Washington Huskies baseball


















































Washington Huskies baseball

2019 Washington Huskies baseball team
Washington Huskies logo.svg
Founded 1901, 118 years ago
University University of Washington
Head coach
Lindsay Meggs
(9th season)
Conference Pac-12
Location
Seattle, Washington
Home stadium
Husky Ballpark
(Capacity: 2,212)
Nickname Huskies
Colors Purple and Gold[1]
         
College World Series appearances
2018
NCAA regional champions
2018
NCAA Tournament appearances
1959, 1992, 1994, 1997, 1998,
2002, 2003, 2004, 2014, 2016, 2018
Conference tournament champions
1997, 1998
Conference champions
PCC: 1919, 1922
PCC North Division: 1923, 1925, 1926, 1929, 1930, 1932, 1952, 1959
Pac-10 North: 1981, 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 1998

The Washington Huskies baseball team is the varsity intercollegiate baseball team of the University of Washington, located in Seattle, Washington, United States. The program has been a member of the NCAA Division I Pac-12 Conference since the start of the 1960 season, preceded by the Pacific Coast Conference.


The team has played at Husky Ballpark since 1998; the on-campus venue was renovated extensively for the start of the 2014 season. Lindsay Meggs has been the program's head coach since the start of the 2010 season. The program has appeared in nine NCAA Tournaments. It has won two Pac-10 North-South Division Playoffs, six Pac-10 North Division Titles, eight PCC North Division Titles, and two PCC Regular Season Championships. As of the start of the 2014 season, 18 former Huskies have appeared in the major leagues.




Contents






  • 1 History


    • 1.1 Pacific Coast Conference


    • 1.2 Pac-12 Conference


    • 1.3 Conference affiliations




  • 2 Venues


    • 2.1 Old Graves Field


    • 2.2 Graves Field


    • 2.3 Husky Ballpark


      • 2.3.1 Renovation




    • 2.4 Alternate venues


      • 2.4.1 Sick's Stadium


      • 2.4.2 Kingdome


      • 2.4.3 Safeco Field






  • 3 Head coaches


    • 3.1 Current coaching staff




  • 4 Yearly records


  • 5 Notable former players


    • 5.1 See also




  • 6 Major League Baseball Draft


    • 6.1 2012 MLB Draft




  • 7 References


  • 8 External links





History


The baseball program at UW began play in the 1901 season, in which it went 4-6 under head coach Fred Schlock. After not competing in 1902, the team returned in the 1903 season. From its inception through the end of the 1915 season, the team did not belong to a conference. Prior to 1923, most of the program's head coaches served only one or two seasons, with Dode Brinker being the only exception.[2] Brinker served four tenures as the program's head coach (1906, 1909–1910, 1915–1916, 1918–1919), in between which he also played professional baseball.[3][4] In his seven seasons as the team's head coach, Washington had a 59-28 record.[2]



Pacific Coast Conference


Under Brinker, the program joined the Pacific Coast Conference (PCC) for the 1916 season. After not playing in 1917 due to World War II and competing as an independent in 1918, the PCC resumed baseball in 1919. Washington won that year's conference championship with a perfect 10-0 record in Brinker's final season. It won the PCC Championship again in 1922 under head coach Robert L. Mathews.[2]


In 1922, the university adopted the husky as its mascot and athletic nickname. Since 1920, the teams' nickname had been the Sundodgers, and prior to that the university's athletic programs were known as both the Indians and the Vikings.[5][6]


Prior to the 1923 season, Tubby Graves became the program's head coach; the Huskies won seven PCC North Division titles, all in Graves' first ten seasons.[2] In 1932, the Huskies won the North Division title with a 13-4 conference record, the division title was the team's last under Graves, who coached through the end of the 1946 season.[2] In the 1930s, the team's home venue was named Graves Field in honor of Graves, and the name carried over to the next venue used by Washington from the late-1960s until the end of the 1997 season.[7][8]


