2021 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament

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2021 NCAA Division I
Baseball Tournament
Season2021
Teams64
Finals site
ChampionsMississippi State (1st title)
Runner-upVanderbilt (5th CWS Appearance)
Winning coachChris Lemonis (1st title)
()

The 2021 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament was the 74th edition of the NCAA Division I Baseball Championship. The 64-team tournament began on Friday, June 4, 2021, as part of the 2021 NCAA Division I baseball season and concluded with the 2021 College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska, which started on June 19 and ended on June 30.[1] Mississippi State defeated Vanderbilt in the best-of-three final series to win their first national championship in program history.

The 64 participating NCAA Division I college baseball teams were selected out of an eligible 299 teams. There were 30[a] teams awarded an automatic bid as champions of their conferences, and 34 teams were selected at-large by the NCAA Division I Baseball Committee. Teams were divided into sixteen regionals of four teams, each of 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]

Grand Canyon,[3] NJIT,[4] Norfolk State[5] and Presbyterian[6] made their NCAA tournament debuts after winning their first conference tournaments in program history. Nevada qualified for the tournament for the first time since 2000,[7] Rider qualified for the first time since 2010[8] and Charlotte qualified for the first time since 2011.[9] Auburn and Louisville were the lone teams from the 2019 College World Series field to fail to qualify.

Tournament procedure[]

A total of 64 teams entered the tournament, with 30 of them (down from 31, due to the Ivy League having cancelled all spring sports due to COVID-19)[10] receiving an automatic bid by winning their conference's tournament. The remaining 34 bids were at-large", with selections extended by the NCAA Selection Committee.

On Friday, May 14, the NCAA Selection Committee announced 20 potential sites for the first round regionals due to necessary coronavirus precautions, which were reduced to 16 on May 30.[11][12] Typically, the top sixteen teams receive national seeds and host their respective regional tournaments. However, since the committee determined only twenty potential sites, if a team outside that list of twenty were to receive a national seed, they would play their regional on the road. This had not occurred since 2010 when No. 1 seed Florida State Seminoles traveled to the Norwich Regional hosted by UConn at Dodd Memorial Stadium.[13] Despite receiving a national seed, Old Dominion travelled to Founders Park at the Columbia Regional hosted by the University of South Carolina.

Schedule and venues[]

On May 30, the NCAA Division I Baseball Committee announced the sixteen regional host sites. The Southeastern Conference led the way with seven hosts. The Big 12 Conference and Pac-12 Conference each had three regional hosts, while Conference USA, Atlantic Coast Conference, and American Athletic Conference each had one regional host. Texas led all institutions as they hosted for the 28th time. Louisiana Tech hosted for the first time in program history.[14]

The Super Regional sites were announced on the morning of Tuesday, June 8, after the completion of the regional round.[14]

Regionals

Super Regionals

  • June 11–13
    • Baum–Walker Stadium, Fayetteville, Arkansas (Host: University of Arkansas)
    • Dan Law Field at Rip Griffin Park, Lubbock, Texas (Host: Texas Tech University)
    • Hi Corbett Field, Tucson, Arizona (Host: University of Arizona)
    • Hawkins Field, Nashville, Tennessee (Host: Vanderbilt University)
  • June 12–14
    • UFCU Disch–Falk Field, Austin, Texas (Host: University of Texas at Austin)
    • Dudy Noble Field, Polk–DeMent Stadium, Starkville, Mississippi (Host: Mississippi State University)
    • Founders Park, Columbia, South Carolina (Host: University of South Carolina)
    • Lindsey Nelson Stadium, Knoxville, Tennessee (Host: University of Tennessee)

College World Series

Bids[]

Automatic bids[]

