Bucknell University Athletics

Bison Baseball Through the Decades, Presented by Geisinger
7/27/2020 3:51:00 PM | Baseball
LEWISBURG, Pa. -- Bucknell Baseball dates back to 1886, and in the 134 years since its debut, the program has provided numerous championships and incredible moments, and it has sent 40 players and coaches into the Bucknell Athletics Hall of Fame. All this week we are going to take a look back at the history of Bison Baseball through the voices of many of the key figures who helped shape the last 60 or so years of the program. Head coach Scott Heather leads the discussions, along with a current member of the team. Special thanks to Geisinger for sponsoring the series.Â
1950s
We wrap up this entertaining and enlightening series with the decade of the 1950s, which was a good one for the Bucknell baseball program. Coached by Hall-of-Famer Bill Lane for the first eight years of the decade, the squad posted .500 or better records in five of those seasons, and in 1950 and 1951 Bucknell captured Middle Atlantic Baseball Conference titles. Two Bucknell alumni played in the Major Leagues in the '50s, most notably Hall-of-Famer Bob Keegan '44, who pitched a no-hitter for the Chicago White Sox against the Washington Senators in 1957 and was an American League All-Star in 1954. Keegan would be the last Bison to play in the majors until Eric Junge in 2002. Tom Upton also debuted in the big leagues in 1950 with the St. Louis Browns. Joining coach Scott Heather on this call are two alumni from the era, Hall-of-Famer Dick Roush '51 and Rich McFarland '56, P'82, P87. Roush posted a 5-1 record with a 2.49 ERA in 1950 and was a key part of those title-winning teams in 1950 and 1951. He lettered three times each in baseball and soccer and was one of Bucknell's finest multi-sport athletes of his time. McFarland was also a three-year letterman on the baseball team, and he captained the 1956 team.
1960s
Next up in the series is the 1960s, and we are joined by three alums from different parts of the decade: Hall-of-Famer Ken Twiford '62, Bob Zavorskas '67 and Vig Cegles '70. Twiford captained the 1962 baseball team and was an All-Middle Atlantic Conference infielder that season. Twiford, who ranked fourth nationally in home runs per game in 1961, was also an all-conference football player and a member of Bucknell's 1960 Lambert Cup team. Zavorskas captained the baseball team as a senior in 1967, when he was an Honorable Mention All-MAC selection at shortstop. Zavorskas and teammate Al Criswell were both selected by the Cincinnati Reds in the 1967 MLB Draft. Cegles was a First Team All-MAC shortstop on the historic 1969 team. One year after finishing 0-15, Bucknell had one of the greatest turnaround seasons in NCAA history in 1969, finishing 15-4 with a dramatic doubleheader sweep of Delaware in the final league games of the season to clinch the MAC championship. Cegles hit .416 that season, the sixth-best average in team history, and he still owns the school record for hits in a game with six against Juniata in 1969. Cegles, who also played basketball at Bucknell, went on to enjoy a long and successful career in college athletics administration, including a 10-year stint as AD at Long Beach State.Â
1970s
The decade of the 1970s featured a number of star players, many of whom were two-sport athletes. Two of the best were Hall-of-Famers Randy Ruger '70 and Gene Luccarelli '71, who starred both on the gridiron and the diamond at Bucknell. Ruger and Luccarelli, along with standout pitcher Jack Recco '77, join head coach Scott Heather for today's conversation. Ruger was an All-Middle Atlantic Conference First Team selection in 1969, when Bucknell won the league title. That season he led the nation with a .494 batting average, and he still holds the team records for average, on-base percentage (.557) and slugging percentage (.883) in a single season. Ruger's career .675 slugging percentage is still the Bucknell record as well, and his .398 career average ranks No. 2 behind fellow Hall-of-Famer Ted Aceto. Luccarelli was an All-MAC selection in 1971 after hitting .396, and he also held long-standing interception records in football. Recco was an All-East Coast Conference pitcher in 1975, when he posted a stellar 1.44 earned run average, third-best in school history. He ranks in the top 10 in five career pitching categories, including third in strikeouts and seventh in ERA.Â
1980s
