Jump to content
 







Main menu
   


Navigation  



Main page
Contents
Current events
Random article
About Wikipedia
Contact us
Donate
 




Contribute  



Help
Learn to edit
Community portal
Recent changes
Upload file
 








Search  

































Create account

Log in
 









Create account
 Log in
 




Pages for logged out editors learn more  



Contributions
Talk
 



















Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Bids  



1.1  Automatic bids  





1.2  By conference  







2 National seeds  





3 Regionals and Super Regionals  



3.1  Gainesville Super Regional  





3.2  Baton Rouge Super Regional  





3.3  College Station Super Regional  





3.4  Lubbock Super Regional  





3.5  Coral Gables Super Regional  





3.6  Starkville Super Regional  





3.7  Louisville Super Regional  





3.8  Columbia Super Regional  







4 College World Series  



4.1  Participants  





4.2  Bracket  





4.3  Game results  





4.4  All-Tournament Team  







5 Final standings  





6 Record by conference  





7 Media coverage  



7.1  Radio  





7.2  Television  



7.2.1  Broadcast assignments  









8 References  














2016 NCAA Division I baseball tournament







Add links
 









Article
Talk
 

















Read
Edit
View history
 








Tools
   


Actions  



Read
Edit
View history
 




General  



What links here
Related changes
Upload file
Special pages
Permanent link
Page information
Cite this page
Get shortened URL
Download QR code
Wikidata item
 




Print/export  



Download as PDF
Printable version
 
















Appearance
   

 






From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


2016 NCAA Division I
baseball tournament
Season2016
Teams64
Finals site
  • Omaha, Nebraska
  • ChampionsCoastal Carolina Chanticleers (1st title)
    Runner-upArizona Wildcats (16th CWS Appearance)
    Winning coachGary Gilmore (1st title)
    MOPAndrew Beckwith (Coastal Carolina)
    TelevisionESPN Networks
  • NCAA Division I Baseball Championship
  • 2017
  • The 2016 NCAA Division I baseball tournament began on Friday, June 3, 2016, as part of the 2016 NCAA Division I baseball season. The 64-team, double-elimination tournament concluded with the 2016 College World Series (CWS) in Omaha, Nebraska, starting on June 18, 2016, and ending on June 30, 2016.[1] The 64 participating NCAA Division I college baseball teams were selected out of 298 eligible teams.[2] Thirty-one teams were awarded an automatic bid, as champions of their conferences; the remaining 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 faced each other in Super Regionals, a best-of-three-game series to determine the eight participants of the College World Series.[1] The Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) set a conference record and tied the all-time mark of having ten teams in the championship field.[3] A tournament-high seven regional hosts came from the Southeastern Conference (SEC), followed by six of the ten ACC schools; however, only Miami (ACC) and Florida (SEC) advanced to Omaha, and they were the first and second teams eliminated, respectively. For the first time since the tournament expanded from 48 teams in 1999, the NCAA did not select any Pac-12 schools to host a regional, and Lubbock, Texas, (Texas Tech) was the westernmost regional host city picked by the selection committee.[4]

    In the CWS after Texas Tech lost to Big 12 rival TCU, none of the three national seeds who had reached Omaha had won their opening game. Tech eventually became the fourth team to be eliminated. While Oklahoma State and TCU advanced through the winners' bracket to set up a possible all–Big 12 championship, Arizona and Coastal Carolina won both elimination games to advance to the best-of-three final series.

    With each team winning a game in the championship series to force a winner-take-all Game 3, the tournament reached the maximum of 17 games for the first time; the finals expanded in 2003 to a best-of-three format as opposed to a single, winner-take-all championship game.[5] Coastal Carolina won the deciding game, 4–3, becoming the first team since 1956 to win the title in its first CWS appearance.[6] Coastal Carolina won six elimination games in NCAA post-season play – one in a Regional, three in the CWS double-elimination bracket, and two in the Championship Series.[7] The runner-up, Arizona, won six elimination games – three in a Regional and three in the CWS double-elimination bracket, but lost their 7th, the last game of the Championship Series.[8]

    Bids[edit]

    Automatic bids[edit]

    [9]

