TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Alabama Director of Athletics Greg Byrne introduced Brad Bohannon as the school’s new head baseball coach Monday morning at a news conference in the Mal M. Moore Athletics Facility.
“As we were identifying potential candidates, Brad Bohannon’s name continued to surface,” Byrne said. “We sat down on Monday in our home in Tuscaloosa. What I thought it was going to be was an hour conversation of getting reintroduced to Brad and talking a little about the program, and about three and a half hours later he left my house. I could tell right away this is where he wanted to be. He wanted to work with our current team. He wanted to work with our alums and former baseball players and understands the importance in that. He wanted to work with our fan base and our community. He had a really solid academic and compliance plan. He also had an incredible vision for recruiting.”
Bohannon, the 2015 American Baseball Coaches Association and Baseball America National Assistant Coach of the Year, brings 14 years of Southeastern Conference coaching experience to Alabama after having served as an assistant at Kentucky from 2004-15 and, most recently, Auburn from 2016-17. Regarded as one of the best recruiters in the nation, he was responsible for signing 13 Wildcat student-athletes that went on to play professional baseball, including 2014 Golden Spikes Award winner A.J. Reed. His first recruiting class at Auburn was ranked No. 9 by Collegiate Baseball and includes six current starting position players.
“I really think anything can be achieved here at The University of Alabama,” Bohannon said. “My goal going forward is to make Alabama the absolute best place to place college baseball in the country, and we have everything we need in place to make that happen. We’re going to do that by being a players-first program. Everything that we do as a coaching staff is going to be about making sure that our kids get their college degree, helping them grow as men and hopefully one day be great husbands and fathers while helping them become the best versions of themselves as a baseball player.”
Bohannon played a pivotal role in transforming Kentucky and Auburn within three years on the job. Kentucky became the first team in SEC history to go from worst to first in only one season, winning 44 games and the program’s first league title in 2006, while Auburn won 12 more games in 2017 than in 2016 and advanced to the NCAA tournament. In addition to improving in the win column, the 2017 squad is on pace to set the school record for fielding percentage.
While at Kentucky, Bohannon served under two SEC Coach of Year honorees in John Cohen and Gary Henderson. Along with winning the school’s only league title, Bohannon was a part of a trio of record-breaking win seasons, capped off by the 2012 team that won 45 games to set the program mark.
A combined 69 Wildcat student-athletes were chosen in the Major League Baseball First-Year Player draft or signed as a free agent during Bohannon’s tenure as recruiting coordinator. He had nine recruits selected in the 2012 draft, which set a new Kentucky record and was second-most in the NCAA.
One of Bohannon’s most notable recruits was the aforementioned Reed, who was tabbed as the consensus national player of the year in 2014. The 2012 freshman All-American continued to improve each year under Bohannon’s watch and went on to lead the NCAA in home runs and slugging percentage as a junior, while leading the SEC in wins by a pitcher.
Since 2008, all of Bohannon’s recruiting classes have been ranked in the top 25 with the 2008 class coming in at No. 4, the 2009 class at No. 6, the 2010 class at No. 16, the 2011 class at No. 25, the 2012 class at No. 11, the 2013 class at No. 25, the 2014 class at No. 16 and both the 2015 and 2016 classes coming in at No. 9. He has signed recruits from 25 different states and Canada, three of which have gone on to be first-round picks in the MLB draft.
Prior to his stint at Kentucky, Bohannon worked for two seasons at Wake Forest as an assistant on George Greer’s staff. In his two seasons in Winston-Salem, the Demon Deacons advanced to the NCAA tournament twice and captured the Atlantic Coast Conference title in 2001.
In addition to his collegiate coaching experience, Bohannon also spent the summer of 2005 managing the Southern Ohio Copperheads of the Great Lakes Summer Collegiate League.
Bohannon earned an undergraduate degree in finance in 1998 from Berry College in Georgia. He then went on to earn a master’s degree in business administration from Wake Forest in 2002. Bohannon began his collegiate career playing at Vanderbilt and Georgia Tech before finishing up at Berry.
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