Barbe (Lake
Charles, La.) finished the 2021 high school baseball season as the
MaxPreps National Champion, but the Buccaneers weren't the only team in
the country to claim a national title this season. Four media outlets
produced national baseball rankings in 2021 and each named a different
national champion.
Perfect Game chose
Stoneman Douglas (Parkland, Fla.), Baseball America chose Madison
Central (Miss.) and Collegiate Baseball Newspaper chose St. Mary Prep
(Orchard Lake, Mich.). Thus, there was no definitive, unanimous national
champion. Over the past five seasons (not including 2020), a total of
14 teams can claim that they have been named national champions.
But
having multiple national champions isn't a bad thing. The recognition
is good for the sport and makes for good debate. Unfortunately, high
school baseball has a relatively short history when it comes to
recognizing national champions. Joe Namath Prep Sports was the first
organization to name a national champion in 1976 and Collegiate Baseball
began doing rankings and naming national champions in 1977. USA Today
followed in the late 1980s and Baseball America began in the early
1990s. The Fab 50 rankings by Student Sports/ESPN ran from 2000-2013.
MaxPreps started its first national rankings in 2009 while Perfect Game
began doing rankings in the past decade.
Prior to 1976, however, there was no official recognition. MaxPreps is hoping to fix that. But first a little rankings history.
High
school football has had national rankings since 1959 when Art Johlfs of
Minnesota began producing end-of-season rankings while naming a
national champion. He also retroactively chose football national
champions back to 1927 as part of his business called National Sports
News Service (NSNS).
Barry Sollenberger of Arizona took over the
reins of the NSNS in the late 1970s and he added to Johlfs' national
rankings list back to 1910. He also began working on a national high
school baseball record book and retroactive national baseball rankings
around 1981, but he never finished this project. He went on to work for
the Arizona Interscholastic Association as its sports information
director for many years and he died suddenly in 2005.
MaxPreps
hopes to pick up where Sollenberger left off. Using research from
multiple sources, MaxPreps has retroactively chosen national champions
back to 1910 (a date that is an homage to Sollenberger's football
research). MaxPreps has also chosen a single national champion for each
season between 1976 and 2021 when various media outlets began doing
rankings and choosing national champions. MaxPreps is not attempting to
nullify the work of organizations like USA Today, Baseball America and
others, but to recognize a single champion for each year based on the
rankings produced by those organizations.
Sources for the
retroactive mythical national champions list include the monumental work
of Nelson and Mark Tennis and their Cal-Hi Sports Record Book, Barry
Sollenberger and his initial research from 1981, Robert Pruter of Illinois, Seth Polansky at the
Arizona Interscholastic Association, Ron Pesch of Michigan, Chuck
Langerman of New Jersey, Russell Phillips of Waxahachie, Donald King of
San Diego and his book Caver Conquest, Fredy Merchant of
Massachusetts and newspapers accessed via newspapers.com and
genealogybank.com. Additions, corrections? kevinaskeland65@gmail.com.

Barbe has won 11 Louisiana state titles in addition to two national championships.
File photo by Leslie Plaza Johnson
High school baseball national champions dating to 1910
2021 — Barbe (Lake Charles, La.)
Record: 39-2
Coach: Glenn Cecchini
Top Players: Jack Walker, P (MaxPreps National Player of the Year, 13-0); Gavin Guidry (all-state, 9-0).
Biggest Wins: Defeated Sam Houston (Lake Charles) 1-0 in semifinals; defeated West Monroe 5-0 in state finals.
Competition:
St. Mary Prep (Orchard Lake, Mich.), 43-1 (Collegiate Baseball
Newspaper national champion); Stoneman Douglas (Parkland, Fla.), 28-2
(Perfect Game national champion); Madison Central (Madison, Miss.), 32-2
(Baseball America national champion).
Reasons for No. 1:
Besides ranking No. 1 in the nation via the MaxPreps computer ratings,
Barbe defeated six of the top seven teams in Louisiana ratings and five
of the top 100 teams in the nation — more than any other nationally
ranked teams. Barbe's title was the 11th state championship and second
national crown.
2020 — None
COVID 19 ended the season before it could be completed
2019 — Argyle (Texas)
Record: 40-1-1
Coach: Rick Griffin
Top Players: Chad Ricker, P (12-0, All-America); Dillon Carter, OF (medium school All-American).
Biggest Wins: Keller, 7-5; Coppell, 12-9; Prosper, 6-0; Sweeny, 6-3 (4A state championship game).
Competition: IMG Academy (Bradenton, Fla.), 24-1 (USA Today national champion), Cypress (Calif.), 31-3 (Perfect Game national champion).
Reasons for No. 1:
Argyle won the national championship for the second straight season by
winning a second straight Texas 4A title. The only loss was to eventual
6A champion Southlake Carroll. Argyle did not lose a single postseason
game over two seasons and had 14 players make the all-district team.
Argyle was a 77-1-1 over two seasons. Also chosen national champion by
Collegiate Baseball Newspaper and Baseball America.
2018 — Argyle (Texas)
Record: 37-0
Coach: Rick Griffin
Top Players:
Bryson Hudgens, P (12-0, medium school All-American); Brendan Dixon, IF
(.422, medium school All-American); Hayden Clearman, OF (.455, medium
school All-American).
Biggest Wins: Jasper, 14-4 in Class 4A state semifinals; Sweeny, 5-0 in state finals.
Competition:
Parkview (Ga.), 36-6 (Baseball America national champion); Riverdale
Baptist (Md.), 32-1 (USA Today national champion); Calvary Christian
(Clearwater, Fla.), 30-1 (Perfect Game national champion).
Reasons for No. 1:
Undefeated state champions in Texas are rare, especially at the higher
levels, so Argyle's 37-0 season made it the choice as national champion.
Eight players on the team earned all-area honors of some kind. The 37-0
record also gave Argyle the best record in the country. Also chosen
national champion by Collegiate Baseball Newspaper.
2017 — Shawnee (Okla.)
Record: 40-0
Coach: Todd Boyer
Top Players: Tanner Sparks, UT (10-0, .504, state player of the year).
Biggest Wins: Carl Albert, 20-3 in state semifinals. Claremore, 12-7 in Class 5A state championship.
Competition: Archbishop McCarthy (Fort Lauderdale, Fla.), 28-3 Florida state champion.
Reasons for No. 1:
Shawnee was nearly a unanimous national champion as it was ranked No. 1
in the nation by Collegiate Baseball Newspaper, Perfect Game, Baseball
American and MaxPreps.
2016 — Buchanan (Clovis, Calif.)
Record: 30-1
Coach: Tom Donald
Top Players:
Grant Gambrell, P (12-0, .363, all-state), Quentin Selma, IF (.443,
all-state); Hunter Reinke, P (11-0, all-state); Zach Presno, C (.338,
all-state).
Biggest Wins: Clovis North, 4-0 Central Section championship game. Bullard, 5-3 in section semifinals.
Competition: Stoneman Douglas (Parkland, Fla.), 27-2 (Perfect Game national champion; Baseball America national champion).
Reasons for No. 1:
Buchanan has one of the top programs in the nation and plays in one of
the toughest leagues in California in the Tri-River League. The Bears
had won the Central Section in 2015 and were previously national
champions by one poll in 2011.
2015 — Parkview (Lilburn, Ga.)
Record: 34-2
Coach: Chan Brown
Top Players: Austin Biggar, C (.370, 11 HR, All-American); Wes Ethridge, P (13-0, All-American).
Biggest Wins: Walton, 3-0, 8-1 sweep in state finals.
Competition: Oxford (Miss.), 35-1; Bishop Gorman (Las Vegas), 32-3.
Reasons for No. 1:
Parkview was the easy choice for national champion in 2015 after it
swept through the Georgia state playoffs, which are all best-of-three
series, without a loss. Parkview was named national champion by
MaxPreps, USA Today, Collegiate Baseball Newspaper, Baseball America and
Perfect Game.
2014 — Barbe (Lake Charles, La.)
Record: 39-2
Coach: Glenn Cecchini
Top Players: Kennon Fontenot (.434), Beau Jordan (.396), Bryce Jordan (.481), Gunner Leger (11-0), Adam Goree (12-0).
Biggest Wins: St. Amant, 2-0 state semifinals; Live Oak, 7-1 state finals.
Competition: Lambert (Suwanee, Ga.), 36-2 (Collegiate Baseball Newspaper national champion, USA Today national champion).
Reasons for No. 1:
Barbe earned recognition from Baseball America, Perfect Game, and
MaxPreps as the national champion over Lambert after the Georgia squad
dropped a game in the final best-of-three series in the Georgia state
championships. Barbe won its final 28 games to surpass Lambert and
ascend to the top of the rankings. The state title was the seventh in
school history.
2013 — Pensacola Catholic (Pensacola, Fla.)
Record: 30-0
Coach: Richard LaBounty
Top Players: Avery Geyer, all-area player of the year; Drew LaBounty (.511); Evans Bozeman (.402, 7 HR); Cody Henry (.400).
Biggest Wins: Bishop Verot, 2-0 state semifinals; Monsignor Pace, 7-5 state finals.
Competition: Owasso (Okla.), 36-0; Harvard-Westlake (Studio City, Calif.), 28-4 (Perfect Game and Baseball America national champion).
Reasons for No. 1:
Although Pensacola Catholic played in one of the smaller enrollment
divisions in Florida, it still earned enough respect from pollsters to
finish No. 1 by MaxPreps, Student Sports, USA Today and Collegiate
Baseball Newspaper. The Crusaders had won the state championship in 2012
as well and finished among the top 40 in the nation.
2012 — Bishop Gorman (Las Vegas)
Record: 40-3
Coach: Nick Day
Top Players: Johnny Sewald (.431); Joey Gallo (.509, national player of the year); Justin Jones (.458).
Biggest Wins: Carroll (Corpus Christi, Texas), 8-4; Gloucester Catholic (N.J.), 8-0; Coronado (Henderson), 11-1 in state championship game.
Competition:
Parkview (Ga.), 31-6 (Baseball America national champion). American
Heritage (Plantation, Fla.), 28-4 (Powerade Fab 50 ESPNHS and Perfect Game national
champion).
Reasons for No. 1: Three outlets ranked the Gaels
No. 1 for the season, including MaxPreps, Collegiate Baseball Newspaper
and USA Today. As a team, Bishop Gorman averaged .436 with 476 runs and
57 home runs. Joey Gallo earned MaxPreps National Player of the Year
honors.
2011 — Broken Arrow (Okla.)
Record: 36-2
Coach: Shannon Dobson
Top Players: Archie Bradley, P (12-1, All-American, national player of the year); Patrick Hope (drafted 163 overall).
Biggest Wins: Jenks, 15-2 and 20-8 in semifinals, Owasso, 4-0, in state finals.