    School Conference Record (Conf) Berth Last NCAA appearance
    Binghamton America East 30–23 (19–5) Tournament 2014 (Stillwater Regional)
    Connecticut American 37–23 (14–9) Tournament 2013 (Blacksburg Regional)
    Clemson ACC 42–18 (16–14) Tournament 2015 (Fullerton Regional)
    Stetson Atlantic Sun 29–29 (9–12) Tournament 2011 (Columbia Regional)
    Rhode Island Atlantic 10 30–25 (18–6) Tournament 2005 (Long Beach Regional)
    TCU Big 12 42–15 (15–9) Tournament 2015 (Fort Worth Regional)
    Xavier Big East 30–28 (14–4) Tournament 2014 (Nashville Regional)
    Coastal Carolina Big South 44–15 (21–3) Tournament 2015 (College Station Regional)
    Ohio State Big Ten 43–18–1 (15–9) Tournament 2009 (Tallahassee Regional)
    Cal State Fullerton Big West 35–21 (17–7) Regular season 2015 (Fullerton Regional)
    William & Mary Colonial 29–29 (14–9) Tournament 2013 (Raleigh Regional)
    Southern Miss Conference USA 40–18 (20–10) Tournament 2011 (Atlanta Regional)
    Wright State Horizon 44–15 (23–6) Tournament 2015 (Champaign Regional)
    Princeton Ivy League 24–19 (13–7) Championship series 2011 (Austin Regional)
    Fairfield Metro Atlantic 32–24 (17–7) Tournament First Appearance
    Western Michigan Mid-American 22–32 (11–13) Tournament 1989 (Midwest Regional)
    Bethune-Cookman Mid-Eastern 29–25 (17–7) Tournament 2014 (Coral Gables Regional)
    Dallas Baptist Missouri Valley 41–17 (15–5) Tournament 2015 (Dallas Regional)
    New Mexico Mountain West 38–21 (20–10) Tournament 2013 (Fullerton Regional)
    Bryant Northeast 47–10 (26–4) Tournament 2014 (Baton Rouge Regional)
    Southeast Missouri State Ohio Valley 39–19 (22–8) Tournament 2002 (Tuscaloosa Regional)
    Utah Pac-12 25–27 (19–11) Regular season 2009 (Fullerton Regional)
    Navy Patriot 42–14–1 (15–5) Tournament 2011 (Charlottesville Regional)
    Texas A&M Southeastern 45–14 (20–10) Tournament 2015 (College Station Regional)
    Western Carolina Southern 30–29 (15–9) Tournament 2007 (Chapel Hill Regional)
    Sam Houston State Southland 41–20 (24–6) Tournament 2014 (Fort Worth Regional)
    Alabama State Southwestern Athletic 38–15 (24–0) Tournament First Appearance
    Oral Roberts Summit 38–19 (22–8) Tournament 2014 (Waco Regional)
    Louisiana–Lafayette Sun Belt 41–19 (21–9) Tournament 2015 (Houston Regional)
    Saint Mary's West Coast 33–23 (18–9) Tournament First Appearance
    Utah Valley Western Athletic 37–21 (18–9) Tournament First Appearance

    By conference[edit]

    [10]

    Conference Total Schools
    ACC 10 Boston College, Clemson, Duke, Florida State, Georgia Tech, Louisville, Miami (FL), NC State, Virginia, Wake Forest
    SEC 7 Florida, LSU, Mississippi State, Ole Miss, South Carolina, Texas A&M, Vanderbilt
    Conference USA 4 Florida Atlantic, Louisiana Tech, Rice, Southern Miss
    Pac-12 4 Arizona, Arizona State, Utah, Washington
    American 3 East Carolina, Tulane, UConn
    Big Ten 3 Minnesota, Nebraska, Ohio State
    Big 12 3 Oklahoma State, TCU, Texas Tech
    Big West 3 Cal State Fullerton, Long Beach State, UC Santa Barbara
    Colonial 2 UNC Wilmington, William & Mary
    Southland 2 Sam Houston State, Southeastern Louisiana
    Sun Belt 2 Louisiana–Lafayette, South Alabama
    West Coast 2 Gonzaga, Saint Mary's (CA)
    America East 1 Binghamton
    Atlantic 10 1 Rhode Island
    Atlantic Sun 1 Stetson
    Big East 1 Xavier
    Big South 1 Coastal Carolina
    Horizon 1 Wright State
    Ivy 1 Princeton
    MAAC 1 Fairfield
    Mid-American 1 Western Michigan
    MEAC 1 Bethune-Cookman
    Missouri Valley 1 Dallas Baptist
    Mountain West 1 New Mexico
    NEC 1 Bryant
    Ohio Valley 1 Southeast Missouri State
    Patriot 1 Navy
    Southern 1 Western Carolina
    SWAC 1 Alabama State
    Summit 1 Oral Roberts
    WAC 1 Utah Valley

