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Topic: College World Series

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ELA

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Re: College World Series
« Reply #56 on: June 02, 2026, 01:03:08 PM »
I just imagine the Troy groundskeepers panicking and running around, having to host a Super.  Even with supreme confidence, they'd have to assume they'd be playing at the other regional-winner's place.
Michigan upset the #1 overall seed Vanderbilt in 2007, and should have hosted the super regional, but they assumed that wasn't a possibility, so they started renovations on the stadium after the regular season ended.

So Oregon State got to host them for the super regional.  I was home working that summer, and was very pissed off that I missed my one chance to attend one

CatsbyAZ

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Re: College World Series
« Reply #57 on: June 02, 2026, 01:36:58 PM »
If you're looking to deride a conference for being overrated in baseball, the ACC board is over there --->>

It's never going to feel right to try and pin UCLA's failures on the Big Ten...


https://twitter.com/JacobRudner/status/2061233677292703845

ELA

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Re: College World Series
« Reply #58 on: June 02, 2026, 02:00:46 PM »
They were very stars and scrubs.  I thought USC and Nebraska had more dangerous rosters

OrangeAfroMan

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Re: College World Series
« Reply #59 on: June 02, 2026, 07:12:13 PM »
We're getting A LOT of football scores this year.  I haven't looked at the annual stats, but maybe it's time for wood bats in college.   
“The Swamp is where Gators live.  We feel comfortable there, but we hope our opponents feel tentative. A swamp is hot and sticky and can be dangerous." - Steve Spurrier

MikeDeTiger

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Re: College World Series
« Reply #60 on: June 03, 2026, 10:22:07 AM »
We're getting A LOT of football scores this year.  I haven't looked at the annual stats, but maybe it's time for wood bats in college. 

It seems like they have trouble finding the happy medium.  As a fan of a team who at least at one time was the poster-child, if not the author, of gorilla ball, I'm kinda okay with it, but I get its lack of appeal to a lot of fans.  But I'd take that over what they did back 13, 14, years ago when the CWS scrapped Rosenblatt, built TD Ameritrade intentionally at the highest point, made it face against the wind, at the same time the sport adopted ~30% less active bats. 

The CWS became unwatchable for me, and the field tilted.  I don't care what purists say, and I know not everyone agreed with me.  They're free to be wrong.  Small-ball teams had the advantage.  Previously, all kinds of teams could make Omaha and have a fair shot at competing. 

They claimed they wanted the game to be more like the MLB.  Back then I checked, and the MLB averaged over 1 HR per game.  I watched an entire CWS one year where out of all games played at TD Ameritrade, there were 4 HRs, total.  We had two of them, and couldn't win either game we played.  Nowhere near 1 HR per game.  You take away the excitement and the importance of the long ball, I'm out.  Creighton, who played their home games in that place, had 0 HRs that year. 

And as much as I love great pitching--and a fine pitcher's-duel-type game--I also hate rewarding a pitcher who floats a lame duck over the strike zone, when he should be punished.  When a batter gets into that, it should be gone.  Bailing out crappy pitches because the bats and the wind kill everything inside the park isn't a great pitcher's duel, it's just rewarding mediocrity on the mound and punishing batters. 

That same year I mentioned, a great LSU team made the field and went 2 and out.  The park punished everything about that team.  They lost g1 to eventual winner UCLA 2-1.  Granted, LSU did a lot wrong in that game so I can't blame the loss entirely or even mostly on the state of the game.  But it's also true that it seems LSU should have prevailed even in spite of some mistakes and an uncharacteristic string of lead-off singles from the pitcher.  Because you can tell by the sound the bat makes when a ball is launched.  At least I can.  Twice that game, LSU batters blistered what would've been solo shots anywhere else, and everybody knew it.  Except they weren't.  Died in center field, like every other crushed ball.  I couldn't escape the feeling that despite UCLA being genuinely good, and despite us playing an overall worse game, we still should've won that 3-2.  I can coulda, woulda, shoulda, the other things as well.  Fine.  But you're supposed to be able to overcome some mistakes with great moments.  In that park, we just couldn't, and that Bruins pitcher got away with two pansy pitches that he should've had to eat. 

After that we lost to UNC, another power hitting team, who just flat outplayed us, but I couldn't help but notice they should have absolutely drilled us, but they couldn't, because the same thing happened to them.  Our pitcher wasn't up to the challenge that day, they got a hold of some that should've been long gone....except they weren't. 

After that I basically stopped watching the CWS until they changed the seams in the balls, which brought some offense back.  Now, I'm not sure what's going on because I haven't been keeping up with it the last few years, but I'll take games like SC's in the College Station regional over the small-ball-required snooze-fest that Omaha was for several years. 

utee94

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Re: College World Series
« Reply #61 on: June 04, 2026, 10:33:36 PM »
Well that'll do.  Congrats to the Lady Longhorns for their second softball championship in a row.  What a postseason for these women.

