Mike Stone | |
Current Title: | Head coach |
Birth Date: | 29 April 1955 |
Player Sport1: | Baseball |
Player Years2: | 1974 |
Player Team2: | Gulf Coast Cardinals |
Player Years3: | 1974–1976 |
Player Team3: | St. Petersburg Cardinals |
Player Years4: | 1976 |
Player Team4: | Arkansas Travelers |
Player Years5: | 1977 |
Player Team5: | St. Petersburg Cardinals |
Player Years6: | 1978 |
Player Team6: | Lodi Dodgers |
Player Sport7: | Clinton Dodgers |
Player Sport8: | Football |
Player Years9: | 1978–1981 |
Player Team9: | UMass |
Coach Years1: | 1983–1987 |
Coach Team1: | Vermont |
Coach Years2: | 1988–2017 |
Coach Team2: | UMass |
Overall Record: | 751–785–5 |
Championships: | A-10 tournament |
Awards: | A-10 Coach of the Year 1994, 1995, 1996 |
Mike Stone (born April 29, 1955) is an American college baseball coach, and last served as the head coach of the UMass Minutemen baseball team. He was named to that position prior to the 1988 season.[1] [2] [3] [4] Stone retired after the 2017 season.[5]
Stone played high school baseball at Taft School, and was drafted in the third round of the 1974 MLB Draft by the St. Louis Cardinals. He played four seasons in the Cardinals organization, primarily as a catcher, and reached Class-AA, and spent one season in the Los Angeles Dodgers organization.
After ending his baseball career, Stone played football for UMass while pursuing a degree in physical education.
Stone began coaching at Northfield Mount Hermon School, serving as head baseball coach for the 1982 season. He then earned a position as head coach at Vermont, where he remained for five seasons, succeeding Jack Leggett. In his time at Vermont, the Catamounts struggled but finished above .500 in his final season. Stone also earned a master's degree while at Vermont.
During his tenure at UMass, the Minutemen have won eight Atlantic 10 Conference regular season crowns, a pair of Atlantic 10 Conference baseball tournament titles, and seen 36 players sign professional contracts. Stone was named Atlantic 10 Conference Coach of the Year three times in a row from 1994 through 1996.
This table shows Stone's record as a college head coach.[6] [7]