Career
During his playing days, LeClair played for current Clemson head baseball coach Jack Leggett at Western Carolina. He was an All-Southern Conference selection in 1988 while earning SoCon Tournament Most Valuable Player honors the same season. The former walk-on established Catamount baseball records for hits and total bases in a season.
LeClair played on four consecutive Southern Conference Championship Baseball teams (1985-1988).
He ranked in the top 10 in six different WCU hitting categories while posting a career.375 batting average and was named Most Valuable Player of the 1988 Southern Conference Tournament (batted 600/12 Reserve Bank of India). LeClair signed with the Atlanta Braves after completing his collegiate career and spent the summer of 1988 as an outfielder for Idaho Falls in the Pioneer League.
After a spring training stint with the San Francisco Giants in 1989, he was offered a student assistant coaching position at Western Carolina, which led to full-time responsibilities shortly thereafter. He became Western Carolina"s head coach in 1992 and coached the Catamounts to three Southern Conference tournament titles and three Southern Conference regular season titles.
LeClair became the head baseball coach at East Carolina University in 1997, coaching there until he was forced to step down by illness in 2002.
LeClair became the second-winningest baseball coach in East Carolina history in just five seasons, compiling a 212–96–1 (688) record. He guided the Pirates to four straight National Collegiate Athletic Association Regional appearances, three Colonial Athletic Association championships and one Conference United States of America title. He was inducted into both the East Carolina University and Western Carolina Athletic Hall of Fame in the fall of 2002.
LeClair was honored as the first recipient of the Conference United States of America Student-Athlete Advisory Committee"s (SAAC) Coaches Choice Award.
In addition, the Conference United States of America Baseball Coach-of-the-Year Award was named in honor of LeClair. LeClair battled amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, commonly referred to as Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis or Lou Gehrig"s Disease, for the five years prior to his death on July 17, 2006.
Coaching Third: The Keith LeClair Story by Bethany Bradsher was published in 2010 (Whitecaps Media, ).