NCAA Division I Baseball Championships recent history

The following are notes and records, in summary form, for conferences and teams, participating in the NCAA Division I Baseball Championship and the College World Series (CWS). Except as noted, the conference is the one that the team was in at the time of participation. Independents at the time of participation are listed as "Ind", never as being in any prior, nor subsequent, conference.

Champions and Runners up

The number of champions and runner ups in the format #.#, reverse chronology cumulative. Updated: 20:31, 30 June 2016 (UTC).
Sum is useful for error checking. In a column, all championships and all runner ups should add up, separately, to the sum shown.

`16`15`14`13`12`11`10`09`08`07`06`05`04`03`02`01`00`99`98`97`96`95`94`93`92`91`90`89`88`87
ACC0.01.01.11.11.11.11.11.11.11.21.31.31.31.31.31.31.31.41.41.41.41.41.51.51.51.51.51.51.51.5ACC
B120.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.10.10.10.11.11.21.22.22.22.22.22.22.22.22.23.23.23.23.23.33.43.43.5B12
BSo1.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.0BSo
BWs0.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.02.02.02.02.12.12.12.12.12.1BWs
Ind0.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.01.01.02.02.02.02.12.12.12.12.12.12.12.12.12.1Ind
MVC0.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.10.10.20.21.21.21.2MVC
PAC0.10.10.11.12.12.12.22.22.23.24.24.24.24.34.34.44.54.55.65.65.65.75.75.75.75.75.75.76.87.8PAC
SEC 0.00.11.11.21.32.43.44.44.54.54.54.64.64.64.74.75.75.75.76.87.87.87.88.88.89.810.810.810.810.8SEC
WAC0.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.01.01.01.01.01.02.02.02.02.02.02.02.02.02.02.02.02.02.02.02.02.02.0WAC
WCC0.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.01.01.01.01.01.01.0WCC
Sum123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930Sum

[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11]

Note: The B12 Conference record includes teams from the Big 8 and the Southwest Conferences before 1994. All teams involved were founding members of the Big 12 Conference, therefore they did not leave a conference, with continued existence, to join a preexisting conference.

CWS Participants

The number of teams from each conference that participated in the College World Series, reverse chronology cumulative.
Year across the top. Updated: 18:30, 26 June 2016 (UTC).
Sum is useful for error checking. In a column, all numbers should add up to the sum shown.

`16`15`14`13`12`11`10`09`08`07`06`05`04`03`02`01`00`99`98`97
AAC00111111111111111111AAC
ACC1346791113161721212121232325262727ACC
AmE00001111111111111111AmE
B1000011111111111111111B10
B123477791011111111141516181920222222B12
BEa00011111122222333333BEa
BSo11111111111111111111BSo
BWs1233333446778991010111212BWs
CUS00000001234555566666CUS
Ind00000000000012233456Ind
MAC00001111111111111111MAC
MWC00000011111111111111MWC
MVC00000000000001111111MVC
PAC11135689101213151617182022232527PAC
SEC157912151719212223252931323435363943SEC
Sun00000000000000001111Sun
WAC00000000111112334556WAC
Sum81624324048566472808896104112120128136144152160Sum

Note: The AAC was formed in 2014 by some teams splitting off from the BEa; participation is zero for all earlier years, perforce. Any teams in the AAC are included in the BEa, when that was their previous conference at the time, even when that team was a founding member of the AAC. Some of the teams included above, remained in the Bea after the split, and did not go to the AAC.

Seed and Finish

The following shows all participating teams for some conferences. Updated 20:33, 30 June 2016 (UTC).