School Conference Record (Conf) Berth Last NCAA Appearance
NJIT America East 26–22 (23–17) First appearance
South Florida American 28–27 (14–14) Tournament 2018 (DeLand Regional)
Jacksonville ASUN 16–32 (4–15) 2018 (Gainesville Regional)
Duke ACC 32–20 (16–17) Tournament 2019 (Morgantown Regional)
VCU Atlantic 10 37–14 (13–3) Tournament 2015 (Dallas Regional)
TCU Big 12 40–17 (17–7) Tournament 2019 (Fayetteville Regional)
UConn Big East 33–16 (13–4) Tournament 2019 (Oklahoma City Regional)
Presbyterian Big South 22–21 (18–16) First appearance
Nebraska Big Ten 31–12 (31–12) Regular Season 2019 (Oklahoma City Regional)
UC Irvine Big West 40–16 (32–8) Regular Season 2014 College World Series
Northeastern Colonial 36–10 (20–3) Tournament 2018 (Raleigh Regional)
Old Dominion Conference USA 42–14 (22–10) Tournament 2014 (Columbia Regional)
Wright State Horizon 35–11 (28–4) Tournament 2018 (Stanford Regional)
Rider Metro Atlantic 23–16 (18–16) 2010 (Austin Regional)
Central Michigan Mid-American 40–16 (31–9) Regular Season 2019 (Starkville Regional)
Norfolk State Mid-Eastern 25–26 (18–10) Tournament First appearance
Dallas Baptist Missouri Valley 37–15 (18–6) Tournament 2019 (Lubbock Regional)
Nevada Mountain West 25–18 (22–9) Regular Season 2000 (Palo Alto Regional)
Central Connecticut Northeast 28–13 (21–9) Tournament 2019 (Fayetteville Regional)
Southeast Missouri State Ohio Valley 30–20 (17–10) Tournament 2016 (Starkville Regional)
Arizona Pac-12 40–15 (21–9) Regular Season 2017 (Lubbock Regional)
Army West Point Patriot 28–23 (15–10) Tournament 2019 (Lubbock Regional)
Arkansas SEC 46–10 (22–8) Tournament 2019 College World Series
Samford Southern 35–22 (20–10) Tournament 2018 (Tallahassee Regional)
McNeese State Southland 32–28 (21–18) 2019 (Nashville Regional)
Southern Southwestern Athletic 20–28 (13–11) Tournament 2019 (Starkville Regional)
North Dakota State Summit 41–17 (20–11) Tournament 2014 (Corvallis Regional)
South Alabama Sun Belt 33���20 (15–9) 2017 (Hattiesburg Regional)
Gonzaga West Coast 33–17 (20–7) Regular Season 2018 (Minneapolis Regional)
Grand Canyon Western Athletic 39–19–1 (29–7) First appearance

At-large[]

Team Conference Record (Conf) Last NCAA Appearance
Alabama SEC 31–24 (12–17) 2014 (Tallahassee Regional)
Arizona State Pac-12 32–20 (16–14) 2019 (Baton Rouge Regional)
Campbell Big South 35–16 (28–9) 2019 (Greenville Regional)
Charlotte Conference USA 39–19 (24–8) 2011 (Tempe Regional)
East Carolina American 41–15 (20–8) 2019 (Louisville Super Regional)
Fairfield Metro Atlantic 37–3 (33–1) 2016 (Lubbock Regional)
Florida SEC 38–20 (17–13) 2019 (Lubbock Regional)
Florida State ACC 30–22 (20–16) 2019 College World Series
Georgia Tech ACC 29–23 (21–15) 2019 (Atlanta Regional)
Indiana State Missouri Valley 30–19 (14–10) 2019 (Nashville Regional)
Liberty ASUN 39–14 (19–2) 2019 (Chapel Hill Regional)
Louisiana Tech Conference USA 40–18 (22–8) 2016 (Starkville Regional)
LSU SEC 34–22 (13–17) 2019 (Baton Rouge Super Regional)
Maryland Big Ten 28–16 (28–16) 2017 (Winston-Salem Regional)
Miami (FL) ACC 32–19 (20–15) 2019 (Starkville Regional)
Michigan Big Ten 27–17 (27–17) 2019 College World Series Runner-up
Mississippi State SEC 40–15 (20–10) 2019 College World Series
NC State ACC 30–17 (19–14) 2019 (Greenville Regional)
North Carolina ACC 27–25 (18–18) 2019 (Chapel Hill Super Regional)
Notre Dame ACC 30–11 (25–10) 2015 (Champaign Regional)
Oklahoma State Big 12 35–17–1 (12–12) 2019 (Lubbock Super Regional)
Ole Miss SEC 41–19 (18–12) 2019 (Fayetteville Super Regional)
Oregon Pac-12 37–14 (20–10) 2015 (Springfield Regional)
Oregon State Pac-12 34–22 (16–14) 2019 (Corvallis Regional)
South Carolina SEC 33–21 (16–14) 2018 (Fayetteville Super Regional)
Southern Miss Conference USA 37–19 (22–9) 2019 (Baton Rouge Regional)
Stanford Pac-12 33–14 (17–10) 2019 (Starkville Super Regional)
Tennessee SEC 45–16 (20–10) 2019 (Chapel Hill Regional)
Texas Big 12 42–15 (17–7) 2018 College World Series
Texas Tech Big 12 36–15 (14–10) 2019 College World Series
UCLA Pac-12 35–18 (18–12) 2019 (Los Angeles Super Regional)
UC Santa Barbara Big West 39–18 (29–11) 2019 (Stanford Regional)
Vanderbilt SEC 40–15 (19–10) 2019 National Champions
Virginia ACC 29–23 (18–18) 2017 (Fort Worth Regional)

