How Omaha's potential field went from 64 teams to these 16.
Notice how the Road to Omaha suddenly seems a lot emptier? Look at all the top-16 seed regional hosts who took a wrong turn: No. 3 Arkansas, No. 4 Clemson, No. 6 Vanderbilt, No. 9 Miami, No. 10 Coastal Carolina. On and on. Nos. 11 and 13 Oklahoma State and Auburn were at home and didn’t even win a tournament game.
But Rider did for the first time in 36 years, and Penn for the first time in 33 years, and George Mason for the first time in 31. They’re gone now, too. So is Wright State with second baseman Gehrig Anglin –—right, he’s named after the Yankee legend — who nearly beat eventual regional champion Indiana State with a two-run homer... on Lou Gehrig Day. His parents, wishing a baseball theme, pondered naming him Rawlings, after the glove.
What’s left for the super regionals are 16 survivors of various June pedigrees and often shared conference affiliations. There will be two all-SEC collisions this weekend (Kentucky at LSU, South Carolina at Florida) and one from the ACC (Duke at Virginia). In the who-saw-this-coming super regional, Oral Roberts will be at Oregon.
So 16 teams still dream of late June in eastern Nebraska — and 16 special feats from the past weekend that put them there.