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I am in my Third year coaching at Manhattan College in New York. We are a Division I team that plays in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC). I am the head pitching coach at Manhattan with also a background in working with hitters and infielders
- Head Coach, South Plainfield American Legion, 2009-2010
- Assistant Varsity Baseball Coach, Spotswood (NJ) HS, 2011
- Assistant Baseball Coach, New Jersey City University, 2011-2019
- Associate Head Baseball Coach, New Jersey City University, 2019-present
Adam Taraska enters his 11th season as head coach of the Panthers in 2024.
Coming off of one of the best seasons in Panthers history in 2023, the future has never looked brighter for the team. The team won 22 games (one shy of the program record), won two elimination playoff games, and advanced to the final semifinals game of the Skyline Conference Tournament.
Over his tenure as head coach at Purchase, Taraska has coached 19 All-Skyline Conference players including one Skyline Player of the Year, two Skyline Rookies of the Year, two All-Region players and multiple Skyline players, pitchers, and rookies of the week.
Taraska came to Purchase in the fall of 2011 and served as an assistant under Bill Guerrero for the 2012 and 2013 seasons. In 2013, Guerrero was named Skyline Coach of the Year.
The 2014 team, in Taraska's first year at the helm, was one of the most successful in the program's history. The team advanced to the semifinals of the Skyline Conference Tournament for the first time after finishing the regular season in a first place tie with a 12-4 conference record. The Skyline Conference took notice as seven Panthers were elected All-Conference, and one was named Skyline Conference Player of the Year. Taraska was named Skyline Coach of the Year. The 2014 team was also recognized by the NCAA Division III as the national leader in stolen bases per game (3.86).
Prior to Purchase, Taraska served as an assistant coach and recruiting coordinator at D-1 Fairfield University in 2010 and 2011. He also served as an assistant coach for the 2009 season at Fairfield foe, Iona College. He coached 2010 and 2012 drafted players for the Seattle Mariners and San Diego Padres during his time in the MAAC conference.
Taraska started his collegiate coaching career as an assistant at D-2 Caldwell College in 2008, the same year the Cougars won the Central Atlantic Collegiate Conference regular season crown and conference tournament, advancing to the D-2 Northeast Regional Tournament.
At the high school level, Taraska spent the 2006 and 2007 seasons as head coach at Greens Farms Academy in Westport, CT. In addition, he spent the better part of 20 years as a coach for the AAU Connecticut Blue Jays starting in 2002. In his time with the Jays, he led numerous teams to Top 10 regional and national finishes. He has coached at every level from 13U-18U. He began a new connection with MVP Baseball in 2023, coaching the MVP New York Black team.
Prior to coaching, Taraska was a decorated athlete and four-year starter at the University of Bridgeport. Captain of the Purple Knights in 2003, he earned a B.S. in Human Services. He is currently pursuing a Masters Degree in Sport Management from SUNY Cortland. He and his fiancee, Greta, reside in New Rochelle, NY.
https://wagnerathletics.com/sports/baseball/roster/coaches/craig-noto/2997
My name is Isiah Daubon and I am from Poughkeepsie, NY.
I'm currently an assistant coach at Sacred Heart University.
I work with the hitters and outfielders.
This is my second year coaching overall
I played at Sacred Heart from 2017-2021
I played a graduate year at NJIT in 2022
Aldins will start his sixth season as the head coach of the Stevens baseball program after five solid seasons to begin his career at Castle Point.
Aldins led the 2014 Ducks to their first NCAA Tournament appearance since 2002 and secured the programs first-ever NCAA Regionals victory, a 10-3 triumph over Union College. Additionally Stevens has captured two regular season CUNYAC titles (2012 and 2013) and one CUNYAC championship tournament title (2014) during Aldins tenure. His 129 victories over his first five campaigns are the most in a five-year span at the college. After completing his first season with the Ducks and leading the team to a 24-18 record and a ten win improvement from the previous year, Aldins was named 2012 Empire 8 co-Coach of the Year.
In 2015 the Ducks set a program-record for wins with 29 and the coaching staff garnered Coaching Staff of the Year recognition from the Empire 8. Formerly an assistant coach at Harvard University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Aldins is the 10th coach in program history.
I am honored and humbled to be the head baseball coach of Stevens Institute of Technology, a college that has a rich tradition of supporting America's Pastime dating back to 1906 said Aldins. Stevens is a special place with a national reputation for both academic and athletic excellence and is located in a perfect area for our student-athletes, overlooking the skyline of New York City. It is especially amazing to call Hoboken home, a city that is considered by some as the Birthplace of Baseball. I am grateful to Russell Rogers and the search committee for giving me the opportunity to lead this program and become a member of the Stevens community. The 2014 and 2015 seasons were big steps forward for us and I am looking forward to continuing to help our baseball program rise to the top of the New York Region and accomplishing our current on-the-field goal of reaching the World Series.
Stevens Baseball completed the 2016 campaign with a 26-15 record and appeared in both the American Baseball Coaches Association (ABCA)/Collegiate Baseball Newspaper and d3baseball.com national polls at various points during the season. Additionally the Ducks finished the 2016 season ranked 5th in the New York Region. Notable victories included two triumphs over local powerhouse rival Kean University as well as three combined wins against World Series participants St. John Fisher and Keystone. Individual honors included senior Jayson Yano being named d3baseball.com All-American, Empire 8 Player of the Year, Empire 8 Pitcher of the Year, as well as many other accolades. Senior Nick Sieber and junior Zeph Walters also received All-Region honors. In 2016 the Ducks' schedule was ranked as the 27th toughest in the nation, continuing our program's commitment to playing the best competition possible.
The Ducks set a new program record with 29 victories in 2015 and appeared in both the American Baseball Coaches Association (ABCA)/Collegiate Baseball Newspaper and d3baseball.com national polls for the first time in over ten years. Additionally Stevens finished the season ranked third in the New York Region.Upon the conclusion of the season, junior received several major awards including d3baseball.com 2 nd Team All-American, d3baseball.com New York Region Player of the Year, Empire 8 Player of the Year, Empire 8 Pitcher of the Year, ABCA/Rawlings First Team All-Region, ECAC Upstate All-Star, and d3baseball.com First Team All-Region. Junior also was recognized by being named d3baseball.com Third Team All-Region.
