Southern Conference baseball tournament
Collegiate baseball tournament
The Southern Conference baseball tournament is the conference championship tournament in baseball for the Southern Conference . The winner of the tournament receives the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Division I baseball tournament . The event is scheduled for the Tuesday through Saturday before Memorial Day each year, five days prior to the NCAA Regionals .[ 1]
Tournament
The Southern Conference Baseball Tournament is held annually. Beginning in 2009, the top eight teams (eleven teams sponsor baseball in the conference) participated in a two-bracketed double-elimination tournament . The previous format included ten teams participating in the tournament with the lowest four seeds (#7–#10) competing in a single elimination first round. The winner receives an automatic bid to the NCAA Division I baseball tournament while the other teams must rely on an at-large bid.
History
The Southern Conference first held a baseball tournament in 1950.[ 2] Maryland and Virginia Tech from the North division, and Clemson and Wake Forest from the South played the inaugural year in Greensboro, North Carolina ,[ 3] with Wake Forest defeating Maryland for the title. In 1951, Clemson, Duke, Maryland, and West Virginia met, with Duke defeating Clemson in the final.[ 4] Duke repeated their title in 1952, over N.C. State, George Washington, and Richmond.[ 5] Duke, George Washington, Maryland, and North Carolina participated in 1953, with Duke again the winner.[ 6] [ 7]
The tournament was renewed in 1984 as a four-team tournament. The tournament was held at Joseph P. Riley Jr. Park in Charleston, South Carolina , from 1997 to 2008, and again in 2010 and 2011.
Champions
By year
Year[ 8]
Champion
Site
MVP[ 9]
1950
Wake Forest
Greensboro, North Carolina
1951
Duke
Greensboro, North Carolina
Bob Davis, Duke
1952
Duke
Devereux Meadow • Raleigh, North Carolina
Red Smith, Duke
1953
Duke
Devereux Meadow • Raleigh, North Carolina
1984
Appalachian State
Hennon Stadium • Cullowhee, North Carolina
Rusty Weaver, Appalachian State
1985
Western Carolina
Boone, North Carolina
Mike Carson, Western Carolina
1986
Western Carolina
Hennon Stadium • Cullowhee, North Carolina
David Hyatt, Western Carolina
1987
Western Carolina
Asheville, North Carolina
Clint Fairey, Western Carolina
1988
Western Carolina
Asheville, North Carolina
Keith LeClair , Western Carolina
1989
Western Carolina
Asheville, North Carolina
Paul Menhart , Western Carolina
1990
The Citadel
College Park • Charleston, South Carolina
Billy Baker, The Citadel
1991
Furman
College Park • Charleston, South Carolina
Brent Williams, Furman
1992
Western Carolina
College Park • Charleston, South Carolina
Joey Cox, Western Carolina
1993
Western Carolina
College Park • Charleston, South Carolina
Phillip Grundy, Western Carolina
1994
The Citadel
College Park • Charleston, South Carolina
Jermaine Shuler, The Citadel
1995
The Citadel
College Park • Charleston, South Carolina
Donald Morillo, The Citadel
1996
Georgia Southern
College Park • Charleston, South Carolina
Mark Hamlin, Georgia Southern
1997
Western Carolina
Riley Park • Charleston, South Carolina
J. P. Burwell, Western Carolina
1998
The Citadel
Riley Park • Charleston, South Carolina
Brian Rogers, The Citadel
1999
The Citadel
Riley Park • Charleston, South Carolina
Rodney Hancock, The Citadel
2000
Georgia Southern
Riley Park • Charleston, South Carolina
Matt Easterday, Georgia Southern
2001
The Citadel
Riley Park • Charleston, South Carolina
Randy Corn, The Citadel
2002
Georgia Southern
Riley Park • Charleston, South Carolina
Brett Lewis, Georgia Southern
2003
Western Carolina
Riley Park • Charleston, South Carolina
Brian Sigmon, Western Carolina
2004
The Citadel
Riley Park • Charleston, South Carolina
Jonathan Ellis, The Citadel
2005
Furman
Riley Park • Charleston, South Carolina
Nick Hollstegge, Furman
2006
