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LCSC baseball program to
hold ring ceremony on Feb. 3
12-7-06
The
Lewis-Clark State College baseball program
will hold its ring ceremony for its 2006
Avista NAIA World Series national
championship team on Feb. 3 at 6 p.m. at the
LCSC Williams Conference Center.
Players
and coaches from last year’s squad will
receive their championship rings during the
event.
Also,
former Warriors Steve Reed and Steve Decker
will have their numbers retired during the
evening.
Tickets
for the event, which includes dinner, are
$15 apiece and can be purchased either at
the door or at the LCSC athletic office
inside the Activity Center.
The
Warriors posted a 47-8 record in 2006 to win
their 14th national championship.
The Warriors won the Series title with a 5-4
win over Cumberland University in 11 innings
at Lewiston’s Harris Field in June. That was
LCSC coach Ed Cheff’s 2001st
win.
Reed, a
right-handed pitcher, played for the
Warriors during 1985-88, while Decker was a
battery mate of Reed’s during the 1986-88
seasons when he played catcher at LCSC. Both
had outstanding 1988 seasons when Decker hit
.397 with 13 home runs and was the team’s
MVP, while Reed picked up two wins in the
1988 Series.
Reed was
signed by the San Francisco Giants as a free
agent on June 24, 1988, and made his major
league debut with the team in 1992, when he
posted a 1-0 record with a 2.30 ERA in 15
innings of relief. That season impressed the
Colorado Rockies, who made Reed its 30th
player selected in the expansion draft. He
led the majors in pitching appearances
during the 1994 season with 61.
Reed
pitched for the Rockies until 1998 when he
signed with San Francisco, but was later
traded to Cleveland. He was with the Indians
until 2001 when he was traded to Atlanta as
part of a deal for controversial closer John
Rocker. He signed a free-agent contract with
San Diego in 2002 but was soon traded to the
New York Mets. He finished the year with the
Mets, and then spent two more seasons with
Colorado. He signed with Baltimore in 2005,
but was eventually released that season at
the age of 40, the ninth oldest player in
the big leagues at that time.
During
his 14-year major league career, Reed
fashioned a 49-44 record with 18 saves. He
pitched 881 innings, had 630 strikeouts and
an ERA of 3.63.
Decker
was drafted in the 21st round of
the 1988 draft by San Francisco and
immediately signed with the team.
It took
Decker only three seasons to reach the major
league level as he made his MLB debut in
1990. He appeared in 15 games for the Giants
and went 16-of-54 at the plate for a .298
average. He also had three home runs and
eight RBI.
The
following season, he saw action in 79 games
and hit five home runs with 24 RBI. He also
played with the Giants in 1992 before he was
selected by Florida in the expansion draft.
He spent
most of 1993 and all of 1994 in the minors,
but played in 51 games in 1995 and hit .226.
The Giants signed him as a free agent in
1996 and he played in 57 games before his
contract was purchased in August by Colorado
and he saw action in another 10 games with
the Rockies that year.
After
the season, he was signed as a free agent
and spent time in the minor leagues with
Seattle, Pittsburgh and the New York Mets
before he made it back to the big leagues
with the Anaheim Angels in 1999. He played
catcher, first base and designated hitter
that season and saw action in 28 games. He
retired following the season.
During
his 10-year big league career, which also
featured some playing time at third base,
Decker hit .221 with 13 home runs and 72
RBI.
After
his playing career ended, Decker joined the
San Francisco Giants organization, first as
a hitting instructor. He is now the manager
of the Class A Salem-Keizer squad in the
short-season Northwest League where he has
won or tied for manager of the year honors
for two straight seasons. |