Academically and off the field the Stevens baseball team also has continued to improve and shine. The Ducks baseball scholar-athletes posted a five-year best 3.563 team GPA in the spring 2016 semester and boast a 3.42 cumulative team GPA. For the seventh time in eight semesters, the Ducks were named an Empire 8 All-Academic team. Over the past five seasons baseball has participated in numerous initiatives including Stevens' Duckling Program, Hoboken Baseball Special Olympics, Friends of Jaclyn, Stevens Athletics' Brothers and Sisters Council, The Hoboken Boys & Girls Club, Hoboken Night Out, and The Hoboken Race.
Stevens 27-win NCAA Tournament campaign in 2014 resulted in the Ducks being ranked in numerous key categories including second nationally out of 369 schools in strikeouts per nine innings (9.6), second in hits allowed per nine innings (7.21), third in E.R.A. (2.27), third in strikeout to walk ratio (3.29), fifth in shutouts (5), tenth in stolen bases (113), and eighteenth in stolen bases per game (2.57). At the conclusion of the season seven student-athletes were named to the Empire 8 All-Conference Team, five to the CUNY All Conference Team, five New Jersey Collegiate Baseball Association (NJCBA) honorees (including D2/D3 Rookie Pitcher of the Year Zeph Walters), two to the D3baseball.com All-Region Team, and one to the ABCA All-Region Team.
Summer collegiate baseball achivements also continue to roll in for the Ducks as now senior right-handed pitcher/second baseman Jayson Yano was named to the 2015 Northwoods League All-Star Team en route to a stellar campaign for the Rochester Honkers franchise. Northwoods is considered by many to be the top summer collegiate baseball league in the nation. In summer 2014 Yano was named Perfect Game Collegiate League Pitcher of the Year, Third Team Summer All-American (only Division III player on this list), and the #30 Professional Pitching Prospect in the league. Yano's teammate Greg Jakusik, a junior left-handed pitcher, also spent the summer of 2015 with the Honkers and was one of the team's regular starters. Additionally senior Robert Robbins, a right-handed pitcher, played for the Forest City Owls of the equally prestigious Coastal Plain League. Robbins had an excellent 2015 summer finishing the season with a 6-3 win/loss record and a 3.80 E.R.A. against some of the best hitters in the nation. Fellow junior Zeph Walters also played for the Owls and batted a very respectable .263 in the wood-bat-only league. In addition to Northwoods, Coastal Plain, and Perfect Game, the Ducks have had placements in several top exposure environments including the Cal Ripken Collegiate Baseball League, Futures Collelegiate Baseball League, Texas Collegiate League, New York Collegiate Baseball League, Beach League and South Florida Collegiate Baseball League. Year round commitment to the game of baseball has quickly become a cornerstone of the Stevens Baseball experience.
The Ducks 23 victories in 2013 marked the eighth time in the previous ten seasons in which the Stevens baseball program has eclipsed the 20-win plateau. Aldins guided nine student-athletes (the most in school history) to Empire 8 All-Conference recognition, which included Empire 8 Co-Rookie of the Year, Jayson Yano. Junior Dan Allen racked up post season honors as he was named NJCBA Fireman of the Year and was a First-Team All-State Selection. Allen was also a D3Baseball.com and American Baseball Coaches Association/Rawlings All-Region performer in the New York Region in addition to being recognized as a First-Team Empire 8 honoree.
In 2012, Aldins first year at the helm of the Ducks, Stevens posted a 24-18 record, a ten-win improvement from the previous season. This turnaround resulted in Aldins and his staff garnering Empire 8 co-Coaching Staff of the Year honors. Stevens was named the No. 1 seed in the six-team ECAC Metro Tournament and advanced all the way to the tournament's championship game where the Ducks lost 2-1 in extra innings. During the year, Stevens tallied seven wins against regionally ranked teams. The Ducks also had seven wins against teams that went on to compete in the 2012 NCAA tournament. Stevens' strength of schedule was rated as the 35th most difficult in the nation amongst 371 teams. At the conclusion of the season senior first baseman Matt Glassman was named to the CoSIDA/Capital One Academic All-America Team. Additionally, a Stevens baseball player was recognized as either the Empire 8 Conference Player or Pitcher of the Week on eight separate occasions - the most in program history.
Prior to his appointment at Stevens, Aldins spent two seasons in Cambridge, Mass. at Harvard University, under head coach Joe Walsh. In addition to his on-the-field and recruiting duties, he also served as the director and owner of the Rising Star Academic Prospect Camp. This annual event served as a feeder system that helped attract top-notch student athletes to Harvard.
While at Harvard, Aldins was responsible for the placement of the Crimson's players in some of the top summer collegiate leagues in the country including the Cape Cod League, Northwoods League, and many others. During the summer of 2011 he served as the director of the Cape Cod League Tryout in Wareham, Mass. He also has experience as an assistant coach for the North Shore Navigators of the New England Collegiate Baseball League (NECBL), enjoying two playoff appearances in consecutive seasons, helping the team to an overall 46-37 record, and assisting in the development of nine future Major League Baseball (MLB) draft picks.
Aldins also is the current Head Coach for the Latvian National team, which he coached in the 2014 European Championship Qualifier in Ljubljana, Slovenia. While there the club competed against the national teams from Finland, Hungary, Ireland, Israel, Norway, Romania, and Slovenia. Aldins led Latvia to its first-ever National Team victories over Norway (10-7) and Hungary (12-4). Latvia was also leading 3-0 in the 6 th inning versus tournament champion Israel and lost a tight 6-to-2 contest versus Pool B Qualifier Slovenia. In the November, 2014 International Baseball Federation (IBAF) World Rankings Latvia moved up six spots, the fifth biggest jump in the world from 2013 to 2014.
