Hall of Fame
The most-used pitcher in the program's history, Andy Weimer '03 is the latest member of the baseball program to be elected to the Hall of Fame. Over a program-record 85 career appearances out of the bullpen, he went 20-7 with 22 saves, a 2.13 earned run average and 139 strikeouts over 160.2 innings. In addition to leading the program in appearances, he ranks second in saves (most at time of graduation) and opponent batting average (.196), sixth in earned run average and tied for seventh in wins. He opened his career by going 4-1 with two saves, a 3.25 earned run average and 24 strikeouts over 27.2 innings in 16 appearances. He followed that up by going 3-4 with five saves, a 2.41 ERA and 28 strikeouts over 41 innings in 21 games. He tallied a 6-1 record with a career-high eight saves (the most in the program's history at the time, tied for fifth now), a 2.42 ERA and 39 strikeouts in 44.2 innings over 24 appearances (the most in the program's history at the time). Weimer closed out his career with a spectacular senior year by going 7-1 with seven saves (the second-most at the time and tied for seventh now), a 0.95 ERA (the second-best in the program's history) and 48 strikeouts over 47.1 innings in 24 appearances as the Dolphins won their first Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference championship and earned their first NCAA Championships berth since 1988. His 0.95 ERA would have led Division I had he qualified, but he fell 2.2 innings shy of the required 50 innings. For his academic work, Weimer was named to the MAAC All-Academic Team three times and he was selected to the ESPN/CoSIDA Academic All-District Team as a senior. Following his senior year, he was selected by the then-Tampa Bay Devil Rays in the 15th round of the Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft. He later went on to sign with the Cincinnati Reds before having stints in the Atlantic League and the CanAm League.