Nicholaus Strong

Baseball Head Coach

Current Team Baseball 2023-24
Years 3
Alma Mater Texas Southern University
Email nastrong@fnu.edu
Phone (305) 821-3333 Ext 1153
Hometown Chicago, IL
About Nicholaus Strong

Nick Strong comes to Florida National from Wiley College where he was instrumental in bringing in the largest recruiting class in program history. Through the recruiting trail, Strong helped bring in over 45 student-athletes to the Wildcat program. For the fall season, he was the Pitching Coach & Recruiting Coordinator. During the summer, Coach Strong coached in the Nationally Ranked Summer program Houston Banditos organization.

In 2023, Strong led FNU to a program-best 16-19 finish and the team’s first appearance in the Continental Athletic Conference (CAC) Tournament. After finishing 7-40 the previous year, Strong put together a true turnaround season including five All-CAC First Team selections (Mario Benjamin-Garnett Lopez, Alejandro De Arazoza, Gino Bellantoni, Bastyan Hernandez and Sair Sanchez) and two Second Team honorees (Yordangel Gonzalez and Nick Diaz). In the USCAA, FNU baseball was awarded one First Team All-American (Roberto Fernandez) and one Second Team All-American (Alejandro De Arazoza).

Before Wiley College, he was the head coach of the University of Houston-Downtown team and led it to its first conference title and the National Club Baseball Association Division II Regional Title game in his 1st season of NCBA play. His team finished ranked No. 14 in the nation and coached one All-American in Gino Masini. He coached the NCBA Division II hits and RBI leaders Luis Salazar and Masini, respectively.Prior to the University of Houston-Downtown, Strong spent the 2015-2016 season as a Pitching Coach/Recruiting Coordinator for Houston Community College. At HCC, Coach Strong developed relationships with local little leagues, the Houston Astros and Texas Rangers Urban Youth programs, local middle schools, and select baseball teams. The Chicago native developed the first Friday Night Kids Night where kids come out and throw out the first pitch before the game.Before coaching at HCC, the Texas Southern graduate was the head varsity baseball coach at Jack Yates High School in Houston, Texas from 2012-2014. Coach Strong was instrumental in turning the Lions baseball program around where he built the first high school indoor batting cage in the Houston area, hosted the first Middle School baseball signing day, and hosted many baseball camps for kids in the third ward community. The young coach was able to get the community involved to raise over $10,000 in charitable donations for the Lions Baseball program.Coach Strong took over a program at Jack Yates High School that hadn’t won a game in two years, and then led them to three victories in his first season. In his first season as head coach, Coach Strong’s former player Lance Simmons graduated from Jack Yates and went on to play NCAA Division I baseball for Texas Southern University. Before taking over as head coach of Jack Yates, Coach Strong worked as a Volunteer Assistant under Steve Robinson in 2006-2008. As a Volunteer Assistant, Coach Strong learned everything from game management, practice planning, scheduling, and learning the kids of the community.Coach Strong played NCAA Division I baseball at Texas Southern University from 2004-2005. As a preferred walk-on in the spring of 2004, the Chicago native pitched his way into the closer’s role. Nick earned his first career post-season save against Southern University in the 2004 SWAC tournament. The TSU Tigers went on to the NCAA Houston Regional at Rice University and earned the biggest upset in the 2004 NCAA baseball tournament by defeating the defending national champions Rice Owls 4-3 in the first round.Coach Strong also played Junior College baseball at West Valley College in Saratoga, California under head coach Mike Perez and played his first collegiate season out of high school at North Park University, a NCAA Division III school in Chicago, Illinois. Nicholaus Strong has two kids Nicholaus Strong Jr. and Madeline Strong.

Continental Athletic Conference (CAC) logo.