Southern U's Rickie Weeks Named 17th Recipient
Of Dick Howser Trophy, College Baseball Player of Year
June 13, 2003
OMAHA, Neb.-Rickie Weeks, the first standout from the Southwestern Athletic
Conference to receive the honor and NCAA Division I batting champion for two
consecutive seasons, has been named as winner of the 17th annual Dick Howser
Trophy as 2003 college baseball player of the year.
In voting by members of the National Collegiate Baseball Writers
Association in conjunction with the St. Petersburg (Fla.) Area Chamber of
Commerce, Weeks is the second straight Florida resident to capture the
prestigious Howser Trophy. Last year Clemson shortstop Khalil Greene of Key
West, Fla. (also the hometown of Dick Howser's Florida State fellow alumnus
Burt Reynolds), earned top laurels.
The 2003 and 2002 numbers posted by the 2003 winner are among the
finest in NCAA history.
Weeks has led the nation hitting in each of the last two seasons
averages of .495 and .479, respectively, as the second baseman from Altamonte
Springs, Fla., rolled to one of the most successful careers in college
baseball history.
During the 2003 campaign the 2002 Howser Trophy finalist as a
sophomore hit was 78-for-163 with a NCAA-best 1.61 runs scored per game (82 in
51 contests), hit 16 home runs and drove in 66 runs.
A year earlier, he posted equally-outstanding numbers with a .495
average, 98-for-198 platework, 63 runs scored, a Southern-season-record 20
home runs and school-most 96 RBI.
Over his last 107 games in college he batted .488 with 36 home runs
and 162 RBI for an average of 1.55 runs-batted-in each outing. He also notched
Southwestern Athletic Conference Player of the Year and consensus All-America
honors in each of his last two campaigns. He played on a SU team which sported
the nation's best winning percentage (.863) in DI baseball this season at 44-7
and belted a two-run homer to push the Jaguars into the second round of the
NCAA Hattiesburg Regional with a 5-3 triumph.
The second straight Florida resident to win the Howser Trophy was
the second player selected in the 2003 Major League Baseball Draft by the
Milwaukee Brewers. He currently is awaiting possible signing or returning to
Southern for his senior season.
Weeks also distinguished himself as COLLEGIATE BASEBALL 2003 Player
of the Year, was a COLLEGIATE BASEBALL Freshman All-America in 2001 and played
on the USA Baseball National Summer Team for two seasons.
"We could not be more pleased to present the Dick Howser Trophy to a
deserving young man like Rickie Weeks," said Howser Trophy chair David P.
Feaster of the Greater St. Petersburg Chamber of Commerce and Signature
Bank-Florida. "He had an amazing season in 2003 and has put together two of
the most successful back-to-back individual seasons in college baseball
history."
The Dick Howser Trophy, given in memory of the former Florida State University
All-America shortstop and major league player and manager who died of brain
cancer in 1987, is regarded by many as college baseball's most prestigious
award.
In addition to Friday's presentation by NCBWA Rob Carolla of the Big
East Conference USA, there will be a special ceremony before or during a 2003
Southern football contest to be determined to award Weeks the trophy in front
of a "home" audience.
Criteria for consideration for the trophy include performance on the
field, leadership, moral character and courage, qualities that were
exemplified by Dick Howser's life.
A Florida native, Howser was twice an All-America shortstop at
Florida State University (1957-58), then coached the Seminoles in 1979 after a
career as a major league player and coach. The personable college standout and
successful Major League manager also served as an analyst for ESPN's coverage
of the 1981 NCAA World Series with Jim Simpson. After one year in the college
ranks, Howser returned to the majors to manage the New York Yankees and Kansas
City Royals and won the World Series with the Royals in 1985. The baseball
stadium on the Florida State campus is named for Howser.
The winner's name is inscribed on the permanent trophy, a bronze
bust of Howser permanently displayed at Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg,
home of the Tampa Bay D-Rays and the 1999 NCAA Men's Basketball Final Four,
among other championship events. Both the winner and his school receive a
special trophy to keep on public display at the university.
The St. Petersburg Area Chamber of Commerce celebrated its 100th
birthday in 1999 and is in the midst of its third century of service to the
community and nation in 2002. The organization has long been a vital force in
the baseball affairs of the city, both in spring training and during the
pursuit of a major league baseball franchise for the Tampa Bay area, and
continues its solid role in the in both college and professional sports as
well as serving as the home for the Association of Professional Baseball
Leagues.
NCBWA membership includes writers, broadcasters and publicists. Designed to
promote and publicize college baseball, it is the sport's only college
media-related organization, founded in 1962, and just celebrated its 40th
anniversary as an organization in 2002.
The Howser Trophy was created in 1987, shortly after Howser's
death. 1987-98 winners were selected by the American Baseball Coaches
Association before the NCBWA became the voting body in 1999.
Previous winners of the Howser Trophy are Mike Fiore, Miami
(Fla.), 1987; Robin Ventura, Oklahoma State, 1988; Scott Bryant, Texas, 1989;
Alex Fernandez, Miami-Dade Community College South, 1990; Frank Rodriguez,
Howard College (Texas), 1991; Brooks Kieschnick, Texas, 1992 and 1993; Jason
Varitek, Georgia Tech, 1994; Todd Helton, Tennessee, 1995; Kris Benson,
Clemson, 1996; J. D. Drew, Florida State, 1997; Eddy Furniss, LSU, 1998; Jason
Jennings, Baylor, 1999; Mark Teixeira, Georgia Tech, 2000; Mark Prior,
Southern California, 2001; Khalil Greene, Clemson, 2002; Rickie Weeks,
Southern, 2003.
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