Competition:
Archbishop McCarthy, 29-3 (Baseball America, Perfect Game and USA Today national
champion), Buchanan (Clovis, Calif.), 30-2 (ESPN Fab 50 national
champion).
Reasons for No. 1: Bradley was a force on the
mound, racking up 137 strikeouts in his 71.1 innings. The Tigers
dominated over the final third of the season, averaging 10 runs a game
over the final 10 games. Broken Arrow was No. 1 by MaxPreps and
Collegiate Baseball Newspaper.
2010 — Sumrall (Miss.)
Record: 35-1
Coach: Larry Knight
Top Players: Chase Lewallen (.545); Jackson Posey (12-0, .523); Connor Barron (.514).
Biggest Wins: Oak Grove, 9-0; Water Valley, 11-1 and 5-1 for state championship.
Competition:
Flanagan, 25-2, Florida state champion (Baseball America national
champion). Pace (Fla.), 29-2 (ESPN Rise Fab 50 national champion). Archbishop Mitty (San Jose, Calif.), 31-3 (Perfect Game national champion).
Reasons for No. 1:
With multiple players returning from 2009 national championship team,
Sumrall began the year as the top team in the nation. A loss to Oak
Grove knocked Sumrall down in the rankings, but an unblemished run
through the postseason put the Bobcats back at No. 1. Sumrall was ranked
No. 1 by MaxPreps, USA Today and Collegiate Baseball Newspaper.
2009 — Sumrall (Miss.)
Record: 36-0
Coach: Larry Knight
Top Players: Jared Miller (11-0. .412, 14 HR); Jackson Posey (.505, 10 HR); Luke Lowery (10-0).
Biggest Wins: South Pontotoc, 10-4 and 11-1 in state finals.
Competition:
Naples (Fla.), 33-1, Florida 4A champion (ESPN Rise Fab 50 national
champion); Bishop Gorman (Las Vegas), 40-4, Nevada state champion
(Baseball America, Perfect Game national champion); Menchville (Va.), 26-2 (USA Today,
Collegiate Baseball Newspaper national champion).
Reasons for No. 1:
The Bobcats won their second straight Mississippi state champion, but
didn't rise to No. 1 in the rankings until after the season. When Moody
lost in the Texas state playoffs, it dropped out of the No. 1 spot and
allowed Sumrall to take over No. 1. MaxPreps was the only outlet to have
Sumrall No. 1, however it went on to finish No. 1 again in 2010, this
time by three media polls.
2008 — Don Bosco Prep (Ramsey, N.J.)
Record: 33-0
Coach: Greg Butler
Top Players: Mike Dennhardt, P (10-0, all-state); Steve Proscla, 3B (.545, 9 HR, all-state), Eric Pfisterer, P (10-0, all-state).
Biggest Wins: Christian Brothers Academy, 5-4 Non-Public A state final.
Competition: American Heritage (Plantation, Fla.), 31-2, Florida state champion (Baseball America, USA Today national champion).
Reasons for No. 1:
The 33 wins was the most ever for a New Jersey team in an undefeated
season. The Ironmen also came from behind to beat St. Joseph in the
Bergen County Tournament final and pulled out a one-run win over Seton
Hall Prep in the section finals. Became first undefeated Bergen County
team since 1950. Ranked No. 1 by Collegiate Baseball Newspaper and
Rivals.com Fab 50 (Student Sports).
2007 — Seton Hall Prep (West Orange, N.J.)
Record: 32-1
Coach: Mike Sheppard Jr.
Top Players:
Rick Porcello (10-0, 1.18 ERA, 11 home runs, state player of the year,
taken in first round of MLB draft); Evan Danieli, P (11-0, all-state);
Jaren Matthews, 1B (.500, 5 HR, drafted in 17th round, all-state).
Biggest Wins: St. Joseph's, 10-0, state final.
Competition:
Long Beach Wilson (Calif.), 32-3, Southern Section champion (Baseball
America national champion). Horizon (Scottsdale, Ariz.), 31-3 (Student
Sports Fab 50 national champion).
Reasons for No. 1: Seton
Hall Prep won its third straight Non-Public A state championship,
defeating St. Joseph's (Metuchen) 10-1 in the championship game. Both
Collegiate Baseball Newspaper and USA Today ranked the Pirates No. 1.
Ranked No. 1 in the nation in four different preseason polls.
2006 — The Woodlands (Texas)
Record: 38-1
Coach: Ron Eastman
Top Players:
Steven Maxwell, P (championship game MVP); Kyle Drabek, P
(All-American, 14-0, 12 HR, first round draft pick),; Paul Goldschmidt,
3B (future Arizona Diamondback); Mickey Armstrong Jr., C
(all-tournament).
Biggest Wins: Def. Katy, 5-3 in Class 5A state final; Midland, 5-3 in semifinal.
Competition: Monsignor Pace (Fla.), 28-4, Florida 4A state champion; James Monroe (Bronx, N.Y.), 50-2, PSAL A champion.
Reasons for No. 1:
After an early season loss, the Highlanders won 32 straight games to
finish No. 1 in the Baseball America, USA Today, Student Sports and
Collegiate Baseball Newspaper rankings. The team featured one of the
nation's top players in Kyle Drabek, son of former Pittsburgh Pirate
Doug Drabek.
2005 — Russell County (Seale, Ala.)
Record: 38-1
Coach: Tony Rasmus
Top Players: Colby Rasmus (All-American, 24 HR, .484); Cory Rasmus (all-state, 11-0); Kasey Kiker (12-1, 173 Ks, all-state).
Biggest Wins: Pinson Valley, 5-1, 7-0 in Class 5A state championship game.
Competition:
Brownsburg (Ind.), 35-0, Indiana state champion; Nova (Davie, Fla.),
30-1, Florida state champion (Student Sports Fab 50 national champion).
Reasons for No. 1:
Led by the Rasmus family, coach Tony and players Colby and Cory,
Russell County finished the season ranked No. 1 by USA Today, Collegiate
Baseball Newspaper and Baseball America. The only loss of the season
came in the Class 5A state semifinals to Stanhope Elmore in a three-game
series. Began the season ranked No. 4 by Baseball America.
2004 — Chatsworth (Calif.)
Record: 35-0
Coach: Tom Meusborn
Top Players:
Jason Dominguez, P (13-0, Los Angeles Times all-star); Willie Cabrera,
IF (Los Angeles Times all-star); Mike Moustakas, IF (freshman, future
MLB player); Matt Dominguez, IF (freshman, future MLB player).
Biggest Wins: Defeated San Pedro, 7-1 for Los Angeles City Section championship.
Competition: La Cueva (Albuquerque, N.M.), 28-0, New Mexico state champion (Collegiate Baseball Newspaper national champion).
Reasons for No. 1:
The Chancellors ended up with a 50-game win streak in winning their
second straight national championship. That streak eventually stretched
to 54 in 2005 as the Chancellors, ranked No. 1 by Baseball America,
Student Sports and USA Today, won their second straight Los Angeles City
Section championship in 2004.
2003 — Chatsworth (Calif.)
Record: 33-1
Coach: Tom Meusborn
Top Players:
Justin Cassell (15-0, 119 strikeouts, All-LA City Player of the Year);
Jordan Sisson, C (All-City); Jason Dominguez, P-OF (11-0, All-City);
Keith Renno, OF (All-City).
Biggest Wins: Carson, 3-0 for Los Angeles City Section championship.
Competition: La Costa Canyon (San Diego), 32-1 (Student Sports Fab 50 national champion).
Reasons for No. 1:
Although ranked No. 2 in the state by Cal-Hi Sports, Chatsworth was
ranked No. 1 in the nation by Collegiate Baseball Newspaper, USA Today
and Baseball America. The Chancellors had one of the top pitching
combinations in the nation in Justin Cassel, brother of NFL quarterback
Matt Cassel, and Jason Dominguez. In 2002, Chatsworth (31-2) finished
the season ranked No. 5 by USA Today.
2002 — Fort Bend Elkins (Missouri City, Texas)
Record: 35-1
Coach: Rick Carpenter
Top Players: James Loney (8 HR, .509); Wardell Starling (12-0, 109 Ks).
Biggest Wins: Austin Bowie, 11-4 Class 5A state finals; Round Rock Westwood, 6-1 state semifinals.
Competition: Bishop Amat (La Puente, Calif.), 28-2 (Collegiate Baseball Newspaper national champion).
Reasons for No. 1:
The Knights won 27 straight games heading into the postseason and then
lost their first playoff game to Lamar (Houston). Elkins bounced back to
win the remainder of its games and finished the season ranked No. 1 in
the nation by Baseball America, Student Sports and USA Today. Elkins had
a pair of players drafted in Loney and Starling.
2001 — Bishop Amat (La Puente, Calif.)
Record: 27-2
Coach: Kenny Kedrena
Top Players: Miguel Sanchez, P (11-1); Mike Lange (All-Southern Section); Adam Simon (All-Section).
Biggest Wins: Burroughs (Ridgecrest), 8-0 for Southern Section championship.
Competition:
Seminole (Fla.), 21-10 Florida state champion. All 10 losses by
forfeit. (Student Sports Fab 50 and Baseball America national champion).
Reasons for No. 1:
USA Today and Collegiate Baseball Newspaper both named the Lancers No. 1
in the nation after they won the Southern Section championship. Bishop
Amat posted 11 shutouts on the season.
2000 — Rancho Bernardo (San Diego)
Record: 30-3
Coach: Sam Blalock
Top Players: Scott Heard, C (All-American); Matt Wheatland, P (All-North County player of the year).
Biggest Wins: Vista, 1-0 San Diego Section championship game.
Competition:
Gloucester Catholic (N.J.), 33-1 (Baseball America, Collegiate
Baseball Newspaper national champion, but ranked No. 2 in New Jersey).
Reasons for No. 1:
In 2009, the San Diego Union named the 1999 Rancho Bernardo team as the
best in San Diego history, but it was the 2000 team that won a national
championship. Due to its 1999 season, Rancho Bernardo started the
season ranked No. 1 by USA Today, Student Sports and Baseball America.
While some losses dropped the Broncos from the top spot during the
season, they rose back to the top with the win over Vista.
1999 — Lassiter (Marietta, Ga.)
Record: 35-2
Coach: Mickey McMurtry
Top Players: Jarrod Schmidt, P (12-0); Chad Bendinelli, P, (11-0).
Biggest Wins: Brookwood, 10-0, 6-0, in state championship series.
Competition: Bellaire (Houston), 38-2, Texas state champion (USA Today national champion).
Reasons for No. 1:
Lassiter outscored opponents 81-21 in the playoffs and finished the
season with a 33-game win streak. Lassiter was named No. 1 in the nation
by Collegiate Baseball Newspaper and Baseball America.
1998 — Edwardsville (Ill.)
Record: 40-0
Coach: Tom Pile
Top Players: Ben Hutton, P (17-0, 1.07 ERA, All-Metro); Dave Crouthers, OF (.486, All-Metro).
