2023 NCAA Division I baseball tournament

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2023 NCAA Division I
baseball tournament
Season2023
Teams64
Finals site
ChampionsLSU (7th title)
Runner-upFlorida (13th CWS Appearance)
Winning coachJay Johnson (1st title)
MOPPaul Skenes (LSU)
Attendance39,294
TelevisionESPN
ESPN2
ESPNU
ACCN
SECN
LHN
ESPN+

The 2023 NCAA Division I baseball tournament was the 76th edition of the NCAA Division I Baseball Championship. The 64-team tournament began on Friday, June 2, as part of the 2023 NCAA Division I baseball season and ended with the 2023 Men's College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska, which began on June 16 and ended on June 26.[1] LSU defeated Florida in the best-of-three final series to win their seventh national championship in program history.

The 64 participating NCAA Division I college baseball teams were selected from an eligible 300 teams. 30 teams were awarded automatic bids as champions of their conferences, and 34 teams were selected at-large by the NCAA Division I Baseball Committee. Teams were then divided into sixteen regionals of four teams, each of which is conducted via a double-elimination tournament. Regional champions then faced each other in Super Regionals, a best-of-three-game series, to determine the eight participants in the Men's College World Series.

Tournament procedure

[edit]

A total of 64 teams entered the tournament, with 31 of them receiving an automatic bid by either winning their conference's tournament or by finishing in first place in their conference. The remaining 33 bids were at-large, with selections extended by the NCAA Selection Committee.

National seeds

[edit]

The sixteen national seeds were announced on the Selection Show on May 29.[1] Teams in italics advanced to the Super Regionals. Teams in bold advanced to the 2023 Men's College World Series.

One of the national seeds, Kentucky, faced serious logistical challenges due to multiple events scheduled in the area during the regional weekend:

  • The Railbird Music Festival, headlined by country stars Tyler Childers and Zach Bryan, was held at The Red Mile, a harness racing track in Lexington.[2]
  • The Kentucky High School Athletic Association held its state baseball and softball tournaments, as well as its state championship meets in track and field, in Lexington. The softball and track events were held on the Kentucky campus; the early rounds of the baseball championship were played at a separate Lexington ballpark.
  • The Great American Brass Band Festival, which typically draws more than 40,000 spectators, was held about 45 minutes' drive away in Danville.

The NCAA cleared Kentucky as a regional host due to the school's contingency plans. Three residence halls, all newer facilities with apartment-style accommodations located near the UK ballpark, were secured for use by participating teams. UK also secured hotel rooms an hour's drive away in Louisville for potential use. All participating teams, including Kentucky, were ultimately housed in the residence halls.[3][4]

Schedule and venues

[edit]

On May 28, the NCAA Division I Baseball Committee announced the sixteen regional host sites.[5]

Regionals

Super Regionals

Men's College World Series

Bids

[edit]