By conference[]

Conference Total Schools
SEC 9 Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, LSU, Mississippi State, Ole Miss, South Carolina, Tennessee, Vanderbilt
ACC 8 Duke, Florida State, Georgia Tech, Miami, NC State, North Carolina, Notre Dame, Virginia
Pac-12 6 Arizona, Arizona State, Oregon, Oregon State, Stanford, UCLA
Big 12 4 TCU, Texas, Texas Tech, Oklahoma State
Conference USA 4 Charlotte, Louisiana Tech, Old Dominion, Southern Miss
Big Ten 3 Maryland, Michigan, Nebraska
American 2 East Carolina, South Florida
ASUN 2 Liberty, Jacksonville
Big South 2 Campbell, Presbyterian
Big West 2 UC Irvine, UC Santa Barbara
Metro Atlantic 2 Fairfield, Rider
Missouri Valley 2 Dallas Baptist, Indiana State
America East 1 NJIT
Atlantic 10 1 VCU
Big East 1 UConn
Colonial 1 Northeastern
Horizon 1 Wright State
Mid-American 1 Central Michigan
Mid-Eastern 1 Norfolk State
Mountain West 1 Nevada
Northeast 1 Central Connecticut
Ohio Valley 1 Southeast Missouri State
Patriot 1 Army
Southern 1 Samford
Southland 1 McNeese State
Southwestern Athletic 1 Southern
Summit 1 North Dakota State
Sun Belt 1 South Alabama
West Coast 1 Gonzaga
Western Athletic 1 Grand Canyon

National seeds[]

The sixteen national seeds were announced on the Selection Show on Monday, May 31, 2021 at 12 p.m. EDT on ESPN2.[15] Teams in italics advanced to the Super Regionals. Teams in bold advanced to the 2021 College World Series.

Regionals and Super Regionals[]

Bold indicates winner. Seeds for regional tournaments indicate seeds within regional. Seeds for super regional tournaments indicate national seeds only.

Fayetteville Super Regional[]

Regional Regional Regional Final Super Regional
               
1 Arkansas 13
4 NJIT 8
1 Arkansas 5
2 Nebraska 1
3 Northeastern 6
2 Nebraska 8
1 Arkansas 3 6
Fayetteville Regional – Baum–Walker Stadium
2 Nebraska 5 2
4 NJIT 3
3 Northeastern 2
4 NJIT 4
2 Nebraska 18
1 Arkansas 21 5 2
NC State 2 6 3
1 Louisiana Tech 18
4 Rider 2
1 Louisiana Tech 3
2 NC State 8
3 Alabama 1
2 NC State 8
2 NC State 14
Ruston Regional – J. C. Love Field at Pat Patterson Park
1 Louisiana Tech 7
4 Rider 1
3 Alabama 3
3 Alabama 8
1 Louisiana Tech 10

Lubbock Super Regional[]

