The only All-America recipient in the history of baseball, TimSheridan compiled a 16-3 record after transferring prior to the1995 season. On the mound, he started 21 games while allowing 28earned runs and 18 walks in 145 innings, an average of 1.74 earnedruns per game (school record) and 0.124 walks per inning (1.16walks per game, a school record). For his career, he tied theschool record for most wins (16), holds the record for completegames (15) and ranks among the leaders in strikeouts (142) andinnings pitched (145).
A designated hitter and outfielder as well as a pitcher, hefinished his career with a .322 batting average (49-of-152), 21runs, 11 doubles, one triple, 28 RBIS, 27 walks and five stolenbases on eight attempts. His best season came in 1995 as he wasnamed an American Baseball Coaches Association Division III secondteam All-American after receiving All-Centennial Conference andEastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) first team honors. The1995 Centennial Conference (CC) Pitcher of the Year, he hurled theDiplomats to the CC Championship by compiling a 10-1 record andearned NCAA All-Region Tournament honors as a designatedhitter.
He concluded his baseball career in 1996 by being named theCentennial Conference Pitcher of the Year and earned All-CC andECAC first team honors. On the gridiron, Sheridan earned a startingberth on defense late in the 1994 season and was named a 1996 CCall-star linebacker after contributing 58 tackles with one sack,two tackles for loss, three forced fumbles, one recovered fumble,eight pass break-ups and a team-high three interceptions (51 returnyards). For his career, Sheridan had 3.5 sacks (48 yards), eighttackles for loss (39 yards), three forced fumble recoveries andnine interceptions for 194 yards and two touchdowns.