During the 2014 Qualifier, Aldins, who is a dual citizen, also competed as a player. He posted a 1-0 record in 11.0 innings with an ERA of 0.00 as a pitcher. He also batted .750 on the tournament with seven runs scored, eight walks, three hit by pitches, and a .933 on base percentage. In the summer of 2011 he managed the team in Antwerp, Belgium where Latvia competed in the Qualifier against Austria, Belgium, Poland and Slovakia. Aldins organized and planned the first-ever Major League Baseball Envoy assignment to Latvia to help develop the talent, skill and awareness of baseball within the country. The Envoy assignment, which took place both in 2011 and 2014, also played a large role in helping the national team prepare for the European Qualifier appearance. MLB Envoy has helped make significant strides for the sport in Latvia and has motivated the national team members to develop a youth system.
Before traveling overseas and stepping on Harvards campus, Aldins was the pitching coach and recruiting coordinator at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) from 2005-09. Aldins oversaw a pitching staff of 16 student-athletes and helped lead the Engineers to a school-record 25 victories in 2009 and two appearances in the NEWMAC Tournament finals. In his tenure at MIT, he developed one NEWMAC Player of the Year, one Academic All-American and numerous All-New England and all-conference performers.
Aldins inherited a program on Castle Point that strives to compete for an Empire 8 title each season. With strong nationally recognized teams to the likes of Ithaca College and St. John Fisher College in the conference, it will be a challenge, but Aldins looks forward to the opportunity.
We will strive every day to live up to our teams three core covenants of family, passion and perseverance. If we can do this I have no doubt that we will annually compete for an Empire 8 championship, an NCAA Tournament bid, and a shot at the World Series expressed Aldins.
As a collegiate player, Aldins competed at Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, N.Y. and was a three-time All-Academic student-athlete as well as the 2005 Liberty League Player of the Year his senior season. His accolades kept piling up in 05, as he was named First-Team ABCA/Rawlings New York State All-Region and was selected to the Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) Upstate All-Star team. Aldins' teammates voted him as the MVP, Hitter and Pitcher of the Year for the Brewers. He graduated from Vassar with a double major in history and Russian studies in 2005 and authored A History of Vassar Baseball, a paper depicting the rise of Brewers baseball from club to varsity status.
Aldins received his Masters Degree in Sports Leadership from Northeastern University in June, 2011.
Currently he is serving as the ABCA NCAA Division III New York Region Organization Committee Chair and has also represented the Empire 8 as the conference's Sports Chair for baseball and the CUNYAC as the Games Committee Chair.
Reardon completed his third season as head coach of the baseball team in 2016, and his tenth overall as a collegiate coach after enjoying a lengthy period at Caldwell University. At Queens, Reardon has compiled a 45-68 overall record after the Knights finished the 2016 season 22-26 and 9-15 in conference play, continuing a steady climb up the conference and region ladder. The Knights' 22 victories in 2016 were the most by a QC squad since the 1998 campaign. The season was a marked improvement for the Knights, who scored more runs, stole more bases, collected more extra bases hits and registered higher team batting, on-base and slugging percentage. The pitching staff struck out more batters and pitched to a lower earned run average than last season. Four players tallied over forty hits and drove in over 20 runs.
A Queens College graduate, Reardon returned to his alma mater in August 2013 following previous stints at the aforementioned Caldwell University, the New Jersey Institute of Technology and St. Johns University. While playing for the Knights baseball team and head coach Ed Tatarian during the 1997 and 1998 seasons, Reardon was tremendously successful, pitching for the top-ranked team in the region in 1998 and leading the team to a 29-9 overall record in addition to being selected to the All-Conference team that same year. At the conclusion of his playing career, Reardon moved to the coaching ranks, accepting a volunteer position on head coach Ed Blankmeyers staff at St. Johns. With the Red Storm, Reardon assisted in all areas for a team that finished the 2000 season 31-22 and 13-13 in Big East play. Reardons time at St. Johns propelled him to the head coaching position at Division II Caldwell University in New Jersey. During his eight seasons in charge, the Cougars won 176 games, were two-time champions of the Central Atlantic Collegiate Conference in 2004 and 2008, and made three appearances in the NCAA Tournament. Reardon also coached 37 All-Conference selections at Caldwell and spearheaded the Cougars to finish first in the conference in batting average and team earned run average in 2007 and 2008. After Caldwell, Reardon returned to the Division I level spending two seasons at NJIT before coaching at Boonton High School in New Jersey. He also spent a year as manager of the Jersey Pilots in the Atlantic Collegiate Baseball League. Outside of the dugout, Reardon directed the prestigious New Jersey Super 17 program in Flemington, which develops some of the top players in the state and surrounding area. Reardon graduated from Queens College in 1998 with a degree in History. He is married to his wife, Stephanie, and is the father to his nine-year-old daughter, Madison Faith.
Assistant Coach, Recruiting Coordinator
St. Thomas Aquinas
Division 2
John-Michael Guarino
Pitching Coach
St. Thomas Aquinas
As part of our COVID-19 safety plan, the indoor sessions traditionally held on the first day of camp will be shared online.
Sessions will be accessible for the week prior to camp. They are available on-demand and can be completed at the athlete's
convenience.
This approach allows us to continue offering these valuable sessions so athletes arrive to camp ready to maximize the experience,
while still maintaining a safe experience.
Your camp footage will be accessible to the below colleges, who have participated in EXACT's events. Instructing coaches at camp are listed under Confirmed Coaches.
Assistant Baseball Coach at Belmont University Division 1 located in Nashville, TN. Members of the Missouri Valley Conference
Steven Mooney is entering his first season as an assistant coach at Canisius University. His primary responsibilities include working with the catchers and assisting in various other areas of the program. Steven finished his playing career at Clark University this past spring, where he played 83 games over six seasons all at catcher. He was twice voted captain of the Cougars and had a career .990 fielding percentage, helping the team make the playoffs twice in his career. The Cougars also won two Western division championships in Steven's career.
Aside from his playing career, Steven has been coaching youth baseball for several years. While in high school, he started coaching a youth travel team out of Central Amherst Little League. After being there for five years, he transitioned to a head coach position with the West Seneca Warriors. His next stop would be with NY Stingers Baseball where he was a catching instructor and a head coach. During the school year at Clark, Steven would assist with various travel teams at The Strike Zone, also working individually with several players. Steven also worked with PBR on various showcases in the New England region.