    National seeds[edit]

    The following eight teams automatically host a Super Regional if they advance to that round:[10]

    1. Florida
    2. Louisville
    3. Miami (FL)
    4. Texas A&M
    5. Texas Tech
    6. Mississippi State
    7. Clemson
    8. LSU

    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[edit]

    Bold indicates winner. Seeds for regional tournaments indicate seeds within regional. Seeds for super regional tournaments indicate national seeds only.[11]

    Gainesville Super Regional[edit]

    Regional Regional Regional Final Super Regional
                   
    1Florida 9
    4Bethune-Cookman 3
    1Florida 6
    3UConn 5
    3UConn 7
    2Georgia Tech 6
    1Florida 10
    Gainesville Regional – Alfred A. McKethan Stadium
    2Georgia Tech 1
    4Bethune-Cookman 3
    2Georgia Tech 12
    2Georgia Tech 7
    3UConn 5
    1Florida 0 5 7
    Florida State 3 0 0
    1Florida State 18
    4Alabama State 6
    1Florida State 7
    2Southern Miss 2
    3South Alabama 2
    2Southern Miss 14
    1Florida State 18
    Tallahassee Regional – Mike Martin Field at Dick Howser Stadium
    3South Alabama 6
    4Alabama State 3
    3South Alabama 6
    3South Alabama 7
    2Southern Miss 4

    Baton Rouge Super Regional[edit]

    Regional Regional Regional Final Super Regional
                   
    1LSU 7
    4Utah Valley 1
    1LSU 4
    2Rice 2
    3Southeastern Louisiana 2
    2Rice 7
    1LSU 65
    Baton Rouge Regional – Alex Box Stadium
    2Rice 10 2
    4Utah Valley 2
    3Southeastern Louisiana 3
    3Southeastern Louisiana 0
    2Rice 15
    8LSU 83
    Coastal Carolina 11 4
    1NC State 13
    4Navy 8
    1NC State 0
    2Coastal Carolina 4
    3Saint Mary's (CA) 2
    2Coastal Carolina 5
    2Coastal Carolina 17
    Raleigh Regional – Doak Field
    1NC State 8 5
    4Navy 8
    3Saint Mary's (CA) 513
    4Navy 1
    1NC State 17

    College Station Super Regional[edit]

    Regional Regional Regional Final Super Regional
                   
    1Texas A&M 4
    4Binghamton 2
    1Texas A&M 22
    3Wake Forest 2
    3Wake Forest 5
    2Minnesota 3
    1Texas A&M 8
    College Station Regional – Olsen Field at Blue Bell Park
    2Minnesota 2
    4Binghamton 5
    2Minnesota 8
    2Minnesota 8
    3Wake Forest 3
    4Texas A&M27 1
    TCU 8 14
    1TCU 7
    4Oral Roberts 0
    1TCU 4
    3Gonzaga 3
    3Gonzaga 5
    2Arizona State 1
    1TCU 8
    Fort Worth Regional – Lupton Stadium
    2Arizona State 1
    4Oral Roberts 1
    2Arizona State 4
    2Arizona State 6
    3Gonzaga 3

    Lubbock Super Regional[edit]

    Regional Regional Regional Final Super Regional
                   
    1Texas Tech 12
    4Fairfield 1
    1Texas Tech 4
    3New Mexico 3
    3New Mexico 12
    2Dallas Baptist 6
    1Texas Tech 65
    Lubbock Regional – Dan Law Field at Rip Griffin Park
    2Dallas Baptist 10 3
    4Fairfield 5
    2Dallas Baptist 8
    2Dallas Baptist 5
    3New Mexico 3
    5Texas Tech 63 11
    East Carolina 8 113 0
    1Virginia 17
    4William & Mary 4
    1Virginia 6
    3East Carolina 8
    3East Carolina 9
    2Bryant 1
    3East Carolina 8
    Charlottesville Regional – Davenport Field
    4William & Mary 4
    4William & Mary 4
    2Bryant 3
    4William & Mary 5
    1Virginia 4