Biggest Wins: Tinley Park Andrew, 10-2, in Class AA state final.
Competition:
Vestavia Hills (Ala.), 32-2 Alabama state champion (Baseball America
national champion); Clovis (Calif.), 33-2 (USA Today national champion).
Reasons for No. 1:
Three different teams earned recognition as national champion, but
Edwardsville was the only one to finish undefeated. Ranked No. 1 by
Collegiate Baseball Newspaper, Edwardsville, ironically, did not have
any players on the Chicago Tribune's all-state team, but the downstate
club did place two on the St. Louis Post-Dispatch All-Metro Team.
1997 — Washington (New York City)
Record: 44-2
Coach: Steve Mandl
Top Players:
Vicente Rosario, CF (.623, 16 HR, drafted 8th round); Emmanuel Ulloa, P
(14-1, 127 Ks, drafted 21st round); Manuel Olivera, P (12-0, 147 Ks);
Sharbel Torres, 2B (.495).
Biggest Wins: Lehman, 7-3 PSAL championship.
Competition:
Jesuit (Tampa, Fla.), 32-3, Florida state champion (Baseball America
national champion); Clovis (Calif.), 33-2 (USA Today national champion).
Reasons for No. 1:
George Washington had reached the PSAL championship game three straight
years before finally winning in 1997. Collegiate Baseball Newspaper
lists GW as its national champion (Baseball America had GW third). In 14
years at George Washington, Mandl posted a record of 432-61.
1996 — Westminster Christian (Miami)
Record: 36-0
Coach: Rich Hoffman
Top Players: K.O. Weigandt, P (all-state); Mark Walker, OF (all-state); Jason Moore, SS (all-state); Manny Crespo, OF (all-state.
Biggest Wins: Liberty County (Bristol, Fla.), 10-6.
Competition: Cherry Creek (Colo.), 22-0; Kennedy (Granada Hills, Calif.), 31-3; Monterey (Lubbock, Texas), 36-3.
Reasons for No. 1:
National champions in 1992, Westminster earned the honor again in 1996
by sweeping national champion recognition from Collegiate Baseball
Newspaper national champion, Baseball America, and USA Today.
1995 — Germantown (Tenn.)
Record: 38-0
Coach: Phil Clark
Top Players: Jay Hood (All-American); Chris Lotterhos (All-American); Matt Hale (all-state); Tom Hildebrand (all-state).
Biggest Wins: Fountain Valley, 10-6; Montgomery Bell Academy, 6-3 AAA state final.
Competition: Fountain Valley (Calif.), 26-3-1.
Reasons for No. 1:
Winner of the Upper Deck tournament in California, Germantown finished
the season undefeated while winning the AAA state championship.
Collegiate Baseball Newspaper, Baseball America, and USA Today all named
Germantown as national champion. Key win for Germantown came in the
Upper Deck tournament when it defeated Fountain Valley, which was ranked
No. 1 in the nation.
1994 — Start (Toledo, Ohio)
Record: 31-0
Coach: Rich Arbinger
Top Players: Matt King, P (all-state); Dan Wardrop, 1B (all-state); Steve Luda, 3B (all-state).
Biggest Wins: Washington (Massillon, Ohio), 10-2 for Division I state championship.
Competition: Sarasota (Fla.), 33-4, Florida state champion (Baseball America national champion).
Reasons for No. 1:
Start went 27-3 in 1993 and got as high as No. 4 in the national
rankings. A total of seven starters returned from that team in 1994.
Start became the first team from the City League to win a state
championship in 67 years. Collegiate Baseball Newspaper named Start the
national champion.
1993 — Bullard (Fresno, Calif.)
Record: 26-3-1
Coach: Mike Noakes
Top Players:
Tony Sciola, C (Fresno Bee All-Area team, .431); Greg Marchbanks, 3B
(all-area, .365); John Phillips, P (14-0, 114 Ks, all-area player of the
year).
Biggest Wins: West (Bakersfield, Calif.), 5-2 for Yosemite Division championship.
Competition:
Arundel (Md.), 21-1, Maryland state champion (Collegiate Baseball
Newspaper national champion); Greenway (Ariz.), 32-2 (Baseball America
national champion).
Reasons for No. 1: In a replay of 1986,
Esperanza (Anaheim) defeated Simi Valley (Calif.), which was ranked No. 1
in the nation. Simi Valley's loss was Bullard's gain as it moved into
the No. 1 spot in the USA Today final national rankings nearly a month
after playing its final game. Bullard had won the school's fifth section
championship on May 21.
1992 — Westminster Christian (Miami)
Record: 33-2
Coach: Rich Hoffman
Top Players:
Alex Rodriguez, SS (all-state, All-American, future MLB No. 1 draft
pick); Mikey Lopez, IF (all-state); Doug Mientkiewicz, C (all-state,
future MLB player); Steve Butler, P (all-state, All-American).
Biggest Wins: Florida Air, 5-1, Class 2A state championship.
Competition: Cherry Hills West (N.J.), 27-3, New Jersey state champion (Collegiate Baseball Newspaper national champion)
Reasons for No. 1:
Led by a pair of All-Americans in future MLB standout Rodriguez and
team MVP Butler, Westminster Christian earned national champion honors
from USA Today. The team possessed five players who went on to play
professionally.
1991 — Fairfield (Ohio)
Record: 32-3
Coach: Gary Yeatts
Top Players:
Spence Gunnell (All-city player of the year, .465, 9-2); Terry Mitchum,
1B (all-city); Chris Williams, SS (all-city); Tracy Moore, P
(all-city).
Biggest Wins: Newark, 10-2, state semifinals; Boardman (Youngstown), 4-0, Division I state final.
Competition: Northeast (Pasadena, Md.), 24-0.
Reasons for No. 1:
Sitting at No. 10 in late May, Fairfield climbed up the USA Today
rankings until it took over the No. 1 spot following the win over
Boardman. Named by the Cincinnati Enquirer as the third greatest team in
city history.
1990 — Carlsbad (N.M.)
Record: 26-0
Coach: Tom Forni
Top Players: Shane Andrews, P (all-state, No. 11 overall pick in MLB draft); Mark Beeman, 3B (all-state); Jamie Zuniga, OF (all-state).
Biggest Wins: Farmington, 14-11, for state championship.
Competition: Lake Brantley (Fla.), 30-4, Florida state champion (USA Today national champion); Monte Vista (Cupertino, Calif.), 27-3.
Reasons for No. 1:
Collegiate Baseball Newspaper tabbed Carlsbad as the national champion
with several weeks left in the season, stating that there wasn't
anything any other team could do to knock the Cavemen out of the top
spot. The state title was the third in a row for Carlsbad.
1989 — Sarasota (Fla.)
Record: 32-1
Coach: Clyde Metcalf
Top Players: Ron Scott, P (all-state); David Ferriera, IF (all-state); Greg Blosser, OF (all-state); Ray Suplee, OF (all-state);
Biggest Wins: Sandalwood, 9-0, for state championship.
Competition: Bullard (Fresno), 28-2
Reasons for No. 1:
One year after being upset by Sandalwood in the AAA finals, Sarasota
defeated the Jacksonville team 9-0 on a no-hitter by Scott in the 4A
championship. The win gave Sarasota the national championship by both
USA Today and Collegiate Baseball Newspaper.
1988 — Memorial (West New York, N.J.)
Record: 28-1
Coach: Anthony Ferrainolo
Top Players: Juan Llanes, 2B (.6-5, all-state first team); Bob Montalvo, SS (all-state second team);
Biggest Wins: Def. Madison Central, 7-3, for Group IV championship.
Competition: Bullard (Fresno) 29-1
Reasons for No. 1:
Under Ferrainolo, who passed away in 2011 as the state's all-time
winningest coach in New Jersey, Memorial won four group championships
and seven sectional crowns. Both USA Today and Collegiate Baseball chose
Memorial as the national champion. The only loss was an 8-1 defeat to
Bayonne, which ended a 23-game win streak.
1987 — La Porte (Ind.)
Record: 34-2
Coach: Ken Schreiber
Top Players: Bub Gale, P (15-1, 127 Ks, all-state).
Biggest Wins: Evansville Central, 4-1, for state championship (ending Central's 22-game win streak).
Competition: Cooper (Abilene), 33-3 (Collegiate Baseball Newspaper co-national champion).
Reasons for No. 1:
La Porte had already won four state championships under coach
Schreiber, who was the winningest coach in Indiana baseball history. The
34-2 record was the best winning percentage posted by a La Porte team.
1986 — Pine Bluff (Ark.)
Record: 27-1
Coach: Billy Bock
Top Players: Jon House, IF (all-state); Mark Lewis, IF (all-state; Chris Bryan, P (10-0, all-state).
Biggest Wins: North Little Rock Northeast, 1-0, Class AAA state championship.
Competition: Bellaire (Houston), 29-4; Esperanza (Anaheim, Calif.), 25-3-1 (Collegiate Baseball Newspaper national champion)
Reasons for No. 1:
The only time we will disagree with the national champion selections
chosen in real time is 1986. Collegiate Baseball Newspaper chose
Esperanza as the national champion after it knocked off No. 1 Simi
Valley in the Southern Section semifinals. Esperanza went on to win the
section title. However, Cal-Hi Sports does not select Esperanza as its
state team of the year (it chose Santana of Santee instead). Esperanza
was also the fourth seed entering the Southern Section finals. The more
obvious choice in 1986 was Pine Bluff, which won a state record fourth
consecutive state championship and finished the season with one loss.
1985 — Hialeah-Miami Lakes (Hialeah, Fla.)
Record: 32-1
Coach: Gary Krey
Top Players:
Ricky Rojas, P (all-county, 13-0, state record 618 career strikeouts);
Ozzie Carcache, 2B (all-county, .390); Titi Roche, OF (all-county,
.451).
Biggest Wins: Mosley, 4-2, for Class 4A state championship.
Competition: Oak Forest (Ill.), 36-1
Reasons for No. 1:
The state championship was the fourth for Miami Lakes over the previous
nine seasons and was arguably the best of the four. Rojas was one of
the top prospects in Florida and was taken in the fifth round of the MLB
draft. Collegiate Baseball Newspaper chose Miami Lakes as co-national
champions along with Oak Forest (Ill.).
1984 — Tate (Cantonment, Fla.)
Record: 38-1
Coach: Randy Putnam
Top Players: Jay Bell, SS (.505, 8th overall pick in MLB draft).
Biggest Wins: Southridge (Miami), 4-2, in Class 4A state championship game.
Competition: Northwest Omaha (Neb.), 19-0, state champion; Rancho Cordova (Calif.), 33-5-1; Freeport Brazoswood (Texas), 33-5.