In this chapter of Bison Baseball Through the Decades, we rewind to the 1980s. The Bison were still playing on the diamond adjacent to the football stadium, which was rededicated as Christy Mathewson-Memorial Stadium in 1989. One of the biggest transitions of the decade occurred in 1982, when Gene Depew succeeded Tommy Thompson as baseball coach. After a slow start, the team improved throughout the decade, highlighted by an 18-11-1 season in 1985, and the Bison produced a number of very talented players. Among them were Ted Aceto '89 and Joe Markulike '90, a pair of Hall-of-Famers who went on to play professionally. Aceto and Markulike join us on the show today, along with two more former captains in Paul Bamford '83 and Don Leitzel '85. Bamford was an All-East Coast Conference outfielder in 1982 and was the ECC Scholar-Athlete that season. Leitzel, who is now the head baseball coach at Lewisburg High School was an All-ECC shortstop and a two-time Co-SIDA Academic All-District selection. Aceto still today holds the Bucknell career batting average (.408) and on-base percentage (.503) records, and his 58 career stolen bases are second-most in team history. Aceto was also a 1,000-point scorer in basketball, where he played in two NCAA Tournaments, and he later played for two seasons in the New York Mets system. Markulike was a two-year team captain who was an ABCA Second Team All-American in 1990. He hit over .400 twice and graduated with a .395 career average, which ranks third in team history. He still ranks in the top 10 in six other career categories. Markulike was also a star off the field, where he was not only a three-time national Academic All-American, but the National Academic All-American of the Year for all sports in 1990. He later spent some time in the Atlanta Braves organization.Â
1990s
The decade of the 1990s was one of change for the Bison Baseball program. The 1990 season was the team's last in the East Coast Conference, as the Patriot League debuted as an all-sports affiliate during the 1990-91 academic year. The team's home ballpark moved over to the west side of Rt. 15 in the spring of 1990, and then as head coach Gene Depew shifted his attention full-time to baseball -- he had also been the football team's defensive line coach -- the team's success also began to ramp up. The Bison posted .500 or better conference records in seven of their nine Patriot League seasons in the '90s, and in 1996 they broke through and won their first PL title, which led the program's very first appearance in the NCAA Regionals. Led by Patriot League Player of the Year Kevin Silverman and Pitcher of the Year Mike Tomko, Bucknell beat Navy in the PL championship series and made their first NCAA visit in Gainesville, Fla. The Bison closed out the decade by finishing 15-5 in league play on the way to a PL regular-season title, setting the stage for three more NCAA trips in the 2000s. Joining us on the show for this edition are four of the standouts of the era: Kurt Waldner '93, Silverman '96, Eric Junge '99 and Tyler Prout '00. Waldner was one of the team's top pitchers in the early part of the decade, a control artist who still ranks second all-time at Bucknell in complete games, third in shutouts and fourth in wins and fewest walks per nine innings. One of those shutouts was a no-hitter against Lafayette in 1993. Silverman was one of the premier power bats of the era, and he was a two-time First Team All-Patriot League third baseman. He holds the school record with a 27-game hitting streak and still ranks eighth in team history in home runs and slugging percentage. Junge captained the 1999 squad that won the regular-season league title, one year after posting a school-record 31 wins. He was a two-time All-PL selection who ranks in the top 10 in five career categories. Junge, a right-handed pitcher, was drafted by the Los Angeles Dodgers in the 11th round in 1999, and three years later he made his Major League debut with the Philadelphia Phillies. Prout, a 2012 Bucknell Athletics Hall of Fame inductee, still holds school records for career RBIs, triples and sacrifice flies, and he ranks in the top 10 in eight more categories. He was a three-time All-PL selection.   Â
2000s
If one were to rank all of the decades in Bucknell Baseball history, it would be hard to top the 2000s. In this 10-year period, the Bison won three Patriot League Tournament titles, four Patriot League regular-season titles, and went to the NCAA Regionals three times. And then, of course, there is the matter of May 30, 2008. On that Friday night in Tallahassee, Fla., Bucknell pulled off one of the greatest upsets in NCAA baseball history with a 7-0 victory over fourth-ranked Florida State. In what would be the final game of his career, senior Mathew Wilson spun a six-hit shutout over the Buster Posey-led Seminoles, who came in with a 48-9 record and a national-best .350 team batting average. Joining us to reflect on all the wonderful moments of the 2000s are six outstanding players from the era: Ian Joseph '01, Gregg Farmery '02, Kyle Walter '06, Jason Buursma '08, Ben Yoder '10 and Andrew Brouse '10. Joseph and Buursma are both in