Dave Serrano
Dave Serrano was born in Torrance, California, United States on June 28th, 1964 and is the Baseball Manager. At the age of 60, Dave Serrano biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
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David Scott Serrano is an American college baseball coach and former pitcher.
He is the head baseball coach at California State University, Northridge.
Serrano played college baseball at Serrano formerly served as head coach at Cerritos College from 1984 to 1985 and at California State University, Fullerton from 1986 to 1987 for coach Augie Garrido.
He served as the head coach at University of California, Irvine from 2005 to 2007, Cal State Fullerton from 2008 to 2011, and the University of Tennessee from 2012 to 2017.
Playing career
Serrano graduated from Cerritos High School in 1982 and spent two seasons at Cerritos College. While leading the Falcons to a 39–5 record and a state championship in 1985, he went 12–1 and received JC All-American recognition. Serrano started pitching for Cal State Fullerton in 1986, totaling 3–4 points with just one save in 15 appearances. He obtained his bachelor's degree from Trinity College and University (now Bronte International University), an unaccredited school.
Coaching career
In 1988, he began teaching at Cerritos College as an assistant. After Horton left to be associate head coach to Augie Garrido at Cal State Fullerton, he took over Horton for the 1991 season. Serrano spent two seasons as a pitching coach for Rod Delmonico from 1992 to 1994 for the Falcons before heading to Tennessee. In 1995, the Volunteers made their first trip to Omaha in 44 years, after being swept twice by Fullerton's third national championship team.
Serrano will serve as the pitching coach and recruiting coordinator for former Titan head coach Horton and the Titans from 1997 to 2004. The Titans went 356-154-1 (.698) during Serrano's 8-year tenure at Fullerton, and they were in the NCAA Tournament every season. To earn four trips to Omaha, they won six Big West Conference championships, four NCAA Regionals, and four NCAA Super Regionals. In 2004, he was named the ABCA/Baseball America Assistant Coach of the Year.
Every one of Serrano's Fullerton recruiting classes was ranked in the top 20 percent of the country. Chad Cordero is also responsible for a long line of pitchers who went on to play professionally, including Chad Cordero. During his tenure at Fullerton, he tutored six conference pitchers of the year and 25 All-American players.
He left after the Titans' fourth national championship to become head coach at UC Irvine, where he established a 114–66–1 (.633) record in three seasons and the Anteaters' first College World Series appearance in 2007. Serrano national coach of the year awards from Baseball America, which rated him as the nation's top assistant coach in 2004 with the Titans, in their 47–17–1 season. At UCI, he produced three more All-American pitchers.
Serrano took over the Fullerton State Titans baseball team in 2008. He coached the Titans to the NCAA tournament every year since being head coach. In 2009, he also helped the Titans guide them to the College World Series. Serrano's teams continued to compete in Super Regionals in each of his first three seasons with Fullerton. The Big West Conference Championships were won by the 2008, 2010, and 2011 Titans teams. In his four seasons with the Titans, he set an overall record of 175–73.
Serrano was officially named as the Tennessee Volunteers baseball head coach on June 15, 2011, after replacing Todd Raleigh. In six seasons with the Vols, he had not had a winning record in conference play. At the end of the 2017 season, he resigned.
Serrano was named as the West Virginia Mountaineers' pitching coach on July 3, 2017. After one season, WVU and Serrano experienced a "mutual parting of ways."
Serrano was named head coach for the Cal State Northridge Matadors on June 24, 2019. Serrano resigned from coaching on January 25th, 2022, as a result of the season.