Automatic bids

[edit]
School Conference Record (Conf) Berth Last NCAA Appearance
Maine America East 32–19 (19–5) Tournament 2011 (Chapel Hill Regional)
Tulane American 19–40 (8–16) Tournament 2016 (Oxford Regional)
Lipscomb ASUN 36–24 (23–7) Tournament 2015 (Louisville Regional)
Clemson ACC 43–17 (20–10) Tournament 2019 (Oxford Regional)
George Mason Atlantic 10 34–25 (13–10) Tournament 2014 (Houston Regional)
TCU Big 12 37–22 (13–11) Tournament 2022 (College Station Super Regional)
Xavier Big East 37–23 (14–7) Tournament 2017 (Louisville Regional)
Campbell Big South 44–13 (22–5) Tournament 2022 (Knoxville Regional)
Maryland Big Ten 41–19 (17–7) Tournament 2022 (College Park Regional)
Cal State Fullerton Big West 31–22 (20–10) Regular season 2018 (Fullerton Super Regional)
UNC Wilmington Colonial 34–21 (20–8) Tournament 2019 (Chapel Hill Regional)
Charlotte Conference USA 30–26 (17–12) Tournament 2021 (Greenville Regional)
Wright State Horizon 39–21 (22–8) Tournament 2022 (Blacksburg Regional)
Penn Ivy League 32–14 (16–5) Tournament 1995 (Midwest II Regional)
Rider Metro Atlantic 35–19 (14–7) Tournament 2021 (Ruston Regional)
Ball State Mid-American 36–21 (19–11) Tournament 2006 (Lexington Regional)
Indiana State Missouri Valley 42–15 (24–3) Tournament 2021 (Nashville Regional)
San Jose State Mountain West 31–25 (18–11) Tournament 2002 (Palo Alto Regional)
Central Connecticut Northeast 36–12 (25–5) Tournament 2021 (Eugene Regional)
Eastern Illinois Ohio Valley 38–19 (13–11) Tournament 2008 (Lincoln Regional)
Oregon Pac-12 37–20 (16–14) Tournament 2022 (Louisville Regional)
Army Patriot 38–16 (21–4) Tournament 2022 (Hattiesburg Regional)
Vanderbilt SEC 41–18 (19–11) Tournament 2022 (Corvallis Regional)
Samford Southern 36–23 (15–6) Tournament 2021 (Starkville Regional)
Nicholls Southland 34–22 (15–9) Tournament 1998 (South II Regional)
Florida A&M Southwestern Athletic 29–28 (18–12) Tournament 2015 (Gainesville Regional)
Oral Roberts Summit 46–11 (23–1) Tournament 2022 (College Station Regional)
Southern Miss Sun Belt 41–17 (22–8) Tournament 2022 (Hattiesburg Super Regional)
Santa Clara West Coast 35–18 (17–10) Tournament 1997 (West Regional)
Sam Houston Western Athletic 38–23 (22–8) Tournament 2017 (Tallahassee Super Regional)

By conference

[edit]
Conference Total Schools
SEC 10 Alabama, Arkansas, Auburn, Florida, Kentucky, LSU, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas A&M, Vanderbilt
ACC 8 Boston College, Clemson, Duke, Miami (FL), North Carolina, NC State, Virginia, Wake Forest
Big 12 6 Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Texas, TCU, Texas Tech, West Virginia
Pac-12 5 Arizona, Oregon, Oregon State, Stanford, Washington
Sun Belt 4 Coastal Carolina, Louisiana, Southern Miss, Troy
Big Ten 3 Indiana, Iowa, Maryland
American 2 East Carolina, Tulane
Big East 2 UConn, Xavier
Colonial 2 Northeastern, UNC Wilmington
Conference USA 2 Charlotte, Dallas Baptist
ASUN 1 Lipscomb
America East 1 Maine
Atlantic 10 1 George Mason
Big South 1 Campbell
Big West 1 Cal State Fullerton
Horizon 1 Wright State
Ivy League 1 Penn
Metro Atlantic 1 Rider
Mid-American 1 Ball State
Missouri Valley 1 Indiana State
Mountain West 1 San Jose State
Northeast 1 Central Connecticut
Ohio Valley 1 Eastern Illinois
Patriot 1 Army
Southern 1 Samford
Southland 1 Nicholls
Southwestern Athletic 1 Florida A&M
Summit 1 Oral Roberts
Western Athletic 1 Sam Houston
West Coast 1 Santa Clara

Regionals and Super Regionals

[edit]

Bold indicates winner. Seeds for regional tournaments indicate seeds within regional. Seeds for super regional tournaments indicate national seeds only. Game times are listed in ET.

