Auburn Baseball Academy
Pawlowski's
turnaround of the Auburn baseball program has been a rapid one. In
just three seasons on the Plains, the 12-year head-coaching veteran
took the program from six consecutive fifth- or sixth-place finishes
in the Southeastern Conference's Western Division to a 2010 Division
Championship, its first since 1995, and a 2010 NCAA Regional Host,
winning 43 games during the remarkable and memorable 2010 campaign.
In addition, his ability to guide the team to back-to-back SEC
Tournament appearances in 2010 and 2011 marked the first time Auburn
had appeared in the conference tournament in consecutive seasons
since it went for seven straight years from 1997-2003 and the
program's 34 combined SEC wins from 2010 and 2011 are the most over
a two-year period for the program since it won 35 in 1999 (18) and
2000 (17). The only other time Auburn has won 34-or-more SEC games
in back-to-back years was in 1998 (16) and 1999 (18).
Pawlowski has also helped turn Auburn into a professional
development factory as 21 players have been drafted out of Auburn
over the past three seasons, 12 of which had never before been
drafted and five of which went in the first 10 rounds.
In three seasons at Auburn, Pawlowski has guided the team to a
103-75 (.579) record, has won a conference division championship and
hosted a regional and energized a fan base that is anxious to
support an exciting brand of baseball.
The 2011 season, in which the team finished 29-29, 14-16 SEC and
tied for second in the ultra-competitive SEC West, saw Pawlowski
become just the fifth coach in Auburn history to reach 100 victories
at the school and the third-fastest as he needed just 169 games to
get there, nine more than legendary coach Hal Baird. At the
conclusion of the season six players were selected in the MLB Draft,
four of them for the first time in their careers, including
sixth-round pick Dan Gamache (Pittsbugh) and 11th-round selection
Casey McElroy (San Diego).
Auburn's 43 wins in 2010 were the seventh-most in school history and
along with the wins came numerous accolades for the program,
including the SEC Player of the Year (Hunter Morris), six All-SEC
selections, four of which were on the First Team (Morris, Brian
Fletcher, Trent Mummey and Kevin Patterson), and two All-America
choices (Morris and Fletcher). At the conclusion of the 2010 season,
Pawlowski's group saw a national-best and SEC and school
record-tying 11 players get drafted, including nine in the first 18
rounds.
Much of Auburn success in 2010 was due to a rejuvenation of an
Auburn lineup that set school records for batting average (.348),
home runs (131) and slugging percentage (.591), with the latter two
leading the nation. Auburn's 816 hits, 584 runs and its 9.1 runs per
game also finished among the nation's top 10.
Over a year into the job as the head coach at Auburn, the hiring of
Pawlowski in June of 2008 had already begun to pay dividends in
2009. With a roster full of talent but void of previous success at
the collegiate level, Auburn's 31 wins in 2009 were the third most
for an Auburn coach in his debut season on the Plains. The
difference in 2009 was the pop in the lineup as Auburn hit 103 home
runs a year after hitting just 58 with two-thirds of the starting
lineup from 2008 back for 2009.
At the conclusion of the season, four Auburn players had their name
called in the Major League Baseball Draft, two of them for the first
time, including fifth-round pick Joseph Sanders (Colorado).
Now a 12-year head coaching veteran and another branch off Clemson
head coach Jack Leggett's coaching tree, Pawlowski brought with him
a pedigree that includes a seven-year professional baseball career
and stops on both Leggett's and Pat Murphy's coaching staffs at
perennial powers Clemson and Arizona State, respectively, before his
nine-year run at the College of Charleston. During his stay at CofC,
he guided the Cougars to a .637 winning percentage, two regular
season conference championships and three straight NCAA Tournament
berths from 2004-06.
"This is a tremendous opportunity and I'm looking forward to helping
bring the Auburn baseball program back to national prominence,"
Pawlowski said at the press conference to announce his hiring.
"There is a rich history and tradition here at Auburn and I plan on
working tirelessly to make this a national contender."
Since arriving on the Plains, Pawlowski, 48, has lived up to his
initial billing both inside the clubhouse and in the Auburn
community at large, helping raise money for multiple charities while
also putting in place the measures to get the program back to the
College World Series for the first time since Hal Baird took Auburn
there in 1997.
