Chad Holbrook
Chad Holbrook is the head baseball coach of South Carolina. Prior to becoming head coach for the Gamecocks, Holbrook was an assistant for both the University of North Carolina and the University of South Carolina.
Playing career
Holbrook attended the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill from 1990 to 1993, receiving second-team All-ACC honors as a senior. He graduated in 1994 with a degree in physical education.[1]
Coaching career
North Carolina
At the conclusion of his playing career, Holbrook served as an undergraduate assistant coach for the 1994 season before being promoted to Assistant Coach in 1995 and Associate Head Coach in 2007.[1] In his 15 seasons on the Tar Heel coaching staff, North Carolina made 11 NCAA tournament appearances and three College World Series appearances.[2]
South Carolina
After the 2008 season, Holbrook left North Carolina to become the Associate Head Coach at South Carolina.[1] In Holbrook's time as Associate Head Coach, South Carolina won back-to-back national championships in 2010 and 2011 and finished as the national runner-up in 2012.[1] In 2011, ESPN the Magazine named Holbrook the 10th best recruiter in all of college athletics.[2] After the 2011 season, Holbrook was named Assistant Coach of the Year by 2011 Assistant Coach of the Year by the ABCA and Baseball America.[2]
Holbrook became head coach after Ray Tanner became the Athletic Director at South Carolina following the 2012 season.[2] In his first season as head coach, Holbrook and the Gamecocks finished with a 43-20 overall record and finished second in the SEC Eastern division with a 17-12 record in conference play. The Gamecocks hosted and won the Columbia Regional. However, the team lost two out of three games to the North Carolina Tar Heels in the NCAA Super Regionals.
Personal
Holbrook's father, Eddie Holbrook, was the head basketball coach at Gardner–Webb University and Furman University.[1] Holbrook and his wife, Jennifer, have two sons, Reece and Cooper.[1]
Head coaching record
Season |
Team |
Overall |
Conference |
Standing |
Postseason
|
South Carolina Gamecocks (Southeastern Conference) (2013–present)
|
2013 |
South Carolina |
43–20 | 17–12 | 2nd (East) | NCAA Super Regional
|
2014 |
South Carolina |
44–18 | 18–12 | 2nd (East) | NCAA Regional
|
2015 |
South Carolina |
32–25 | 13–17 | 5th (East) |
|
2016 |
South Carolina |
35-9 | 15-5 | - (East) |
|
South Carolina: |
154–72 | 63–46 |
|
Total: | 154–72 | |
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 |
See also
References
External links
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- No coach (1892–1893)
- No team (1894)
- No coach (1895)
- E. R. Wilson (1896)
- Lee Hagood (1897)
- W. C. Benet, Jr. (1898)
- J. C. Hughes (1899)
- A. H. Brooker (1900)
- J. D. Ardrey (1901)
- George Bell Timmerman, Sr. (1902)
- W. Augustus Lee (1903–1904)
- L. William Earle (1905)
- George Needham (1906)
- Dicky James (1907)
- Frank Lohr (1908)
- R. C. Reid (1909)
- Bill Breitenstein (1910)
- P. L. Wright (1911)
- James G. Driver (1912–1913)
- G. I. Guerrant (1914)
- Syd Smith (1915)
- Bill Clark (1916)
- Dixon Foster (1917–1920)
- Bill Clark (1921–1924)
- Branch Bocock (1925–1927)
- Billy Laval (1928–1934)
- Dutch Stamman (1935–1937)
- Vernon Smith (1938–1939)
- Ted Petoskey (1940–1942)
- Kay Kirven (1943)
- H. W. Klocker (1944)
- John D. McMillan (1945)
- Vernon Smith (1946–1947)
- Ted Petoskey (1948–1956)
- Joe Grugan (1957–1963)
- Bob Reising (1964–1965)
- Dick Weldon (1966)
- Jack Powers) (1967–1969)
- Bobby Richardson (1970–1976)
- June Raines (1977–1996)
- Ray Tanner (1997–2012)
- Chad Holbrook (2013– )
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