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Purdue Baseball Camps
Head Coach Doug Schreiber Since Doug Schreiber was named
Purdue's head baseball coach on May 29, 1998, the Boilermakers have
become a major force in the Big Ten Conference and have made big
strides on a national level.
In 2008, Purdue finished second in
the Big Ten regular season as the Boilermakers won a school-record 21
conference games. The Boilermakers also finished second at the Big Ten
Tournament, losing a close 3-2 game in the championship round.
This
was the third time in the past eight seasons that Schreiber has led his
Boilermakers to the brink of winning a Big Ten championship. In both
2005 and 2001, the Boilers finished the regular season in second place,
just one win shy of winning the conference title. Schreiber’s 2000
team finished the Big Ten season in third place, including a dominating
9-3 mark against the other top three teams in the conference.
Schreiber
believes in playing a challenging non-conference schedule each year
against some of the nation's elite baseball programs. During the past
nine years of the Schreiber era, Purdue has won games against #1 Rice,
#2 North Carolina, #6 Alabama, #16 East Carolina, #16 Missouri, #24
Wake Forest, #24 Notre Dame and national powers Georgia, Kentucky,
Tennessee, and Vanderbilt.
Two
of Schreiber's Purdue teams have been ranked in the top 25 in the
country. Baseball America ranked Purdue No. 25 in the nation after the
Boilermakers opened the 2001 season with upset wins over No. 1 Rice and
No. 24 Wake Forest while capturing the championship of the Coca-Cola
Classic, held in Houston, Texas. It was the baseball program's first
national ranking since 1993. Later that season, after posting a 13-game
winning streak, the Boilermakers were ranked No. 29 by Collegiate
Baseball. The 13-game streak was the nation's longest winning streak at
that point in the season.
The 2002 squad entered the season
ranked No. 24 in the country by the National Collegiate Baseball
Writers Association (NCBWA) and No. 27 by Collegiate Baseball. It was
the first time in school history that the baseball program started a
season nationally ranked.
Over the past three years, Purdue has
led the Big Ten in most players (10) selected in the Major League
Baseball Draft. Five Boilers were chosen in 2008, including
2nd-rounder Josh Lindblom (RHP) and 4th-rounder Ryne White (OF), which
tied the school mark for most players chosen in a single year.
Lindblom became the second highest player drafted under Coach
Schreiber, as Chadd Blasko (RHP) was a 1st-round pick of the Chicago
Cubs back in 2002.
Schreiber
owns a 285-278 overall record and a 153-144 Big Ten mark. His overall
wins rank second in Purdue history, while his conference victories
stand alone in first. Schreiber is also the first Boilermaker head
baseball coach to have both a winning overall and conference record
since B.P. Pattison led the Boilers from 1915-1916.
Prior
to becoming the head coach at Purdue, Schreiber spent four seasons
(1995-98) as the top assistant coach and recruiting coordinator under
Pat Murphy at Arizona State University. Schreiber helped guide Arizona
State to the College World Series and the national championship game in
1998. A year earlier, the Sun Devils finished as regional runners-up to
Miami, and were two outs away from going to the College World Series.
Schreiber's recruiting classes at ASU were ranked No. 1 in 1995 and No.
3 in 1996, and were nationally ranked in 1997 and 1998, as well.
Before
going to ASU, Schreiber served as an assistant coach for Murphy at the
University of Notre Dame in 1994. That season, the Fighting Irish
finished 46-16 and ended the season just two wins shy of Omaha,
finishing as regional runners-up to Auburn.
Schreiber began his
coaching career as a graduate assistant under Pat Quinn at Ball State
University for two seasons (1991-92) and spent one year (1993) as an
assistant at Butler University.
A native of LaPorte, Ind.,
Schreiber was a four-year starter (1983-86) at second base for the
Boilermakers. During his career, Purdue posted a 120-112-2 mark and
established a school-record 37 victories his senior season when he was
a second-team All-Big Ten selection. Schreiber still ranks among
Purdue's career leaders in a variety of categories, including top-six
ranking in four categories. Schreiber ranks first all-time in walks
(132), fourth in runs scored (159), tied for third in games played
(220) and tied for sixth in triples (9). He earned his bachelor of arts
degree in communications and has completed some course work towards a
master's in education.
Schreiber played for the Adray Sound of
the Detroit Adray Summer League in 1983, where he started in the
infield alongside future Major Leaguers Barry Larkin (shortstop) and
Jim Leyritz (third base). Schreiber also played for the Cotuit
Kettleers of the prestigious Cape Cod League, helping the team win the
league championship in the summer of 1985.
Born Aug. 25, 1963,
Schreiber is the son of legendary LaPorte High School baseball coach
Ken Schreiber, a three-time National Prep Coach of the Year who retired
in 1998. The elder Schreiber guided LaPorte to an Indiana-record seven
state championships, including the 1982 season, when Doug was a senior
co-captain and starting shortstop. Schreiber was also named the
recipient of the prestigious L.V. Phillips Mental Attitude Award
presented by the IHSAA following his team's state championship run.
Schreiber and his wife, the former Sarah Piper, reside in Lafayette.

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