- Source: 2006 NCAA Division I baseball tournament
The 2006 NCAA Division I baseball tournament was held from June 2 through June 26, 2006. Sixty-four NCAA Division I college baseball teams met after having played their way through a regular season, and for some, a conference tournament, to play in the NCAA tournament. The tournament culminated with 8 teams in the College World Series at historic Rosenblatt Stadium in Omaha, Nebraska.
After winning the regional and super regional rounds of the 2006 NCAA Division I baseball tournament, eight teams advanced to Omaha. Clemson, Georgia Tech, North Carolina, Cal State Fullerton, Oregon State, Rice, Georgia, and Miami (FL) all won their super-regionals and made the trip to the 2006 College World Series. Five national seeds advanced to Omaha: Clemson (1), Rice (2), Cal State Fullerton (5), Georgia (7), and Georgia Tech (8). Third-seeded Texas and sixth-seeded Nebraska both fell in the regionals, while the fourth seed Alabama lost in super regional play.
The first pitch of the 2006 CWS was Friday, June 16, at 1:00 PM CDT (18:00 UTC). The 2006 tournament was only the second time in CWS history in which 16 games were played (the other being the 2003 College World Series).
After losing their tournament opener to Miami (FL), the Oregon State Beavers staved off elimination for four straight games to win their bracket and advance to the championship series. The Rice Owls, who had not lost a three-game series all season, were shut out in consecutive games by the Beavers and failed to score in a CWS-record 23 innings. Oregon State advanced to face North Carolina in the final.
The best-of-three championship series featured Oregon State and North Carolina. Oregon State won the deciding game, 3–2, winning the school's first national title in baseball and its second NCAA championship overall. All games were televised on ESPN and ESPN2.
Oregon State set a CWS record by winning six elimination games (four in bracket play, two in the championship series) and also became the first team ever to lose twice in Omaha and still win the title. Oregon State is the only team besides Holy Cross in 1952 to win six games in the College World Series. Oregon State played in half (eight of 16) of the games in the tournament.
OSU pitcher Jonah Nickerson was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.
Five-time national champion LSU was left out of the field of 64, the first time since 1988 that the Tigers failed to qualify for a regional. LSU's overall record of 35–24 merited at-large consideration, but it was undone by poor performance in the Southeastern Conference, where the Tigers finished 8th out of 12 teams at 13–17. LSU won national championships in 1991, '93, '96, '97 and 2000 under Hall of Fame coach Skip Bertman, who was the school's athletic director at this time. Ten days after LSU's season ended, Bertman fired his successor, Smoke Laval, and hired Notre Dame coach Paul Mainieri.
Bids
= Automatic bids
=Conference champions from 30 Division I conferences earned automatic bids to regionals. The remaining 34 spots were awarded to schools as at-large invitees.
= Bids by conference
=National seeds
Bold indicates CWS participant.
Clemson
Rice
Texas
Alabama
Cal State Fullerton
Nebraska
Georgia
Georgia Tech
Regionals and super regionals
Bold indicates winner.
= Clemson Super Regional
== Houston Super Regional
== Corvallis Super Regional
== Tuscaloosa Super Regional
== Fullerton Super Regional
== Oxford Super Regional
== Athens Super Regional
== Atlanta Super Regional
=College World Series
= Participants
== Bracket
== Championship series
=Saturday 6/24
= Championship Game #1: 6:00 PM =
Note: 77 minute rain delay in top of 6th inning
Sunday 6/25
= Championship Game #2: 6:00 PM =
Monday 6/26
= Championship Game #3: 6:00 PM =
= All-Tournament Team
=The following players were members of the All-Tournament Team.
Tournament performance by conference
Notes on tournament field
Lehigh, UNC Asheville, San Francisco, Prairie View, and Sacred Heart were making their first NCAA tournament appearance.
See also
2006 NCAA Division II baseball tournament
2006 NCAA Division III baseball tournament
2006 NAIA World Series
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
- NASCAR on NBC
- 2006 NCAA Division I baseball tournament
- NCAA Division I baseball tournament
- 2024 NCAA Division I baseball tournament
- 2023 NCAA Division I baseball tournament
- 2005 NCAA Division I baseball tournament
- 2011 NCAA Division I baseball tournament
- List of NCAA Division I baseball programs
- 2017 NCAA Division I baseball tournament
- 2013 NCAA Division I baseball tournament
- 2012 NCAA Division I baseball tournament