1991 LSU Tigers baseball team

1991 LSU Tigers baseball
Conference Southeastern Conference
1991 record 55-18 (19-7 SEC)
Head coach Skip Bertman (8th year)
Assistant coach Smoke Laval (8th year)
Assistant coach Dane Canevari (1st year)
Home stadium Alex Box Stadium
1991 Southeastern Conference baseball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
#1 LSU y 19 7   .731     55 18   .753
#4 Florida y 16 8   .667     51 21   .708
#22 Mississippi State y 12 9   .571     42 21   .667
#25 Alabama y 14 11   .560     42 20   .677
Auburn 14 12   .538     35 24   .593
Kentucky 13 12   .520     41 20   .672
Tennessee 13 13   .500     41 19   .683
Ole Miss 9 15   .375     31 24   .564
Vanderbilt 8 19   .296     29 28   .509
Georgia 7 19   .269     27 31   .466
Conference champion
Tournament champion
y Invited to the NCAA Tournament
As of June 30, 1991[1]; Rankings from Collegiate Baseball

The 1991 LSU Tigers baseball team represented Louisiana State University in the 1991 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Tigers played their home games at Alex Box Stadium. The team was coached by Skip Bertman in his 8th season at LSU.

The Tigers won the College World Series, defeating the Wichita State in the championship game.

Roster

1991 LSU Tigers roster
 

Pitchers

  • 10 Mike Sirotka - Sophomore
  • 14 Gregg Moock - Sophomore
  • 23 Rick Greene - Sophomore
  • 28 Matt Chamberlain - Freshman
  • 30 Chad Ogea - Junior
  • 32 David Herry - Junior
  • 36 Ronnie Rantz - Freshman
  • 37 Mark LaRosa - Senior
  • 39 Jeff Naquin - Freshman
  • 41 Bhrett McCabe - Freshman
  • 42 Henri Saunders - Junior
  • 44 Paul Byrd - Junior
 

Infielders

  • 1 Tookie Johnson - Senior
  • 3 Andy Sheets - Sophomore
  • 4 Mike Neal - Freshman
  • 5 Luis Garcia - Junior
  • 12 Pat Garrity - Senior
  • 20 Johnny Tellechea - Senior
  • 24 Keyaan Cook - Freshman

Catchers

  • 6 Adrian Antonini - Freshman
  • 8 Gary Hymel - Senior
  • 31 Dale Adams - Freshman
  • 40 Tim Bauer - Junior
 

Outfielders

  • 7 Danny Zahl - Junior
  • 9 Chris Moock - Junior
  • 17 Tiger Blackwell - Freshman
  • 18 Jared Mula - Sophomore
  • 21 Lyle Mouton - Junior
  • 27 Rich Cordani - Senior
  • 29 Mike Graham - Sophomore
  • 33 Harry Berrios - Freshman
  • 35 Armando Rios - Sophomore

Coaches

 

Schedule

1991 LSU Tigers baseball game log
Post-Season
1991 Southeastern Conference Baseball Tournament
Date Opponent Site/Stadium Score Overall Record
May 16 vs. Kentucky Alex Box Stadium 8-7 45-16
May 18 vs. Mississippi State Alex Box Stadium 8-2 46-16
May 18 vs. Florida Alex Box Stadium 1-7 46-17
May 19 vs. Mississippi State Alex Box Stadium 9-4 47-17
May 18 vs. Florida Alex Box Stadium 4-8 47-18
NCAA Tournament: South Regional
Date Opponent Site/Stadium Score Overall Record
May 24 vs. Northwestern State Alex Box Stadium 13-2 48–18
May 26 vs. Oklahoma Alex Box Stadium 4-3 49–18
May 27 vs. Texas A&M Alex Box Stadium 7-1 50–18
May 28 vs. SW Louisiana Alex Box Stadium 8-5 51–18
NCAA Tournament: College World Series
Date Opponent Site/Stadium Score Overall Record
May 31 vs. Florida Rosenblatt Stadium 8–1 52–18
June 2 vs. Fresno State Rosenblatt Stadium 15–3 53–18
June 5 vs. Florida Rosenblatt Stadium 19–8 54–18
June 8 vs. Wichita State Rosenblatt Stadium 6–3 55–18

Awards and honors

Rich Cordani
Rick Greene
Gary Hymel
Tookie Johnson
Chris Moock
Lyle Mouton
Chad Ogea
John Tellechea

Tigers in the 1991 MLB Draft

The following members of the LSU Tigers baseball program were drafted in the 1991 Major League Baseball Draft.[4]

Player Position Round Overall MLB Team
Chad OgeaRHP3rd86thCleveland Indians
Paul ByrdRHP4th112thCleveland Indians
Lyle MoutonOF5th126thNew York Yankees
Mark LarosaRHP8th217thMontreal Expos
Gary HymelC14th373rdMontreal Expos
Chris Moock3B79th1565thNew York Yankees

References

  1. "College Baseball Conference Standings -- 1991". Boydsworld.com. Retrieved December 17, 2014.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Individual Honors" (PDF). LSUSports.net. Retrieved 19 July 2012.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 "College World Series Record Book" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved 19 July 2012.
  4. "MLB Amateur Draft Picks who came from "Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, LA)"". Baseball Reference. Retrieved 19 July 2012.
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