Miami chosen as No. 1 seed; Oregon State left out of field
Miami was selected as the top seed for the 64-team Division I college baseball tournament Monday, while two-time defending champion Oregon State was left out of the field.
The Hurricanes (47-8), who won the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament for the first time, will host one of 16 four-team, double-elimination regionals that begin Friday. Miami, making its 36th straight tournament appearance to extend its NCAA record, was ranked No. 1 in various polls for the majority of the season and opens against Bethune-Cookman (36-20).
"There was a lot of discussion about who the No. 1 seed should be, and quite frankly, North Carolina and Arizona State all got a strong look at that position," Division I selection committee chairman Larry Templeton said. "At the end of the night, Miami's play toward the end of the season, particularly winning the tournament -- and we were watching that tournament as the selection process was going through -- probably convinced the committee."
The other national seeds, in order, are: North Carolina (46-12), Arizona State (45-11), Florida State (48-10), Cal State Fullerton (37-19), Rice (42-13), LSU (43-16-1) and Georgia (35-21-1).
The winners of each regional will advance to the super regionals, played June 6-9. The eight winners of the super regionals will play in the College World Series, which starts June 14 in Omaha, Neb.
Being the top seed hasn't necessarily guaranteed tournament success. The only No. 1 overall seed to win the College World Series since the field was expanded to 64 teams was the 1999 Hurricanes, and no top-eight seed has won it all since Rice in 2003.
Oregon State (28-24) did not receive an at-large bid, despite having five series wins against teams in the 64-team field, including Arizona, Arizona State and Georgia. The Beavers, the first defending champ not to make the tournament since Georgia in 1991, will not have a chance to join Southern California (1970-74) as the only schools to win three straight titles.
"The committee struggled long and hard and, quite frankly, probably wouldn't have struggled as long if Oregon State had not been the two-time defending national champion," said Templeton, also the athletic director at Mississippi State. "The thing that probably was the determining factor was their 24 losses and who some of those losses were against. It was a tough call, but we felt that there were a couple of other teams that were more deserving."
A year after getting only five berths, the Southeastern Conference led the tournament field with nine, tying its the record it set in 2004 and matched in 2005: Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, LSU, Mississippi, South Carolina and Vanderbilt. Arkansas didn't make it into the eight-team SEC tournament, but the committee was impressed by how competitive the teams were.
"I think the thing about the SEC this year that impressed the committee is their strength of schedule had improved over last year," Templeton said. "It was the work of the whole year in that conference."
LSU enters the tournament as the hottest team in the country, riding a 20-game winning streak into their first-round matchup against Texas Southern (16-32).
"I'm extremely proud of what our team has accomplished so far, but we still have a lot of work to do," LSU coach Paul Mainieri said. "The NCAA tournament separates the men from the boys, so we know we have a great challenge in front of us."
The ACC (Florida State, Georgia Tech, Miami, North Carolina, North Carolina State and Virginia) and Big 12 (Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Texas and Texas A&M) each had six teams selected.
UC Davis, Dallas Baptist, Lipscomb and Mount St. Mary's are in the tournament for the first time, while Columbia is in the field for the first time since 1976.
Dallas Baptist is the first independent other than Miami to be selected to tournament since Cal State Northridge in 1992.
"What they've done is what our committee has suggested, and they've gone out and played really good people in other conferences and they've been successful," Templeton said. "We rewarded them for that."
http://sports.espn.go.com/ncaa/news/...=ESPNHeadlines
Re: Miami chosen as No. 1 seed; Oregon State left out of field
The bowl system sucks. College sports needs a playoff system of some type.
Re: Miami chosen as No. 1 seed; Oregon State left out of field
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ohms_law
The bowl system sucks. College football needs a playoff system of some type.
LOL
Re: Miami chosen as No. 1 seed; Oregon State left out of field
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Wassit3
MY god they let a team with a .333 wining pct in the tourney!!! thats insane!
Re: Miami chosen as No. 1 seed; Oregon State left out of field
Quote:
Originally Posted by
gRYFYN1
MY god they let a team with a .333 wining pct in the tourney!!! thats insane!
I'm pretty sure its because they won the conference tournament.
Re: Miami chosen as No. 1 seed; Oregon State left out of field
Do people actually watch this?
Re: Miami chosen as No. 1 seed; Oregon State left out of field
Re: Miami chosen as No. 1 seed; Oregon State left out of field
If they would go to wooden bats I would watch. If I wanted to hear a ping when someone hits a ball, I'll go watch Tiger at the driving range.
Re: Miami chosen as No. 1 seed; Oregon State left out of field
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Reade
If they would go to wooden bats I would watch. If I wanted to hear a ping when someone hits a ball, I'll go watch Tiger at the driving range.
Or when someone swings at the Yankee currently wearing the thong :eek:
Re: Miami chosen as No. 1 seed; Oregon State left out of field
He doesn't have any balls left after all the roids he took
Re: Miami chosen as No. 1 seed; Oregon State left out of field
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Reade
He doesn't have any balls left after all the roids he took
How bout those he's "shared" this crusty gold thong with? Jeter, Damon, and others???
Men who share undergarments are not men...I don't care how many chicks Jeters dated from Maxim's top 100. Really, has ANYONE in here really worn another mans used underwear??? Maybe it's just me..........this story really did not get enough play.:confused::eek::rolleyes:
Re: Miami chosen as No. 1 seed; Oregon State left out of field
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ohms_law
The bowl system sucks. College sports needs a playoff system of some type.
baseball doesn't have a bowl system in college sports...
