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Bob Wojick

Bob Wojick

Bob Wojick enters his 13th season as an instrumental member of the Wesleyan coaching staff in 2025. In his 48 years of coaching college baseball, his teams have won 1,437 games and four national championships.

Prior to joining the Cardinals, he served 36 years as an assistant coach at Eastern Connecticut State University, including serving as associate head coach from 1996 to 2012. His experience at all facets of the game was a prime reason his teams won the Div. III National Championship four times, appeared in the College World Series 12 times, and played in a regional 31 times.

In 2005, he was named the National Assistant Coach-of-the-Year by the American Baseball Coaches Association and Baseball America magazine. He is the only non-Division I coach to receive the award. In 2009, he was also named the New England Assistant Coach-of-the-Year by the New England Intercollegiate Baseball Association.

In 2003, he helped coach as Eastern Conn. represented USA in the World Port Tournament in Rotterdam, Netherlands. His team came in fourth place against teams from Cuba, Chinese Taipei and South Africa.

He was one of the founders of the Thread City Tides in Willimantic, Conn. during the inaugural season of the New Egnalnd Collegiate Baseball League, serving during the entire 10 years of the franchise. He also started and played for the Superior Ford summer league baseball team from 1970-1986, which played in the Norwich, New London, Willmantic and Hartford Twlight Leagues.

A three-year letterwinner as an outfielder at Eastern Conn., he served as captain in 1971 before joing the coaching staff the following year. He took five years off to spend more time with his family, before returning in 1995. He was inducted into the Eastern Conn. Hall of Fame in 1992.

A 1971 graduate of Eastern Conn. St. with a B.A. in Applied Social Relations, he also received his M.A. in Industrial Education from Central Connecticut State University. He retired after 35 years teaching in the Hartford Public Schools system. He and his wife Sandy have two children, Kimberlee and Brian.