the Bucknell Athletics Hall of Fame. A three-time All-Patriot League selection, Joseph was elected in 2013 after setting team career records for runs scored, walks and stolen bases. Buursma, a first-ballot Hall-of-Famer in 2018, amazingly won All-Patriot League recognition at five different positions. He was the league's Player of the Year and Tournament MVP in that magical 2008 season. He graduated ranked in the top 10 in four offensive statistical categories, including third with 24 home runs, and on the mound he is Bucknell's all-time saves leader while ranking No. 2 in ERA. Buursma was also the Patriot League's overall Male Scholar-Athlete of the Year for all sports, he was a First Team Academic All-American, he captured the 2008 Christy Mathewson Award as the top senior athlete in the class, and he spent several years in the St. Louis Cardinals system, advancing as high as AAA ball. When Buursma notched his 15th career save to break the team record, it was Farmery's mark that he eclipsed. The 2002 team captain appeared in more games (72) on the mound than any other player in team history, and he ranks ninth all-time in career ERA. Farmery was a three-time All-Patriot League selection and was a key part of Bucknell's 2001 championship team that tied a school record with 31 wins. Walter captained the 2006 squad and was a rare four-time All-Patriot League selection. He ranks in the top 10 in 11 different offensive career lists at Bucknell, and he also saw time on the mound later in his career. He was an 18th-round draft pick of the Toronto Blue Jays in 2006. Yoder was a two-year team captain whose name appears on 10 different career lists. An outstanding defensive infielder, he was the 2007 Patriot League Rookie of the Year, a Louisville Slugger Freshman All-American, and a three-time All-Patriot League selection. Brouse co-captained the 2010 Patriot League championship team with Yoder. A power-hitting outfielder, he set a school single-season record with 60 runs scored in 2010, and he ranks second all-time at Bucknell in home runs (30) and third in RBIs (130). Brouse was a two-time First Team All-Patriot League selection and was the 2010 Patriot League Player of the Year.
2010s
The Bison kicked off the decade of the 2010s with a Patriot League championship and NCAA Regionals appearance, which would be the last of Hall-of-Fame coach Gene Depew's five NCAA trips. Seeded fourth in the Patriot League Tournament, the Bison knocked off Army and Holy Cross with dramatic Game Three victories in the semifinal and championship series, and then put up a strong showing in the Columbia Regional, falling to eventual national champion South Carolina and Virgina Tech. Scott Heather took over the coaching reins in 2013, and a year later his squad won another PL title, this time at home at Depew Field as the No. 1 seed. Bucknell went on to to the Charlottesville Regional, where it picked up it's second-ever NCAA win, 5-2 over Liberty. Joining Coach Heather and sophomore pitcher Tyler Rigot in this edition are Doug Shribman '11, Joe Ogren '16, Connor Van Hoose '18 and Jeff Gottesman '19. Shribman was the 2010 Patriot League Tournament MVP after leading the Bison to the title, and he is Bucknell's all-time leading home run hitter. Shribman smashed 43 career home runs, including a record 21 in 2010, and he ranks in the Bucknell top 10 in nine different offensive categories. He was a three-time All-Patriot League selection and was also an Academic All-PL and CoSIDA Academic All-District pick as a senior. Ogren was a two-year team captain and three-time PL all-star. He ranks in the top 10 in Bucknell history in 11 different categories, including No. 2 in games started and No. 4 in doubles and walks. Ogren was the MVP of the 2014 PL Tournament as a sophomore, and he was a three-time Academic All-PL and two-time Academic All-District pick. Van Hoose will go down as one of the top pitchers in Bucknell history. He ranks second only to Hall-of-Famer Don RIchards in both career strikeouts and strikeouts per nine innings, and his 2.55 career ERA is fourth-best. Van Hoose was a two-time First Team All-PL selection, he was the league's Pitcher of the Year in 2018, and he tossed a no-hitter against Lehigh. After graduation, he was the eighth-round draft choice of the New York Yankees. Gottesman was part of the same starting rotation with Van Hoose for a couple of seasons, and he also authored an outstanding career on the mound and in the classroom. Gottesman, a 2019 team captain, ranks eighth on Bucknell's career strikeouts list and fifth in games started. He was not only the Patriot League Baseball Scholar-Athlete of the Year in 2018, but he was the overall Male Scholar-Athlete of the Year for all sports. He was also a two-time national Academic All-American.