Regional Regional Regional Final Super Regional
               
1 Texas Tech 6
4 Army 3
1 Texas Tech 7
3 North Carolina 2
3 North Carolina 5
2 UCLA 4
1 Texas Tech 8
Lubbock Regional – Dan Law Field at Rip Griffin Park
2 UCLA 2
4 Army 6
2 UCLA 13
2 UCLA 12
3 North Carolina 2
8 Texas Tech 3 0
9 Stanford 15 9
1 Stanford 9
4 North Dakota State 1
1 Stanford 12
2 UC Irvine 4
3 Nevada 0
2 UC Irvine 7
1 Stanford 4 11
Stanford Regional – Klein Field at Sunken Diamond
2 UC Irvine 8 8
4 North Dakota State 6
3 Nevada 1
4 North Dakota State 3
2 UC Irvine 18

Tucson Super Regional[]

Regional Regional Regional Final Super Regional
               
1 Arizona 12
4 Grand Canyon 6
1 Arizona 4
3 UC Santa Barbara 0
3 UC Santa Barbara 14
2 Oklahoma State 4
1 Arizona 5
Tucson Regional – Hi Corbett Field
3 UC Santa Barbara 2
4 Grand Canyon 3
2 Oklahoma State 5
2 Oklahoma State 3
3 UC Santa Barbara 13
5 Arizona 9 3 16
12 Ole Miss 3 12 3
1 Ole Miss 6
4 Southeast Missouri State 3
1 Ole Miss 4
3 Florida State 3
3 Florida State 5
2 Southern Miss 2
1 Ole Miss 7 12
Oxford Regional – Swayze Field
2 Southern Miss 10 9
4 Southeast Missouri State 0
2 Southern Miss 21
2 Southern Miss 7
3 Florida State 4

Nashville Super Regional[]

Regional Regional Regional Final Super Regional
               
1 Vanderbilt 10
4 Presbyterian 0
1 Vanderbilt 4
2 Georgia Tech 3
3 Indiana State 6
2 Georgia Tech 7
1 Vanderbilt 14
Nashville Regional – Hawkins Field
2 Georgia Tech 1111
4 Presbyterian 2
3 Indiana State 9
3 Indiana State 0
2 Georgia Tech 9
4 Vanderbilt 2 4
13 East Carolina 0 1
1 East Carolina 8
4 Norfolk State 5
1 East Carolina 7
2 Charlotte 5
3 Maryland 10
2 Charlotte 13
1 East Carolina 9
Greenville Regional – Clark–LeClair Stadium
3 Maryland 6
4 Norfolk State 0
3 Maryland 16
3 Maryland 2
2 Charlotte 1

Knoxville Super Regional[]

Regional Regional Regional Final Super Regional
               
1 Tennessee 9
4 Wright State 8
1 Tennessee 9
3 Liberty 3
3 Liberty 11
2 Duke 6
1 Tennessee 3
Knoxville Regional – Lindsey Nelson Stadium
3 Liberty 1
4 Wright State 6
2 Duke 14
2 Duke 4
3 Liberty 15
3 Tennessee 4 15
LSU 2 6
1 Oregon 13
4 Central Connecticut 10
1 Oregon 7
2 Gonzaga 3
3 LSU 0
2 Gonzaga 3
1 Oregon 1 8
Eugene Regional – PK Park
3 LSU 4 9
4 Central Connecticut 5
3 LSU 610
3 LSU 9
2 Gonzaga 4

Columbia Super Regional[]

The Columbia Super Regional between Dallas Baptist and Virginia was held at Founders Park due to NCAA COVID-19 guidelines for the 2021 tournament mandating that all Super Regionals take place at one of the original sixteen regional sites regardless of the winners of those regionals.[16]

Regional Regional Regional Final Super Regional
               
1 TCU 12
4 McNeese State 4
1 TCU 6
3 Dallas Baptist 8
3 Dallas Baptist 6
2 Oregon State 5
3 Dallas Baptist 4 8
Fort Worth Regional – Lupton Stadium
2 Oregon State 5 5
4 McNeese State 5
2 Oregon State 10
2 Oregon State 3
1 TCU 2
Dallas Baptist 6 0 2
Virginia 5 4 5
1 Old Dominion 4
4 Jacksonville 3
1 Old Dominion 2
2 South Carolina 1
3 Virginia 3
2 South Carolina 4
1 Old Dominion 3 3
Columbia Regional – Founders Park
3 Virginia 8 410
4 Jacksonville 8
3 Virginia 13
3 Virginia 3
2 South Carolina 2

