2007 NCAA Division I baseball tournament

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2007 NCAA Division I
baseball tournament
Season2007
Teams64
Finals site
ChampionsOregon State (2nd title)
Runner-upNorth Carolina (6th CWS Appearance)
Winning coachPat Casey (2nd title)
MOPJorge Reyes (Oregon State)

The 2007 NCAA Division I baseball tournament was held from June 1 to 24, 2007. Sixty-four NCAA Division I college baseball teams advanced to the post season tournament after having played through a regular season, and for some, a conference tournament.

The 2007 tournament culminated with 8 teams advancing to the College World Series at historic Rosenblatt Stadium in Omaha, Nebraska, on June 15. Unseeded Oregon State repeated as national champions, winning all five of its games in the 2007 CWS.

Oregon State went undefeated through the College World Series, posting a 5–0 record. The Beavers, led by head coach Pat Casey, won all three games in their four-team bracket and then, for the second straight season, defeated North Carolina in the best-of-three championship series— this time in two games. Oregon State became the fifth team to win consecutive NCAA titles (last done by LSU in 1996-97), and were the first team to win four games in a CWS by six or more runs. As of 2019, 2007 Oregon State remains the only team to have ever won at least four games by six or more runs in the same College World Series. Their opener against Cal State Fullerton was a tight 3–2 victory, but OSU's last four games in the CWS were not close, impressive for a team seeded in the lower half of the 64-team tournament.

The Beavers also became the first team to win the CWS after having posted a losing conference record. Oregon State was a disappointing 10–14 (.417) in the Pac-10, placing sixth among the nine baseball-playing schools (Oregon dropped baseball in 1981, but revived it in 2009.)

However, the Beavers' non-conference record during the regular season was an impressive 28–3 (.903), and as defending NCAA champions, just enough to gain a berth in the 64-team tournament. They were placed as a No. 3 seed in one of the 16 four-team regionals, in Charlottesville, Virginia. Oregon State responded by going 11–1 (.917) in the post season. Oregon State won their final 10 games to finish at 49–18 (.731) overall. The Beavers trailed in only one inning of 2007 CWS: the first inning of the final game. Their only loss in the post season came during the second game of regionals, where they fell in 13 innings to host Virginia.[1]

Oregon State freshman pitcher Jorge Reyes (of Warden, Washington) was named the Most Outstanding Player of the 2007 CWS. Reyes was 2–0 as a starter, defeating Cal State Fullerton in the opener and North Carolina in the first game of the finals.

Two elite programs from Louisiana, LSU and Tulane both failed to qualify for the field of 64, marking the first time since 1984 both schools stayed home. LSU reached the College World Series 13 times between 1986 and 2004, winning five national championships (1991, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000), while Tulane made trips to the CWS in 2001 and 2005.

Bids[edit]

Automatic bids[edit]

Conference champions from 30 Division I conferences earned automatic bids to regionals. The remaining 34 spots were awarded to schools as at-large invitees.

Conference School Record Berth type
America East Albany 29–27 Tournament champion
ACC North Carolina 48–12 Tournament champion
Atlantic Sun Jacksonville 34–26 Tournament champion
A-10 Charlotte 47–10 Tournament champion
Big East Rutgers 38–19 Tournament champion
Big South Coastal Carolina 48–11 Tournament champion
Big Ten Ohio State 37–22 Tournament champion
Big 12 Texas A&M 44–16 Tournament champion
Big West UC Riverside 37–19 Regular-season champion
CAA VCU 37–21 Tournament champion
Conference USA Rice 49–12 Tournament champion
Horizon League UIC 34–19 Tournament champion
Ivy League Brown 27–19 Championship series winner
MAAC Le Moyne 34–17 Tournament champion
MAC Kent State 33–24 Tournament champion
Mid-Con Oral Roberts 40–15 Tournament champion
MEAC Bethune-Cookman 33–25 Tournament champion
Missouri Valley Creighton 44–14 Tournament champion
MWC TCU 46–12 Tournament champion
NEC Monmouth 36–22 Tournament champion
OVC Austin Peay 39–20 Tournament champion
Pac-10 Arizona State 43–13 Regular-season champion
Patriot League Lafayette 33–18 Tournament champion
SEC Vanderbilt 46–10 Tournament champion
SoCon Wofford 30–31 Tournament champion
Southland Sam Houston State 38–22 Tournament champion
SWAC Prairie View A&M 34–23 Tournament champion
Sun Belt New Orleans 37–24 Tournament champion
WCC San Diego 43–16 Championship series winner
WAC Fresno State 36–27 Tournament champion