Reasons for No. 1:
Tate had been one of the more successful baseball programs in Florida,
winning three state titles starting in 1962. The 1984 state title was
the school's fourth (it has won seven total, winning again in 1986).
Bell ranked as one of the top high school players in the country, being
the third high school player drafted in 1984. Collegiate Baseball
Newspaper chose Tate as the national champion.
1983 — Omaha Northwest (Neb.)
Record: 21-1
Coach: Bill Olson
Top Players: Gregg Olson, P (27-0, 0.76 ERA, 276 Ks in career, fourth overall pick in 1988 MLB draft).
Biggest Wins: Def. Millard South, 10-0, for Class A state championship.
Competition: Port Arthur Jefferson (Texas), 34-3; El Cerrito (Calif.), 27-1; Hamilton (Ohio), 27-2
Reasons for No. 1:
Behind the pitching of future Baltimore Oriole Olson, son of coach Bill
Olson, Northwest dominated in the mid-1980s, winning 53 straight games.
The streak began in 1983 when Northwest was named national champion by
Collegiate Baseball Newspaper. The state championship was the second of
four straight for Northwest.
1982 — Madison Central (Richmond, Ky.)
Record: 40-0
Coach: Don Richardson
Top Players:
Ricky Congleton, P (10-0, tournament MVP); Tim Black (all-tournament);
Gene Cruse (all-tournament); Greg Stephens (all-tournament).
Biggest Wins: Pleasure Ridge Park, 9-0, in state championship game.
Competition: Carol City (Fla.), 27-6, Class 4A state champion; Sharpstown (Houston), 32-4; Euclid (Ohio), 33-1.
Reasons for No. 1:
The first undefeated state champion in Kentucky in 16 years, Madison
Central set a state record for most wins in an undefeated season that
stands today. Collegiate Baseball Newspaper named the Indians as
national champion.
1981 — Bowie (Md.)
Record: 22-0
Coach: Bumps Vaughan
Top Players: Alex Pauley (All-Met by Washington Post); Brent Friehauf (All-Met); David Vaughan (All-Met), Swen Thompson (All-Met).
Biggest Wins: Ovrerlea, 3-2, for Maryland Class AA state championship.
Competition: Boone (Orlando), 27-3; Westminster (Los Angeles), 23-4; Monterey (Lubbock, Texas), 38-4.
Reasons for No. 1:
Over the course of the 1981 and 1982 season, Bowie won 54 straight
games. In the 10 seasons starting in 1978, Bowie went on to post a
record of 208-25. Collegiate Baseball Newspaper selected Bowie as
national champion.
1980 — Bullard (Fresno, Calif.)
Record: 29-2
Coach: Mike Noakes
Top Players:
Richie Gaynor, P (16-1, North Yosemite League pitcher of the year,
threw no-hitter in playoffs vs. Mt. Whitney); Randy Asadoor, SS (drafted
in 11th round)
Biggest Wins: South (Bakersfield), 11-6 for Yosemite Division championship.
Competition: Miami Lakes (Fla.), 29-2.
Reasons for No. 1:
From 1977 to 1980, Bullard went 110-11-2 with four straight league
championships. Pitcher Gaynor was drafted in the sixth round of the MLB
draft and had two no-hitters on the season. Coach Noakes played at
Fresno High School for Ollie Bidwell, coach of the 1958 championship
team.
1979 — White Oak (Jacksonville, N.C.)
Record: 22-0
Coach: Tom McGirt
Top Players: Louie Meadows, P (national player of the year, 29-0 career pitching record).
Biggest Wins: East Gaston, 4-2, for state championship.
Competition: Oregon Clay (Ohio), 25-2; Miami Lakes (Fla.), 23-6; Tampa Catholic (Fla.), 30-4.
Reasons for No. 1:
White Oak won back-to-back state championships in 1978 and 1979,
posting a 45-0 record during that run. Collegiate Baseball Newspaper
picked White Oak the national champions in 1979.
1978 — Southeast (Wichita, Kan.)
Record: 23-0
Coach: Jim Deckinger
Top Players:
Mark Nordyke, 1B (All-City); Jim Thomas, SS (All-City); Bret Reynolds,
3B (All-City); Mark Reynolds, OF (All-City); Doug Hoppock, P (All-City);
Kevin Clinton, P (All-City).
Biggest Wins: Shawnee Mission South, 6-3, for state championship.
Competition: Coral Park (Miami), 3-2; Redwood (Larkspur, Calif.), 30-5.
Reasons for No. 1:
The second team to ever be chosen national champion by Collegiate
Baseball Newspaper, Southeast had six players make the All-City first
team, with half a dozen playing baseball at the college level. Became
first Kansas team to win state championship with undefeated season.
1977 — Edgewood (West Covina, Calif.)
Record: 29-1
Coach: Karl Major
Top Players: Mike Pill, P (14-0, 33 straight wins, 0.50 ERA); Ken Angulo, P; Rick Aguilera, P (future MLB player).
Biggest Wins: Magnolia, 3-1, for Southern Section 3A championship.
Competition: Redwood (Larkspur, Calif.), 33-4; Bullard (Fresno), 31-1-1.
Reasons for No. 1:
Edgewood won the CIF Southern Section 3A championship in 1976 and won
it again in 1977. While Collegiate Baseball Newspaper selected Redwood
(Larkspur, Calif.) as the top team in the nation, Cal-Hi Sports gives
the edge to Edgewood for its state team of the year.
1976 — Lakewood (Calif.)
Record: 22-4-1
Coach: John Herbold
Top Players:
Billy Simpson, OF (drafted No. 12 overall); Don Ruzek, SS (drafted No.
43 overall); Stan Williams, OF (drafted 11th round); Randy Whistler, C
(drafted 14th round)
Biggest Wins: Long Beach Jordan, 5-3, for Southern Section championship.
Competition: Nathan Hale (Tulsa, Okla.), 35-2; Arundel (Md.), 21-1.
Reasons for No. 1:
Lakewood had contended for the Southern Section championship the
previous two seasons before winning it all in 1976. Joe Namath Prep
Sports Magazine, edited by Barry Sollenberger of Arizona, selected
Lakewood as the national champion. Four Lakewood players were chosen in
the MLB draft.
1975 — Bishop Montgomery (Torrance, Calif.)
Record: 27-3
Coach: Ernie Martinez
Top Players: Bill Bordley, P (16-1, 0.45 ERA, 176 Ks, CIF Player of the Year); Chris Smith (.395, future MLB player); Tim Collins (All-CIF).
Biggest Wins: Lynwood, 1-0, CIF Southern Section championship.
Competition: Nathan Hale (Tulsa, Okla.), 34-2, Oklahoma state champion.
Reasons for No. 1:
Bordley, a two-time All-CIF player of the year who was drafted in the
first round by the San Francisco Giants in 1976, led Bishop Montgomery
to the Southern Section championship. He won 16 games, including a
no-hitter against Bassett in the CIF playoffs.
1974 — Monterey (Lubbock, Texas)
Record: 36-4
Coach: Bobby Moegle
Top Players: Jimmy Shankle, C (All-state); Marlin Hamilton, OF (all-state).
Biggest Wins: Spring Woods, 4-2, for Class 4A state championship.
Competition: Rummel (La.), 19-0.
Reasons for No. 1:
En route to becoming the winningest baseball coach in Texas state
history, Moegle led the Plainsmen to four state titles. The early 1970s
was the heyday for Monterey as it reached the state finals in 1971, 1972
and 1974, winning the title in the latter two seasons. Arguably the
1974 squad was Moegle's best state title team.
1973 — Kennedy Catholic (Burien, Wash.)
Record: 28-1
Coach: Joe Faccone
Top Players: Floyd Bannister, P (15-0, 14 shutouts, 0.00 ERA, 182 Ks).
Biggest Wins: Shadle Park, 5-0 (Bannister no-hitter, 14 Ks), Clover Park, 2-1, state championship.
Competition: Elder (Cincinnati, Ohio), 27-1
Reasons for No. 1:
With future first round MLB draft pick Bannister on the mound, the
Lancers were unbeatable as he tossed 14 shutouts in his 15 wins. The
championship came in the first season that Washington held a state
tournament. Bannister was eventually chosen No. 1 overall in the 1976
MLB draft.
1972 — Tucson High Magnet School (Ariz.)
Record: 25-0
Coach: Ray Adkins
Top Players: Ron Hassay, SS, (.486); Frank Castro, P (13-0, 0.68 ERA).
Biggest Wins: Chandler, 4-3, in state finals.
Competition: Monterey (Lubbock, Texas), 30-6, Texas state champion; Escambia (Tallahassee, Fla.), 28-1-1, Florida state champion.
Reasons for No. 1:
Tucson had previously won a national record 26 state championships, but
the 1972 team is considered the best of Tucson's 27 state crowns. The
team batted .433 on the season and was led by future MLB catcher Hassey,
who batted .486 and played shortstop. Al Lopez batted .340 and hit a
home run to beat Chandler in the finals. Castro pitched all three games
in the postseason and struck out 26 batters over 23.2 innings.
1971 — El Segundo (Calif.)
Record: 33-2
Coach: John Stevenson
Top Players:
Scott McGregor, P (18-1, CIF Player of the Year); George Brett, SS
(.339, All-CIF, future MLB Hall of Famer); Kirk Allison, OF (.429,
All-CIF).
Biggest Wins: Def. Lompoc, 5-2;
Competition: East Jefferson (La.), 21-2; Lompoc (Calif.), 26-2; LaPorte (Ind.), 33-4-1, Indiana state champion.
Reasons for No. 1:
Lompoc was actually the top seed in the 3A CIF state finals after
beating El Segundo in the 1970 playoffs. However, the Eagles got a
pitching win from McGregor and four hits from Allison in the 5-2
championship win. Both McGregor and Brett went on to win a World Series
with the Orioles and Royals, respectively.
1970 — Archbishop Molloy (Queens, N.Y.)
Record: 36-0
Coach: Jack Curran
Top Players:
Carl Czurda, P (11-0, 0.41 ERA); Rich Kisielewski, P (0.58 ERA); Gary
Kenney, C (.314); Ed Kurpiel, 1B (.407, 10 HR, Daily News All-Star).
Biggest Wins: McClancy (Jackson Heights, N.Y.), 7-5, for Catholic High School Athletic Association championship.
Competition: Lompoc (Calif.), 27-1, Naugatuck (Conn.), 22-0; South Bend Clay (Ind.), 39-3
Reasons for No. 1:
Molloy had won eight straight Queens crowns and five city championships
over the previous six seasons under legendary coach Curran, who is also
one of the winningest basketball coaches in high school history. Molloy
finished the season with a 47-game win streak.
1969 — Creighton Prep (Omaha, Neb.)
Record: 19-0
Coach: George Kocsis
Top Players: Jim Jacobsen, P (0.00 ERA); Jerry Jurgensen, P.
Biggest Wins: Omaha Ryan, 1-0, state semifinal; Omaha Westside, 4-3, state finals.
