Camp Staff
Kevin Tyrrell, Head Baseball Coach
Kevin Tyrrell was hired as Head Baseball Coach at UChicago in January 2022.
In Tyrrell's debut season as head coach of the Maroons, they posted a 23-16 record. UChicago went 16-7 in the Midwest Conference (MWC) and advanced to the MWC title game. Five players were named to the MWC All-Conference Teams, including First Team selection Carson Weekley (3B/RF).
Tyrrell spent the previous three seasons serving as an assistant baseball coach for the Maroons (2019-21). During that time, the team posted a 48-23 cumulative record (.676 winning percentage). UChicago finished first in the Midwest Conference North Division in 2019 and qualified for the MWC Tournament.
Prior to his arrival in Hyde Park, Tyrrell was Head Baseball Coach at the College of DuPage for seven seasons. The Chaparrals achieved top-10 rankings in the NJCAA national poll during each of his final four years at DuPage (2015-18). The 2016 squad won 40 games and was ranked as high as fourth in the national poll.
Tyrrell's teams at College of DuPage posted an overall record of 188-174. Seven of his players received NJCAA All-American status. In 2016, All-American catcher Javier Martinez received NJCAA Elite Hitter recognition when he led the nation with 74 RBI. The Chaparrals boasted a consistent run of offensive production under Tyrrell, hitting over .300 as a team in all seven seasons - .302 in 2012, .348 in 2013, .334 in 2014, .325 in 2015, .336 in 2016, .309 in 2017 and .319 in 2018.
Tyrrell began his head coaching career with the Upper Deck Cougars travel baseball team (2007-10). The 2008 Cougars reached the 15U USSSA National Championship game, and then followed up by winning the 16U USSSA National Championship in 2009. The 2010 team placed eighth nationally. Tyrrell coached 19 NCAA Division I athletes, 10 Major League Baseball draft picks and four players who have played on MLB rosters.
Tyrrell played high school baseball at Montini High School where he was an All-State infielder as a senior. At the collegiate level, he played for legendary coach Irish O'Reilly at Lewis University and was a three-year team captain. He graduated from Lewis in 2007 with a double major in business administration and management information systems.
Paul Stevens, Assistant Baseball Coach
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Paul Stevens continues his assistant coach duties on the UChicago baseball coaching staff for his third season in 2017-18. The 2017 Maroons boasted one of the best offenses in NCAA Division III. UChicago's offense hit for a .334 batting average (11th nationally) with a .412 on-base percentage (22nd).
Three players were named All-Region. Outfielder Connor Hickey ranked eighth nationally with 1.43 runs per game, and outfielder Maximiliano Larsen was seventh in the nation with 0.50 doubles per game.
Stevens previously served as Head Baseball Coach at Northwestern University from 1988 until his retirement after the 2015 season. A three-time Big Ten Coach of the Year, he amassed more victories than any other skipper in program history with 674.
Since taking over the program, Stevens had 67 players drafted by a Major League Baseball club or signed to a professional contract, including his oldest son, Trevor, who joined the professional ranks in 2013. Overall, Stevens coached 94 All-Big Ten selections including New York Yankees manager and four-time World Series champion Joe Girardi, two-time Major League Baseball All-Star Mark Loretta and recent major leaguers J.A. Happ of the Toronto Blue Jays, George Kontos of the San Francisco Giants, Jake Goebbert of the Tampa Bay Rays, Bo Schultz of the Toronto Blue Jays and Eric Jokisch of the Miami Marlins.
Under Stevens' guidance, the Wildcats excelled in the classroom. Since 1985, 215 student-athletes earned Academic All-Big Ten honors, while eight were named CoSIDA Academic All-Americans. He mentored five Big Ten Medal of Honor recipients, including Girardi, Loretta, Ron Rojas, Francis Brooke and Luke Farrell. The Medal of Honor is the conference's oldest and most exclusive award, bestowed to one male and one female student-athlete from the graduating class of each university who had attained the greatest proficiency in athletics and scholastic work.