The team was established in 1914 at the new Kent State Normal School, which was established in 1910 and had its first classes in 1912 at temporary locations. The
new campus opened in May 1913. The team is the second intercollegiate athletic team at Kent State, formed just after the
men's basketball team, which was established in late 1913. H.E. Nickerson served as manager and William Brown was captain of that first team in 1914. No records of any games are available, though a photo of that team, labeled as the "Ex Temporé Base Ball Team", exists from that season. The following year, the "Normal Nine", coached by school custodian Alexander Whyte, played their first recorded intercollegiate games, opening the season with a 7–6 win over
Baldwin Wallace College in Kent. The team finished 1–3 that season and games were held on an informal field in front of the campus, which is now largely occupied by Rockwell Hall. Alf Lovall coached the team to a 1–2 record in 1916 and Paul Chandler led the team to a 3–0 record in 1922. The records for the 1917–21 and 1923–25 seasons are incomplete, though it was during the 1923 season that the various Kent State Normal College teams began being referred to as the Silver Foxes. The team also began play at
Rockwell Field around 1920, their home field through the 1941 season. In 1927, the current "Golden Flashes" name debuted and Merle Wagoner, who also coached the
football team from 1925–32, became the Flashes' first long-term coach from 1926–33 leading Kent State to a record of 27–34 in his eight seasons. Paskert would coach through the 1971 season with an overall record of 103–116–4 and 45–59–1 in the MAC. During his tenure he coached notable players such as
Thurman Munson,
Gene Michael,
Rich Rollins, and
Steve Stone, as well as future college football and NFL coach
Nick Saban, who was also a member of the Golden Flashes football team. Art Welch took over the head coaching position from 1972–1981 and was succeeded by Bob Morgan (1982–1983) and Bob Todd (1984–1987) before Danny Hall was hired for the 1988 season. The win was followed by a 7–4 victory over host
Purdue and a 3–2 win over Kentucky in the regional final. The Flashes advanced to the Super Regional series in
Eugene, Oregon, against host
Oregon and won the series 2–1 with a series-clinching run in the bottom of the ninth inning of game three. During the series, the team's winning streak reached 21 games before a 3–2 Oregon win in the second game of the series. In the
2012 College World Series, after falling to
Arkansas 8–1 in the opener, the Flashes defeated national top seed
Florida 5–4. A 4–1 loss to defending national champion and eventual 2012 runner-up
South Carolina ended the Flashes' run, giving them a national fifth-place finish. Kent State's appearance in the
College World Series marked the first appearance by any Mid-American Conference team since the 1976
Eastern Michigan Eagles and first ever by a MAC team at both the Super Regional round and College World Series since the NCAA tournament expanded to 64 teams. The Flashes were also the first team from the state of Ohio to appear in the College World Series since the 1970
Ohio Bobcats. The Flashes have also continued to have multiple players drafted into the major leagues. In 1994, seven Kent State players were selected in the Major League Baseball draft and the Flashes have had players selected in every draft since 1990 except 1998, including six in 2009, five in 2011, and six in 2012 Following the 2013 season where the Flashes won the regular-season MAC title, Stricklin was hired by
Georgia as their head coach. Stricklin's record at Kent State is 350–188 ().
Jeff Duncan Jeff Duncan was hired as head coach in June 2013. In his first season, Kent State finished second in the MAC East Division, but won their 11th MAC tournament title with a 3–0 win over arch-rival Akron in the
championship game to advance to the
NCAA tournament. The following season, the Flashes won their 10th MAC East title, but were eliminated in two games at the
MAC tournament. Through the 2015 season, Duncan has an overall record of 65–45 and 34–20 in MAC play. ==Postseason==