This page takes a deep look at Baseball at California State University-Northridge, a spring sport — the roster, coaching, finances and academics, broken out by gender and stacked against the school’s other sports. CSUN is classified as NCAA Division I without football as a member of Big West Conference.
Skip ahead to the topic you care about:
The CSUN men’s baseball team carries 27 players, with an NCAA multi-year squad size of 111. The most recent cohort included 122 athletes in this program for its academic reporting.
Of the 12 varsity sports CSUN reports, baseball sits at #6 by total roster size.
The men’s baseball program employs 5 coaches — 1 head coach and 4 assistants. Of those, 3 work full-time and 2 part-time. At the helm is Eddie Cornejo.
Across the school’s 12 sports, baseball ranks #5 by total coaching staff.
Financial data is drawn from the U.S. Department of Education’s Equity in Athletics survey.
The CSUN men’s baseball program generated $2,162,761 in revenue against $1,994,292 in expenses, for a surplus of $168,469. Per athlete, that is about $19,157 in operating expense per athlete, or $517,240 per team.
Against the school’s 12 sports, baseball ranks #2 by revenue, or about 9% of the school’s total athletics revenue.
The men’s baseball team earned an Academic Progress Rate (APR) of 950 and a Graduation Success Rate of 83%. Year over year, it held onto 93% of its athletes, with 94% remaining academically eligible.
Compared with the school’s average team APR of 979, baseball trails the average at 950.
If CSUN places on one of our Best Schools for a Sport list, you’ll see it called out. To rank well, a program needs strong athletics and a quality education.
Blank metrics mean the data was not reported for this team.