Vanderbilt wins 2019 College World Series title in three games over Michigan NCAA.com
CHAMPS
PRESENTED BY OMAHA, Neb. — Vanderbilt is 2019 College World Series champion after defeating Michigan 8-2 in Game 3 of the final series. Vanderbilt is the fourth school in five years to clinch the national title after dropping Game 1 of the CWS finals. Mason Hickman earned the win Wednesday night, allowing just one first-inning run in six strong frames. He struck out 10 and allowed just four hits. CWS 2019: Pat DeMarco homered in the second and then walked with the bases loaded in a three-run third inning. Stephen Scott's two-out single after DeMarco's walk broke the game open early at 4-1. After losing 7-4 to Michigan in Game 1 on Monday, Vanderbilt defeated Michigan 4-1 on Tuesday to even the final series at a game apiece. Kumar Rocker struck out 11 and allowed just three hits in 6.1 innings to earn his second win of this College World Series. This is Vanderbilt's second College World Series title in four appearances in Omaha. The Commodores also won the national title in 2014. Here is the 2019 College World Series finals schedule: Game 1:
Game 2:
Game 3: Be sure to scroll down below for the latest scores, news and highlights from the College World Series: 2019 College World Series schedule and results
DATE GAME TEAMS Saturday, June 15 Game 1 Saturday, June 15 Game 2 Sunday, June 16 Game 3 Sunday, June 16 Game 4 Monday, June 17 Game 5 Monday, June 17 Game 6 Wednesday, June 19* Game 7 Wednesday, June 19 Game 8 Wednesday, June 19 Game 9 Thursday, June 20 Game 10 Friday, June 21 Game 11 Friday, June 21 Game 12 Monday, June 24 CWS Finals: Game 1 Tuesday, June 25 CWS Finals: Game 2 Wednesday, June 26 CWS Finals: Game 3* * Game began Tuesday, June 18 but rain postponed to the conclusion of the game to Wednesday, June 19. 2019 College World Series bracket
The 2019 College World Series kicks off June 15 and will continue through June 25/26. The eight-team field will be split into two brackets. The final two teams will be decided in the semifinal games on June 22. The best-of-three final series is then scheduled for June 24-25/26. 2019 NCAA baseball tournament Bracket for Super Regionals
Sixty-four teams were selected to the 2019 NCAA baseball tournament, split into 16 four-team regionals. Each regional was double-elimination from May 31-June 3. Sixteen teams advanced to eight two-team Super Regionals, played June 7-10. SHOP CWS GEAR: 2019 NCAA baseball tournament Schedule scores for Super Regionals
Game times listed in ET. Los Angeles Super Regional
ADVANCING: Michigan Lubbock Super Regional
ADVANCING: Texas Tech Fayetteville Super Regional
ADVANCING: Arkansas Baton Rouge Super Regional
ADVANCING: Florida State Nashville Super Regional
ADVANCING: Vanderbilt Louisville Super Regional
ADVANCING: Louisville Starkville Super Regional
ADVANCING: Mississippi State Chapel Hill Super Regional
ADVANCING: Auburn
2019 NCAA baseball tournament Schedule scores for Regionals
Game times listed in ET. Los Angeles Regional — No 1 UCLA
ADVANCING: UCLA Corvallis Regional — No 16 Oregon State
ADVANCING: Michigan Oklahoma City Regional — No 9 Oklahoma State
ADVANCING: Oklahoma State Lubbock Regional — No 8 Texas Tech
ADVANCING: Texas Tech Fayetteville Regional — No 5 Arkansas
ADVANCING: Arkansas Oxford Regional — No 12 Mississippi
ADVANCING: Mississippi Baton Rouge Regional — No 13 LSU
ADVANCING: LSU Athens Regional — No 4 Georgia
ADVANCING: Florida State Nashville Regional — No 2 Vanderbilt
ADVANCING: Vanderbilt Morgantown Regional — No 15 West Virginia
ADVANCING: Duke Greenville Regional — No 10 East Carolina
ADVANCING: East Carolina Louisville Regional — No 7 Louisville
ADVANCING: Louisville Starkville Regional — No 6 Mississippi State
ADVANCING: Mississippi State Stanford Regional — No 11 Stanford
ADVANCING: Stanford Chapel Hill Regional — No 14 North Carolina
ADVANCING: North Carolina Atlanta Regional — No 3 Georgia Tech
