2017 NCAA Division I baseball tournament: Difference between revisions
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|rowspan=2| P || '''[[Alex Faedo]] ([[College World Series Most Outstanding Player|MOP]])''' || style={{ |
|rowspan=2| P || '''[[Alex Faedo]] ([[College World Series Most Outstanding Player|MOP]])''' || style={{CollegePrimaryStyle|Florida Gators|border=0}}|'''Florida''' |
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| [[Brady Singer]] || style={{ |
| [[Brady Singer]] || style={{CollegePrimaryStyle|Florida Gators|border=0}}|'''Florida''' |
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| C || [[Michael Papierski]] || style={{CollegePrimaryStyle|LSU Tigers|border=0}}|'''LSU''' |
| C || [[Michael Papierski]] || style={{CollegePrimaryStyle|LSU Tigers|border=0}}|'''LSU''' |
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|rowspan=3| OF || [[Antoine Duplantis]] || style={{CollegePrimaryStyle|LSU Tigers|border=0}}|'''LSU''' |
|rowspan=3| OF || [[Antoine Duplantis]] || style={{CollegePrimaryStyle|LSU Tigers|border=0}}|'''LSU''' |
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| [[Austin Langworthy]] || style={{ |
| [[Austin Langworthy]] || style={{CollegePrimaryStyle|Florida Gators|border=0}}|'''Florida''' |
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| [[Zach Watson]] || style={{CollegePrimaryStyle|LSU Tigers|border=0}}|'''LSU''' |
| [[Zach Watson]] || style={{CollegePrimaryStyle|LSU Tigers|border=0}}|'''LSU''' |
Revision as of 03:08, 11 June 2022
Season | 2017 |
---|---|
Teams | 64 |
Finals site | |
Champions | Florida Gators (1st title) |
Runner-up | LSU Tigers (18th CWS Appearance) |
Winning coach | Kevin O'Sullivan (1st title) |
MOP | Alex Faedo (Florida) |
Television | ESPN Networks |
The 2017 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament began on June 1, 2017 as part of the 2017 NCAA Division I baseball season. The 64-team, double-elimination tournament concluded with the 2017 College World Series (CWS) in Omaha, Nebraska. The CWS started on June 17 and ended on June 27.[1]
The 64 participating NCAA Division I college baseball teams were selected out of an eligible 299 teams.[2] Thirty-one teams were awarded an automatic bid as champions of their conferences, and 33 teams were selected at-large by the NCAA Division I Baseball Committee.
Teams were divided into sixteen regionals of four teams, which conducted 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 College World Series.[1]
Bids
Automatic bids
By conference
National seeds
The following eight teams automatically host a Super Regional if they advance to that round:
Bold indicates College World Series participant
† indicates teams that were eliminated in the Regional Tournament
‡ indicates teams that were eliminated in the Super Regional Tournament
Regionals and Super Regionals
Bold indicates winner. Seeds for regional tournaments indicate seeds within regional. Seeds for super regional tournaments indicate national seeds only.
Corvallis Super Regional
Long Beach Super Regional
Tallahassee Super Regional
Baton Rouge Super Regional
Gainesville Super Regional
Fort Worth Super Regional
Louisville Super Regional
College Station Super Regional
Hosted by Texas A&M at Olsen Field at Blue Bell Park Template:CWSBracket
College World Series
The College World Series is held at TD Ameritrade Park in Omaha, Nebraska.