Old Dominion was unable to host at their home stadium, Bud Metheny Baseball Complex in Norfolk, Virginia, due to inadequate facilities according to NCAA regional hosting guidelines.[17]

Starkville Super Regional[]

Regional Regional Regional Final Super Regional
               
1 Mississippi State 8
4 Samford 4
1 Mississippi State 16
2 VCU 4
3 Campbell 4
2 VCU 19
1 Mississippi State 6
Starkville Regional – Dudy Noble Field, Polk–DeMent Stadium
3 Campbell 5
4 Samford 13
3 Campbell 16
3 Campbell 19
2 VCU 10
7 Mississippi State 9 1 11
10 Notre Dame 8 9 7
1 Notre Dame 10
4 Central Michigan 0
1 Notre Dame 26
2 UConn 3
3 Michigan 1
2 UConn 6
1 Notre Dame 14
South Bend Regional – Frank Eck Stadium
4 Central Michigan 2
4 Central Michigan 8
3 Michigan 2
4 Central Michigan 14
2 UConn 9

Austin Super Regional[]

Regional Regional Regional Final Super Regional
               
1 Texas 11
4 Southern 0
1 Texas 10
2 Arizona State 3
3 Fairfield 6
2 Arizona State 7
1 Texas 12
Austin Regional – UFCU Disch–Falk Field
3 Fairfield 2
4 Southern 2
3 Fairfield 6
3 Fairfield 9
2 Arizona State 7
2 Texas 4 12
South Florida 3 4
1 Florida 3
4 South Florida 5
4 South Florida 10
2 Miami (FL) 2
3 South Alabama 0
2 Miami (FL) 1
4 South Florida 0 6
Gainesville Regional – Florida Ballpark
3 South Alabama 4 4
1 Florida 1
3 South Alabama 19
3 South Alabama 7
2 Miami (FL) 2

College World Series[]

The College World Series was held at TD Ameritrade Park Omaha in Omaha, Nebraska.

Participants[]

School Conference Record (Conf) Head Coach Super Regional Previous CWS Appearances CWS Best Finish CWS W-L Record
NC State ACC 35–18 (19–14) Elliott Avent Fayetteville 2
(last: 2013)
3rd
(1968)
3–4
Stanford Pac–12 38–15 (17–10) David Esquer Lubbock 16
(last: 2008)
1st
(1987, 1988)
40–29
Arizona Pac–12 45–16 (21–9) Jay Johnson Tucson 17
(last: 2016)
1st
(1976, 1980, 1986, 2012)
43–30
Vanderbilt SEC 45–15 (19–10) Tim Corbin Nashville 4
(last: 2019)
1st
(2014, 2019)
16–7
Tennessee SEC 50–16 (20–10) Tony Vitello Knoxville 4
(last: 2005)
2nd
(1951)
8–8
Virginia ACC 35–25 (18–18) Brian O'Connor Columbia 5
(last: 2015)
1st
(2015)
12–8
Mississippi State SEC 45–16 (20–10) Chris Lemonis Starkville 11
(last: 2019)
2nd
(2013)
13–22
Texas Big 12 47–15 (17–7) David Pierce Austin 36
(last: 2018)
1st
(1949, 1950, 1975,
1983, 2002, 2005)
85–61


Bracket[]

First round Second round Semifinals Finals
               
NC State 10
9 Stanford 4
NC State 1
4 Vanderbilt 0
5 Arizona 6
4 Vanderbilt 712
NC State 1
4 Vanderbilt 3 [A]
9 Stanford 14
5 Arizona 5
9 Stanford 5
4 Vanderbilt 6
4 Vanderbilt 8 2 0
7 Mississippi State 2 13 9
3 Tennessee 0
Virginia 6
Virginia 5
7 Mississippi State 6
7 Mississippi State 2
2 Texas 1
7 Mississippi State 5 4
2 Texas 8 3
3 Tennessee 4
2 Texas 8
2 Texas 6
Virginia 2

