Aug. 6, 2004
1974 UNC Baseball Team
Front Row (L-R): Mark Aasen, Greg Pilkington, Greg Meyer,
Dave Schiessler, Ron Holmes, Steve Gjertsen, Tom Runnells, Rick
Kent.
Second Row: Asst. Coach Rich McMahan, Joe Strain,
Mike Coy, Jeff Simpson, Bob DeMeo, Denny Leonida, Jeff Cheek, Paul
Gradishar, Asst. Coach Tom Wheeler.
Back Row: Head Coach Tom Petroff, Mike McNeill,
Larry Nelson, Rick Thoren, Greg Cook, Keith Bailey, John Gabbert.
The 1974 Northern Colorado baseball team was the 10th Bears'
squad to advance to the College World Series, doing so with an
exciting two-game sweep of favored Arizona at Jackson Field. Coach
Tom Petroff's Bears compiled a record of 32-13 during the season
and finished the year ranked No. 5 nationally.
Along the way they claimed the Great Plains Athletic Conference
(GPAC) title. The Bears split the first 10 games of the season and
had only a 14-10 record after 24 games before winning 17 of 18
games heading into the College World Series.
UNC hosted the NCAA District 7 Playoffs at Jackson Field,
playing Gonzaga in the opening round. The Bears beat the Bulldogs
6-3 in the opener before Gonzaga shutout UNC 12-0 to force a final
game. But Northern Colorado would not be denied and eliminated
Gonzaga with a 6-2 victory.
That brought heavily favored and No. 1 ranked Arizona to Greeley
for the right to play in the College World Series. The Wildcats
entered the series with a 58-4 overall record but encountered the
sizzling Bears and a crowd of over 2,000 at Jackson Field. In the
opener, the Bears never trailed and freshman Keith Bailey pitched
like a senior, pitching into the ninth inning against Arizona.
Senior Greg Cook came into the game with one out and two on base
before getting Ron Hassey to hit a ground ball that shortstop Joe
Strain turned into a 6-3 game-winning double play, as UNC won 6-5.
A day later it was another freshman, Rick Thoren, throwing well
as he pitched a complete game, allowing five hits and only two runs
and pushing the Bears to a 6-2 victory in front of a crowd of
3,000. Arizona led 1-0 after the first inning but the Bears scored
twice in the bottom of the frame on a two-run single by
All-American catcher Bob DeMeo and UNC never looked back.
In Omaha, the bears lost to Oklahoma 10-1 in the opening game of
the CWS before bouncing back to beat Harvard 4-2 behind a complete
game, four-hitter from Thoren. But the season ended two days later
when Southern Illinois bested the Bears 5-3.
DeMeo led the team in hitting with a .404 batting average; four
other Bears hit over .300 for the season (Ron Holmes - .347, Jeff
Cheek - .338; Strain - .338; Dennis Leonida - .309); the pitching
staff was led by Bailey (10-2, 3.63 ERA) and Thoren (8-1, 4.12
ERA).
From that team, DeMeo, Petroff and Strain are all individual
members of the UNC Athletic Hall of Fame (Petroff is also a member
of the ABCA Hall of Fame).
Strain went on to become one of the seven Bears baseball players
to make it to the Major League level of professional baseball,
making his debut with the San Francisco Giants in 1979 and playing
three seasons.