    Coral Gables Super Regional[edit]

    Regional Regional Regional Final Super Regional
                   
    1Miami (FL) 4
    4Stetson 2
    1Miami (FL) 4
    3Long Beach State 311
    3Long Beach State 5
    2Florida Atlantic 1
    1Miami (FL) 9
    Coral Gables Regional – Alex Rodriguez Park at Mark Light Field
    3Long Beach State 8
    4Stetson 4
    2Florida Atlantic 8
    2Florida Atlantic 1
    3Long Beach State 5
    3Miami (FL) 12 39
    Boston College 75 4
    1Ole Miss 5
    4Utah 610
    4Utah 3
    3Boston College 4
    3Boston College 7
    2Tulane 2
    3Boston College 6
    Oxford Regional – Swayze Field
    2Tulane 3
    1Ole Miss 5
    2Tulane 6
    2Tulane 4
    4Utah 1

    Starkville Super Regional[edit]

    Regional Regional Regional Final Super Regional
                   
    1Mississippi State 9
    4Southeast Missouri State 5
    1Mississippi State 4
    2Cal State Fullerton 1
    3Louisiana Tech 0
    2Cal State Fullerton 1
    1Mississippi State 4
    Starkville Regional – Dudy Noble Field
    3Louisiana Tech 0
    4Southeast Missouri State 4
    3Louisiana Tech 9
    3Louisiana Tech 6
    2Cal State Fullerton 2
    6Mississippi State 0 5
    Arizona 1 611
    1Louisiana–Lafayette 5
    4Princeton 3
    1Louisiana–Lafayette 10
    2Arizona 3
    3Sam Houston State 3
    2Arizona 7
    1Louisiana–Lafayette 31
    Lafayette Regional – M. L. Tigue Moore Field
    2Arizona 6 3
    4Princeton 2
    3Sam Houston State 7
    3Sam Houston State 5
    2Arizona 6

    Louisville Super Regional[edit]

    Regional Regional Regional Final Super Regional
                   
    1Louisville 6
    4Western Michigan 1
    1Louisville 15
    2Ohio State 3
    3Wright State 6
    2Ohio State 7
    1Louisville 3
    Louisville Regional – Jim Patterson Stadium
    3Wright State 1
    4Western Michigan 3
    3Wright State 10
    3Wright State 7
    2Ohio State 3
    2Louisville 23
    UC Santa Barbara 4 4
    1Vanderbilt 1
    4Xavier 15
    4Xavier 4
    2UC Santa Barbara 5
    3Washington 2
    2UC Santa Barbara 314
    2UC Santa Barbara 14
    Nashville Regional – Hawkins Field
    4Xavier 5
    1Vanderbilt 8
    3Washington 9
    3Washington 5
    4Xavier 7

    Columbia Super Regional[edit]

    Regional Regional Regional Final Super Regional
                   
    1Clemson 24
    4Western Carolina 10
    1Clemson 2
    2Oklahoma State 12
    3Nebraska 0
    2Oklahoma State 6
    2Oklahoma State 9
    Clemson Regional – Doug Kingsmore Stadium
    1Clemson 2
    4Western Carolina 4
    3Nebraska 1
    4Western Carolina 3
    1Clemson 15
    Oklahoma State 5 3
    South Carolina 11
    1South Carolina 4
    4Rhode Island 5
    4Rhode Island 7
    2UNC Wilmington 11
    3Duke 1
    2UNC Wilmington 11
    2UNC Wilmington 15
    Columbia Regional – Founders Park
    1South Carolina 10 10
    1South Carolina 4
    3Duke 2
    1South Carolina 23
    4Rhode Island 2

    College World Series[edit]

    The College World Series was held at TD Ameritrade ParkinOmaha, Nebraska.[12]

    Participants[edit]

