Tim Chambers | |
Birth Date: | 27 January 1965 |
Birth Place: | Claremore, Oklahoma, U.S. |
Death Place: | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. |
Alma Mater: | Southern Utah State College |
Player Sport1: | Baseball |
Player Years2: | 1984 |
Player Team2: | Dixie JC |
Player Years3: | 1985 |
Player Team3: | Utah Tech JC |
Player Years4: | 1986 |
Player Team4: | Southern Utah State |
Player Positions: | Outfielder |
Coach Sport1: | Baseball |
Coach Years2: | 1991–1999 |
Coach Team2: | Bishop Gorman HS |
Coach Years3: | 2000–2010 |
Coach Team3: | Southern Nevada CC |
Coach Years4: | 2011–2015 |
Coach Team4: | UNLV |
Admin Years1: | 2003–2010 |
Admin Team1: | Southern Nevada CC |
Overall Record: | 157–132 |
Tournament Record: | NCAA: 1–2 |
Championships: | MW regular season (2014) |
Awards: | MW Coach of the Year (2014) |
Timothy Doyle Chambers (January 27, 1965 – October 27, 2019)[1] was an American college baseball coach. He was head coach of the UNLV Rebels baseball team from 2011 to 2015. He was named to that position prior to the 2011 season.[2] [3] [4]
Born in Claremore, Oklahoma, Chambers graduated from Pleasant Grove High School in Pleasant Grove, Utah.[5] He played at three colleges and earned all-conference honors at all three. These included Dixie State, where he was an All-American in 1984. In 1985, Chambers transferred to Utah Technical College,[6] then to Southern Utah, where he earned his degree in 1989. He began his coaching career in 1991 at Bishop Gorman High School in Las Vegas, where he remained until 1999. In his time with the Gaels, the team won six consecutive Sunset Division championships, and were the state runners up in 1997. Chambers was named NIAA Coach of the Year in 1992 and 1993. He also coached the Las Vegas Knights of American Legion Baseball, where he won three state championships and reached the 1998 American Legion World Series.
In 2000, Chambers was hired to coach the Southern Nevada Coyotes baseball team, an NJCAA squad in Las Vegas. As the first Coyotes coach to manage a game (first coach Roger Fairless resigned prior to the program's first competition due to health issues), Chambers built the program to a major power, including seven conference championships, the regional titles, two district championships and the 2003 NJCAA World Series title. In 2010, Chambers coached the Bryce Harper-led Coyotes to the NJCAA Semifinals.
In the summer of 2010, the Washington Nationals, who would later draft Harper first overall, courted Chambers to be a scout.[7] Instead, a month later Chambers was introduced as the head coach at UNLV, following Buddy Gouldsmith's resignation. In his three seasons, the Rebels have reached 30 wins twice and claimed wins over several ranked teams, including Stanford, TCU, UC Irvine, and Arizona, while entering the rankings in both 2011 and 2013 themselves. Chambers was fired by UNLV in December 2015 after being arrested for driving under the influence.[8]
Chambers died on October 27, 2019.[9]