Omaha Mavericks baseball

NCAA Division I college baseball team From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Omaha Mavericks baseball team represents University of Nebraska Omaha, which is located in Omaha, Nebraska, United States. The Mavericks are an NCAA Division I college baseball program that competes in the Summit League. They began competing in Division I in 2012 and joined the Summit League in 2013.

Quick facts Founded, University ...
Omaha Mavericks baseball
2026 Omaha Mavericks baseball team
Founded1947
UniversityUniversity of Nebraska Omaha
Head coachEvan Porter (10th season)
ConferenceSummit League
LocationOmaha, Nebraska
Home stadiumTal Anderson Field
(capacity: 1,500)
NicknameMavericks
ColorsCrimson and black[1]
   
NCAA tournament appearances
Division II
1975, 1976, 1977, 1981, 2002, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010
Division I
2019
Conference tournament champions
2019
Conference regular season champions
2013, 2014, 2019
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The Omaha Mavericks play all home games on-campus at Tal Anderson Field. The Mavericks have played in one NCAA Division I Tournament. Over their 8 seasons in the Summit League, they have won three Summit League regular season titles and one Summit League Tournament.

Since the program's inception in 1947, two Mavericks have gone on to play in Major League Baseball, including two-time All-Star catcher Bruce Benedict.

Conference membership history

Tal Anderson Field

Tal Anderson Field is a baseball stadium in Omaha, Nebraska, that seats 1,500 people. It broke ground in 2019 and was ready for the Spring of 2021 season. The field is named for former UNO baseball standout and long-time donor/supporter Tal Anderson who owned Baxter Auto Group. The field will be the first on-campus home for the Omaha baseball team in school history. Prior to its construction, the team played at numerous high school and municipal facilities around Omaha.

The field will provide fixed seating for 1,500 fans as well as berm seating on each baseline for additional fans. The field will be a state-of-the art artificial surface to extend the Mavericks' playing season. The facility also will include a 34 foot by 25 foot video board in the outfield. The raised concourse will serve both Anderson Field and Connie Claussen Field, the home of Omaha softball, with premium seating, a press box, concession areas and restrooms.

The Nebraska Philanthropic Trust led the fundraising for the Omaha Baseball/Softball Complex which was done entirely through private donations. Construction of the facility is being managed by the Tetrad Property Group with Kiewit serving as the lead contractor.[2]

Head coaches (Division I only)

Records taken from the Omaha baseball record book.[3]

More information Season, Coach ...
Season Coach Years Record Pct.
2012–2016Bob Herold5119–137.465
2017–presentEvan Porter7155–218–2.416
Totals 2 coaches 11 seasons 274–355–2 .436
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Year-by-year NCAA Division I results

Records taken from the Omaha baseball record book.[3]

More information Season, Coach ...
Record table
Season Coach Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Independent (2012)
2012 Bob Herold 12–36
Summit League (2013–present)
2013 Bob Herold 27–2220–61st
2014 Bob Herold 31–2015–91st
2015 Bob Herold 21–3112–184th
2016 Bob Herold 28–2818–122ndSummit League tournament
2017 Evan Porter 12–409–195th
2018 Evan Porter 15–3510–175th
2019 Evan Porter 31–24–120–101stSummit League tournament
Los Angeles Regional
2020 Evan Porter 10–4Season cancelled on March 13
due to Coronavirus pandemic
[4]
2021 Evan Porter 22-2514-123rd
2022 Evan Porter 26-3112-124th
2023 Evan Porter 21-289-144th
2024 Evan Porter 18-32-116-13-12nd
2025 Evan Porter 20-3012-164th
Total:294–376–2167-158-1

      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

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NCAA Division I tournament history

Omaha has participated in the NCAA Division I baseball tournament once.

More information Year, Region ...
Year Region Round Opponent Result
2019Los Angeles RegionalFirst Round
Lower Round 1
UCLA
Baylor
L 2–5
L 6–24
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Awards and honors (Division I only)

  • Over their 13 seasons in Division I, one Maverick has been named to an NCAA-recognized All-America team.
  • Over their 12 seasons in the Summit League, 13 different Mavericks have been named to the all-conference first-team.

All-Americans

More information Year, Position ...
YearPositionNameTeamSelector
2019SPPayton Kinney3rdABCA
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Freshman First-Team All-Americans

More information Year, Position ...
YearPositionNameSelector
20132BClayton TaylorCB
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Summit League Coach of the Year

More information Year, Name ...
YearName
2013Bob Herold
2014Bob Herold
2019Evan Porter
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Summit League Player of the Year

More information Year, Position ...
YearPositionName
2013OFRyan Keely
20163BClayton Taylor
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Summit League Pitcher of the Year

More information Year, Handedness ...
YearHandednessName
2014RightTyler Fox
2016RightTyler Fox
2019RightPayton Kinney
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Summit League Newcomer of the Year

More information Year, Position ...
YearPositionName
2013OFRyan Keely
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Taken from the Omaha baseball record book.[3] Updated March 21, 2020.

Mavericks in the Major Leagues

= All-Star = Baseball Hall of Famer
More information Athlete, Years in MLB ...
Athlete Years in MLB MLB teams
Bruce Benedict 1978–1989 Atlanta Braves
Tyler Cloyd 2012–2013, 2017–2018 Philadelphia Phillies, Seattle Mariners, Miami Marlins
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Taken from Baseball Reference.[5]

See also

References

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