    School Conference Record (conference) Head coach Previous CWS Appearances Best CWS Finish CWS record
    Not including this year
    Arizona Pac-12 44–21 (16–14) Jay Johnson 16
    (last: 2012)
    1st
    (1976, 1980, 1986, 2012)
    38–27
    Coastal Carolina Big South 49–16 (21–3) Gary Gilmore none none 0–0
    Florida SEC 52–14 (19–10) Kevin O'Sullivan 9
    (last: 2015)
    2nd
    (2005, 2011)
    14–19
    Miami (FL) ACC 50–12 (21–7) Jim Morris 24
    (last: 2015)
    1st
    (1982, 1985, 1999, 2001)
    48–40
    Oklahoma State Big 12 39–20 (16–8) Josh Holliday 19
    (last: 1999)
    1st
    (1959)
    38–36
    TCU Big 12 47–16 (15–9) Jim Schlossnagle 3
    (last: 2015)
    3rd
    (2010, 2015)
    6–6
    Texas Tech Big 12 44–16 (19–5) Tim Tadlock 1
    (2014)
    7th
    (2014)
    0–2
    UC Santa Barbara Big West 42–18–1 (13–11) Andrew Checketts none none 0–0

    Bracket[edit]

    Seeds listed below indicate national seeds only

    First round Second round Semifinals Championship series
                   
    1Florida 1
    Coastal Carolina 2
    Coastal Carolina 1
    TCU 6
    TCU 5
    5Texas Tech 3
    TCU 15
    Coastal Carolina 4 7
    1Florida 2
    5Texas Tech 3
    5Texas Tech 5
    Coastal Carolina 7
    Coastal Carolina 0 5 4
    Arizona 3 43
    3Miami (FL) 1
    Arizona 5
    Arizona 0
    Oklahoma State 1
    UC Santa Barbara 0
    Oklahoma State 1
    Oklahoma State 31
    Arizona 9 5
    3Miami (FL) 3
    UC Santa Barbara 5
    UC Santa Barbara 0
    Arizona 3

    Game results[edit]

    Date Game Winner Score Loser Winning Pitcher Losing Pitcher Save Notes
    June 18 Game 1 Oklahoma State 1–0 UC Santa Barbara Thomas Hatch (9–2) Shane Bieber (12–4)
    Game 2 Arizona 5–1 Miami (FL) Nathan Bannister (12–2) Michael Mediavilla (11–2)
    June 19 Game 3 TCU 5–3 Texas Tech Ryan Burnett (3–1) Robert Dugger (6–1) Durbin Feltman (9)
    Game 4 Coastal Carolina 2–1 Florida Andrew Beckwith (13–1) Logan Shore (12–1)
    June 20 Game 5 UC Santa Barbara 5–3 Miami (FL) Noah Davis (7–4) Danny Garcia (9–5) Kyle Nelson (10) Miami (FL) eliminated
    Game 6 Oklahoma State 1–0 Arizona Tyler Buffett (9–3) Bobby Dalbec (10–5) Trey Cobb (6)
    June 21 Game 7 Texas Tech 3–2 Florida Davis Martin (10–1) Alex Faedo (13–3) Hayden Howard (9) Florida eliminated
    Game 8 TCU 6–1 Coastal Carolina Brian Howard (10–2) Alex Cunningham (9–4) Ryan Burnett (1)
    June 22 Game 9 Arizona 3–0 UC Santa Barbara J.C. Cloney (7–4) Justin Kelly (2–1) Cameron Ming (3) UC Santa Barbara eliminated
    June 23 Game 10 Coastal Carolina 7–5 Texas Tech Mike Morrison (8–1) Erikson Lanning (3–4) Bobby Holmes (4) Texas Tech eliminated
    June 24 Game 11 Arizona 9–3 Oklahoma State Kevin Ginkel (5–1) Jensen Elliot (9–5) Cameron Ming (4)
    Game 12 Coastal Carolina 4–1 TCU Andrew Beckwith (14–1) Michael Traver (1–3)
    June 25 Game 13 Arizona 5–1 Oklahoma State Bobby Dalbec (11–5) Thomas Hatch (9–3) Alfonso Rivas III (3) Oklahoma State eliminated
    Game 14 Coastal Carolina 7–5 TCU Alex Cunningham (10–4) Jared Janczak (7–4) TCU eliminated
    June 27 Final Game 1 Arizona 3–0 Coastal Carolina J.C. Cloney (8–4) Zack Hopeck (3–4)
    June 28 Final Game 2 Coastal Carolina 5–4 Arizona Bobby Holmes (7–2) Cameron Ming (3–3)
    June 30 Final Game 3 Coastal Carolina 4–3 Arizona Andrew Beckwith (15–1) Bobby Dalbec (11–6) Alex Cunningham (1) Coastal Carolina wins CWS

