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2025 NCAA Baseball Tournament Bracket: Updated Regional matchups, scores, schedule

The 2025 NCAA Baseball Tournament gets underway with 16 Regional matchups across the country this weekend. These top-16 teams have been awarded the opportunity to host their initial bracket after a stellar season prior to the tournament. In terms of overall bids, the SEC earned the most at 13 teams making the final NCAA Tournament […]

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The 2025 NCAA Baseball Tournament gets underway with 16 Regional matchups across the country this weekend. These top-16 teams have been awarded the opportunity to host their initial bracket after a stellar season prior to the tournament.

In terms of overall bids, the SEC earned the most at 13 teams making the final NCAA Tournament field. The ACC (9) followed, then the Big 12 (8), Big Ten (4), Sun Belt (2), AAC (2), Conference USA (2) and the Big West (2).

Regionals are contested under a double elimination format, before next weekend’s Super Regionals turn to a best of three series. Whoever emerges from each Super Regional will advance to Omaha, where the final eight teams will battle for the national championship at the 2025 College World Series. Below you can find the updated bracket:

Nashville Regional

May 30

2. Louisville 8, 3. East Tennessee State 3
Three Louisville players had two RBI – including Eddie King Jr., who had a two-run home run as part of a three-hit day – en route to an 8-3 victory over East Tennessee State to get the Nashville Regional off and running. The duo of Patrick Forbes and Brennyn Cutts held ETSU to just three hits in the effort and advanced into the winners’ bracket.

1. Vanderbilt vs. 4. Wright State: 6 p.m. ET, SECN

May 31

East Tennessee State vs. Loser of Vanderbilt vs. Wright State – 3 p.m. ET
Louisville vs. Winner of Vanderbilt vs. Wright State – 9 p.m. ET

Winner will face winner of Hattiesburg Regional

Hattiesburg Regional

May 30

2. Alabama vs. 3. Miami: 3 p.m. ET, ESPN2
1. Southern Miss vs. 4. Columbia: 7 p.m. ET, ESPN+

Winner will face winner of Nashville Regional

Tallahassee Regional

May 30

1. Florida State vs. 4. Bethune-Cookman: 3 p.m. ET, ACCN
2. Northeastern vs. 3. Mississippi State: 7:30 p.m. ET, ESPN+

Winner will face winner of Corvallis Regional

Corvallis Regional

May 30

2. TCU vs. 3. USC: 3 p.m. ET, ESPNU
1. Oregon State vs. 4. Saint Mary’s: 8 p.m. ET, ESPN+

Winner will face winner of Tallahassee Regional

Chapel Hill Regional

May 30

1. North Carolina def. 4. Holy Cross, 4-0
The first three innings of North Carolina’s battle with Holy Cross were scoreless, but the Tar Heels made a three-run dent in the bottom of the fourth inning, due to a couple of big hits. They’d add on another run in the bottom of the fifth, and that was all starter Jake Knapp needed. He delivered 8.1 innings of shutout ball, and Walker McDuffie came on for the final two outs. North Carolina has championship aspirations, and they started their journey off with a bang.

2. Oklahoma vs. 3. Nebraska: 5 p.m. ET, ESPN+

May 31

Holy Cross vs. Loser of Oklahoma vs. Nebraska – 12 p.m. ET
North Carolina vs. Winner of Oklahoma vs. Nebraska – 6 p.m. ET

Winner will face winner of Eugene Regional

Eugene Regional

May 30

2. Arizona vs. 3. Cal Poly: 4 p.m. ET, ESPN+
1. Oregon vs. 4. Utah Valley: 9 p.m. ET, ESPN+

Winner will face winner of Chapel Hill Regional

Conway Regional

May 30

3. East Carolina def. 2. Florida, 11-6
East Carolina brought it to Florida from the get-go. Before the Gators even knew what hit them, the Pirates were out to a 9-0 lead, scoring in each of the first four innings. Florida finally got off the mat in the bottom of the fourth with two runs, but it was far from enough. They’d add on another run in the bottom of the eighth and a couple in the ninth, but East Carolina’s offensive explosion — 11 runs on 15 hits, coupled with some impressive pitching — Ethan Norby going 7.1 innings and striking out ten, put a stake through Florida’s hearts. Coastal Carolina and Fairfield are screaming, “Shiver me timbers” at the prospect of facing the Pirates right now.

