Sport(s) | Baseball |
---|---|
Biographical details | |
Born | October 14, 1943 |
Playing career | |
Baseball | |
1962–1965 | Northeastern |
Ice Hockey | |
1961–1965 | Northeastern |
Position(s) | 2B |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
1986–2014 | Northeastern |
Head coaching record | |
Overall | 697–623–4 |
Neil McPhee (born October 14, 1943) is an American former college baseball coach, the head coach of the Northeastern Huskies baseball program from 1986 to 2014.
McPhee was a standout second baseman at Northeastern for four seasons, including a trip to the 1964 NCAA Tournament. McPhee also played ice hockey for the Huskies, completing two seasons before losing his senior season to a broken arm. The Minnesota Twins made him a fifth round pick in the 1965 MLB Draft, and he played three seasons in the Twins organization, reaching Class-A. McPhee was inducted into the NU Athletic Hall of Fame in 1980.
In 1967, McPhee hung up his spikes and turned to coaching. He began at Newton South High School in Newton, Massachusetts, where he coached baseball and ice hockey from 1967 to 1985. After several league titles and appearances in Eastern Massachusetts tournaments, McPhee was hired as the tenth head baseball coach at Northeastern. In his 28 years with the Huskies, he claimed three Conference Tournament titles (all in the America East Conference), two regular season crowns, and appeared in three NCAA Tournaments. He saw fourteen players drafted, including Carlos Peña and Adam Ottavino; several other players have signed professional contracts. McPhee led the Huskies to nineteen winning seasons and was named NAC Coach of the Year twice. After he announced his planned retirement at the close of the 2014 season, the Huskies named Mike Glavine, another McPhee product who played in the major leagues, as his successor. Glavine succeeded McPhee following the end of the season, in which Northeastern finished 5th in the CAA and went 1-2 in the conference tournament.