After finishing no higher than second in the PCC North Division from 1932 to 1951, the team tied for the division title in 1951. In the 1959 season, the Huskies won the North Division title outright under coach Dale Parker. In doing so, the program qualified for its first NCAA Tournament. It finished second in the District VIII Regionals with a 1-2 record.[2]



Pac-12 Conference


On July 1, 1959, the PCC dissolved following a scandal involving illegal payments to football players at several of the conference's schools.[9] In reaction, five former PCC members, including Washington, formed the Athletic Association of Western Universities (AAWU), which began play in the 1959-1960 school year.[10] With the addition of several other schools, the conference eventually became known as the Pac-12 Conference.[11]


Washington struggled in its first two decades after beginning play in the AAWU in the 1960 season. It did not have a winning conference record in its first 19 seasons in the AAWU (renamed the Pacific-8 Conference following the 1968 season). The stretch included five consecutive last-place finishes from 1967–1971 under head coach Ken Lehman. The program had its first winning conference record in the 1979 season, when it finished in second place in the North Division of the Pacific-10 Conference, which had been renamed prior to that season.[2][11]


In 1981, head coach Bob MacDonald, who had held the position since prior to the 1977 season, led the team to its first division title since 1959.[2] MacDonald was also the head coach in 1985, when the team qualified for its first Pac-10 North Division Tournament. The Huskies qualified for the tournament in each of the next five seasons, finishing as the tournament runner-up in 1987 and 1990.[12] In 1992, MacDonald's final season, the Huskies qualified for their second NCAA Tournament with a 39-21 record and North Division title. The team was seeded sixth in the six-team West Regional. After defeating first-seeded Arizona and fourth-seeded Fresno State in its opening two games, the team lost consecutive games to Pepperdine and Hawaii and was eliminated.[13]





Tim Lincecum, 2008 and 2009 National League Cy Young Award Winner, shown while pitching for the San Francisco Giants.


Following the 1992 season, MacDonald left Washington to become the head coach at Navy and was succeeded by Husky assistant coach Ken Knutson.[14][15] In 1993, Knutson's first season, the team won the Pac-10 North and had a 39-19 overall record but did not receive an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament. In 1994, the team did qualify for the NCAA Tournament and played in the Midwest II Regional.[2] The Huskies lost to Georgia Tech in the regional finals. The program continued to have success in the 1990s, winning the Pac-10 North Division title in 1996, 1997, and 1998. It qualified for the 1997 and 1998 NCAA Tournaments after winning the Pac-10 North-South Division Playoff in each season.[12] Individually, Chris Magruder, who later played Major League Baseball, was named a Second Team All-American by the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association in 1998.[2][16]





Brent Lillibridge, shown while playing for Major League Baseball's Chicago White Sox in 2011.


Prior to the 1998 season, the program opened Husky Ballpark, a newly built on-campus home venue that replaced Graves Field.[8] In Washington's first game at the new facility, the Huskies lost to Gonzaga 4-3.[17]


In the three seasons from 1999–2001, the program finished with a conference winning percentage of .500 or worse and did not qualify for the NCAA Tournament. From 2002–2004, however, the team qualified for three consecutive NCAA Tournaments.[2] Its most successful tournament came in 2004, when the Huskies qualified as the second-seeded team in the Oxford Regional. After losing its opening game to Tulane, the team defeated Ole Miss and Western Kentucky in consecutive elimination games before being eliminated by Tulane in the Regional Finals.[13] Future Major League Baseball players on the 2004 team included Tim Lincecum and Brent Lillibridge.[18] Lincecum was named that season's co-National Freshman of the Year by Collegiate Baseball.[19]


Following the 2009 season, head coach Knutson was fired after four consecutive losing seasons in the Pac-10.[20] He was replaced by Indiana State head coach Lindsay Meggs, who played college ball at UCLA.[21] In Meggs' first four seasons, the Huskies' highest win total was 30 (in 2012), and their highest Pac-12 finish was a tie for 6th (in 2013). In 2014, the program reached its first NCAA Tournament in a decade, going 41-17 and finishing second in the Pac-12. At the Oxford Regional, Washington went 2-2, defeating three-seed Georgia Tech twice and losing to host Ole Miss twice, both games by one run. The Huskies' 2014 success coincided with extensive, $15 million renovations to Husky Ballpark.[22][23][24]



