Ohio Baseball Camps
Coaching Staff

Andrew See
Associate Head Coach/Pitching Coach/Recruiting Coordinator
Andrew See enters his fifth season as the pitching coach/recruiting coordinator for the Bobcats.
See's troops recorded 348 strikeouts during the 2010 campaign, the fifth-highest in the Mid-American Conference. In 2009, See's pitching corps finished third in the league with 29 wins, while senior Chris Rigo was named first-team All-MAC. In 2008 under See's tutelage, the Ohio pitching staff posted a 5.59 ERA, ranking fifth in the Mid-American Conference, and struck out 367 batters, good enough for fourth in the league. With See's help, junior Zach Elmer averaged 3.93 earned runs a game, which ranked sixth in the league, while Rigo was tied for second in the MAC with 77 strikeouts. See also helped bring in one of the top recruiting classes in the conference for 2009.
Working with an injury-riddled and relatively inexperienced staff in his first season, See saw his Bobcats post a 5.55 team ERA. Two Bobcat hurlers finished in the top 20 in the MAC in regular season ERA, led by Rigo with a 4.18 ERA. Rigo finished third in the conference in complete games and tossed a one-hit shutout against Miami during the season. Under See's guidance, junior Andrew Shisila posted a team-best 2.62 ERA working primarily out of the bullpen and did not allow a run in his final 14.1 innings pitched.
See, a native of Adrian, Mich., served as the recruiting coordinator and assistant coach at Appalachian State for the 2005 and 2006 seasons and was an assistant during the 2004 season at North Carolina-Greensboro. During the summer of 2005, See was the head coach of the Southern Ohio Copperheads, the Athens-based team that competes in the Great Lakes Summer Collegiate league.
See had a three-year career as an Ohio player from 1999-2001 after transferring from Georgia following his freshman season. In addition to playing center field and first base, See was a starting pitcher in the weekend rotation for two years and served as the Bobcats' closer as a senior. He was a career .350 hitter with 33 home runs and 116 RBIs at the plate and he went 13-12 with a 7.20 ERA and 125 strikeouts in 39 career appearances on the mound. See earned Mideast Region and Mid-American Conference First Team honors as a senior in 2001 when he led the Bobcats with 17 homers, which ties for third all-time in a single season at Ohio, and a (then) school-record 70 RBIs. He ranks second all-time at Ohio with a .647 career slugging percentage and is seventh on the career home runs list.
The utility player carried his career over to the professional ranks when he played for the Chillicothe Paints of the independent Frontier League for three seasons from 2001-03. Playing multiple positions, See helped the Paints to Eastern Division titles in 2001 and 2003 and during his final season he led the team with eight saves and pulled double duty by serving as the team's bullpen coach.
See got his coaching start as an undergraduate student assistant at Ohio during the offseason prior to the 2002 season and parlayed that into an assistant coaching position for the Bobcats as a graduate student during the 2003 season.
See graduated from Ohio in 2002 with a bachelor's degree in sport industry and he earned a master's in coaching education and athletic administration from Ohio in 2003.
See and his wife, Shauna, live in Athens.

Scott Malinowski
Assistant/Hitting Coach
Scott Malinowski enters his eighth season as a coach for the Bobcats, his fifth as an assistant coach, after joining the Ohio Baseball coaching staff in 2004 as a graduate assistant.
As the hitting coach, Malinowski's hitters ranked in the top half of the MAC in homers (1st, 79), slugging percentage (4th, .480), total bases (5th, 978) and batting average (6th, .303). Robert Maddox III was named third team all-American by American Baseball Coaches Association and Collegiate Baseball for his 2010 season in which he led the MAC in home runs (21) and slugging percentage (.737) and was second in RBIs (78) and total bases (174). Maddox currently stands atop the school record book in RBIs (181) and fourth in homers (43) and total bases (411). He set top-five single-season school marks in total bases (2nd, 174), home runs (T-2nd, 21), hits (4th, 89), slugging percentage (4th, .737) and doubles (T-5th, 20).
Gauntlett Eldemire was named to the second team of the All-Mideast Region team and first team All-Mid-American Conference in 2010. Eldemire led the MAC in on-base percentage (.496) and was second in slugging percentage (.726), third in batting average (.398), fourth in home runs (16), sixth in total bases (146) and tied for sixth in stolen bases (16). That duo, along with first baseman Jerod Yakubik, were all selected in the 2010 Major League Baseball Draft, making it the first time since 2004 that the program boasted three draftees.
The Bobcats were also strong at the plate during the 2009 campaign. The Bobcats led the MAC with 102 homers and a .547 slugging percentage, finished second in RBIs (400) and total bases (1,037) and were third in runs scored (434). They also hit .314 and posted an on-base percentage of .404, both of which finished as fourth-highest totals in the league.
One of the heaviest contributors that season was consensus All-American Marc Krauss. Krauss set the Ohio single season record for home runs with 27. That total was the third-highest in the nation and the second-highest in MAC single-season history. He led the MAC with 70 RBIs, which also tied the record for an Ohio single season, only to see Maddox break it the following season. Krauss led the MAC and set school records with 178 total bases (ranked 8th nationally) and sported an .852 slugging percentage (4th nationally). A three-time first-team All-MAC honoree, Krauss was named National Player of the Week by Collegiate Baseball Newspaper during the first week of April when he hit .429 with five home runs for the week.
Malinowski helped the Bobcats hit .308 as a team in 2008, ranking fourth in the Mid-American Conference. Ohio had a .473 slugging percentage last season, which also ranked fourth in the MAC. With Malinowski's guidance, the Bobcats led the conference in hits with 665, an Ohio single-season record, and were second in runs scored and RBIs with 439 and 395, respectively, in 2008. Three 'Cats finished in the top 15 in the conference in hitting, including First-Team All-MAC honoree Matt Stiffler, who led the league with 91 hits, tying Ohio's single-season record, and was second with a .669 slugging percentage.
Malinowski's first season as the team's hitting coach was a success as well, as the Bobcats finished the regular season second in the conference with a .298 team batting average. Three Ohio players finished in the top five in the MAC in hitting, led by Krauss' MAC Freshman of the Year honor. Krauss also earned All-MAC First Team honors, the first Ohio freshman ever to do so. Under Malinowski's watch, the team averaged 6.8 runs per game in 2007.
A four-year starter for the Bobcats from 1995-98, Malinowski helped lead Ohio to a Mid-American Conference championship in 1997 as a junior. He hit .318 that season with two home runs, 34 RBIs and 21 doubles, which tied for second all-time in a single-season at Ohio.
He also proved a gem in the field, committing only four errors at second base and earning the team's Most Outstanding Defensive Player Award. For his career, Malinowski ranks in the top ten in several school records, including sixth in games played (206), eighth in hits (218), tied for second in doubles (53) and tenth in runs scored (136).
After his Bobcat career, he signed with the New York Mets and played two years for the Port St. Lucie (Fla.) Mets and the Capital City (S.C.) Bombers. Malinowski then began his coaching career with the Durham Braves of the Coastal Plains League. He also was an instructor for C.F. Swingtown Baseball Academy for two years in his hometown of Joliet, Ill.
Malinowski graduated from Ohio in 2000 with a bachelor's degree in sport industry and is pursuing a master's degree in education.
Malinowski is married to the former Jen Meier. They have two children, Rose and Bobby.