1996 NCAA Division I baseball tournament

The 1996 NCAA Division I baseball tournament was played at the end of the 1996 NCAA Division I baseball season to determine the national champion of college baseball. The tournament concluded with eight teams competing in the College World Series, a double-elimination tournament in its fiftieth year. Eight regional competitions were held to determine the participants in the final event. Each region was composed of six teams, resulting in 48 teams participating in the tournament at the conclusion of their regular season, and in some cases, after a conference tournament.[1] The fiftieth tournament's champion was LSU, coached by Skip Bertman. The Most Outstanding Player was Pat Burrell of Miami (FL).

1996 NCAA Division I
baseball tournament
Season1996
Teams48
Finals site
ChampionsLSU (3rd title)
Runner-upMiami (FL) (15th CWS Appearance)
Winning coachSkip Bertman (3rd title)
MOPPat Burrell (Miami (FL))
TelevisionESPN Networks, CBS Sports

Regionals

edit

The opening rounds of the tournament were played across eight regional sites across the country, each consisting of a six-team field. Each regional tournament is double-elimination, however region brackets are variable depending on the number of teams remaining after each round. The winners of each regional advanced to the College World Series.

Bold indicates winner.

Atlantic Regional

edit

Hosted by Clemson at Tiger Field in Clemson, South Carolina

Round 1Round 2QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal
1Clemson9
6Charleston Southern11Clemson5
4Old Dominion1
2Tennessee41Clemson6
5West Virginia85West Virginia3
5West Virginia91Clemson12
3Georgia Southern42Tennessee5
3Georgia Southern62Tennessee10
4Old Dominion02Tennessee65West Virginia4
2Tennessee83Georgia Southern1
6Charleston Southern4

Central I Regional

edit

Hosted by Texas at Disch–Falk Field in Austin, Texas

Round 1Round 2QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal
6Sam Houston State2
3Texas4
1Miami (FL)43Texas7
6Sam Houston State51Miami (FL)91Miami (FL)8
1Miami (FL)5
5SW Missouri State2
2Long Beach State2
2Long Beach State3
1Miami (FL)8
5SW Missouri State5
5SW Missouri State134UCLA4
4UCLA2
3Texas25SW Missouri State4*
4UCLA54UCLA9*
6Sam Houston State2
4UCLA10

Central II Regional

edit

Hosted by Texas Tech at Dan Law Field in Lubbock, Texas

Round 1Round 2QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal
1Southern California20
6Akron101Southern California15
4Arkansas5
2Texas Tech21Southern California3
5Fresno State123Oklahoma State9
5Fresno State53Oklahoma State10
3Oklahoma State121Southern California2
3Oklahoma State61Southern California13*
4Arkansas55Fresno State22Texas Tech10*
6Akron22Texas Tech4
2Texas Tech7

East Regional

edit

Hosted by Florida at Alfred A. McKethan Stadium in Gainesville, Florida

Round 1Round 2QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal
1Florida7
6Bucknell01Florida12
3NC State9
2UCF71Florida6*
5UMass84South Florida4*
5UMass81Florida12
4South Florida145UMass2
3NC State34South Florida12
4South Florida125UMass75UMass13
6Bucknell12UCF5
2UCF13

Midwest Regional

edit

Hosted by Wichita State at Eck Stadium in Wichita, Kansas

Round 1Round 2QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal
1Wichita State4
6Indiana01Wichita State9
4Missouri2
2Cal State Fullerton191Wichita State6
5Delaware82Cal State Fullerton1
2Cal State Fullerton71Wichita State16
3Rice33Rice6
3Rice172Cal State Fullerton10
4Missouri43Rice113Rice13
6Indiana106Indiana8
5Delaware8

South I Regional

edit

Hosted by Alabama at Sewell–Thomas Stadium in Tuscaloosa, Alabama

Round 1Round 2QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal
1Alabama19
6Princeton21Alabama9
3South Alabama3
2Virginia11Alabama3
5Notre Dame124Stetson1
5Notre Dame61Alabama18
4Stetson72Virginia8
3South Alabama84Stetson4*
4Stetson95Notre Dame12Virginia5*
6Princeton22Virginia7
2Virginia12

South II Regional

edit

Hosted by Louisiana State at Alex Box Stadium in Baton Rouge, Louisiana

Round 1Round 2QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal
1LSU8
6Austin Peay51LSU7
3UNLV6
2Georgia Tech31LSU17
5New Orleans135New Orleans4
5New Orleans131LSU29
4Tulane52Georgia Tech13
3UNLV75New Orleans7
4Tulane104Tulane42Georgia Tech12
6Austin Peay32Georgia Tech7
2Georgia Tech14

