Iowa State Cyclones | |
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Founded | 1859 |
University | Iowa State University |
Location | Ames, Iowa |
Home stadium | Cap Timm Field |
Nickname | Cyclones (Mascot: Cy the Cardinal) |
Colors | Cardinal and Gold |
Conference history |
|
Overall record | 1,346–1,412–17 |
College World Series appearances | |
1957, 1970 | |
NCAA Tournament appearances | |
1957, 1970, 1971 | |
Conference champions | |
1936, 1957, 1970, 1971 |
Iowa State Cyclones baseball was formerly fielded by Iowa State University from 1892 until the conclusion of the 2001 season. Iowa State ceased to field a team because of what former Iowa State Athletic Director Bruce Van De Velde termed "budget cuts". This was announced on April 2, 2001. Iowa State's last game was a 17–4 loss to Oklahoma State in the Big 12 Tournament on May 18, 2001.
Baseball at Iowa State is currently played as a club sport and its parent league is the National Club Baseball Association. The Iowa State Baseball Club was started in the Fall of 2001 by Jake Reichling. The club officially registered and received GSB funding in November. The club played its first season in the spring of 2002, with its first 55 members dividing into four teams and playing a 6-game schedule with a season-ending tournament. Games were played at various community fields until it was allowed access to Cap Timm, the field formerly used by the NCAA program.
In the fall of 2002, a similar league was played, but with 7 teams due to increased interest. The club's membership had almost doubled in membership during its first year. In the spring of 2002, the club's best 19 players were selected to play on the travel team which would compete in the Central Plains Conference of the National Club Baseball Association (NCBA). In its inaugural season in Spring 2003, the club won the conference, putting them into a regional against the Western Lakes Conference champion, University of Wisconsin. The Cyclones came up just short after losing the close 3-game series two games to one. The winner of the regional advances the NCBA World Series, played in Bradenton, Florida. Iowa State won a back-to-back conference title in 2004 as well, before once again falling short in the regional.
The 2005 spring team played a difficult schedule and missed the regional for the first time in club history. A tough Nebraska team who went 15–1 stormed through the conference, suffering their only loss of the year to Iowa State. The team finished strong with 9 consecutive victories in 2005 to finish second in the conference.
The 2006 season was plagued by weather from the very beginning. Of the 25 scheduled games, 13 were cancelled due to bad weather conditions, leaving the Cyclones to only play 12 games, finishing with a conference record of 5–6, and an overall record of 5–7.
National champion Postseason invitational champion
Conference regular season champion Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
Division regular season champion Division regular season and conference tournament champion
Conference tournament champion