Steven is a native of Buffalo, graduating from Canisius High School in 2017. At Clark, Steven graduated with an Honors Degree in History and a master's degree in public administration, with a concentration in educational leadership.
Wagner College baseball coach Craig Noto has announced the hiring of Matthew Johnson as the director of baseball operations for the 2024 season.
"Coach Johnson has been brought up in and around a great baseball culture," Noto said. "He is a serious young coach who has done a great job at St. Thomas Aquinas under the guidance of John Garvey. Offensively, Matt understands what hitters need to do to be successful in the box. On the recruiting trail, he has already proven to be very astute in his evaluations of players. I'm excited for Matt. He has a bright future in this game."
Johnson spent two years at Nyack College before transferring to St. Thomas Aquinas to finish out his final three years of eligibility. He totaled 174 hits and 108 RBIs during his collegiate career and was honored as an ECC All-Conference member in 2021 and 2022.
Following his playing career, Johnson joined the staff of St. Thomas Aquinas as a hitting coach. Across 50 games in 2023 the team averaged 6.64 runs per game under his guidance. The Spartans as a whole maintained a .283/.391/.416 slash line in Johnsons lone year as hitting coach.
As a result of the successful offense, six players received ECC All-Conference honors in 2023.
With nearly three decades of baseball experience as a coach and professional athlete he was drafted by the New York Yankees shortly before earning a degree at UCLA UC Davis head coach Matt Vaughn selected Mike Hankins as Aggie baseball's new Director of Player Development.
In his role, Hankins will incorporate various methods, tools, analytics and cutting-edge resources to develop players' skills and enhance the team's performance.
"I want to thank Matt Vaughn for giving me a chance to help the players develop and reach their full potential. UC Davis is one of the best academic colleges in the nation, and has a very competitive athletics program," said Hankins.
"I look forward to helping the players, coaches, and baseball program in whatever way I can."
Hankins joins the Aggies after spending the last three years as an assistant baseball coach at American River College. In this role, he strengthened players' fielding skills and improved their swing by using various technology and skill acquisition methods. He also handled all elements of ARC's recruiting program.
He joined the staff at ARC after spending a decade at William Jessup; not only was he the head coach for three seasons, he created and built the program from scratch with help from ex-MLB manager Jerry Manuel and others a tedious process that started in 2008 and culminated in the Warriors' first-ever game in January of 2015. Until his final season at ARC, the team did not have a field of its own.
Hankins was responsible for everything involved with running a college baseball program: recruiting players, designing strength and conditioning programs, practice and game day plans, the team's baseball camps, fundraising and community outreach program.
Prior to creating William Jessup's baseball program, he served as the head baseball coach at Lincoln High School and fueled the program's turnaround from a last-place team into a championship-caliber squad. Not only did he handle all day-to-day operations, he also designed a unique strength, conditioning and injury prevention program that increased player performance, dramatically decreased games lost due to injury and fueled the team's rapid ascension to the top of the league standings.
Hankins' successful coaching career was built on a foundation of experiences, and success, that took place when he competed at the Division I and professional levels.
At UCLA, he was a four-year letter winner who competed in one of the toughest conferences in the nation for legendary baseball coach Gary Adams. It was Adams' tutelage, along with his dad's mentorship and training (he played with the Atlanta Braves), as well as his experience gained throughout his tenure in Westwood that led to the New York Yankees drafting him in 1990.
Throughout his five-year professional career, Hankins won a pair of championships and expanded his baseball knowledge by playing for a list of elite coaches in Tony LaRussa, Ron Washington, Trey Hillman, Brian Butterfield and Rob Thomson.
Hankins' passion for coaching is not limited to the diamond; since 2006, Glen Edwards Middle School has thrived with him as one of its teachers as he also serves as the chair of the Physical Education Department. Incorporating innovative pedagogical methods and fostering learning, while meeting the needs of a diverse student body, is very satisfying for Hankins.
In addition to his bachelor's degree from UCLA and a master's degree from Emporia State University, Hankins is a member of the American Baseball Coaches Association and the National Strength and Conditioning Association. He is certified by Rapsodo in hitting and pitching, by OnBaseU as a hitting specialist, and is K-Vest certified.
Hankins was also certified by the International Youth Conditioning Association as a high school strength and conditioning coach, nutrition specialist, speed and agility specialist and fitness specialist.
Matt Morales is in his first season a volunteer assistant coach for UAB.
Morales arrives to UAB from Florida State University where he was a student assistant coach for the Seminoles during the 2021 season. Morales primarily worked with the FSU infielders, but also assisted in hitting and baserunning development. He worked with the coaching staff daily to assist with practice plans and scouting reports/analytics for upcoming opponents.
Prior to Florida State, Morales played three seasons of professional baseball and has a career MiLB batting average of .265. Morales finished five at-bats short of being in the top five for the Pioneer League batting title with a batting average of .358 for the season. Morales had stints in professional baseball with the Idaho Falls Chukars, Burlington Royals, Lexington Legends and the Saint Paul Saints.
A native of West Palm Beach, Fla., Morales began his collegiate career at Stetson University for the 2015-2016 season before transferring to Palm Beach State College. He was an All-Conference shortstop for the Panthers in 2017.
Originally drafted by the Washington Nationals out of high school in 2015, Morales went on to be drafted by the Kansas City Royals in the 23rd round of the 2017 MLB Draft.
Morales earned his bachelor's degree in interdisciplinary social science at Florida State in July of 2021.
John Sheehan enters his first season on the La Salle baseball coaching staff, serving as pitching coach.
From 2018 to 2020, Sheehan was the pitching coach and strength and conditioning coach at Prairie View A&M University, a member of the Division I SWAC Conference. During his time at Prairie View, the pitching staff saw its ERA decrease by 1.27 runs per game as well as a 15 percent reduction in walks and a 25 percent reduction in home runs allowed. The Prairie View pitching staff also saw its strikeout total increase by 20 percent.
