SEC has 11 top 25 teams. Seems like a pretty good bet.Just listened to a guy from D1 baseball on sirius gushing over GT. Taking the SEC to win it all still over the field.
Yep, and they win the national championship almost every season.SEC has 11 top 25 teams. Seems like a pretty good bet.
Yep, Oregon St in 2018 was the last.. 8 years ago lolYep, and they win the national championship almost every season.
You get what you pay for.Yep, Oregon St in 2018 was the last.. 8 years ago lol
I mean this isn’t entirely true, if you’re alluding to NIL. SEC programs have been committed to baseball for years upon years, but if you’re talking about the athletic budget going into the programs before NIL I agree. A lot of it is luck as well, not a chance on this earth this Mississippi teams had the best rosters money could buy those 2 years they won it. Recently though, I’d agree somewhat to the NIL figure.You get what you pay for.
"Recently" is the period that I am describing. There are outliers, however. Bianco's Ole Miss teams and Gary Gilmore's Coastal Carolina squad are among them.I mean this isn’t entirely true, if you’re alluding to NIL. SEC programs have been committed to baseball for years upon years, but if you’re talking about the athletic budget going into the programs before NIL I agree. A lot of it is luck as well, not a chance on this earth this Mississippi teams had the best rosters money could buy those 2 years they won it. Recently though, I’d agree somewhat to the NIL figure.
The warmer weather has also been a big benefit - just like the southwestI mean this isn’t entirely true, if you’re alluding to NIL. SEC programs have been committed to baseball for years upon years, but if you’re talking about the athletic budget going into the programs before NIL I agree. A lot of it is luck as well, not a chance on this earth this Mississippi teams had the best rosters money could buy those 2 years they won it. Recently though, I’d agree somewhat to the NIL figure.
Those D1 guys just can't get over GT. Even though UNC took them in the series and looked like the better team doing it, D1 can't get away from those sexy offensive numbers. Not saying GT isn't a great team. They are. But I'd rather have better pitching and defense, paired with a good offense and UNC does.Just listened to a guy from D1 baseball on sirius gushing over GT. Taking the SEC to win it all still over the field.
100%Those D1 guys just can't get over GT. Even though UNC took them in the series and looked like the better team doing it, D1 can't get away from those sexy offensive numbers. Not saying GT isn't a great team. They are. But I'd rather have better pitching and defense, paired with a good offense and UNC does.
Not so much, unfortunatelyCoastals ability to consistently field a nationally competitive baseball program is remarkable. Should be a great matchup.
Those D1 guys just can't get over GT. Even though UNC took them in the series and looked like the better team doing it, D1 can't get away from those sexy offensive numbers. Not saying GT isn't a great team. They are. But I'd rather have better pitching and defense, paired with a good offense and UNC does.
I just want to be top 8Those D1 guys just can't get over GT. Even though UNC took them in the series and looked like the better team doing it, D1 can't get away from those sexy offensive numbers. Not saying GT isn't a great team. They are. But I'd rather have better pitching and defense, paired with a good offense and UNC does.
And I want to be seeded commensurate with our ranking and not be jobbed down 2-4 spots in favor of SEC teams as seems to happen every season.I just want to be top 8
remember watching that 2006 game with the UNC win. What a moment..."Recently" is the period that I am describing. There are outliers, however. Bianco's Ole Miss teams and Gary Gilmore's Coastal Carolina squad are among them.
Before "recently," at least back to 2003, when I started again to pay serious attention to college baseball, the preliminary match-ups determined the eventual CWS participants, and those match-ups were made--almost entirely in private--by "a Committee," which consisted of a number of athletic directors, whose method of selection was also not disclosed.
A number of those athletic directors hailed from places like Fullerton. That did not become clear to me until I attended the CWS in 2006. What is still not clear is whether a college's success in Omaha led to selection of its athletic director to that Committee, or just the opposite.
It probably was initially the first, and then it became too irresistible not to be the second. The Omaha regulars all knew to expect Fullerton annually.
The 2006 CWS was a defining moment in many ways. Four ACC teams (Carolina, GA Tech, Clemson and Miami) made the field, which was the first time that had occurred. And the SEC was shocked. Not just the then baseball powers, like LSU and Miss. State, but everyone.
And, since then, the SEC, with a big "blind assist" from ESPN, has simply grabbed college baseball by the ears and, by hook or by crook, made itself the feature of college baseball.
There are, of course, exceptions. And Carolina is one of those. That fortunate circumstance also originated in 2006--at the Tuscaloosa Super Regional--an event that the Heels were supposed to lose.
But they won handily instead. And the ensuing run in Omaha, through 2013, made Carolina an undeniable fixture in the college baseball landscape.
Keep winning mostly and we will be okayAnd I want to be seeded commensurate with our ranking and not be jobbed down 2-4 spots in favor of SEC teams as seems to happen every season.