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1950s
We wrap up this entertaining and enlightening series with the decade of the 1950s, which was a good one for the Bucknell baseball program. Coached by Hall-of-Famer Bill Lane for the first eight years of the decade, the squad posted .500 or better records in five of those seasons, and in 1950 and 1951 Bucknell captured Middle Atlantic Baseball Conference titles. Two Bucknell alumni played in the Major Leagues in the '50s, most notably Hall-of-Famer Bob Keegan '44, who pitched a no-hitter for the Chicago White Sox against the Washington Senators in 1957 and was an American League All-Star in 1954. Keegan would be the last Bison to play in the majors until Eric Junge in 2002. Tom Upton also debuted in the big leagues in 1950 with the St. Louis Browns. Joining coach Scott Heather on this call are two alumni from the era, Hall-of-Famer Dick Roush '51 and Rich McFarland '56, P'82, P87. Roush posted a 5-1 record with a 2.49 ERA in 1950 and was a key part of those title-winning teams in 1950 and 1951. He lettered three times each in baseball and soccer and was one of Bucknell's finest multi-sport athletes of his time. McFarland was also a three-year letterman on the baseball team, and he captained the 1956 team.
1960s
Next up in the series is the 1960s, and we are joined by three alums from different parts of the decade: Hall-of-Famer Ken Twiford '62, Bob Zavorskas '67 and Vig Cegles '70. Twiford captained the 1962 baseball team and was an All-Middle Atlantic Conference infielder that season. Twiford, who ranked fourth nationally in home runs per game in 1961, was also an all-conference football player and a member of Bucknell's 1960 Lambert Cup team. Zavorskas captained the baseball team as a senior in 1967, when he was an Honorable Mention All-MAC selection at shortstop. Zavorskas and teammate Al Criswell were both selected by the Cincinnati Reds in the 1967 MLB Draft. Cegles was a First Team All-MAC shortstop on the historic 1969 team. One year after finishing 0-15, Bucknell had one of the greatest turnaround seasons in NCAA history in 1969, finishing 15-4 with a dramatic doubleheader sweep of Delaware in the final league games of the season to clinch the MAC championship. Cegles hit .416 that season, the sixth-best average in team history, and he still owns the school record for hits in a game with six against Juniata in 1969. Cegles, who also played basketball at Bucknell, went on to enjoy a long and successful career in college athletics administration, including a 10-year stint as AD at Long Beach State.Â
1970s
The decade of the 1970s featured a number of star players, many of whom were two-sport athletes. Two of the best were Hall-of-Famers Randy Ruger '70 and Gene Luccarelli '71, who starred both on the gridiron and the diamond at Bucknell. Ruger and Luccarelli, along with standout pitcher Jack Recco '77, join head coach Scott Heather for today's conversation. Ruger was an All-Middle Atlantic Conference First Team selection in 1969, when Bucknell won the league title. That season he led the nation with a .494 batting average, and he still holds the team records for average, on-base percentage (.557) and slugging percentage (.883) in a single season. Ruger's career .675 slugging percentage is still the Bucknell record as well, and his .398 career average ranks No. 2 behind fellow Hall-of-Famer Ted Aceto. Luccarelli was an All-MAC selection in 1971 after hitting .396, and he also held long-standing interception records in football. Recco was an All-East Coast Conference pitcher in 1975, when he posted a stellar 1.44 earned run average, third-best in school history. He ranks in the top 10 in five career pitching categories, including third in strikeouts and seventh in ERA.Â
1980s
In this chapter of Bison Baseball Through the Decades, we rewind to the 1980s. The Bison were still playing on the diamond adjacent to the football stadium, which was rededicated as Christy Mathewson-Memorial Stadium in 1989. One of the biggest transitions of the decade occurred in 1982, when Gene Depew succeeded Tommy Thompson as baseball coach. After a slow start, the team improved throughout the decade, highlighted by an 18-11-1 season in 1985, and the Bison produced a number of very talented players. Among them were Ted Aceto '89 and Joe Markulike '90, a pair of Hall-of-Famers who went on to play professionally. Aceto and Markulike join us on the show today, along with two more former captains in Paul Bamford '83 and Don Leitzel '85. Bamford was an All-East Coast Conference outfielder in 1982 and was