Nick Meyer
Nick Meyer
Title: Assistant Baseball Coach

Nick Meyer joined the Riverhawks’ baseball staff as an assistant coach in the fall of 2021. Meyer works with AACC’s pitching staff in addition to assisting with all aspects of daily practices and games, as well as aiding the Riverhawks’ recruiting efforts. 

Meyer comes to AACC after two seasons as an assistant coach at Hood College (NCAA DIII). In 2019 his pitching staff boasted the lowest ERA in the Middle Atlantic Conference as the Blazers finished first in the MAC Commonwealth. Under his tutelage, senior Nate Luscombe was named the MAC Pitcher of the Year in 2019. 

He spent the previous four seasons as the pitching coach at McDaniel College (NCAA DIII), guiding the Green Terror to a d3baseball.com/NCBWA Top-25 ranking, a pair of Centennial Conference playoff appearances (2015, 2016), as well as to a runner-up finish in the ECAC Tournament in 2015. At McDaniel, Meyer produced an All-American, four all-region honorees, 13 all-conference players, as well as the 2016 Centennial Conference Player of the Year (Marty Windisch) and Pitcher of the Year (Zach Kronick). 

Meyer got his start in coaching with the Baltimore Chop of the Maryland Collegiate Baseball League in 2012 as an assistant coach, was promoted to head coach in 2014, and continues to oversee the collegiate summer wood bat team based out of the Bachman Sports Complex in Glen Burnie, Md. During his time with the Chop, Meyer has led the team to three MCBL post-season titles (2012, 2013, 2016), and has coached a pair of MLB draft picks and more than 20 NCAA Division I collegiate players. The Chop has had a winning record in each of Meyer’s 10 seasons affiliated with the club. 

Off the field, Meyer is the branch manager for First Team Staffing Services, Inc. at the company’s largest branch in Arbutus, Md. He oversees the majority of the company’s professional accounts and is responsible for locating, recruiting, and training all employees within his territory. 

Meyer holds a bachelor’s degree in computer information systems from Stevenson University where he was a four-year member of the NCAA Division III Mustangs baseball team.