Entering his seventh season as Rutgers-Camden's baseball coach,
Keith Williams has won more games than any coach in the history
of the program.
Williams' second victory in 2004, 6-4 at Albright College March
8, was his 83rd win with the Scarlet Raptors, passing the program
mark of 82 set by Frank Trotman from 1986-1992. Williams added
14 more wins after that one, raising his Rutgers-Camden total
to 97 and leaving him three shy of becoming the first baseball
coach in school history to notch 100 victories.
During his first six seasons at Rutgers-Camden, Williams owns
a 97-113-1 record, including the three winningest seasons in school
history. He turned the program around during his third year at
Rutgers-Camden in 2001, setting a school mark for wins with a
21-15 record. The 21 wins raised the standard set by Trotman's
20-17 team in 1987, and set the stage for a remarkable 2002 campaign.
That season the Raptors went 32-10, qualified for the New Jersey
Athletic Conference playoffs for the second time in program history,
earned their first post-season win (a 10-inning 9-8 triumph over
William Paterson in the NJAC playoffs May 5) and
played in their first ECAC Metro Tournament.
The Scarlet Raptors continued their amazing three-year run in
2003, posting a 21-16 record which was capped by winning the ECAC
Metro championship. During that three-year span, Rutgers-Camden
posted a phenomenal 74-41 record, producing 17 percent of the
victories in the history of the program.
The Raptors' streak of three straight winning seasons was snapped
last spring when Rutgers-Camden posted a 16-23-1 record in a tough-luck
campaign which included seven losses by one run and three others
by two runs. A pair of Scarlet Raptors, junior pitcher Matt Ulmer
and senior center fielder Brian Murphy, were named All-NJAC Honorable
Mention.
Williams returns a veteran team in 2005, looking to return to
the success which saw the Raptors celebrate after the final game
of the 2003 ECAC Metro Baseball Championship, when Rutgers-Camden
blanked FDU-Florham, 5-0, May 11. That win gave Rutgers-Camden
its first post-season baseball title in school history.
The 2003 Scarlet Raptors saw five players selected to the NJAC
all-star teams, two earn All-ECAC Division III Metro honors and
a pair of players capture post-season recognition on the All-New
Jersey Collegiate Baseball Association teams.
Capping off the Scarlet Raptors' 2003 season, Williams saw the
first player of his tenure get selected in Major League Baseball's
First-Year Player Draft. Senior closer Dan McKenna was drafted
in the 27th round by the Milwaukee Brewers on June 4.
The 2003 Scarlet Raptors posted a winning record in NJAC play
for only the third time in their 20 seasons of conference play.
Coming on the heels of a record-setting 12-6 mark during conference
play in 2002, it was the first time Rutgers-Camden produced back-to-back
winning seasons in the NJAC.
Williams' 2002 team set nearly every school record while steamrolling
its way to a 32-10 record, 11 more victories than the previous
school mark set by the 2001 club. Along the way, the Scarlet Raptors
won their first 17 games -- easily setting a school record for
consecutive victories -- and found themselves in previously-uncharted
territory by reaching the American Baseball Coaches Association/Collegiate
Baseball Division III national poll. The Raptors made their debut
in the poll at No. 23 on March 25, and peaked at No. 19 on April
8.
The Raptors' success led to their first berth in the NJAC playoffs
since the top-four team format was adopted in 1990. The only previous
trip to the NJAC playoffs came in 1987 when the team finished
second in the NJAC Southern Division.
Those accomplishments helped Williams capture the 2002 NJAC
Coach of the Year and Rutgers-Camden Coach of the Year awards
and become one of five men honored as the New Jersey Collegiate
Baseball Association Div. II/III Coaches of the Year.
The Raptors' success in 2002 led to a flurry of post-season honors,
including six Raptors listed among the NJAC's First, Second and
Honorable Mention teams. Five players were honored by the NJCBA
and third baseman Ricky Flores also earned ECAC Metro and Mid-Atlantic
Regional All-American honors.
Williams' first two teams (1999 and 2000) combined to post a
combined 7-49 record, while he was working hard to rebuild the
program. That hard work culminated in a 21-15 season in 2001,
led by the Bob Diepold, the school's first All-NJAC First Team
player since 1997. Freshman Brian Murphy set a host of records
en route to earning Second Team All-NJAC honors and becoming the
first NJAC Rookie of the Year at Rutgers-Camden.
