PERSONAL |
Hometown |
Benton, Ark. |
Alma Mater |
Meridian CC (1997-98)
Mississippi State (1999) |
Spouse |
Chassity |
Children |
Caleb Christopher, Lily Marie |
COACHING EXPERIENCE |
Years |
School - Position |
2015-pres. |
Little Rock - Head Coach |
2013-15 |
Northwestern State - Assistant Coach |
2011-12 |
Meridian CC - Head Coach |
2009-10 |
Arkansas - Assistant Coach |
2008 |
Arkansas Tech - Assistant Coach |
2007 |
Hendrix - Assistant Coach |
PLAYING EXPERIENCE |
Drafted |
9th Round of 1999 MLB Draft
(Chicago Cubs) |
Years |
School - Position |
1999 |
Eugene Emeralds (A) |
2000 |
Lansing Lugnuts (A) |
2000 |
Daytona Cubs (A+) |
2001 |
Daytona Cubs (A+) |
2001 |
West Tenn. Diamond Jaxx (AA) |
2001 |
Lansing Lugnuts (A) |
2002 |
Daytona Cubs (A+) |
2002 |
West Tenn. Diamond Jaxx (AA) |
2002 |
Iowa Cubs (AAA) |
2003 |
Norwich Navigators (AA) |
2004 |
Norwich Navigators (AA) |
2005 |
Norwich Navigators (AA) |
2006 |
Gary Southshore RailCats (Ind) |
Little Rock native Chris Curry is now in his 11th season at the helm of the Trojan baseball program after being named head baseball coach at Little Rock on July 1, 2014. Curry has made his mark in Little Rock with an overall record of 236-261.
Curry earned his third Coach of the Year award as he led the Trojans to the program's first regular season championship. Additionally, the 2024 season marked the program's highest win total (32) to record back-to-back 30+ win seasons for the first time in Trojan history. The 2024 campaign was capped off with a multitude of post season awards including Jacob Weatherley winning OVC Pitcher of the Year just one year after Jackson Wells. Hoss Brewer, Nico Baumbach, and Jacob Weatherley also were named to the All-OVC First Team with Jake Wright and Luke Pectol being named to the All-OVC Second Team. Hoss Brewer, Thomas Kuykendall, and Luke Pectol all received in-season Player of the Week awards.
In conference play, Coach Curry led the team to a 19-8 record posting a .704 winning percentage breaking the record for highest conference winning percentage which he set last year. Adding to the on-field success, the team posted yet another semester with a team G.P.A. above 3.0 which marks 20 straight semesters.Â
In 2023, Little Rock finished second in the OVC standings, reaching the semifinals of the OVC Tournament. The 2023 campaign was highlighted by several awards, including pitcher Jackson Wells receiving multiple All-America honors as well as being named the OVC’s Pitcher of the Year. Those accolades came as he was the NCAA's statistical national champion in ERA with a 1.65 mark, becoming the first Little Rock pitcher to become an NCAA statistical champion. The Trojans hauled in four All-OVC First Team honors (Nico Baumbach, Skyler Trevino, Jackson Wells and Tyler Williams) while recording their 18th consecutive semester above a 3.0 team grade point average.
This all came as Little Rock recorded its second program win over Arkansas in an 11-4 dismantling of the fifth-ranked Razorbacks in Fayetteville on April 12 and he recorded his 200th career win over the course of the season. The notable campaign witnessed all of these accomplishments and more along with new padded walls installed behind home plate at Gary Hogan Field.
During the 2022 season, Curry headed a Little Rock team that finished with a record of 24-27 in the Trojans final season competing in the Sun Belt Conference. This record included 20 wins at Gary Hogan Field which is the highest home win total in Curry's head coaching tenure at Little Rock and the most since 2014.
At the conclusion of the season, two Trojans achieved All-Conference selections in Noah Dickerson and, for the second consecutive season, Hayden Arnold. Curry also served as the Sun Belt representative on the NCAA Division I Baseball Regional Advisory Committee for the South Region in 2022.
