LSU baseball coach Paul Mainieri will announce his retirement today after 15 seasons with the school, the university announced Friday.

LSU Baseball Report

For Immediate Release – May 28, 2021

HALL OF FAME LSU BASEBALL COACH PAUL MAINIERI ANNOUNCES RETIREMENT; PRESS CONFERENCE SET FOR 4:30 P.M. CT TODAY


BATON ROUGE, La. – LSU baseball coach Paul Mainieri, who led the Tigers to the 2009 national championship and is No. 1 among active NCAA Division I coaches in career victories, announced Friday that he will retire at the end of the 2021 season.

Mainieri, whose collegiate career spans 39 seasons – including the past 15 years at LSU – will coach the Tigers in the 2021 NCAA Tournament should they receive a berth in the 64-team field.

“I have been the luckiest guy in the world to have lived out a childhood dream of becoming a college baseball coach,” Mainieri said. “I’ve worked at four wonderful institutions, and it’s been the honor of my life to have served as the head coach at LSU for 15 years. To have carried the torch of a program built by Skip Bertman, the greatest college baseball coach of all time, has been a tremendous privilege. It has always been my unwavering goal to sustain the excellence that was created here.

“I’ve been blessed throughout my career to coach unbelievable young men of great character and skill, and to have worked with talented and dedicated assistant coaches, support staff and administrators. It’s very difficult to leave a profession that I truly love, but I’m so grateful for the amazing opportunities that have been presented to me through the years.

“Paul Mainieri has made an immeasurable impact not only at LSU, but across college baseball,” said director of athletics Scott Woodward. “Every day he has taken the field, he has honored the game he loves with his class, his character, and his commitment to excellence. We are forever grateful for the championships he has won, the student athletes he has inspired, and memories he has gifted our fans over 15 seasons.”

The 63-year-old Mainieri has a 1,501-774-8 (.659) career record that includes six seasons at St. Thomas (1983-88), six seasons at Air Force (1989-94), 12 seasons at Notre Dame (1995-2006) and 15 seasons at LSU (2007-21). He is No. 7 all-time among NCAA Division I Baseball coaches in career wins.

He is one of only five coaches in NCAA Division I Baseball history to win 1,500 games and a national championship. The others are Augie Garrido (Cal State Fullerton/Texas), Gene Stephenson (Wichita State), Jim Morris (Miami, Fla.) and Mark Marquess (Stanford).

During Mainieri’s LSU tenure, the Tigers have captured a remarkable 30 team championships, including the 2009 NCAA title, eight NCAA Regional championships, five College World Series appearances/NCAA Super Regional championships, four Southeastern Conference championships, six SEC Tournament titles and six SEC Western Division crowns. His six SEC tournament titles tie him with former LSU coach Skip Bertman and former Alabama coach Jim Wells for the most in league history.

Mainieri is the second-winningest coach at LSU with a 637-282-3 (.693) mark, and he has the third-highest career winning percentage in SEC history, trailing only Bertman, who was 870-330-3 (.724) from 1984-2001, and former South Carolina coach Ray Tanner, who posted a 738-316 (.700) mark from 1997-2012.

Under Mainieri, the Tigers earned an NCAA Tournament Top 8 National Seed in six consecutive seasons (2012-17), making LSU and Stanford (1999-2004) the only schools in NCAA history to capture six straight Top 8 National Seeds. Since 2008, LSU has earned nine NCAA Tournament National Seeds, the second-best mark in the country over the past 13 seasons.

Mainieri’s LSU players have earned First-Team All-America recognition on 13 occasions, and 20 of his former Tigers have played Major League Baseball, including MLB All-Stars DJ LeMahieu, Alex Bregman and Aaron Nola. LSU players have been chosen in the MLB Draft on 88 occasions during Mainieri’s tenure, including a first-round selection in seven of the past 12 seasons.

He served as the head coach of the United States Collegiate National Team for its 2018 summer tour, and he led Team USA to a 12-3 record that included series victories over Chinese Taipei, Japan and Cuba.

His sincere commitment to everyday excellence was recognized in a substantial way on January 3, 2014, in Dallas when he was inducted into the American Baseball Coaches Association Hall of Fame. Mainieri, a four-time National Coach of the Year, joined in the Hall of Fame his father, Demie Mainieri, who coached Miami-Dade North Community College to 1,012 wins and a national title in his 30-year career. Demie and Paul Mainieri are the only father-son combination in the ABCA Hall of Fame.

