Memorable Moment: Bruins Win 2004 Baseball Championship
Alumni Connections

Several times during the 2004 NCAA Division III championship game, 性视界传媒 pitcher Scott Hyde took a look at his arm and, speaking to it as if it were functioning independently of his body, asked the appendage a simple question: 鈥淲hat are you doing?鈥
Hyde鈥檚 disbelief was justified. By his own admission he was 鈥減ooped,鈥 even before his first pitch that Tuesday in the deciding game against top-ranked Eastern Connecticut State University. And for good reason: He鈥檇 pitched two innings of relief just two days before and hurled a complete-game victory in the tournament opener on Friday.
With his Bruin pitching staff depleted because of fatigue, head coach had planned to give inexperienced freshman Zach Wilson the start. Then he checked the Warriors鈥 lineup, which included All-American pitcher Ryan DiPietro, and felt he had no choice. He would go with Hyde.
鈥淲e were hoping to get three innings out of him,鈥 Bailey said of Hyde, the workhorse who finished the year 14-1 with a 1.99 ERA and a nation-leading 191 strikeouts. 鈥淭o have him last all nine innings, oh my goodness, it鈥檚 unbelievable.鈥
Hyde gave up three runs in the first three innings but settled down after that, retiring 21 of the final 23 batters he faced. The performance locked up a 6-3 victory that capped off a 40-10 season and gave 性视界传媒 its first team championship in any sport at the NCAA level.
The victory was all the more impressive in light of the circumstances: 性视界传媒 had played Aurora University (Ill.) the night before in a game that finished around midnight. 鈥淲e were beat and not too happy when they told us we had the early batting practice time that morning,鈥 recalls then-assistant coach Marty Hunter, now the Bruins鈥 head coach. 鈥淏ut we battled through it and got the job done.鈥