1. Coastal Carolina vs. 4. Fairfield: 6 p.m. ET, ESPN+

May 31

Florida vs. Loser of Coastal Carolina vs. Fairfield – 12 p.m. ET
East Carolina vs. Winner of Coastal Carolina vs. Fairfield – 6 p.m. ET

Winner will face winner of Auburn Regional

Auburn Regional

May 30

2. NC State vs. 3. Stetson: 2 p.m. ET, ESPN+
1. Auburn vs. 4. Central Connecticut: 7 p.m. ET, ESPN+

Winner will face winner of Conway Regional

Austin Regional

May 30

1. Texas def. 4. Houston Christian, 7-1
The second-ranked Longhorns used small ball to roll over the visiting Huskies in the opening game of the Austin Regional on Friday. Texas got on the board first with a two-run third inning before exploding for a five-spot in the fifth inning to put this one away. Kimble Schuessler started the five-run fifth with a two-out, two-run single to left, sparking a string of five straight hits for the Longhorns. Schuessler scored one at-bat later on a single by Adrian Rodriguez, who’d score on another RBI-single from Casey Borba while Jalin Flores scored the game’s seventh run on a RBI-double from Will Gasparino. Houston Christian got on the board with a two-out RBI-double by Jeremy Rader in the top of the fourth inning.

2. UTSA vs. 3. Kansas State: 7 p.m. ET, ESPN+

May 31

Houston Christian vs. Loser of Kansas State vs. UTSA – 3 p.m. ET
Texas vs. Winner of Kansas State vs. UTSA – 9 p.m. ET

Winner will face winner of Los Angeles Regional

Los Angeles Regional

May 30

1. UCLA vs. 4. Fresno State: 4 p.m. ET, ESPN+
2. UC Irvine vs. 3. Arizona State: 9 p.m. ET, ESPNU

Winner will face winner of Austin Regional

Oxford Regional

May 30

2. Georgia Tech vs. 3. Western Kentucky: 4 p.m. ET, ESPN+
1. Ole Miss vs. 4. Murray State: 8 p.m. ET, ESPN+

Winner will face winner of Athens Regional

Athens Regional

May 30

1. Georgia vs. 4. Binghamton: 12 p.m. ET, SECN
2. Duke vs. 3. Oklahoma State: 6 p.m. ET, ESPNU

Winner will face winner of Oxford Regional

Baton Rouge Regional

May 30

1. LSU vs. 4. Little Rock: 3 p.m. ET, SECN
2. Dallas Baptist vs. 3. Rhode Island: 7:30 p.m. ET, ESPN+

Winner will face winner of Clemson Regional

Clemson Regional

May 30

2. West Virginia 4, 3. Kentucky 3
Kentucky saw its three-run lead vanish as West Virginia rallied to tie things up in the seventh inning. The Mountaineers then got a leadoff double in the ninth inning from Brodie Kresser, and he later came around to score on a walk-off sacrifice fly – completing the comeback and sending WVU to the winners’ bracket with a 4-3 win.

1. Clemson vs. 4. USC Upstate: 6 p.m. ET, ACCN

May 31

Kentucky vs. Loser of Clemson vs. USC Upstate – 12 p.m. ET
West Virginia vs. Winner of Clemson vs. USC Upstate – 6 p.m. ET

Winner will face winner of Baton Rouge Regional

Knoxville Regional

May 30

3. Cincinnati 11, 2. Wake Forest 6
The opening game of the Knoxville Regional saw Cincinnati pull off a win over Wake Forest. The Bearcats broke out with a six-run second inning and didn’t look back, taking down the Demon Deacons 11-6 to advance in the winners’ bracket.

1. Tennessee vs. 4. Miami (OH): 6 p.m. ET, ESPN+

May 31

Wake Forest vs. Loser of Tennessee vs. Miami (OH) – 12 p.m. ET
Cincinnati vs. Winner of Tennessee vs. Miami (OH) – 6 p.m. ET

Winner will face winner of Fayetteville Regional

Fayetteville Regional

May 30

1. Arkansas 6, 4. North Dakota State 2
In the opening game of the Fayetteville Regional, Arkansas and North Dakota State traded runs. However, the Razorbacks created separation thanks in large part to a two-run home run from Cam Kozeal to go up four runs, which stood as the difference in the 6-2 victory.

