|
LSU first baseman Eddy Furniss culminated a sterling four-year career by receiving the 1998 Dick Howser Trophy as college baseball’s most outstanding player. Furniss finished his career as the SEC’s all-time leader in hits (349), home runs (80), RBI (309), doubles, (87) and total bases (689). In NCAA annals, Furniss finished his career No. 3 all-time in total bases, No. 4 in home runs and doubles, and No. 5 in RBI. The Nacogdoches, Texas, native -- who posted a .371 lifetime batting average -- hit .403 in 1998 with 27 doubles, three triples, 28 homers, 85 runs and 76 RBI, earning first-team all-America and all-SEC honors. He was also voted a second-team Academic all-American with a 3.5 gpa in zoology.
In 1997, Furniss helped lead LSU to its second straight NCAA title, earning second-team all-America and all-SEC recognition and first-team Academic all-America honors. He batted .377 with 25 doubles, 17 homers and 77 RBI.
Furniss, a 1996 consensus first-team all-American, was voted the '96 Southeastern Conference Player of the Year after batting .374 (89-for-238) with a school-record 26 homers and an SEC-record 103 RBI. Furniss, whose home run and RBI totals were the best in the nation, also was named a second-team Academic all-American with a 3.7 gpa in zoology.
Furniss was the Pittsburgh Pirates’ fourth-round draft pick in 1998, and he played four seasons of minor league baseball prior to entering medical school. He is in his fourth year as a student physician at the University of Texas Health Science Center in Houston.
Furniss’ LSU Career Statistics
|
1995 |
.326 |
62 |
215 |
30 |
70 |
14 |
1 |
9 |
52 |
15 |
44 |
2-2 |
|
1996 |
.374 |
66 |
238 |
69 |
89 |
21 |
1 |
26 |
103 |
46 |
43 |
1-2 |
|
1997 |
.378 |
70 |
259 |
77 |
98 |
25 |
0 |
17 |
77 |
58 |
56 |
0-3 |
|
1998 |
.403 |
67 |
236 |
85 |
95 |
27 |
3 |
28 |
76 |
72 |
40 |
0-3 |
|
Total |
.371 |
265 |
948 |
261 |
352 |
87 |
5 |
80 |
308 |
191 |
183 |
3-10 |
|