Statistics: Career / 2012 / 2011 / 2010 / 2009
2012: Played in 15 games, including three as a starter ... Had one hit in 12 at-bats for a .083 batting average ... Recorded two runs batted in and six runs scored ... Posted a .167 slugging percentage and a .389 on-base percentage ... Went 1 for 1 with a double at Vassar (5/6) ...
2011: Played in 15 games ... Had one hit in 11 at-bats for a .091 average ... Had for runs batted in and one run scored ... Posted a .091 slugging percentage and a .200 on-base percentage ... Went 1 for 2 with an RBI at Clarkson (5/14) ...
2010: Played in 21 games, started 12 ... Batted .259 with a .333 slugging percentage and a .273 on-base percentage ... Posted five RBI's and scored eight runs ... Had a triple and two doubles ... Fielded a 1.000 clip ... Went 2 for 5 recording two RBI and a double against Webster (4/8) ... Went 2 for 4 recording two RBI, a triple, and scored a run against Worcester Polytechnic (4/11) ...
2009: Played in two games ... Went 1 for 2 at the plate ...
High School: Three-year starter in baseball ... Captain ... Midstate Athletic Conference (MAC) First Team All-Star ... Oneonta Daily Star First Team All-Star ... Team’s Most Valuable Player ... Holds the single season triples record ... Two-time MAC Scholar-Athlete ... Two-time MAC Second Team All-Star ... Team won the MAC Championship in 2007 ... Played two years of football ... Two-time MAC Scholar-Athlete ... Helped the team to the 2005 Class C Championship title ... Member of the volleyball team for one season ... Played ice hockey for the Binghamton Jr. B Senators for three years ... Salutatorian ... RPI Medalist ... Bausch & Lomb Honorary Science Award ... Clarkson University High School Leadership Award ... Mirabito Leadership Award ... Rotary Youth Leadership Award ...
Personal: Aeronautical Engineering major … Son of Susan and Mark Delello ... Father played baseball at Ithaca with current RPI head coach Karl Steffen ... He also played 16 years of semi-professional baseball with the Otsego Macs ... Uncle, Rick Delello, played baseball at Cornell.