the ECC Scholar-Athlete that season. Leitzel, who is now the head baseball coach at Lewisburg High School was an All-ECC shortstop and a two-time Co-SIDA Academic All-District selection. Aceto still today holds the Bucknell career batting average (.408) and on-base percentage (.503) records, and his 58 career stolen bases are second-most in team history. Aceto was also a 1,000-point scorer in basketball, where he played in two NCAA Tournaments, and he later played for two seasons in the New York Mets system. Markulike was a two-year team captain who was an ABCA Second Team All-American in 1990. He hit over .400 twice and graduated with a .395 career average, which ranks third in team history. He still ranks in the top 10 in six other career categories. Markulike was also a star off the field, where he was not only a three-time national Academic All-American, but the National Academic All-American of the Year for all sports in 1990. He later spent some time in the Atlanta Braves organization.Â
1990s
The decade of the 1990s was one of change for the Bison Baseball program. The 1990 season was the team's last in the East Coast Conference, as the Patriot League debuted as an all-sports affiliate during the 1990-91 academic year. The team's home ballpark moved over to the west side of Rt. 15 in the spring of 1990, and then as head coach Gene Depew shifted his attention full-time to baseball -- he had also been the football team's defensive line coach -- the team's success also began to ramp up. The Bison posted .500 or better conference records in seven of their nine Patriot League seasons in the '90s, and in 1996 they broke through and won their first PL title, which led the program's very first appearance in the NCAA Regionals. Led by Patriot League Player of the Year Kevin Silverman and Pitcher of the Year Mike Tomko, Bucknell beat Navy in the PL championship series and made their first NCAA visit in Gainesville, Fla. The Bison closed out the decade by finishing 15-5 in league play on the way to a PL regular-season title, setting the stage for three more NCAA trips in the 2000s. Joining us on the show for this edition are four of the standouts of the era: Kurt Waldner '93, Silverman '96, Eric Junge '99 and Tyler Prout '00. Waldner was one of the team's top pitchers in the early part of the decade, a control artist who still ranks second all-time at Bucknell in complete games, third in shutouts and fourth in wins and fewest walks per nine innings. One of those shutouts was a no-hitter against Lafayette in 1993. Silverman was one of the premier power bats of the era, and he was a two-time First Team All-Patriot League third baseman. He holds the school record with a 27-game hitting streak and still ranks eighth in team history in home runs and slugging percentage. Junge captained the 1999 squad that won the regular-season league title, one year after posting a school-record 31 wins. He was a two-time All-PL selection who ranks in the top 10 in five career categories. Junge, a right-handed pitcher, was drafted by the Los Angeles Dodgers in the 11th round in 1999, and three years later he made his Major League debut with the Philadelphia Phillies. Prout, a 2012 Bucknell Athletics Hall of Fame inductee, still holds school records for career RBIs, triples and sacrifice flies, and he ranks in the top 10 in eight more categories. He was a three-time All-PL selection.   Â
2000s
If one were to rank all of the decades in Bucknell Baseball history, it would be hard to top the 2000s. In this 10-year period, the Bison won three Patriot League Tournament titles, four Patriot League regular-season titles, and went to the NCAA Regionals three times. And then, of course, there is the matter of May 30, 2008. On that Friday night in Tallahassee, Fla., Bucknell pulled off one of the greatest upsets in NCAA baseball history with a 7-0 victory over fourth-ranked Florida State. In what would be the final game of his career, senior Mathew Wilson spun a six-hit shutout over the Buster Posey-led Seminoles, who came in with a 48-9 record and a national-best .350 team batting average. Joining us to reflect on all the wonderful moments of the 2000s are six outstanding players from the era: Ian Joseph '01, Gregg Farmery '02, Kyle Walter '06, Jason Buursma '08, Ben Yoder '10 and Andrew Brouse '10. Joseph and Buursma are both in the Bucknell Athletics Hall of Fame. A three-time All-Patriot League selection, Joseph was elected in 2013 after setting team career records for runs scored, walks and stolen bases. Buursma, a first-ballot Hall-of-Famer in 2018, amazingly won All-Patriot