Alan Cockrell
Alan Cockrell | |||
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New York Yankees – No. 62 | |||
Outfielder / Hitting coach | |||
Born: Kansas City, Kansas |
December 5, 1962 |||
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MLB debut | |||
September 7, 1996, for the Colorado Rockies | |||
Last MLB appearance | |||
September 29, 1996, for the Colorado Rockies | |||
MLB statistics | |||
Batting average | .250 | ||
Home runs | 0 | ||
Runs batted in | 2 | ||
Teams | |||
As player
As coach
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Atlee Alan Cockrell (born December 5, 1962) is the current hitting coach for the New York Yankees of Major League Baseball.
Contents
Football career
Twice named first-team all state, Cockrell led Joplin, Missouri's Parkwood High School Bears to a 31–3 record during his three years as starting quarterback. An outstanding athlete, Cockrell's could pass (3,499 yds, 44 TDs), run (1,541 yds, 36 TDs) and even kick (154 PATs, 8 FGs).
Cockrell led the Bears' offensive attack to an undefeated season (14–0 - outscoring opponents 653-33) and the Missouri State Class 4A High School Championship in 1980, despite being one of the smallest schools in Class 4A. That team has recently been inducted into the Joplin Area Sports Hall of Fame, alongside the likes of NASCAR's Jamie McMurray.[1] Heavily recruited by several schools, he chose to attend the University of Tennessee.
Cockrell became the first true freshman ever to start at quarterback for the Volunteers in 1981. Fifth game into the season he suffered a major knee injury vs Auburn and his future became uncertain. One of the first football players to come back from such major knee damage, he led the Vols for the 1982 (6-5-1) and 1983 (9-3) seasons,[2] culminating in a 30-23 victory over the Maryland Terrapins (led by future NFL standout Boomer Esiason) in the inaugural Florida Citrus Bowl (now Capital One Bowl).[3] The victory was a great ending for Cockrell, as it would be his last game at UT. He was soon to be a first round draft pick by The San Francisco Giants.
Baseball career
Cockrell's first love had always been baseball and he was an even better outfielder than he was a quarterback. An All-American, he was named to the University of Tennessee All-Century Baseball Team in 2009. The San Francisco Giants made Cockrell the ninth pick overall in the 1984 MLB draft so he chose to forgo his senior year in college and play pro baseball.
He played in the minor leagues for nine years (five different organizations), including a five-year stint with the Colorado Springs Sky Sox. He is a member of the Sky Sox Hall of Fame. On September 7, 1996, Cockrell made his Major League Baseball debut with the Colorado Rockies, a pinch hit appearance in which he struck out against All-Star closer Billy Wagner. His first major league hit came three days later in the form of a pinch hit double off Tom Glavine vs. Atlanta at Coors Field. Cockrell appeared in his final game on September 29, 1996.
Coaching career
His leadership skills and teaching ability, though, shone through and Cockrell spent the next few years working as a manager and hitting coach in various parts of the Colorado Rockies' development system.[4][5] He returned to MLB when he was named hitting coach for the Rockies November 7, 2006 – his second stint, having previously served as hitting instructor the last five months of the 2002 season when Clint Hurdle was promoted to manager. Under Cockrell's guidance in 2007, the Rockies slugged their way to a National League Championship, leading the circuit in batting, on-base percentage, and total hits. Cockrell was one of four coaches let go by the Rockies after a disappointing 2008 season in which the team won only 74 games.
On December 7, 2008, Cockrell was named hitting coach for the Seattle Mariners.[6] On May 9, 2010, Cockrell the first of four coaches who were relieved of their duties alongside manager Don Wakamatsu. He was replaced by Alonzo Powell.[7]
On January 11, 2015, the New York Yankees hired Cockrell to be one of the two hitting coaches employed by them in 2015 along with Jeff Pentland.[8] On November 2, 2015, Cockrell was named the hitting coach of the Yankees after the firing of Jeff Pentland. Marcus Thames was hired as assistant hitting coach.[9]
Personal life
Cockrell and his wife Polly Dunaway Cockrell reside in Edgewater, NJ during the season but also maintain a home in Beaufort, SC during the off season. Having met and dated in High School, he reunited with his first love in 2013 and they were married in St. Lucia. Together they have a blended family of 6 grown children between them. He is a born again Christian and has often been a Featured Guest Speaker concerning his faith and his sports career. As a 31-year Veteran in the industry, Cockrell is also the developer of a training device called the SwingPath Coach. Simple in design it creates "feel' for the hitter by giving immediate visual feedback which allows them to recreate the proper swing path. He and his wife own and operate the business that markets this product into baseball camps all over the country.
References
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- ↑ Tennessee Volunteers football
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- ↑ Mariners tab Cockrell as hitting coach Official site
- ↑ "Seattle Mariners fire hitting coach Alan Cockrell". Associated Press. May 9, 2010.
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External links
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball Reference, or Fangraphs, or Baseball Reference (Minors)
Preceded by | New York Yankees Hitting Coach 2016–present |
Succeeded by Incumbent |
- Use mdy dates from November 2015
- Pages using baseballstats with unknown parameters
- 1962 births
- Living people
- American football quarterbacks
- Baseball players from Kansas
- Calgary Cannons players
- Charlotte Knights players
- Colorado Rockies (baseball) coaches
- Colorado Rockies players
- Colorado Springs Sky Sox players
- Everett Giants players
- Fresno Giants players
- Major League Baseball hitting coaches
- Major League Baseball outfielders
- Major League Baseball right fielders
- New Haven Ravens players
- New York Yankees coaches
- Phoenix Firebirds players
- Portland Beavers players
- Seattle Mariners coaches
- Shreveport Captains players
- Sportspeople from Kansas City, Kansas
- Tennessee Volunteers baseball players
- Tennessee Volunteers football players