2013 Virginia Tech Hokies Baseball Team
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2013 Virginia Tech Hokies Baseball Team
The 2013 Virginia Tech Hokies baseball team is representing Virginia Tech in the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball season. They will play in the 2013 ACC Championship. Head Coach Pete Hughes is in his 7th year coaching the Hokies. They are coming off a 2012 season, in which they had a 34 win season. 11 of them came in the ACC. That marked the fourth straight year with over 30 wins under Pete Hughes. Personnel Schedule ! style="background:#ff6600;color:#660000;", Regular season , - valign="top" , - bgcolor="#ccffcc" , February 15 , , , , – , , Brooks Field , , 10–9 , , J. Joyce (W, 1-0), , J. Pierce (0-1), , C. Labitan(1), , 351 , , 1–0 , , – , - bgcolor="#ccffcc" , February 16 , , Kent State , , – , , Brooks Field , , 8-1 , , B. Markey (1-0)), , C. Wilson (0-1), , None, , 519 , , 2-0 , , – , - bgcolor="#ccffcc" , February 16 , , , , – , , Brooks Field , , 9-0 , , D. Burke (1-0), , J. Ramsey (0-1), , None , , 1,038 , , 3-0 , , – ...
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Pete Hughes
Pete Hughes (born January 11, 1968) is an American college baseball coach and head coach of the Kansas State Wildcats baseball team. Previously he served as the head coach of the Oklahoma Sooners baseball and the Virginia Tech Hokies baseball team. Playing career After growing up in Brockton, Massachusetts, Hughes attended Boston College High School, lettering in both baseball and football for the Eagles. Hughes then was a four-year starting quarterback at Davidson College. He also played third base for the Wildcats baseball team. Coaching career After completing college, Hughes became an assistant coach for both baseball and football at Hamilton College. He stayed there for one academic year before moving to Northeastern in the same dual capacity. After five years, he decided to focus on baseball and landed his first head coaching job at Trinity University in Texas. Taking just two seasons to improve the Tigers to a conference championship, Hughes was hired by Boston College af ...
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Jack Coombs Field
Jack Coombs Field is a baseball stadium in Durham, North Carolina, USA. It is the on-campus home field of the Duke University Blue Devils college baseball teams. As of the 2011 season, Duke uses Coombs Field for all weekday games and Durham Bulls Athletic Park for weekend games. The stadium holds 2,000 people. It was dedicated in 1951 for former Duke baseball coach Jack Coombs.Jack Coombs Field
at goduke.com, URL accessed December 22, 2010
Archived
12-22-2010
The field itself was first used in 1931. The stonework on the grandstand exterior suggests the

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Durham Bulls Athletic Park
Durham Bulls Athletic Park (DBAP, pronounced "d-bap") is a 10,000-seat ballpark in Durham, North Carolina that is home to the Durham Bulls, the Triple-A affiliate of the Tampa Bay Rays of Major League Baseball. It is also home to the Duke Blue Devils and North Carolina Central Eagles college baseball teams. The $18.5-million park opened in 1995 as the successor to the Durham Athletic Park. History The ballpark was designed by HOK Sport (now Populous), who also designed Camden Yards in Baltimore, Progressive Field in Cleveland, and Coors Field in Colorado as part of the "new" old-stadium-like movement of the 1990s. The Bulls began playing at the DBAP in 1995 when the team played in the Class A Advanced Carolina League. In 1998, Durham moved up to the Triple-A level, causing the DBAP to be expanded to 10,000 seats. The first Triple-A game was played on April 16, 1998. A roof covers approximately 2,500 seats behind home plate and down both the first and third base lines to th ...
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Eddie Pellagrini Diamond At John Shea Field
Eddie Pellagrini Diamond at John Shea Field was a baseball stadium in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. It was the home field of the Boston College Eagles baseball team from 1961 to 2017. The stadium held 1,000 people and was named after Commander John Joseph Shea, USN, a former football player (1916–1917) at Boston College, who died on September 15, 1942, when the aircraft carrier USS ''Wasp'' was torpedoed and sunk during the Guadalcanal Campaign in World War II. In 1997, the diamond was named for Eddie Pellagrini, head coach of the Eagles for 31 years and the coach of the team when the field opened in 1961. Shea Field was also home to many tailgaters during home football games at the adjacent Alumni Stadium. The Boston College baseball team played its final game at Shea Field on May 20, 2017. The team moved to a new baseball stadium, on nearby Brighton Campus, in spring 2018. Boston College's new Athletics Field House, an indoor practice facility for football and other varsit ...
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Radford Baseball Stadium
Williams Field at Carter Memorial Stadium is a baseball venue on the campus of Radford University in Radford, Virginia, United States. It is home to the Radford Highlanders of the NCAA Division I Big South Conference. The field opened in 1986 and underwent extensive renovations in 2011. Its capacity is 800 spectators, with a grass area down the left field line allowing for overflow crowds. Other uses of the stadium include baseball camps and high school baseball tournaments. History The facility opened in 1986. In July 2007, Joe Raccuia assumed control of the program with plans for facility upgrades. Renovations beginning in 2008 led to reconstruction of the field. In 2008, a new backstop was installed. Dugouts were enlarged and the playing surface improved in 2009. In 2011, the venue's name was changed from Radford Baseball Field to Radford Baseball Stadium, due to major renovations. Branch and Associates, Inc. led a project to rebuild the stadium. A seating stru ...