Eugene Super Regional

[edit]

Hosted by Oregon at PK Park

Regional Regional Regional Final Super Regional
June 9–11
               
1 Vanderbilt 12
4 Eastern Illinois 2
1 Vanderbilt 7
2 Oregon 8
3 Xavier 4
2 Oregon 5
2 Oregon 11
Nashville Regional – Hawkins Field
3 Xavier 2
4 Eastern Illinois 0
3 Xavier 7
3 Xavier 2
1 Vanderbilt 1
  Oregon 9 7 6
  Oral Roberts 8 8 11
1 Oklahoma State 4
4 Oral Roberts 6
4 Oral Roberts 15
3 Washington 12
3 Washington 9
2 Dallas Baptist 5
4 Oral Roberts 6
Stillwater Regional – O'Brate Stadium
2 Dallas Baptist 5
1 Oklahoma State 4
2 Dallas Baptist 18
2 Dallas Baptist 9
3 Washington 1

Fort Worth Super Regional

[edit]

Hosted by TCU at Lupton Stadium due to logistical issues presented because of Terre Haute hosting the Special Olympics Indiana Summer Games[6]

Regional Regional Regional Final Super Regional
June 9–11
               
1 Arkansas 13
4 Santa Clara 6
1 Arkansas 5
2 TCU 20
3 Arizona 4
2 TCU 12
2 TCU 12
Fayetteville Regional – Baum–Walker Stadium
1 Arkansas 4
4 Santa Clara 9
3 Arizona 3
4 Santa Clara 4
1 Arkansas 6
  TCU 4 6
14 Indiana State 1 4
1 Indiana State 6
4 Wright State 5
1 Indiana State 7
2 Iowa 4
3 North Carolina 4
2 Iowa 5
1 Indiana State 11
Terre Haute Regional – Bob Warn Field at Sycamore Stadium
2 Iowa 8
4 Wright State 0
3 North Carolina 5
3 North Carolina 5
2 Iowa 613

Charlottesville Super Regional

[edit]
Regional Regional Regional Final Super Regional
June 9–11
               
1 Virginia 15
4 Army 1
1 Virginia 2
2 East Carolina 1
3 Oklahoma 5
2 East Carolina 14
1 Virginia 8
Charlottesville Regional – Disharoon Park
2 East Carolina 3
4 Army 1
3 Oklahoma 10
3 Oklahoma 5
2 East Carolina 8
7 Virginia 4 14 12
  Duke 5 4 2
1 Coastal Carolina 10
4 Rider 1110
4 Rider 1
2 Duke 2
3 UNC Wilmington 3
2 Duke 12
2 Duke 6 12
Conway Regional – Springs Brooks Stadium
1 Coastal Carolina 8 3
1 Coastal Carolina 12
3 UNC Wilmington 2
1 Coastal Carolina 13
4 Rider 5

Gainesville Super Regional

[edit]
Regional Regional Regional Final Super Regional
June 9–11
               
1 Florida 3
4 Florida A&M 0
1 Florida 4
3 Texas Tech 5
3 Texas Tech 3
2 UConn 2
3 Texas Tech 1 0
Gainesville Regional – Condron Ballpark
1 Florida 7 6
4 Florida A&M 6
2 UConn 9
2 UConn 2
1 Florida 8
2 Florida 5 4
15 South Carolina 4 0
1 South Carolina 19
4 Central Connecticut 1
1 South Carolina 6
3 NC State 3
3 NC State 5
2 Campbell 1
1 South Carolina 16
Columbia Regional – Founders Park
2 Campbell 7
4 Central Connecticut 5
2 Campbell 10
2 Campbell 11
3 NC State 1

Winston-Salem Super Regional

[edit]
Regional Regional Regional Final Super Regional
June 10–12
               
1 Wake Forest 12
4 George Mason 0
1 Wake Forest 21
2 Maryland 6
3 Northeastern 2
2 Maryland 7
1 Wake Forest 15
Winston-Salem Regional – David F. Couch Ballpark
4 George Mason 1
4 George Mason 11
3 Northeastern 3
4 George Mason 11
2 Maryland 10
1 Wake Forest 5 22
16 Alabama 4 5
1 Alabama 4
4 Nicholls 3
1 Alabama 11
3 Troy 8
3 Troy 11
2 Boston College 10
1 Alabama 8
Tuscaloosa Regional – Sewell–Thomas Stadium
2 Boston College 0
4 Nicholls 6
2 Boston College 14
2 Boston College 4
3 Troy 1

