CONWAY, S.C. — Three Coastal Carolina baseball players, C
Caden Bodine, RHP
Cameron Flukey and RHP
Jacob Morrison, were named All-Americans by D1Baseball.com on Thursday.
Bodine and Morrison were first-team honorees while Flukey took third-team recognition.
Coastal Carolina had a nation-leading and school record 56 wins, a Sun Belt Conference Championship, Sun Belt Tournament Championship, Conway Regional Championship, Auburn Super Regional Championship and a 3-0 run in Omaha to the Men's College World Series Championship Final. Over the last quarter of the season, Coastal posted a 26-game winning streak, the fourth-longest winning streak in DI in the last five years.
ON CADEN BODINE
Individually,
Bodine is a Gold Glove Award winner at catcher and a finalist for the Buster Posey Award. This is his fourth All-America team of the postseason, to go along with College Baseball Foundation (First), Perfect Game (second) and NCBWA (third).
One of the premier catchers in college baseball, Bodine turned in an elite all-around campaign in 2025. The First-Team All-Sun Belt Conference selection started 67 games for the Chanticleers — 66 behind the dish, one at DH — guiding a pitching staff that ranked No. 2 nationally in both ERA and WHIP. Offensively, he hit .318 with a team-best .454 on-base percentage, drawing 47 walks and being hit by 17 pitches. He added 24 extra-base hits, drove in 42 runs and slugged .461, serving as a consistent presence atop the lineup.
Behind the plate, Bodine was a defensive anchor. He threw out 19 would-be base stealers on 44 attempts — tied CCU's career record with 46 runners caught stealing — and finished with a .998 fielding percentage. His leadership helped elevate Coastal to the Sun Belt Conference Regular Season and Tournament Championship, where he was named the Most Outstanding Player and also earned a spot on the All-Tournament Team. He followed that up with All-Tournament honors in the NCAA Conway Regional as the Chants advanced to the Super Regionals and Men's College World Series for the first time since 2016.
ON CAMERON FLUKEY
Flukey (8-2) had a breakout year in the starting rotation, earning First-Team All-Sun Belt Conference honors and a spot on the Sun Belt's All-Tournament Team. He posted a 3.19 ERA in 17 starts, striking out a team-best 118 batters over 101.2 innings, allowing just 78 hits and limiting opponents to a .209 batting average.
Flukey excelled on the biggest stages — delivered 22.0 innings with 25 strikeouts and a 3.27 ERA across four NCAA Tournament outings, including 10.0 IP, 12 K, 2.70 ERA in the Men's College World Series.
He was a key starter in CCU's wins over national powers Auburn and Arizona, helping Coastal sweep the Auburn Super Regional and advance through Omaha. Flukey helped Coastal Carolina post a team ERA of 3.00 in NCAA Tournament play and anchor a pitching staff that ranked top five nationally in ERA, WHIP, and strikeout-to-walk ratio.
ON JACOB MORRISON
Morrison (12-1) — the ABCA/Rawlings DI National Pitcher of the Year — was one of the key cogs in the Chanticleers run to Omaha and finished the season ranked tied for third in the NCAA with 12 wins. This is his fourth All-America team along with ABCA/Rawlings, College Baseball Foundation and NCBWA (first).
The Sun Belt Conference Pitcher of the Year was also tabbed as a First-Team All-American, the NCBWA District 4 Player of the Year and was a finalist for the National Pitcher of the Year Award. Coastal Carolina was 17-2 when he pitched this year and 16-2 when he started. He leads the nation with 10 starts of at least six innings while allowing one or fewer runs. The only player with a season of more such outings in the last five years is LSU's Paul Skenes in 2023.
In his first Omaha start against Oregon State, Morrison retired 16 straight Oregon State batters after allowing a homer to lead off the 3rd inning, the third-longest streak in the MCWS since the 2011 move to Charles Schwab Field Omaha. He trails only South Carolina's Michael Roth (2012 vs. Kent State) and Oregon State's Kevin Abel (2018 vs. Arkansas). Morrison is second in the nation with 107.2 IP and is tied for fifth with 18 starts.