West Regional

edit

Hosted by Stanford at Sunken Diamond in Stanford, California

Round 1Round 2QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal
1Florida State16
6Northeastern Illinois01Florida State10
4UC Santa Barbara1
2Stanford101Florida State5
5Cal State Northridge52Stanford4
2Stanford81Florida State9
3Mississippi State65Cal State Northridge2
3Mississippi State62Stanford3
4UC Santa Barbara23Mississippi State195Cal State Northridge4
6Northeastern Illinois15Cal State Northridge20
5Cal State Northridge18

College World Series

edit

The championship game ended dramatically when LSU's Warren Morris hit a two-out, two-run home run against Miami reliever Robbie Morrison in the bottom of the ninth inning to lift the Tigers to a 9–8 victory over the Hurricanes. It was Morris's only home run of the 1996 season. Morris, an All-American in 1995, missed much of the 1996 season after suffering a wrist injury early in the campaign.

Oklahoma State's participation in CWS marked the last athletic event for the Big 8 Conference. The Big 8 was absorbed into the new Big 12 on July 1, 1996.

Participants

edit
SeedingSchoolConferenceRecord (conference)Head coachCWS appearancesCWS best finishCWS record
1AlabamaSEC49–17 (20–10)Jim Wells2
(last: 1983)
2nd
(1983)
4–4
2FloridaSEC48–16 (20–10)Andy Lopez2
(last: 1991)
3rd
(1991)
3–4
3Wichita StateMVC54–9 (24–4)Gene Stephenson6
(last: 1993)
1st
(1989)
16–9
4ClemsonACC49–15 (17–7)Jack Leggett7
(last: 1995)
5th
(1958, 1959, 1976)
4–14
5Miami (FL)n/a47–13 (n/a)Jim Morris14
(last: 1995)
1st
(1982, 1985)
29–25
6LSUSEC48–15 (20–10)Skip Bertman7
(last: 1994)
1st
(1991, 1993)
15–11
7Florida StateACC51–15 (19–5)Mike Martin14
(last: 1995)
2nd
(1970, 1986)
18–28
8Oklahoma StateBig 845–19 (17–9)Gary Ward17
(last: 1993)
1st
(1959)
38–32

Results

edit

Bracket

edit
First roundSecond roundSemifinalsFinals
             
1Alabama7
8Oklahoma State5
1Alabama1
5Miami (FL)15
4Clemson3
5Miami (FL)7
5Miami (FL)14
Bracket One
4Clemson5
8Oklahoma State5
4Clemson810
1Alabama13
4Clemson14
5Miami (FL)8
6LSU9
2Florida5
7Florida State2
2Florida4
6LSU9
3Wichita State8
6LSU9
6LSU2
Bracket Two
2Florida1
7Florida State8
3Wichita State4
2Florida6
7Florida State3

Game results

edit
DateGameWinnerScoreLoserNotes
May 31Game 1Alabama7–5Oklahoma State
Game 2Miami (FL)7–3Clemson
June 1Game 3Florida5–2Florida State
Game 4LSU9–8Wichita State
June 2Game 5Miami (FL)15–1Alabama
Game 6Clemson8–5 (10 innings)Oklahoma StateOklahoma State eliminated
June 3Game 7LSU9–4Florida
Game 8Florida State8–4Wichita StateWichita State eliminated
June 4Game 9Clemson14–13AlabamaAlabama eliminated
Game 10Florida6–3Florida StateFlorida State eliminated
June 5Game 11Miami (FL)14–5ClemsonClemson eliminated
June 6Game 12LSU2–1FloridaFlorida eliminated
June 8FinalLSU9–8Miami (FL)LSU wins CWS

All-Tournament Team

edit

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

PositionPlayerSchool
PJ.D. ArteagaMiami (FL)
Ed YarnallLSU
CTim LanierLSU
1BChris MollerAlabama
2BRudy GomezMiami (FL)
3BPat Burrell (MOP)Miami (FL)
SSAlex CoraMiami (FL)
OFJustin BowlesLSU
Michael DeCelleMiami (FL)
Brad WilkersonFlorida
DHChuck HazzardFlorida

Notable players

edit

Tournament notes

edit
  • LSU's 29–13 victory over Georgia Tech sets a new tournament record for most combined runs (42).

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "NCAA Men's College World Series Records" (PDF). NCAA. 2009. p. 195. Retrieved November 5, 2014.