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College baseball hall-of-famer, Gary Ward returns to New
Mexico State for his seventh year to be an assistant for his son Rocky
Ward. He is the hitting coach for
the Aggies and brings an extensive amount of experience to the team. This is his second stint as an
assistant coach. He served as the
Aggies' top assistant in 2000 after being out of coaching for three years.
Ward was inducted into the College Baseball Hall of Fame
July 4, 2008 in Lubbock, Texas.
Ward was inducted into the 2008 College Baseball Foundation Hall of Fame
for his accomplishments as a collegiate coach. He coached at Oklahoma State
from 1978 to 1996 and at New Mexico State from 2001 to 2002. Ward led OSU to 16 straight conference
titles, 17 NCAA Regional appearances and 10 trips to the College World Series.
He compiled a record of 953-313-1 in 19 seasons in Stillwater. In 2002, he led
New Mexico State to a Sun Belt Tournament Championship and an NCAA appearance.
He finished with a career record of 1,022-361-1, which ranks 24th on the NCAA
all-time wins list.
Ward coached the Aggies in 2001 and 2002 and picked up his
1,000th win as a head coach while with NM State. In 2001 the Aggies posted a 32-23 record, the program's most
wins since 1995. During that stint
as a head coach, Ward was the second winningest active coach in Division I baseball,
the sixth winningest of all-time and the 24th coach to win 1,000 games.
Ward, who was a former baseball and basketball star for
NMSU, led Oklahoma State to 10 College World Series appearances in 19 seasons
as head coach (1978-96). His OSU
teams earned a record seven consecutive CWS berths from 1981-87 and were
national runners-up in 1981, 1987, and 1990. The Cowboys qualified for 17 regionals, including 16 in a
row from 1981-96 under Ward. He
led OSU to 17 Big Eight championships and two Big Eight Western Division titles
in 19 years. Ward also led them to
16 consecutive conference championships.
Included in his tenure at OSU were 18 40-win seasons. All 18 of those teams were ranked
nationally at the end of the season.
Twelve of his teams finished in Baseball America's top-10.
Ward coached 15 first-team All-Americans and a total of 58
(first, second and third teams).
Among players coached by Ward were Robin Ventura, 1988 Golden Spikes
Award winner and Baseball America's Player of the Decade for the 1980's, and
Pete Incaviglia, the NCAA's career home run leader and Baseball America's
Player of the Century. Ward helped
to develop Bryan Marquez as one of the best hitting shortstops in the nation as
he was named to six different All-American teams in 2009.
Before he coached at OSU, he served as head coach of Yavapai
Junior College in Prescott, Ariz. from 1971-77, where he led the school to national
championships in 1975 and 1977 and earned NJCAA Coach of the Year both
years. Yavapai went 240-83 under
Ward. He also served as an
assistant basketball coach there from 1969-75.
From 1963-69, Ward was the head baseball and basketball
coach at Collinsville (Okla.) High School, posting a 99-40 mark over six
seasons on the diamond. He was
also an assistant football coach there.
During the 1962-63 season, he served as a graduate assistant baseball
coach at NM State as well as the school's freshman basketball head coach.
Ward competed in both baseball and basketball at NM State
from 1960-62 and played two seasons of baseball under Presley Askew. During the 1960 season he led the team
in win-loss record as a pitcher and ERA.
He also played basketball under Askew and averaged 9.2 points and 5
rebounds in two seasons. Ward was
inducted to the New Mexico State University's Hall of Fame for his
accomplishments as an athlete.
Prior to playing for NM State, Ward played baseball and
basketball at Northeastern Oklahoma A&M. At Romona (Okla.) High School, Ward competed three years in
baseball, basketball and track.
Ward has produced a number of baseball instructional
videotapes that have been sold all around the world. At Oklahoma State, he was founder and director of the
Mid-America All-Star Baseball School in Stillwater. More than 1,000 amateur baseball players attend the camp
annually.
Ward was born Sept. 9, 1940 in Ramona, Okla. He graduated from Ramona High in 1958
and from New Mexico State in 1963.
He earned his master's degree from NM State in 1968. Ward has been married to the former
Catherine Gardner for 44 years.
Ward has three children, Rocky, Roger and Sherri.
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