1980 College Baseball All-America Team
| 1980 College Baseball All-America Team |
|---|
| College Baseball All-America Team |
| 1980 NCAA Division I baseball season |
| ← 1979 1981 → |

1980 All-Americans included 2× World Series-winning manager Terry Francona.
This is a list of college baseball players named first team All-Americans for the 1980 NCAA Division I baseball season. From 1964 to 1980, there were two generally recognized All-America selectors for baseball: the American Baseball Coaches Association and The Sporting News.
Key
A
|
American Baseball Coaches Association[1] |
S
|
The Sporting News[2] |
| Member of the National College Baseball Hall of Fame | |
| Consensus All-American – selected by both organizations | |
| Consensus All-American – selected by one organization |
All-Americans
| Position | Name | School | # | A | S | Other awards and honors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pitcher | Neal Heaton | Miami (FL) | 1 | — | ||
| Pitcher | Ken Dayley | Portland | 1 | — | ||
| Pitcher | Steve Krueger | Arkansas | 1 | — | ||
| Pitcher | Frank Wills | Tulane | 1 | — | ||
| Catcher | Scotti Madison | Vanderbilt | 2 | |||
| First baseman | Wes Clements | Arizona | 1 | — | ||
| First baseman | Keith Hagman | New Mexico | 1 | — | ||
| Second baseman | Tim Teufel | Clemson | 2 | |||
| Shortstop | Ross Jones | Miami (FL) | 1 | — | ||
| Shortstop | Dave Pagel | Central Michigan | 1 | — | ||
| Third baseman | Jeff Smith | Delaware | 1 | — | ||
| Third baseman | Glenn Wilson | Sam Houston State | 1 | — | ||
| Outfielder | Joe Carter | Wichita State | 1 | — | ||
| Outfielder | Terry Francona | Arizona | 2 | | ||
| Outfielder | Mike Fuentes | Florida State | 1 | — | ||
| Outfielder | Dan Murphy | UNLV | 1 | — | ||
| Outfielder | Jim Weaver | Florida State | 1 | — | ||
| Designated hitter | Matt Gundlefinger | Kansas | 1 | — | ||
| Designated hitter | Randy Ward | UNLV | 1 | — |
See also
List of college baseball awards
References
- ^ "1980 ABCA/Rawlings NCAA Div. I All-America Teams". ABCA. Retrieved July 11, 2025.
- ^ "What Happens to College All-America Selections?". SABR. 1982. Retrieved July 11, 2025.