2021 saw more highlights for Curry’s squad, headlined by Hayden Arnold named the Sun Belt Pitcher of the Year. He was joined by Aaron Barkley on the All-Sun Belt team as Little Rock started out the year strong, earning a series win over nationally-ranked Southern Illinois.
Little Rock won 11 conference games in 2021, upping Curry’s career conference win total to 84 and become the program’s all-time leader, surpassing the 76 from former head coach and stadium namesake Gary Hogan. His field continued to provide a unique advantage for Little Rock who finished 12-5 on its home turf, including Sun Belt sweeps over Texas State and South Alabama and a series win over Louisiana.
Curry’s 2020 squad was making noise early in the season with Kale Emshoff and Aaron Funk emerging as Player of the Year candidates for the Sun Belt Conference. The duo ranked among the league leaders in a number of categories and had the Trojans gelling before the global coronavirus pandemic shut the season down on March 11, 2020.
The shutdown had an impact on the MLB Draft as well as it was limited to just five rounds, keeping Emshoff from possibly going down as the highest-ever draft pick in program history. The redshirt junior catcher was signed as a free agent by the Kansas City Royals and is ranked as one of their top-20 prospects, bringing Curry’s count to nine Trojans signed by Major League programs since arriving at Little Rock.
2019 was a banner year for Curry and the program as Little Rock won 29 games, the most for the program since 2010, as the Trojans set a new benchmark for conference wins in a season with 18. Going 18-11, Little Rock earned the number three overall seed in the 2019 Sun Belt tournament, tied for its best seeding in program history.
One of the most memorable moments of the season came on April 2, 2019, when Little Rock earned a convincing 17-7 win over Arkansas, the reigning national runners-up, at Baum-Walker Stadium in the first meeting between the two schools. That spearheaded an impressive 8-0 record against teams from the Natural State as Little Rock became the first program in the state’s history to defeat the other four Division I schools in the same season.
Individual accolades rolled in for the Trojans as Riley Pittman and Chandler Fidel were both named first team All-Sun Belt selections, followed by Pittman being named a CoSIDA Google Cloud Second Team All-American after becoming the program’s all-time home run leader. Little Rock claimed the Sun Belt Conference’s Academic Team achievement for the third-straight year (2017, 2018 and 2019) while extending the program’s streak to 10-straight semesters of a team GPA above a 3.0.
Curry and the Trojans made their third consecutive Sun Belt Conference Tournament appearance in 2018. Little Rock finished the season with a 28 wins, the most since 2013. The Trojans won their fifth straight series against Texas State — a feat that had never been accomplished against another Sun Belt team since Little Rock joined the league in 1992. The Trojans reached an RPI of 31 during March, the highest in program history, with Justin Garcia being selected in the 17th round of the MLB Draft by the Arizona Diamondbacks.
In his second season in 2016, Curry was named the Sun Belt Conference’s Coach of the Year after leading the Trojans to a 17-13 Sun Belt record and a third-place finish during the regular season, both program records. The Trojans were able to win six Sun Belt series for the year, tying the program record. Curry took the Trojans back to the Sun Belt Conference Tournament for the first time since 2013.
Little Rock had a pair of wins over No. 16 Louisiana, winning the season series for the second straight year against the Ragin’ Cajuns. Under his guidance, the Trojans earned three All-Sun Belt selections while Ryan Scott earned Sun Belt Student-Athlete of the Year and Louisville Slugger First Team All-American.
In 2018, Curry was inducted into the Mississippi Junior College Hall of Fame for his accomplishments as a player from 19997-98 as well as a coach from 2011-12.
Before coming to Little Rock, Curry was a top assistant and pitching coach at Northwestern State for two years and previously worked on the baseball staffs at Arkansas, Arkansas Tech, Hendrix and Meridian Community College.
In Curry’s second year at Northwestern State, the Demons won 33 games and tied a school record with a 17-win improvement from the previous season, including a Southland Conference record 14-win increase in league play. NSU also boasted the Southland Conference Freshman of the Year and a Louisville Slugger Freshman All-American in right-handed pitcher Adam Oller. Center fielder Bret Underwood, who Curry recruited, was taken by the San Francisco Giants in the 20th round of the Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft. Off the field, the Demons posted a team GPA of 3.0 or higher in each of the four semesters under Curry and head coach Lane Burroughs.
