Back to the Tigue: Pitcher Austin Robichaux Completes Degree

Written byHope Aucoin

Like many Fall 2020 University of Louisiana at ĒąÉ¬Ö±²„ graduates, Austin Robichaux will earn his degree during commencement ceremonies at M.L. ā€œTigueā€ Moore Field at Russo Park. 

The venue holds special significance for Robichaux, whoā€™s celebrating the completion of a longtime goal: graduate from UL ĒąÉ¬Ö±²„. He will receive his diploma on the same field where he pitched for the Louisiana Raginā€™ Cajuns from 2012-2014 under his father, the late Tony ā€œCoach Robeā€ Robichaux. The elder Robichaux was head coach for 25 years until his death last year.

Lifelong Raginā€™ Cajun

Austin grew up as a Raginā€™ Cajun, and not even an offer to join the Cincinnati Reds out of high school in 2011 was enough to sway him from playing for his fatherā€™s team. 

ā€œI got to do what I love and play the sport that I love at such a competitive level, while also being with my dad every single day," he says. ā€œI would relive that over and over.ā€

The pinnacle of that experience for Austin was when the Cajuns hosted the 2014 Super Regional. It was the teamā€™s first Super Regional since 2000. 

During that tournament, Austin got news heā€™d been drafted to the Los Angeles Angels. Within three days, he was flying out to play for the teamā€™s minor division in Utah, cutting his academic career short with nearly 30 credit hours left to his bachelorā€™s degree.

ā€œAt first it was kind of a culture shock,ā€ he says. ā€œAfter that first year under my belt, I became more comfortable, and it was basically ā€” essentially ā€” a dream come true. I was waking up every day, playing the sport I love as a job.ā€

Life After Baseball

Coach Robe was known for holding his players to a high standard both on and off the field. Players ā€” including sons Justin and Austin ā€” were required to sign a code of conduct known as ā€œRobeā€™s Rules.ā€ 

In a 2009 interview for La Louisiane, the head coach said, ā€œBaseball will come to an end. For some, that happens after college. For others, itā€™s after a career in baseball ā€” but it will end. Itā€™s my job to prepare them for life after baseball.ā€

Austin says part of that preparation was an emphasis on earning a degree. 

ā€œOne day, it comes to an end and when that day comes, we need to be set up,ā€ he says. ā€œIt was something [my dad] preached, and it was a goal that I set.ā€ 

When the University began offering the online Bachelor of General Studies in 2017, Austin enrolled to finish what heā€™d started six years earlier. The following year, he played his last season of pro ball and returned to Acadiana. 

He began working with athletic training facility Raginā€™ Cages, giving lessons. That eventually turned into a full-time role as head of baseball operations, focusing on training pitchers. 

Balancing his online coursework with his full-time job was a challenge but found it was something heā€™d trained for. 

ā€œIt was definitely tough, but if there's one thing that going to school and playing a Division I sport and going to school and playing a professional sport does is, it teaches you time management, and a big thing my dad taught me, as well, was time management," Austin says. 

Austin says heā€™d plot out what needed to be done when to tackle in 45-minute to hour-long blocks as he had them.

ā€œThatā€™s what ultimately saved me,ā€ he says. 

Back to the Ball Field

Austin says it was never a matter of if he would earn his degree but when. Now that the date is assured, Austin is both proud and relieved.

ā€œI couldn't be more excited because of how much [my dad] preached I need to get my degree, and how proud I know he is,ā€ Austin says. 

 

Commencement comes with its own set of emotions. Had he continued at UL ĒąÉ¬Ö±²„ through his senior year, his father would have been on stage to confer his degree. Instead, his mother Colleen will be part of the ceremony. 

ā€œThere are going to be a lot of emotions, but I know he's going to be watching from above, so at the end of the day, it's just going to be all happy tears,ā€ Austin says. 

With this chapter closed, Austin is looking ahead to carrying on his fatherā€™s legacy on the field and off, as he continues training future players and he and his wife Sara prepare to welcome their first child. 

ā€œMy dad taught me not only the game itself but the game after baseball, which is life. Ultimately, my dad's biggest thing until the day passed away was: life isnā€™t just baseball, because baseball comes to an end. It's what kind of husband, what kind of brother, what kind of son ā€” and that's kind of what I put into my teaching. I remind them that someday you have to be the man that God intended, and it's not just about baseball,ā€ Austin says. 

ā€œThe biggest thing Iā€™m looking forward to is waiting on my son to get here and teaching him about who his grandfather was.ā€

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