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Spanky McFarland
American baseball coach

Spanky McFarland

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
American baseball coach
A.K.A.
Joe McFarland
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
New Carlisle, Clark County, Ohio, USA
Age
70 years
Education
Hillsdale College
Tecumseh High School
Sports Teams
Hillsdale Chargers football
Hillsdale Chargers baseball
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Joe "Spanky" McFarland (born May 24, 1954) is an American former college baseball coach who was the head coach of Northern Illinois (1991–1997) and James Madison (1998–2015).Under him, JMU appeared in three NCAA Tournaments.A 1976 graduate of Hillsdale College, McFarland served as an assistant coach at several schools in the late 1970s and 1980s.

Playing career

A native of New Carlisle, Ohio, McFarland attended Tecumseh High School, where he played football, basketball, and baseball. He then played football and baseball at Michigan's Hillsdale College. After graduating in spring 1976, he spent training camp with the Canadian Football League's Calgary Stampeders before starting his coaching career the following year.

Coaching career

Junior college and assistant coaching

McFarland's first coaching position was an assistant job at Hillsdale in 1977.He next served as the head coach at Kellogg Community College, also in Michigan, from 1979 to 1980.His overall record at Kellogg was 33-13.McFarland then spent a decade as an assistant in the southeast, coaching at Appalachian State (1981), Florida State (1982), Georgia Tech (1983–1985), and South Florida (1986–1990).

Northern Illinois

McFarland's first Division I head coaching job came at Northern Illinois (NIU) from 1991 to 1997. There, McFarland revived a program that had been cut in the early 1980s. He had a 146-211 record in seven seasons.

After playing 1991 as an independent, NIU played in the Mid-Continent Conference from 1992 to 1994.The team finished in the bottom three of the conference in all three seasons, with its highest win total coming in 1994 (23-30).From 1995 to 1997, it played in the Horizon League and qualified for the conference tournament in each season.In 1995, it had its first above-.500 season under McFarland (29-27), finished second in the West Division, and placed third in the Horizon Tournament.The Huskies' Jesse Richardson was named the Horizon Player of the Year.In 1996, it won the Horizon Tournament but lost to Northeastern Illinois in the NCAA Tournament play-in game.

At NIU, four of McFarland's players were selected in the MLB Draft, including 7th-round selection Chris Burt in 1994. Another of his players, Brian Schmack, went undrafted but later pitched in Major League Baseball for the Detroit Tigers.

James Madison

After the 1997 season, McFarland left Northern Illinois to become the head coach at James Madison.He replaced Kevin Anderson, who had resigned following allegations that he overstated spending on team meals.

The Dukes' first winning season under McFarland came in 2000, his third season, when they went 37-22. After another 30-win season in 2001, the Dukes qualified for the NCAA Tournament in 2002. After a 41-12 regular season in which they won the CAA's American Division and McFarland was named CAA Coach of the Year, they went 2-2 in the CAA Tournament. After receiving an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as the third seed in the Columbia Regional, they went 1-2, getting a win against VCU in an elimination game.

After missing the CAA Tournament in 2004 and 2005, the Dukes went 38-21 in 2006 and won the CAA regular season title.They finished third in the CAA Tournament, however, and did not receive an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament.

McFarland's best four-year stretch at James Madison came from 2008 to 2011. In this stretch, the Dukes had three 30-win seasons and a 40-win season. They won two CAA regular season titles (2010 and 2011) and appeared in two NCAA Tournaments (2008 and 2011).In 2008, at the Raleigh Regional, the Dukes again went 1-2 with a win in the 0-1 game.In 2010, the team won the regular season title but lost in the tournament; McFarland was named the CAA's Co-Coach of the Year.In 2011, they reached the Chapel Hill Regional final in their deepest postseason run under McFarland.

James Madison had losing records in 2012, 2013, and 2014, finishing no higher than 6th in the CAA.

At James Madison, McFarland has had many major award winners and draftees. CAA award winners include Players of the Year Eddie Kim (2002 and 2003), Kellen Kulbacki (2006), and Jake Lowery (2011). Kulbacki was named a First-Team All-American in both 2006 and 2007.Between 1998 and 2014, 28 of his players have been selected in the Major League Baseball Draft. Rich Thompson, Dan Meyer, and Ryan Reid went on to appear in Major League Baseball.

In the fall of 2014, McFarland announced that he would retire after the 2015 season. That year, the Dukes finished 18-33 and missed the CAA Tournament.

Personal life

McFarland's son, Ty, played for him at James Madison from 2011 to 2014. He was a 10th-round selection of the New York Yankees in the 2014 Major League Baseball Draft.

In 1990, McFarland wrote a book titled Coaching Pitchers. It was re-published in 2003.

Head coaching record

Junior college

SeasonTeamOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
Kellogg Community College
1979Kellogg CC
1980Kellogg CC
Kellogg CC:33–13
Total:33–13

College

Below is a table of McFarland's records as a collegiate head baseball coach.

SeasonTeamOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
Northern Illinois Huskies (NCAA Division I independent)
1991Northern Illinois11–25
Northern Illinois Huskies (Mid–Continent Conference)
1992Northern Illinois18–366–165th
1993Northern Illinois16–34–16–137th
1994Northern Illinois23–3010–147th
Northern Illinois Huskies (Horizon League)
1995Northern Illinois29–279–72ndHorizon Tournament
1996Northern Illinois27–3012–10T–3rdNCAA Play-in Game
1997Northern Illinois22–2912–12T–4thHorizon Tournament
Northern Illinois:146–21155–72
James Madison Dukes (Colonial Athletic Association)
1998James Madison27–2911–83rdCAA Tournament
1999James Madison22–35–16–158thCAA Tournament
2000James Madison37–2212–94thCAA Tournament
2001James Madison36–2310–115thCAA Tournament
2002James Madison44–169–31stNCAA Regional
2003James Madison29–2713–72ndCAA Tournament
2004James Madison28–268–167th
2005James Madison20–358–168th
2006James Madison38–2122–81stCAA Tournament
2007James Madison22–3111–179th
2008James Madison39–1920–92ndNCAA Regional
2009James Madison30–2412–117th
2010James Madison30–2318–61stCAA Tournament
2011James Madison42–1921–91stNCAA Regional
2012James Madison16–35–210–2010th
2013James Madison25–3011–158thCAA Tournament
2014James Madison17–368–126thCAA Tournament
2015James Madison18–336–18T–8th
James Madison:521–473–4216–210
Total:667–684–4

           
           
           
     

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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