
Cleveland Indian star part of 2007 Hall of Fame class
Having led Cowley to its first baseball national championship
in school history, former Cowley College great, Travis Hafner, will be
inducted into the Tiger Athletic Hall of Fame on Feb. 10.
Hafner, who has gone on to become one of the best Major League baseball
players in the game, had two stellar seasons at Cowley. As a freshman,
Hafner helped lead the 1996 Tiger baseball team to the program’s
first trip to the NJCAA College World Series and a record of 51-13.
He followed up the success of his freshman season by
leading the Tiger baseball team to the first of back-to-back national
championships in 1997. Hafner, who was named a Third-Team All-American,
drove in a school-record 82 runs and helped Cowley to a record of 53-11.
Hafner still holds the school-record for runs batted in in a season (82),
runs batted in in a career (161), doubles in a season (21), and doubles
in a career (36).
“He practiced every day like it was the seventh
game of the World Series and that is why he was so successful for us,” Cowley
had coach Dave Burroughs said. “He is a very genuine, honest, hard
working person.”
While in high school in North Dakota, Hafner attended
an Atlanta Braves tryout camp. He impressed the scouts enough to be offered
a small free agent bonus, but thought he was not quite ready to join
a major league organization. As a result, a scout for the Braves gave
Hafner a list of five junior colleges to contact about playing for. One
of which, was Cowley.
“I called all of them and Cowley had the best
record of the schools and I was told was the toughest place to play,” Hafner
said. “They were also the only school that did not offer me a starting
position, they told me I would have to earn it. There was something about
having to prove myself that I found attractive.”
Hafner not only excelled in baseball in high school, he was also good
enough in basketball to receive a scholarship offer to play basketball
at North Dakota State. However, he is glad he made the decision to come
to Cowley and play baseball for Tiger coaches Dave and Darren Burroughs.
“Probably the most fun I have had in my life
was playing baseball in college,” Hafner said. “Dave (Burroughs)
and Lefty (Darren Burroughs) are like uncles to me. With their knowledge
of the game I probably learned more about baseball in those two years
than I ever have.”
He went on to get drafted by the Texas Rangers in the
31st round of the 1996 amateur draft and signed with the Rangers on June
2, 1997.
Hafner recalls the first time he got to put on a major league uniform.
He got the call in June 2002 to fly to Chicago and play for the Rangers
that night. However, when he checked into his hotel he was told to hang
out until the team decided if either of the two players on the roster
that were injured would need to go on the disabled list. After hanging
out in the hotel for three days, he was told to rejoin his minor league
team in Triple A.
He made it back to play in one game for his Triple A club and was looking
forward to going back to his hotel room to relax when he got the call
to fly to Detroit to play that night. This time he made his major league
debut as he pinch hit for the Texas Rangers against Detroit and then
was in the team’s starting lineup the following night.
“It was like a dream come true to get to play
in the big leagues,” Hafner said.
He has stuck in the major leagues ever since and has become one of the
most feared hitters in the game. His incredible power is complimented
by his uncanny ability to reach base.
After one season with the Rangers, Hafner was traded to the Cleveland
Indians. In four seasons with the Indians, Hafner has belted 117 home
runs, and driven in 374 runs.
This past season, Hafner batted .308 with a career-high
42 home runs and 117 runs batted in, while being limited to 129 games
due to injury. This marked the third straight season Hafner surpassed
the 100 RBI mark.
Despite missing the final month of the season with a broken right hand,
Hafner finished first in the American League in slugging percentage (.659).
He also finished second in on base percentage (.439), third in home runs
(42), fourth in walks (100), and sixth in runs batted in (117).
“Dave and lefty gave me my approach to hitting,” Hafner
said. “So much of my basic fundamentals come from them.”
When Hafner was playing baseball in the minor leagues he would fly back
to Arkansas City in the winter to have Dave and Lefty fine-tune his stroke.
“We just pointed him in the right direction, he did all the work,” Dave
Burroughs said.
Hafner credits a lot of his success to his hard work
and his time at Cowley.
“From a work ethic standpoint I can trace it back to my time at Cowley,” Hafner
said. “They set the tone for our teams with the tough workouts they put
us through.”
Hafner is fully recovered from his broken hand and
is excited about the upcoming season. Especially since the Indians added
some key free agents including second baseman Josh Barfield, outfielders
David Dellucci and Trot Nixon, and relief pitchers Joe Borowski, Keith
Foulke, Aaron Fultz and Roberto Hernandez.
“We added some experience to the bullpen and
to the outfield, which should help us” Hafner said.
Hafner, nicknamed the Pronk, has become one of the most well known baseball
players in the game, he has thousands of fans in Cleveland, and even
has his own candy bar named after him, the Pronk Bar.
However, he has not forgotten his time at Cowley, and is looking forward
to coming back for the Hall of Fame ceremony.
“It’s always great to get back and see
the people at Cowley,” Hafner said.
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