Bids by conference[edit]

Conference Total Schools
Atlantic Coast 7 Clemson, Florida State, Miami (FL), North Carolina, NC State, Virginia, Wake Forest
Big 12 6 Baylor, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma State, Texas, Texas A&M
Southeastern 5 Arkansas, Ole Miss, Mississippi State, South Carolina, Vanderbilt
Big West 4 UC Irvine, UC Riverside, Cal State Fullerton, Long Beach State
Conference USA 4 East Carolina, Memphis, Rice, Southern Miss
Pacific-10 4 Arizona, Arizona State, Oregon State, UCLA
Big East 3 Louisville, Rutgers, St. John's
Big Ten 3 Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio State
Sun Belt 3 Louisiana–Lafayette, New Orleans, Troy
Atlantic Sun 2 Jacksonville, Stetson
Missouri Valley 2 Creighton, Wichita State
Southern 2 Western Carolina, Wofford
WCC 2 Pepperdine, San Diego
Atlantic 10 1 Charlotte
America East 1 Albany
Big South 1 Coastal Carolina
Colonial 1 VCU
Horizon 1 UIC
Ivy 1 Brown
Metro Atlantic 1 LeMoyne
Mid-American 1 Kent State
Mid-Con 1 Oral Roberts
Mid-Eastern 1 Bethune-Cookman
Mountain West 1 TCU
Northeast 1 Monmouth
Ohio Valley 1 Austin Peay
Patriot 1 Lafayette
Southland 1 Sam Houston State
Southwestern 1 Prairie View
Western Athletic 1 Fresno State

National seeds[edit]

Bold indicates CWS participant.

  1. Vanderbilt
  2. Rice
  3. North Carolina
  4. Texas
  5. Arizona State
  6. Florida State
  7. Arkansas
  8. San Diego

Regionals and super regionals[edit]

Schedule[edit]

Regional rounds were held Friday, June 1, through Monday, June 4. Each regional followed a similar format, with two games played on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, and one on Monday if needed (many regionals in the southern U.S. had their schedules adversely affected by rain)

Day Game Teams
Fri. 6/1/07 1 2/3 or 1/4 (host choice)
2 2/3 or 1/4 (host choice)
Sat. 6/2/07 3 Loser Games 1 & 2
4 Winner Games 1 & 2
Sun. 6/3/07 5 Winner Game 3 vs Loser Game 4
6 Winner Games 4 & 5
Mon. 6/4/07 7 if needed, only if winner of game 5 wins game 6

Best-of-three super regionals were held Friday, June 8 through Monday, June 11. Four series were played Friday-Sunday and four series were played Saturday-Monday.

Bold indicates winner. * indicates extra innings.

Corvallis Super Regional[edit]

Hosted by Oregon State at Goss Stadium

First roundSecond roundRegional finalsSuper regionals
1Vanderbilt211
4Austin Peay1
1Vanderbilt3
2Michigan4
3Memphis7
2Michigan10
2Michigan7410
Nashville Regional – Hawkins Field
1Vanderbilt103
4Austin Peay18
3Memphis74Austin Peay5
1Vanderbilt11
Michigan02
1Virginia5
Oregon State18
4Lafayette1
1Virginia713
3Oregon State4
3Oregon State5
2Rutgers1
1Virginia33
Charlottesville Regional – Davenport Field
3Oregon State57
4Lafayette10
2Rutgers112Rutgers2
3Oregon State5

Houston Super Regional[edit]

