, at this stage of my life, I am ready for a new challenge. Indiana is a part of who I am and always will be. I want to thank President McRobbie and Fred Glass for helping build this program into what it has become. I also would like to thank Rick Greenspan for giving me the opportunity to be at Indiana in the first place. Most importantly, I would like to thank the players – past and present – for being the heart and soul of Indiana Baseball now and in the future. I have loved my time at Indiana University, and I am proud of what we have achieved. I look forward to IU's continued success.”
Source: Indiana University
June 24, 2014
News Release
Tempe, Ariz. — Arizona State University has hired Indiana University head coach Tracy Smith as its fifth baseball coach, pending approval by the Arizona Board of Regents, Vice President for University Athletics Ray Anderson announced Tuesday.
Smith earned National Coach of the Year honors and was a unanimous choice for Big Ten Coach of the Year after he led IU to the school's only College World Series appearance in 2013.
“His accomplishments and accolades on the field speak for themselves, and his career has been defined by class, dignity and integrity,” Anderson said. “He will be a great fit within the ASU family, our baseball community and our current student-athletes, and we can’t wait for the new era of Sun Devil Baseball to begin under Tracy’s guidance.”
Sun Devil Athletics will introduce Smith at a formal press conference on Thursday, June 26, at 1:30 p.m. PT, which will be streamed live at http://pac-12.com/videos/arizona-state-university.
Smith comes to Tempe with 18 years of experience as a collegiate head coach, including nine at Miami University (Ohio) and nine at IU, where he was two-time Big Ten Coach of the Year. He led both programs to a pair of NCAA Regional appearances and has more than 600 career victories.
He tallied more than 40 wins in each of the past two seasons at IU and led the Hoosiers to consecutive Big Ten Conference Championships for the first time in school history. IU won the Big Ten regular season and B1G Tournament title in 2013, marking the school’s first regular season conference championship since 1949 and the first outright crown since 1932, and advanced to the 2013 College World Series, which ended the Big Ten’s 29-year CWS absence.
Smith took an IU program that had finished 10th in the Big Ten six times in an eight-year stretch between 2000 and 2007, and led the Hoosiers to an NCAA Regional in 2009 and to the College World Series in 2013. IU notched a program-best 21 conference wins in 2014 and secured eight first team All-Big Ten selections to tie a conference mark for most first team honorees from one school.
Smith has established a reputation of evaluating and developing talent as more than 40 student-athletes since 2000 improved their stock in the Major League Baseball Draft under Smith’s tutelage, including four who became first-round draft picks after going undrafted out of high school.
In 18 total years as a head coach, Smith has seen 54 of his players selected in the MLB Draft, including 22 in the first 10 rounds. He has mentored 24 Major League Baseball draft picks over the past six seasons, including the fourth overall pick in the 2014 Major League Baseball June Amateur Draft (Kyle Schwarber) and three first-round selections in the 2009 MLB June Draft (Eric Arnett, Josh Phegley, Matt Bashore).
An accomplished fundraiser, Smith played a huge role in facility upgrades at both IU and Miami (Ohio) and was instrumental in the approval and design of both Miami's Stanley G. McKie Field at Joseph P. Hayden Jr. Park and Indiana's Bart Kaufman Field.
Smith’s Academic Progress Rate as a head coach increased each season until it reached a perfect 1000 in two-year stretch between 2008-10.
IU saw eight players on 12 occasions be named All-Americans under Smith, including four in 2014, which was the highest total in program history and the second straight season that IU produced three or more All-Americans.
Smith mentored two Big Ten Players of the Year, three Big Ten Pitchers of the Year and a pair of Big Ten Freshman of the Year in nine seasons at IU, and at least one Hoosier earned Freshman All-America honors in six of the past seven seasons in Bloomington.
He has landed three players on the USA Baseball Collegiate National Team and mentored numerous players at all positions, including outfielder Alex Dickerson, who was named Big Ten Player of the Year and won the Big Ten Triple Crown in 2010, right-handed pitcher Aaron Slegers, who was named 2013 Big Ten Pitcher of the Year, and catcher Kyle Schwarber, who was named an All-American by five major college baseball groups in 2014.
In nine years at the helm of the RedHawks baseball program, Smith compiled eight straight 30-win seasons, two NCAA Regional appearances and advanced to the Mid-American Conference Tournament finals six times.
He began his coaching career as head coach at Miami University-Middletown in 1990, served as an assistant coach at Miami (Ohio) from 1993-94 and was the pitching coach at IU from 1995-96.
A four-year letterwinner at Miami (Ohio), Smith was a pitcher and an infielder for the RedHawks, and played three minor league seasons in the Chicago Cubs organization. He also participated in 1992 Major League Scouting Bureau's Professional Scout School as a representative of the Cubs.
Born Feb. 14, 1966, Smith graduated with a bachelor's degree in Education from Miami (Ohio) in 1989 and completed a master's degree in Sport Organization from Miami (Ohio) in 1992.
A native of Kentland, Ind., Smith and his wife, Jaime, have three sons, Casey, Ty and Jack. Casey was a redshirt senior on the Hoosier baseball team while Ty is a sophomore receiver for the IU football team. Jack is a three-sport athlete at Bloomington High School North.
Source: Arizona State University