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Brian Hamm

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American baseball coach

Brian Hamm
Current position
TitleFay Vincent '31 Head Coach of Baseball
TeamYale
ConferenceIvy League
Record66–60 (.524)
Biographical details
BornTerryville, Connecticut, U.S.
Alma materBA - Middlebury College (VT)MA Sport Management - UMass Isenberg School of Mgmt
Playing career
Soccer
1998–2001Middlebury
Baseball
1999–2002Middlebury
PositionsGoalkeeper,Shortstop
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
2003–2005Middlebury (Asst)
2006–2009Amherst (Asst)
2010–2018Amherst
2019–2022Eastern Connecticut State
2023–presentYale
Head coaching record
Overall395–203 (.661)
TournamentsNCAA D1: 0–0 (–)
NCAA D3: 15–10 (.600)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
  • 2 NESCAC (2013, 2018)
  • 2 Little East (2021, 2022)
  • Ivy League (2025)
  • NCAA Division III National (2022)
Awards
Skip Bertman Award - National Coach of the Year - 2022

ABCA/ATEC National Coach of the Year Division III - 2022

D3baseball.com National Coach of the Year - 2022

D3baseball.com New England Regional Coach of the Year - 2021, 2022

Ivy League Coach of the Year - 2025

LEC Coach of the Year - 2021, 2022

NESCAC Coach of the Year - 2011, 2018

Brian Hamm is abaseball coach and formershortstop, who is the current head baseball coach of theYale Bulldogs. He playedcollege soccer andcollege baseball atMiddlebury College from 1998 to 2002. He then served as the head baseball coach of theAmherst Mammoths (2010–2018) and theEastern Connecticut State Warriors (2019–2022). He led the Warriors to anNCAA Division III National Championship in 2022.

Playing career

[edit]

During his college years, Hamm excelled in both soccer and baseball as a student-athlete for theMiddlebury Panthers. He played as the starting shortstop for four years on the baseball team and served as a three-year startinggoalkeeper for thesoccer team. His exceptional performance in soccer led him to earn all-conference and all-region honors twice. Throughout his tenure, Hamm exhibited strong leadership qualities, captaining both teams during his senior year. In recognition of his athletic achievements, academic scholarship, and leadership skills, he was presented with the John P. Stabile Memorial Award during his senior year.[1]

Coaching career

[edit]

Following his graduation from Middlebury in 2002, he worked as an assistant coach for the soccer and baseball teams for three years while also serving as a college admissions counselor for Middlebury. In 2005, he took a position as an assistant coach under Bill Thurston, a renowned Hall-of-Fame coach, atAmherst College for four years. Between 2007 and 2009, he also served as an Envoy Coach for Major League Baseball International, where he worked with both amateur and professional teams in Europe. For his exceptional coaching and player development in international baseball, he was awarded the MLB Julio Puente Envoy Coach Award in 2009, making him the youngest coach to have ever received this award.[2]

Starting in 2009, he became the head coach for the Amherst College baseball program and stayed there until 2018. While serving as head coach, Hamm oversaw the most successful era in Amherst baseball's 162-year history, with a record of 221–113 (.662). His leadership led the team to fourNCAA Division III tournaments and twoNESCAC tournament championships (2013 and 2018). Furthermore, his .725 winning percentage in NESCAC regular-season play is the highest ever recorded in the conference's history. He earned the title of NESCAC Coach of the Year in both 2011 and 2018. During his tenure at Amherst, Hamm produced moreMLB draftees (four) than any other Division III head coach, and his teams also had the most players selected for the NESCAC All-Academic Team among all NESCAC baseball teams.[1]

After departing from Amherst College, he became the head baseball coach atEastern Connecticut State University for four seasons, from 2019 to 2022. During his tenure, he led the Warriors to two consecutive NCAA Tournaments in 2021 and 2022 and won an NCAA Division III National Championship in 2022. Hamm's leadership resulted in an overall record of 108–30 (.783) and aLittle East Conference record of 38–10 (.792) for ECSU. The Warriors claimed the LEC Regular Season Championship in both 2021 and 2022 with a record of 15–1 each year, establishing the LEC record for most regular-season conference wins. Hamm was recognized with the LEC Coach of the Year Award two years consecutively (2021 and 2022).[3][2]

In 2022, the Warriors earned the program's first national championship in 20 years, culminating in a season where they went 49–3. Hamm's leadership helped ECSU break the school record for wins with 49, which is tied for the second-most ever by a DIII National Champion. The team also tied the school record with a 23-game winning streak to end the year. Hamm's impressive work during the 2022 season earned him the Skip Bertman Award as National Coach of the Year from theCollege Baseball Foundation. He was also named D3baseball.com National Coach of the Year and ABCA/ATEC National Coach of the Year for the Division III level.[4][5]Hamm became the coach of the Yale Bulldogs in 2022.[6]

Awards

[edit]

Skip Bertman Award - National Coach of the Year - 2022

ABCA/ATEC National Coach of the Year Division III - 2022

D3baseball.com National Coach of the Year - 2022

D3baseball.com New England Regional Coach of the Year - 2021, 2022

Ivy League Coach of the Year - 2025

LEC Coach of the Year - 2021, 2022

NESCAC Coach of the Year - 2011, 2018

Head coaching record

[edit]
Statistics overview
SeasonTeamOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
Amherst Mammoths(New England Small College Athletic Conference)(2010–2018)
2010Amherst21–117–5T-2nd(West)
2011Amherst25–1010–21st(West)
2012Amherst23–1010–21st(West)
2013Amherst27–139–3T-1st(West)NCAA Regional
2014Amherst30–119–32nd(West)NCAA Regional
2015Amherst27–159–32nd(West)NCAA Regional
2016Amherst24–137–5T-1st(West)
2017Amherst20–168–4T-1st(West)
2018Amherst24–148–4T-1st(West)NCAA Regional
Amherst:221–113 (.662)77–31 (.713)
Eastern Connecticut State Warriors(Little East Conference)(2019–2022)
2019Eastern Connecticut State23–188–8T-4th
2020Eastern Connecticut State4–1Season canceled due toCOVID-19
2021Eastern Connecticut State32–815–11stNCAA Regional
2022Eastern Connecticut State49–315–11stNCAA Champions
Eastern Connecticut State:108–30 (.783)38–10 (.792)
Yale Bulldogs(Ivy League)(2023–present)
2023Yale17–2310–115th
2024Yale18–2311–104th
2025Yale31–1416–5T–1st
Yale:66–60 (.524)37–26 (.587)
Total:395–203 (.661)

      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

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Brian Hamm - Head Coach - Baseball Coaches".Amherst College. RetrievedApril 2, 2023.
  2. ^ab"Brian Hamm - Head Baseball Coach - Baseball Coaches".Eastern Connecticut State University. RetrievedApril 3, 2023.
  3. ^"Yale Names Brian Hamm as Its Next Head Baseball Coach".Eastern Connecticut State University. RetrievedApril 3, 2023.
  4. ^"Brian Hamm - Head Coach - Staff Directory".Yale University. RetrievedApril 3, 2023.
  5. ^Anthony, Mike (June 27, 2022)."New Yale baseball coach Brian Hamm wins national coach of year award".CT Insider. RetrievedApril 3, 2023.
  6. ^Anthony, Mike (July 1, 2022)."'How many people get to be the Yale coach?': Inside Brian Hamm's first week leading Yale baseball".CT Insider. RetrievedApril 3, 2023.

External links

[edit]
Current head baseball coaches of theIvy League

# denotes interim head coach

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