2013 Warrior Baseball Coaches


 

Head Coach Jeremiah Robbins


Jeremiah Robbins is the man to lead the Lewis-Clark State College baseball team into its next era.

Robbins was hired on June 22, 2012, to replace Warrior athletic director Gary Picone, who guided the team for two seasons after the retirement of legendary coach Ed Cheff in September 2010.

Robbins comes to the Warriors after seven seasons as head coach with Western Oregon. He compiled a 252-109 record during his time with the Wolves, including a 170-34 record in the Great Northwest Athletic Conference (NCAA D-II).

“Jeremiah Robbins is exactly the kind of person the LC program needs going forward,” said Picone at Robbins’ introductory news conference. “He has established a strong reputation for his coaching ability in the college baseball community, and he has a proven record of excellent leadership.”

Robbins takes the helm of one of the premier teams in the NAIA and one of the most successful programs in all of college baseball. In the last 37 years, the Warriors have built a record of 1,785-461 while claiming 16 national championships.

“I’m truly honored, and I’d like to thank President Fernandez and Gary Picone for putting their trust in me to lead this program,” said Robbins. “Obviously, when you’re in the Northwest and you’re a young coach coming up you try to model things after Lewis-Clark State. It is one of the top programs not only in the Northwest but in the United States, and to be selected as the leader of the program is the highest honor I could ever achieve. I know it’s a cliché, but it’s definitely a dream come true.”

Robbins led the Wolves to seven straight GNAC titles, and received seven conference Coach of the Year awards in the process. In 2006 and 2012, he was named the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association West Region Coach of the Year.

“We are indeed fortunate for someone as experienced and talented as Jeremiah Robbins to serve as LCSC head baseball coach,” Fernandez said. “We look forward to Coach Robbins continuing the Warrior tradition of excellence and we welcome him and his family to Lewiston and Lewis-Clark State College.”

Robbins' 2012 squad won the school's 12th consecutive conference title with a 29-3 record in the GNAC, and earned their fifth bid to the NCAA West regional tournament under Robbins' guidance. In 2006, his first season at the helm, the Wolves won the GNAC title and were the No. 1 seed and host of the NCAA Division II West Region Tournament.

Under Robbins' leadership Western Oregon had five student-athletes drafted in the Major League Baseball Amateur Draft. The Wolves also took home the last three GNAC Player of the Year honors and the last four Pitcher of the Year awards.

Robbins said one of the things that interests him most about coaching at LCSC is the support the program receives from the community.

“We’ve been to Lewiston numerous times over the last seven years and all you see is LC baseball everywhere. There’s truly a passion for the game there, and a passion to do it right.”

A native of Winston, Ore., Robbins played baseball at Douglas High School before playing two seasons at College of the Redwoods and one at Western Oregon. He earned all-conference honors as a catcher with the Wolves in 1998.

Prior to coaching at Western Oregon he served two seasons as head coach at Douglas where his teams won back-to-back Far West League championships and he was honored with two league Coach of the Year titles.

Robbins, who earned a Bachelor’s degree from Eastern Oregon University, is joined in Lewiston by his wife, Mareena, and his sons, Luke and Cal.


 

Assistant Coach Allen Balmer

A former Avista NAIA World Series MVP and a Lewiston native, Allen Balmer is entering his fourth season as an assistant coach at Lewis-Clark State College. He works primarily with position players and is 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 two children, Brody and Avery Marie.

 

 

Assistant Coach Bill Stevenson

Bill Stevenson played for Lewis-Clark State as a catcher in 1984-1985 and was a part of the program’s first two national championship titles. In 1985, he hit .376 with 13 home runs and 50 runs batted in to earn NAIA All-American honors. He was selected in the 25th round of the 1985 draft by the San Diego Padres and played five seasons in the Minor Leagues. He works primarily with LCSC’s catchers. Stevenson and his wife, Lisa, reside in Lewiston and have three children.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Assistant Coach Justin Fuller

Justin Fuller enters his second season as a coach with the Warriors. A former All-American second baseman at LCSC, Fuller works primarily with infielders and hitters. Fuller, a middle infielder and four-year starter from 2003-2006, had a .349 career batting average with the Warriors. The native of Juneau, Alaska, was a part of two NAIA World Series titles, one as a freshman and one as a senior. He was selected by the Los Angeles Dodgers in the 11th round of the 2006 draft. He spent five years in the Minor Leagues, three with the Dodgers and two with the White Sox. Fuller was traded to the White Sox in 2009 as part of the deal that sent Jim Thome from Chicago to Los Angeles.

 

 

 

 

 

Assistant Coach Mike Madrid

Mike Madrid is back on the Warrior coaching staff where he will again work primarily with hitters and infielders. Madrid, who played for the Warriors from 2001-02 and served as a coach from 2006-07, has been a part of three Lewis-Clark State national titles, one as a player in 2000, and two during his previous coaching stint. During his senior year, he earned the team's Gold Glove Award in and also hit .328 with 10 homeruns to help LCSC to its 12th World Series title. He then signed a free-agent contract with the Pittsburgh Pirates and in 2003 helped a Pirates' minor league team, the Williamsport Crosscutters, capture the New York Penn League championship and made the all-star team. From 2004-06, he played for an independent team in the Frontier League, the River City Rascals, and compiled three-year totals of 47 home runs, 215 RBI, and a .305 batting average. In 2008, he was inducted into the River City All-Diamond Team. From 2007-10, Madrid served as the head coach at Kendrick High School. He earned a bachelors degree in Kinesiology from LCSC.

 

 


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