College Baseball

College Baseball

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DateRHjemme v Ude-
04/24 17:00 - Maryland Eastern Shore v Mount St. Mary's View
04/24 19:00 - LIU Brooklyn v Iona View
04/24 19:00 - Fordham v Fairleigh Dickinson View
04/24 19:00 - St. Peter's v Lafayette View
04/24 19:00 - Prairie View A&M v Texas A&M Corpus Christi View
04/24 19:00 - Purdue Fort Wayne v Toledo View
04/24 19:00 - Siena v Massachusetts View
04/24 19:00 - Xavier v Northern Kentucky View
04/24 19:00 - Ball State v Indiana View
04/24 19:00 - Bowling Green v Dayton View
04/24 19:00 - Merrimack v Maine View
04/24 19:00 - Lehigh v Cairn Highlanders View
04/24 19:00 - Stonehill v Rhode Island View
04/24 19:30 - Princeton v Wagner View
04/24 19:35 - Connecticut v Hofstra View
04/24 20:00 - Seton Hall v Columbia View
04/24 20:00 - Butler v Eastern Illinois View
04/24 20:00 - Presbyterian v Georgia State View
04/24 21:00 - Youngstown State v Akron View
04/24 21:00 - Queens NC v Radford View
04/24 21:30 - Penn State v West Virginia View
04/24 22:00 - Purdue v Evansville View
04/24 22:00 - UNC Greensboro v High Point View
04/24 22:00 - Mercer v Georgia Southern View
04/24 22:30 - Notre Dame v Central Michigan View
04/24 23:00 - Lamar v Texas Southern View
04/24 23:00 - UL Lafayette v Houston Christian View
04/24 23:00 - SE Louisiana v Alcorn State View
04/24 23:00 - Creighton v Coastal Carolina View
04/24 23:00 - Louisiana Tech v Nicholls State View

Wikipedia - College baseball

College baseball is baseball that is played on the intercollegiate level at institutions of higher education. In the United States, college baseball is sanctioned mainly by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA); in Japan, it is governed by the All Japan University Baseball Federation (JUBF).

In comparison to American football and basketball, college competition in the United States plays a smaller role in developing professional players, as baseball's professional minor leagues are more extensive, with a greater history of supplying players to Major League Baseball (MLB). Moving directly from high school to the professional level is more common in baseball than in football or basketball. However, if players opt to enroll at a four-year college, they must complete three years of college to regain professional eligibility, or have turned at least age 21 before starting their third year of college. Players who enroll at junior colleges (i.e., two-year institutions) regain eligibility after one year at that level. During the ongoing NCAA regular season, 301 teams have competed at the Division I level in the United States, with top teams progressing through the regular season, various conference tournaments and championship series, and the 2023 NCAA Division I baseball tournament to play for the Division I championship in the 2023 Men's College World Series.

History

The first intercollegiate baseball game took place in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, on July 1, 1859, between squads representing Amherst College and Williams College. Amherst won, 73–32. This game was one of the last played under an earlier version of the game known as "Massachusetts rules", which prevailed in New England until the "Knickerbocker Rules" (or "New York Rules") developed in the 1840s gradually became accepted. The first ever nine-man team college baseball game under the Knickerbocker Rules still in use today was played in New York on November 3, 1859, between the Fordham Rose Hill Baseball Club of St. John's College (now Fordham University) against The College of St. Francis Xavier, now known as Xavier High School.

Students at many colleges began organizing games between colleges, particularly after the Civil War, first in the northeastern United States but quickly throughout the country. By the late 1870s, several northeastern schools were playing regular home and home series. The team with the best record claimed a "National Championship." Arguments over professional and graduate players led to the creation of the American College Base Ball Association in late 1879, consisting of six northeastern schools which sought to govern such issues and organize games. This organization lasted until 1887, when it dissolved in acrimony and waves of realignment. The Western Conference and Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association were formed in the 1890s as multi-sport conferences. The first tournament to name a national champion was held at the 1893 World's Fair in Chicago, resulting in Yale being crowned champion. No other such tournament was held until the first College World Series in 1947.

A map of all NCAA Division I baseball teams, using 2014 alignments

Traditionally, college baseball has been played in the early part of the year, with a relatively short schedule and during a time when cold (and/or rainy) weather hinders the ability for games to be played, particularly in the northern and midwestern parts of the U.S. These and other factors have historically led colleges and universities across the nation to effectively consider baseball a minor sport, both in scholarships as well as money and other points of emphasis.

College baseball's popularity has increased greatly since the 1980s.[] As increased efforts to popularize the sport resulted in better players and overall programs, more television and print media coverage began to emerge. The ESPN family of networks have greatly increased television coverage of the NCAA playoffs and the College World Series since 2003.[]

For 2008 and succeeding seasons, the NCAA mandated the first ever start date for Division I baseball, thirteen weeks before the selection of the NCAA tournament field, which takes place on Memorial Day.[]

College Baseball

College Baseball er en turnering i baseball for hold fra amerikanske colleges og universiteter. Den arrangeres af National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) og er opdelt i tre divisioner: Division I, Division II og Division III.

Turneringen begynder med en række regionale turneringer, hvor holdene spiller for at kvalificere sig til College World Series. College World Series er en turnering med otte hold, der afholdes på TD Ameritrade Park Omaha i Omaha, Nebraska.

College Baseball er en populær sport i USA, og mange af de bedste spillere i Major League Baseball har spillet college baseball. Flere kendte spillere, der har spillet college baseball, omfatter Mike Trout, Bryce Harper og David Ortiz.

Hvis du er fan af baseball, så er College Baseball en turnering, du ikke vil gå glip af. Den byder på nogle af de bedste spillere i verden og nogle af de mest spændende kampe.