2023 NCAA Baseball Tournament Results Schedule TV Channel Live Stream Bracket College World Series Dates – CBS Sports

The Super Regionals resume Saturday in the 2023 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. Sixteen teams will compete in eight best-of-three Super Regional series this weekend in a bid to compete for the 2023 College World Series in Omaha. These encounters include top seed Wake Forest vs. Alabama, two SEC-vs-SEC bouts, and the tournament’s biggest Cinderella team, Oral Roberts, vs. Oregon.

Here are the Super Regional Matches:

  • Wake Forest vs. Alabama
  • Texas vs Stanford
  • LSU vs. Kentucky
  • Southern Miss vs. Tennessee
  • Florida vs. South Carolina
  • Duke versus Virginia
  • Oregon vs. Oral Roberts
  • Indiana State vs. TCU

There were some surprise eliminations during the regional round, as high-ranked players like Vanderbilt, Clemson and Miami were sent home from the original field of 64 players.

Below is everything fans need to know about the annual college baseball tournament, from format and dates to standings and results. let’s dive in

NCAA Tournament, College World Series Dates

  • Regionals: 2nd-5th June
  • Super Regionals: 9th-12th June
  • Start of the College World Seres: 15th June
  • College World Series Finals: 24.-26. June

Super Regionals Results, Fixtures, TV Channels

All games on ESPN and ESPN2 can be streamed live on fubo (try for free).

Friday June 9th

  • Duke 5, Virginia 4
  • TCU 4, Indiana State 1
  • Florida 5, South Carolina 4
  • Oregon 9, Oral Roberts 8

Saturday June 10th

  • Wake Forest vs. Alabama, 12 p.m. ET, ESPN
  • Duke vs. Virginia, 12 p.m. ET, ESPN2
  • LSU vs. Kentucky, 3 p.m. ET, ESPN
  • South Carolina vs. Florida, 3 p.m. ET, ESPN2
  • Southern Miss vs. Tennessee, 3 p.m. ET, ESPNU
  • Stanford vs. Texas, 6 p.m. ET, ESPN2
  • TCU vs. Indiana State, 6:00 p.m. ET, ESPNU
  • Oral Roberts vs. Oregon, 9 p.m. ET, ESPNU

Regionals results

Winston-Salem Regional
Hosted by Wake Forest, the #1 national seed.

  • June 2 Wake Forest 12, George Mason 0
  • June 2: Maryland 7, Northeastern 2
  • June 3: George Mason 11, Northeastern 3
  • June 3: Wake Forest 21, Maryland 6
  • June 4: George Mason 11, Maryland 10
  • June 4: Wake Forest 15, George Mason 1 (Wake Forest advances)

Gainesville Regional
The host is the #2 Florida national seed.

  • June 2: Florida 3, Florida A&M 0
  • June 2: Texas Tech 3, UConn 2
  • June 3: UConn 9, Fla. A&M 6
  • June 3: Texas Tech 5, Florida 4
  • June 4: Florida 8, UConn 2
  • June 4: Florida 7, Texas Tech 1
  • June 5: Florida 6, Texas Tech 0 (Florida advances)

Fayetteville Regional
Hosted by the #3 National State Arkansas.

  • June 2: Arkansas 13, Santa Clara 6
  • June 2: TCU 12, Arizona 4
  • June 3: Santa Clara 9, Arizona 3
  • June 4: TCU 20, Arkansas 5
  • June 4: Arkansas 6, Santa Clara 4
  • June 5: TCU 12, Arkansas 4 (TCU advances)

Clemson Regional
Host is Clemson, number 4 in the national seed.

  • June 2: Clemson 12, Lipscomb 5
  • June 2: Tennessee 8, Charlotte 1
  • June 3: Charlotte 9, Lipscomb 2
  • June 3: Tennessee 6, Clemson 5 (F/14)
  • June 4: Charlotte 3, Clemson 2
  • June 4; Tennessee 9, Charlotte 2 (Tennessee advances)

Baton Rouge Regional
Hosted by LSU, the #5 National Seed Vendor.

  • June 2: LSU 7, Tulane 2
  • June 2: Oregon State 18, Sam Houston State 2
  • June 4: Sam Houston State 10, Tulane 2
  • June 4: LSU 6, Oregon State 5
  • June 4: Oregon State 3, Sam Houston State 1
  • June 5: LSU 13, Oregon State 7 (LSU advances)

Nashville Regional
Host is Vanderbilt, number 6 in the national seed.

  • June 2: Vanderbilt 12, Eastern Illinois 2
  • June 2: Oregon 5, Xavier 4
  • June 3: Xavier 7, Eastern Illinois 0
  • June 3: Oregon 8, Vanderbilt 7
  • June 4: Xavier 2, Vanderbilt 1
  • June 4: Oregon 11, Xavier 2 (Oregon advances)

Charlottesville Regional
Hosted by the #7 National State of Virginia.

  • June 2: Virginia 15, Army West Point 1
  • June 2: East Carolina 14, Oklahoma 5
  • June 3: Oklahoma 10, Army West Point 1
  • June 3: Virginia 2, East Carolina 1
  • June 4: East Carolina 8, Oklahoma 5
  • June 4: Virginia 8, East Carolina 3 (Virginia advances)

Stanford Regional
Hosted by Stanford, the #8 national seed.

