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Breaking News>>>Skip Johnson Named OU Head Baseball Coach

joeywa

Unofficial HS BBQ Consultant & Baseball Pundit
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Good for Skip.  He will get the opportunity to coach Oklahoma. 

— Twitter API (@twitterapi) November 7, 2011

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http://www.soonersports.com/ViewArticle.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=31000&ATCLID=211631291

NORMAN — University of Oklahoma Vice President and Athletics Director Joe Castiglione announced today that Skip Johnson has been named the 10th head coach of the OU baseball program.

Johnson served as the Sooners' pitching coach last season after a 25-year coaching career in the state of Texas, including the most recent 10 years as an assistant and associate head coach at the University of Texas. In his lone season in Norman, he helped OU to its first NCAA Tournament appearance since 2013.

New Skip in Town
SGRVJFUIHGAUYTG.20160913174024.jpg
Skip Johnson, Head Coach
Johnson, the Sooner pitching coach in 2017, becomes the 10th head coach in OU baseball history. He previously spent 10 seasons as an assistant at Texas and 13 as the head coach at Navarro JC. Johnson's Coaching Experience 1993 Navarro College Assistant Coach 1994-06 Navarro College Head Coach 2007-12 Texas Assistant Coach 2003-16 Texas Associate Head Coach 2017 Oklahoma Assistant Coach The Johnson File Hometown Denton, Texas College Texas-Pan American '90 Family wife Cathy
sons Tyler and Garrett Wins 450 MLB Draft Picks Oklahoma - 3
Texas - 32
Navarro - 38
"It's an exciting new day for Sooner baseball with the hiring of Skip Johnson as our head coach," said Castiglione. "Once our search got underway last week, we spoke to many people throughout the youth, college and professional baseball worlds about the candidates we were considering, and the information gleaned from those conversations further validated our belief that Skip is the right and the best choice for our program now and going forward.

"Our main focus with any coaching search is making decisions grounded in what's best for our student-athletes and our program overall. Skip emerged as the best candidate and he's diligently prepared for this special opportunity. We obviously got to know Skip this past year as a member of our coaching staff, but we also know about his career of success, his previous head coaching experience and him being mentored by the winningest coach in the history of college baseball, Augie Garrido. Skip's been part of championships and he's been to Omaha. That's where we want to be. Knowing the passion he possesses, he will hit the ground running. We're looking forward to officially introducing him as our head coach at tomorrow's news conference."

Johnson made an immediate impact on the Sooner pitching staff this past season. Oklahoma pitchers surrendered the least amount of home runs in the Big 12 Conference in 2017, and combined for 531 strikeouts to rank fourth in the league and fourth in OU single-season history. The Sooners' 9.26 strikeouts per nine innings ranked second in the conference. As a team, OU pitchers struck out 10 or more batters on 24 occasions.

Sooner pitchers combined for 17 starts of six innings or more in 2017, including the first two games of the Louisville Regional. Last week, three Oklahoma pitchers were selected in the Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft. Sooner closer JB Olson was drafted in the 10th round to extend a string of seven straight years with an Oklahoma player chosen in the first 10 rounds. OU saw starter Devon Perez and reliever Vincenzo Aiello selected on day three of the draft.

"I'd like to thank the OU Board of Regents, President David Boren, Joe Castiglione and (Senior Associate AD) Greg Tipton for giving me this opportunity to lead the University of Oklahoma baseball program, and for the confidence in me they've shown," said Johnson. "More than anything, I'm honored. As head coach at OU, I'm going to do everything I can to make our alumni and our fan base very proud. We're going to recruit and develop student-athletes who possess the intangibles and the heart necessary to win conference and national championships, we're going to abide by a set of core values that our players will clearly understand, and we'll have a player program that is going to develop young men on and off the field. OU baseball is going to be here for a long, long time, and I'm excited and honored to have the opportunity to leave a positive mark on this tradition-rich program."

"We're going to recruit and develop student-athletes who possess the intangibles and the heart necessary to win conference and national championships."
-- Skip Johnson
Johnson was hired as the pitching coach at Texas for the 2007 season under Augie Garrido, who stepped down from his position as the winningest coach in college baseball in May 2016 to take on new duties in the UT athletics department. In 10 seasons, Johnson helped the Longhorns to seven NCAA Regional appearances, four Super Regionals and three College World Series appearances.

