Brian Smiley

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

TitleHead Coach
ConferenceMAC
Born (1984-10-30) October 30, 1984 (age 41)
Evansville, Indiana, U.S.
Brian Smiley
Current position
TitleHead Coach
TeamMiami University
ConferenceMAC
Biographical details
Born (1984-10-30) October 30, 1984 (age 41)
Evansville, Indiana, U.S.
Alma materArkansas-Little Rock
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
2008-2011Indiana State (asst.)
2012Iowa University (asst.)
2013-2023Indiana State (asst.)
2024-presentMiami University
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
MAC tournament (2025)
Awards
MAC Baseball Coach of the Year (2025)

Brian Smiley (born October 30, 1984) is an American baseball coach and former player, who is the current head coach of the Miami Redhawks. He played college baseball at Arkansas-Little Rock from 2006 to 2007, before entering the collegiate coaching profession at Indiana State. Smiley was then named the head coach at Miami University in 2023.[1][2]

Over his four years as a student-athlete in collegiate baseball, Smiley played one season each at Triton College and Lincoln Trail College College before transferring to play two seasons (2006–2007) at Arkansas-Little Rock, batting .284 for his career as a utily player.[3]

Indiana State

Joining the Sycamores after finishing his playing career, Smiley helped guide the Sycamores to five NCAA postseason berths during his time in Terre Haute, including a trip to the Super Regionals in 2023, the first in program history. Indiana State was 442-292 during Smiley's time, never recording a losing season and posting nearly 50 victories over Power-5 programs.[4][5]

When Indiana State head coach Rick Heller took the Iowa job in 2013, Smiley followed to Iowa City, but returned to Indiana State the following year as the top assistant to new head coach Mitch Hannahs.[6]

Miami University

Named as Head Coach in June 2023, Smiley led the Redhawks to a 27-27 (.500) record in his first season (2024), but would take Miami to the NCAA regionals in the 2025 season, finishing the season with a 35-23 (.603) overall record, winning the MAC regular season and tournament championship, with a 23-7 (.767) conference record.[7][8][4][9]

Personal life

See also

References

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