Year2016201520142013
Team RsRfNsOfRsRfNsOfRsRfNsOfRsRfNsOfTeam
Boston CollACC31st Boston Coll
ClemsonACC12nd#717th34th 34th 23rd Clemson
DukeACC34th Duke
Florida StACC11st 11st 14th#549th11st#79thFlorida St
Geo TechACC22nd 33rd 22nd Geo Tech
LouisvilleACC11st#29th11st#39th Louisville
MarylandACC 21st Maryland
Miami (FL)ACC11st#37th11st#55th12nd 23rd Miami (FL)
N CarolinaACC 33rd 11st#13rdN Carolina
N Caro StACC12nd 22nd 11st5thN Caro St
N DameACC 23rd N Dame
VirginiaACC13rd 31st1st11st#32nd11st#69thVirginia
Virg TechACC 12nd Virg Tech
Wake ForestACC33rd Wake Forest
Avg/TotalsACC1.702.00311.861.86222.002.57211.381.7532Avg/Totals
KansasB12 33rd Kansas
Kans StB12 11st Kans St
OklahomaB12 21st Oklahoma
Okla StB1221st3rd13rd 11st 32nd Okla St
TCUB1211st3rd11st#73rd11st#75th TCU
TexasB12 34th 21st3rd Texas
Tex TechB1211st#55th 21st7th Tex Tech
Avg/TotalsB121.331.00131.672.67111.801.40132.001.3300Avg/Totals
ArizonaPAC21st2nd Arizona
Ariz StPAC22nd 23rd 24th 22nd Ariz St
CalifPAC 32nd Calif
OregonPAC 33rd 22nd 12nd#817thOregon
Oreg StPAC 23rd 12nd#117th11st#33rdOreg St
S CalifPAC 22nd S Calif
StanfordPAC 31st Stanford
UCLAPAC 12nd#117th 11st1stUCLA
UtahPAC43rd Utah
WashPAC33rd 22nd Wash
Avg/TotalsPAC2.752.25012.172.50102.002.20101.251.5022Avg/Totals
AlabamaSEC 22nd 23rd Alabama
ArkansasSEC 21st7th22nd 22nd Arkansas
AuburnSEC 33rd Auburn
FloridaSEC11st#17th11st#43rd14th#249th24th Florida
KentuckySEC 22nd Kentucky
LSUSEC11st#89th11st#25th12nd#817th11st#47thLSU
Miss StSEC11st#69th 22nd 11st2ndMiss St
Ole MissSEC14th 24th 31st 23rd Ole Miss
S CaroSEC11st 12nd 11st S Caro
Tex A&MSEC11st#49th11st 32nd 22nd Tex A&M
VandySEC14th 11st2nd11st1st11st#29thVandy
Avg/TotalsSEC1.001.86411.571.71241.802.00221.562.0022Avg/Totals

Notes By Year

General interest information that is very significant, for example a regional 4 seed winning the national championship, or a 2 winning it all in their first trip to the CWS, is probably best placed on the specific yearly NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament page.
The notes here are for more detailed information that is best compared to previous years and can be used with the above detailed information over a number of years.

2016

Although with this metric (where the basis for comparison is the selection committee's seeding), the ACC & the SEC underperformed and the BIG 12 & the PAC overperformed, that is not the clear recent pattern. In 2016, the SEC teams had average regional 1.00 seeding, finishing 1.86, worse by 0.86; the BIG 12 in 2015 had average regional 1.67 seeding, finishing 2.67, worse by 1.00. The clearest pattern by this metric is that the ACC, BIG 12, PAC, and SEC, all have underperformed slightly, on average over the most recent 4 seasons. The PAC had underperformed slightly the previous 3. The BIG 12 has overperformed 3 of the 4, but was worst in the other, and, in spite of having 7 total in the CWS over the 4 most recent, have not had a runner up nor a champion, not even once. Over those same 4, the ACC has had a total of 2, the PAC has had 2 and the SEC 3; together that is 7 of a possible 8 champions and runner ups.
In 2016, the SEC only had 1 of 4 top 8 national seeds in the CWS and the ACC 1 of 3. In the past 3 seasons, both have had champions and/or runner ups, who were not national seeds. In 2015 the SEC had 4 in the CWS, only having 2 top 8 seeded. Over the past 4, the PAC has had 3 of 4 top 8 seeded not even win their regionals and 2 of those were the #1 overall seeded teams in two of those years.

In the 2016 Regionals, 10 of 16 Regional 1 seeds won their regionals.
In the 2016 CWS, 3 of the top 8 seeds made the CWS, one more than the 2 in 2014. 2 of these 2016 top 8 seeds went 0–2 in the CWS; the 3rd went 1—2, perforce since 2 of these played an elimination game against each other. The 1–6 record is the worst record by the top 8 seeds that made the CWS since the top 8 were seeded and Super Regionals were first held in 1999.
Underperformance and overperformance may not mean much, anyway. Any group of teams that are seeded very high have little room to go anywhere other than down. Those seeded very low, anywhere other than up. However, over a longer period of time, the better teams will win more.

For comparison, given the importance of winning games to advance through the tournament bracket (3-4 wins needed to reach a Super Regional, 5-6 wins needed to reach the CWS, and 8-10 wins needed to reach the championship series), it is also interesting to compare how each conference performs in terms of average wins per bid from 2013-2016: the Big 12 averaged 4.3 wins, followed by the SEC at 3.4, Pac 12 at 3.3, ACC at 3.0, and Big West at 2.5. Translating wins to the percentage of teams reaching the world series per conference bid from 2013-2016, 48% of Big 12 teams advanced, 28% for the SEC, 27% for the Big West, 20% for the ACC, and 19% for the Pac 12. As with many tournament format championships, the statistics above show the challenges of converting high regional seeds and even high percentage winning into championships.