During his tenure in Austin, 32 Texas pitchers were selected in the MLB Draft, including 14 in the first 10 rounds and three first-round picks. Johnson also oversaw the development of six Longhorn pitchers who have made it to the big leagues. The Texas pitching staff produced a team earned run average below 3.00 on five occasions and struck out better than 7.5 per-nine-innings in five of his last eight seasons. As Texas reached its second CWS with Johnson on staff in 2011, his pitchers led the Big 12 in ERA (2.35), batting average against (.198) and strikeouts per nine innings (8.28).

Prior to his time in Austin, Johnson was the head coach at Navarro College of the NJCAA's Texas Eastern Athletic Conference. From 1994-2006, he guided the Bulldogs to 13 NJCAA Regionals, nine TEAC championships and four regional titles while compiling 450 wins.

Johnson has also mentored a number of players outside of those he coached at Navarro and UT. Johnson regularly works with three-time Cy Young Award winner Clayton Kershaw of the Los Angeles Dodgers and Homer Bailey of the Cincinnati Reds. He's also worked with Chris Davis of the Baltimore Orioles, among others.

A standout baseball player at Denton High School, Johnson began his collegiate playing career at Ranger (Texas) College. After a two-year career there, Johnson moved on to play baseball at the University of North Texas in 1988 before the school dropped its baseball program. He completed his collegiate playing career at UT-Pan American, lettering for the Broncs in 1989 and receiving his bachelor's degree in 1990. Johnson earned a master's degree in education from UT-Tyler in 1993.

A native of Denton, Texas, Johnson and his wife, Cathy, have two sons, Tyler and Garrett.

Additional Quotes on Skip JohnsonChris Davis, Baltimore Orioles First Baseman:

"As far as baseball, Oklahoma is getting the best guy I know of. And I'm talking about high school, college, minor leagues, big leagues. Just as far as knowing the game, being able to relate to players and communicate with them, and being able to understand players, how they tick and how to get the most out of them, I think he's the best at those things. And as far as a person, there aren't too many people out there I hold in higher regard than Skip Johnson. I played for him for two years some 11 years ago and we're better friends now than we ever have been. He's just a really down-to-earth guy and I just can't think of many guys I have more respect for than him."

Augie Garrido, Former Texas Head Coach:

"This is an exciting new era for Oklahoma baseball with the hiring of Skip Johnson. He's going to bring the core values of the state of Oklahoma itself and he's going to bring championship baseball back to Norman and the University of Oklahoma. The legacies of Coach (Enos) Semore, Coach (Larry) Cochell and Coach (Sunny) Golloway have all been a part of his own observation and his own development. I sincerely believe all of us in coaching are influenced by the people who we're surrounded by. He was surrounded by the spirit of Oklahoma baseball and the people in the leadership roles at OU. He's been on the Texas side of it and so he knows about arch rivals from the inside point of view, and he brings with him a background of championship baseball from when he was head coach at Navarro. I think the fans are going to enjoy the authenticity of his core values system, how he relates to the players, the academic demands he'll put on them and the results he'll get both academically and athletically as he provides championship leadership for the University of Oklahoma."

Tim Tadlock, Texas Tech Head Coach:

"I've known Skip since we were on the same Little League team and some things never change. What you see is what you get with Skip. He's a true baseball guy who has earned the right to lead a program like OU. It's neat to see that Joe Castiglione recognized almost 30 years of commitment to the game of college baseball. Skip is baseball all day, every day. Our league just got better.”










 
I must have missed it. Where did previous coach go? Good for Skip. OU still sucks, and it's 4:21...PST.

 
I must have missed it. Where did previous coach go? Good for Skip. OU still sucks, and it's 4:21...PST.
His contract was not renewed at the end of this season. 

 
If we had an AD instead of a Personal Injury Attorney who knows nothing about baseball in the position,  Skip would be the Texas coach.

He is going to kick Pierce's xxx in recruiting and on the field.

 
If we had an AD instead of a Personal Injury Attorney who knows nothing about baseball in the position,  Skip would be the Texas coach.

He is going to kick Pierce's xxx in recruiting and on the field.
I disagree. We needed new blood and a new culture in the baseball program. A complete overhaul was needed...

 
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I disagree. We needed new blood and a new culture in the baseball program. A complete overhaul was needed...
This is exactly right.  Had UT done better the last two season that Augie was here, then a case could have been made to keep Skip.  His resume and ties in recruiting were there.  The thing was, the program needed a clean sweep of the coaching staff, esp after 2016. 

I absolutely was in Skip's corner for the HC gig at UT, but it was best for all if he moved on. 

