If the last "SEC spot" came down to Florida vs. Auburn (which it did since Texas A&M got a #2 seed), the Tigers have to be thinking about that Saturday game in Gainesville when they led the Gators 4-1 in the ninth and lost 5-4. A victory puts Auburn at 14-16 in the SEC and also would have put Florida under .500 overall. That ninth inning changed two team's seasons and as we learned later today, got Tiger coach John Pawlowski fired.
For the second consecutive year a bubble team that was iffy to even get in the field is a #2 seed. Last season East Carolina scored a surprise #2 seed. This year, it was Texas A&M. What do they have in common? Their respective Athletic Directors were on the Selection Committee.
So Towson is a #3 seed and Central Arkansas and Saint Louis are #4 seeds? Oh I forgot the CAA has a rep on the committee. Like that guy at the gym who only hits on married women, they're not even trying to be discrete any more.
Teams like Campbell and Western Carolina have to be upset today; Especially Campbell who not only won their regular seasons but also had an RPI in the bid range. Campbell won 49 games and sits at home while a team that finished behind them in the standings (Coastal Carolina) got in. Campbell's Strength of Schedule was abysmal at #237 and Western Carolina's was #130. Let that show all you schedule makers out there that the committee is not into padding win totals.
Want to guess which at large team had the worst strength of schedule? That would be Atlantic Sun champ Mercer at #153 and then Sun Belt co-champ Troy at #122. It's pretty clear if you are a mid-major, either win the automatic bid or build your SOS. Win totals and regular season crowns aren't going to cut it.
That is unless you are New Mexico. The west coast seemed to do OK in this bracket. The Lobos won the Mountain West (13th rated conference) and has a plus 50 RPI. They got in despite an SOS at #116.
San Francisco has an RPI near 50 and they got in. Cal Santa Barbara - theirs is 57. Both had SOS under 100.
Clemson goes back to South Carolina for the second straight year. Some of us saw this coming. It is a great spirited rivalry that plays well on television. But we probably don't have to do it every year.
Florida got in - we've been saying they would since they hit the bubble - and you have to believe this was due to their schedule strength. They also didn't go to Tallahassee which is probably nice for both programs.
Alabama went to Tallahassee instead which is where they went the last time they made the postseason (they missed the field last year). The Crimson Tide will play Troy who they just played a couple of weeks ago. It should be a little different with the weekend arms instead of midweek.
The Raleigh Regional could be a doozy. You have to love the possibility of NC State's Carlos Rodon dueling with Ole Miss' Bobby Wahl on Saturday. Rebs are tinkering with going with Mike Mayers in game one versus William & Mary.
Mississippi State fans are happy to host a Regional but they ended up with one of the toughest. They draw the toughest four seed in Central Arkansas who shouldn't be intimidated going in to Dudy Noble since they won a series there earlier this year. ?
The easiest Regional has to be in Chapel Hill where the Tar Heels get a low #2 seed that was a bubble team entering the Sun Belt Tournament in Florida Atlantic and two #4 seeds.
The SEC got nine teams in the field while the ACC got eight. The Pac 12 and Sun Belt were next with four while the Big XII, Big West, and CAA got three each. The Big East and Big Ten enjoyed improved years but got just two bids. Conference USA got just one.
Some quick seed talk:
#4s who can win a game: Saint Louis Connecticut Central Arkansas Wichita State San Diego State
#3s who can make the finals: Oklahoma State Florida Mercer UCSB San Diego
#2s who can win the Regional: Oklahoma Arkansas Ole Miss Clemson Rice