Competition: Huntsville Lee (Ala.), 20-0; Grant (Sacramento, Calif.), 16-1.
Reasons for No. 1:
The Junior Jays only trailed in a game twice throughout the season en
route to posting the first unbeaten season at Creighton Prep in 30
seasons. Creighton Prep also won the third state title of the school
year after winning championships in football and basketball.
1968 — Hoover (Fresno, Calif.)
Record: 27-3
Coach: Jack Hannah
Top Players:
Ron Dunn, 2B (drafted 94th overall); Richard Wurkits, C (drafted 118th
overall); Fred Frazier, IF (drafted 81st overall in 1969), Bruce
McKinney, P (10-1, All-Metro Player of the Year).
Biggest Wins: Bakersfield, 10-3, in Central Section championship game.
Competition: Franklin County (Tenn.), 31-3; Manual (Peoria, Ill.), 26-3.
Reasons for No. 1:
Hoover dominated baseball in the valley, earning Fresno Bee All-Metro
MVP and coach of the year honors three years in a row and culminating
with the 1968 team that featured three MLB drafted players.
1967 — South San Antonio (Texas)
Record: 39-0
Coach: Cliff Gustafson
Top Players:
John Langerhans, P (threw no-hitter in state final, played at Texas);
Raul Zamora (played at Baylor); Dennis Magro (played at Texas); Mark
Salazar (All-tourney, 36-1 pitching record).
Biggest Wins: Def. Beaumont Forest Park, 3-0, in state championship game.
Competition: Hillsborough (Tampa, Fla.) 17-3; King (Corpus Christi), 32-3; La Porte (Ind.), 28-3, Indiana state champion.
Reasons for No. 1:
The Bobcats won seven state championships in 10 seasons with the 1967
title being the final one. Gustafson coached South San Antonio before
moving on to a Hall of Fame career at the University of Texas. The 39
wins were also part of a 45-game winning streak. Seven of the players on
the team went on to play at Division 1 schools. First Texas team to go
undefeated in tournament's 19-year history.
1966 — Ritenour (Overland, Mo.)
Record: 23-2
Coach: Lee Engert
Top Players: Mike Pruett, P (drafted by Cardinals); Jerry Reuss, P (drafted 2nd round by Cardinals, 1967).
Biggest Wins: Def. Augustinian Academy (St. Louis), 2-0.
Competition: El Segundo (Calif.), 24-4-1; Ashland (Ky.), 25-0; Fairmount West (Ohio), 19-1.
Reasons for No. 1:
Ritenour was one of the top baseball programs in Missouri during the
1960s, but hadn't won a state championship until 1966. The Huskies won
its sixth straight Suburban Conference championship and posted 10
shutouts during the season. The pitching staff included two hurlers who
were eventually drafted, including Pruett, who picked up the win in the
state finals and went 8-1 on the season and 24-2 for this career. There
was also Reuss, future World Series winner with the Dodgers, who was
drafted in 1967 after leading Ritenour to a second straight state
championship.
1965 — Fair Park (Shreveport, La.)
Record: 33-3
Coach: James Farrar
Top Players:
Dick Hicks, P (14-1, 144 Ks, All-City Player of the Year); Randy
Bouknight, P (7-0, All-City); Jerry Smith, P (6-0, All-City); Wayne
Burney, 1B (.404, All-City).
Biggest Wins: Redemptorist, 2-1, 8-3 in state finals.
Competition: Manual (Peoria), 25-3, Illinois state champion.
Reasons for No. 1:
Fair Park had an outstanding team in 1963, winning 44 games and a
Louisiana state championship. The 1965 team was part of the Fair Park
dynasty during the 1960s, placing nine players on the Shreveport Times
All-City Team and seven on the All-District team.
1964 — Lawton (Okla.)
Record: 23-1
Coach: Orval "Bo" Bowman
Top Players: Tom Fremin (All-state, .358); Johnny Wilson (All-state, .389, 25 RBI).
Biggest Wins: Northwest, 4-1.
Competition: Lynwood (Calif.), 23-2; Lima (Ohio), 18-0; Christian Brothers (Memphis, Tenn.), 21-2.
Reasons for No. 1:
Lawton won 55 of 60 games from 1962 to 1960 and went 60 consecutive
games without being shutout. Lawton was considered the top program in
Oklahoma in the early 1960s after reaching the state tournament six
straight years. The 1964 team was the most successful of all Lawton
teams. Lawton also won the state championship in football that season.
1963 — Science Hill (Johnson City, Tenn.)
Record: 22-3
Coach: John Broyles
Top Players:
Steve Spurrier, P (7-0, .400, football All-American, future Heisman
Trophy winner); Tommy Hager (.396), Jim Sanders (.344); Dave Foster
(.328).
Biggest Wins: Christan Brothers, 7-6, 7-5 for state championship.
Competition: Muskegon, 21-1; Rocky Mount, 16-5; Fair Park, 44-4-1.
Reasons for No. 1:
The Hilltoppers made their fourth straight trip to the state tournament
and repeated as state champions in 1963. Future Heisman Trophy winner
Spurrier pitched two games in the state playoffs, including the final
game against Christian Brothers. Spurrier was also All-American in
football and all-state in basketball.
1962 — Bishop Armstrong (Sacramento, Calif.)
Record: 22-2
Coach: Dick Sperbeck
Top Players:
Jim Fox, 1B (.482, All-City); Mike Green, P (9-0, 127 Ks, All-City);
Bert Bonomi, C (All-City); Larry Marietti, IF (All-City); Doug Crawford,
IF (All-City).
Biggest Wins: McClatchy, 1-0, Grant, 9-2.
Competition:
Science Hill, 22-2, Tennessee state champion; Cape Girardeau (Mo.),
21-0, Missouri state champion; Chicopee (Mass.), 21-0, state champion;
Clarksdale (Miss.), 20-1, Mississippi state champion.
Reasons for No. 1:
One of the top athletic programs in the Sacramento Valley during the
1960s, the Falcons had one of the top pitchers in the state in Green,
who was the Sacramento player of the year as a junior. A total of six
players made the Sacramento Bee All-Metro team.
1961 — Berwyn/Cicero Morton (Cicero, Ill.)
Record: 23-2
Coach: Dick Kucera
Top Players:
Arnie Vesely (state tournament MVP); Wayne Reznicek (all-tourney); Rick
Rakowski (all-tourney); Rich Hanus (all-tourney); Larry Mack
(all-tourney); Billy Posen (all-tourney).
Biggest Wins: Wood River (Peoria), 20-0 in state finals (Larry Mack threw no-hitter).
Competition:
Grand Haven (Mich.), 31-0, state champions; Jesuit (New Orleans), 15-5,
state champion; Beaver Falls (Pa.), 16-0, WPIAL champion (Led by Joe
Namath).
Reasons for No. 1: Morton East, as it was known in
1961, dominated in the state finals, nearly doubling the previous high
score in a championship game. The overwhelming performance resulted in
scribes musing that Morton East was the best Illinois team to ever win a
state tournament.
1960 — Bellaire (Texas)
Record: 40-5
Coach: Howard Allen
Top Players:
John Crain, P (all-tournament); Bill Pruett, C (all-tournament); Steve
Cosgrove, 3B (all-tournament); Tom Hillary, SS (all-tournament); Jerry
Braswell, OF (all-tournament).
Biggest Wins: Harlandale, 5-4, state championship game.
Competition: Roosevelt (Fresno, Calif.), 20-2; Elder (Cincinnati, Ohio), 21-2; Medford (Ore.), 26-1.
Reasons for No. 1:
Harlandale actually entered the state tournament as the favorite based
on its undefeated record, but Bellaire picked up the win in the
championship game to claim the first state title in school history.
Bellaire added another state championship in 1962 and has been one of
the more successful programs in the state over the past 50 years.
1959 — DuPont Manual (Louisville, Ky.)
Record: 33-1
Coach: Ralph Kimmel
Top Players: Bobby Marr, P (10-1, four no-hitters, batted .600); Leland Melear, P (10-0, one no-hitter).
Biggest Wins: Defeated Lafayette, 17-0, in semifinal. Defeated Greenville, 3-1, in state finals.
Competition:
Elder (Cincinnati), 21-2; Christian Brothers (Memphi, Tenn.), 20-2;
Lakeland (Fla.), 22-5; St. Ignatius (San Francisco), 28-3; Woodlawn
(Ala.), 20-1.
Reasons for No. 1: The 1959 state championship
was the fifth in school history, setting a state record. It was also the
fourth state championship in the decade for the Crimson. Courier
Journal staff writer Earl Cox, noted that the Manual team might have
been the greatest in Kentucky prep history.
1958 — Fresno (Calif.)
Record: 25-1
Coach: Ollie Bidwell
Top Players:
Dick Ellsworth, P (15-0, future MLB pitcher); Jim Maloney, P (future
20-game winner with Cincinnati Reds); Pat Corrales C (future MLB
manager).
Biggest Wins: Beat frosh teams from Stanford and Cal.
Competition: Maine, 20-2, Illinois state champion; Cleveland NJROTC, 23-1, Missouri state champion; Elder, 22-3, Ohio state champion.
Reasons for No. 1:
Arguably the greatest team in California history. One year after going
22-2, Fresno did even better in 1958. Team posted 15 shutouts, which was
a state record for several decades. Team included three future
professional players.
1957 — Academy of Richmond County (Augusta, Ga.)
Record: 17-0
Coach: A.L. Williams
Top Players:
Pitching staff of Jack Fisher, Herb Alewine and Luther Shead combined
for 11 shutouts in 14 regular season games. The highest ERA on the staff
was 0.35. Staff posted three straight no-hitters.
Biggest Wins: Lanier, 8-1, in state championship game. Northside, 4-1, in semifinals.
Competition:
Fair Park (Shreveport, La.), 21-2, Louisiana state champion; Pasco
(Fla.), 26-5, Florida state champion; Abilene (Texas), 27-5-1, Texas
state champion; Fresno (Calif.), 22-2; Mesa (Ariz.), 21-1, Arizona state
champion.
Reasons for No. 1: A total of nine players on the
1957 team went on to play at either University of Georgia or Georgia
Southern College, according to the Area of Richmond County Hall of Fame.
The 1957 team finished its season on a 30-game win streak, including an
8-1 win over Lanier (Ga.) in the finals. Richmond Academy had won seven
straight region and state championships and had posted a record of
147-13 during that stretch.
1956 — Abilene (Texas)
Record: 26-3
Coach: B.L. Blackburn
Top Players:
All-state players included Jim Carpenter, LF; Bruce Boyd, 1B; Freddie
Green, 3B; Glynn Gregory, C (.437); Altus Scott, P (13-1, two
no-hitters); Bob Carothers, SS.
Biggest Wins: Highland Park, 13-0 (state championship), Fort Worth Paschal, 8-3 (state semifinals).
