Scott Doffek
Scott Doffek

Player Profile
Position:
Head Coach

Experience:
Second Season

Scott Doffek enters his second year as the head coach of the Panthers, having been named to the position in September of 2006. A mainstay in the Milwaukee baseball program, Doffek enters his 14th season with the Panther coaching staff after spending the previous 12 years as the assistant head coach.

He continues to lead the Milwaukee offense to great success at the plate, with six regulars batting over .300 last season, including two finishing in the top 10 in the league. His squad recorded 25-plus wins for the 10th time in the past 11 seasons, with his 25 victories a year ago breaking the program mark for wins by first-year head coach, which had been 21. His team also reeled off the longest winning streak since the 2001 season (eight games) and set a program record when it scored more than 10 runs in seven consecutive games in May, breaking the old standard of five-straight 10-plus run outings.

After a slow start where the team played series against nationally-ranked Arkansas and Kentucky and also against eventual NCAA-Tournament participant Austin Peay, the Panthers righted the ship to go 23-15 the rest of the regular season. After posting two postseason victories, they had their season come to a heartbreaking close in extra innings of the semifinals at the Horizon League Tournament.

Doffek was named the seventh head coach in the history of the Milwaukee baseball program on Sept. 25, 2006.

"I feel extremely blessed to have been given this opportunity," Doffek said at the time. "The great thing is that I am coming into a position I'm very familiar with, especially when it comes to the day-to-day duties of all baseball operations. This roster is filled with players I have been working with all along and the guys know the way I work and what I expect of them. At the same time, I know how they work and what they expect from us. I see it as a very smooth transition."

Horizon League Standings (Since 1995)
WS = Seasons at .500 or above
Team Wins Losses Pct. WS
In Horizon League Games
Milwaukee 168 113 .597 11
UIC 161 114 .585 7
Wright State 151 136 .526 6
YSU (joined in '02) 65 69 .485 3
Butler 134 147 .477 6
Detroit 85 111 .434 3
Cleveland State 103 177 .368 3
Record Overall
Milwaukee 372 329 .531 7
UIC 334 288 .537 7
Butler 303 339 .472 5
Wright State 286 356 .445 5
YSU (joined in '02) 110 149 .425 1
Detroit 168 250 .402 4
Cleveland State 207 434 .323 0

As the assistant head coach in the past, he worked primarily with the team's hitting and defensive units while also serving as the lead recruiter and overseeing the day-to-day operations of the program. The 2006 season - his last as the assistant - will go down as a memorable one, as the Panthers won 30+ games for the sixth time since UWM moved to the NCAA Division I level in 1991, going 32-25 overall.

Doffek led the offense to great heights, with seven regulars batting over .300, paced by All-American outfielder Mike Goetz. Doffek helped guide Goetz to a .493 average on the season - the highest in the nation - in addition to hitting streaks of 32 and 27 games and team records in seven categories. Goetz went on to be drafted by the Milwaukee Brewers.

As a team, the Panthers batted .324, the 16th-best average in the nation. His squad also ranked in the national leaders in doubles (third at 2.51 per game), slugging percentage (18th at .488), triples (35th), and runs (48th). UWM set a team record in doubles (143) and ended in the top five in the record book in numerous categories: average (third), runs (third), hits (second), triples (second), runs batted in (third), total bases (third) and home runs (fifth).

During Doffek's time at UWM, he has been instrumental in the Panthers' rise to a league and regional power. Since his first season in 1995, the Panthers have reset every offensive record and set school marks for wins and winning percentage multiple times. He has also coached a list of players nearing 30 that have been either drafted or signed by professional teams.

Doffek's influence reached a national level in 1999 when Milwaukee upset No. 1 Rice University during the program's first appearance in the NCAA Tournament. Doffek, along with Jerry Augustine, was named the 1999 Wisconsin Baseball Coaches Association (WBCA) Co-Coach of the Year. In 2001, the Panthers' offense ranked second in the nation after hitting a school-record .352 as a team. Together, Milwaukee saw all 10 regulars bat above .300 and five hit over .350. The team was led by a pair of players that hit over .420, including Scott Gillitzer's then school-record average of .424. Gillitzer is one of nine drafted players through Doffek's instruction.

Before joining the coaching staff, Doffek spent five seasons (1989-93) in the Los Angeles Dodgers minor league system, making it to the Triple-A level with the Albuquerque Dukes.

Collegiately, Doffek played baseball at Waukesha County Community College, where he won the NJCAA batting title after hitting .539 as a sophomore. He was honored as an all-region and all-conference selection. Doffek attended Hartland Arrowhead High School, where he was selected to all-state and all-conference teams. He also played football for three years.

Doffek lives in Menomonee Falls with his wife, Kara, and two children, daughter Kori and son Ty.



Coaching Record & Milestones
Scott Doffek
Season Overall Pct. League Pct. Finish Honors/Achievements
2007 25-32 .439 16-14 .533 3rd *Record For Wins by First-Year Coach
Totals 25-32 .439 16-14 .533 N/A