College of Charleston
Riley Park • Charleston, South Carolina
Nick Chigges & Jess Easterling, College of Charleston
2007
Wofford
Riley Park • Charleston, South Carolina
Brandon Waring, Wofford
2008
Elon
Riley Park • Charleston, South Carolina
Cory Harrilchak, Elon
2009
Georgia Southern
Fluor Field • Greenville, South Carolina
Kyle Blackburn, Georgia Southern
2010
The Citadel
Riley Park • Charleston, South Carolina
Justin Mackert, The Citadel
2011
Georgia Southern
Riley Park • Charleston, South Carolina
Chris Beck , Georgia Southern
2012
Samford
Fluor Field • Greenville, South Carolina
Josh Martin, Samford
2013
Elon
Fluor Field • Greenville, South Carolina
Joe Jackson, The Citadel
2014
Georgia Southern
Riley Park • Charleston, South Carolina
Jason Richman, Georgia Southern
2015
Mercer
Riley Park • Charleston, South Carolina
Eric Nyquist, Mercer
2016
Western Carolina
Fluor Field • Greenville, South Carolina
Matt Smith, Western Carolina
2017
UNC Greensboro
Fluor Field • Greenville, South Carolina
Tripp Shelton, UNC Greensboro
2018
Samford
Fluor Field • Greenville, South Carolina
Brooks Carlson, Samford
2019
Mercer
Fluor Field • Greenville, South Carolina
Trevor Austin, Mercer
2020
Cancelled due to the coronavirus pandemic
2021
Samford
Fluor Field • Greenville, South Carolina
Towns King, Samford
2022
UNC Greensboro
Fluor Field • Greenville, South Carolina
2023
Samford
Fluor Field • Greenville, South Carolina
Heath Clevenger, Samford
By school
School
Tournament Titles
Years
Western Carolina
10
1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1992, 1993, 1997, 2003, 2016
The Citadel
8
1990, 1994, 1995, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2004, 2010
Georgia Southern
6
1996, 2000, 2002, 2009, 2011, 2014
Samford
4
2012, 2018, 2021, 2023
Duke
3
1951, 1952, 1953
UNC Greensboro
2
2017, 2022
Mercer
2
2015, 2019
Elon
2
2008, 2013
Furman
2
1991, 2005
Wake Forest
1
1950
Appalachian State
1
1984
College of Charleston [ a]
1
2006
Wofford
1
2007
Italics indicate the school no longer sponsors baseball in the SoCon.
^ Now athletically branded as Charleston.
Composite Records
Current schools only, 1984 through 2015 [ 10] [ 11]
See also
References
^ "Southern Conference Championship Sites and Dates" (PDF) . soconsports.com. Retrieved December 15, 2012 .
^ "Southern Champs To Be Crowned At Greensboro Meet" . The Robesonian . Lumberton, N.C. AP . May 19, 1950. Retrieved August 27, 2011 .
^ "Maryland To Play In Diamond Series". The Baltimore Sun . May 22, 1950. p. 14. Virginia Tech and Maryland from the North and Wake Forest and Clemson from the South will meet to determine the Southern Conference baseball championship.
^ "Clemson Meets Duke For Southern League Title" . The Dispatch . Lexington, N.C. May 21, 1951. p. 6. Retrieved August 27, 2011 .
^ "Duke Nine Cops Conference Championship" . The News and Courier . Charleston, S.C. May 19, 1952. p. 6. Retrieved August 27, 2011 .[permanent dead link ]
^ "Maryland Nine Whips W. & M. In Double-Header". The Baltimore Sun . May 12, 1953. p. 19. George Washington will join Maryland as the Northern division's other representative against the two top teams in the southern branch of the league.
^ "Rain-Check Team Emerging As Top Quality In Playoff" . The Robesonian . Lumberton, N.C. May 19, 1953. p. 8. Retrieved August 27, 2011 .
^ "Championship Results" (PDF) . 2007 Southern Conference Baseball . Southern Conference. 2007. pp. 43– 47. Retrieved February 2, 2009 .
^ "SoCon Tournament MVPs" (PDF) . 2006 Southern Conference Baseball . Southern Conference. 2006. p. 16. Retrieved February 2, 2009 .
^ 2014 SoCon Baseball media Guide . Southern Conference. 14 February 2014. p. 48. Retrieved October 20, 2014 .
^ "2014 Southern Conference Baseball Championship" (PDF) . Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04.
Teams Championships & awards
Southern Conference championships
NCAA Division I baseball conference tournaments
Active Former