  • June 2: Stanford 13, San Jose State 2
  • June 2: Texas A&M 12, Cal State Fullerton 7
  • June 3: Cal State Fullerton 9, San Jose State 5
  • June 3: Texas A&M 8, Stanford 5
  • June 4: Stanford 6, Cal State Fullerton 5
  • June 4: Stanford 13, Texas A&M 5
  • June 5: Stanford 7, Texas A&M 1 (Stanford advances)

Coral Gables Regional
Host is the No. 9 national seed Miami.

  • June 2: Miami 9, Maine 1
  • June 2: Texas 4, Louisiana 2
  • June 3: Louisiana 19, Maine 10
  • June 3: Texas 4, Miami 1
  • June 4: Miami 8, Louisiana 5
  • June 4: Texas 10, Miami 6 (Texas advances)

Conway Regional
Host is the No. 10 national seed Coastal Carolina.

  • June 2: Rider 11, Coastal Carolina 10
  • June 2: Duke 12, UNC Wilmington 3
  • June 3: Coastal Carolina 12, UNC Wilmington 2
  • June 3: Duke 2, Rider 1
  • June 4: Coastal Carolina 13, Driver 5
  • June 4: Coastal Carolina 8, Duke 6
  • June 5: Duke 12, Coastal Carolina 3 (Duke advances)

Stillwater Regional
Host is the No. 11 national seed Oklahoma State.

  • June 2: Oral Roberts 6, Oklahoma State 4
  • June 2: Washington 9, Dallas Baptist 5
  • June 3: Dallas Baptist 18, Oklahoma State 4
  • June 3: Oral Roberts 15, Washington 12
  • June 4: Dallas Baptist 9, Washington 1
  • June 4: Oral Roberts 6, Dallas Baptist 5 (Oral Roberts advances)

Lexington Regional
The host is the number 12 national seed of Kentucky.

  • June 2: Kentucky 4, Ball State 0
  • June 2: Indiana 12, West Virginia 6
  • June 3: West Virginia 13, Ball State 5
  • June 3: Indiana 5, Kentucky 3
  • June 4: Kentucky 10, West Virginia 0
  • June 4: Kentucky 16, Indiana 6
  • June 5: Kentucky 4, Indiana 2 (Kentucky advances)

Auburn Regional
Host is the #13 national seed Auburn.

  • June 2: Penn 6, Auburn 3 (F/11)
  • 2 June: Samford 4, Southern Miss 2 (F/10)
  • June 3: Southern Miss 7, Auburn 2
  • June 3: Penn 5, Samford 4
  • June 4: Southern Miss 9, Samford 4
  • June 4: Southern Miss 11, Penn 2
  • June 5: Southern Miss 11, Penn 7 (Southern Miss advances)

Terre Haute Regional
Host is Indiana State’s No. 14 national seed.

  • June 2: Indiana State 6, Wright State 5
  • June 2: Iowa 5, North Carolina 4
  • June 3: North Carolina 5, Wright State 0
  • June 3: Indiana State 7, Iowa 4
  • June 4: Iowa 6, North Carolina 5 (F/13)
  • June 4: Indiana State 11, Iowa 8 (Indiana State advances)

Columbia Regional
Host is number 15 national seed South Carolina.

  • June 2: South Carolina 19, Central Connecticut State 1
  • June 2: NC State 5, Campbell 1
  • June 3: Campbell 10, Central Connecticut State 5
  • June 3: South Carolina 6, NC State 3
  • June 4: Campbell 11, NC State 1
  • June 4: South Carolina 16, Campbell 7 (South Carolina advances)

Tuscaloosa Regional
The host is No. 16 national seed Alabama.

  • June 2: Alabama 4, Nicholls 3
  • June 2: Troy 11, Boston College 10
  • June 3: Boston College 14, Nicholls 6
  • June 3: Alabama 11, Troy 8
  • June 4: Boston College 4, Troy 1
  • June 4: Alabama 8, Boston College 0 (Alabama advances)

College Baseball Bracket, Notes

Here’s a link to NCAA.com’s full list of region-vs-region pairings for the Super Regionals. Now for some quick takeaways about the 64-team field:

  • There will be no repeat this year as reigning national champion Ole Miss (25-29) didn’t receive an offer. No team has repeated the national championship title at the Division I level since South Carolina in 2010 and 2011.
  • Florida State (23-31) finished on a losing tally for the first time and missed the postseason for the first time since 1977. Her 44 tournament appearances in a row is a record.
  • In alphabetical order, the bottom four teams were Arizona, Louisiana, Oklahoma State, and Troy. The top four teams eliminated were Arizona State, Kansas State, Kent State and UC Irvine.
  • The SEC has hosted a record eight regional championships. The state of South Carolina has hosted three regional championships, while the state of Texas has not hosted a regional competition for the first time since 2013.

NCAA baseball tournament format

  • The first round of play is called the regional round and is a round-robin, double-elimination format. Each of the 16 No. 1 seeds host their respective four-team regional squad when possible. Each of the 16 Regionals is seeded first through fourth. In each region, #1 meets #4 and #2 meets #3 on the first day of promotion. The winners of these two matches then play each other, while the losers play an elimination match.
  • The winner of each region advances to the super region. The 16-team Super Regional is a best-of-three series format.
  • The winners of the Super Regionals – a total of eight teams – qualify for the College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska.
  • The College World Series is a double-elimination format until the bottom two teams remain. At this point, all odds are settled and a best-of-three series begins to determine the national champion.