2. Kansas vs. 3. Creighton: 8 p.m. ET, ESPN+

May 31

North Dakota State vs. Loser of Kansas vs. Creighton – 3 p.m. ET
Arkansas vs. Winner of Kansas vs. Creighton – 9 p.m. ET

Winner will face winner of Knoxville Regional



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Pittman: House settlement provides level playing field

ATLANTA — Sam Pittman says a $2.8 billion antitrust settlement that went into effect this month levels the college football playing field in a good way for his Arkansas team. Pittman said Arkansas now has a chance to compete on more even terms with other SEC powers like Georgia, Alabama and Texas. Pittman said Thursday […]

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ATLANTA — Sam Pittman says a $2.8 billion antitrust settlement that went into effect this month levels the college football playing field in a good way for his Arkansas team.

Pittman said Arkansas now has a chance to compete on more even terms with other SEC powers like Georgia, Alabama and Texas. Pittman said Thursday at SEC media days his program previously dealt with a financial disadvantage against the schools with more established name, image and likeness collectives since NIL payments began in 2022.

According to the terms of the House settlement, each school now can share up to about $20.5 million with their athletes.

“Financially with revenue sharing I think we are finally back on even keel with everybody, which we weren’t,” said Pittman, whose team finished 7-6 in 2024. “If I was going to make an excuse, it would be financially is why we haven’t done quite as well. … But I think now with it being even, look out, the Razorbacks are coming.”

Pittman and most other coaches brought seniors and graduate players to represent their teams at SEC media days, which concluded on Thursday. Pittman brought two 2021 recruits and a transfer, but Arkansas could have difficulty finding seniors next year from his original 2022 signing class because many members of that class have transferred.

Pittman, whose Razorbacks have earned bowl bids in four of his five seasons, said players have different reasons for transferring but many were lured away from Arkansas by more attractive NIL packages at other schools. When asked about the 2022 class, Pittman said, “Here’s what it’s not because of: the way they’re treated, because of the way they’re developed, because of the way they’re taught.”

“That’s not the reason. It could be playing time. It could be finances. Probably the majority of it is finances.”

The House settlement era began on July 1.

The enforcement of the House settlement is still being worked out as the new College Sports Commission has informed athletic directors in letters last week it was rejecting payments to players from collectives created only to pay players instead of as payment for name, likeness and image.

Some seniors at SEC media days said NIL payments and the transfer portal have contributed to their decisions to complete their eligibility instead of leaving school early to pursue opportunities in the NFL.

“I would most definitely say so,” Missouri offensive lineman Connor Tollison said. “Obviously, you know, you have a chance to make some money these days. … With the transfer portal, if you don’t have a necessarily a good opportunity at this place you’re at, you have the chance to go somewhere else and get a fresh start. It wasn’t necessarily something I experienced to my college career, but I’ve seen it. You know, it works for plenty of players. So yeah, I think it’s good for the players.”

When asked if NIL makes it easier for players to complete their eligibility, Kentucky Coach Mark Stoops, coming off a 4-8 season, said, “Listen, we all love our players, whether they’re one year in our program, six months, or four years.”

Linebacker Alex Afari, defensive back Jordan Lovett and tight end Josh Kattus were the seniors who accompanied Stoops to Atlanta.

“Of course I love making money from name, image and likeness,” Lovett said. “But I love football first. You know, football was my first love. So I play for the game, not for money.”

Lovett added his primary motivation for returning was to earn his first win over Georgia.

“It’s the big part of college football now because some dudes just make decisions off, you know, the financial stuff,” Lovett said. “I love football. … I still haven’t, you know, beat Georgia yet. You know, Georgia’s one of my goals.”



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    Pittman says House settlement provides level NIL playing field in SEC | College

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    ATLANTA — Sam Pittman says a $2.8 billion antitrust settlement that went into effect this month levels the college football playing field in a good way for his Arkansas team. 0

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    ATLANTA — Sam Pittman says a $2.8 billion antitrust settlement that went into effect this month levels the college football playing field in a good way for his Arkansas team.

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    LSU 2026 commits receive early NIL lesson at event featuring local businesses

    We’re in a new age of college athletics and Thursday morning was another reminder of that. Before athletes were allowed to capitalize on their name, image and likeness, brand events and outside endorsement opportunities were not publicly endorsed. However, walking into Elite Training Academy and seeing all nine of LSU’s commits in the 2026 class […]

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    We’re in a new age of college athletics and Thursday morning was another reminder of that. Before athletes were allowed to capitalize on their name, image and likeness, brand events and outside endorsement opportunities were not publicly endorsed.