League recognition at five different positions. He was the league's Player of the Year and Tournament MVP in that magical 2008 season. He graduated ranked in the top 10 in four offensive statistical categories, including third with 24 home runs, and on the mound he is Bucknell's all-time saves leader while ranking No. 2 in ERA. Buursma was also the Patriot League's overall Male Scholar-Athlete of the Year for all sports, he was a First Team Academic All-American, he captured the 2008 Christy Mathewson Award as the top senior athlete in the class, and he spent several years in the St. Louis Cardinals system, advancing as high as AAA ball. When Buursma notched his 15th career save to break the team record, it was Farmery's mark that he eclipsed. The 2002 team captain appeared in more games (72) on the mound than any other player in team history, and he ranks ninth all-time in career ERA. Farmery was a three-time All-Patriot League selection and was a key part of Bucknell's 2001 championship team that tied a school record with 31 wins. Walter captained the 2006 squad and was a rare four-time All-Patriot League selection. He ranks in the top 10 in 11 different offensive career lists at Bucknell, and he also saw time on the mound later in his career. He was an 18th-round draft pick of the Toronto Blue Jays in 2006. Yoder was a two-year team captain whose name appears on 10 different career lists. An outstanding defensive infielder, he was the 2007 Patriot League Rookie of the Year, a Louisville Slugger Freshman All-American, and a three-time All-Patriot League selection. Brouse co-captained the 2010 Patriot League championship team with Yoder. A power-hitting outfielder, he set a school single-season record with 60 runs scored in 2010, and he ranks second all-time at Bucknell in home runs (30) and third in RBIs (130). Brouse was a two-time First Team All-Patriot League selection and was the 2010 Patriot League Player of the Year.
2010s
The Bison kicked off the decade of the 2010s with a Patriot League championship and NCAA Regionals appearance, which would be the last of Hall-of-Fame coach Gene Depew's five NCAA trips. Seeded fourth in the Patriot League Tournament, the Bison knocked off Army and Holy Cross with dramatic Game Three victories in the semifinal and championship series, and then put up a strong showing in the Columbia Regional, falling to eventual national champion South Carolina and Virgina Tech. Scott Heather took over the coaching reins in 2013, and a year later his squad won another PL title, this time at home at Depew Field as the No. 1 seed. Bucknell went on to to the Charlottesville Regional, where it picked up it's second-ever NCAA win, 5-2 over Liberty. Joining Coach Heather and sophomore pitcher Tyler Rigot in this edition are Doug Shribman '11, Joe Ogren '16, Connor Van Hoose '18 and Jeff Gottesman '19. Shribman was the 2010 Patriot League Tournament MVP after leading the Bison to the title, and he is Bucknell's all-time leading home run hitter. Shribman smashed 43 career home runs, including a record 21 in 2010, and he ranks in the Bucknell top 10 in nine different offensive categories. He was a three-time All-Patriot League selection and was also an Academic All-PL and CoSIDA Academic All-District pick as a senior. Ogren was a two-year team captain and three-time PL all-star. He ranks in the top 10 in Bucknell history in 11 different categories, including No. 2 in games started and No. 4 in doubles and walks. Ogren was the MVP of the 2014 PL Tournament as a sophomore, and he was a three-time Academic All-PL and two-time Academic All-District pick. Van Hoose will go down as one of the top pitchers in Bucknell history. He ranks second only to Hall-of-Famer Don RIchards in both career strikeouts and strikeouts per nine innings, and his 2.55 career ERA is fourth-best. Van Hoose was a two-time First Team All-PL selection, he was the league's Pitcher of the Year in 2018, and he tossed a no-hitter against Lehigh. After graduation, he was the eighth-round draft choice of the New York Yankees. Gottesman was part of the same starting rotation with Van Hoose for a couple of seasons, and he also authored an outstanding career on the mound and in the classroom. Gottesman, a 2019 team captain, ranks eighth on Bucknell's career strikeouts list and fifth in games started. He was not only the Patriot League Baseball Scholar-Athlete of the Year in 2018, but he was the overall Male Scholar-Athlete of the Year for all sports. He was also a two-time national Academic All-American.
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