Game results[]

Date Game Winning team Score Losing team Winning pitcher Losing pitcher Save Notes
June 19 Game 1 NC State 10–4 Stanford Reid Johnston (9–3) Brendan Beck (9–2) Evan Justice (12)
Game 2 Vanderbilt 7–6 (12) Arizona Chris McElvain (5–1) Vince Vannelle (5–3) ���
June 20 Game 3 Virginia 6–0 Tennessee Andrew Abbott (9–6) Chad Dallas (11–2) Matt Wyatt (1)
Game 4 Mississippi State 2–1 Texas Will Bednar (8–1) Ty Madden (7–5) Landon Sims (11)
June 21 Game 5 Stanford 14–5 Arizona Alex Williams (5–2) Garrett Irvin (6–3) Jacob Palisch (2) Arizona eliminated
Game 6 NC State 1–0 Vanderbilt Sam Highfill (9–2) Jack Leiter (10–4) Evan Justice (13)
June 22 Game 7 Texas 8–4 Tennessee Tanner Witt (5–0) Sean Hunley (7–5) Tennessee eliminated
Game 8 Mississippi State 6–5 Virginia Cade Smith (3–0) Stephen Schoch (4–2) Landon Sims (12)
June 23 Game 9 Vanderbilt 6–5 Stanford Luke Murphy (4–1) Brendan Beck (9–3) Stanford eliminated
June 24 Game 10 Texas 6–2 Virginia Cole Quintanilla (5–0) Matt Wyatt (4–2) Aaron Nixon (9) Virginia eliminated
June 25 Game 11 Vanderbilt 3–1 NC State Kumar Rocker (14–3) Garrett Payne (0–1) Luke Murphy (9)
Game 12 Texas 8–5 Mississippi State Aaron Nixon (4–3) Brandon Smith (4–4)
June 26 Game 13 Vanderbilt WO NC State Game declared no contest NC State eliminated
Game 14 Mississippi State 4–3 Texas Landon Sims (5–0) Cole Quintanilla (5–1) Texas eliminated
Finals
June 28 Game 1 Vanderbilt 8–2 Mississippi State Jack Leiter (11–4) Christian MacLeod (6–6) Nick Maldonado (9) Vanderbilt 1–0
June 29 Game 2 Mississippi State 13–2 Vanderbilt Preston Johnson (4–0) Christian Little (3–2) Tied 1–1
June 30 Game 3 Mississippi State 9–0 Vanderbilt Will Bednar (9–1) Kumar Rocker (14–4) Landon Sims (13) Mississippi State 2–1


All-Tournament Team[]

The following players were members of the College World Series All-Tournament Team.[19]

Position Player School
P & MOP Will Bednar Mississippi State
P Jack Leiter Vanderbilt
C Logan Tanner Mississippi State
1B Luke Hancock Mississippi State
2B Tim Tawa Stanford
3B Zack Gelof Virginia
SS Lane Forsythe Mississippi State
OF Tanner Allen Mississippi State
Brock Jones Stanford
Rowdey Jordan Mississippi State
DH Ivan Melendez Texas


Final standings[]

Seeds listed below indicate national seeds only

Place School Record
1st No. 7 Mississippi State 10–3
2nd No. 4 Vanderbilt 9–3
3rd No. 2 Texas 8–2
NC State 7–2
5th No. 9 Stanford 6–3
Virginia 7–4
7th No. 3 Tennessee 5–2
No. 5 Arizona 5–3
9th No. 1 Arkansas 4–3
Dallas Baptist 4–3
No. 13 East Carolina 3–2
LSU 4–3
No. 10 Notre Dame 4–2
No. 12 Ole Miss 4–3
South Florida 3–3
No. 8 Texas Tech 3–2
17th Campbell 2–2
Central Michigan 2–2
Fairfield 2–2
Georgia Tech 2–2
Liberty 2–2
No. 16 Louisiana Tech 2–2
Maryland 2–2
Nebraska 3–2
No. 11 Old Dominion 2–2
No. 14 Oregon 2–2
Oregon State 3–2
South Alabama 3–2
Southern Miss 3–2
UC Irvine 3–2
UCLA 2–2
UC Santa Barbara 2–2
33rd Alabama 1–2
Arizona State 1–2
Charlotte 1–2
Duke 1–2
Florida State 1–2
Gonzaga 1–2
Indiana State 1–2
Miami (FL) 1–2
NJIT 1–2
North Carolina 1–2
North Dakota State 1–2
Oklahoma State 1–2
South Carolina 1–2
No. 6 TCU 1–2
UConn 1–2
VCU 1–2
49th Army 0–2
Central Connecticut 0–2
No. 15 Florida 0–2
Grand Canyon 0–2
Jacksonville 0–2
McNeese State 0–2
Michigan 0–2
Nevada 0–2
Norfolk State 0–2
Northeastern 0–2
Presbyterian 0–2
Rider 0–2
Samford 0–2
Southeast Missouri St 0–2
Southern 0–2
Wright State 0–2

