Larry Hays | |
Birth Place: | Elida, New Mexico, U.S. |
Coach Sport1: | Baseball |
Coach Years2: | 1971–1986 |
Coach Team2: | Lubbock Christian |
Coach Years3: | 1987–2008 |
Coach Team3: | Texas Tech |
Coach Sport4: | Men's basketball |
Coach Years5: | 1969–1975 |
Coach Team5: | Lubbock Christian |
Coach Years6: | 1978–1980 |
Coach Team6: | Lubbock Christian |
Coach Sport7: | Women's basketball |
Coach Years8: | 1982–1983 |
Coach Team8: | Lubbock Christian |
Coach Sport9: | Softball |
Coach Years10: | 2010 |
Coach Team10: | Lubbock Christian |
Admin Years1: | 1979–1987 |
Admin Team1: | Lubbock Christian |
Overall Record: | 1,509–860 (Baseball) 113–137 (Men's basketball) 8–9 (Women's basketball) 54–7 (Softball) |
Championships: | NAIA Baseball (1983) SWC Regular Season (1995) SWC Tournament (1995) Big 12 Regular Season (1997) Big 12 Tournament (1998) SAC Regular Season (2010) |
Awards: | SWC Coach of the Year (1995) Big 12 Coach of the Year (1997) NAIA Hall of Fame inductee Texas Baseball Hall of Fame inductee |
Cbasehof Year: | 2015 |
Larry Hays is a US college baseball, basketball, women's basketball, and softball coach. He was the head baseball coach at Lubbock Christian University (LCU) (1971–1986) and Texas Tech University (1987–2008). He was the head coach of the LCU Chaparrals basketball (1969–1975, 1978–1980), LCU Lady Chaps basketball (1982–83), LCU Lady Chaps softball (2010) and LCU athletic director (1979–1987).
Under the leadership of Hays, the LCU Chaparrals baseball team won the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) Baseball World Series in 1983.
Hays was born in Elida, New Mexico, but went to school in Dora, where he played basketball and baseball in high school. He attended Lubbock Christian College and played for the men's basketball team while earning an Associates of Arts degree in 1964. He then attended Eastern New Mexico University (ENMU), in Portales, New Mexico, where he earned a Bachelors (1966) and master's degree (1969). As Hays put it, "I've always liked to say when I was at Eastern, that I averaged 30 a game. When I said that, people looked at me, and I would say '30 seconds, not 30 points."[1]
Hays began his coaching career when he was hired as the assistant coach of the Lubbock Christian Chaparrals basketball team. He was promoted to head coach in 1969. When Lubbock Christian added baseball in 1971, Hays became the program's second head coach (he played on teams for LCC in the 1960s which were coached by Lester Perrin, the head basketball coach at the school at that time). He led the Chaparrals baseball team to an NAIA national championship in 1983. In the same season, he was, for a single season, the head women's basketball coach of the Lady Chaps. From 1979 until 1987, he was the university's athletic director.
Hays was the softball program's second head coach after his son, Shanon Hays, resigned to take the same position with the Texas Tech Red Raiders softball team.[2] He was succeeded by his son Daren Hays, after a single season as the Lady Chaps' head coach in 2010.
Hays became the head baseball coach of the Texas Tech Red Raiders in 1987. He led the Red Raiders to two SWC championships, two Big 12 championships and nine NCAA tournament appearances and posted a winning season in every year but his first and last. In 2005, he became the fourth coach ever to gain 1,400 wins. On April 2, 2008, Hays became just the fourth coach in NCAA baseball history to win 1,500 games, 805 with the Red Raiders, with a 10–5 win over Texas A&M-Corpus Christi in his 22nd year as Texas Tech's head coach.[3] [4] On June 2, 2008, Hays retired from coaching after 38 years, 22 of which were spent at Texas Tech.[5] [6] His final record stands at 1,509 wins and 860 losses, fourth all-time in NCAA history. He will remain on the Tech staff in a developmental role. Hays's No. 27 jersey was retired on March 23, 2009. Ceremonies were held at Dan Law Field before the Texas Tech Red Raiders game against the Lubbock Christian Chaparrals.[7] Texas Tech won the game 4–3.[8]
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