Hosted by Rice at Reckling Park

First roundSecond roundRegional finalsSuper regionals
1Rice5
4Prairie View A&M0
1Rice6
2TCU3
3Baylor2
2TCU3
1Rice3
Houston Regional – Reckling Park
2TCU1
4Prairie View A&M2
3Baylor93Baylor5
2TCU10
2Rice3105
1Texas A&M7
Texas A&M22
4Le Moyne2
1Texas A&M4
2Louisiana–Lafayette5
3Ohio State4
2Louisiana–Lafayette5
2Louisiana–Lafayette12
College Station Regional – Olsen Field
1Texas A&M45
4Le Moyne5
3Ohio State6103Ohio State4
1Texas A&M10

Chapel Hill Super Regional[edit]

Hosted by North Carolina at Boshamer Stadium

First roundSecond roundRegional finalsSuper regionals
1North Carolina6
4Jacksonville0
1North Carolina11
2East Carolina10
3Western Carolina8
2East Carolina9
1North Carolina6
Chapel Hill Regional – Boshamer Stadium
3Western Carolina5
4Jacksonville0
3Western Carolina73Western Carolina9
2East Carolina5
3North Carolina969
1South Carolina9
South Carolina684
4Wofford1
1South Carolina12
3Charlotte8
3Charlotte6
2NC State3
1South Carolina11
Columbia, SC Regional – Sarge Frye Field
3Charlotte6
4Wofford6
2NC State102NC State10
3Charlotte12

Wichita Super Regional[edit]

Hosted by Wichita State at Eck Stadium

First roundSecond roundRegional finalsSuper regionals
1Texas8
4Brown2
1Texas1
2UC Irvine3
3Wake Forest0
2UC Irvine13
2UC Irvine9
Round Rock Regional – Dell Diamond
1Texas6
4Brown2
3Wake Forest43Wake Forest4
1Texas712
UC Irvine13
1Wichita State6
Wichita State02
4New Orleans7
4New Orleans8
2Arizona9
3Oral Roberts3
2Arizona4
2Arizona30
Wichita Regional – Eck Stadium
1Wichita State43
1Wichita State11
3Oral Roberts41Wichita State7
4New Orleans3

Tempe Super Regional[edit]

Hosted by Arizona State at Packard Stadium

First roundSecond roundRegional finalsSuper regionals
1Arizona State5
4Monmouth3
1Arizona State9
2UC Riverside2
3Nebraska5
2UC Riverside10
1Arizona State19
Tempe Regional – Packard Stadium
3Nebraska7
4Monmouth5
3Nebraska63Nebraska11
2UC Riverside1
5Arizona State47
1Ole Miss14
Ole Miss31
4Sam Houston State5
1Ole Miss4
2Southern Miss0
3Troy1
2Southern Miss14
1Ole Miss21
Oxford Regional – Swayze Field
4Sam Houston State13
4Sam Houston State5
3Troy44Sam Houston State1211
2Southern Miss11

Starkville Super Regional[edit]

Hosted by Mississippi State at Dudy Noble Field

First roundSecond roundRegional finalsSuper regionals
1Florida State6
4Bethune–Cookman2
1Florida State0
2Mississippi State3
3Stetson3
2Mississippi State6
2Mississippi State9
Tallahassee Regional – Dick Howser Stadium
1Florida State4
4Bethune–Cookman0
3Stetson123Stetson1
1Florida State17
Mississippi State88
1Coastal Carolina7
Clemson65
4VCU1
1Coastal Carolina8
2Clemson11
3St. John's2
2Clemson3
2Clemson15
Myrtle Beach Regional – Coastal Federal Field
1Coastal Carolina3
4VCU4
3St. John's53St. John's5
1Coastal Carolina6

Louisville Super Regional[edit]

Hosted by Louisville at Jim Patterson Stadium

First roundSecond roundRegional finalsSuper regionals
1Arkansas9
4Albany0
1Arkansas3
3Oklahoma State14
3Oklahoma State6
2Creighton4
3Oklahoma State7
Fayetteville Regional – Baum Stadium
1Arkansas6
4Albany11
2Creighton212Creighton0
1Arkansas6
Oklahoma State03122
1Missouri10
Louisville9220
4Kent State2
1Missouri7
3Louisville5
3Louisville13
2Miami (FL)7
1Missouri36
Columbia, MO Regional – Taylor Stadium
3Louisville416
4Kent State7
2Miami (FL)82Miami (FL)7
3Louisville8