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2013 Virginia Cavaliers Baseball Team
The 2013 Virginia Cavaliers baseball team represented the University of Virginia in the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball season. Head Coach Brian O'Connor is in his 10th year coaching the Cavaliers. They are coming off a 2012 season, in which they made it to the Charlottesville Regional in the NCAA Tournament. Personnel Schedule ! style="background:#FF7F00;color:#0D3268;", Regular Season , - valign="top" , - bgcolor="#ccffcc" , February 15 , , at , , 25 , , Clark–LeClair Stadium , , 14–4 , , J. Sborz (1-0), , L. Hoffman (0-1), , None , , 3,511 , , 1–0 , , – , - bgcolor="#ccffcc" , February 16 , , at East Carolina , , 25 , , Clark-LeClair Stadium , , 13-9 , , W. Mayberry (1-0), , L. Lucroy (0-1), , None, , 2,483 , , 2-0 , , – , - bgcolor="#ccffcc" , February 18 , , , , 25 , , Davenport Field, , 9-1 , , T. Oest (1-0), , Z. Hopf (0-1), , None , , 2,333 , , 3-0 , , – , - bgcolor="#ccffcc" , February 19 , , , , 25 , , Davenport F ...
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Gray–Minor Stadium
Gray–Minor Stadium is a 1,400-seat facility home to the Virginia Military Institute (VMI) Keydets baseball team in Lexington, Virginia. It is named after Elmon T. Gray and Gil Minor, graduates of VMI in 1946 and 1963, respectively. History Before the construction of Gray–Minor Stadium, Patchin Field was the home of VMI baseball. Nicknamed "The Patch", VMI played there up until the end of the 2006 season. Then, in the off-season of 2006, construction would begin for Gray-Minor. It was five years after the field was renovated, but Patchin Field would serve VMI baseball for another trio of seasons. The project cost around $1.1 million, and was funded by Gray and Minor, along with Bill Paulette, VMI graduate in 1969. 2007 Season The 2007 VMI baseball season was the inaugural season for Gray–Minor Stadium. The Keydets opened up playing Florida for three games, in which the underdog VMI surprisingly took 2 of those 3 games. VMI came back to Lexington on February 20 and defea ...
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Shipley Field
Shipley may refer to: People *Shipley (surname) Places ;in Australia *Shipley, New South Wales ;in England *Shipley, Derbyshire, a village * Shipley, Northumberland, now in the parish of Eglingham * Shipley, Shropshire, a village, see List of United Kingdom locations: Sg-Sh#Shi *Shipley, West Sussex, a village *Shipley, West Yorkshire, a town, near Bradford **Shipley (UK Parliament constituency) ;in USA *Shipley, Oregon Other uses * Shipley School, Pennsylvania prep school * Shipley Do-Nuts, a doughnut chain in Texas * Shipley & Halmos, New York design firm * Shiply, a goods transportation service * Shepley, West Yorkshire Shepley is a village in the civil parish of Kirkburton, in Kirklees, West Yorkshire, England, and in the Diocese of Wakefield. It lies south south east of Huddersfield and north west of Penistone. In the 2011 census the population of Shep ...
, a village, near Huddersfield {{disambiguation, geo ...
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2013 North Carolina Tar Heels Baseball Team
The 2013 North Carolina Tar Heels baseball team are representing the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball season. Head Coach Mike Fox is in his 15th year coaching the Tar Heels. They play their home games at Bryson Field at Boshamer Stadium and are members of the Atlantic Coast Conference. The 2013 season was one of the best in school history. The Tar Heels were ranked #1 in the Baseball America poll for most of the season, and won their first ACC tournament title in six years. They made the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball tournament as the overall number-one seed, and advanced to the 2013 College World Series. It was the 10th CWS appearance in school history, and their seventh appearance since 2006. Current roster Schedule ! style="background:#56A0D3;color:white;", Regular season , - valign="top" , - bgcolor="#ccffcc" , February 15 , , , , 1 , , Bryson Field at Boshamer Stadium , , 1–0 , , K. Emanuel (1–0), , J. ...
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Doak Field
Doak Field (or The Doak) is a baseball venue in Raleigh, North Carolina, United States. It opened in 1966 and is home to the North Carolina State University Wolfpack college baseball team of the NCAA's Division I Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). It is named for Charles Doak, who was the head coach of the NC State baseball team from 1924–1939. The stadium is located on NC State's West Campus, behind Lee and Sullivan residence halls. The diamond is in the north/northwest corner of its block, which is bounded by Thurman Drive (third base, north/northeast); Dail Park and the residence halls (left field, east/southeast); Sullivan Drive (right field, south/southwest); and Varsity Drive (first base, west/northwest). Its seating capacity is 2,500 spectators, with an overflow capacity of 3,000. The largest crowd at Doak Field since its 2004 renovation was 3,109 on April 28, 2007, in a series finale between NC State and its rival UNC. Doak Field hosted the Atlantic Coast Co ...
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