Conference affiliations



  • Independent (1901–1915)


  • Pacific Coast Conference (1916–1959), independent in war years of 1918 and 1944


  • Pac-12 Conference (1960–present)

    • Athletic Association of Western Universities, 1960–1966

    • Pacific-8 Conference, 1967–1978

    • Pacific-10 Conference, 1979–2011





Venues



Old Graves Field


Although a 1931 source refers to the team's home venue simply as the "Husky ball lot," sources as early as 1936 refer to the program's home venue as Graves Field, named for Tubby Graves, the program's head coach from 1923 to 1946.[2][7][25][26] The field was located directly north of Hec Ed Pavilion and east of the current Graves Hall. Oriented northeast, the infield was at the western end of the current outdoor tennis courts; its concrete grandstand continues as the Bill Quillian tennis stadium. Left and center field were displaced by the Intramural Activities Building.[27][28] In addition to Washington baseball, the field hosted freshman football games and the Whitworth College (NAIA) baseball team for periods of its history.[29][30]



Graves Field


With the construction of the Intramural Activities Building in the late 1960s, a new baseball field was built at the northeast corner of the UW campus. Also oriented northeast with natural grass, its center field fence was near the intersection of NE 45th Street and Union Bay Place (now Mary Gates Memorial Avenue). Originally a practice field to the new main field adjacent to the west,[31] it became the program's venue shortly after its construction and was also named after Graves.[14] In 1973, it underwent $19,000 renovations.[32] It had a seating capacity of 1,500 spectators in temporary seating.[33] Used by the program until the end of the 1997 season,[8] it is now occupied by intramural athletic fields.[34]



Husky Ballpark





Husky Ballpark in July 2009



During the 1990s, plans for a new stadium to replace Graves Field were announced. Ground was broken in 1997 and the $4.75 million Husky Ballpark hosted its first regular season game in late February 1998. Oriented southeast, it is located north of Husky Stadium and northeast of the site of Old Graves Field. It featured an AstroTurf infield, changed to FieldTurf in 2005, with a well-draining natural grass outfield. It had a seating capacity of 2,212 and employed only temporary bleachers for its first 16 seasons, through May 2013.[8][35]



Renovation


Plans were announced in 2011 for a $15 million building project on a new Husky Ballpark. The new stadium, over a decade overdue, was completed the start of the 2014 season; the new concrete grandstand will have a capacity of 2,500 spectators. In addition to chairbacked seating behind home plate, it features berm seating past the left field fence. The grass outfield has been removed and the entire field is FieldTurf, with only the pitcher's mound as dirt.[36][37][38]



Alternate venues



Sick's Stadium





Sick's Stadium in 1967



While Graves Field was renovated during the 1973 season, the Huskies used Sick's Stadium as its home field. The stadium opened in 1938 and was a major league venue for one season, the home field of the Seattle Pilots in 1969.[32]
Without a baseball tenant after 1976, it was salvaged in the late 1970s and demolished in 1979.



Kingdome



The Huskies played early season tournaments and occasional home games in the Kingdome, which was demolished in March 2000.



Safeco Field



Since the 2007 season, the program has played a single conference game per season at Safeco Field, home of the Seattle Mariners.[39]



Head coaches


The program's most successful head coach is Ken Knutson, who coached the team from 1993–2009 and had 584 wins. Its longest tenured head coach is Tubby Graves, who coached for 24 seasons (1923–1946).[2]


















































































































































































Year(s)
Coach
Seasons
W-L-T
Pct
1901
Fred Schock
1
4–6
  .400  
1903
F. W. Knight
1
8–5
.615
1904–1905
Thorpe
2
10–11–1
.476
1906, 1909–10,
1915–16, 1918–19

