Brad Weitzel
Brad Weitzel is an American baseball player, scout, coach, and author. Across his coaching and scouting career, he has amassed 77 big leaguers, including Harrison Bader, Pete Alonso, Jonathan India, J.D. Martinez, A.J. Pierzynski, Doug Mientkiewicz, Denard Span, Steve Pearce, Lance Carter, Chris Heston, and Anthony Swarzak, among others.
Weitzel has coached at Palm Beach Community College, the University of North Florida, and the University of Florida. He also was the Florida area scout for the Minnesota Twins from 1991 until 2007. He has coached for the Twins' minor league affiliate Erie Sailors, the Gulf Coast League Twins, and within the Minnesota Twins’ Instructional League program.
While at Florida, Weitzel was the key coaching piece to SEC regular season titles in 2010, 2011, 2014, 2017, and 2018, with 2017 also being the program's first national title campaign in school history. Weitzel coached several national and conference award winners while at UF, including Mike Zunino, Brandon McArthur, and Jonathan India.
Early life and athletics
Weitzel was born in 1957 to Judy and Bill Weitzel in upstate New York. He was joined by sister Kym in 1959 and brother Jay in 1960. Weitzel grew up playing football, basketball, and baseball across southwestern New York. and western Pennsylvania. Weitzel attended Salamanca High School, playing running back/safety in football, guard in basketball, and shortstop in baseball. Weitzel played for the storied Salamanca Warriors football program under Joe Sanfilippo and George Whitcher. Weitzel led the team in rushing twice and interceptions once. As a junior, Weitzel had a 3 interception game against rival Olean High School at historic Bradner Stadium, including a 104-yard return down the sideline containing Olean's bench. Weitzel was a Big 30 selection at defensive back.On the hardwood, Weitzel put down 39 points against Hornell, 31 points against Dunkirk on 15 of 20 field goals, and 26 points against Falconer in an era prior to the introduction of the shot clock and three point line. In a game against Olean, Weitzel made 23 out of 27 free throws. In a holiday tournament at Hornell, he was named tournament MVP. He was considered a sharp shooter and slick ballhandler by opposing coaches and newspapers in the area.
Weitzel played in the World Fastpitch Softball Tournament two times as Team Florida's shortstop.
Playing career (baseball)
Weitzel initially attended Palm Beach Community College in Lake Worth, FL. After playing at PBCC for two years, Weitzel earned a scholarship to the University of Georgia, playing two seasons there.Coaching (football and baseball)
Weitzel began his coaching career at Little Valley in 1982. He was an assistant on a varsity football team that won Division X and a sectional title at Rich Stadium, going 7–2. This is the solitary title the Little Valley football program has won in its history.Weitzel began his baseball coaching career at Palm Beach Community College in 1984. He then made his way to UNF to assist in beginning the baseball program at the school in 1987. Initial recruiting efforts amounted to showing potential Ospreys where the future field and clubhouse would be. In spite of this, the overall four-year record during Weitzel's time at UNF amounted to 200–68, a nearly 75% win-loss ratio. The program made NAIA World Series appearances in 1989 and 1991 and generated five MLB players under Weitzel and Rhodes.
In the fall of 2007, Weitzel headed to the University of Florida in a return to college baseball. Weitzel immediately made his mark with the program, instilling toughness, resilience, and a commitment to fundamentals which had not been seen in recent years. With his past experience working with both pitchers and position players, Weitzel served as the de facto player development coordinator in all aspects of the Florida program. Practices were not short, with a far greater emphasis on defensive drilling than other teams within the SEC. Florida led the conference in fielding four separate years – 2010 and 2015–17, with an average fielding percentage of.976 from 2008 through 2019. Further, in conference play during his tenure, Florida averaged a.282 batting clip, good for third in the league. Florida advanced to the College World Series seven out of the twelve years Weitzel was on staff.
Record-wise, Florida was 531–255 overall, good for a.675 winning percentage. Within the SEC, Florida garnered a record of 225–134, a.626 winning percentage – the best in the SEC during this time.
In total, in sixteen years of coaching college baseball, Weitzel led teams to the College World Series nine times.
Scouting
Weitzel was the state of Florida area scout for the Twins from 1991 to 2007. During this time, he either signed or had drafted 19 future MLB players. The Florida Diamond Club bestowed their yearly MLB scout of the year award on Weitzel in 1998, 1999, and 2004.Education
BS in Health and Physical Education, University of Georgia.MS in Health Education, Nova Southeastern.
Works
42 Years of Dominance, an unpublished text on the history of the Salamanca Warriors football program.Other media
https://www.oleantimesherald.com/sports/salamanca-native-weitzel-an-ncaa-champion/article_58a75ce6-6208-11e7-8373-876543b024e8.htmlhttps://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/gators-weitzel-helped-start-trend-of-scouts-turned-college-coaches/
https://www.bostonglobe.com/sports/redsox/2019/06/19/twins-discovered-martinez-but-didn-sign-him/CAKvpZhAaJjiaLLQXCqFaP/story.html
https://nypost.com/2022/10/08/mlb-playoffs-harrison-bader-thinks-he-was-meant-to-be-yankees/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yOE6L5tKdY4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WiYtkyn1y7w&t=970s
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_kSdtYJy4d8
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