Fairfield Stags, where Arundel & Anderson used to roam, dedicate Alumni diamond
Fairfield Honours Legendary Athletics Director and Coach C. Donald Cook … Alumni Diamond renamed Don ’63 and Chris ’88 Cook Field in honour of former AD C. Donald Cook ‘63 for his contribution to the Stags and his efforts to help propel the program as a national force.
January 19, 2024
FAIRFIELD, Conn. _ Fairfield University President Mark R. Nemec, PhD announced that Baseball's Alumni Diamond has been renamed the Don '63 and Chris '88 Cook Field in honour of C. Donald Cook '63, alumnus and former Fairfield University athletic director and head baseball coach.
Don Cook was a standout with Fairfield team where he served as co-captain in 1963. He became head coach in 1966, and directed the Stags for 19 seasons, transforming the program into a respected Division I entity. Eleven Stags, who played under Cook’s leadership went on to play professionally in the minors, including Keefe Cato ’82, the only Fairfield alum to appear in a big-league game.
In 1971, Cook was appointed director of athletics, a position he held until 1986, where he supervised the building of the Recreation Complex, the expansion of Alumni Hall, and a renovation of Alumni Field. He was a co-founder and the first president of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC) and was inducted into the Fairfield Athletic Hall of Fame in 1984.
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LHP Mike Arundel (Ottawa, Ont.) middle, on his way to the bullpen. Brian Cleary was an Arundel teammate with the Stags. Cleary then coached the University of Cincinnati Bearcats and is a Washington Nationals scout.
Two Canucks come to mind when we think of Fairfield: LHP Mike Arundel (Ottawa, Ont.) and LHP Jack Anderson (Waterloo, Ont.). Arundel pitched for the Ottawa-Nepean Canadians in 1978 and 1980 -- years later dominating an old-timers game at age 50 -- and the Nepean Knights and Waterloo Tigers in 1979. Then, he headed west to pitch for the Calgary Royals and Calgary A’s, under a patient and wiser manager than anyone in Ontario. He then embarked on a career in crime fighting with the RCMP. He was with the Stags in 1987-88.
LHP Jack Anderson (Waterloo, Ont.). who pitched for the Stags in 2022.
Team Ontario grad, Anderson pitched in 14 games, making three starts in 2022, and struck out a season-high four batters in three innings against Niagara. He transferred to the Stags after three seasons with the Hofstra Pride where he appeared in 27 career games with a 3-0 record with 36 strikeouts in 39 1/3 innings. He struck out a career-high six batters against UNC-Wilmington, picking up wins against Liberty, James Madison and LIU Brooklyn. He was also a four-time CAA Commissioner’s Academic Honour Roll selection.
“Fairfield University is proud to recognize Don Cook’s legacy and his role in helping to shape Fairfield athletics, especially its esteemed program—building a tradition of superior coaching, developing talented and well-rounded players, and generating support from the highest levels—a formula that will continue to produce continued success on the Don (1963) and Chris Cook (1988) Field,” said president Nemec.
The field’s new name also honours the memory of Cook’s son, Christopher Lance Cook, who died in 2014 after a long illness.
Christopher earned a bachelor’s degree in finance in 1988 from Fairfield’s Charles F. Dolan School of Business, rising to the position of vice president and general manager of indirect equipment finance at Hitachi Capital America Corp. A scholar athlete, Christopher played throughout his college career at Fairfield (1985-88), and ranked among the Stags’ batting leaders, following in his father’s footsteps.
For nearly 50 years, Don Cook’s tenure in college athletics has included serving as athletics director at three Connecticut institutions: Fairfield University, Sacred Heart University and the University of Hartford. Cook is currently executive director of athletics, emeritus, at Sacred Heart University, as a consultant to the university’s Advancement and Athletics departments.
Cook retired from Sacred Heart after 21 years as director of athletics and executive director of athletics. Under his leadership, the university saw expansion in varsity sports and facilities, including the construction of the William H. Pitt Health and Recreation Center. Cook also led the Pioneers’ move to Division I, which began in 1999 as a full member of the Northeast Conference.
He served as athletic director at Hartford from 1986-92, where he oversaw the building of an athletics complex and the program’s emergence as a Division I institution. In May of 2014, he was inducted into the Hartford Athletics Hall of Fame.
“As a student-athlete, as a coach, as director of athletics and as an alumnus, Don Cook has been a loyal, proud and exemplary steward of Fairfield University and Fairfield Athletics for more than 60 years,” said the Vice President for Athletics Paul Schlickmann. “We are blessed to have Don in the Fairfield Stags family and excited to bestow upon him this well-deserved honour.”
Cook served as board president of the Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference (ECAC) in 1990 and was honored with the 1998 ECAC Athletics Administrator of the Year award, and received the 2013 Commissioner’s award. He is also a member of the Fairfield County Sports Commission Athletic Hall of Fame, and the Northeast Conference Hall of Fame.
Building upon Cook’s legacy with the loyal support of Friends of Fairfield Baseball, the Stags have grown to become a national force under the leadership of head coach Bill Currier.
In the Fall of 2016 Friends of Fairfield Baseball dedicated a new stadium and varsity locker room featuring new bleachers with red chair back seats, expanded dugouts, a press box and new fencing, wooden lockers, showers, a bathroom area, built-in speakers and updated technology. Recent additions to the complex include an indoor batting facility and an enhanced and modernized weight room.
The Fairfield University team’s 2024 schedule will feature 24 home games in their 52-game slate, beginning with a weekend series against UNC Greensboro on Feb. 16 with the Stags returning to Cook Field one month later for their home opener against Army West Point.
The Stags return 26 letterwinners to a team that went 37-18 last season including a 16-5 mark in the MAAC in grabbing their third-straight regular season crown—becoming the first MAAC program to win three-straight regular season titles outright. Fairfield also won 30 games for the fourth-straight season, winning 34 regular season contests, the most in program history.
A dedication ceremony to officially rename the field will take place this spring.
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