Year: | 1973 |
Division: | University Division |
Teams: | 32 |
Collegeworldseriesballpark: | Johnny Rosenblatt Stadium |
City: | Omaha, Nebraska |
Champions: | Southern California |
Titlecount: | 9th |
Runner-Up: | Arizona State |
Cwscount: | 6th |
Coach: | Rod Dedeaux |
Coachcount: | 9th |
Mop: | Dave Winfield |
Mopteam: | Minnesota |
Different Next: | 1974 |
Tournament Link: | NCAA Division I Baseball Championship |
The 1973 NCAA University Division baseball tournament was played at the end of the 1973 NCAA University Division baseball season to determine the national champion of college baseball. The tournament concluded with eight teams competing in the College World Series, a double-elimination tournament in its twenty-seventh year.
Eight regional districts sent representatives to the College World Series with preliminary rounds within each district serving to determine each representative. These events would later become known as regionals. Each district had its own format for selecting teams, resulting in 32 teams participating in the tournament at the conclusion of their regular season, and in some cases, after a conference tournament.[1]
The twenty-seventh tournament's champion was Southern California, led by head coach Rod Dedeaux, and Dave Winfield of Minnesota. was the Most Outstanding Player. He was the starting pitcher in two games, tossing 17 innings, allowing nine hits, one earned run, and striking out 29. In addition, Winfield batted .467 in the Series.
USC became the first team to win four consecutive College World Series and was undefeated (5–0) in the double-elimination format. The final game drew 12,050, the sixth highest to date, and attendance for the fourteen-game Series was 65,356, a new record by nearly seven thousand.[2]
The opening rounds of the tournament were played across eight district sites across the country, each consisting of between three and six teams.[3] The winners of each District advanced to the College World Series.
Bold indicates winner.
School | Conference | Record (conference) | Head coach | CWS appearances | CWS best finish | CWS record | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
56–6 (16–1) | 5 (last: 1972) | 1st (1965, 1967, 1969) | 20–7 | ||||
Independent | 42–10 | 0 (last: none) | none | 0–0 | |||
35–3 (11–2) | 2 (last: 1971) | 5th (1971) | 1–4 | ||||
29–14–2 (14–4) | 3 (last: 1964) | 1st (1956, 1960, 1964) | 14–3 | ||||
47–10 (17–4) | 2 (last: 1972) | 1st (1951) | 5–2 | ||||
Independent | 19–5 | 4 (last: 1963) | 2nd (1957) | 8–8 | |||
46–11 (14–4) | 14 (last: 1972) | 1st (1948, 1958, 1961, 1963, 1968, 1970, 1971, 1972) | 48–18 | ||||
48–5 (15–3) | 14 (last: 1972) | 1st (1949, 1950) | 28–25 |
Date | Game | Winner | Score | Loser | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
June 8 | Game 1 | 1–0 | Dave Winfield 14 Ks, 6-hit shutout.[4] | |||
Game 2 | 3–1 | |||||
June 9 | Game 3 | 6–3 | ||||
Game 4 | 4–1 | |||||
Game 5 | Oklahoma | 6–0 | Penn State | Penn State eliminated | ||
June 10 | Game 6 | Georgia Southern | 8–0 | Harvard | Harvard eliminated | |
Game 7 | Arizona State | 3–0 | Minnesota | |||
Game 8 | Southern California | 4–1 | Texas | |||
June 11 | Game 9 | Minnesota | 6–2 | Georgia Southern | Georgia Southern eliminated | |
Game 10 | Texas | 10–2 | Oklahoma | Oklahoma eliminated | ||
Game 11 | Southern California | 3–1 | Arizona State | |||
June 12 | Game 12 | Arizona State | 6–5 | Texas | Texas eliminated | |
Game 13 | Southern California | 8–7 | Minnesota | Minnesota eliminated | ||
June 13 | Final | Southern California | 4–3 | Arizona State | Southern California wins CWS |
Final game was on Wednesday night, with an attendance of 12,050.[2]
Recalled each year as perhaps the most amazing game in CWS history, Minnesota faced a USC team that featured future major leaguers Rich Dauer, Fred Lynn, and Roy Smalley. Dave Winfield was the starting pitcher for Minnesota. In his first game vs. Oklahoma, he struck out 14 in shutting out the Sooners, 1-0. In the semi-final vs. defending champion USC, Winfield had struck out 15 through 8 innings, allowing only an infield single as Minnesota built a 7-0 lead. USC's Rich Dauer said "In my whole career, even facing the big boys in the majors, I have never seen anything like that," When Dave let go of the ball, it was three feet in front of your face and it seemed like it was going 110 miles an hour."[5]
In the ninth inning, USC opened with a base hit but the next batter grounded into what appeared to be a double play. Television replays indicated the batter was out at first base, but the umpire called him safe and Minnesota coach Dick Siebert was thrown out of the game arguing the call. Two more singles and a key error by the first baseman led to three runs and Winfield was relieved and went to left field. Two relievers allowed five more runs and USC won the game 8–7.[6] "I have played in a lot of memorable big games during my career," Winfield said. "World Series games, league championship games, all-star games, all kinds. But I will never forget that game against USC. Never."[7]
The following players were members of the All-Tournament Team.
Position | Player | School | |
---|---|---|---|
P | style= | Arizona State | |
style= | USC | ||
style= | Oklahoma | ||
Dave Winfield (MOP) | style= | Minnesota | |
C | Clint Meyers | style= | Arizona State |
1B | Clay Westlake | style= | Arizona State |
2B | Bill Berger | style= | Arizona State |
3B | style= | Texas | |
SS | style= | USC | |
OF | Ken Huizenga | style= | USC |
style= | Georgia Southern | ||
Terry Pyka | style= | Texas |