Dode Brinker
7
59–28
.678
1907
Loren Grinstead
1
7–6
.538
1908
William Dehn
1
10–12
.455
1911–1912
Bill Hurley
2
14–15
.483
1913
James Clark
1
5–7–1
.417
1914
George Ingle
1
5–3
.625
1920–1921

Stub Allison
2
15–8–1
.652
1922

Robert L. Mathews
1
15–3
.833
1923–1946

Tubby Graves
24
234–131–4
.641
1947–1949

Art McLarney
3
23–23
.500
1950–1953
Warren Tappin
4
41–37–2
.526
1954–1955

Bill Marx
2
36–21
.632
1956
Joe Budnick
1
5–6
.455
1957–1960
Dale Parker
4
73–48
.603
1961–1963

Carmen Mauro
3
29–45–1
.392
1964–1971

Ken Lehman
8
96–177
.352
1972–1976

Bubba Morton
5
48–101
.322
1977–1992
Bob MacDonald
16
423–320–7
.569
1993–2009
Ken Knutson
17
584–399–2
.594
2010–present

Lindsay Meggs
8
230–213–1
.519
TOTALS
23
115
1933–1623–19
.543

Source:[40]



Current coaching staff




  • Head coach – Lindsay Meggs[41]


  • Assistant coach – Jason Kelly


  • Assistant coach – Donegal Fergus


  • Assistant coach – Tanner Swanson



Yearly records


Below is a table of the program's yearly records.[2][42][43]

















































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Season
Coach
Overall
Conference
Standing
Postseason

Independent (1901–1915)
1901
Fred Schock
4-6
1902
no team

1903
F. W. Knight
8-5
1904
Thorpe
2-8
1905
Thorpe
8-3-1
1906

Dode Brinker
7-6
1907
Loren Grinstead
7-6
1908
William Dehn
10-12
1909

Dode Brinker
14-6
1910
Dode Brinker
16-6
1911
Bill Hurley
9-11
1912
Bill Hurley
5-4
1913
James Clark
5-7-1
1914
George Ingle
5-3
1915

Dode Brinker
2-5

Independent:
102-88-2

Pacific Coast Conference (1916–1959)
1916

Dode Brinker
4-5 3-5 4th
1917
no team

1918
Dode Brinker
6-0 Independent
1919
Dode Brinker
10-0 10-0 1st
1920

Stub Allison
8-4 8-4 2nd
1921
Stub Allison
7-4-1 7-4-1 3rd
1922

Robert L. Mathews
15-3 8-2 1st
1923

Tubby Graves
16-4 8-1 1st (North)

1924
Tubby Graves
15-6-1 10-5-1 2nd
1925
Tubby Graves
11-2 8-2 1st (North)

1926
Tubby Graves
8-3 8-3 1st (North)

1927
Tubby Graves
7-7 5-4 4th (North)

1928
Tubby Graves
6-4 4-4 4th (North)

1929
Tubby Graves
12-7 9-6 1st (North)

1930
Tubby Graves
10-3 10-3 1st (North)

1931
Tubby Graves
13-3 13-3 1st (North)

1932
Tubby Graves
15-4 13-4 1st (North)

1933
Tubby Graves
7-3 3-3 t-2nd (North)

1934
Tubby Graves
8-8 6-8 4th (North)

1935
Tubby Graves
13-13-1 10-6 2nd (North)

1936
Tubby Graves
15-10 9-7 t-2nd (North)

1937
Tubby Graves
7-7 7-7 3rd (North)

1938
Tubby Graves
7-15-1 4-12 5th (North)

1939
Tubby Graves
9-12 6-10 4th (North)

1940
Tubby Graves
7-13 4-11 5th (North)

1941
Tubby Graves
10-6 10-6 2nd (North)

1942
Tubby Graves
8-8 8-8 2nd (North)

1943
Tubby Graves
10-7 8-7 3rd (North)

1944
Tubby Graves
5-5-1 Independent
1945
Tubby Graves
4-9 2-2 2nd (North)

1946
Tubby Graves
11-7 8-8 3rd (North)

1947

Art McLarney
9-7 9-7 2nd (North)

