Graham was born in Yoakum, Texas on April 3, 1936.[3] His father, Earl, later moved the family to Houston for work, but also was employed as a Southwestern Conference umpire.[4][5] Wayne was the batboy for the 1945 semi-pro Finger Furniture baseball team coached by his father.[6]
Playing career
Graham attended Reagan High School in Houston, winning a Texas state baseball championship in 1952.[7] He subsequently played college baseball and studied engineering at the University of Texas,[8] where he played two seasons under coach Bibb Falk.[9] In order to earn money to support his wife and two children at the time, Wayne left school to pursue a professional baseball career.[4]
Graham was signed by the Phillies as an amateur free agent in 1957.[9][10] He played eleven years in pro ball, with the Phillies and Mets organizations. Graham was named Texas minor league player of the year in 1962 after hitting .311 for the Dallas-Fort Worth Rangers.[11]
Graham received two brief MLB call-ups in the early 1960s. In early 1963, he was recalled by the Phillies, playing in ten games for managerGene Mauch.[9] Graham then appeared in twenty games for the 1964 New York Mets under the tutelage of legendary skipper Casey Stengel.[9] He batted .127 in 55 at-bats in his short major league career.[10]
Coaching career
High school
When his playing career ended, Graham returned to the University of Texas to earn a Bachelor of Science degree in physical education in 1970, and he later added a master's degree in physical education at the University of Houston in 1973.[12]
Beginning in 1981, Graham turned San Jacinto into the one of the best junior college baseball teams in the country.[13] After regular conference titles in Graham's first few seasons, the Gators became a dominant force in 1984 when they began a run of seven consecutive 50-win seasons and berths in the NJCAA World Series in Grand Junction, Colorado. After losing in the 1984 championship game, San Jacinto won three consecutive titles from 1985 to 1987.[13] After falling short again in 1988 by taking second place, the Gators went back-to-back in 1989 and 1990.[14] Those five national titles in six years eventually led to Graham being named Junior College Coach of the Century by Collegiate Baseball.[14] In 1988, Graham skippered the Hyannis Mets, a collegiate summer baseball team in the Cape Cod Baseball League.[15] In his 11 seasons at San Jacinto, Graham posted a 675–113 record (.856 win percentage), earned five national coach of the year awards, and produced multiple professional players, most notably pitchers Roger Clemens and Andy Pettitte.[14][9]
Rice
Graham took over at Rice in 1992.[14] He inherited a program that had tallied only seven winning seasons in 78 years of Southwest Conference play[14] and had only finished above fourth place once. As at San Jacinto, he turned the program into a national powerhouse. A program that had never before qualified for the NCAA Division I baseball tournament made 23 consecutive tournament appearances (1995–2017) and won 20 consecutive regular-season or tournament conference championships (1996–2015) in three different conferences (Southwest Conference, Western Athletic Conference, and Conference USA).[9] Rice has also been to the College World Series seven times (1997, 1999, 2002, 2003, 2006, 2007, and 2008).[14] Graham's crowning achievement was the 2003 College World Series, in which Rice won its first national championship in any sport in its 91-year history.[14] Not one to rest on his laurels, Graham quipped during a post-game interview, "We want to do it again."[16] On April 16, 2016, Graham won his 1,100th Division I game (3–2 over Western Kentucky). He has more than 1,600 wins as a collegiate head coach.[17] Graham was also largely responsible for Rice's on-campus baseball stadium, Reckling Park, being built in 2000.[13]
During the 2017 season, despite finishing in 6th place in Conference USA, Graham led Rice to their 23rd consecutive NCAA tournament. Needing to win the Conference USA tournament title to qualify for the NCAA tournament and to keep the streak alive, he led to Owls to the conference title. Rice won four consecutive games and rallied late in the championship to upset #11 nationally ranked Southern Miss 5–4 on a walk-off double.[18] Graham never had a losing season as a high school or college coach until his final season at Rice in 2018. His contract was not extended after that season.[19]
National champion
Postseason invitational champion
Conference regular season champion
Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
Division regular season champion
Division regular season and conference tournament champion
Conference tournament champion