Dallas Baptist Patriots baseball

The Dallas Baptist Patriots baseball team represents Dallas Baptist University, which is located in Dallas, Texas. The Patriots are a NCAA Division I college baseball program that competes in the Missouri Valley Conference. They began competing in Division I in 2004 and joined the Missouri Valley Conference in 2014 after only one season with the Western Athletic Conference. They are the only Dallas Baptist program in Division I and the Missouri Valley Conference. All other Dallas Baptist programs compete in Division II's Lone Star Conference.

Dallas Baptist Patriots
2020 Dallas Baptist Patriots baseball team
Founded1970
Overall record624—341
UniversityDallas Baptist University
Head coachDan Heefner (13th season)
ConferenceMissouri Valley Conference
LocationDallas, Texas
Home stadiumHorner Ballpark
(Capacity: 2,000)
NicknamePatriots
ColorsRed, White, and Blue[1]
              
NCAA regional champions
2011
NCAA Tournament appearances
2008, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019
Conference tournament champions
2014, 2016, 2017
Conference champions
2016, 2019

The Dallas Baptist Patriots play all home games on campus at Joan and Andy Horner Ballpark. Under the direction of Head Coach Dan Heefner, the Patriots have played in nine NCAA Tournaments and hosted their first regional in 2015. Over their six seasons in the Missouri Valley Conference, they have won two MVC regular season titles and three MVC tournaments.

Since the program's inception in 1970, 18 Patriots have gone on to play in Major League Baseball, highlighted by 3-time All-Stars Freddy Sanchez and Ben Zobrist. Under current head coach Dan Heefner, 52 Patriots have been drafted, including Vic Black who was selected in the first round of the 2009 Major League Baseball Draft.

Conference membership history (Division I only)

Joan and Andy Horner Ballpark

Joan and Andy Horner Ballpark is a baseball stadium on the Dallas Baptist campus in Dallas, Texas that seats 2,000 people. It was opened on February 15, 2013 with a 9–11 loss to Creighton. A record attendance of 3,242 was set on May 31, 2015 during an NCAA Tournament game against Texas.[2]

Head coaches (Division I only)

Records taken from the 2020 DBU baseball media guide.[2]

Season Coach Years Record Pct.
2004Mike Bard144–16.733
2005–2007Eric Newman395–72.569
2008–presentDan Heefner13475–253.652
Totals 3 coaches 17 seasons 624–341 .643

Year-by-year NCAA Division I results

Records taken from the 2020 DBU baseball media guide.[2]

Statistics overview
Season Coach Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Independent (2004–2012)
2004 Mike Bard 44–16
2005 Eric Newman 32–23
2006 Eric Newman 33–23
2007 Eric Newman 30–26
2008 Dan Heefner 37–19College Station Regional
2009 Dan Heefner 38–17
2010 Dan Heefner 28–27
2011 Dan Heefner 42–20Santa Clara Super Regional
2012 Dan Heefner 41–19Waco Regional
Western Athletic Conference (2013)
2013 Dan Heefner 30–3013–14T-7thWAC Tournament
Missouri Valley Conference (2014–present)
2014 Dan Heefner 40–2114–7T-2ndMVC Tournament
Fort Worth Regional
2015 Dan Heefner 46–1515–62ndMVC Tournament
Dallas Regional
2016 Dan Heefner 44–1915–51stMVC Tournament
Lubbock Regional
2017 Dan Heefner 42–2115–62ndMVC Tournament
Fort Worth Regional
2018 Dan Heefner 42–2116–52ndMVC Tournament
Fayetteville Regional
2019 Dan Heefner 43–2014–7T-1stMVC Tournament
Lubbock Regional
2020 Dan Heefner 12–4Season cancelled on March 12
due to Coronavirus pandemic
[3]
Total:624–341

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

NCAA Division I Tournament history

Year Record Pct Notes
2008 0–2 .000 Eliminated by UIC in College Station Regional
2011 3–3 .500 Eliminated by California in Santa Clara Super Regional
2012 2–2 .500 Eliminated by Baylor in Waco Regional
2014 0–2 .000 Eliminated by Siena in Fort Worth Regional
2015 3–2 .600 Eliminated by VCU in Dallas Regional
2016 3–2 .600 Eliminated by Texas Tech in Lubbock Regional
2017 2–2 .500 Eliminated by TCU in Fort Worth Regional
2018 2–2 .500 Eliminated by Arkansas in Fayetteville Regional
2019 2–2 .500 Eliminated by Texas Tech in Lubbock Regional
Totals 17–19 .472

Awards and honors (Division I only)

  • Over their 16 seasons in Division I, 16 Patriots have been named to an NCAA-recognized All-America team.
  • Over their 6 seasons in the Missouri Valley Conference, 24 different Patriots have been named to the all-conference first-team.