Fullerton Super Regional[edit]

Hosted by Cal State Fullerton at Goodwin Field

First roundSecond roundRegional finalsSuper regionals
1San Diego2
4Fresno State6
4Fresno State4
2Cal State Fullerton6
3Minnesota1
2Cal State Fullerton7
2Cal State Fullerton13
San Diego Regional – Tony Gwynn Stadium
4Fresno State2
1San Diego5
3Minnesota6103Minnesota6
4Fresno State11
Cal State Fullerton122
1Long Beach State1
UCLA21
4UIC4
4UIC1
2UCLA3
3Pepperdine3
2UCLA7
2UCLA7
Long Beach Regional – Blair Field
1Long Beach State4
1Long Beach State6
3Pepperdine31Long Beach State4
4UIC3

Tournament notes[edit]

  • Albany, Brown, and Wofford were making their first NCAA tournament appearance.[2]
  • Oregon State is one of only six teams (South Carolina: 2010–2011, LSU: 1996–1997, Stanford: 1987–1988, Southern California: 1970–1974, Texas: 1949–1950) to win consecutive CWS titles.
  • Oregon State is also the first team to repeat as champion since the CWS switched to the current 3-game championship series.
  • Oregon State is the first champion to make it back to the CWS the year after they won title since Texas appeared in the 2003 after winning it in 2002
  • The 2007 Oregon State Beavers are the first CWS champions with a conference record of less than .500 (10–14)
  • Louisville is the second school whose athletic teams have played in a Final Four, BCS bowl game, and a College World Series within the last three years. Florida is the other school.
  • 2007 marks the 15th year in a row that the SEC has had at least one team make it to Omaha.
  • 2007 marks the second time the College World Series champions and runners-up are the same two consecutive years.

CWS records tied or broken[edit]

  • Oregon State became the first team to win four games by six or more runs in the CWS. As of 2021, 2007 Oregon State remains the final team to win four games by six or more runs in the CWS.
  • Oregon State became the first team to win the CWS while having a losing record in regular season conference play.
  • North Carolina's Rob Wooten pitched in a record 6 games in a single CWS.
  • North Carolina tied a CWS record by turning five double plays in game one of the final series against Oregon State.[3]
  • North Carolina used a CWS record eight pitchers in its Game 6 loss to Rice.
  • Game 7 between UC-Irvine and Cal State-Fullerton went 13 innings and lasted 5 hours and 40 minutes. It was the longest game in terms of time in College World Series history.[4] The game also had the most hit-by-pitches (eight) and reportedly used and lost 96 balls, the most ever.[5] The previous record was 84 balls lost.
  • Louisville's Logan Johnson tied the CWS record with four home runs.
  • By beating Arizona State, UC-Irvine became the first team in CWS history to win two extra-inning games back to back.
  • A CWS record number of batters were hit by pitches during the series.[6]

College World Series[edit]

Participants[edit]

School Conference Record (conference) Head coach CWS appearances Best CWS finish CWS record
Not including this year
Arizona State Pac-10 48–13 (19–5) Pat Murphy 19
(last: 2005)
1st
(1965, 1967, 1969, 1977, 1981)
58–32
Cal State Fullerton Big West 38–23 (10–11) George Horton 14
(last: 2006)
1st
(1979, 1984, 1995, 2004)
34–23
Louisville Big East 46–22 (19–8) Dan McDonnell 0
(last: none)
none 0–0
Mississippi State SEC 38–20 (15–13) Ron Polk 7
(last: 1998)
3rd
(1985)
7–14
North Carolina ACC 53–13 (21–9) Mike Fox 5
(last: 2006)
2nd
(2006)
6–10
Oregon State Pac-10 44–18 (10–14) Pat Casey 3
(last: 2006)
1st
(2006)
6–6
Rice C-USA 54–12 (22–2) Wayne Graham 5
(last: 2006)
1st
(2003)
8–9
UC Irvine Big West 45–15–1 (15–6) Dave Serrano 0
(last: none)
none 0–0

Bracket[edit]