Record by conference[]

Conference # of Bids Record Win % Nc Record Nc Win % RF SR WS NS CS NC
SEC 9 38–23 .623 33–18 .647 6 6 3 2 2 1
ACC 8 24–18 .571 24–18 .571 4 3 2 1
Big 12 4 13–8 .619 13–8 .619 2 2 1 1
Pac-12 6 19–14 .576 18–13 .581 5 2 2
American 2 6–5 .545 6–5 .545 2 2
Missouri Valley 2 5–5 .500 5–5 .500 1 1
Conference USA 4 8–8 .500 8–8 .500 3
Big Ten 3 5–6 .455 5–6 .455 2
Big West 2 5–4 .556 5–4 .556 2
ASUN 2 2–4 .333 2–4 .333 1
Big South 2 2–4 .333 2–4 .333 1
Metro Atlantic 2 2–4 .333 2–4 .333 1
Mid-American 1 2–2 .500 2–2 .500 1
Sun Belt 1 3–2 .600 3–2 .600 1
Other 16 5–32 .135 5–32 .135

Includes a game declared no-contest due to COVID-19 protocols with NC State. Vanderbilt advanced to the CWS Finals.

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 will provide nationwide radio coverage of the College World Series through its Omaha Station KOZN, in association with Westwood One. It also will stream all CWS games at westwoodonesports.com on Tunein and on SiriusXM. Kevin Kugler and John Bishop will provide pxp on games leading up to the Championship Series. Bishop (Gms 6, 8-10, 12), Jeff Leise (Gms 2, 4-5), Damon Benning (Gms 1, 3, 7, 11), and Gary Sharp (Gms 13-14) will provide the analysis. The Championship Series will be called by Kugler and Scott Graham.

Television[]

ESPN will air every game from the Regionals, Super Regionals, and the College World Series across its networks.

Broadcast assignments[]

Regionals[]

[20]

Super Regionals[]

[21]

College World Series[]

[22]

CWS Championship Series[]

[22]


Notes[]

  1. ^ Game declared no contest due to COVID-19 protocols with NC State. Vanderbilt advanced in the tournament.[18]
  1. ^ The Ivy League canceled its 2021 season, dropping the number of automatic bids from 31 to 30 for the 2021 tournament.[2]

References[]

