| College: | LaRoche '80 |
| Position: | Mazzuto Family Head Coach |
| Years at Yale: | 17th Season |
Entering his 17th season as the Mazzuto Family Head Coach of
Baseball, John Stuper has compiled a 322-348-1 record in the Eli
dugout. He is second on Yale’s all-time wins list, trailing
only the legendary Ethan Allen (333). Stuper reached the 100-win
mark faster than any coach in program history and oversaw the best
four-year period (104-68) in Yale baseball history from
1993-96.
The 13th head coach in Yale baseball history, Stuper has led the
Bulldogs to three Red Rolfe Division titles and two Ivy League
championships. The 1993 squad, Stuper’s first, was his best,
winning a school-record 33 games, earning an NCAA Regional
appearance, and setting numerous school records, including 160
stolen bases in 44 games. He earned 1993 New England Division I
Coach of the Year and Northeast Region Division I Coach of the Year
honors. The Bulldogs won the Ivy League championship in each of his
first two seasons.
“I try to tailor my offensive game plan to my talent. I want
to run. I like to steal bases because it disrupts things,”
Stuper said. Yale baserunners have stolen 1,019 bases in his 16
seasons at the helm.
He has seen 25 of his players sign professional contracts in his
tenure at Yale. Most recently, three Bulldogs were drafted in the
2008 MLB amateur draft. Left-handed pitcher Craig Breslow, the
captain of Stuper’s 2002 squad, appeared in 13 games with the
Boston Red Sox in 2006.
Stuper has also coached two All-Americans while at Yale, including
Ryan Lavarnway, the 2007 NCAA batting and slugging percentage
champion. Lavarnway was drafted in the sixth round of the 2008 MLB
amateur draft by the Boston Red Sox.
“I want my team to be difficult to play against,” said
the former major leaguer, who was managed by Whitey Herzog and Pete
Rose. Not coincidentally, he lists them as two of his biggest
influences. “I watched how they ran a game. Their knowledge
of the game, work ethic and preparation were second to none,
especially Whitey with his aggressive style. (At Yale) we want to
make things happen, not wait for things to happen. Having a
versatile team will give us the ability to score runs in a lot of
different ways.”
Stuper pitched in the major leagues for the St. Louis Cardinals
and Cincinnati Reds from 1982-85, appearing in a total of 111
games. He posted a 32-28 overall record with a 3.96 earned run
average. His most memorable performance came with the Cardinals in
the sixth game of the 1982 World Series. With St. Louis trailing
the Milwaukee Brewers, three games to two in the best-of-seven
series, the right-hander helped the Cardinals even the series with
a 13-1 complete-game, four-hit victory. St. Louis went on to win
the Series the following day. Sports Illustrated listed his World
Series performance among the 10 best by a rookie pitcher in the
history of postseason play.
The only two-time all-conference baseball and basketball player at
Butler County Community College (1976-77), Stuper fashioned a 34-3
collegiate record. He also helped Point Park (Pa.) College to the
NAIA World Series in 1978, while earning NAIA All-America
honors.
Stuper, who received his bachelor's degree from LaRoche College
and his master's degree in English at Slippery Rock University in
1989, continued as head coach at Butler until March 1991, when he
returned to the Cardinals as a minor league pitching instructor. He
remained with the Cardinals until taking the Yale job in 1993. His
wife, Pam, is the head field hockey coach at Yale. They currently
reside in Hamden.


