    All-Tournament Team[edit]

    The following players were members of the College World Series All-Tournament Team.[13]

    Position Player School
    P Andrew Beckwith (MOP) Coastal Carolina
    J. C. Cloney Arizona
    C David Parrett Coastal Carolina
    1B Ryan Aguilar Arizona
    2B Cody Ramer Arizona
    3B Zach Remillard Coastal Carolina
    SS Ryan Merrill TCU
    OF Anthony Marks Coastal Carolina
    Zach Gibbons Arizona
    Jared Oliva Arizona
    DH Luken Baker TCU

    Final standings[edit]

    Seeds listed below indicate national seeds only

    Place School Record
    1st Coastal Carolina 11–3
    2nd Arizona 11–4
    3rd Oklahoma State 7–2
    TCU 7–3
    5th UC Santa Barbara 6–2
    No. 5 Texas Tech 6–4
    7th No. 1 Florida 5–3
    No. 3 Miami 5–3
    9th Boston College 4–2
    East Carolina 4–2
    Florida State 4–2
    No. 2 Louisville 3–2
    No. 8 LSU 3–3
    No. 6 Mississippi State 3–2
    South Carolina 4–3
    No. 4 Texas A&M 4–2
    17th Arizona State 2–2
    No. 7 Clemson 2–2
    Dallas Baptist 3–2
    Georgia Tech 2–2
    Long Beach State 2–2
    Louisiana–Lafayette 2–2
    Louisiana Tech 2–2
    Minnesota 2–2
    NC State 3–2
    Rice 3–2
    South Alabama 2–2
    Tulane 2–2
    UNC Wilmington 2–2
    William & Mary 2–2
    Wright State 2–2
    Xavier 2–2
    33rd Cal State Fullerton 1–2
    Connecticut 1–2
    Florida Atlantic 1–2
    Gonzaga 1–2
    Navy 1–2
    New Mexico 1–2
    Ohio State 1–2
    Rhode Island 1–2
    Sam Houston State 1–2
    Southeastern Louisiana 1–2
    Southern Miss 1–2
    Utah 1–2
    Virginia 1–2
    Wake Forest 1–2
    Washington 1–2
    Western Carolina 1–2
    49th Alabama State 0–2
    Bethune-Cookman 0–2
    Binghamton 0–2
    Bryant 0–2
    Duke 0–2
    Fairfield 0–2
    Nebraska 0–2
    Ole Miss 0–2
    Oral Roberts 0–2
    Princeton 0–2
    Saint Mary's (CA) 0–2
    Southeast Missouri State 0–2
    Stetson 0–2
    Utah Valley 0–2
    Vanderbilt 0–2
    Western Michigan 0–2

    Record by conference[edit]

    Conference # of Bids Record Win % Nc Record Nc Win % RF SR WS NS CS NC
    Big South 1 11–3 .786 11–3 .786 1 1 1 1 1 1
    Pac-12 4 15–10 .600 15–10 .600 2 1 1 1 1
    Big 12 3 20–9 .690 19–8 .704 3 3 3 2
    Southeastern 7 19–17 .528 19–17 .528 5 5 1
    Atlantic Coast 10 25–21 .543 22–18 .561 7 4 1
    Big West 3 9–6 .600 9–6 .600 2 1 1
    American 3 7–6 .538 7–6 .538 2 1
    Conference USA 4 7–8 .467 7–8 .467 2
    Colonial 2 4–4 .500 4–4 .500 2
    Sun Belt 2 4–4 .500 4–4 .500 2
    Big Ten 3 3–6 .333 3–6 .333 1
    Southland 2 2–4 .333 2–4 .333
    West Coast 2 1–4 .200 1–4 .200
    Other 18 11–36 .234 11–36 .234 3

    The columns RF, SR, WS, NS, CS, and NC respectively stand for the Regional Finals, Super Regionals, College World Series, 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[edit]

    Radio[edit]

    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 Archived 2016-06-19 at the Wayback Machine and on TuneIn. 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 (Gms 1–2), Bishop (Gm 3), and Scott Graham. Ted Emrich acted as field reporter for Games 1 & 2.