First roundSecond roundSemifinalsFinals
Oregon State3
Cal State Fullerton2
Oregon State12
5Arizona State6
5Arizona State5
UC Irvine4
Oregon State7
UC Irvine1
Cal State Fullerton4
UC Irvine55Arizona State7
UC Irvine8
Oregon State119
2Rice15
3North Carolina43
Louisville10
2Rice14
3North Carolina4
Mississippi State5
3North Carolina8
2Rice14
3North Carolina67
Louisville12
Mississippi State43North Carolina3
Louisville1

Championship series[edit]

Saturday 6/23[edit]

Game 14: 6:00 pm[edit]
Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
North Carolina 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 1 0 4 12 2
Oregon State 0 2 1 0 1 2 4 1 X 11 12 2
WP: Jorge Reyes (2–0)   LP: Alex White (6–7)
Home runs:
UNC: Johnson
OSU: Lennerton

Sunday 6/24[edit]

Game 15: 6:00 pm[edit]
Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Oregon State 0 3 1 0 1 0 2 0 2 9 13 0
North Carolina 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 9 2
WP: Mike Stutes (12–4)   LP: Luke Putkonen (8–2)
Home runs:
OSU: Barney, Lennerton
UNC: Ackley

All-Tournament Team[edit]

The following players were members of the All-Tournament Team.[7]

Position Player School
P Jorge Reyes (MOP) Oregon State
Andrew Carignan North Carolina
C Mitch Canham Oregon State
1B Dustin Ackley North Carolina
2B Joey Wong Oregon State
3B Diego Seastrunk Rice
SS Darwin Barney Oregon State
OF Bryan Petersen UC Irvine
Tim Fedroff North Carolina
Scott Santschi Oregon State
DH Mike Lissman Oregon State

Tournament performance by conference[edit]

Conference Tournament record Percentage Schools to super regionals Schools to CWS
Pacific-10 21–6 0.778 Arizona St, Oregon St, UCLA Arizona St, Oregon St
Big West 14–7 0.667 UC Irvine, Cal State Fullerton UC Irvine, Cal State Fullerton
SEC 17–10 0.630 Ole Miss, Mississippi St, South Carolina Mississippi St
Big East 10–8 0.556 Louisville Louisville
ACC 19–16 0.543 Clemson, North Carolina North Carolina
Big 12 15–13 0.536 Oklahoma St, Texas A&M
Conference USA 9–8 0.529 Rice Rice
Missouri Valley 5–5 0.500 Wichita State
Atlantic 10 2–2 0.500
Big South 2–2 0.500
Mountain West 2–2 0.500
Southland 2–2 0.500
Western Athletic 2–2 0.500
Big 10 5–7 0.417 Michigan
Sun Belt 3–6 0.333
Southern 2–4 0.333
Horizon 1–2 0.333
Ohio Valley 1–2 0.333
Atlantic Sun 1–4 0.200
America East 0–2 0.000
Colonial 0–2 0.000
Ivy 0–2 0.000
Metro Atlantic 0–2 0.000
Mid-American 0–2 0.000
Mid-Con 0–2 0.000
Mid-Eastern 0–2 0.000
Northeast 0–2 0.000
Patriot 0–2 0.000
Southwestern Athletic 0–2 0.000
WCC 0–4 0.000

References[edit]

  1. ^ "The Seattle Times | Local news, sports, business, politics, entertainment, travel, restaurants and opinion for Seattle and the Pacific Northwest".
  2. ^ "NCAA Men's College World Series Records 1947-2008" (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved January 20, 2009.
  3. ^ Borzi, Pat (June 24, 2007). "Oregon State One Win From a Second Title". New York Times. Retrieved June 26, 2007.
  4. ^ "Student eliminates coaching mentor in Irvine's victory". ESPNU. June 19, 2007. Retrieved June 26, 2007.
  5. ^ "Irvine uses a little luck, a lot of baseballs to knock out Cal State Fullerton". ESPNU. June 18, 2007. Retrieved June 26, 2007.
  6. ^ "COLLEGE WORLD SERIES: Getting beaned has fast become big hit". Salt Lake Tribune. June 21, 2007. Archived from the original on October 10, 2007. Retrieved June 26, 2007.
  7. ^ "OSU in first and last Division I games of season". OregonLive.com. June 25, 2007. Retrieved June 25, 2007.