Press Release for
Thursday, July 1, 2010Laval takes over UNF baseball program
Christopher Whitehead
Assistant Director, Athletic Media Relations
(904) 620-4029
After
23 seasons, the University of North Florida baseball team is under new
direction as Raymond “Smoke” Laval officially becomes the head coach of
the Ospreys. Laval replaces Hall of Fame head baseball coach Dusty
Rhodes, who announced his retirement in August effective at the end of
the 2010 season.
“Dusty
laid a good foundation here,” stated Laval. “I am just going to try to
add on to the foundation. As far as the baseball is concerned, I have
to do the system that I have been taught. It has worked and it has been
successful and I have been able to go to Regionals, Super Regionals and
even to Omaha. I am not going to change that. My job is to try to get
the team to believe in that part.
“It is
the old cliché, winning breeds success,” Laval added. “You want to win,
hang around winners. You want to catch the flu, hang around 10 people
who have the flu. The blueprint is still the same whether it’s high
school, junior college, NAIA, Division I or Division II. I know it can
get done and I know it can get done here at UNF.
“We
have broadened our recruiting area a bit. We are trying to get more
physical. I was a part of 'gorilla ball' down at LSU, so I like to see
guys that are a little bit bigger and stronger. I know the system
works. If I can get the guys to believe in that system then, barring
injury, we should be successful. You can’t judge us on the wins and
losses initially. Judge us on whether we get better game-by-game,
week-by-week. You can play good and win and good and lose or bad and
win and bad and lose. I want to play good no matter what the outcome is
and keep getting better each game.”
Laval is a 30-year college coaching veteran with 12 years of Division I experience as a head coach.
Laval
served as LSU’s head baseball coach for five seasons (2002-2006). In
five years at the helm of the LSU program, he guided the Tigers to two
College World Series berths (2003 and 2004), two NCAA Super Regional
titles, three NCAA Regional championships, one SEC title, two SEC
division championships and two Top 10 finishes. Laval, the 2003 SEC
Coach of the Year, finished his career at LSU with a 210-109-1 (.658)
overall record and the highest winning percentage in SEC regular-season
games. He coached two players to SEC Player of the Year accolades and
had 23 players drafted by Major League clubs. Laval boasted a
school-record 12 SEC Academic Honor Roll members in 2004 and in 2005.
Laval
served seven seasons (1994-2000) as the head coach at the University of
Louisiana-Monroe. Laval compiled a 241-159 (.603) mark as the head
coach at ULM, guiding them to NCAA Regional appearances in 1995, 1999
and 2000. The 2000 club posted a 41-22 mark en route to the Southland
Conference title, tying the ULM record for wins. Laval, the 1999 SLC
Coach of the Year, also led ULM to the 1999 regular-season title and to
the 1995 conference tournament crown. He was voted the 1995 Louisiana
Coach of the Year by the Louisiana Sportswriters Association.
Laval
began his coaching career in 1977 as an assistant at Jacksonville
University before moving to Wolfson High School in Jacksonville as a
baseball and football coach. He served as a graduate assistant at LSU
in 1979 under former Tiger head coach Jack Lamabe before working two
years as an assistant at Gulf Coast Community College in Panama City,
Fla.
Laval
served as an assistant coach at Florida for two seasons (1982-83)
before returning to LSU to work under former coach Skip Bertman. Laval
served as the assistant coach for the LSU Tigers from 1984-93 before
leaving for ULM. As an assistant at LSU, helped guide the Tigers to two
NCAA titles, six College World Series appearances and five SEC
Championships. He returned to LSU in 2001 as an administrative
assistant and took over for the retired Bertman the next season.
Laval
holds a bachelor’s degree (1977) from Jacksonville in physical
education and a master’s degree (1979) from LSU in administration. The
McDonald, Pa., native played two seasons at Gulf Coast Community
College, where he lettered as a catcher. He completed his playing
career at JU, where he led the ninth-ranked Dolphins in hitting at the
1976 NCAA South Regional.
The Smoke Laval File
PERSONAL DATA
Full Name: Raymond Peter Laval
Birthdate: December 20, 1955, in McDonald, Pa.
Wife: Former Pam Lewis of Reserve, La.
Children: Jamie and Brandon
EDUCATION
1973: High School Diploma, South Fayette HS (McDonald, Pa.)
1977: Bachelor’s in Physical Education, Jacksonville
1979: Master’s in Administration, LSU
PLAYING EXPERIENCE
1970-73: Catcher, South Fayette High School
1974-75: Catcher, Gulf Coast Community College
1976-77: Catcher, Jacksonville
COACHING EXPERIENCE
1977: Assistant Coach, Jacksonville
1978: Assistant Coach, Wolfson High School (Jacksonville, Fla.)
1979: Graduate Assistant Coach, LSU
1980-81: Assistant Coach, Gulf Coast Community College
1982-83: Assistant Coach, Florida
1984-93: Assistant Coach, LSU
1994-00: Head Coach, ULM
2001: Administrative Assistant, LSU
2002-06: Head Coach, LSU
2010: Associate Head Coach, North Florida
-UNF-