MALIBU, Calif. – Rick Hirtensteiner, longtime assistant coach and member of the forthcoming 2015 Pepperdine Athletics Hall of Fame induction class, has been named the 17th head coach of the Waves’ storied baseball program. He is now the fourth former player at Pepperdine to assume head coaching duties.
“I look for coaches who are committed to our Christian mission, are committed to the academic well-being of their student-athletes and are committed to competing for championships every year. Rick Hirtensteiner meets that criteria in every respect,” said Director of Athletics Steve Potts. “He was an accomplished student-athlete here, he has contributed significantly to our program as an assistant coach and I am convinced he will continue the strong leadership and the championship tradition of our baseball program for many years to come. We are fortunate to have Rick as our new head coach.”
“I am honored, humbled and blessed to be able to follow in the footsteps of (former coaches) Dave Gorrie, Andy Lopez, Frank Sanchez and Steve Rodriguez,” said Hirtensteiner. “Steve has done a great job during the last 12 seasons directing the Pepperdine baseball team – building character, achieving in the classroom, succeeding on the field – and I look forward to building upon that Pepperdine tradition.
“I’d like to thank Dr. Potts and President Benton for entrusting the team to me, and for allowing my family and I to continue to call Pepperdine ‘home,’” Hirtensteiner stated.
During Hirtensteiner’s 17 seasons as an assistant, the Waves have won six WCC regular-season crowns and advanced to the postseason 10 times. In 2014, Pepperdine advanced past the NCAA Tournament regional round for the first time since 1992. The Waves won the San Luis Obispo Regional with a 3-0 record to advance to their first-ever NCAA Super Regional (since the round was instituted in 1999), eventually falling 2-1 in a three-game series at nationally-seeded TCU.
Pepperdine returned to the NCAA Tournament in 2015 after winning its second-straight WCC Tournament crown with wins over BYU, San Diego and Loyola Marymount.
Hirtensteiner is the fourth former Pepperdine player to assume the head coaching duties for the Waves in the program’s history. Gary Marks earned the distinction of being the first former Pepperdine player to pilot the program when he skippered the Waves from 1963-67. Gail Hopkins coached in Malibu during the 1968 season. Hirtesteiner’s predecessor, Rodriguez, also suited up for the Blue and Orange and was a member of the 1992 national championship team.
During Hirtensteiner’s collegiate career at Pepperdine (1985-89), the Waves won four WCC titles and advanced to the NCAA Tournament each season, compiling a cumulative four-year record of 164-76-7 (.678). The Waves earned a national Top 20 ranking all four seasons. Hirtensteiner was tabbed the 1989 WCC Player of the Year and also earned All-American first team notice by Baseball America.
He was the first-ever Pepperdine player of any sport to earn CoSIDA Academic All-American first team honors, doing so in 1989 after earning a bachelor’s degree in business administration. He was also recognized as the WCC’s Male Scholar-Athlete of the Year, becoming just the second Pepperdine athlete to earn the prestigious award.
A three-time All-WCC pick, Hirtensteiner had a .337 career batting average and is the Waves’ all-time career leader in triples (17), and also ranks among the top five in base hits (295), runs scored (228), RBI (175) and at-bats (876).
Hirtensteiner will be inducted into the Pepperdine Athletics Hall of Fame this October.
Hirtensteiner and his wife, Shannon, have five sons, Cade, Cullen, Crosby, Colter and Cash and live in Westlake Village.