Rutgers-Camden
assistant baseball coach Bob Diepold has signed a contract with the
Camden Riversharks of the Atlantic League of Professional Baseball.
Diepold, who signed on April 9, will go to spring training with the
team beginning April 19 at Campbell’s Field.
“It’s huge,”
said Diepold, a former
Camden Catholic
High School star who had a standout three-year career with the
Scarlet Raptors from 1999-2001. “It means you can play your game
instead of worrying about getting a contract. It’s a huge step in
the direction of what I want to do.”
Diepold, who graduated from Rutgers-Camden in 2003 with a degree in
Sociology, is in his third year as an assistant coach under head
coach Keith Williams. He joined the Scarlet Raptors during Williams’
first season in 1999 after transferring from
Catawba College,
and helped transform the Raptors from a last-place team to a
contender in the New Jersey Athletic Conference. The Raptors went
7-49 over the first two years of Diepold’s career before turning the
corner in 2001 by setting a school record for wins in a 21-15
campaign. That mark has since been broken.
“It’s a great opportunity for Bobby,” said Williams, whose club
started using Campbell’s Field as its home park in 2002, one season
after Diepold ended his collegiate career. “I think the Riversharks
will be real happy with him. If we were stronger when he played, he
would have had an opportunity (to get signed) out of school. He
worked real hard and he wanted to get signed. He did everything he
had to do.”
At Rutgers-Camden, Diepold compiled a 5-14 record, including a
no-hitter against
St. Joseph’s-Patchogue.
He also threw a no-hitter against the
Netherlands in
the Apeldoorn Baseball Series while playing for the USA Athletes
International Baseball team during the summer of 2000.
In addition to
pitching, Diepold also played first base at Rutgers-Camden and
posted a .335 career batting average and a school-record 18-game
hitting streak. Diepold earned All-NJAC Honorable Mention in 1999.
As a Rutgers-Camden senior in 2001, he was named First Team All-NJAC
and All-ECAC Metro, Second Team All-NJCBA Division II/III and All-ABCA
Mid-Atlantic Region, the Raptors’ team MVP and the South Jersey
Baseball Coaches Association Division III College Player of the
Year. Yet despite his accomplishments, he didn’t get a professional
offer.
Since his
playing career ended, Diepold has worked with the team as a coach
while finishing up his degree and working in the school’s athletic
department.
“I was going to give it up after last year,” said Diepold, whose
last outing in the RVL changed his mind. “I threw a pretty good
game, a four-hitter, and I said I’d give it one more year and we’ll
see what happens. If I failed I could say I gave it 110 percent.
It’s hard to give it up when you’re working in the athletic
department and have all the resources around you. Everyone around me
supported me. I couldn’t have done it without my family and
everybody supporting me.”
“He was determined,” Williams said. “He wanted to get himself to the
point where he’d be signed. It’s a shame he didn’t get the
opportunity out of school, but I understand their view. He was on a
bad team, so he didn’t have the numbers. I think the Riversharks
will be very pleased. He’s a local kid, he grew up in the area. It’s
a win-win situation for all of us.”
“Hopefully, on May 6 I’ll be on the roster,” Diepold said. “I’m glad
I didn’t give up. I received an opportunity and hopefully all the
hard work will pay off.” |