  1. ^ a b "Baseball Division I Championship". NCAA. Retrieved January 12, 2021.
  2. ^ Adams, Susan (February 18, 2021). "The Ivy League Cancels Spring 2021 Sports". Forbes. Retrieved May 30, 2021.
  3. ^ Obert, Richard (May 30, 2021). "Tyler Wilson's 9th-inning single sends Grand Canyon into the NCAA Division I baseball tournament for first time". The Arizona Republic. Retrieved May 30, 2021. GCU (39-19-1) rallied from a 4-1 deficit to reach the NCAA Division I baseball tournament for the first time in its history.
  4. ^ Rubin, Roger (May 30, 2021). "SBU baseball doesn't get chance to play for NCAA Tournament". Newsday. Retrieved May 30, 2021. With a full day of rain in the forecast, the conference and game officials decided to end the tournament without crowning a champion. As a result, the Highlanders – not the Seawolves – will get the bid.
  5. ^ Nimmo, Ray (May 22, 2021). "Norfolk State wins first MEAC baseball title with 11th-inning walk-off". The Virginian-Pilot. Retrieved May 29, 2021.
  6. ^ Morris, Julia (May 29, 2021). "Presbyterian baseball team wins first Big South Championship in program history". WYFF. Fayetteville, North Carolina. Retrieved May 30, 2021. Presbyterian recorded the baseball program's first Big South Championship
  7. ^ Moran, Kirsten (May 29, 2021). "'It's been a long road coming.' Nevada baseball family members react to MW title". Nevada Sports Net. Retrieved May 30, 2021. The Wolf Pack also earned the league's automatic bid to the NCAA Regionals for the first time in twenty one years.
  8. ^ "Baseball Draws Louisiana Tech in NCAA Tournament Regional". gobroncs.com. May 31, 2021. Retrieved June 13, 2021. The Broncs are making their first appearance in the tournament since the 2010 season.
  9. ^ "Baseball Earns #2 Seed for Greenville Regional Opening Friday". charlotte49ers.com. May 31, 2021. Retrieved June 13, 2021. The 49ers, earning a #2 seed becoming the highest-ever in program history and second overall at-large bid, get the invite from the NCAA for the first time since 2011.
  10. ^ Witz, Billy (February 18, 2021). "Ivy League Cancels Spring Sports Despite Pleas From Athletes". The New York Times. Retrieved May 20, 2021.
  11. ^ Cahill, Teddy (May 14, 2021). "Shortlist Of 20 Potential NCAA Tournament Host Sites Announced". Baseball America. Retrieved May 20, 2021.
  12. ^ "Division I Baseball Committee announces championship host sites". National Collegiate Athletic Association. Indianapolis. May 14, 2021. Retrieved May 29, 2021.
  13. ^ Cahill, Teddy (May 28, 2021). "2021 NCAA Baseball Tournament Final Projected Field Of 64". Baseball America. Retrieved May 29, 2021. The selection committee has not sent a top seed on the road since 2010 when Florida State was the No. 1 seed in the Norwich Regional, hosted by Connecticut.
  14. ^ a b "Sixteen Regional Sites Selected For 2021 NCAA Baseball Championship". NCAA.com. Indianapolis. May 30, 2021. Retrieved May 30, 2021.
  15. ^ "2021 college baseball tournament selection show: Time, how to watch". www.ncaa.com. May 27, 2021. Retrieved May 31, 2021.
  16. ^ Bezjak, Lou (June 8, 2021). "Founders Park will host Super Regional round of NCAAs this weekend". The State. Retrieved June 9, 2021. Under the unique tournament rules set by the NCAA amid the COVID-19 pandemic, 16 host sites were determined prior to the tournament field being announced. Host could be called upon to host a super regional between two teams that weren’t previously picked to host.
  17. ^ Portnoy, Ben (June 4, 2021). "Old Dominion headlines regional at USC. Monarchs hope to one day host NCAAs at home". The State. Retrieved June 9, 2021. Under current NCAA regional hosting guidelines, the Monarchs’ home park — Bud Metheny Baseball Complex — isn’t technically eligible to host given its lack of a handful of behind-the-scenes necessities like vast media seating or an advanced television camera setup.
  18. ^ "Vanderbilt-NC State College World Series game ruled no-contest due to COVID-19 protocols". NCAA.com. June 26, 2021. Retrieved June 26, 2021.
  19. ^ @NCAACWS (July 1, 2021). "2021 Men's College World Series - All Tournament Team" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  20. ^ "#RoadtoOmaha: ESPN Networks to Showcase up to 153 Games During 2021 NCAA Division I Baseball Championship, Beginning Friday". ESPN Press Room. Retrieved June 3, 2021.
  21. ^ "#RoadToOmaha Continues: ESPN Networks to Showcase NCAA Division I Baseball Championship Super Regionals". ESPN Press Room. Retrieved June 10, 2021.
  22. ^ a b "ESPN's Exclusive Coverage of the NCAA Division I Men's College World Series Begins Saturday from Omaha". ESPN Press Room. Retrieved June 17, 2021.

External links[]

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