Sheehan played baseball at the College of William and Mary from 2009-2014. He was a two-way player his freshman year, both pitching and hitting before undergoing Tommy John Surgery as a sophomore. Sheehan bounced back in his junior season, leading the pitching staff in appearances and opponent batting average. During his senior year, Sheehan was second on the team in wins, innings pitched and ERA.
At the conclusion of his senior year at William and Mary, Sheehan signed a professional contract with the Colorado Rockies. He reached High A while playing for the Modesto Nuts in 2015. At the end of his professional career, Sheehan finished with a 3.49 ERA, 1.18 WHIP and 9.6 K/9.
Following his playing career, Sheehan joined the staff at Salem State University in Salem, Mass. as the team's pitching coach. That season, Salem led the MASCAC Conference in ERA and was second in hits allowed.
In 2018, Sheehan joined the staff at Momentum Physical Therapy, where he attained his Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist and Precision Nutrition Level 1 coaching certifications. As a strength and conditioning coach at Momentum Physical Therapy, he helped oversee the rehabilitation protocols of different sports injuries, specifically elbow and shoulder injuries in baseball players.
The Westwood, Mass. native earned his bachelor's degree from The College of William and Mary in 2014, interned at Cressey Sports Performance in 2016, and is Driveline Baseball Certified
Jason Staub was named pitching coach by head coach Frank Pericolosi in August of 2021. He was given assistant athletic performance coach responsibilities for baseball in addition to his role as pitching coach.
In his first year with the Sagehens, Pomona-Pitzer set a program record for NCAA Tournament Wins (3) and finished with the third most wins in program history (32). The pitching staff set the program record for strikeouts (400). The staffs opponent batting average from their last full season, in 2019, dropped from .292 to .258 in 2022. 6 Sagehens received all-conference and 4 all-region selections, including one starting pitcher.
Before arriving at Pomona-Pitzer, Staub served as a voluntary assistant coach with Eastern Connecticut State University in the fall of 2020. Staub also spent a year as an assistant coach at Portland High School with the Varsity baseball program. He was a strength and conditioning intern with TCU, UConn, Elon, Springfield College, Quinnipiac University, and ECSU.
Staub attended Springfield College from 2019-2021 to earn his masters degree in Strength and Conditioning.
Jason is a 2019 graduate of ECSU with a degree in Sports and Leisure Management. He was a four-year member of the baseball program where he split time as a starting and relief pitcher. Staub helped ECSU win a LEC conference tournament in 2016.
Staub is a native of Portland, Connecticut and attended Portland High School where he was a Class S Baseball State Championship winner in 2014.
2018 Assistant Coach Pasadena Poly HS (CIF Champions 2018)
2019 Head Coach Pasadena Poly HS (CIF Runner-Up)
2019 Catching Coach Providence Christian College
2020-Present Pitching/Catching Coach Claremont-Mudd-Scripps
Assistant Coach, Recruiting Coordinator
Stevens Institute of Tech
Division 3
My college career was played at Kean University which is a small D3 in NJ where I was a pitcher. While there I was fortunate enough to be apart of some talented teams that were able to make two runs to the College World Series.
I was announced to the Ducks coaching staff on November 28, 2017. Prior to that I was able to gain experience coaching in summer leagues such as the Prospect & Northwoods League. As well as spending a couple seasons coaching High School (Franklin HS) & Summer Club Teams (Full Count Baseball).
Our coaching staff tries to give our players everything they need to succeed and we look forward to seeing our guys soon so we can get back to work!
Ron Krsolovic, who will serve as the Lords' hitting coach, arrives on campus for the 2021-22 campaign after working as an assistant coach at NCAA Division II Lake Erie College. His main responsibilities with the Storm were working with the hitters and position players.
Krsolovic is a 2019 graduate of NCAA Division I Oakland University, where he was a two-year performer at third base, starting 76 of 78 games for the Golden Grizzlies. As a senior, he was named to the All-Horizon League Academic Team.
Prior to his time at Oakland, Krsolovic was a member of the baseball, cross-country and basketball teams at Harford Community College in Bel Air, Maryland. During his two years at Harford, the baseball team went a combined 105-21, winning 49 of 51 league games and appearing in the College World Series.
Currently, Krsolovic is a member of both the Croatian National Baseball Team and the Tupper Lake RiverPigs of the Empire Professional Baseball League.
BJ Holloway joined the UAH baseball program in 2014 and now serves as the lead assistant coach on head coach Hunter Royers coaching staff, working primarily with hitters and position players.
A native of Klamath Falls, Oregon, Holloway aided the UAH baseball program as an assistant in 2014 and 2015, in which the squad was ranked nationally and boasted a 77-27-1 combined overall record. Prior to returning to the Chargers, Holloway spent one season assisting the Whitman baseball program in Walla Walla, Washington.
In Holloway's time at Whitman, the team batting average raised 18 points to .279 this past season, and the number of walks induced (157) and the on-base percentage (.370) increased by 42 base on balls and by 33 points, respectively; the number of doubles and home runs increased by 17 and 14 as well as the team slugging percentage rocketing from .308 in 2015 to .365 in 2016. One of the most notable jumps for the offense was the increase in team RBIs from 98 in 2015 to an impressive 205 in 2016.
Defensively the number of assists increased from 371 to 412, the number of errors dropped from 56 to 46, and the overall fielding percentage increased 11 points to .968 for the 2016 season.
After transferring from Western Kentucky, where he played one full season, Holloway was a three-year starter at Montevallo from 2006-08. In 2006, he helped lead the Falcons to a South Central Regional Championship and a trip to the NCAA Division II World Series. In 2007, Holloway helped to lead Montevallo to another Regional Championship game and a school-record 47 wins.
Holloway graduated in 2009 from Montevallo with a bachelors in kinesiology, and, in 2013, earned a masters degree from West Alabama in teaching.
University of Tampa asst coach since 2013, 2 time National Champ.
As a player in 2017, Trevor Tunison was the recipient of the Br. David Delahanty Award given to Lewis student-athletes for academic excellence - and named to Academic All-GLVC Team...played in 11 games with seven starts...Tallied a pair of RBI against UW-Parkside (March 25) and Northwood (March 7)...recorded his first career double at Butler (March 22).