Participants
School | Conference | Record (Conference) | Head Coach | Previous CWS Appearances | Best CWS Finish | CWS Record Not including this year |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cal State Fullerton | Big West | 39–22 (15–9) | Rick Vanderhook | 17 (last: 2015) |
1st (1979, 1984, 1995, 2004) |
34–29 |
Florida | SEC | 47–18 (21–9) | Kevin O'Sullivan | 10 (last: 2016) |
2nd (2005, 2011) |
14–21 |
Florida State | ACC | 45–21 (14–14) | Mike Martin | 21 (last: 2012) |
2nd (1970, 1986, 1999) |
28–42 |
Louisville | ACC | 52–10 (23–6) | Dan McDonnell | 3 (last: 2014) |
5th (2007) |
1–6 |
LSU | SEC | 48–17 (21–9) | Paul Mainieri | 17 (last: 2015) |
1st (1991, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2009) |
36–24 |
Oregon State | Pac-12 | 54–4 (27–3) | Pat Casey | 5 (last: 2013) |
1st (2006, 2007) |
13–8 |
TCU | Big 12 | 47–16 (16–8) | Jim Schlossnagle | 4 (last: 2016) |
3rd (2010, 2015, 2016) |
8–8 |
Texas A&M | SEC | 41–21 (16–14) | Rob Childress | 5 (last: 2011) |
5th (1951, 1993) |
2–10 |
Bracket
Seeds listed below (in the column before each team's name) indicate national seeds only Template:CWSBracket
Game results
Date | Game | Winning team | Score | Losing team | Winning pitcher | Losing pitcher | Save | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
June 17 | Game 1 | Oregon State | 6–5 | Cal State Fullerton | Jake Mulholland (7–1) | Blake Workman (6–3) | Drew Rasmussen (2) | |
Game 2 | LSU | 5–4 | Florida State | Jared Poché (11–3) | Tyler Holton (10–3) | Zack Hess (2) | ||
June 18 | Game 3 | Louisville | 8–4 | Texas A&M | Brendan McKay (11–3) | Corbin Martin (7–4) | – | |
Game 4 | Florida | 3–0 | TCU | Alex Faedo (8–2) | Jared Janczak (9–1) | Michael Byrne (17) | ||
June 19 | Game 5 | Florida State | 6–4 | Cal State Fullerton | Chase Haney (3–2) | Jack Pabich (1–3) | Drew Carlton (7) | Cal State Fullerton eliminated |
Game 6 | Oregon State | 13–1 | LSU | Bryce Fehmel (6–2) | Eric Walker (8–2) | – | ||
June 20 | Game 7 | TCU | 4–1 | Texas A&M | Brian Howard (12–3) | Stephen Kolek (4–5) | Sean Wymer (2) | Texas A&M eliminated |
Game 8 | Florida | 5–1 | Louisville | Brady Singer (8–5) | Kade McClure (8–4) | – | ||
June 21 | Game 9 | LSU | 7–4 | Florida State | Jared Poché (12–3) | Cole Sands (6–4) | Zack Hess (3) | Florida State eliminated |
June 22 | Game 10 | TCU | 4–3 | Louisville | Sean Wymer (6–4) | Nick Bennett (5–1) | – | Louisville eliminated |
June 23 | Game 11 | LSU | 3–1 | Oregon State | Alex Lange (10–5) | Jake Thompson (14–1) | Zack Hess (4) | |
Game 12 | TCU | 9–2 | Florida | Charles King (1–3) | Jackson Kowar (12–1) | – | ||
June 24 | Game 13 | LSU | 6–1 | Oregon State | Caleb Gilbert (7–1) | Bryce Fehmel (6–3) | – | Oregon State eliminated |
Game 14 | Florida | 3–0 | TCU | Alex Faedo (9–2) | Jared Janczak (9–2) | Michael Byrne (18) | TCU eliminated | |
Finals | ||||||||
June 26 | Game 1 | Florida | 4–3 | LSU | Brady Singer (9–5) | Russell Reynolds (1–2) | Michael Byrne (19) | |
June 27 | Game 2 | Florida | 6–1 | LSU | Tyler Dyson (4–0) | Jared Poché (12–4) | Jackson Kowar (1) | Florida wins CWS |
All-Tournament Team
The following players were members of the College World Series All-Tournament Team.[3]
Position | Player | School |
---|---|---|
P | Alex Faedo (MOP) | Florida |
Brady Singer | Florida | |
C | Michael Papierski | LSU |
1B | Drew Mendoza | Florida State |
2B | Nick Madrigal | Oregon State |
3B | Dylan Busby | Florida State |
SS | Timmy Richards | Cal State Fullerton |
OF | Antoine Duplantis | LSU |
Austin Langworthy | Florida | |
Zach Watson | LSU | |
DH | Brendan McKay | Louisville |
Final standings
Seeds listed below indicate national seeds only
Place | School | Record |
---|---|---|
1st | No. 3 Florida | 10–3 |
2nd | No. 4 LSU | 9–3 |
3rd | No. 1 Oregon St | 7–2 |
No. 6 TCU | 8–2 | |
5th | Florida State | 7–3 |
No. 7 Louisville | 6–2 | |
7th | Cal State Fullerton | 5–3 |
Texas A&M | 5–2 | |
9th | Davidson | 3–2 |
Kentucky | 4–3 | |
Long Beach St. | 5–3 | |
Mississippi State | 4–3 | |
Missouri State | 3–3 | |
Sam Houston St. | 4–3 | |
Vanderbilt | 3–3 | |
Wake Forest | 4–2 | |
17th | Arkansas | 3–2 |