Stanford Super Regional

[edit]
Regional Regional Regional Final Super Regional
June 10–12
               
1 Stanford 13
4 San Jose State 2
1 Stanford 5
2 Texas A&M 8
3 Cal State Fullerton 7
2 Texas A&M 12
2 Texas A&M 5 1
Stanford Regional – Sunken Diamond
1 Stanford 13 7
4 San Jose State 5
3 Cal State Fullerton 9
3 Cal State Fullerton 5
1 Stanford 6
8 Stanford 5 8 7
Texas 7 3 6
1 Miami (FL) 9
4 Maine 1
1 Miami (FL) 1
2 Texas 4
3 Louisiana 2
2 Texas 4
2 Texas 10
Coral Gables Regional – Alex Rodriguez Park at Mark Light Field
1 Miami (FL) 6
4 Maine 10
3 Louisiana 19
3 Louisiana 5
1 Miami (FL) 8

Baton Rouge Super Regional

[edit]
Regional Regional Regional Final Super Regional
June 10–12
               
1 LSU 7
4 Tulane 2
1 LSU 6
2 Oregon State 5
3 Sam Houston 2
2 Oregon State 18
1 LSU 13
Baton Rouge Regional – Alex Box Stadium
2 Oregon State 7
4 Tulane 2
3 Sam Houston 10
3 Sam Houston 1
2 Oregon State 3
5 LSU 14 8
12 Kentucky 0 3
1 Kentucky 4
4 Ball State 0
1 Kentucky 3
3 Indiana 5
3 Indiana 12
2 West Virginia 6
3 Indiana 6 2
Lexington Regional – Kentucky Proud Park
1 Kentucky 16 4
4 Ball State 5
2 West Virginia 13
2 West Virginia 0
1 Kentucky 10

Hattiesburg Super Regional

[edit]

Hosted by Southern Miss at Pete Taylor Park

Regional Regional Regional Final Super Regional
June 10–12
               
1 Clemson 12
4 Lipscomb 5
1 Clemson 5
2 Tennessee 614
3 Charlotte 1
2 Tennessee 8
2 Tennessee 9
Clemson Regional – Doug Kingsmore Stadium
3 Charlotte 2
4 Lipscomb 2
3 Charlotte 9
3 Charlotte 3
1 Clemson 2
Tennessee 3 8 5
  Southern Miss 5 4 0
1 Auburn 3
4 Penn 611
4 Penn 5
3 Samford 4
3 Samford 4
2 Southern Miss 210
4 Penn 2 7
Auburn Regional – Plainsman Park
2 Southern Miss 11 11
1 Auburn 2
2 Southern Miss 7
2 Southern Miss 9
3 Samford 4

Men's College World Series

[edit]

The Men's College World Series was held at Charles Schwab Field in Omaha, Nebraska.

Participants

[edit]
School Conference Record (Conf) Head Coach Super Regional Previous MCWS Appearances MCWS Best Finish MCWS W–L Record
LSU SEC 48–15 (19–10) Jay Johnson Baton Rouge 18
(last: 2017)
1st
(1991, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2009)
40–27
Florida SEC 50–15 (20–10) Kevin O'Sullivan Gainesville 12
(last: 2018)
1st
(2017)
21–24
Virginia ACC 50–13 (19–11) Brian O'Connor Charlottesville 5
(last: 2021)
1st
(2015)
13–10
Wake Forest ACC 52–10 (22–7) Tom Walter Winston-Salem 2
(last: 1955)
1st
(1955)
7–3
Stanford Pac-12 44–18 (23–7) David Esquer Stanford 18
(last: 2022)
1st
(1987, 1988)
41–33
Tennessee SEC 43–20 (16–14) Tony Vitello Hattiesburg 5
(last: 2021)
2nd
(1951)
8–10
TCU Big 12 42–22 (13–11) Kirk Saarloos Fort Worth 5
(last: 2017)
3rd
(2010, 2015, 2016, 2017)
11–10
Oral Roberts Summit League 51–12 (23–1) Ryan Folmar Eugene 1
(last: 1978)
5th
(1978)
1–2

Bracket

[edit]