 
This is exactly right.  Had UT done better the last two season that Augie was here, then a case could have been made to keep Skip.  His resume and ties in recruiting were there.  The thing was, the program needed a clean sweep of the coaching staff, esp after 2016. 

I absolutely was in Skip's corner for the HC gig at UT, but it was best for all if he moved on. 
All of this... And for the record I love what Skip did for Texas..

 
I disagree. We needed new blood and a new culture in the baseball program. A complete overhaul was needed...

Very possible.    But David Pierce was a terrible hire.   More so,  when he brought his entire staff.

joeywa and I could have coached this talent to a Regional.  

 
I know others disagree but I was never all that impressed with Skip Johnson as our pitching coach.

 
It is also my understanding he did all of our recruiting for the last few years.

Another reason to not be impressed.

 
Then why didn't Augie and Skip coach them to a regional? They didn't look very talented under that regime...
They had recruited but did not have Hamilton, Reynolds, Todd.    Cooper was coming back from TJ and really not 100%.   Kingham and Shugart were  freshmen that needed to mature on and off the field.    Baker and Rand fought injuries.    Boswell had to play out of position at ss.

It is also my understanding he did all of our recruiting for the last few years.

Another reason to not be impressed.
With 11 draft selections and many more still on roster,  MLB might disagree.

Final thoughts:

It was time for Augie to leave.   But a competent AD would have known that Augie's contract only had 1 more year and would have planned accordingly by having a list of potential replacements.  Certainly not taking 30 days to find a replacement.  The resignation/firing of Augie on Memorial Day and announcing it during the NCAA Selection Show...no words.

Skip should have been a candidate.   Per Bohls, AAS, he was not even considered.

David Pierce was the head coach at SHSU for only 3 years and Tulane for 2.   Both of those programs were solid when he took over.    He inherited the previous regime's players like at Texas.  Give him credit for managing them, like he did this year.     The SHSU team that went to the Super Regional this year started 5 sophomores.   Perhaps Pierce had identified them before he left in '14, don't know, doubtful.   Tulane was 27-31 this year.

A competent AD would have wanted more experience for a historic/successful college baseball program like Texas.    A coach with a longer tenure at one program, that had won a Regional (Pierce never has) and ideally been to Omaha.   You certainly don't give a 6 year contract.  There are exceptions,  but this is Texas. 

  Tadlock came to Tech from an Asst job at OU.   He has a similar resume as Skip, successful head coach at a juco (Grayson).   But look who he surrounded himself with (Ray Hayward, MLB and college experience)   Look at TCU.   Saarloos gets the publicity,  but their program took off when Schlossnagle hired Bill Mosiello who was at Tenn and has much college and MLB experience.   Look at Ok St hiring Rob Walton, former Oral Roberts head coach, as an assistant.    Take a look around at successful programs and you will see the same.   We have an inexperienced coaching staff.   This is the Power 5, big boys.

Before the season started,   I asked Scott Wilson  (if you follow Texas Baseball, you know of him) on why I should like David Pierce.   His reply...

"We have to support whoever is there"

Luv you guys !     :)

 
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1st great for skip a terrific baseball guy and he will be successful.

2nd not to debate this again for the 10k time, was not right for this job. A while new regime needed to be brought in. I was a Tadlock supporter but Pierce will be fine here.

 
Mac,

Please don't use Bohls as an authority.

Skip was both talked to and given consideration.

Admin felt the need to clean house for a clean break.

Additionally, Gus (different time/era in college baseball-granted) had zero college experience. Augie was the opposite end of the spectrum.

Both OSU coach and Vandy coach accepted the job and changed their minds in the 11th hour.

O'Sullivan was interview and was being pushed on UT by a certain faction of big wigs. He played the situation.

LSU coach was interviewed as well.

UVA coach was talked to but had a contract extension, as did the Louisville coach.

Trust me on this, I spent a lot of time discussing this with people involved.

I believe Pierce is the right guy. Give him time to get the pieces all in place. 2018 will be a patchwork quilt of sorts, mixing HS kids and JUCO xfers. Hopefully this will lend itself to some players that can come into the mix and contribute right away.

 
"With 11 draft selections and many more still on roster, MLB might disagree" per Mav.

Very low selections for the most part.

Not impressive at all.
A lot of truth here. MLB took a few of our best high, but the bulk were later rounds. While I'm happy with them getting drafted and having an opportunity to play at the next level, let's not kid ourselves and think they're going to be on anyone's opening day rosters. They all have a long way to go.

 
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