Mainieri’s emphasis upon academic achievement has been illustrated by the Tigers’ performance in the classroom, as 103 LSU baseball players have earned their degrees during his tenure. Twenty-five of the graduates were players who signed professional contracts before completing their college eligibility and returned to LSU to finish their degree requirements. In addition, LSU players have received SEC Academic Honor Roll recognition on 141 occasions over the past 14 seasons.

When Mainieri was hired as LSU’s coach in June 2006, he expressed a clear vision for the future of the Fighting Tiger program. Just three years later, LSU occupied the pinnacle position in college baseball as the 2009 NCAA National Champions. Mainieri directed the ’09 Tigers to the College World Series title, posting a 56-17 overall record, including a 10-1 mark in NCAA Tournament competition.

Mainieri had served for 12 seasons as the head coach at Notre Dame when he accepted then LSU director of athletics Skip Bertman’s offer to take over the LSU program. Mainieri directed Notre Dame to 14 different team titles, including a 2002 NCAA Super Regional championship and a berth in the College World Series. Sixty of Mainieri’s Fighting Irish players signed professional contracts, and eight of them reached the Major Leagues.

He was the first civilian baseball coach at the United States Air Force Academy from 1989-94, and four of his players went on to attain the rank of general in the armed forces. One of his former players, retired Major Mike Kazlausky, is now the head coach at Air Force.

His collegiate coaching career began in 1983 at St. Thomas University in Miami, Fla. In March 2013, St. Thomas named its new baseball facility in honor of Mainieri, who also worked as the school’s director of athletics for three years.

Mainieri first joined the coaching profession at his alma mater, Columbus High School in Miami, where he worked as assistant baseball coach – for head coach Jim Hendry, his best friend and future GM of the Chicago Cubs – and assistant football coach. He was inducted into the Columbus High Sports Hall of Fame in 2009.

Along with his father, he counted among his mentors Hall of Fame manager and two-time World Series champion Tommy Lasorda of the Los Angeles Dodgers; and legendary former University of New Orleans baseball coach and athletics director Ron Maestri, who led UNO to the College World Series in 1984.

Mainieri, who was born in Morgantown, W. Va., and raised in Miami, will achieve his goal of finishing his collegiate baseball career in the same place it began 45 years ago. He earned a letter in 1976 as a freshman outfielder at LSU, where he also met his future wife, Karen, then a Fighting Tiger cheerleader.

Mainieri played one season for his father at Miami-Dade North Community College and two seasons at UNO, where the second baseman helped the Privateers win two Sun Belt Conference titles and advance to the 1979 NCAA Tournament.

After completing his undergraduate degree requirements at FloridaInternational in 1980, Mainieri earned a master’s in sports administration from St. Thomas in 1982.

Paul and Karen are now the proud parents of four children – Nicholas, Alexandra, Samantha and Thomas; and four grandchildren – Holden, Jonathan, Wren and Rocco.

LSU Baseball under Paul Mainieri:

NCAA National Champions
2009

NCAA National Runners-Up
2017

College World Series Appearances
2008, 2009, 2013, 2015, 2017

NCAA Regional Champions
2008, 2009, 2012, 2013, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2019

NCAA Tournament National Seeds
2008, 2009, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2019

Southeastern Conference Champions
2009, 2012, 2015, 2017

SEC Tournament Champions
2008, 2009, 2010, 2013, 2014, 2017


Paul Mainieri’s Coaching Superlatives at LSU

· 2018 U.S. Collegiate National Team Coach and Recipient of 2018 USA Baseball Rod Dedeaux Award

· 2017 Stan Musial Award

· 2015 National Coach of the Year (College Baseball Foundation, NCBWA)

· 2014 Inductee into the American Baseball Coaches Hall of Fame

· 2009 National Coach of the Year (ABCA, Baseball America, Collegiate Baseball, Rivals.com)

· 2008 National Coach of the Year (Rivals.com, College Baseball Insider)

· 2015 and 2009 SEC Coach of the Year

· Five-Time Louisiana Sportswriters Association Coach of the Year


Paul Mainieri’s Career Coaching Superlatives Prior to LSU

At Notre Dame


· 2001, 2002 & 2006 ABCA Mideast Region Coach of the Year

· 2001 Big East Coach of the Year

· 2000 National Coach of the Year (College Baseball Insider)

Nine NCAA tournament appearances in 12 seasons
40-plus win seasons in 11 of 12 years
College World Series Appearance – 2002
NCAA Regional and Super Regional Championship - 2002
Five Conference Tournament Championships
Seven Conference Regular Season Championships


At St. Thomas

· 1984 Sunshine State Conference Coach of the Year


The Paul Mainieri File

Career Record: 1501-774-8 (.659, 39 seasons)

at LSU: 637-282-3 (.693, 15 seasons)

at Notre Dame: 533-213-3 (.714, 12 seasons)

at Air Force: 152-158 (.490, six seasons)

at St. Thomas: 179-121-2 (.598, six seasons)

Birthdate: August 29, 1957 in Morgantown, W. Va.