Sources:[7] Seeds listed below indicate national seeds only

First round Second round Semifinals Finals
               
TCU 5
Oral Roberts 6
  Oral Roberts 4
2 Florida 5
7 Virginia 5
2 Florida 6
2 Florida 3
Bracket 1
  TCU 2
  TCU 4
7 Virginia 3
  TCU 6
  Oral Roberts 1
2 Florida 3 24 4
5 LSU 411 4 18
1 Wake Forest 3
8 Stanford 2
1 Wake Forest 3
5 LSU 2
5 LSU 6
Tennessee 3
1 Wake Forest 2 0
Bracket 2
5 LSU 5 211
8 Stanford 4
  Tennessee 6
  Tennessee 0
5 LSU 5

Game results

[edit]

Sources:[8]

Bracket 1

[edit]
June 16, 2023
1:00 pm CDT (UTC-5)
Game 1
Oral Roberts 6–5 TCU Charles Schwab Field Omaha
Attendance: 24,134
Umpires: HP: Jeff Head, 1B: Angel Campos, 2B: Ramon Armenderiz, 3B: Brandon Cooper
WP: Cade Denton (2–1) Box Score LP: Luke Savage (5–3)
HR: Mac McCroskey (14) HR: Cole Fontenelle (14)

June 16, 2023
6:00 pm CDT (UTC-5)
Game 2
No. 7 Virginia 5–6 No. 2 Florida Charles Schwab Field Omaha
Attendance: 24,801
Umpires: HP: Billy Van Raaphorst, 1B: David Savage, 2B: Travis Reininger, 3B: Casey Moser
LP: Jake Berry (0–5) Box Score WP: Brandon Neely (1–2)
HR: Wyatt Langford (19), BT Riopelle (17), Ty Evans (5)

June 18, 2023
1:00 pm CDT (UTC-5)
Game 5
TCU 4–3 No. 7 Virginia Charles Schwab Field Omaha
Attendance: 24,479
Umpires: HP: Ramon Armenderiz, 1B: Brandon Cooper, 2B: Jeff Head, 3B: Angel Campos
WP: Garrett Wright (3–2)
Sv: Ben Abeldt (2)
Box Score LP: Connelly Early (11–3)
HR: Ethan Anderson (15)

June 18, 2023
6:00 pm CDT (UTC-5)
Game 6
Oral Roberts 4–5 No. 2 Florida Charles Schwab Field Omaha
Attendance: 24,841
Umpires: HP: Travis Reininger, 1B: Casey Moser, 2B: Billy Van Raaphorst, 3B: David Savage
LP: Harley Gollert (10–2) Box Score WP: Hurston Waldrep (10–3)
Sv: Cade Fisher (2)
HR: Justin Quinn (8), Matt Hogan (19) HR: Ty Evans (6), Josh Rivera (18), Luke Heyman (12)

June 20, 2023
1:00 pm CDT (UTC-5)
Game 9
TCU 6–1 Oral Roberts Charles Schwab Field Omaha
Attendance: 23,496
Umpires: HP: Angel Campos, 1B: Ramon Armenderiz, 2B: Billy Van Raaphorst, 3B: Brandon Cooper
WP: Luke Savage (6–4) Box Score LP: Brooks Fowler (9–2)

June 21, 2023
1:00 pm CDT (UTC-5)
Game 11
No. 2 Florida 3–2 TCU Charles Schwab Field Omaha
Attendance: 23,889
Umpires: HP: Jeff Head, 1B: Casey Moser, 2B: Travis Reininger, 3B: David Savage
WP: Brandon Neely (2–2) Box Score LP: Ben Abeldt (3–4)
HR: Josh Rivera (19)

Bracket 2

[edit]
June 17, 2023
1:00 pm CDT (UTC-5)
Game 3
No. 8 Stanford 2–3 No. 1 Wake Forest Charles Schwab Field Omaha
Attendance: 23,943
Umpires: HP: David Savage, 1B: Travis Reininger, 2B: Casey Moser, 3B: Billy Van Raaphorst
LP: Ryan Bruno (2–2) Box Score WP: Seth Keener (8–1)
Sv: Camden Minacci (13)
HR: Brock Wilkin (31)