    Television[edit]

    ESPN carried every game from the Regionals, Super Regionals, and College World Series across its networks. During the 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, hosted by Brendan Fitzgerald and Matt Schick with Kyle Peterson providing analysis.[14]

    The final game of the tournament aired on ESPNU, as the NCAA scheduled the game for an afternoon start, and there were scheduling conflicts with ESPN and ESPN2 due to UEFA Euro 2016 and the 2016 Wimbledon Championships.[15]

    Broadcast assignments[edit]

    References[edit]

    1. ^ a b "Baseball Division I Championship". NCAA. Archived from the original on February 20, 2014. Retrieved November 30, 2015.
  • ^ "NCAA Sports Sponsorship". Web1.ncaa.org. Archived from the original on December 30, 2010. Retrieved June 27, 2016.
  • ^ "NCAA Division I Baseball Committee announces the field of 64 teams". NCAA.com. May 31, 2016. Retrieved June 27, 2016.
  • ^ "NCAA Baseball Tournament 2016 regional sites named; no Pac-12 hosts for first time since expansion". OregonLive.com. May 29, 2016. Retrieved June 27, 2016.
  • ^ "Coastal Carolina forces winner-take-all Game 3 with Arizona in CWS". Sports Illustrated. June 29, 2016. Retrieved July 4, 2016.
  • ^ "Coastal Carolina defeats Arizona, 4–3, to win first College World Series title". Los Angeles Times. June 30, 2016. Retrieved July 4, 2016.
  • ^ Redford, Patrick (June 30, 2016). "Early Runs Push Cats Past OSU". Deadspin. Retrieved July 1, 2016.
  • ^ "Early Runs Push Cats Past OSU". University of Arizona. June 25, 2016. Archived from the original on July 2, 2016. Retrieved July 1, 2016.
  • ^ "2016 Division I baseball conference tournament, automatic qualifers [sic]". NCAA. May 29, 2016. Retrieved July 1, 2016.
  • ^ a b "NCAA Division I Baseball Committee announces the field of 64 teams". NCAA. May 31, 2016. Retrieved July 1, 2016.
  • ^ "2016 Division I Baseball Championship Official Bracket". NCAA. July 1, 2016. Retrieved July 1, 2016.
  • ^ "2016 Division I Baseball Championship Official Bracket". NCAA. July 1, 2016. Retrieved July 1, 2016.
  • ^ "Most Outstanding Player Andrew Beckwith headlines 2016 CWS All-Tournament team". Omaha World-Herald. June 30, 2016. Retrieved July 4, 2016.
  • ^ a b c "ESPN To Carry Every NCAA Division I Baseball Regional Matchup Beginning Friday". ESPN Media Zone. Retrieved May 30, 2016.
  • ^ "Swing And A Miss: ESPN Did Not Have Much Say On Start Time For CWS Final Game". Sports Business Daily. Retrieved June 30, 2016.
  • ^ a b "Comprehensive NCAA Division I Baseball Championship Super Regional Coverage Begins Friday". ESPN Media Zone. Retrieved June 8, 2016.
  • ^ ""Baseball Tonight" Makes its First Trip to the College World Series on ESPN". ESPN Media Zone. Retrieved June 13, 2016.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2016_NCAA_Division_I_baseball_tournament&oldid=1227059506"

    Categories: 
    NCAA Division I baseball tournament
    2016 NCAA Division I baseball season
    2016 in sports in Nebraska
    Baseball in the DallasFort Worth metroplex
    Baseball competitions in Nebraska
    Sports competitions in Lubbock, Texas
    Baseball competitions in Texas
    Hidden categories: 
    Use mdy dates from August 2023
    Articles with short description
    Short description matches Wikidata
    Short description is different from Wikidata
    Webarchive template wayback links
     



    This page was last edited on 3 June 2024, at 12:53 (UTC).

    Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 4.0; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.



    Privacy policy

    About Wikipedia

    Disclaimers

    Contact Wikipedia

    Code of Conduct

    Developers

    Statistics

    Cookie statement

    Mobile view



    Wikimedia Foundation
    Powered by MediaWiki