Auburn | 2–2 | |
Bethune–Cookman | 2–2 | |
Clemson | 3–2 | |
Dallas Baptist | 2–2 | |
Houston | 2–2 | |
NC State | 2–2 | |
No. 2 North Carolina | 2–2 | |
Rice | 2–2 | |
Southern Miss | 2–2 | |
No. 8 Stanford | 2–2 | |
Texas | 2–2 | |
No. 5 Texas Tech | 2–2 | |
West Virginia | 2–2 | |
Xavier | 2–2 | |
Yale | 2–2 | |
33rd | Arizona | 1–2 |
BYU | 1–2 | |
Florida Gulf Coast | 1–2 | |
Holy Cross | 1–2 | |
Indiana | 1–2 | |
Iowa | 1–2 | |
Maryland | 1–2 | |
Oklahoma | 1–2 | |
Oral Roberts | 1–2 | |
San Diego State | 1–2 | |
South Alabama | 1–2 | |
South Florida | 1–2 | |
Southeastern Louisiana | 1–2 | |
Tennessee Tech | 1–2 | |
UNC Greensboro | 1–2 | |
Virginia | 1–2 | |
49th | Baylor | 0–2 |
Central Connecticut State | 0–2 | |
Delaware | 0–2 | |
Marist | 0–2 | |
Michigan | 0–2 | |
Nebraska | 0–2 | |
Ohio | 0–2 | |
Oklahoma State | 0–2 | |
Radford | 0–2 | |
Sacramento State | 0–2 | |
St. John's | 0–2 | |
Texas Southern | 0–2 | |
UCF | 0–2 | |
UCLA | 0–2 | |
UIC | 0–2 | |
UMBC | 0–2 |
Record by conference
Conference | # of Bids | Record | Win % | Nc Record | Nc Win % | RF | SR | WS | NS | CS | NC |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SEC | 8 | 40–21 | .656 | 36–17 | .679 | 8 | 6 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 1 |
Big 12 | 7 | 15–14 | .517 | 15–14 | .517 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 1 | – | – |
Pac-12 | 4 | 10–8 | .556 | 10–8 | .556 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | – | – |
ACC | 7 | 25–15 | .625 | 25–15 | .625 | 6 | 3 | 2 | – | – | – |
Big West | 2 | 10–6 | .625 | 7–3 | .700 | 2 | 2 | 1 | – | – | – |
Missouri Valley | 2 | 5–5 | .500 | 5–5 | .500 | 2 | 1 | – | – | – | – |
Southland | 2 | 5–5 | .500 | 5–5 | .500 | 1 | 1 | – | – | – | – |
Atlantic 10 | 1 | 3–2 | .600 | 3–2 | .600 | 1 | 1 | – | – | – | – |
Conference USA | 2 | 4–4 | .500 | 4–4 | .500 | 2 | – | – | – | – | – |
American | 3 | 3–6 | .333 | 3–6 | .333 | 1 | – | – | – | – | – |
Big East | 2 | 2–4 | .333 | 2–4 | .333 | 1 | – | – | – | – | – |
Big Ten | 5 | 3–10 | .231 | 3–10 | .231 | – | – | – | – | – | – |
Other | 19 | 13–38 | .255 | 13–38 | .255 | 2 | – | – | – | – | – |
The columns RF, SR, WS, NS, CS, and NC respectively stand for the Regional Finals, Super Regionals, College World Series Teams, National Semifinals, Championship Series, and National Champion.
Nc is non–conference records, i.e., with the records of teams within the same conference having played each other removed.
Media coverage
Radio
NRG Media provided nationwide radio coverage of the College World Series through its Omaha station KOZN, in association with Westwood One. It was streamed at westwoodonesports.com, on TuneIn, and on SiriusXM. Kevin Kugler and John Bishop called all games leading up to the Championship Series with Gary Sharp acting as the field reporter. The Championship Series was called by Kugler and Scott Graham with Bishop acting as field reporter.
Television
ESPN carried every game from the Regionals, Super Regionals, and College World Series across its networks. During the Regionals and Super Regionals ESPN offered a dedicated channel, ESPN Bases Loaded (carried in the same channel allotments as its "Goal Line" and "Buzzer Beater" services for football and basketball), which carried live look-ins and analysis across all games in progress.
Broadcast assignments
References
- ^ a b "Baseball Division I Championship". NCAA. Retrieved May 29, 2017.
- ^ "Team Directory". Archived from the original on 2010-12-30. Retrieved 2016-10-29.
- ^ Nyatawa, Jon (June 27, 2017). "Florida's Alex Faedo named CWS most outstanding player; all-tournament team released". Omaha World-Herald. Retrieved June 28, 2017.
- ^ a b "Batter Up: ESPN's Coverage of NCAA Division I Baseball Championship Begins Thursday with Regionals". ESPN Media Zone. Retrieved 2017-05-30.
- ^ a b "NCAA Division I Baseball Championship Coverage Continues on ESPN This Weekend with Super Regionals". ESPN Media Zone. Retrieved 2017-06-07.
- ^ a b "Men's College World Series Begins Saturday, June 17 on ESPN". ESPN Media Zone. Retrieved 2017-06-15.
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