Prior to his stint at Northwestern State, Curry served as head coach of Meridian Community College from 2011-12. He went 69-44 in two seasons at Meridian, capturing a Miss-Lou Conference Championship and earning Coach of the Year honors in 2012. Curry coached two junior college All-Americans and produced the NJCAA national home run leader in both seasons. Two of his players were selected in the 2012 Major League Baseball Player’s Draft while the team raised its cumulative GPA from 2.62 to 3.30 with Curry at the helm.
Curry worked as an assistant coach under head coach Dave Van Horn at Arkansas from 2009-10. He worked with the catchers and assisted with hitting duties in his time with the Razorbacks, which included a College World Series appearance in 2009 and an NCAA Super Regional in 2010.
In 2009, Arkansas led the Southeastern Conference in runners caught stealing after placing last in the league in that category the year before Curry’s arrival. The Razorbacks led the SEC with just three passed balls in 2010.
Curry’s coaching career began as an assistant coach at both Hendrix (2007) and Arkansas Tech (2008), coming following the completion of Curry’s seven-year pro playing career. He made appearances in major league spring training games from 2002-05 and allowed him to catch big leaguers Kerry Wood, Carlos Zambrano, Mark Prior and Tom Gordon.
Curry worked his way up to the Chicago Cubs’ Triple-A affiliate between 1999-02. He finished his pro career as an All-Star with the independent Northern League’s Gary Southshore Railcats in 2006.
Curry played his high school baseball at Conway High School and was an All-State pitcher and catcher for the Wampus Cats. He played two seasons at Meridian CC and was Baseball America’s No. 1-rated junior college prospect in the nation in 1998. He was the starting catcher for Team USA’s Junior College All-Star Team that same year.
Following two All-Miss-Lou Conference and All-Region 23 seasons at Meridian CC, Curry signed with legendary coach Ron Polk at Mississippi State. He led all SEC catchers in fielding percentage in 1999 before being chosen by the Chicago Cubs in the ninth round of the 1999 MLB Draft.
A veteran of seven years as a catcher in professional baseball with the Chicago Cubs and San Francisco Giants organizations, Curry’s selection by Chicago marked his fourth time being drafted. He was selected by the San Francisco Giants in the 26th round as a high school senior in 1996 and twice by the Detroit Tigers, first in the 17th round in 1997 and again in the 52nd round in 1998.
Curry was a 1998 Cape Cod League All-Star and in 2018 was inducted into the Mississippi Junior College Hall of Fame for his playing career while at Meridian.
He is married to the former Chassity Cossey of Hamburg, Arkansas. The couple has one son, Caleb Christopher, and one daughter, Lily Marie.
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CHRIS CURRY
YEAR-BY-YEAR RECORD
YEAR |
OVERALL |
PCT. |
CONF. |
PCT. |
POSTSEASON |
2015 |
16-33 |
.327 |
12-17 |
.414 |
|
2016 |
26-28 |
.481 |
17-13 |
.567 |
Sun Belt Tournament |
2017 |
21-34 |
.382 |
11-18 |
.379 |
Sun Belt Tournament |
2018 |
28-28 |
.500 |
15-14 |
.571 |
Sun Belt Tournament |
2019 |
29-28 |
.509 |
18-11 |
.621 |
Sun Belt Tournament |
2020 |
9-8 |
.529 |
0-0 |
N/A |
No Postseason Held (COVID-19) |
2021 |
21-30 |
.412 |
11-13 |
.458 |
Sun Belt Tournament |
2022 |
24-27 |
.471 |
11-18 |
.379 |
Sun Belt Tournament |
2023 |
31-23 |
.574 |
14-8 |
.636 |
OVC Tournament |
TOTALS |
204-237 |
.463 |
109-112 |
.493 |
7 Consecutive Postseasons |