Re: Miami chosen as No. 1 seed; Oregon State left out of field
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Wassit3
baseball doesn't have a bowl system in college sports...
Hehe, I was pretty sure Ohms was joking about that, that's why I did the LOL post. But you have to admit, ESPECIALLY IN BASEBALL, it makes no sense for a team to make the college world series with a .333 record simply because they won the conference tournament.
The Bowl system in football makes no sense in picking a national champion, but it makes a great deal of sense in rewarding lots of programs for certain acheivements and traditions. The basketball system of conference tournaments in addition to at-large bids probably works really well for that sport, but not for baseball. To have a .333 team even considered for the college world series makes no sense.
Taken in this complete context, Ohms sentiment makes some sense, even if it wasn't a joke.
EDIT: BTW, how do you find all this interesting stuff you post??? I've been wondering that for some time. Do you search the entire web for interesting tidbits to post here or do you, like, get some help, and people give you a heads up on stuff. You always seem to be right on top of the latest breaking news and it gets posted here; I've always wondered how that comes to be.
Re: Miami chosen as No. 1 seed; Oregon State left out of field
Quote:
Originally Posted by
OldFatGuy
Hehe, I was pretty sure Ohms was joking about that, that's why I did the LOL post. But you have to admit, ESPECIALLY IN BASEBALL, it makes no sense for a team to make the college world series with a .333 record simply because they won the conference tournament.
The Bowl system in football makes no sense in picking a national champion, but it makes a great deal of sense in rewarding lots of programs for certain acheivements and traditions. The basketball system of conference tournaments in addition to at-large bids probably works really well for that sport, but not for baseball. To have a .333 team even considered for the college world series makes no sense.
Taken in this complete context, Ohms sentiment makes some sense, even if it wasn't a joke.
I'm not a huge college sports fan, but regarding a playoff system for football...the question I have is;
Doesn't the current system pretty much always work out?
Every year we hear the same arguments about 2/3 way through the season, but I still hear every year that the general consensus is that the best teams usually have been crowned National Champion. For all it's faults, from what I keep hearing it generally gets it correct. That said, I can understand apprehension to dramatically change something that is financially rewarding and effective.
Re: Miami chosen as No. 1 seed; Oregon State left out of field
Quote:
Originally Posted by
OldFatGuy
BTW, how do you find all this interesting stuff you post??? I've been wondering that for some time. Do you search the entire web for interesting tidbits to post here or do you, like, get some help, and people give you a heads up on stuff. You always seem to be right on top of the latest breaking news and it gets posted here; I've always wondered how that comes to be.
It can all be found on yahoo (usually front page), espn, or si hours, and sometimes, days before it's posted on here
Re: Miami chosen as No. 1 seed; Oregon State left out of field
Quote:
Originally Posted by
etothep
It can all be found on yahoo (usually front page), espn, or si hours, and sometimes, days before it's posted on here
Oh, come on etothep, this thread is a very good example. The college world series teams were just announced THIS AFTERNOON. But, I take your point, as I'm not computer (or internet) savvy, I guess if I would just take some time on more popular internet sites I would be more informed. Still, for folks who aren't as up to date as you younger (I'm guessing) folks are, things like this at sites like this are kinda neat, IMHO.
Re: Miami chosen as No. 1 seed; Oregon State left out of field
Quote:
Originally Posted by
dickay
I'm not a huge college sports fan, but regarding a playoff system for football...the question I have is;
Doesn't the current system pretty much always work out?
Every year we hear the same arguments about 2/3 way through the season, but I still hear every year that the general consensus is that the best teams usually have been crowned National Champion. For all it's faults, from what I keep hearing it generally gets it correct. That said, I can understand apprehension to dramatically change something that is financially rewarding and effective.
I dunno, I would have to disagree, and I could use the JUST COMPLETED 2007-2008 season as an example. I'm not sold LSU was the best team out there, and I would love to have seen a playoff system including USC (who played really well at the end), Hawaii (yeah, they lost that last bowl game when they knew it didn't matter, but under different circumstances who knows), and even Va. Tech (my neighborhood) could've made some noise in a playoff system. I mean, if it weren't for a couple of losses by teams that LSU had NO CONTROL OVER, they wouldn't have even been in the championship game.
Re: Miami chosen as No. 1 seed; Oregon State left out of field
Quote:
Originally Posted by
OldFatGuy
I dunno, I would have to disagree, and I could use the JUST COMPLETED 2007-2008 season as an example. I'm not sold LSU was the best team out there, and I would love to have seen a playoff system including USC (who played really well at the end), Hawaii (yeah, they lost that last bowl game when they knew it didn't matter, but under different circumstances who knows), and even Va. Tech (my neighborhood) could've made some noise in a playoff system. I mean, if it weren't for a couple of losses by teams that LSU had NO CONTROL OVER, they wouldn't have even been in the championship game.
Thats why I said general consensus. I really don't follow college football alot, but if i'm not mistaken, didn't most analyst..commentators..ex-football coachs & personalities feel that the system got it right?
You're never going to make everyone happy. Heck, the Giants won the Superbowl and most people still think the Patriots were the better team. And if college football DOES implement a playoff system, I see even more complaints regarding who gets in it than I would think we see with the current profitable system.
Thats about all I can say on the issue because I really am a bit uneducated on it. It's all hearsay pretty much, and just food for thought.
Re: Miami chosen as No. 1 seed; Oregon State left out of field
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Wassit3
woot! Go Wolfpack!!!
Carolina sucks!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!