ADVANCING: Auburn NCAA baseball tournament 2019 schedule & key dates
REGIONAL HOSTS ANNOUNCED: Sunday, May 26 on , ESPN Bottomline and at 8:30 p.m. ET. SELECTION SHOW: Monday, May 27 at 12 p.m. ET. The selection show was televised on ESPNU. REGIONALS: Friday, May 31-Monday, June 3 16 top seeds will host regional competition on campus. Each regional is a four-team, double elimination tournament. Teams are seeded Nos. 1-4 in each regional. SUPER REGIONALS: Friday, June 7-Monday, June 10 Eight teams will host on-campus super regional tournaments. Each super regional is a two-team, best-of-three series. COLLEGE WORLD SERIES: Saturday, June 15-Monday/Tuesday, June 25/26 Eight teams will advance to a two-week double-elimination final site bracket. The final two teams will play in a best-of-three series to decide the national championship. All games will be played at TD Ameritrade Park Omaha in Omaha, Nebraska. . 2019 NCAA Baseball Conference tournament brackets automatic qualifiers
Of the 64 teams that qualified for the 2019 DI tournament, 31 were awarded automatic bids via conference championships. The remaining 33 schools were selected at-large. Here were all the 2019 conference champions, who received automatic qualification. CONFERENCE (BRACKET) LOCATION DATES CHAMPION Vestal, NY May 22-25 Stony Brook Clearwater, FL May 21-26 Cincinnati Durham, NC May 21-26 North Carolina DeLand, FL May 22-25/26 Liberty Bronx, NY May 22-25 Fordham Mason, OH May 23-25 Creighton Fayetteville, NC May 21-25 Campbell Omaha, NE May 22-26 Ohio State Oklahoma City May 22-26 Oklahoma State Big West No Tournament N/A UC Santa Barbara Harrisonburg, VA May 22-25/26 UNCW Biloxi, MS May 22-26 Southern Miss Fairborn, OH May 22-25 UIC Cambridge, MA May 18-19 Harvard Staten Island, NY May 22-26 Quinnipiac Avon, OH May 22-26 Central Michigan Daytona Beach, FL May 15-18 Florida A&M Normal, IL May 21-25 Indiana State Reno, Nev. May 23-26 Fresno State Norwich, CT May 23-26 Central Connecticut Marion, IL May 21-26 Jacksonville State Pac-12 No Tournament N/A UCLA at higher seed May 11-12; 17-19 Army Hoover, AL May 21-26 Vanderbilt Greenville, SC May 21-26 Mercer Sugar Land, TX May 22-25 McNeese New Orleans, LA May 15-19 Southern Tulsa, OK May 22-25 Omaha Conway, SC May 21-26 Coastal Carolina Stockton, CA May 23-25 Loyola Marymount Mesa, AZ May 22-25/26 Sacramento State College World Series history NCAA baseball national champions
Southern California leads all schools with 12 national titles, twice as many as any other school since the College World Series started in 1947. USC's last national championship came in 1998. Since the turn of the decade (2011-18), there have been eight different schools to take home the crown. CWS HISTORY: In 2018, Oregon State won its third national title after a 55-12-1 season. The Beavers defeated Arkansas in three games in the final series. Below is the full championship history from 1947-2018. The College World Series has called Omaha home since 1950. YEAR CHAMPION (RECORD) COACH SCORE RUNNER-UP SITE 2019 Tim Corbin 8-2 Michigan Omaha, Neb. 2018 Pat Casey 5-0 Arkansas Omaha, Neb. 2017 Kevin O'Sullivan 6-1 LSU Omaha, Neb. 2016 Gary Gilmore 4-3 Arizona Omaha, Neb. 2015 Brian O'Connor 4-2 Vanderbilt Omaha, Neb. 2014 Tim Corbin 3-2 Virginia Omaha, Neb. 2013 John Savage 8-0 Mississippi State Omaha, Neb. 2012 * Arizona (48-17) Andy Lopez 4-1 South Carolina Omaha, Neb. 2011 * South Carolina (55-14) Ray Tanner 5-2 Florida Omaha, Neb. 2010 South Carolina (54-16) Ray Tanner 2-1 (11 inn.) UCLA Omaha, Neb. 2009 LSU (56-17) Paul Mainieri 11-4 Texas Omaha, Neb. 2008 Fresno State (47-31) Mike Batesole 6-1 Georgia Omaha, Neb. 2007 * Oregon State (49-18) Pat Casey 9-3 North Carolina Omaha, Neb. 2006 Oregon State (50-16) Pat Casey 3-2 North Carolina Omaha, Neb. 2005 * Texas (56-16) Augie Garrido 6-2 Florida Omaha, Neb. 2004 Cal St. Fullerton (47-22) George Horton 3-2 Texas Omaha, Neb. 2003 Rice (58-12) Wayne Graham 14-2 Stanford Omaha, Neb. 2002 * Texas (57-15) Augie Garrido 12-6 South Carolina Omaha, Neb. 2001 * Miami (Fla.) (53-12) Jim Morris 12-1 Stanford Omaha, Neb. 2000 * LSU (52-17) Skip Bertman 6-5 Stanford Omaha, Neb. 1999 * Miami (Fla.) (50-13) Jim Morris 6-5 Florida State Omaha, Neb. 1998 Southern California (49-17) Mike Gillespie 21-14 Arizona State Omaha, Neb. 1997 * LSU (57-13) Skip Bertman 13-6 Alabama Omaha, Neb. 1996 * LSU (52-15) Skip Bertman 9-8 Miami (Fla.) Omaha, Neb. 1995 * Cal St. Fullerton (57-9) Augie Garrido 11-5 Southern California Omaha, Neb. 1994 * Oklahoma (50-17) Larry Cochell 13-5 Georgia Tech Omaha, Neb. 1993 LSU (53-17-1) Skip Bertman 8-0 Wichita State Omaha, Neb. 1992 * Pepperdine (48-11-1) Andy Lopez 3-2 Cal St. Fullerton Omaha, Neb. 1991 * LSU (55-18) Skip Bertman 6-3 Wichita State Omaha, Neb. 1990 Georgia (52-19) Steve Webber 2-1 Oklahoma State Omaha, Neb. 1989 Wichita State (68-16) Gene Stephenson 5-3 Texas Omaha, Neb. 1988 Stanford (46-23) Mark Marquess 9-4 Arizona State Omaha, Neb. 1987 Stanford (53-17) Mark Marquess 9-5 Oklahoma State Omaha, Neb. 1986 Arizona (49-19) Jerry Kindall 10-2 Florida State Omaha, Neb. 1985 Miami (Fla.) (64-16) Ron Fraser 10-6 Texas Omaha, Neb. 1984 Cal St. Fullerton (66-20) Augie Garrido 3-1 Texas Omaha, Neb. 1983 * Texas (66-14) Cliff Gustafson 4-3 Alabama Omaha, Neb. 1982 * Miami (Fla.) (55-17-1) Ron Fraser 9-3 Wichita State Omaha, Neb. 1981 Arizona State (55-13) Jim Brock 7-4 Oklahoma State Omaha, Neb. 1980 Arizona (45-21-1) Jerry Kindall 5-3 Hawaii Omaha, Neb. 1979 Cal St. Fullerton (60-14-1) Augie Garrido 2-1 Arkansas Omaha, Neb. 1978 * Southern California (54-9) Rod Dedeaux 10-3 Arizona State Omaha, Neb. 1977 Arizona State (57-12) Jim Brock 2-1 South Carolina Omaha, Neb. 1976 Arizona (56-17) Jerry Kindall 7-1 Eastern Michigan Omaha, Neb. 1975 Texas (59-6) Cliff Gustafson 5-1 South Carolina Omaha, Neb. 1974 Southern California (50-20) Rod Dedeaux 7-3 Miami (Fla.) Omaha, Neb. 1973 * Southern California (51-11) Rod Dedeaux 4-3 Arizona State Omaha, Neb. 1972 Southern California (47-13-1) Rod Dedeaux 1-0 Arizona State Omaha, Neb. 1971 Southern California (46-11) Rod Dedeaux 5-2 Southern Illinois Omaha, Neb. 1970 Southern California (45-13) Rod Dedeaux 2-1 (15 inn.) Florida State Omaha, Neb. 1969 Arizona State (56-11) Bobby Winkles 10-1 Tulsa Omaha, Neb. 1968 * Southern California (43-12-1) Rod Dedeaux 4-3 Southern Illinois Omaha, Neb. 1967 Arizona State (53-12) Bobby Winkles 11-0 Houston Omaha, Neb. 1966 Ohio State (27-6-1) Marty Karow 8-2 Oklahoma State Omaha, Neb. 1965 Arizona State (54-8) Bobby Winkles 2-0 Ohio State Omaha, Neb. 1964 Minnesota (31-12) Dick Siebert 5-1 Missouri Omaha, Neb. 1963 Southern California (35-10) Rod Dedeaux 5-2 Arizona Omaha, Neb. 1962 Michigan (34-15) Don Lund 5-4 (15 inn.) Santa Clara Omaha, Neb. 1961 * Southern California (36-7) Rod Dedeaux 1-0 Oklahoma State Omaha, Neb. 1960 Minnesota (34-7-1) Dick Siebert 2-1 (10 inn.) Southern California Omaha, Neb. 1959 Oklahoma State (27-5) Toby Greene 5-0 Arizona Omaha, Neb. 1958 Southern California (29-3) Rod Dedeaux 8-7 (12 inn.) Missouri Omaha, Neb. 1957 * California (35-10) George Wolfman 1-0 Penn State Omaha, Neb. 1956 Minnesota (37-9) Dick Siebert 12-1 Arizona Omaha, Neb. 1955 Wake Forest (29-7) Taylor Sanford 7-6 Western Michigan Omaha, Neb. 1954 Missouri (22-4) John "Hi" Simmons 4-1 Rollins Omaha, Neb. 1953 Michigan (21-9) Ray Fisher 7-5 Texas Omaha, Neb. 1952 Holy Cross (21-3) Jack Barry 8-4 Missouri Omaha, Neb. 1951 * Oklahoma (19-9) Jack Baer 3-2 Tennessee Omaha, Neb. 1950 Texas (27-6) Bibb Falk 3-0 Washington State Omaha, Neb. 1949 * Texas (23-7) Bibb Falk 10-3 Wake Forest Wichita, Kan. 1948 Southern California (26-4) Sam Barry 9-2 Yale Kalamazoo, Mich. 1947 * California (31-10) Clint Evans 8-7 Yale Kalamazoo, Mich. *Indicates undefeated teams in College World Series play. Vanderbilt' s Gordon Sargent wins individual title in 2022 DI men' s golf championship
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