Gallaudet Baseball Coach Curtis Pride Wins The National Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA) Award For Exceptional Personal Achievement
Curtis Pride, a native of Washington, D.C. and first-year baseball coach at Gallaudet University, who overcame profound deafness to become a standout high school and college athlete and a Major League Baseball player, has been selected as the recipient of the 2008 Jerry Yeagley Award for Exceptional Personal Achievement by the National Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA).
The award is to be presented annually by the National Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA) to a college men's or women's soccer player (past or present) who has demonstrated exceptional personal achievement and extraordinary accomplishment that transcend normal expectation, and who is or was an example and inspiration to his/her teammates and university.
The recipient exhibits the qualities of sportsmanship,
integrity, respect and concern for others, leadership, generosity
and appreciation and should exhibit a strong work ethic and have
the ability to rise above adversity. Pride will receive the award
at the NSCAA All-America Luncheon, to be held Saturday, Jan. 17, as
part of the 2009 NSCAA Convention in St. Louis, Mo.
As a high school student, Pride maintained a 3.6 grade point
average while breaking virtually every single-season and career
school record in soccer, basketball and baseball.
He also was a member of the U.S. National Team that competed at
the 1985 FIFA U-16 World Championship in China. He scored two goals
in the tournament, including a game-winner against Bolivia, earning
recognition as one of the top 15 youth prospects in the world that
year.
Drafted by the New York Mets out of high school, he negotiated a
unique arrangement that allowed him to remain with the club while
playing basketball on scholarship for the College of William Mary.
He was a four-year starter at point guard for the Tribe and
graduated with a degree in finance in 1990. He also played briefly
with the William and Mary soccer team.
In 1993, Pride received a September call-up to the Montreal Expos.
His first major league hit was a double that drew a five-minute
standing ovation from a capacity crowd at Montreal's Olympic
Stadium. He ended that season with a .444 batting average.
As a free agent in 1996, he won a roster spot with the Detroit
Tigers. Staying with the club the entire year, he became the first
regular full-season deaf player in modern baseball history. It was
a breakout season, as he .300 and had 10 home runs and 11 stolen
bases. That season he was selected as the recipient of the Tony
Conigliaro Award, presented to the Major League Baseball player who
best overcomes adversity through the attributes of spirit,
determination and courage.
After moving to the Boston Red Sox in September 1997, he hit a home
run in Fenway Park in his first at-bat with the club, becoming only
the seventh player in Red Sox history to accomplish the feat. The
following season Pride moved to the Atlanta Braves, where he hit
.252 in 70 games, helping the team advance to the post-season
playoffs. After a wrist injury and moves to back to the Red Sox and
Expos, Pride signed with the New York Yankees on July 4, 2003. Two
days later, in his first game in Yankee pinstripes, he hit a home
run that generated a standing ovation and curtain call from the
Yankee fans.
In 2004 he signed with the Los Angeles Angels, playing for the team
for three seasons. He concluded his major league career with 421
games played, the most by a deaf player in 105 years. He has a
career batting average of .240 with 20 home runs and 82 RBI.
On Nov. 3, Pride accepted the position of baseball coach at
Gallaudet University. Located in his hometown of Washington, D.C.,
Gallaudet is the world's leading university for the education and
career development of deaf and hard of hearing students.
He and his wife, Lisa, are actively involved in the Together with
Pride Foundation, which helps support and create programs for
hearing-impaired children, focusing on the importance of education,
learning life skills and promoting positive self-esteem.