Competition:
Lane Tech (Chicago, Ill.), 20-1; Tucson (Ariz.), 20-2; Elder
(Cincinnati, Ohio), 25-2; Beaumont (Mo.), 21-1; Chattanooga Central
(Tenn.), 17-1.
Reasons for No. 1: Abilene was the runner-up to
Paris in 1955 in the state finals and it also had a good group of
athletes from a Class 4A state champion football team in the fall. The
13-0 win over Highland Park was the widest margin of victory in a state
final. Abilene had been to the state finals three other times before
finally winning in 1956.
1955 — Elder (Cincinnati)
Record: 22-2
Coach: Don Ruberg
Top Players: Ron Moeller, P (winning pitcher in state finals, 10 strikeouts); Dick Selcer 2B, (all-state quarterback).
Biggest Wins: Massillon, 3-0, for Ohio state championship. Defending state champion Mansfield, 18-3, in semifinals.
Competition: Joplin (Mo.), 15-1
Reasons for No. 1:
Elder was one of the most dominant teams in the nation during the
1950s. It won the state championship in 1952 and finished as runner-up
to Mansfield in 1954. Elder went on to win a state title in 1956 and
1958-60. No school in Ohio has won more baseball games than Elder.
1954 — Lanier (Montgomery, Ala.)
Record: 20-0
Coach: Neal Posey
Top Players: Bobby Ledford Jr., P (9-0 record, no-hitter in Alabama state finals); Phillip Hunt (.385).
Biggest Wins: Anniston, 9-0, in state finals. Pepperell (Ga.), 5-0 and 4--0 for two-state championship.
Competition: Mansfield (Ohio), 26-1, Ohio state champion. Central (Cape Girardeau, Mo.), 15-0.
Reasons for No. 1:
Winners of five straight state championships, Lanier posted its best
season in 1954 by going undefeated in-state and then defeating
Pepperell, the state champion from Georgia, in a bi-state playoff.
1953 — Capitol Hill (Oklahoma City)
Record: 27-0
Coach: John Pryor
Top Players:
Bob Burr, 1B (all-state, .433); Buzzy Cleveland, 3B (all-state .396);
Jim Davis, SS; Smokey Davidson, 2B, Don Demeter, CF, all signed with
Dodgers.
Biggest Wins: Tulsa Rogers, 12-4, for Class A championship.
Competition: Richmond Academy (Ga.), Southeastern Tournament champion for third straight year. Compton (Calif.), 23-2.
Reasons for No. 1:
Bert Wells, a Brooklyn Dodger scout, told the Daily Oklahoman in May
1953 that Capitol Hill was the best prep team he had ever seen. "They
don't have a single weak position." The Redskins had five of the top
seven hitters in the conference, led by Cleveland, who batted .474 in 11
games. Capitol Hill went 30-1 in 1952 and won the Class A crown.
1952 — Redstone (Republic, Pa.)
Record: 15-0
Coach: George Zoretic
Top Players: Bobby Locke, P-OF, (played nine seasons in Major Leagues).
Biggest Wins: Har-Brack, 5-3, to win WPIAL championship, McKeesport, 1-0.
Competition:
Richmond Academy (Ga.), 20-3. Richmond Academy won the Southeastern
Interstate Tournament. Capitol Hill (Oklahoma City, Okla.), 30-1.
Reasons for No. 1:
Redstone benefited from the pitching of Locke, who went 7-0 on the
season with two no-hitters. He pitched, and won, all four state
tournament games. He averaged 13 strikeouts per game and played in the
1952 USA All-Star Game at the Polo Grounds.
1951 — McClatchy (Sacramento, Calif.)
Record: 22-0-1
Coach: Cliff Perry
Top Players:
Earl Rose (.521, 6 HR, 46 RBI); Dave Thomas (21 SB); Bob Jones, catcher
(.456, 5 HR); Chris Christin, pitcher (8-0, 64 Ks); JC Masters, pitcher
(6-0).
Biggest Wins: Sacramento, 6-5. Ended the season with
the conference championship and an undefeated record. Also came from
behind to beat Sacramento 6-3 earlier in the season.
Competition:
Gastonia (N.C.), 22-2-1, the best of six straight state championship
teams. Muskegon (Mich.), 13-1, led by future NFL QB Earl Morrall, ended
Kalamazoo Central's 47-game win streak.
Reasons for No. 1: The
Lions were the preseason favorite and didn't disappoint. The Lions hit
.309 as a team and had six players make the Sacramento Bee's all-city
team. The Lions went 18-1 in 1952 for a second conference title,
stretching its unbeaten streak to 41 games.
1950 — Manual (Peoria, Ill.)
Record: 25-0
Coach: Ed Stonebock
Top Players:
Bob Schmitt, pitcher, 13-0 for the season, including 17 strikeouts in
championship game against La Grange. Had 33-3 record over three seasons.
Biggest Wins: Defeated La Grange, 6-0, for state championship.
Competition:
Lanier, 22-1 and won Southeastern Tournament championship. Kalamazoo
Central, Michigan mythical state champion, 11-0 season was part of 47-0
win streak over four seasons.
Reasons for No. 1: Manual was an
Illinois powerhouse in the 1940s and 50s, reaching the state finals
three times in the 1940s. Starting in 1949, Stonebock won 81 percent of
his game, according to a 2016 story in the Peoria Journal Star, winning
three state titles. In winning the 1950 state championship, Manual
became the first undefeated team to do so in state history.
1949 — Hughes (Cincinnati)
Record: 30-1
Coach: Robert Ruess
Top Players: Larry Hoover, pitcher, 11-0; Al Janzen (.409).
Biggest Wins:
Defeated Woodward, 29-0, on perfect game by Al Janzen. Defeated
Lakewood, 14-0, for Class A championship (Rick Marrs hit two home runs
in win).
Competition: Kalamazoo Central, 11-0 with mythical
state championship in Michigan. Went on to win 47 straight games from
1948 to 1951. St. Benedict's (Newark, N.J.), 23-0.
Reasons for No. 1:
Hughes was ranked as the seventh greatest team in Cincinnati high
school baseball history in a 2019 story in the Enquirer. Hughes beats
out a San Diego team that went 29-3 to win the SCIF championship,
however the Cavers lost three times to Tucson, which ended up losing in
the Arizona state finals to North Phoenix. The Southeastern tournament
champion, Johnson City, would normally be a contender for national
honors, but the Science Hill squad did not win the state championship
that year and only played in the tournament because it was the host
team. Hughes, meanwhile, dominated in the Class A state finals against
Lakewood, winning 14-0. Hughes also had a 22-game win streak during the
season.
1948 — St. Benedict's Prep (Newark, N.J.)
Record: 19-0
Coach: Joe Kasberger
Top Players:
Harry Durkin, SS (all-state, .411); Gene Smith, P (all-state); Leroy
O'Neill, C, (all-state); Bob Deacon, 1B (all-state second team); Don
McNally, 2B (all-state second team); John Thomas, OF (all-state second
team); Vic Kowalec, OF (all-state second team); Jack Feehan, P
(all-state second team).
Biggest Wins: St. Mary's, 5-1. Defeated Bill Kenely, who struck out 13, for 19th win of the season and 38th in a row over two seasons.
Competition:
Ramsay (Birmingham, Ala.), won the first Southeastern Interstate
tournament, which featured state champions from six Southern states.
Reasons for No. 1:
The 19 wins during the 1948 season were part of a 64-game win streak
that began in 1947 and ended in 1950. The streak was the second-longest
in high school baseball history behind Waxahachie's 65-game streak in
the 1920s. The Gray Bees placed eight players on the all-state first and
second teams, led by shortstop Durkin.
1947 — Lynn Classical (Lynn, Mass.)
Record: 16-1
Coach: Bill Joyce
Top Players:
Harry Agganis, 1B (future member of Boston Red Sox); George Bullard,
shortstop. Both Agganis and Bullard were All-Scholastics with Agganis
batting .333 and Bullard .355.
Biggest Wins: Ludlow, 14-2 in state championship game. Haverhill, 8-0, no-hitter by sophomore John Robinowski.
Competition: St. Benedict (Newark, N.J.), 19-0 (part of eventual 64-game win streak), Cleveland Heights (Ohio), 20-1.
Reasons for No. 1:
Lynn Classical had an outstanding group of athletes in the late 1940s.
Agganis was one of the top high school football players in the country,
leading Lynn Classical to a state championship in 1946 and eventually
leading the team to a mythical national championship in 1947, as
retroactively chosen by National Sports News Service. Agganis was also
chosen captain of the first Wigwam Wiseman All-America football team in
the fall of 1947, and he played in the national high school all-star
baseball game played at the Polo Grounds.
1946 — Jesuit (New Orleans)
Record: 13-0
Coach: Gernon Brown
Top Players: Hugh Oser, P; Harold "Tookie" Gilbert (MLB with Giants).
Biggest Wins: St. Aloysius for state champion.
Competition: Lincoln (Cleveland), 16-1; Bishop Fenger, 13-1; Tucson, 18-4-1.
Reasons for No. 1:
The Blue Jays placed 10 players on the All-Prep team and boasted 17
home runs during a 13-game schedule. Later that summer, Jesuit won the
American Legion World Series.
1945 — Mission (San Francisco)
Record: 10-0
Coach: Pop Elder
Top Players: Bill Healy, P; Gus Triandos, C (future MLB all-star)
Biggest Wins: Sacred Heart, 11-2.
Competition: Lee (Jacksonville, Fla.), 17-0
Reasons for No. 1:
With several future MLB players in the starting lineup, Mission did not
lose a game for two seasons, posting a 19-0 record over that period.
1944 — Burlington City (Burlington, N.J.)
Record: 7-1
Coach: Paul Vandermark
Top Players: Barney Schultz, P; Sam Calderone, C; Eddie Miksis; Gene Saragnese, P.
Biggest Wins: Bordentown, 1-0.
Competition: Male (Louisville, Ky.), 15-1; Mission (San Francisco), 9-0
Reasons for No. 1:
One of the most talented lineups in state history, Burlington boasted
three future Major Leaguers in Schultz, Calderone and Miksis who joined
the Dodgers at the end of the high school season.
1943 — Fremont (Los Angeles)
Record: 13-1
Coach: Soapy Coffman
Top Players: Gene Mauch, SS (All-city, future MLB manager); Al Koerner, OF (All-city).
Biggest Wins: Bell, 2-0, for city championship.
Competition: Tucson (Ariz.), 16-8; Morton (Ill.), 12-1.
Reasons for No. 1:
Cal-Hi Sports lists Fremont as the state's best team for 1943. The
Pathfinders won the Dorsey Tournament, which crowned the city champion,
for the third year in a row.
1942 — Muskegon (Mich.)