OrangeAfroMan

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Re: College World Series
« Reply #62 on: June 04, 2026, 11:50:40 PM »
It seems like they have trouble finding the happy medium.  As a fan of a team who at least at one time was the poster-child, if not the author, of gorilla ball, I'm kinda okay with it, but I get its lack of appeal to a lot of fans.  But I'd take that over what they did back 13, 14, years ago when the CWS scrapped Rosenblatt, built TD Ameritrade intentionally at the highest point, made it face against the wind, at the same time the sport adopted ~30% less active bats. 

The CWS became unwatchable for me, and the field tilted.  I don't care what purists say, and I know not everyone agreed with me.  They're free to be wrong.  Small-ball teams had the advantage.  Previously, all kinds of teams could make Omaha and have a fair shot at competing. 

They claimed they wanted the game to be more like the MLB.  Back then I checked, and the MLB averaged over 1 HR per game.  I watched an entire CWS one year where out of all games played at TD Ameritrade, there were 4 HRs, total.  We had two of them, and couldn't win either game we played.  Nowhere near 1 HR per game.  You take away the excitement and the importance of the long ball, I'm out.  Creighton, who played their home games in that place, had 0 HRs that year. 

And as much as I love great pitching--and a fine pitcher's-duel-type game--I also hate rewarding a pitcher who floats a lame duck over the strike zone, when he should be punished.  When a batter gets into that, it should be gone.  Bailing out crappy pitches because the bats and the wind kill everything inside the park isn't a great pitcher's duel, it's just rewarding mediocrity on the mound and punishing batters. 

That same year I mentioned, a great LSU team made the field and went 2 and out.  The park punished everything about that team.  They lost g1 to eventual winner UCLA 2-1.  Granted, LSU did a lot wrong in that game so I can't blame the loss entirely or even mostly on the state of the game.  But it's also true that it seems LSU should have prevailed even in spite of some mistakes and an uncharacteristic string of lead-off singles from the pitcher.  Because you can tell by the sound the bat makes when a ball is launched.  At least I can.  Twice that game, LSU batters blistered what would've been solo shots anywhere else, and everybody knew it.  Except they weren't.  Died in center field, like every other crushed ball.  I couldn't escape the feeling that despite UCLA being genuinely good, and despite us playing an overall worse game, we still should've won that 3-2.  I can coulda, woulda, shoulda, the other things as well.  Fine.  But you're supposed to be able to overcome some mistakes with great moments.  In that park, we just couldn't, and that Bruins pitcher got away with two pansy pitches that he should've had to eat. 

After that we lost to UNC, another power hitting team, who just flat outplayed us, but I couldn't help but notice they should have absolutely drilled us, but they couldn't, because the same thing happened to them.  Our pitcher wasn't up to the challenge that day, they got a hold of some that should've been long gone....except they weren't. 

After that I basically stopped watching the CWS until they changed the seams in the balls, which brought some offense back.  Now, I'm not sure what's going on because I haven't been keeping up with it the last few years, but I'll take games like SC's in the College Station regional over the small-ball-required snooze-fest that Omaha was for several years. 
I don't understand how (smart?) decision-makers in major positions are seemingly allergic to small corrections.  
“The Swamp is where Gators live.  We feel comfortable there, but we hope our opponents feel tentative. A swamp is hot and sticky and can be dangerous." - Steve Spurrier

CatsbyAZ

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Re: College World Series
« Reply #63 on: Today at 09:46:15 AM »
With the Super Regionals getting going this weekend, I'm generally interested in any potential newcomers or rare birds or those who haven't made the CWS in a while (but not interested in Oregon).

Troy (0) and Little Rock (0) play each other

Cal Poly (0) and West Virginia (0) play each other

Oregon (1) plays Texas (38 - by far the most)

Kansas (1) plays Oklahoma (11)

St. Johns (6 - but hasn't qualified since 1980) plays Alabama (5 - but hasn't qualified since 1999)

North Carolina (12) plays USC (21 - but hasn't qualified since 2001)

Georgia (6) plays Mississippi St (12)

Auburn (6) plays Ole Miss (6)

utee94

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Re: College World Series
« Reply #64 on: Today at 09:49:14 AM »
It's hard to believe USC hasn't made it since 2001.  That's crazy.  

Obviously I'll be rooting for Texas against Oregon.  

Don't really care about the rest of the field, although I'd be fine if the dirt burglars were eliminated.


FearlessF

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Re: College World Series
« Reply #65 on: Today at 10:13:36 AM »
rooting for the B1G and against the SEC
not really that interested - probably won't be watching much
"Courage; Generosity; Fairness; Honor; In these are the true awards of manly sport."

utee94

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Re: College World Series
« Reply #66 on: Today at 10:55:44 AM »
Rooting for Oregon?  Gross.

FearlessF

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Re: College World Series
« Reply #67 on: Today at 11:53:15 AM »
wasn't my idear to invite them to the B1G
"Courage; Generosity; Fairness; Honor; In these are the true awards of manly sport."

 

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