2020 Southeastern Conference Baseball Tournament

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2020 Southeastern Conference
Baseball Tournament
Teams12
FormatSee below
Finals site
MVP()
2020 Southeastern Conference baseball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
Eastern
No. 1 Florida  ‍‍‍ 0 0   16 1   .941
Tennessee  ‍‍‍ 0 0   15 2   .882
No. 3 Georgia  ‍‍‍ 0 0   14 4   .778
South Carolina  ‍‍‍ 0 0   12 4   .750
No. 6 Vanderbilt  ‍‍‍ 0 0   13 5   .722
Missouri •  ‍‍‍ 0 0   11 5   .688
Kentucky  ‍‍‍ 0 0   11 6   .647
Western
No. 8 Ole Miss  ‍‍‍ 0 0   16 1   .941
Alabama  ‍‍‍ 0 0   16 1   .941
Texas A&M  ‍‍‍ 0 0   15 3   .833
No. 17 Mississippi State  ‍‍‍ 0 0   12 4   .750
No. 18 Auburn  ‍‍‍ 0 0   13 5   .722
No. 19 LSU  ‍‍‍ 0 0   12 5   .706
No. 14 Arkansas  ‍‍‍ 0 0   11 5   .688
‡ – Tournament champion
  • – ineligible for postseason due to NCAA sanctions
    As of February 1, 2022[1]; Rankings from D1Baseball

The 2020 Southeastern Conference Baseball Tournament was scheduled to be held from May 19 through May 24 at Hoover Metropolitan Stadium in Hoover, Alabama. The annual tournament determines the tournament champion of the Division I Southeastern Conference in college baseball. The tournament champion would have earned the conference's automatic bid to the 2020 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament[2]

The tournament has been held every year since 1977, with LSU claiming twelve championships, the most of any school. Original members Georgia and Kentucky along with 1993 addition Arkansas have never won the tournament. This is the twenty-first consecutive year and twenty-third overall that the event has been held at Hoover Metropolitan Stadium, known from 2007 through 2012 as Regions Park. Texas A&M joined in 2013, and won its first title in 2016. Missouri, which also joined in 2013, has yet to win the event.

Missouri would have been ineligible to participate in this year's tournament due to a postseason ban.[3] On March 17, 2020, the SEC cancelled all remaining spring competitions and championships due to the coronavirus pandemic.[4]

References[]

  1. ^ "2020 Standings". Southeastern Conference. Retrieved March 12, 2020.
  2. ^ "Championship – Baseball". Southeastern Conference. Retrieved November 28, 2019.
  3. ^ "Missouri's NCAA appeal denied, confirming postseason ban for football, baseball and softball". USA Today. November 26, 2019. Retrieved February 27, 2020.
  4. ^ "SEC statement on remaining 2020 competition". SECsports.com. March 17, 2020. Retrieved March 17, 2020.
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