Record: 15-0
Coach: Harry Potter
Top Players: Paul Bard, P (0.11 ERA)
Biggest Wins: Grand Haven, 9-0
Competition: Hoover (San Diego), 13-0; Oak Park (Ill.), 18-2; Tilstonsville (Ohio), 18-1.
Reasons for No. 1:
Muskegon was 26-0 over the 1941 and 1942 seasons behind the play of
Bard, who was an all-state football and basketball player as well. Big
Red eventually stretched the streak to 55 wins in a row.
1941 — Catholic Central (Novi, Mich.)
Record: 13-0
Coach: James Martin
Top Players:
Pete Grzywny, P (all-city), Harry Kujawa, C (.510, all-city), Frank
Kolodziejski, IF, (all-city); Stan Wilkins, IF (all-city); Tommy Groth,
OF (All-city).
Biggest Wins: DeLaSalle, 21-6
Competition: Trinity (Pa.), 15-2; Tucson (Ariz.), 12-0; Grover Cleveland (New York), 22-1
Reasons for No. 1:
With a Catholic League title in 1941, the Shamrocks, won six straight
league titles and 47 of 48 games. Catholic Central, which was located in
Detroit in the 1940s, outscored opponents 253-36 including a 37-0 win
over St. Ambrose, 24-2 over St. Joseph and 24-2 and 25-2 over St.
Ladislaus.
1940 — Trinity (Washington, Pa.)
Record: 15-0
Coach: Donald "Dudley" Moore
Top Players: Billy Sams, P (10-0, 15 Ks in title game).
Biggest Wins: Midland, 3-0, WPIAL title game.
Competition: Leon (Tallahassee, Fla.), 12-0.
Reasons for No. 1:
Coming off a Section V championship in 1939, Trinity went undefeated in
1940 and won a second straight crown in 1941. Sams also pitched in the
championship game in 1941.
1939 — Hondo (Texas)
Record: 19-0
Coach: J.G. Barry
Top Players: Clint Hartung, P (future MLB player).
Biggest Wins: Adamson, 3-2, in state semifinal. Pharr-San Juan-Alamo, 15-2.
Competition: Catholic Central (Novi, Mich.), 8-0.
Reasons for No. 1:
Led by future New York Giant Hartung, a 6-foot-5 junior who was known
as the "Hondo Hurricane," the Owls finished undefeated with Hartung
pitching both the semifinal and championship game.
1938 — Palm Beach Central (Wellington, Fla.)
Record: 20-1
Coach: Red Whittington
Top Players:
Edwin Booth, 1B (tournament MVP, all-state); Tommy O'Rourke, P
(all-state); Billy Burns, SS (all-state); Julian Sowell, 3B (all-state);
Mizell Platt, OF (all-state).
Biggest Wins: Leon (Tallahassee), 7-0, in state semifinals; Andrew Jackson (Jacksonville), 11-2.
Competition: Catholic Central (Novi, Mich.), 8-0
Reasons for No. 1:
Palm Beach won 18 straight games en route to the championship,
including the dominating wins in the state tournament. A total of eight
Palm Beach players made the first or second all-state team.
1937 — Mason City (Iowa)
Record: 18-0
Coach: Clayton "Chick" Sutherland
Top Players: Everett Fletcher, P; Jack Shire, P; Johnny Thompson, C.
Biggest Wins: Burlington, 6-4, state semifinal; Everly, 5-1
Competition: Jamaica (NY), 15-2, PSAL champion; Canton McKinley (Ohio), 18-2; Lynn English (Boston, Mass.), 13-0.
Reasons for No. 1:
Mason City captured the 1935 state championship and picked up another
state title in 1937 with an unbeaten team. Iowa currently plays
baseball during the summer, but it played baseball in the spring in the
1930s.
1936 — Jesuit (New Orleans)
Record: 11-0
Coach: Gernon Brown
Top Players: Connie Ryan (MLB player); Charles Gilbert (MLB player); Fast D'Antonio, C (.444); Bill Hodges (.558).
Biggest Wins: Warren Easton, 11-0, state semifinals; Ouachita, 6-0, state championship game.
Competition: Long Beach Poly (Calif.), 23-2; Phoenix Union (Ariz.), 10-0; Norwood (Ohio), 15-0.
Reasons for No. 1:
Jesuit won its fourth state championship in six seasons and boasted of a
powerful lineup that placed eight players on the All-Prep team. Three
players went on to play in the Major Leagues.
1935 — Textile (New York)
Record: 20-1
Coach: Coach Sullivan
Top Players: Ray Romersa, P; Bill Nicholas, P.
Biggest Wins: Brooklyn Tech, 4-0, PSAL semifinals; Newtown, 8-5, in PSAL title game.
Competition: Sacramento, 20-1
Reasons for No. 1:
Textile dominated the PSAL in the early 1930s, reaching the city
championship game four times in the five seasons and winning
back-to-back titles in 1934 and 1935.
1934 — Withrow (Cincinnati)
Record: 21-3
Coach: Angus King
Top Players: Don Corken, P; Gordon Corken, LF
Biggest Wins: Warren Harding, 12-1 in state finals; Akron East,15-2, semifinals.
Competition: Mission (San Francisco), 7-0; Phoenix Union, 7-0.
Reasons for No. 1:
Withrow had one of the most dominating performances in the state
tournament in state history. It bashed 17 hits in the semifinals and
defeated the defending state champion Warren Harding by 11 runs. The
Cincinnati Enquirer ranks Withrow as the No. 6 greatest Cincinnati team
of all-time.
1933 — Phoenix Union (Ariz.)
Record: 11-0
Coach: Jessie McComb
Top Players: Elwood Esmay, P; Lee Lowery; Ed Wilson.
Biggest Wins: Glendale, 7-6, Valley championship game.
Competition: Roosevelt (N.Y.), 20-2; Austin (Texas), 20-3
Reasons for No. 1:
McComb led the Coyotes to eight state championships during his tenure
and led Phoenix Union to 18 title games in 19 years. At one time,
Phoenix Union was one of the largest schools in the country, but it
closed in 1982 due to declining enrollment.
1932 — Manatee (Bradenton, Fla.)
Record: 14-2
Coach: Bill Doak
Top Players: Earl Evans, P (pitched both state semifinal and final game on same day and had 22 strikeouts in two games).
Biggest Wins: St. Augustine, 8-2, state championship game.
Competition: Lane Tech (Chicago), Chicago Public League champion.
Reasons for No. 1:
Coming off a state championship in 1931, Bradenton was the favorite
again in 1932. Bradenton placed four players on the all-state team,
paced by pitcher Earl Evans. The first loss of the season was to the
Cardinals - the St. Louis
Cardinals - the 1931 World Series champion Cardinals who spent their
spring training in Bradenton and played the locals in a practice game.
Also lost to Plant in a three-game series for district championship that
Bradenton ended up winning.
1931 — Easton (New Orleans)
Record: 12-0
Coach: Lawrence Lashley
Top Players: R.C. Mullins, 1B (.378, all-prep school), Roy Smith, 3B (.415, all-prep school), S. A. Gautreaux, C (all-prep school).
Biggest Wins: St. Aloysius, 9-8 (11 innings), Commercial (New Orleans), 10-4; Jesuit, 15-0.
Competition: Boston English (Mass.), 14-0
Reasons for No. 1:
Easton had one of the best programs in Louisiana starting in 1910,
winning nine straight state titles (five as Boys High School before
being renamed). The 1931 championship was the first crown in 13 years.
The state championship was actually held prior to the final games of the
season as it beat St. Aloysius for the state championship at rally day
and then topped Jesuit in the season finale.
1930 — San Diego (Calif.)
Record: 19-3
Coach: Mike Morrow
Top Players: Athos Sada (.611), Tony Galasso, pitcher (12 strikeouts in playoff wins over Huntington Beach and Cathedral).
Biggest Wins: Fullerton, 31-6; Colton, 9-1 (SCIF semifinals), Cathedral, 8-0 (SCIF championship game).
Competition: Martins Ferry (Ohio), 21-1; Tucson (Ariz.), 11-1.
Reasons for No. 1:
The SCIF championship in 1930 was the third straight for San Diego,
which lost just one game to a high school team during the season.
According to Caver Conquest, scouts and newspapermen called the 1930
team one of the most powerful ever assembled and was stronger than the
1921 team.
1929 — San Diego (Calif.)
Record: 31-5
Coach: Mike Morrow
Top Players: Marshall Pierson, pitcher; Al McNeely (.439).
Biggest Wins: Fullerton, 4-1, SCIF championship.
Competition: Phoenix, 13-0, Arizona state champion; Columbus Central (Ohio), 15-1.
Reasons for No. 1:
San Diego had won the SCIF championship in 1928 and had one of the
winningest teams in the nation in 1929 with 19 wins coming against
military teams. Only one of the losses was to a high school team while
23 of the games were against military teams. San Diego avenged its only
high school loss by beating Fullerton for the SCIF championship.
1928 — Orlando (Fla.)
Record: 25-1
Coach: L.E. Davidson
Top Players: Paul Yochum, OF (all-state); Fred Yochum, 2b (all-state), Urban Yochum, P (all-state).
Biggest Wins: Defeated Miami, 3-2, in state finals.
Competition: Phoenix (Ariz.), 9-1; San Diego, 22-8-1.
Reasons for No. 1:
Coming off a state championship in 1927, Orlando won a pair of close
games in the state semifinals, beating Palatka and Miami for the title.
The Tigers benefited from the play of the Yochum brothers, all of whom
made the all-state team. Urban Yochum was the top pitcher in the state
tournament, figuring in all three wins for Orlando. The school closed in
1952.
1927 — Fullerton (Calif.)
Record: 29-5-1
Coach: Shorty Smith
Top Players: Homer Hurst, P (reportedly had 26 pitching wins).
Biggest Wins: Defeated Alhambra, 9-0, for Southern California championship.
Competition: Waxahachie (Texas), 15-0.
Reasons for No. 1:
Fullerton had eight lettermen returning from a team that won the
Southern California championship in 1926. Fullerton won 68 games over a
two-year period and appeared in the Southern California championship
game three straight seasons and four of the previous six years.
1926 — Waxahachie (Texas)
Record: 21-0
Coach: A.A. Scott
Top Players: Paul Richards, IF (future MLB all-star and manager).
Biggest Wins: Bryan, 7-5; Austin, 9-5, 13-6.
Competition: Byrd, 16-0, Louisiana state champions; Alameda (Calif.), 22-1
Reasons for No. 1:
Heading into the 1926 season, Waxahachie had won 29 straight games,
including 24-0 in 1925, according to information compiled by C.L.
Kennedy. Waxahachie posted nine shutouts and allowed one run in six
other games. Waxahachie had claimed state championships in 1924 and
1925. In the two wins against Austin, Richards pitched both right- and
left-handed during the series.
1925 — Lane Tech (Chicago)
Record: 30-1
Coach: Percy Moore
Top Players: Arf Thorp, P (14 Ks vs. Flushing, no-hitter vs. Lake View).