1948
Art McLarney
8-7 8-7 2nd (North)

1949
Art McLarney
6-9 6-9 4th (North)

1950
Warren Tappin
9-6 9-6 2nd (North)

1951
Warren Tappin
14-7-1 10-6 t-2nd (North)

1952
Warren Tappin
14-9 10-6 t-1st (North)

1953
Warren Tappin
4-15-1 1-11 5th (North)

1954

Bill Marx
18-10 10-6 t-2nd (North)

1955
Bill Marx
18-11 7-7 4th (North)

1956
Joe Budnick
5-6 5-4 4th (North)

1957
Dale Parker
20-11 8-8 3rd (North)

1958
Dale Parker
12-13 3-10 5th (North)

1959
Dale Parker
21-12 9-3 1st (North)

NCAA Regional

PCC:
431-300-6 291-232

AAWU, Pac-8/10/12 Conference (1960–present)
1960
Dale Parker
20-12 7-8 4th (North)

1961

Carmen Mauro
13-10-1 4-8 5th (North)

1962
Carmen Mauro
9-18 3-13 5th (North)

1963
Carmen Mauro
7-17 3-11 5th (North)

1964

Ken Lehman
12-14 6-10 4th (North)

1965
Ken Lehman
17-24 3-15 4th (North)

1966
Ken Lehman
20-16 6-10 3rd (North)


Pac-8 (1967–1978)
1967
Ken Lehman
8-27 1-13 8th
1968
Ken Lehman
15-26 2-18 8th
1969
Ken Lehman
7-29 1-20 8th
1970
Ken Lehman
8-22 4-12 4th (North)

1971
Ken Lehman
9-19 1-14 4th (North)

1972

Bubba Morton
13-18 5-12 3rd (North)

1973
Bubba Morton
10-11 7-11 3rd (North)

1974
Bubba Morton
10-28 5-12 t-3rd (North)

1975
Bubba Morton
8-17 2-13 4th (North)

1976
Bubba Morton
7-27 2-16 4th (North)

1977
Bob MacDonald
19-20-3 6-12 3rd (North)

1978
Bob MacDonald
29-16-2 5-12-1 4th (North)


Pac-10 (1979–2011)
1979
Bob MacDonald
37-13 11-5 2nd (North)

1980
Bob MacDonald
33-20 6-9 3rd (North)

1981
Bob MacDonald
34-18-1 12-6 1st (North)

1982
Bob MacDonald
22-24 10-14 t-5th (North)

1983
Bob MacDonald
25-16-1 12-11 3rd (North)

1984
Bob MacDonald
16-27 6-15 7th (North)

1985
Bob MacDonald
36-12 15-9 2nd (North)
Pac-10 North Division Tournament
1986
Bob MacDonald
25-23 9-14 6th (North)
Pac-10 North Division Tournament
1987
Bob MacDonald
21-20 11-13 5th (North)
Pac-10 North Division Tournament
1988
Bob MacDonald
17-28 8-16 6th (North)
Pac-10 North Division Tournament
1989
Bob MacDonald
13-20 9-15 6th (North)
Pac-10 North Division Tournament
1990
Bob MacDonald
30-19 14-10 3rd (North)
Pac-10 North Division Tournament
1991
Bob MacDonald
27-23 8-12 t-4th (North)
Pac-10 North Division Tournament
1992
Bob MacDonald
39-21 20-10 1st (North)

NCAA Regional
1993
Ken Knutson
39-19 22-8 1st (North)

1994
Ken Knutson
46-18 20-10 2nd (North)

NCAA Regional
1995
Ken Knutson
24-30 16-14 2nd (North)

1996
Ken Knutson
30-28 16-8 1st (North)

1997
Ken Knutson
46-20 20-4 1st (North)

NCAA Regional
1998
Ken Knutson
41-17 17-7 1st (North)

NCAA Regional
1999
Ken Knutson
33-23 12-12 t-5th
2000
Ken Knutson
26-30 7-17 8th
2001
Ken Knutson
29-23 7-17 8th