Braden Wells is in his first year as Linfield baseball coaching staff assistant. He will also assist with game management during football game days.
Wells' coaching experience spans every level of college baseball, including Division I and II, NAIA and Junior College, and now Division III.
He was most recently was the Director of Student-Athlete Development for the Oregon State baseball program during the 2022 and 2023 seasons. Prior to returning to his alma mater to join Mitch Canhams staff, Wells was an assistant coach at Linn-Benton Community College during the 2019 and 2020 seasons. In 2019, Wells stepped outside his comfort zone and took on the role of pitching coach for Roadrunners manager Andy Peterson.
Prior to his time at LBCC, Wells made a brief stop in 2017 as head coach of the Skagit Valley College baseball program following a one-year stint with Spencer as an assistant coach at Washington State in 2016.
He served a three-year stint as an assistant at Concordia-Portland from 2013-15, helping guide the Cavaliers to the best three-year stretch in program history. Wells made the decision to pursue coaching as a career and served as the graduate assistant at Grand Canyon University in 2012. He began his coaching career as an undergraduate assistant coach for the Beavers in 2009 after playing outfield for OSU in 2007 and 2008.
The Glendale, Ariz., native appeared in 88 games over two seasons at Oregon State. He batted .277 as a junior in 2007, helping the Beavers to the second of two consecutive national titles. It was at OSU where he met Spencer, who was then the pitching coach of during the Beavers 2006 and 2007 national championship seasons.
Wells played two seasons at Dixie State. As a sophomore, he was named first team All-Region after batting .358 with nine doubles, a triple and 31 RBI.
Wells was an all-state outfielder and 2004 graduate of Brophy College Prep in Arizona.
I am Cameron Hollins. I played collegiate baseball for 2 years at Tuskegee University. Immediately after finishing my playing career. I began coaching at Tuskegee University and am now entering my 3rd year as an assistant coach. For Tuskegee, I coach Infield, hitting, and assistant strength and conditioning coach.
Coach Tyler Womer joined the Erskine College Baseball staff in September 2019. He brings an outstanding knowledge of the game as well as a passion for developing baseball players of all ages. Originally from New Castle, PA, Tyler played infield at Wingate University in Wingate, NC.
While playing at Wingate, Tyler was part of the 2011 Conference Tournament Championship winning team that finished the season 34-22 and advanced to the NCAA Division II Regional Tournament. After graduating with a degree in Sport Management in 2011, Tyler stayed at Wingate to be an assistant baseball coach while attending graduate school. As a volunteer assistant coach at Wingate, Tyler was responsible for running the youth camps, high school camps and organizing the annual team golf tournament. He also assisted with the coaching and development of Wingates infielders.
Tyler was then hired asthe Recruiting Coordinator/Assistant Baseball Coach at DeSales University in Center Valley, Pennsylvania in June 2012 where he coached until 2015. Womer coached the outfielders, infielders & hitters at DeSales while having the opportunity to be mentored by Head Coach, Tim Neiman, who has over 700 career victories & currently ranks 31stall-time among all NCAA Division III Coaches. During Coach Womers two seasons at DeSales, the Bulldogs compiled a 59-28 overall record.
In June 2017, Coach Womer was hired as the Director of Operations for the Mizuno Outlaws Travel Baseball Organization & Assistant Director of Baseball at Perfect Performance NOVA in Tysons Corner, VA. Tyler helped grow the Mizuno Outlaws organization from 5 teams in June 2017 to 11 teams in September 2019 before joining the Erskine College Baseball coaching staff this Fall.
Clark, a 2009 Knox College graduate, joined the Prairie Fire coaching staff in the fall of 2013.
Clark was a member of the 2008 Midwest Conference Championship baseball team and was a two-time Academic All-Midwest Conference honoree.
Clark was the head baseball coach at Spoon River College from 2009 to 2011 and at Eureka College during the 2012 season. He also assisted on the Quincy Gems staff in the summer of 2011. The Gems took home the Prospect League Championship with a record of 40-18. In 2014, Clark managed the Laramie Colts Baseball Club in their inaugural season in the Rocky Mountain Baseball League. The Colts finished with a record of 24-15 (23-10 in the RMBL). He returned in 2015 to lead the team to a 21-17 record.
Starting in the summer of 2006 Clark assisted his father, the late John Clark, with the Oneida American Legion Post 727 baseball program in Oneida, IL. He now manages the senior legion team and they won their first District Championship since 2000 in the summer of 2017.
Clark also serves as the Sports Information Director at Knox. He earned a masters degree in sport management from Western Illinois University.
I am the recruiting coordinator at Belhaven University
Current Volunteer Assistant coach with the Villanova Wildcats. Primarily working with the catchers, as well as assisting in all aspects of offense.
Max Weir joined the University of Massachusetts baseball staff as an assistant coach in the summer of 2022. Weir came to UMass from Gardner-Webb, where he spent a season as the Head Developmental Baseball Coach.
At Gardner-Webb, Weir was the junior varsity head coach, spending time recruiting, creating practice and game schedules, coordinating meals and team travel, creating and monitoring team budgets and worked closely with compliance. In addition, he also assisted the Division I varsity program with player development, recruiting, fundraising and other administrative duties.
Weir has also shared his time with Powerhouse Training, in East Longmeadow, Massachusetts, as the Assistant General Manager and a baseball instructor. There, he helped with a multitude of tasks, such as developing plans for the outfielders and hitters, communicating with all players and families, as well as setting individual meetings with each athlete to aid in the college recruiting process.
Prior to Gardner-Webb and Powerhouse Training, Weir was the Assistant Baseball Coach at American International College for four years. At AIC, he assisted with player development, designing practice plans, coaching outfielders, recruiting, scouting and game planning. He also coordinated all team travel, meals, budget and aided with team fundraising. Weir guided outfielder Josh Aviles to the programs first ever National Division II Rawlings Gold Glove Award, as well.
