Skip to main content
Top of the Page

ABCA Hall of Fame

ABCA Hall of Fame Inductee

Andy Baylock Profile Photo

Andy Baylock

University of Connecticut
Inducted in 1996

Andy Baylock retired as UConn's head baseball coach in May 2003 after a 24-year run in which he posted a 556-492-8 (.527) record, guiding the Huskies to BIG EAST Championships in 1990 and 1994, along with a trio of NCAA tournament berths. Baylock currently serves as the football program's Director of Football Alumni and Community Affairs. His association with UConn began in 1963 as the freshman baseball coach, a part-time position, and Baylock joined the Husky staff on a full-time basis a year later as an assistant football and baseball coach - positions which he held for 15 seasons. Baylock was a part of Husky football teams that won or shared four Yankee Conference titles. He also had a long tenure as UConn's freshman football coach. Baylock was an assistant baseball coach from 1964-79, helping UConn to the College World Series in 1965, 1972 and 1979, before assuming the head coaching reigns in 1980. Over the years, Baylock has been honored by several organizations, and is a member of seven Halls of Fame. Baylock was also selected as the 2011 recipient of the ABCA/Wilson Lefty Gomez Award, the highest honor given out by the ABCA. In the spring of 2008, he received awards for his outstanding contribution from both the Connecticut High School Coaches Association and the National Football Foundation's Southeastern Connecticut Chapter. Baylock also served as the head football coach at East Catholic High School in Manchester from 1962-64 when he became a full-time member of the UConn staff. He played three seasons of professional football, last with the Springfield (Mass.) entry in the Atlantic Coast Professional Football League. In 1987, Baylock won the Jack Butterfield Award, which is given by the New England Association of College Baseball Coaches for dedication to collegiate baseball. In 2002, the association presented the veteran skipper with the Outstanding Contribution to New England Baseball Award. In 1985, he was awarded the Gold Key from the Connecticut Sportswriters' Alliance for his many years of service to Connecticut athletics. Baylock was the 1990 New England Coach of the Year and the 1994 ABCA/Diamond Northeast Region Division I Coach of the Year. Baylock is also very active when it comes to international baseball and is well-known as a distinguished pitching clinician. In October of 1998, Baylock served as a pitching consultant for the Dutch National Team at a training session held in Tucson, Ariz., for the European Championships held in the summer of 1999. He has conducted pitching clinics throughout the country and has had the honor of addressing the baseball players, their families and other dignitaries at the United States Olympic Sports Festival in St. Louis. He was a four-year member of USA Baseball's International Baseball Ambassador Committee, responsible for directing the annual week-long baseball clinic for amateur coaches from around the world. In the summers of 1985 and 1989, Baylock was the pitching coach for the United States Senior National Team. He also was pitching coach for the U.S. squad that finished second in the International Harbor Tournament in Taiwan in the fall of 1988. In addition, Baylock also conducted instructional programs in Canada for six summers and coached in the Cape Cod summer league for five seasons. Baylock served as chairman of the Division I Baseball Committee for the ABCA and was the chair of the Division I All-America Selection Committee. He is a past member of the NCAA Pro-Sport Liaison Committee. Baylock was the President of the BIG EAST Baseball Coaches' Association and a member of the Executive Council of the New England Baseball Coaches' Association. A 1960 graduate of Central Connecticut State University, Baylock captained the baseball and football teams. Baylock then continued his education at the University of Michigan, where he earned his master's degree and served as a graduate assistant baseball coach.

Andy Baylock Action Photo

Back to Top