Biggest Wins:
McKinley, 16-1, for Chicago Public League championship; Flushing
(N.Y.), 3-1, for Chicago-New York Interstate championship (in front of
50,000 fans).
Competition: Waxahachie (Texas), 24-0, Texas state champion
Reasons for No. 1:
Lane Tech had its best team to date under coach Moore. After winning
Public League championships in 1920 and 1921, Lane lost only to a prep
school in 1925 en route to beating Flushing in the Chicago-New York
intercity series. The Public League title was the first of three
straight and seven in the next nine seasons for Lane Tech.
1924 — Lafayette Jefferson (Lafayette, Ind.)
Record: 17-0
Coach: PJ Grosshans
Top Players: Bud Stewart (14 Ks vs. Lane Tech), Pete McConnell, Doc Mohlman, Harry Kemmer, John Hanna.
Biggest Wins: Lane Tech, 9-6.
Competition: Schurz (Chicago), 21-1-1.
Reasons for No. 1:
Jefferson went undefeated against Indiana competition two straight
seasons, but lost to Lane Tech (Chicago) in 1923. Jefferson avenged that
loss in 1924 with a victory over Lane Tech, which had traditionally
been one of the top teams in the Chicago Public League.
1923 — San Diego (Calif.)
Record: 15-4
Coach: John Perry
Top Players: Stubby Nemechek, pitcher; Ed Cabelleo; Cone Galindo; Dutch Buerkle.
Biggest Wins: Covina, 12-1 (SCIF championship), Norwalk, 3-1 (SCIF playoff).
Competition: George Washington (New York), winner of Chicago-New York intercity baseball series.
Reasons for No. 1:
Besides going undefeated against high school competition, San Diego
defeated a 9-0 Covina team for the SCIF crown. A proposed state
championship game against Northern California champion Sacramento never
occurred after the Dragons declined, according to Caver Conquest. The
SCIF crown was the fifth for the Cavemen. San Diego was 14-0 against
high school competition with all four losses coming against the Marines,
alumni or USC freshman team. San Diego did not compete in the CIF in
1922 after being suspended for one year for playing in the national
championship game in 1921.
1922 — Byrd (Shreveport, La.)
Record: 12-0
Coach: Alberson.
Top Players: Tuggles Armstrong, SS (captain); Toney Fulco, 1B.
Biggest Wins: Warren Easton, 4-2, 4-3 for state championship.
Competition: Mission (San Francisco), 6-1; Little Rock Central (Ark.), 24-3; Battin (N.J.), 19-2.
Reasons for No. 1:
State champions in 1920, Byrd won five straight state championships
from 1922 to 1926. The Shreveport team beat a Warren Easton squad that
had won the 1921 state title and had dominated the previous decade with
nine straight state titles.
1921 — San Diego (Calif.)
Record: 20-5-2
Coach: John Perry
Top Players: Earl "Red" Lehman, pitcher (threw no-hitter against Whittier), Willis Praul, pitcher (17 Ks vs. Long Beach Poly).
Biggest Wins: Chico, 10-4 (state playoff game); West Tech (Cleveland, Ohio), 10-0, 7-6 (national playoff).
Competition: West Tech (Cleveland, Ohio). Mission (San Francisco), 9-0.
Reasons for No. 1:
San Diego was the defending SCIF and state champion, defeating Alameda,
5-3, for the state crown in 1920. The Hillers built on that success
with the first-ever national championship in 1921. The Hillers were 15-1
against high school teams, losing only to Whittier. Other losses and
ties came against naval teams, town teams and local all-star teams. San
Diego advanced to a state championship game against Chico, which was
19-0 according to Caver Conquest, and then took on West Tech from
Cleveland, Ohio, for a national championship game. West Tech had lost
just once in three seasons and was unbeaten in 1921. The game was the
first-ever national championship baseball game.
1920 — Commerce (Manhattan, N.Y.)
Record: 10-0
Coach: Harry Kane
Top Players: Lou Gehrig, 1B (future Hall of Famer with New York Yankees).
Biggest Wins: Def. Lane Tech (Chicago, Ill.), 12-6 in Chicago-New York intercity series.
Competition: San Diego, 13-1 (California state champion); Little Rock Central (Ark.), 34-1.
Reasons for No. 1:
In the first Chicago-New York Intercity Series, PSAL champion Commerce
traveled to play Lane Tech at Wrigley Field (called Cubs Park back
then). Gehrig sparked Commerce to the win with a ninth-inning grand
slam.
1919 — Oakland Tech (Oakland, Calif.)
Record: 8-0
Coach: CH Blesse
Top Players: Gus Bower, Johnny Gillespie
Biggest Wins: Oakland 3-2 for Oakland League championship.
Competition: Warren Easton (La.), Erasmus (Brooklyn, N.Y.); Waxahachie (Texas), 12-0, Little Rock Ark.), 14-0.
Reasons for No. 1:
Tech won the Northern California championship and was scheduled to play
the winner of the Southern California playoffs for the state
championship, but Fullerton elected not to travel north to meet Tech.
Standout track athlete Harold "Brick" Muller, who played on the 1917 San
Diego baseball team, had moved to Oakland and was dominant on the Tech
track team. He reportedly played baseball as well.
1918 — Brooklyn Prep (N.Y.)
Record: 12-2
Coach: McEntee and Brown.
Top Players: Jake Hehl, P.
Biggest Wins: St. John's, 3-1.
Competition: Brackendridge (San Antonio), 10-1.
Reasons for No. 1:
With a 3-1 win over St. John's, Brooklyn Prep avenged an earlier loss
and claimed the championship of New York. Hehl had one of the most
peculiar professional careers in MLB history. Two weeks after his final
game with Brooklyn Prep, Hehl was brought in by the Brooklyn Robins to
pitch against the New York Giants. Hehl pitched one inning, faced four
batters and got three outs while also plunking Jim Thorpe with a pitch.
Hehl never pitched another professional game.
1917 — San Diego (Calif.)
Record: 12-1
Coach: NIbs Price
Top Players: Wes Sharp (.412); Clyde Randall (P)
Biggest Wins: USC Varsity, 9-1; Chaffey, 9-1 (playoff game); Whittier, 7-2 (playoff game); Norwalk, 12-2 (CIF championship game).
Competition: Little Rock Central (Ark.), 15-2.
Reasons for No. 1:
It was a great season at San Diego High, which also went 12-0 in
football and was retroactively selected as the national champion by the
National Sports News Service. The Southern California Interscholastic
Federation championship was the first of many to come for the Hillers.
San Diego easily won its playoff game thanks to 12 errors by Norwalk.
1916 — Central (Little Rock, Ark.)
Record: 17-3
Coach: Earl Quigley
Top Players: Sloan (.368); Cockrill (.337); Powell (.302).
Biggest Wins: Pine Bluff, 14-3.
Competition: Brooklyn Prep, 7-0-1
Reasons for No. 1:
Central did not lose to a high school team in 1916, losing three games
to a military team and two college squads. Little Rock had a strong
program under Quigley during the last half of the decade, playing as
many as 50 games one season while other programs across the country were
playing less than 10.
1915 — Phillips (Chicago)
Record: 15-1
Coach: Ray
Top Players: Stewart (no-hitter vs. Hyde Park, 11 Ks)
Biggest Wins: Harrison, 7-4, for Chicago Prep League championship.
Competition: Sacred Heart (San Francisco, Calif.), 5-0; Warren Easton (La.)
Reasons for No. 1:
The Chicago Public League formed in 1914 and Phillips won the league
championship in its second season. With a win over Oak Park, Phillips
also claimed ownership of the championship of Cook County.
1914 — Erasmus Hall (Brooklyn, N.Y.)
Record: 14-2
Coach: Wallace Welsh
Top Players:
John Walsh, 2B (all-scholastic); William Sykes, P (all-scholastics,
player of the year); Jimmy Olson, 3B (all-scholastics); Ty Halsted, LF
(all-scholastics); Harry Sullivan, CF (all-scholastics).
Biggest Wins: Poly Prep, 15-1, 10-6
Competition: Lowell (San Francisco) 6-0.
Reasons for No. 1:
Erasmus won the borough championship three straight seasons with the
1914 team being the best of the three. Behind the pitching of city
player of the year Sykes, Erasmus beat every team in Brooklyn en route
to the city championship. One of the losses was to the Princeton
freshman team.
1913 — Everett (Mass.)
Record: 21-0
Coach: Cleo O'Donnell
Top Players: John Murray, P (All-Interscholastic); Fred Sweetland, C (All-Interscholastic); George Brickley, 2B (All-Interscholastic).
Biggest Wins: Melrose, 7-6;
Competition: Long Beach Poly (Calif.), 19-3-1
Reasons for No. 1:
Everett had a tremendous group of athletes during the 1913 and 1914
seasons. Prior to the football team earning national championship
recognition in 1914, the baseball team had similar success in 1913,
going undefeated with three players earning All-Interscholastic honors.
1912 — Long Beach Poly (Long Beach, Calif.)
Record: 17-5
Coach: Gastrich
Top Players: Craig, SS (.360); Holloway, 2B (.437); Reagan, 3B (.371).
Biggest Wins: Los Angeles, 7-5, for Los Angeles County championship.
Competition: Tucson, 8-3.
Reasons for No. 1:
Poly was undefeated against high school competition with all five
losses coming against college teams during the preseason. The
Jackrabbits also defeated Occidental College. After beating Los Angeles
for the county championship, Long Beach Poly was scheduled to play
Downey for the Southern California championship, however school
officials decided not to play after it was determined that Downey's star
pitcher had competed in professional games.
1911 — Newtown (Elmhurst, N.Y.)
Record: 13-2-1
Coach: John Kerrigan
Top Players: Damico, P (All-Scholastic); Payne, C (All-Scholastic).
Biggest Wins: Commercial, 8-1, for Greater New York PSAL championship.
Competition: Sacred Heart (San Francisco).
Reasons for No. 1:
Newtown knocked off defending PSAL champion Commercial in the
championship game. There were fewer candidates in 1911 due to "Sunday
Baseball." Sacred Heart (San Francisco) and nearly every team in the
Chicago Public League had to forfeit their seasons due to players
competing professionally during Sunday games.
1910 — Commercial (Brooklyn, N.Y.)
Record: 9-1
Coach: Shearer
Top Players: Pete Greene, pitcher (3-hitter against undefeated Richmond Hill, All-Scholastic).
Biggest Wins: Defeated Commerce (Manhattan, N.Y.) 8-2 for the P.S.A.L. championship.
Competition: Boys High (Warren Easton, La.); Sacred Heart (San Francisco), 8-0.
Reasons for No. 1:
Commercial finished as the runner-up in the P.S.A.L. in 1909 and went
one step further in 1910 with a borough and city championship.