Additionally, Weir spent a season with the Boston Red Sox with the Fan Engagement team, aiding with various public and private events in New England, as well as Fenway Park to enhance fans experience. He also helped with the marketing and promotional aspects, such as ticket initiatives, tabling at partnered events and executing large-scale events.
Assistant Coach, Recruiting Coordinator
Cal State-Bakersfield
Division 1
Quinn Hawksworth was named as an assistant coach with CSU Bakersfield Baseball on September 14, 2020.
Hawksworth comes to Bakersfield after spending the 2020 season in a volunteer position with Big West Rival, UC Santa Barbara. He is expected to work with Roadrunner hitters and infielders, while handling recruiting responsibilities for CSUB. He coached hitters and infielders for the Gauchos last season, helping UCSB to a 13-2 mark on the strength of 37 extra-base hits and ten home runs.
Prior to coaching at UCSB, Hawksworth spent as an assistant at Belmont Abbey in Belmont, N.C. He worked with outfielders and hitters at BAC during the 2019 season, leading the Crusaders offense to a .393 on-base average and a .419 slugging-percentage, while mentoring a pair of 15-home run hitters.
Hawksworth was an assistant at Saddleback College during the 2018 season. The Gauchos finished that season 33-14 and reached the Elite Eight round of the CCCAA Playoffs.
In 2017, he was an assistant with Linn-Benton Community College in Albany, Ore. With LBCC, Hawksworth coached catchers and first baseman and aiding the Roadrunners to a 30-12 record and a Southwest League Championship.
Hawksworth started his collegiate career as an assistant director of operations at Oregon State University in 2016.
I want to thank Coach Beard and all of CSUB Athletics for this incredible opportunity, Hawksworth expressed. My family and I are excited to join this community and be a part of this program. Bakersfield is a special place and the CSUB Baseball has such a high ceiling, with the potential to accomplish so much on and off the field. Im blessed to be a part of the growth and development of this program and our student-athletes.
Hawksworth was a two-year starter at Belmont Abbey, and a Conference Carolinas Honor Roll selection during his NCAA playing career. He also played two seasons at Green River Community College in Auburn, Wash.
Hawksworth graduated from Belmont Abbey with a degree in Sport Management and earned his Master's of Education from the University of Arkansas in 2020. A native of Seattle, Wash., he and his wife, Dorothea, have a son, William, and two daughters, Emma and Lily.
I have been coaching at Wabash College for the past 3 years. I have worked primarily with the outfielders on the defensive side and was named the Hitting Coach for this past season. I also have experience as a Head Coach overseas in Germany in the 1. Bundesliga as well as playing experience at D1 IPFW (now Purdue Fort Wayne) and 8 overseas seasons in Germany and Australia where I was named Top 5 Overseas Hitter by BBJO in 5 of those seasons.
Reina. In his time at Rochester, he has created a firm foundation for success on the diamond.
He guided the Yellowjackets in 2014 to the championship game of the Liberty League Tournament, ultimately falling to Union College and ending up one game short of reaching the NCAA Division III Tournament for the first time as a coach. The 2014 Rochester baseball squad ended with a 25-16 record and were 16-8 in the conference, earning the 2nd seed in the Liberty League Tournament.
In 2015, Reina's Yellowjackets were preseason favorites in the Liberty League and ended up with a 26-16 record overall and 17-7 mark in conference play, good enough to reach the conference tournament for the second straight season. The 2015 season includes a new school record winning streak of 17-game which lasted from March 29 through April 19.
Last year, UR finished 22-19 and qualified for the Liberty League playoffs for the third straight season. Rochester had seven All-Liberty League players and four of them were All-Region honorees by the ABCA, including 1st Team selections Nolan Schultz and Steve Eychner.
In 2010, Reina's Yellowjackets repeated as University Athletic Association champions in February, and won their second straight Liberty League regular season title. The previous season was equally as successful, as Reina led Rochester to a school record 30 wins, while being ranked as high as 8th in the country.
Under Reina, Rochester qualified for the Liberty League baseball playoffs 10 times, coming in 2003 (when it was known at the Upstate Collegiate Athletic Association), '04, '06-'10, '12, '14 and '15. In 2005, the Yellowjackets were 21-16-1 overall and finished second at the UAA Championships. Reina and his staff have been recognized for their accomplishments in the Liberty League by earning the league's coveted Coaching Staff of the Year award in 2004, 2007, 2008 and 2009.
Reina picked up his 300th career victory in the 2015 season, coming following a 2-1 win over Clarkson University. He has a career record of 302-242-2 (.573) overall and is 168-104 (.618) in conference play.
A Rochester native, Reina is a graduate of Gates-Chili High School where he starred at shortstop for the Spartans. He then took his talents to Monroe Community College where he played under Hall of Fame coach H. David Chamberlain. In 1995, Reina was selected as the Region III Player of the Year and a second team All- American shortstop. He was awarded a full athletic scholarship to Division I, Long Island University - Brooklyn Campus. A two-year starter for the Blackbirds, Reina had two solid seasons including his junior year where he hit .371 and four grand slams in a season. He graduated with a bachelors degree in physical education.
Reina then came back to Rochester and his alma mater to coach at Monroe CC. In two years at Monroe, the Tribunes tallied close to 100 wins and finished runner-up in the district championships. He then accepted a two year position as a graduate assistant at The College of New Jersey (Division III).
While at TCNJ, Reina worked as the infield instructor and recruiting coordinator. The Lions won their first Conference championship in 18 years in 2000. In May of 2001, Reina graduated with a Masters of Education Degree.
During the summer months, Coach Reina has had a wide variety of experience in coaching all different levels. For two years he coached in the New York Collegiate Baseball League. In the summer of 2001, he worked as an assistant for the Bourne Braves, a member of the prestigious Cape Cod Baseball League. Ten of the 24 players were selected in the 2002 Major league Baseball Amateur Draft while the Braves had one of its most successful season in the program's history.
In the summer of 2002 and 2003, Coach Reina was asked by Major League Baseball to work in their International Envoy program. He worked in Southern Germany and in Japan. The purpose of these trips were to further baseball in both countries. He worked with players from ages 7-45 and also worked with softball players in different clubs.