Hometown: Miami, Fla.

Education: 1980 - B.S. in physical education from Florida International 1982 - M.S. in sports administration from St. Thomas (Fla.)

Wife: the former Karen Fejes of Belle Chasse, La.

Children: Nicholas, Alexandra, Samantha and Thomas

Grandchildren: Holden Brooks Roth; Jonathan Demie Mainieri; Wren Violet Rauber; Rocco Paul Wolfe

Filed Under: LSU Baseball
34 Comments
user avatar
Wayne_T36 months
Congratulations, thank you, and best wishes for a long, healthy, and happy retirement.
user avatar
tucoco36 months
It was for the best, the guy had been struggling the last few years. And only winning 1 title after such a great start is really disappointing. But I wish the guy the best because he is a really nice guy and true champion. God Bless you, Mainieri.
user avatar
GoRuckTiger36 months
After watching the entire press conference it's clear that the stress of being the head baseball coach at LSU took it's toll. Paul had huge shoes to fill and even larger expectation from fans. He wanted to win as much as the fans do and the losses really ate at him the last few years. He actually seemed relieved announcing his retirement. Hopefully in retirement he can enjoy life again and smile a little. Thanks Paul for all you've done at LSU. Congrats on a great coaching career.
user avatar
skullopener36 months
This marks the end of all the terrible hires Skip Bertman did as an AD. HOF coach but terrible AD.
user avatar
BigTimer2336 months
Idiot
user avatar
DoubleOught36 months
Thank you coach! You kept us relevant for many years.
user avatar
uptowntiger8436 months
He was running the program just like Miles was with football. An ok regular season with a pinch of great seasons and a post season run. That's not acceptable at LSU. You can't be scared to make a move and get fresh blood in the program. Look what happened with O and Brady.
user avatar
RaleighTGR36 months
We should celebrate that no players will further be hurt by being thrown under a bus. I don’t care how much this arse helped us win - he’s pathetic.
user avatar
RaleighTGR36 months
Go ahead and downvote the fact that character matters and he’s never taken responsibility for any loss.
user avatar
mr bunion36 months
Former players completely agree with you RTGR. Me too
user avatar
Robber DeNiro36 months
Yall so called smart fans got what yall wanted, remember this when the exact same happens in the future.
user avatar
BigDropper36 months
You disagree with his decision?
user avatar
NPComb36 months
Good bye sweet prince.
user avatar
BabyTac36 months
Good riddance. Long overdue.
user avatar
TigahJay36 months
TYFYS
user avatar
deuce98536 months
well, bye.
user avatar
deuce98536 months
In all seriousness though, gl coach. Some great memories he brought to our program.
user avatar
Deplorable Duke36 months
No... He QUIT!
user avatar
mr bunion36 months
He quit a long time ago.
user avatar
ByUselves36 months
Pawl Bawl is officially over. I am sure there are a lot of happy Tiger fans today, as well as some that are not so happy, but hey,it's time to move on. Happy for him & his family. This season was hard to watch for me, so much promise, with mixed results. Looking forward to the future of Tiger Baseball!
user avatar
CaptainJ4736 months
You hate to see it
user avatar
secfan197636 months
THANK GOD!!
user avatar
chinhoyang36 months
Was this really the time to be an arse?
user avatar
voodooidotwo36 months
Ok!!!!!! I’m back on board of supporting these tigers. A little late like with Miles but hey, better late than never
user avatar
Robber DeNiro36 months
Not a real tiger if you only support when everything good.
user avatar
chinhoyang36 months
I don't think that the Tigers could go on without your support.
user avatar
voodooidotwo36 months
Always supported the tigers. I can’t say I did not want an early exit so Paw would leave.
user avatar
LSU Tiger Eyes36 months
I wonder if he intends to retire back here in Key Biscayne.
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X123F4536 months
Pull one of the waffen SS Marshalls from the box and let them coach. At least they'll be disciplined.
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LSUTheodore36 months
Does this mean LSU didn’t make the post season?
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STEVED0036 months
I think the intention is basically to help LSU get into the tournament. In the end, ratings matter for the powers that be and Maineri’s last tournament should draw more eyeballs.
user avatar
Lowes knowsLSU36 months
Probably so. This is same record as LSU got his first season as LSU coach. But even if their season would not be over with, lsu would stand a better chance at moving on without him. His time is beyond done, no more energy left to give
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