All-Americans

YearPositionNameTeamSelector
2006OFDrew Holder1stABCA
2ndCB
3rdNCBWA
2009SSRyan Goins3rdBA
CB
NCBWA
DHJason Krizan3rdABCA
2010OFRyan Enos3rdABCA
2011OFJason Krizan1stABCA
BA
CB
NCBWA
2BTyler Robbins2ndABCA
2012OFBoomer Collins3rdABCA
NCBWA
SSJoel Hutter2ndNCBWA
20133BDuncan McAlpine3rdABCA
2015RPChance Adams2ndNCBWA
RPBrandon Koch2ndCB
NCBWA
2016UTDarick Hall1stCB
2ndABCA
3rdNCBWA
SPColin Poche2ndCB
20171BAustin Listi2ndCB
3rdABCA
2018RPTrevor Conn3rdCB
OFDevlin Granberg1stABCA
CB
NCBWA
2ndBA
2019DHBryce Ball1stNCBWA
2ndABCA

Freshman First-Team All-Americans

YearPositionNameSelector
2007SSAustin KnightCB
2008RPChris HaneyCB
2010SSAustin ElkinsCB
DHDuncan McAlpineCB
2013OFAustin ListiCB
20142BCamden DuzenackCB
OFDavid MartinelliCB
2015RPDalton HigginsCB
2016OFJameson HannahCB
2018SPLuke EldredCB
SSJimmy GlowenkeBA
CB
NCBWA

Missouri Valley Conference Player of the Year

YearPositionName
2016UTDarick Hall
2018OFDevin Granberg

Missouri Valley Conference Defensive Player of the Year

YearPositionName
2017IFCamden Duzenack
2018SSJimmy Glowenke

Missouri Valley Conference Pitcher of the Year

YearHandednessName
2016LeftColin Poche
2018RightTrevor Conn

Missouri Valley Conference Coach of the Year

YearName
2016Dan Heefner

Missouri Valley Conference Newcomer of the Year

YearPositionName
2016UTDarick Hall
2018RPKody Funderburk

Missouri Valley Conference Freshman of the Year

YearPositionName
2016OFJameson Hannah
2018SSJimmy Glowenke

Taken from the 2020 DBU baseball media guide.[2] Updated February 25, 2020.

Patriots in the Major Leagues

= All-Star = Baseball Hall of Famer
Athlete Years in MLB MLB Teams
Les Lancaster 1987–1993 Chicago Cubs, Detroit Tigers, St. Louis Cardinals
Billy Brewer 1993–1999 Kansas City Royals, New York Yankees, Oakland Athletics, Philadelphia Phillies
Darren Hall 1994–1998 Toronto Blue Jays, Los Angeles Dodgers
Jason LaRue 1999–2010 Cincinnati Reds, Kansas City Royals, St. Louis Cardinals
Scott Mullen 2000–2003 Kansas City Royals, Los Angeles Dodgers
J. J. Trujillo 2002 San Diego Padres
Freddy Sanchez 2002–2011 Boston Red Sox, Pittsburgh Pirates, San Francisco Giants
Lew Ford 2003–2007, 2012 Minnesota Twins, Baltimore Orioles
Ben Zobrist 2006–present Tampa Bay Devil Rays/Rays, Oakland Athletics, Kansas City Royals, Chicago Cubs
Brandon Harper 2006 Washington Nationals
Lance Broadway 2007–2009 Chicago White Sox, New York Mets
Brandon Bantz 2013 Seattle Mariners
Vic Black 2013–2014 Pittsburgh Pirates, New York Mets
Ryan Goins 2013–present Toronto Blue Jays, Kansas City Royals, Chicago White Sox
Drew Smith 2018 New York Mets
Chance Adams 2018–present New York Yankees
Colin Poche 2019–present Tampa Bay Rays
Cy Sneed 2019–present Houston Astros

Taken from the 2020 DBU baseball media guide.[2] Updated February 25, 2020.

See also

References

  1. "DBU vs. Louisiana–Monroe Baseball Game Notes" (PDF). February 17, 2017. Retrieved February 20, 2017.
  2. "DBU Baseball Media Guide". Retrieved February 25, 2020.
  3. "NCAA & DBU COVID-19 Updates". Retrieved March 15, 2020.
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