Men’s College World Series Results Schedule

Here is the 2023 NCAA Baseball Tournament. The Regionals Tour will be held June 2-5. Get the NCAA Interactive Baseball Bracket here.

Below are the NCAA’s undergraduate regional, national, and 2023 College World Series schedules.

  • Regionals: Friday – Monday, 2nd – 5th June
  • Super Regionals: Friday-Sunday 9th-11th June or Saturday-Monday 10th-12th June
  • Day One of the MCWS Games: begin Friday June 16th
  • MCWS-Final: From Saturday to Monday, 24.-26. June
  • Last tournament game: Monday June 26th

You can get a printout of the NCAA College Baseball Bracket here, and you can get a printout of the NCAA College World Series here.

2023 NCAA baseball schedule, results by region

All times ET

Auburn Regional is hosted by Auburn

Baton Rouge Regional is hosted by LSU

Charlottesville Regional hosted by Virginia

Clemson Regional is hosted by Clemson

Columbia Regional hosted by South Carolina

Conway Regional is hosted by Coastal Carolina

Coral Gables Regional hosted by Miami, Florida

The state of Arkansas hosts the Fayetteville Regional

It hosted the Gainesville Regional in Florida

Lexington Regional is hosted by Kentucky

The Nashville area is hosted by Vanderbilt

The Stanford Regional is hosted by Stanford

Stillwater Regional hosted by Oklahoma-St.

Terre Haute Regional hosted by Indiana St.

Tuscaloosa Regional hosted by Alabama

Winston-Salem Regional is hosted by Wake Forest

2023 DI College Baseball Championship Bracket

(Click or tap here to open a printable PDF of the bracket | Click or tap here to open the bracket as a .JPG file)

2023 Men’s College World Cup

(Click or tap here to open a printable PDF of the sheet. Click or tap here to open the sheet as a .JPG file.)

⚾️ More baseball ⚾️

Games begin with Regionals and progress through to Super Regionals before the 2023 Men’s College World Series begins on Friday, June 16 at Charles Schwab Stadium in Omaha. MCWS will run until Monday, June 26 if needed.

Explainer: How the Men’s College World Series works

Baseball Tournament: upcoming dates

The regionSuper regionalMCWS
202431. May – 3. June7th-9th June or 8th-10th June14.-24. June

MCWS History: Successful Trainers | most titles | most appearances | most representative conferences

Here’s more on how the tournament works:

What is the difference between the Division I baseball championship and the College World Series?

The NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament is a 64-team tournament that begins in May. After two rounds (consisting of several games each), only eight teams are left. These eight teams then travel to Omaha, Nebraska. to compete in the College World Series. The CWS is the culmination of the DI Championship, where teams compete in groups and the winners of each meeting clash in the CWS Finals, a best-of-three series to determine the NCAA champion.

When did the College World Series start?

The first NCAA Division I baseball tournament was held in 1947 and is rarely recognized as the same tournament today. Only eight teams competed in the 1947 tournament, which were split into two teams of four and a single elimination round. Then the two winners – California and Yale – met in a best-of-three final in Kalamazoo, Michigan. California would come through the first CWS undefeated and beat Yale for the first title.

How are teams selected for the NCAA Division I baseball tournament?

Since 1954, NCAA Division I baseball has been divided into two qualifying groups: automatic berths and general selection. As of 2014, in a typical year, 31 conference champions receive automatic berths and 33 teams receive general bids, which are decided by the NCAA Division I Baseball Committee.

Junior College World Series champions since 1947

California defeated Yale in the first men’s collegiate world championships, the first in Kalamazoo, Michigan. Texas made its mark as the first consecutive champion when it won the only MCWS title in 1949, held in Wichita, Kansas. The following season, Texas won its second championship and opened Rosenblatt Stadium in Omaha.

Below is a complete listing of every College World Series Finals in the event’s 73-year history. Ole Miss won the 2022 Men’s College World Series in two games against Oklahoma.