In 2016, the Big South Conference with one team in the NCAA post season, Coastal Carolina, overperformed all other conferences, in the process of winning the CWS. With a small enough sample, things can become very skewed. As Coastal Carolina coach Gary Gilmore noted, “We're not the most talented team in America. We're just the national champion. That's all that matters.” [12]

ACC: Had 10 participants. Clemson was the only top 8 seed to lose its regional. 3 of 6 hosting Regional 1 seeds won their regionals with a 4th ACC team that was a lower seed winning a regional. 1 of 3 top 8 seeds made the CWS, with no others making the CWS; that one top 8 seed went 0–2.
Big 12: Had 3 teams in the NCAA post season. All 3 teams made the CWS, 2 made the semifinals, 2 Regional 1 seeds, including the 1 top 8 seed, and a Regional 2 seed.
PAC: Had 4 teams, all lower than Regional 1 seeds. None hosted a Regional. 3 did not win regionals but 1 did make the CWS, playing in the Championship Series.
SEC: Had 7 teams, 3 less than the ACC. All 7 were hosting Regional 1 seeds, 1 more than the ACC, with 5 winning their regionals, 1 more than the ACC. 1 of 4 top 8 seeds made the CWS, with no others making the CWS; that one top 8 seed went 0–2, the same as the one ACC CWS participant.

2015

In the CWS, 4 of the top 8 seeds made the CWS. None played in the Championship Series.
ACC: Had 7 teams in the NCAA post season. 2 were top 8 seeds. 1 of which made the CWS plus a regional 3 seed, which won the National Championship.
Big 12: Had 3 teams. Only 1 was a top 8 seed, which made the CWS.
PAC: Had 6 teams. UCLA was the #1 overall seed and was the only top 8 seed to lose its regional.
SEC: Had 7 teams. 2 were top 8 seeds, both making the CWS plus 2 other SEC teams for a total of 4 in the CWS. One, not a top 8 seed was the national runner up.

2014

Only 7 of the 16 regional 1 seeds won their Regionals.
Only 2 of the top 8 seeds made the CWS.
Oregon State was the #1 overall seed and was one of five top 8 seeds to lose their Regionals.
Florida, Indiana, Florida State, and LSU were the other top 8 seeds that lost their Regionals.
Louisiana–Lafayette was the only top 8 seeds to lose its Super Regional. TCU and Virginia were the 2 that made the CWS.

2013

14 of the 16 regional 1 seeds won their Regionals.
Only 3 of the overall top 8 seeds made the CWS.
Of overall top 8 seeds, North Carolina, Florida State, Virginia, Vanderbilt, and LSU, only North Carolina and LSU made the CWS.
Oregon State, Cal State Fullerton, and Oregon were all overall top 8 national seeds. Oregon was the only top 8 seed to lose its Regional and Oregon State was the only one of the three to make the CWS.

References

  1. "GENERAL CWS RECORDS, CHAMPIONSHIP RESULTS, Pg 3" (PDF). NCAA.org. 2016. Retrieved 13 Oct 2016.
  2. "The Complete History of ACC Realignment". Athlon Sports Inc. 1 July 2014. Retrieved 13 Oct 2016.
  3. "Big 12 expansion: Oral history of Big 8-SWC merger". Campus Rush. 16 Aug 2016. Retrieved 13 Oct 2016.
  4. "Coastal Carolina's College World Series Title Was As Thrilling As It Was Unlikely". Gizmodo Media Group. 30 June 2016. Retrieved 13 Oct 2016.
  5. "About The Big West Conference". Big West Conference. 2016. Retrieved 13 Oct 2016.
  6. "University of Miami Baseball Team History and Statistics". The Baseball Cube. 2016. Retrieved 13 Oct 2016.
  7. "On the market: Wichita State is researching conference options and these homes might listen". The Wichita Eagle. 25 May 2016. Retrieved 13 Oct 2016.
  8. "Pac-12 set to celebrate 100 Years of excellence". Pac-12 Conference. 30 July 2015. Retrieved 13 Oct 2016.
  9. "SEC football history at a glance". The Tennessean. 25 July 2015. Retrieved 13 Oct 2016.
  10. "National Champions". Western Athletic Conference. 8 June 2016. Retrieved 13 Oct 2016.
  11. "Conference Championships". CBS Interactive. 2016. Retrieved 13 Oct 2016.
  12. http://www.latimes.com/sports/sportsnow/la-sp-college-world-series-20160630-snap-story.html
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