A three-time Southern Conference Coach of the Year (2004, 2005 &
2007), Pawlowski turned a regionally successful program at the
College of Charleston into a nationally recognized program to be
feared as the Cougars twice established school records for wins in a
season and advanced into the NCAA Tournament for the first time in
CofC history in 2004, an accomplishment that the Cougars repeated in
2005 and 2006. By the end of the 2006 season the College of
Charleston was clearly on the map as it went to SEC Champion
Kentucky's home field and went 3-0 to win the NCAA Regional and
advance to the Atlanta Super Regional. The Cougars finished the year
ranked as high as 12th nationally.
In nine years at the College of Charleston, Pawlowski guided the
Cougars to a 338-192-1 mark overall and a 170-86-1 (.663) record in
Southern Conference play. He also helped develop his players into 42
all-conference honors, four academic All-America honors, three SoCon
Pitchers of the Year and two SoCon Players of the Year accolades.
Additionally, he had 17 all-America honors bestowed upon his players
since 2001.
Pawlowski's run of success at Charleston can be aptly defined by his
180-67 (.729) record from 2004-07, which established school and
conference records for most wins in a four-year span, which includes
a 53-year history of the Southern Conference, and three straight
trips to the NCAA Tournament along with two regular-season
conference championships.
The 2006 season has been hailed as the finest in College of
Charleston history as the team posted a 46-17 overall record and a
20-7 record in Southern Conference play, winning the school's first
Southern Conference Tournament title to go along with the
unprecedented success in the NCAA Tournament, but his success in
2004, establishing school records for overall (47) and conference
(25) wins and 2005 when he topped both of those accomplishments
(48-15 overall, 27-3 SoCon) speak to the foundation that he was able
to build at the South Carolina school.
From 2004-06, Pawlowski mentored three straight SoCon Pithcers of
the Year in Nich Chigges (2006), Brett Harker (2005) and Ryan
Johnson (2004).
Prior to his arrival at College of Charleston, Pawlowski was the
pitching coach and recruiting coordinator at Arizona State in 1999.
Before that he served as the pitching coach and assistant recruiting
coordinator at Clemson from 1994-98. During that time, the Tigers
made five consecutive NCAA regional appearances and two trips to the
College World Series (1995 and 1996).
While an assistant at Clemson, Pawlowski's staff led the country in
earned run average in 1996 with a staff that featured the No. 1 and
No. 4 overall picks in that's years MLB draft in Kris Benson and
Billy Koch. In his five years at Clemson, the Tigers had 15 pitchers
drafted, while the recruiting classes ranked in the top 10
nationally each year.
As a player at Clemson from 1983-85, Pawlowski finished his Tiger
career with a 21-12 record and a 3.89 ERA over 54 games. He made 30
career starts working 240 1/3 innings with eight complete games,
three shutouts and five saves.
Pawlowski was the sixth-round draft pick of the Chicago White Sox in
1985 and made his major league debut in September of 1987. After
playing more than seven years for the Chicago White Sox (1986-91),
California Angels (1991-92) and Baltimore Orioles (1992)
organizations, Pawlowski returned to Clemson to begin his coaching
career and complete his degree.
Pawlowski received his bachelor's degree in Industrial Education
from Clemson University in May of 1996. The Johnson City, N.Y.
native graduated from Seton Catholic Central in Binghamton, N.Y. in
1982. In 2007, he was inducted into the Upstate New York Section IV
Hall of Fame. Pawlowski has three daughters, Christine (20), Mary
Louise (17) and Jenny Caroline (11).
He is 1 of 13 former Major League Players coaching
NCAA Division I baseball.
He
spent 9 years at The College of
Charleston winning 4 conference titles, made 3 regional appearances,
and 1 Super Regional appearance.

He was named Southern Conference Coach of the Year
3 times.
Recognized
by Nike Camps as a top pitching instructor and contracted to conduct
specialized pitcher/catcher camps and showcases throughout US from
2003-2006.
Former
Arizona State Assistant Coach and Recruiting Coordinator.
Former
Clemson Pitching Coach. Also pitched at Clemson 1983-1985. 
Made two College World Series trips as assistant
coach.

14 years Division I coaching experience in the ACC, PAC-10, and
Southern Conferences.