YearHero (record)Trainera resultrunner upLocation
2022Ole Miss (42-23)Mike White4-2OklahomaOmaha, Neb.
2021State of Mississippi (50-18)Chris Lemonis9-0VanderbiltOmaha, Neb.
2020Canceled due to Covid-19
2019Vanderbilt (59-12)Tim Corbin8-2MichiganOmaha, Neb.
2018Oregon State (55-12-1)Pat Casey5:0ArkansasOmaha, Neb.
2017Florida (52-19)Kevin O’Sullivan6-1LSUOmaha, Neb.
2016Carolina Coast (55-18)Gary Gilmore4-3ArizonaOmaha, Neb.
2015Virginia (44-24)Brian O’Connor4-2VanderbiltOmaha, Neb.
2014Vanderbilt (51-21)Tim Corbin3-2VirginiaOmaha, Neb.
2013*University of California (49-17)John Savage8-0MississippiOmaha, Neb.
2012Arizona (48-17).Andy Lopez4-1South CarolinaOmaha, Neb.
2011* South Carolina (55-14)Ray Tanner5-2flOmaha, Neb.
2010South Carolina (54-16)Ray Tanner2-1 (11 Inns)University of CaliforniaOmaha, Neb.
2009LSU (56-17)Paul Mainery11-4TexasOmaha, Neb.
2008Fresno State (47-31)Mike Petsol6-1GeorgiaOmaha, Neb.
2007* Oregon State (49-18)Pat Casey9-3North CarolinaOmaha, Neb.
2006Oregon (50-16)Pat Casey3-2North CarolinaOmaha, Neb.
2005* Texas (56-16)Augie Garrido6-2flOmaha, Neb.
2004Cal St. Fullerton (47-22)George Horton3-2TexasOmaha, Neb.
2003Reis (58-12)Wayne Graham14-2StanfordOmaha, Neb.
2002* Texas (57-15)Augie Garrido12-6South CarolinaOmaha, Neb.
2001* Miami (FL) (53-12).Jim Morris12-1StanfordOmaha, Neb.
2000* LSU (52-17)Skip Bertman6-5StanfordOmaha, Neb.
1999* Miami (FL) (50-13).Jim Morris6-5FloridaOmaha, Neb.
1998Southern California (49-17)Mike Gillespie21-14ArizonaOmaha, Neb.
1997* LSU (57-13)Skip Bertman13-6AlabamaOmaha, Neb.
1996* LSU (52-15)Skip Bertman9-8Miami, Florida)Omaha, Neb.
1995* Cal St. Fullerton (57-9)Augie Garrido11-5Southern CaliforniaOmaha, Neb.
1994*Oklahoma (50-17)Larry Kuchel13-5Georgia TechOmaha, Neb.
1993LSU (53-17-1)Skip Bertman8-0State of WichitaOmaha, Neb.
1992* Pepperdine (48-11-1)Andy Lopez3-2Cal St. FullertonOmaha, Neb.
1991* LSU (55-18)Skip Bertman6-3State of WichitaOmaha, Neb.
1990Georgia (52-19)Steve Weber2-1State of OklahomaOmaha, Neb.
1989State of Wichita (68-16)Jane Stephenson5-3TexasOmaha, Neb.
1988Stanford (46-23)Mark Marquess9-4ArizonaOmaha, Neb.
1987Stanford (53-17)Mark Marquess9-5State of OklahomaOmaha, Neb.
1986Arizona (49-19)Jerry Kendall10-2FloridaOmaha, Neb.
1985Miami (FL) (64-16)Ron Fraser10-6TexasOmaha, Neb.
1984Cal St. Fullerton (66-20)Augie Garrido3-1TexasOmaha, Neb.
1983* Texas (66-14)Cliff Gustafson4-3AlabamaOmaha, Neb.
1982* Miami (FL) (55-17-1)Ron Fraser9-3State of WichitaOmaha, Neb.
1981Arizona (55-13)Jim Brock7-4State of OklahomaOmaha, Neb.
1980Arizona (45-21-1)Jerry Kendall5-3HawaiiOmaha, Neb.
1979Cal St. Fullerton (60-14-1)Augie Garrido2-1ArkansasOmaha, Neb.
1978* Southern California (54-9)Rod Dido10-3ArizonaOmaha, Neb.
1977Arizona (57-12)Jim Brock2-1South CarolinaOmaha, Neb.
1976Arizona (56-17)Jerry Kendall7-1Ost-MichiganOmaha, Neb.
1975Texas (59-6)Cliff Gustafson5-1South CarolinaOmaha, Neb.
1974Southern California (50-20)Rod Dido7-3Miami, Florida)Omaha, Neb.
1973* Southern California (51-11)Rod Dido4-3ArizonaOmaha, Neb.
1972Southern California (47-13-1)Rod Dido1:0ArizonaOmaha, Neb.
1971Southern California (46-11)Rod Dido5-2Southern IllinoisOmaha, Neb.
1970Southern California (45-13)Rod Dido2-1 (15 inns)FloridaOmaha, Neb.
1969Arizona (56-11)Bobby Winkles10-1TulsaOmaha, Neb.
1968* Southern California (43-12-1)Rod Dido4-3Southern IllinoisOmaha, Neb.
1967Arizona (53-12)Bobby Winkles11-0HoustonOmaha, Neb.
1966Ohio State (27-6-1)Marty Carew8-2State of OklahomaOmaha, Neb.
1965Arizona (54-8)Bobby Winkles2:0Ohio StateOmaha, Neb.
1964Minnesota (31-12)Dick Siebert5-1MissouriOmaha, Neb.
1963Southern California (35-10)Rod Dido5-2ArizonaOmaha, Neb.
1962Michigan (34-15)Don Lund5-4 (15 inns)Santa ClaraOmaha, Neb.
1961* Southern California (36-7)Rod Dido1:0State of OklahomaOmaha, Neb.
1960Minnesota (34-7-1)Dick Siebert2-1 (10 inns)Southern CaliforniaOmaha, Neb.
1959Oklahoma State (27-5)Toby Green5:0ArizonaOmaha, Neb.
1958Southern California (29-3)Rod Dido8-7 (12 inns)MissouriOmaha, Neb.
1957* California (35-10)George Wolfmann1:0State of PennsylvaniaOmaha, Neb.
1956Minnesota (37-9)Dick Siebert12-1ArizonaOmaha, Neb.
1955Wake Forest (29-7)Taylor Sanford7-6West-MichiganOmaha, Neb.
1954Missouri (22-4)John „Hallo“ Simmons4-1RollinsOmaha, Neb.
1953Michigan (21-9)Ray Fisher7-5TexasOmaha, Neb.
1952Holy Cross (21-3)Jack Barry8-4MissouriOmaha, Neb.
1951*Oklahoma (19-9).Jack Bear3-2TennesseeOmaha, Neb.
1950Texas (27-6)Pep Falk3:0WashingtonOmaha, Neb.
1949* Texas (23-7)Pep Falk10-3WachwaldWichita, Kan.
1948Southern California (26-4)Barry himself9-2YaleKalamazoo, Michigan.
1947* California (31-10)Clint Evans8-7YaleKalamazoo, Michigan.

* denotes undefeated teams in College World Series game.

2023-06-02 00:34:34
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