2002
Ken Knutson
33-27-1 15-9 t-3rd
NCAA Regional

2003
Ken Knutson
42-18 15-9 3rd
NCAA Regional

2004
Ken Knutson
39-20-1 15-9 2nd
NCAA Regional

2005
Ken Knutson
33-22 12-12 6th

2006
Ken Knutson
36-25 11-13 t-5th

2007
Ken Knutson
29-27 11-13 5th

2008
Ken Knutson
33-22 11-13 t-6th

2009
Ken Knutson
25-30 13-14 t-5th

2010

Lindsay Meggs
28-28 11-16 9th

2011
Lindsay Meggs
17-37 6-21 10th

Pac-12 (2012–present)

2012
Lindsay Meggs
29–25 13–17 7th

2013
Lindsay Meggs
24–32 15–15 t-6th

2014
Lindsay Meggs
41–17–1 21–9 2nd
NCAA Regional

2015
Lindsay Meggs
29–25 14–16 7th

2016
Lindsay Meggs
33–23 17–13 2nd
NCAA Regional

2017
Lindsay Meggs
28–26 14–16 7th

AAWU, Pac-8/10/12:
1389–1250–11 554–702–1
Total: 1933–1623–19

      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



Source:[40]


Washington huskies cws 2018





































































Year
Record
Pct
Notes
1959 1-2 .333
District 8
1992 2-2 .500
West Regional
1994 4-2 .667
Midwest II Regional
1997 3-2 .600
Mideast Regional
1998 2-2 .500
Central Regional
2002 3-2 .600
Houston Regional
2003 2-2 .500
Long Beach Regional
2004 2-2 .500
Oxford Regional
2014 2-2 .500
Oxford Regional
2016 1-2 .333
Nashville Regional


Notable former players





Rick Anderson





Sammy White


The following is a list of notable former Huskies and the seasons in which they played for the program.[2][18]





  • Rick Anderson (1978)


  • Tracy Baker (1910)

  • Braden Bishop


  • Mike Blowers (1986)


  • Dode Brinker (1903–1905)


  • Scott Brow (1988–1990)


  • Nick Hagadone (2005–2007)


  • Matt Hague (2005–2007)


  • Bill Hutchinson (1929–1930)


  • Chet Johnson (1937–1939)


  • Rondin Johnson (1978–1980)


  • Jake Lamb (2010-2012)


  • Hal Lee (1932–1934)


  • Brent Lillibridge (2003–2005)


  • Tim Lincecum (2004–2006)


  • Chris Magruder (1996–1998)


  • Aaron Myette (1996)


  • Tony Savage (1914)


  • Hunky Shaw (1905)


  • Max Soriano (1946–1949)


  • Sean Spencer (1994–1995)


  • Kevin Stocker (1989–1991)


  • Sammy White (1947–1948)


  • Sean White (2000–2003)




See also


  • Washington Huskies baseball players


Major League Baseball Draft



2012 MLB Draft


Four Huskies were selected in the 2012 Major League Baseball Draft: 3B Jacob Lamb by the Arizona Diamondbacks (6th round), P Aaron West by the Houston Astros (17th round), OF Chase Anselment by the Atlanta Braves (17th round), and C B.K. Santy by the Minnesota Twins (30th round).[44] All four players signed professional contracts with their respective teams.[45][46][47][48]


In 2013 mlb draft tree huskies were selected
in the [[2013 MajorDraftP Austin Voth by the Washington Nationals (5th round), P Tyler Kane by the Miami Marlins (38th round), and SS Ty Afenir by the New York Yankees (39th round). All three signed with their respective teams.[49][50][51][52]



References





  1. ^ "University of Washington Athletics Identity Standards Manual" (PDF). Washington Huskies. January 6, 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 6, 2015. Retrieved November 28, 2015..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ abcdefghijklmno "2012 University of Washington Baseball Record Book". Washington Sports Information. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-08-17. Retrieved 17 August 2012.


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