Georgia State Coach Frady eats, sleeps and breathes baseball

Head Georgia State baseball coach Greg Frady in his 10th season holds the record for the school’s winningest baseball coach. Photos Submitted by Georgia State Athletics

Georgia State’s head baseball coach Greg Frady will go down as one of the best coaches in university history. For Frady, winning seems to come natural, and he has done a lot of it in his coaching career.

Frady took the helm for the Georgia State baseball team in 2006, when he was promoted to head coach after being an assistant for the previous two years.

His coaching career began back in 1988 when he was an assistant at Columbia State. Since then, he has coached at North Florida Community college and University of Central Florida (UCF).

While at UCF, Frady was a part of many incredibly successful teams. During his seven years there, the team ranked in the top 25 every season, won six conference championships and made the NCAA tournament four times.

For Frady, the game of baseball has been a teacher for him. It has taught him many invaluable lessons that he can apply to his everyday life.

“I think one of the best lessons learned is that every day is not going to be a great day,” Frady said. And everyday things are not going to go your way, but the resiliency, the toughness, the positive attitude to get back up every day and make it your special day is something that baseball demands because there is more failure in the game than success.”

Georgia State’s all-time winningest coach

Frady is currently in his 10th season as the Georgia State head coach and he is the all-time winningest coach at the university.  During his time as a coach, the Panthers have had six winning seasons and won at least 30 games in each of those six seasons.

During the 2009 campaign, the Panthers won a Colonial conference championship and a NCAA tournament berth. He also managed to navigate the team through three conference changes, and each time, it was more difficult as the competition rose and the conferences were ranked higher.

“We try to do everything every day here to establish and maintain a continuation of a winning culture based on some things that we’ve done in the past and things that we’re doing today,” Frady said. “But more importantly it has been about having great players. Players make the baseball world go round in a successful way.”

Frady is right – players make the world go round. And he has undoubtedly coached excellent players, which explains why it is so difficult for him to name the best player among the ones he has coached.

“I’ve had so many really outstanding players, it’s hard to categorize that,” Frady said.

Frady coached several major leaguers including Mike Maroth and Drew Butera, who are currently in the big leagues with the Kansas City Royals.

Frady coaches the German national team

Besides his role as the Georgia State baseball coach, Frady was also the coach of the German National team. In 2010, he was named the European coach of the year. Frady won over 100 games in international play while managing the National team. Despite his position there, Georgia State was always his main priority and that is why he was able to balance the two.

“My primary job is to be [a] Georgia State University coach. So I was always here and that was never in sacrifice,” Frady said. “I did it years and it was a fantastic experience,  and I really loved it, and I benefited by doing it, but I think I reached a point where I needed to just move on and just focus on Georgia State.”

Frady demands the same excellence from his players in the classroom as he does on the field, and that is one of the many things that makes him such an exceptional coach. He expects nothing less than 3.0 GPA from any of his players.

Coach Frady played baseball at Troy State, where he won a national championship in 1986. Frady had more fun being a player than he does being a coach.

“Coaching is much more stressful. As a player, you are only responsible for yourself. As a coach you are never thinking about yourself, you’re thinking about everybody else and how to help everybody else and trying to run an organization,” Frady said. “You do enjoy the success as a coach but you have to move on so quickly to get everybody ready for the next that you truly don’t get to enjoy the success as quickly as you do tomorrow.”

Frady has over 300 career wins and counting at Georgia State. He was inducted into the 2017 class of the Georgia Dugout Hall of Fame.

Frady has learned a lot through the game of baseball and he aims to take what he has learned and pass it onto his players to keep the success progressing.