    However, walking into Elite Training Academy and seeing all nine of LSU’s commits in the 2026 class from Louisiana walking around to different local businesses, trying out products and conducting various interviews and photoshoots was yet another dose of reality of where we now are in college sports.

    Among the businesses that the athletes spent the better part of three hours learning about, Raising Canes, Voyager, Tanger Outlets, Retief Windows, Boot Krewe Media, Reliable Roofing, Poppi soda and LSU Snacks all had stations set up. The pitch to the Tigers’ commits was pretty straightforward in talking with multiple players out there. 

    “They’re just showing me all of the resources that I have here and being a Tiger. I’m pretty sure most of them were Tigers too. Just some resources here in Baton Rouge Louisiana businesses to help us build our brands,” Lamar Brown said. 

    “Really just getting to promote these brands and ourselves as well. Just having a fun time getting together as commits and really enjoying the family environment,” Jabari Mack said. “Just getting a connection with LSU’s sponsors and really let them promote us as commits.”

    “Come support a few brands for NIL, having fun with some of the other recruits, building bonds,” Richard Anderson said. “Coming here today, everything’s about building bonds. Having a brotherhood.”

    In addition to those three, Brysten Martinez, Aiden Hall, Kenny Darby, Dezyrian Ellis, Isaiah Washington and Jalan Chapman were all in attendance. This was the first event of its kind that was organized for these high school commits to explore different brand opportunities here locally in Baton Rouge. The players moved from station to station, hearing different pitches from the local business partners, wore different gear, tried various snack and soda products and spent time around each other as well. 

    Every recruiting class at LSU has a healthy dose of Louisiana talent and with six months until signing day, a lot of these players are getting to know each other while others have spent quite a bit of time around each other already. Brown, Mack and Hall all played on the same AAU team growing up and a lot of these commits have played against one another in high school as well. 

    But building a brand is something that’s new to all of these players and doing it together is something they were all keen on doing. 

    Revenue sharing went into effect back on July 1 and preparing for that has been at the forefront of the NIL planning for LSU going back to the end of the 2025 signing class and transfer portal window in the winter of 2024. But outside endorsement deals are at the heart of where NIL was supposed to lean when it was first allowed by the NCAA. 

    These top high school recruits are getting an early lesson on what that looks like and opportunities like the one on Thursday will only continue to grow in years to come. 

    “I feel like it’s great. With NIL there’s some bad ways but some good ways but I feel like it’s great for young guys like me. I know I’m going to invest what I get and make sure I’m surrounding myself with the people to help me,” Brown said. 



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    NFL Scout Predicts QB Fernando Mendoza to ‘Be a Bigger Riser’ Ahead of 2026 Draft

    Indiana was the surprise of the college football world last season when it reached the College Football Playoff with Ohio transfer Kurtis Rourke showing enough at quarterback to be a seventh-round NFL draft pick. Now the Hoosiers have a quarterback in Fernando Mendoza who has a higher ceiling after transferring from Cal to play for […]

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    Indiana was the surprise of the college football world last season when it reached the College Football Playoff with Ohio transfer Kurtis Rourke showing enough at quarterback to be a seventh-round NFL draft pick.

    Now the Hoosiers have a quarterback in Fernando Mendoza who has a higher ceiling after transferring from Cal to play for head coach Curt Cignetti, and the NFL will be paying attention.

    “I really liked Mendoza’s tape,” an NFC scout said, per ESPN’s Jordan Reid. “He’s the one to circle that could be a bigger riser, and Cignetti has a great track record with transfer QBs.”

    Reid highlighted his “strong arm with plus mobility for his size” at 6’5″, which allows him to “stand and deliver in the pocket with ease” and make plays outside of the pocket when on the move.

    While he was not included in the first round of an April mock draft from B/R’s NFL Scouting Department, Mendoza will have the opportunity to play his way up draft boards under the spotlight the Big Ten presents.

    Indiana faces Penn State, Oregon, Illinois, Wisconsin and Iowa, among others, and could once again be a factor in the CFP race if Mendoza improves on what he did at Cal.

    He completed 68.7 percent of his passes for 3,004 yards, 16 touchdowns and six interceptions while adding 105 yards and two scores on the ground as a runner. He seemed to improve as the season progressed and threw for 364 yards and two touchdowns in a win over Oregon State and 299 yards and three touchdowns in a win over rival Stanford.

    The Hoosiers were surely intrigued by that finish to the season and brought him into the Big Ten.

    And now the NFL might be intrigued if he can play even better in 2025.



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