Boen's student-athletes recieved All-NE-10 honors, highlighted by Dan Fratus and Chris Hoyt who were named to the first team. Stonehill maintained its consistent level of success in 2014, as the Skyhawks won 30 games and reached the NE-10 Tournament for the fourth time in five seasons. Stonehill went 30-20 overall, including 17-10 in conference play. At the conclusion of the season, five of Boen's student-athletes earned All-NE-10 honors, highlighted by junior pitcher Jim Duff, who was also a consensus All-East Region selection before becoming Stonehill's second Major League Baseball draft pick in program history. Duff was chosen in the 20th round (595th overall) by the New York Mets. In 1998, his first season on the bench, Boen led Stonehill to a then-school-record 25 wins, earning the program's first NE-10 postseason berth in 12 years. The following year, he earned his first career NE-10 Coach of the Year award after the team captured a share of the NE-10 regular-season title for the first time since 1985. Boen earned his first career New England Division II Coach of the Year selection and his second straight NE-10 Coach of the Year award in 2000. In what was then the program's most successful year to date, Stonehill won 34 games and both the NE-10 regular-season and tournament titles, and earned the program's first-ever NCAA tournament bid. The team advanced to the Northeast Regional championship game, falling to conference rival Saint Rose. The Stonehill program has remained a perennial NE-10 contender during Boen's tenure, returning to the postseason tournament six times in the past decade and breaking into the NCAA Division II East Regional rankings. Boen earned his third NE-10 Coach of the Year selection in 2006, following a 28-win season and a second-place finish in the conference. 2012 marked the third consecutive season that Boen led Stonehill to a 30-win campaign, as the Skyhawks finished 30-19 overall and 18-11 in the NE-10. Four players earned All-Conference honors from the NE-10, including senior Michael White, who was also selected to play in the NEIBA All-Star Game. In 2011, Stonehill posted a 30-18 record overall and made its second-straight trip to the NE-10 tournament. Under Boen's guidance, Stonehill's became the first student-athlete in program history to be drafted by a Major League Baseball (MLB) club when the hometown Boston Red Sox selected him in the 28 round (862 overall) of the 2011 MLB First Year Player Draft. Boen also aided four players in earning NE-10 postseason honors. The 2010 Skyhawks made a return to the top of the NE-10 ranks, claiming the conference tournament title in a 31-win season and earning their second trip to the NCAA tournament as the fourth seed in the East Region. Stonehill knocked off New Haven and C.W. Post in the opening rounds before being eliminated by Franklin Pierce. Boen has coached over 40 All-Conference players during his tenure at Stonehill, including a pair of conference Players of the Year in Mark Langone '00 and Junior Medina '02, and 2005 Northeast-10 Pitcher of the Year Billy Sittig '06. Medina and Sittig also became the program's first two All-America honorees with their selections in 2002 and 2005. A native of Brockton, Mass., Boen was a standout shortstop on the Stonehill diamond from 1986 through 1989, and was also the starting point guard for the Skyhawk basketball squad, helping lead the team to the 1988-89 Northeast-10 title. He came to Stonehill after a standout career at neighboring Brockton High, where he led the Boxers to the state basketball championship as a senior in 1985, and was inducted into the Brockton High School Hall of Fame. A noted camp and clinic coach throughout the region, Boen is the director of the Skyhawk Baseball School hosted on campus every summer. He resides in Mansfield, Mass. with his wife Shelly and their children Lauren, Michael, Max, and Matt.
Current pitching coach at the University of Texas at Tyler (NCAA D2). Previously worked at Mineral Area College (NJCAA D1) for 3 years.
Served as the head coach of the Florence RedWolves of the Coastal Plain League and as an assistant for the Macon Bacon and Martinsville Mustangs in the same league.
Pitcher at the University of Houston (2011-2014) and Arkansas Tech University (2014-2016).
As part of our COVID-19 safety plan, the indoor sessions traditionally held on the first day of camp will be shared online.
Sessions will be accessible for the week prior to camp. They are available on-demand and can be completed at the athlete's
convenience.
This approach allows us to continue offering these valuable sessions so athletes arrive to camp ready to maximize the experience,
while still maintaining a safe experience.
See what people are saying about EXACT!
Coach, USA Baseball
The most unique thing that makes EXACT different from other camps is how they teach the athletes how to talk to coaches and hold a conversation with a college coach. The camps offer a great opportunity to gain exposure that they wouldn't get otherwise. Not only do they allow players to showcase themselves in front of college coaches, they will also receive an evaluation on how they performed throughout the day.
Coach
This camp was unique in that it embraced a competitive atmosphere for the majority of the time the kids were out on the field. It enabled the coaches to see not only a players skills on the diamond, but their competitive make up as well. This aspect of the EXACT Baseball Camp keeps the day up tempo and fun for everyone involved.
Parent
My son attending your camp over the weekend and I must tell you that it was an amazing experience for both of us. I was very impressed with the one on one contact with the coaches representing California. This camp has opened my son's eyes to all the talented ball players that are competing for baseball positions within the organizations. He was given guidance to improve his performance on the field as well as in the classroom. I am so glad we were able to take part in this camp, again it was an amazing experience. Also, the attention given to the parents on understanding the process and knowing what to expect was an eye opener to us. I truly look forward to the next one and cannot wait to see how my son has improved on the field. He is also working on improving his GPA, like you mentioned it about their transcripts not how fast they can throw. Thank you for the wonderful insight and we look forward to future camps with ExactSports.
Learn why EXACT Sports is the most trusted and top-rated training camp
Largest college coaching staff of any organization -- camp, tournament or club (bringing in 1000 amazing college coaches every year)!
Hugely successful supporters of high school athletes -- 70.2% of participants have gone on to play NCAA or NAIA college athletics.
Only training camp organization that has received funding from the NCAA.
Official behavioral training partner for professional baseball teams
The only camp staff that has expertise in developing athletes from high school to college to pro (we also work with over 60 pro teams).
The only exposure organization that blends the 4 pillars of development through our mental training expertise (EXACT is funded by the National Institutes of Health).
This is a sample schedule. Registered athletes will receive a final schedule prior to camp.