June 17, 2023
6:00 pm CDT (UTC-5)
Game 4
Tennessee 3–6 No. 5 LSU Charles Schwab Field Omaha
Attendance: 25,010
Umpires: HP: Angel Campos, 1B: Ramon Armenderiz, 2B: Brandon Cooper, 3B: Jeff Head
LP: Andrew Lindsey (3–4) Box Score WP: Paul Skenes (13–2)
Sv: Riley Cooper (1)
HR: Hunter Ensley (7) HR: Gavin Dugas (11)

June 19, 2023
1:00 pm CDT (UTC-5)
Game 7
No. 8 Stanford 4–6 Tennessee Charles Schwab Field Omaha
Attendance: 23,886
Umpires: HP: Brandon Cooper, 1B: Jeff Head, 2B: Angel Campos, 3B: Ramon Armenderiz
LP: Matt Scott (5–5) Box Score WP: Chase Burns (5–3)

June 19, 2023
6:00 pm CDT (UTC-5)
Game 8
No. 1 Wake Forest 3–2 No. 5 LSU Charles Schwab Field Omaha
Attendance: 24,958
Umpires: HP: Casey Moser, 1B: Billy Van Raaphorst, 2B: David Savage, 3B: Travis Reininger
WP: Camden Minacci (1–1) Box Score LP: Thatcher Hurd (6–3)

June 20, 2023
6:00 pm CDT (UTC-5)
Game 10
Tennessee 0–5 No. 5 LSU Charles Schwab Field Omaha
Attendance: 24,874
Umpires: HP: David Savage, 1B: Travis Reininger, 2B: Jeff Head, 3B: Casey Moser
LP: Drew Beam (12–5) Box Score WP: Nate Ackenhausen (3–0)
Sv: Riley Cooper (2)
HR: Dylan Crews (18)

June 21, 2023
6:00 pm CDT (UTC-5)
Game 12
No. 1 Wake Forest 2–5 No. 5 LSU Charles Schwab Field Omaha
Attendance: 25,214
Umpires: HP: Billy Van Raaphorst, 1B: Brandon Cooper, 2B: Ramon Armenderiz, 3B: Angel Campos
LP: Seth Keener (8–2) Box Score WP: Griffin Herring (5–2)
Sv: Riley Cooper (3)
HR: Cade Beloso (15)

June 22, 2023
6:00 pm CDT (UTC-5)
Game 13
No. 5 LSU 2–0 (F/11) No. 1 Wake Forest Charles Schwab Field Omaha
Attendance: 23,993
Umpires: HP: Travis Reininger, 1B: Jeff Head, 2B: David Savage, 3B: Casey Moser
WP: Thatcher Hurd (7–3) Box Score LP: Michael Massey (3–1)
HR: Tommy White (23)

Finals

[edit]

Sources:[9]

Game 1
[edit]
June 24, 2023 6:00 p.m. (CDT) at Charles Schwab Field Omaha in Omaha, Nebraska
Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 R H E
LSU 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 4 11 0
Florida 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 6 1
WP: Riley Cooper (5–3)   LP: Brandon Neely (2–3)
Home runs:
LSU: Cade Beloso (16), Gavin Dugas (17), Tommy White (24)
FLA: BT Riopelle (18)
Attendance: 25,258
Box Score


Game 2
[edit]
June 25, 2023 2:00 p.m. (CDT) at Charles Schwab Field Omaha in Omaha, Nebraska
Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Florida 0 1 6 1 0 5 2 4 5 24 23 1
LSU 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 4 7 5
WP: Blake Purnell (2–0)   LP: Nate Ackenhausen (3–1)   Sv: Nick Ficarrotta (2)
Home runs:
FLA: Ty Evans 2 (8), Wyatt Langford (20), Jac Caglianone 2 (33), BT Riopelle (19)
LSU: Brayden Jobert (13)
Attendance: 25,292
Box Score


