Tony Rossi (baseball)

Tony Rossi
Sport(s) Baseball
Current position
Title Head Coach
Team Siena
Conference Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference
Biographical details
Born (1943-12-11) December 11, 1943
Alma mater The College at Brockport (1965)
Playing career
1963–1965 Brockport
Position(s) IF
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1970–Present Siena
Head coaching record
Overall 824–986–6
Tournaments 1–4 (.200)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
MAAC Championship (5x) (1995,1996,1997,1999,2014)
Awards

MAAC Coach of the Year (6x) (1991,1995,1996,1999,2001,2005)

                      SUNY All Star (3x) (1963,1964,1965)    

Siena Sports Hall of Fame (1985)

Albany Twilight League Hall of Fame (1985)

Tony Rossi (born December 11, 1943[1]) is an American college baseball coach and former player, currently serving as head coach of the Siena Saints baseball program. He was named to that position prior to the 1970 season. Rossi is the longest tenured coach with the same institution in Division I baseball, and only Augie Garrido has been a head coach for more years than Rossi.[2][3][4][5]

Rossi played at Brockport State, now SUNY Brockport for three seasons, turning down professional offers from the Los Angeles Dodgers and Cincinnati Reds in order to complete his degree. After ending his playing days, he briefly coached lacrosse at Siena before becoming head baseball coach of the then-Division II Saints.[4] Under Rossi, the Saints transitioned to Division I, claimed five Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference championships, made two NCAA Tournaments, and placed three players in the Major Leagues, most notably John Lannan.[6] Rossi has earned six MAAC Coach of the Year awards.[2]

Head coaching record

This table shows Rossi's record as a head coach.[2][4]

Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Siena (Division II) (1970–1976)
1970 Siena 7–10
1971 Siena 7–12
1972 Siena 7–8
1973 Siena 2–16
1974 Siena 12–7
1975 Siena 12–8
1976 Siena 13–9–1
Siena: 60–62–1 (.488)
Siena (D-I Independent) (1977–present)
1977 Siena 12–11 0–0
1978 Siena 15–17 0–0
1979 Siena 15–14 0–0
1980 Siena 16–12 0–0
Siena: 58–54 (.518) 0–0 (.000)
Siena (ECAC North) (1981–1984)
1981 Siena 17–18
1982 Siena 12–17
1983 Siena 15–10–1
1984 Siena 13–17
Siena: 57–62–1 (.475)
Siena (North Atlantic Conference) (1985–1989)
1985 Siena 22–13–1
1986 Siena 21–11
1987 Siena 13–16
1988 Siena 16–17
1989 Siena 19–14
Siena: 91–71–1 (.558)
Siena (Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference) (1990–present)
1990 Siena 6–24–1 5–6 3rd (North)
1991 Siena 12–25 11–6 2nd (North)
1992 Siena 8–25 5–13 4th (North)
1993 Siena 11–24 7–11 T-2nd (North)
1994 Siena 15–22 8–10 3rd (North)
1995 Siena 31–17 14–4 1st
1996 Siena 28–20 14–4 1st
1997 Siena 21–34 10–8 T-2nd (North) MAAC Tournament
1998 Siena 17–32 11–15 T-3rd (North)
1999 Siena 34–22 21–5 1st NCAA Regional
2000 Siena 15–32 12–14 7th
2001 Siena 29–29 19–8 1st
2002 Siena 28–29 17–9 3rd MAAC Tournament
2003 Siena 17–35–1 15–11 T-5th
2004 Siena 27–26 13–12 6th
2005 Siena 29–23 19–5 2nd MAAC Tournament
2006 Siena 23–31–1 12–15 7th
2007 Siena 12–33 10–13 8th
2008 Siena 30–26 15–8 3rd MAAC Tournament
2009 Siena 15–35 8–15 7th
2010 Siena 27–27 13–11 T-5th
2011 Siena 28–30 14–10 3rd MAAC Tournament
2012 Siena 18–37 8–16 8th
2013 Siena 27–30 15–9 4th MAAC Tournament[lower-alpha 1]
2014 Siena 27–33 17–7 2nd NCAA Regional
2015 Siena 23–28 13–8 4th MAAC Tournament
2016 Siena 25–32 16–8 T-2nd MAAC Tournament
Siena (MAAC): 583–769–3 (.430) 344–260 (.570)
Siena (Division I): 789–957–5 (.450)
Total: 849–1016–6 (.454)

      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

  1. The top four finishers of the MAAC's nine teams qualified for the tournament in 2013.

See also

References

  1. http://web1.ncaa.org/stats/StatsSrv/careercoach
  2. 1 2 3 "Tony Rossi bio". Siena Saints. Retrieved October 11, 2013.
  3. "Tony Rossi Gets Call From Capital Region Baseball Hall". Siena Saints. October 24, 2011. Retrieved October 11, 2013.
  4. 1 2 3 Pete Iorizzo (May 10, 2009). "Rossi brings passion to the field". Albany, NY: Times-Union. p. C1. Retrieved October 13, 2013.
  5. "Tony Rossi Gets Call From Capital Region Baseball Hall". Saratogian. Saratoga, NY. October 24, 2011.
  6. Paul Post (April 19, 2011). "Siena graduate John Lannan credits college coach for professional success". Saratogian. Saratoga, NY.
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