1989 Miami Hurricanes baseball team

The 1989 Miami Hurricanes baseball team represented the University of Miami in the 1989 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Hurricanes played their home games at Mark Light Field. The team was coached by Ron Fraser in his 27th season at Miami.

1989 Miami Hurricanes baseball
ConferenceIndependent
Record49–18
Head coach
Home stadiumMark Light Field
1989 NCAA Division I baseball independents standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Wright State    4512 .789
Nicholls State  y  4416 .733
No. 6 Miami (FL)  y  4918 .731
Oral Roberts    3618 .667
No. 25 UCF  y  4222 .656
FIU    3921 .650
Southeastern Louisiana    3320 .623
UMBC    2717 .614
New Mexico State    3422 .607
Florida A&M    2016 .556
Liberty    2524 .510
Tulane    2726 .509
Akron    2424 .500
Wisconsin–Milwaukee    2222 .500
Youngstown State    1920 .487
United States International    2435 .407
Northern Colorado    1829 .383
Davidson    1227 .308
y Invited to the NCAA tournament
As of June 30, 1989[1]
Rankings from Collegiate Baseball

The Hurricanes reached the College World Series, where they finished tied for fifth after winning one game and losing another against semifinalist LSU and losing to eventual runner-up Texas.[2]

Personnel

Roster

1989 Miami Hurricanes roster[3]
 

Pitchers

Catchers

 

Infielders

Outfielders

 

Unknown

  • - Jeff Borgese
  • - Elliot Cianchini
  • - Juan Flores
  • - Henry Hernandez
  • - Mike Hinde
  • - Chris Hirsch
  • - Ron Martinelli
  • - Donald Robinson
  • - Scott Sharts
  • - John Viera
  • - Larry Walker

Coaches

1989 Miami Hurricanes baseball coaching staff

Schedule and results

Legend
 Miami win
 Miami loss
1989 Miami Hurricanes baseball game log[4]
Regular season
Postseason

References

  1. "College Baseball Conference Standings – 1989". Boyd's World. Retrieved February 8, 2021.
  2. "1989 College World Series". Omaha.com. Retrieved February 8, 2021.
  3. Miami Hurricanes Baseball Media Guide (PDF). Miami Hurricanes. pp. 141–146. Retrieved February 8, 2021.
  4. Miami Hurricanes Baseball Media Guide (PDF). Miami Hurricanes. pp. 60–61. Retrieved February 8, 2021.
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