词条 | Pat Murphy (baseball coach) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
|name=Pat Murphy |image=Pat Murphy on May 20, 2013.jpg |image_size=240px |caption=Murphy as manager for the Tucson Padres, triple-A affiliates of the San Diego Padres, in {{By|2013}} |team=Milwaukee Brewers |number=59 |bats=Right |throws=Right |position=Bench coach / Manager |birth_date = {{birth date and age|1958|11|28}} |birth_place = Syracuse, New York |statleague = MLB |stat1label=Games managed |stat1value=96 |stat2label=Win–loss record |stat2value=42–54 |stat3label=Winning percentage |stat3value={{Winning percentage|42|54}} |teams=As coach
}} Patrick T. Murphy (born November 28, 1958) is an American baseball coach and manager. He is currently the bench coach for the Milwaukee Brewers of Major League Baseball. He previously served as the interim manager of the San Diego Padres and as the head coach for the college baseball teams representing Arizona State University and the University of Notre Dame. Playing careerMurphy played baseball at Florida Atlantic University where he played catcher and infield and pitched. He was honored on FAU's 20th Anniversary Team as a pitcher and utility player and in 2008 was inducted into the school's Baseball Hall of Fame. Murphy signed a professional baseball contract with the San Francisco Giants in 1982 and played a total of four years in the minor leagues for the Giants, the San Diego Padres and two independent clubs before beginning his coaching career. Coaching careerNotre Dame (1988–1994)Murphy was hired by the University of Notre Dame as the head coach of the Notre Dame Fighting Irish baseball team on July 11, 1987.[1] Murphy guided the Fighting Irish to a 318–116–1 (.732) record in South Bend, including consecutive trips to NCAA regional finals in 1992, 1993 and 1994. Arizona State University (1995–2009)Murphy was hired by Arizona State University as the head coach of the Arizona State Sun Devils baseball team in 1995. The Sun Devils won the Pac-10 Conference championship in 2000 and consecutive Pac-10 championships in 2007, 2008 and 2009. Twice in that same decade, Murphy had teams finish in the Top 3 in the country; a feat matched by only ten other schools. Murphy's ASU teams were consistently present in the national Top 25, including a streak of 100 consecutive weeks in the polls that lasted from 2000 until the middle of 2005. Murphy led the Sun Devils to the postseason for nine straight seasons and 11 of 12. His teams set an NCAA record of not being shut out in 506 consecutive games between 1995 and 2004, shattering the previous streak of 349.[2] Murphy is the youngest collegiate coach to reach 500 career victories.{{when|date=July 2012}}{{citation needed|date=July 2012}} In 1998, he won Baseball America{{'}}s Coach of the Year award and was Pac-10 Coach of the Year four times (2000, 2007, 2008 and 2009). He led ASU to the College World Series four times (1998, 2005, 2007, 2009). On November 20, 2009; Murphy resigned while the Arizona State baseball program was under investigation. It was initially reported that the resignation was his own decision. However, in December 2009, The Arizona Republic reported that on the day of his resignation, Murphy had been given an ultimatum—resign or be fired.[3] The NCAA's investigation found Murphy innocent of violations regarding student-athlete employment and recruiting, reprimanding him solely for treating investigators with a "cavalier attitude". The Arizona State Athletics Department was faulted for Lack of Institutional Control, however, subsequently resulting in the baseball program being sanctioned and banned from postseason play in the 2012 season, as the ASU Athletic Department was a repeat offender.[4] Murphy's career record at ASU was 629–284–1. San Diego Padres (2010–2015)In February 2010, Murphy was hired by the San Diego Padres as Special Assistant to Baseball Operations.[5] Murphy skippered the Padres' Northwest League affiliate, the Eugene Emeralds, as their manager for the 2011 and 2012 seasons, as the Emeralds had consecutive league-best overall season records.[6] While in Eugene, Coach Murphy compiled a 93–47 record (.664 pct). Murphy managed the Tucson Padres of the Class AAA Pacific Coast League (PCL) in 2013 and the El Paso Chihuahuas of the PCL in 2014 and 2015. In 2015, the Milwaukee Brewers wanted to hire Murphy as a major league coach on Craig Counsell's coaching staff; Murphy coached Counsell at Notre Dame. The Padres refused to allow him to join the Brewers, even though it would constitute a promotion.[7] On June 16, 2015, Murphy was appointed the interim manager of the San Diego Padres after then-manager Bud Black was fired.[8] Immediately after the 2015 season, the Padres announced that Murphy would not return as manager.[9] Milwaukee Brewers (2015 to present)In late October 2015, Murphy was hired as bench coach for the Milwaukee Brewers as part of manager Craig Counsell's makeover of the team's coaching staff. Managerial recordMajor League Baseball{{updated|October 5, 2015}}
College coaching record{{CBB Yearly Record Start | type=coach | conference= | postseason= | poll=no }}{{CBB Yearly Record Subhead||name=Notre Dame Fighting Irish |startyear=1988 |conference=Midwestern Collegiate Conference |endyear=1994 |}}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = division | season = 1988 | name = Notre Dame | overall = 39–22 | conference = 11–3 | confstanding = 1st (North) | postseason = }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = conference tournament | season = 1989 | name = Notre Dame | overall = 48–19–1 | conference = 21–9 | confstanding = 2nd (North) | postseason = NCAA Regional }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = division | season = 1990 | name = Notre Dame | overall = 46–12 | conference = 25–3 | confstanding = 1st (North) | postseason = }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = | season = 1991 | name = Notre Dame | overall = 45–16 | conference = 18–5 | confstanding = 2nd | postseason = }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = confboth | season = 1992 | name = Notre Dame | overall = 48–15 | conference = 18–2 | confstanding = 1st | postseason = NCAA Regional }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = confboth | season = 1993 | name = Notre Dame | overall = 46–16 | conference = 23–4 | confstanding = 1st | postseason = NCAA Regional }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = confboth | season = 1994 | name = Notre Dame | overall = 46–16 | conference = 24–4 | confstanding = 1st | postseason = NCAA Regional }}{{CBB Yearly Record Subtotal | name = Notre Dame | overall = 318–116–1 | confrecord = 140–30 }}{{CBB Yearly Record Subhead| | name = Arizona State Sun Devils | startyear = 1995 | conference = Pac-10 Conference | endyear = 2009 }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = | season = 1995 | name = Arizona State | overall = 34–21 | conference = 13–17 | confstanding = 4th (South) | postseason = }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = | season = 1996 | name = Arizona State | overall = 35–21 | conference = 14–16 | confstanding = 4th (South) | postseason = }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = | season = 1997 | name = Arizona State | overall = 39–22 | conference = 16–14 | confstanding = 4th (South) | postseason = NCAA Regional }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = | season = 1998 | name = Arizona State | overall = 41–23 | conference = 18–11 | confstanding = 3rd (South) | postseason = College World Series Runner-up }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = | season = 1999 | name = Arizona State | overall = 39–21 | conference = 12–12 | confstanding = 5th | postseason = }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = conference | season = 2000 | name = Arizona State | overall = 44–15 | conference = 17–7 | confstanding = T–1st | postseason = NCAA Regional }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = | season = 2001 | name = Arizona State | overall = 37–20–1 | conference = 14–10 | confstanding = T–3rd | postseason = NCAA Regional }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = | season = 2002 | name = Arizona State | overall = 37–21 | conference = 15–9 | confstanding = T–3rd | postseason = NCAA Regional }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = | season = 2003 | name = Arizona State | overall = 53–12 | conference = 16–8 | confstanding = 2nd | postseason = NCAA Super Regional }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = | season = 2004 | name = Arizona State | overall = 41–18 | conference = 13–11 | confstanding = 4th | postseason = NCAA Regional }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = | season = 2005 | name = Arizona State | overall = 42–25 | conference = 15–9 | confstanding = T–3rd | postseason = College World Series }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = | season = 2006 | name = Arizona State | overall = 37–21 | conference = 14–10 | confstanding = 2nd | postseason = NCAA Regional }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = conference | season = 2007 | name = Arizona State | overall = 49–15 | conference = 19–5 | confstanding = 1st | postseason = College World Series }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = conference | season = 2008 | name = Arizona State | overall = 49–13 | conference = 16–8 | confstanding = 1st | postseason = NCAA Super Regional }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = conference | season = 2009 | name = Arizona State | overall = 51–14 | conference = 21–6 | confstanding = 1st | postseason = College World Series }}{{CBB Yearly Record Subtotal | name = Arizona State | overall = 629–284–1 | confrecord = 233–153 }}{{CBB Yearly Record End | overall = 947–400–2 }} References1. ^{{cite web|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=buoPAAAAIBAJ&sjid=pY0DAAAAIBAJ&pg=5224,3030765|title=Boca Raton News - Google News Archive Search|work=google.com|accessdate=June 16, 2015}} 2. ^Policar, R. (2008). Devils. New York, NY: Professional Sports Publications. 3. ^ASU baseball coach Pat Murphy was forced to resign or be fired 4. ^{{cite web|last=Stires|first=Sean|title=NCAA Upholds Arizona State Baseball Sanctions|url=http://collegebaseball360.com/2011/11/05/ncaa-upholds-arizona-state-baseball-sanctions/|work=CollegeBaseball360.com|accessdate=July 3, 2012|archiveurl=https://www.webcitation.org/68ststuDJ?url=http://collegebaseball360.com/2011/11/05/ncaa-upholds-arizona-state-baseball-sanctions/|archivedate=July 3, 2012|date=November 5, 2011|deadurl=yes|df=mdy-all}} 5. ^Fired ASU coach Murphy hired by Padres at signonsandiego.com 6. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.milb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20120901&content_id=37701136&vkey=news_t461&fext=.jsp&sid=t461/|title=Emeralds Drop Season Finale - MiLB.com News|work=MiLB.com|accessdate=June 16, 2015}} 7. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.foxsports.com/mlb/story/san-diego-padres-pat-murphy-triple-a-manager-bud-black-aj-preller-milwaukee-brewers-051915|title=San Diego's handling of Triple-A skipper Murphy highly unusual|author=Fox Sports|work=FOX Sports|accessdate=June 16, 2015}} 8. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.statepress.com/article/2015/06/former-asu-baseball-coach-pat-murphy-to-interview-for-san-diego-padres-managerial-position|title=Former ASU baseball coach Pat Murphy named Padres interim manager|work=statepress.com|accessdate=June 16, 2015}} 9. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/news/2015/oct/04/padres-fire-pat-murphy-interim-manager/|title=Padres fire Murphy as interim manager|author=Dennis Lin|work=San Diego Union Tribune|accessdate=October 6, 2015}} 10. ^{{cite web|title=Pat Murphy|url=https://www.baseball-reference.com/managers/murphpa99.shtml|website=Baseball Reference|publisher=Sports Reference LLC|accessdate=18 September 2015}} External links{{Portal|Biography}}
10 : 1958 births|Living people|Arizona State Sun Devils baseball coaches|Eugene Emeralds managers|Notre Dame Fighting Irish baseball coaches|Milwaukee Brewers coaches|Salem Redbirds players|Tri-Cities Triplets players|Florida Atlantic Owls baseball players|San Diego Padres managers |
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