Lewis-Clark State College - Warrior Baseball

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Baseball Coaches

 

Head Coach Ed Cheff

Year

Wins

Losses

Winning Percentage

Ties

1977

48

13

78.69%

0

1978

51

11

82.26%

0

1979

38

15

71.70%

0

1980

48

12

80.00%

0

1981

40

14

74.07%

0

1982

55

15

78.57%

0

1983

69

7

90.79%

0

1984

51

13

79.69%

0

1985

51

20

71.83%

0

1986

55

11

83.33%

0

1987

55

10

84.62%

0

1988

45

20

69.23%

0

1989

41

24

63.08%

0

1990

52

14

78.79%

0

1991

48

7

87.27%

0

1992

55

10

84.62%

0

1993

47

16

74.60%

0

1994

51

17

75.00%

1

1995

57

16

78.08%

0

1996

53

11

82.81%

0

1997

46

10

82.14%

1

1998

40

16

71.43%

0

1999

57

14

80.03%

0

2000

59

12

83.10%

0

2001

54

14

79.41%

0

2002

41

16

71.92%

0

2003

48

13

78.69%

0

2004

52

10

83.87 %

0

2005

47

9

83.92%

0

2006

47

8

85.45%

0

2007

58

5

92.06%

0

2008

58

7

89.23%

0

TOTALS

1,617

410

79.77%

2

Bold = Won Championship

Coach Ed Cheff enters his 33rd season at Lewis-Clark State College. He has built one of the most impressive collegiate athletic teams in the nation at any level, as the Warriors have won 16 national titles in the past 25 years.
 

From 1982 to 1992 the Warriors played in 11 consecutive National Championship games and won eight—a feat unequalled by a collegiate team at any level in any sport. Five of these titles were earned in the 1980’s, five more in the 1990’s, and six in the new millennium, including the last three. The Warriors’ overall win-loss record under Cheff, entering the 2008 season, is a remarkable 1,617 wins and 410 losses.

 

More than 100 of Cheff’s former Warrior players have gone on to play professional baseball and several have played in the major leagues. His teams at Lewis-Clark State College have been consistently recognized by peers and professional scouts as being well-prepared and aggressive.

 

Cheff has not only built successful collegiate baseball teams but has also worked to instill a sense of pride and work ethic in each Warrior that has come through his program. Warrior Baseball is valued by the local community for its dedication to active involvement with local events, fundraisers, and volunteer programs. The impact of the program is noteworthy both on and off the field.

 

Coach Cheff has been named NAIA Coach of the Year eight times and often addresses clinics outside of the Lewis-Clark Valley. He has addressed the American Baseball Coaches Association (ABCA) on six occasions and was inducted into the NAIA Hall of Fame in 1994 and the ABCA Hall of Fame in 2006.

 

In 2009, Cheff was named the winner of the ABCA's 2009 Lefty Gomez Award for his lifetime contributions to amateur baseball.

 

Away from Lewis-Clark State College’s Harris Field Cheff has coached the Alaska League’s Anchorage Bucs and Fairbanks Gold Panners.  Cheff also coached Team USA in 1994 as its hitting and third base coach.

 

On May 11, 1996, Cheff captured his 1,000th career victory with a doubleheader sweep over Central Washington, becoming only the third coach in NAIA baseball history to win 1,000 games. He became only the fourth coach at any level to win 1,500 games during the 2006 NAIA World Series.

 

His win total is the most accumulated by any coach at the NAIA level and is fourth overall on the all-division list, trailing only University of St. Francis coach Gordie Gillespie (1,783) Texas coach Augie Garrido (1,668) and Wichita State coach Gene Stephenson (1,653)

 

 

Coach Cheff's stats at the NAIA World Series

Appearances: 26 (1978-80, 82-92, 95-96, 99-08)
Note: Warriors also appeared in 1976 under coach Ramon Hooker

Overall Record: 116-31 (.789, best % by any team with more than 5 games)
Note: the record above includes the Warriors' 3-2 mark under Hooker in 1976

Championships: 16 (1984, 85, 87, 88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 96, 99, 00, 02, 03, 06, 07, 08)

Finishes:        1st: 16               2nd: 5               3rd: 3               4th: 1

Other Cheff Facts:

Coach of the Year Titles: 8 (1983, 87, 91,92, 96, 99, 02)