Game 3
[edit]
June 26, 2023 6:00 p.m. (CDT) at Charles Schwab Field Omaha in Omaha, Nebraska
Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
LSU 0 6 0 4 0 0 1 3 4 18 24 1
Florida 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 4 5 0
WP: Thatcher Hurd (8–3)   LP: Jac Caglianone (7–4)
Home runs:
LSU: Josh Pearson (4), Brayden Jobert (14)
FLA: Wyatt Langford (21), Ty Evans (9), Cade Kurland (17)
Attendance: 24,878
Box Score


All-Tournament Team

[edit]

The following players were members of the Men's College World Series All-Tournament Team.[10]

Position Player School
P Paul Skenes (MOP) LSU
Ty Floyd LSU
C BT Riopelle Florida
1B Tre' Morgan LSU
2B Gavin Dugas LSU
3B Tommy White LSU
SS Josh Rivera Florida
OF Dylan Crews LSU
Ty Evans Florida
Wyatt Langford Florida
DH Cade Beloso LSU

Final standings

[edit]

Seeds listed below indicate national seeds only

Place School Record
1st No. 5 LSU 11–2
2nd No. 2 Florida 10–3
3rd No. 1 Wake Forest 7–2
TCU 7–2
5th Oral Roberts 6–3
Tennessee 6–3
7th No. 8 Stanford 6–4
No. 7 Virginia 5–3
9th No. 16 Alabama 3–2
Duke 4–3
No. 14 Indiana State 3–2
No. 12 Kentucky 4–2
Oregon 4–2
No. 15 South Carolina 3–2
Southern Miss 5–3
Texas 4–2
17th No. 3 Arkansas 2–2
Boston College 2–2
Campbell 2–2
Charlotte 2–2
No. 10 Coastal Carolina 3–2
Dallas Baptist 2–2
East Carolina 2–2
George Mason 2–2
Indiana 2–2
Iowa 2–2
No. 9 Miami (FL) 2–2
Oregon State 2–2
Penn 2–2
Texas A&M 2–2
Texas Tech 2–2
Xavier 2–2
33rd
Cal State Fullerton 1–2
No. 4 Clemson 1–2
Louisiana 1–2
Maryland 1–2
North Carolina 1–2
NC State 1–2
Oklahoma 1–2
Rider 1–2
Samford 1–2
Sam Houston 1–2
Santa Clara 1–2
Troy 1–2
UConn 1–2
No. 6 Vanderbilt 1–2
Washington 1–2
West Virginia 1–2
49th Arizona 0–2
Army 0–2
No. 13 Auburn 0-2
Ball State 0–2
Central Connecticut 0–2
Eastern Illinois 0–2
Florida A&M 0–2
Lipscomb 0–2
Maine 0–2
Nicholls 0–2
UNC Wilmington 0–2
Northeastern 0–2
No. 11 Oklahoma State 0–2
San Jose State 0–2
Tulane 0–2
Wright State 0–2

Record by conference

[edit]
Conference # of Bids Record Win % Nc Record Nc Win % RF SR WS NS CS NC
SEC 10 42–23 .646 33–14 .702 8 6 3 2 2 1
ACC 8 23–18 .561 20–15 .571 5 3 2 1
Big 12 6 15–12 .556 15–12 .556 3 2 1 1
Summit 1 6–3 .667 6–3 .667 1 1 1
Pac-12 5 13–12 .520 13–12 .520 3 2 1
Missouri Valley 1 3–2 .600 3–2 .600 1 1
Sun Belt 4 10–9 .526 10–9 .526 2 1
Conference USA 2 4–4 .500 4–4 .500 2
Big Ten 3 5–6 .455 5–6 .455 2
Ivy League 1 2–2 .500 2–2 .500 1
Atlantic 10 1 2–2 .500 2–2 .500 1
Big South 1 2–2 .500 2–2 .500 1
Big East 2 3–4 .429 3–4 .429 1
American 2 2–4 .333 2–4 .333 1
Big West 1 1–2 .333 1–2 .333
Metro Atlantic 1 1–2 .333 1–2 .333
Southern 1 1–2 .333 1–2 .333
West Coast 1 1–2 .333 1–2 .333
Western Athletic 1 1–2 .333 1–2 .333
Colonial 2 0–4 .000 0–4 .000
America East 1 0–2 .000 0–2 .000
ASUN 1 0–2 .000 0–2 .000
Horizon 1 0–2 .000 0–2 .000
Mid-American 1 0–2 .000 0–2 .000
Mountain West 1 0–2 .000 0–2 .000
Northeast 1 0–2 .000 0–2 .000
Ohio Valley 1 0–2 .000 0–2 .000
Patriot 1 0–2 .000 0–2 .000
Southland 1 0–2 .000 0–2 .000
Southwestern Athletic 1 0–2 .000 0–2 .000