Another highlight of the 2001 season came when junior pitcher
Mike Murphy hurled a perfect game against Lincoln
University, March 8. It was the first perfect game in the history
of Rutgers University, including the Camden, Newark and New Brunswick
programs.
The 2001 Raptors also posted an 8-10 record in the NJAC, their
best conference mark since 1996 (10-8, the old school record
before the 2002 team went 12-6).
During Williams' tenure, the Raptors' roster has multiplied
from his first season -- when his team finished with eight players
-- to roughly 40 players. The program has gone from a team which
had to forfeit five games in 1999, due to a lack of players, to
one which is so popular that a junior varsity club was formed
in 2002.
Williams' career as the Rutgers-Camden coach has seen another
milestone for the program. In 2002, the Scarlet Raptors
ushered in the era of Campbell's Field, a state-of-the-art facility
on the Delaware River waterfront. That park, which opened in May,
2001, also serves as the home of the Camden Riversharks of the
Atlantic League of Professional Baseball.
In addition to its downtown stadium, the Rutgers-Camden baseball
program holds annual alumni games, instructional clinics and golf
outings. The Scarlet Raptors have taken a pair of trips to Cooperstown,
New York, during the fall seasons in 2000 and 2002, playing a
game at Doubleday Field and visiting the National Baseball Hall
of Fame each year. In the fall of 2001, the team took a trip to
Virginia Beach, Virginia Wesleyan and Colonial Williamsburg. The
team made annual spring trips to Ft. Pierce, Florida, until last
season, when they traveled to California. They will return to
the west coast in March, 2005.
The Raptors' success off the field has been mirrored in their
on-field performance. Their on-field personality reflects Williams'
own philosophy that hard work, dedication and team unity form
a foundation for success.
Williams' accomplishments as a head coach are a continuation
of the success he has found at all levels of the game. He has
been a top-notch baseball player for years in South Jersey, where
he played on the state champion Cherry Hill Babe Ruth team in
1985, and was a three-year American Legion starter for Medford
Post 307 (1986-88). His 1988 Legion team finished third in the
state.
A 1987 graduate of Bishop Eustace High School, Williams played
baseball, soccer and basketball for the Crusaders, earning All-Parochial
honors in baseball. He led the 1986 Olympic Conference National
Division champions in seven offensive categories. He helped the
1987 team capture the South Jersey Parochial B title, the Diamond
Classic championship and the top ranking in South Jersey. Williams
also earned All-Parochial, All-Conference and All-State soccer
honors at Bishop Eustace.
Williams continued his education and baseball career at Catholic
University of America in Washington, D.C. He was a four-year starter
and a team captain in baseball, and graduated in 1991 with a Bachelors
degree in Biomedical Engineering.
Following college, Williams spent two years in Australia, where
he served as a player/coach and built his Ryde-Eastwood Leagues
team into a Pacific Coast power, winning two league championships.
Returning to the United States, Williams actively pursued a
coaching career. He was an American Legion coach for Medford Post
307 in 1991, and served on the Haddon Heights Legion staff from
1995-2000. He also was an assistant coach at Camden Catholic High
School from 1995-97. He helped the Irish compile a 43-21 record
and win the 1996 South Jersey Parochial A title. He added his
expertise to another South Jersey baseball power in 1998, serving
as an assistant at Eastern High School.
Williams also has served as an assistant coach with the West
Deptford Storm of the Atlantic Collegiate Baseball League, and
as a player/coach for Mazzucco of the semi-pro Rancocas Valley
League. That team won the South Jersey Semi-Pro Baseball Tournament
in 1996.
Williams received his Master of Science in Administration, Sport
and Recreation from West Chester University in August, 2003, and
was hired in February, 2004, as Rutgers-Camden's Assistant Director
of Recreational Services. Prior to taking that job at Rutgers-Camden,
Williams served as a high school teacher at Camden Catholic, Bishop
Eustace and Eastern, and worked with the family business, Lumps
Express, in Cinnaminson.
Williams lives in Haddon Township.