Inducted into NAIA Hall of Fame in 1994

Inducted into America Baseball Coaches Association Hall of Fame in 2006

Coached on the 1991 and 1994 USA National Team staff and 1994 World Championship staff

 


 

Gus Knickrehm – Assistant coach

Gus Knickrehm enters his third year as the pitching coach after serving in various other assistant coach capacities down through his 12-year coaching career at LCSC. Besides coaching, Knickrehm also had a successful career as a pitcher at LCSC. During his senior year, he was a pitcher on the 1987 national championship team, which went undefeated in the Series. During that season, Knickrehm averaged one strikeout per inning pitched. After his playing career, Knickrehm joined the Warrior coaching staff for six seasons, working with the pitchers. He then left to work for a local business, but rejoined the Warrior staff in 2003. In all, Knickrehm has been a part of 10 national titles. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Roberto Saenz  – Assistant coach

Roberto is in his second year as a Warrior assistant coach. He previously spent the summer of 2007 as defensive and hitting coach for the Green Bay Bullfrogs of the Northwoods League. Also in 2007, he was a graduate assistant at Seton Hill University in Greensburg, Penn. Roberto spent two years starting in the outfield at Cerro Coso Community College in Ridgecrest, Calif., and graduated from there in 2002. He then started two seasons at the University of St. Mary, an NAIA school in Leavenworth, Kan., and graduated from there in 2005 with a degree in Business Administration. He earned a Master’s in Business Administration in 2007 from Seton Hill.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Allen Balmer – Assistant Coach

A former Avista NAIA World Series MVP and a Lewiston native, Allen Balmer is entering his first season as an assistant coach at Lewis-Clark State College. He will work primarily with position players and will be instrumental in both infielder and hitter instruction. Balmer played four seasons with the Warriors during 2002-06 and enjoyed much success. He started all four seasons at third base and helped the Warriors capture two national titles, including the championship in the 50th annual Avista NAIA World Series at Lewiston during his senior year in 2006. He earned the tournament’s MVP award after smacking 12 hits, scoring six runs, and driving in seven during a five-game stretch. Overall at LCSC, Allen recorded 245 hits, established a batting average of .341, and averaged less than 12 errors a season. During his senior year, he hit .377 with a team-leading seven home runs during the regular season. Balmer is a second generation Warrior baseball player as well. His father, Gary, who also works at LCSC, was a standout for the Warriors in the early 1980s. Balmer and his wife, former LCSC volleyball player Marie (Lauder) Balmer, have one child, Brody, and are expecting a second child, Avery Marie, in April of 2009.

 

Seth McCauley – Assistant Coach

Seth McCauley returns for his second season as an assistant coach with the Warriors, and will again work with catchers and assist pitching coach Gus Knickrehm with pitchers. A former catcher himself, McCauley played for the Warriors in 2003 and 2004 and was a part of two Avista NAIA World Series championship teams.  During his senior year in 2004, he hit .333 with five home runs and 17 RBI in 72 at-bats. During the summer of 2004 he played for the Kirkland Kodiaks, and then signed with the Padres the following spring. With the Padres he advanced to triple-A before injuring his elbow and having to undergo Tommy John surgery. McCauley, a native of Three Forks, Mont., married Kim Wegner on Aug. 8, 2008, and will finish his Kinesiology degree in Sports Administration in the spring of 2009.   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Isaac Simmons Assistant Coach

After spending a few seasons playing for the Warriors, Isaac Simmons now enters his first season as a coach. Originally from Santa Maria, Calif. and Cabrillo High School, Simmons joined the Warriors in 2005 as a freshman infielder. In 2007, Simmons played in 29 games for the Warriors and hit .367. As a coach, Simmons will spend most of his time working with middle-infielders although he will also assist Coach Saenz with the outfielders. Simmons will graduate with a degree in Sports Administration and Coaching in the spring of 2009, and plans to pursue a job as a scout for the Cincinnati Reds organization. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bruce Madsen – strength and conditioning coach
A certified strength and conditioning specialist, Bruce Madsen has served as the strength and conditioning coach for the LCSC baseball team since 2001 and has made a tremendous impact on the performance of Warrior baseball players. Madsen also founded and runs High Tech Sports Therapy Associates Inc., a sports medicine consulting business that includes such clients as Boeing, Intel, and Nike.










 

 

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