Media coverage

[edit]

Radio

[edit]

NRG Media provided nationwide radio coverage of the Men's College World Series through its Omaha Station KOZN, in association with Westwood One.[11] It also streamed all MCWS games at westwoodonesports.com, Tunein, the Varsity Network, and on SiriusXM.

Broadcast assignments

[edit]
  • John Bishop, Gary Sharp, and Connor Happer (Gms 1–3, 5–6)
  • John Bishop, Gary Sharp, and Nick Handley (Gm 4)
  • John Bishop, Mike Ferrin, and Gary Sharp (Gms 7–8, 10–14)
  • John Bishop, Nick Handley, and Gary Sharp (Gm 9)
  • Kevin Kugler, Scott Graham, and John Bishop (Championship Series)

Television

[edit]

ESPN aired every game from the Regionals, Super Regionals, and the Men's College World Series across its networks.

Broadcast assignments

[edit]
Regionals[12]
Super Regionals[13]
Men's College World Series[14]
MCWS Championship Series

Notes

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "2023 NCAA baseball bracket: Men's College World Series scores, schedule". NCAA. June 6, 2023.
  2. ^ Tunis, Walter (June 5, 2023). "Concert review: After past missteps, Railbird Festival is reborn at Red Mile". Retrieved June 9, 2023.
  3. ^ Medcalf, Myron (May 30, 2023). "NCAA tournament teams, fans scramble for hotels in Kentucky". ESPN. Retrieved May 30, 2023.
  4. ^ Thompson, Tyler (May 30, 2023). "Busy weekend in Lexington forces Kentucky's Regional opponents to stay in dorms". Kentucky Sports Radio. Retrieved May 30, 2023.
  5. ^ "2023 college baseball tournament selection show: Time, how to watch the bracket reveal". NCAA. May 27, 2023.
  6. ^ "Athletic Department Statement on 2023 NCAA Super Regional". gosycamores.com. Indiana State University. June 5, 2023. Retrieved June 5, 2023.
  7. ^ "2023 Men's College World Series bracket".
  8. ^ "2023 Baseball Schedule".
  9. ^ "2023 DI Baseball Championship and Men's College World Series Official Bracket".
  10. ^ "College World Series Most Outstanding Player award history, winners". June 26, 2023. Retrieved June 26, 2023.
  11. ^ Michael Simon, Perry (June 16, 2022). "KOZN (1620 The Zone)/Omaha Renews Affiliation With Westwood One For College World Series, NCAA basketball tournaments". All Access. Retrieved June 16, 2022.
  12. ^ McKay, Julie (May 30, 2023). "The Road to Omaha Starts Here: ESPN Platforms Present Every Pitch of the NCAA Baseball Regionals" (Press release). ESPN. Retrieved May 30, 2023.
  13. ^ McKay, Julie (June 7, 2023). "The Road to Omaha Continues: ESPN Platforms to Showcase Every Pitch of the NCAA Baseball Super Regionals" (Press release). ESPN. Retrieved June 7, 2023.
  14. ^ "ESPN Presents Exclusive Coverage of the 2023 Men's College World Series, June 16–26". ESPN Press Room. Retrieved June 15, 2023.
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Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 | Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023_NCAA_Division_I_baseball_tournament
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