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Elliott Avent (born May 1, 1956) is a baseball coach, who is the current head baseball coach of the NC State Wolfpack. [1] He attended North Carolina State University, but he did not play for the baseball program. In his 25th season of coaching the Wolfpack, Avent has compiled both the most wins and most losses of any head baseball coach in NC ...
Current head coach Elliot Avent is the program's leader in total career victories at NC State, with 951 as of April 25, 2022. Avent became the program's winningest coach on May 9, 2010, in a 21–0 NC State win over Towson .
Alexander Kyle Sogard (born July 25, 1987) is an American baseball coach and former pitcher, who is the current head baseball coach of the Wright State Raiders.He played college baseball at Oregon State from 2006 to 2007 before transferring to NC State where he played for coach Elliott Avent from 2008 to 2010 before playing professionally for 6 seasons from 2010 to 2015.
Avent was an assistant at NC State in 1988 under Ray Tanner, the current athletic director at South Carolina who won back-to-back national championships as the Gamecocks coach in 2010 and 2011 ...
N.C. State pitcher Andrew Shaffner (48) becomes emotional after embracing coach Elliott Avent following the Wolfpack’s 5-4 season ending loss to Florida in game seven of the College World Series ...
This is a list of notable alumni of Missouri State University.Most of these students attended under the former names of the school: Fourth District Normal School (1905–1919), Southwest Missouri State Teacher's College (1919–1972), and Southwest Missouri State University (1972–2005).
Wolfpack baseball coach has been at NCSU for 28 seasons and has more than 1,000 career wins, taking three teams to the College World Series. NC State baseball’s Elliott Avent reflects on CWS ...
Fewer than 70 athletes are known to have played in both Major League Baseball (MLB) [a] and the National Football League (NFL). This includes two Heisman Trophy winners (Vic Janowicz and Bo Jackson) [1] and seven members of the Pro Football Hall of Fame (Red Badgro, [2] Paddy Driscoll, [3] George Halas, [4] Ernie Nevers, [5] Ace Parker, [6] Jim Thorpe, [7] and Deion Sanders). [8]