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This category is for baseball at San Jacinto College in Texas at its Pasadena campus. The campus is also known as San Jacinto Central. Note that its other campuses have different nicknames: San Jacinto North Gators ; San Jacinto South Coyotes ; As of 2022-23, the three teams were merged into the San Jacinto Ravens.
San Jacinto College (Spanish: Colegio San Jacinto) is a public community college in the Greater Houston area, with its campuses in Pasadena and Houston, Texas.Established in 1961, San Jacinto College originally consisted of the independent school districts (ISD) of Channelview, Deer Park, Galena Park, La Porte, and Pasadena.
This category is for baseball at San Jacinto College in Texas at one of its two Houston campuses. The campus is also known as San Jacinto North. Note that its other campuses have different nicknames: San Jacinto Central Ravens ; San Jacinto South Coyotes ; As of 2022-23, the three teams were merged into the San Jacinto Ravens.
San Jacinto College-North: Randy Randle, San Jacinto 1986 Brian Deak, Yavapai 1987 Bill Losa, San Jacinto 1988 Hillsborough Community College: Chris Hanks, Southern Idaho 1989 San Jacinto College-North: David Evans, San Jacinto 1990 Randy Brown, San Jacinto 1991 Howard College (TX) Frank Rodriguez, Howard 1992 Essex Community College (MD)
The SWJCC currently has the three campuses of San Jacinto College as members, all are public schools. As of 2022, San Jacinto merged its three mascots and teams (San Jacinto College–Central Ravens, San Jacinto College–North Gators, San Jacinto College–South Coyotes) into one mascot, the Ravens. [2] [3]
This category is for baseball players who played at San Jacinto College in Texas at one of its two Houston campuses. The campus is also known as San Jacinto North. Note that its other campuses have different nicknames: San Jacinto Central Ravens ; San Jacinto South Coyotes
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Beginning in 1981, Graham turned San Jacinto into the one of the best junior college baseball teams in the country. [13] After regular conference titles in Graham's first few seasons, the Gators became a dominant force in 1984 when they began a run of seven consecutive 50-win seasons and berths in the NJCAA World Series in Grand Junction, Colorado.