| Shehan Tabbed to Brooks Wallace Award
Watch List |
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STATESBORO,
Ga.
– Georgia Southern University’s Chris
Shehan (Strasburg, PA/Lampeter-Strasburg) was selected
as one of 100 finalists to the Brooks Wallace Player of the
Year Award. The College Baseball Foundation announced the
field of candidates for the National Player of the Year Award.
The
junior outfielder was one of four representing the Southern
Conference. He is also one of 50 finalists for the Dick Howser
Trophy by the National Collegiate Baseball Writers
Association.
Shehan
recently became one of six players in
Georgia
Southern history to record 70 runs scored/60 RBI in a season.
He paces the Eagles offense recording: .432 batting average,
71 runs scored, 17 doubles, two triples and 43 walks. Shehan
ranks second on the team with 60 RBI and 20 stolen bases. As
of last week, Shehan was nationally ranked among the ‘Top
35’ in eight different categories, including a top-ranking
in runs scored.
The
2008 award banquet will be held on Wednesday, July 2, at 7
p.m. in the
Lubbock
Memorial
Civic
Center
. Information regarding the sale of individual tickets, as
well as group and corporate tables, is available by calling
(806) 777 – 8277 or through the College Baseball Foundation
website at www.collegebaseballfoundation.org.
The
selection committee will narrow the “Wallace Watch”
throughout the remainder of the season and the three Wallace
Award finalists will be announced following NCAA Super
Regional play. Along with their head coaches and parents, the
finalists will be invited to
Lubbock
from July 2-4 to participate in the College Baseball
Foundation’s “Past Meets Present” celebration of college
baseball. The 2008 College Baseball Hall of Fame Inductees
will also be present for the three days of festivities.
The
Wallace Award is a dedication to the memory of the former
Texas Tech player and assistant coach Brooks Wallace. Wallace
was a slick-fielding shortstop at Texas Tech from 1977 to
1980. A four-year starter, he was named All-Southwest
Conference and All-District his senior year. He led the Red
Raiders to their first-ever appearance in the Southwest
Conference Tournament in 1980. After playing two years in the
Texas Rangers organization, he returned to Texas Tech and
served as a graduate assistant and later as an assistant
coach. In the summer of 1984, he was diagnosed with cancer and
fought the disease courageously until his death on March 24,
1985, at age 27. The
Plano
,
TX
, native was married to the former Sandy Arnold and they had
one daughter, Lindsay Ryan.
Past
winners included Kurt Suzuki of Cal State Fullerton (2004),
Alex Gordon of
Nebraska
(2005), and
Brad Lincoln
of
Houston
(2006). Last year’s winner was the number one choice in
Major League Baseball’s 2007 First-Year Player Draft,
David Price
of Vanderbilt. |