Southwestern Athletic Conference Baseball Tournament
The Southwestern Athletic Conference Baseball Tournament decides the conference baseball championship of the NCAA Division I Southwestern Athletic Conference. The top four finishers in each conference division participate in the two-bracket, double-elimination tournament which, beginning in 2021, will be played at Smith–Wills Stadium in Jackson, Mississippi.[2] The winner of the tournament receives an automatic berth to the NCAA tournament.
Southwestern Athletic Conference Baseball Tournament | |
---|---|
Conference Baseball Championship | |
Sport | Baseball |
Conference | Southwestern Athletic Conference |
Number of teams | 8[1] |
Format | Two-bracket, double-elimination, single elimination final |
Current stadium | Smith–Wills Stadium[2] |
Current location | Jackson, MS[2] |
Played | 1977[3]–2019 |
Last contest | 2019 |
Current champion | Southern |
Most championships | Southern (27 official) |
TV partner(s) | ESPNews (since 2018;[4] ESPNU in prior years[1][5]) |
Official website | https://swac.org/news/2019/5/8/baseball-swacbsb19-tournament-central.aspx |
Host stadiums | |
Wesley Barrow Stadium (2014–2019) LaGrave Field (2013) Lee–Hines Field (2003, 2008–2009, 2012) Fair Grounds Field (2001, 2010–2011) Pete Goldsby Field (1977, 1979, 2008) Smith–Wills Stadium (2000, 2007) Trustmark Park (2006) Rickwood Field (2005) Baseball USA (2004) Shehee Stadium (2002) Pilot Field (2002) "Rags" Scheuermann Field at Kirsch-Rooney Stadium (1996–1999) Chester Willis Field (1988–1995) Bringhurst Field (1986–1987) Neagle Field (1985) University Park (1978, 1980, 1982, 1984) Old Tiger Field (1981, 1983) | |
Host locations | |
New Orleans, LA (1996–1999, 2014–2019) Fort Worth, TX (2013) Baton Rouge, LA (1977, 1979, 2003, 2008–2009, 2012) Shreveport, LA (2001–2002, 2010–2011) Jackson, MS (1978, 1980, 1982, 1984, 2000, 2007) Pearl, MS (2006) Birmingham, AL (2005) Houston, TX (1985, 2004) Natchez, MS (1988–1995) Alexandria, LA (1986–1987) Grambling, LA (1981, 1983) |
History
The SWAC was established in 1920,[6] and the conference is known to have sponsored baseball as a league sport until around the Great Depression and World World II before sanctioning it again in 1949.[7] However, conference baseball records prior to Southern's historic 1959 National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics national championship are not necessarily complete; for example, Southern claims SWAC titles for the 1949, 1950, 1955, and 1956 seasons[8] that existing conference records are not known to fully document. Between 1959 and 2003, only Southern, Jackson State, and Grambling State won SWAC championships. The league office itself has even been known to refer to these schools as the "Big Three." However, since 2004, seven programs have won championships, suggesting greater competitiveness in the league.[9] Also, with the SWAC tournament now including eight schools,[1] simply more lower-seeded teams have an opportunity to compete for the conference crown. However, allowing lower-seeded teams to stake claim to the title and automatic bid to the NCAA tournament may have also come with a price; from 2000—when the SWAC tournament field expanded to six teams[10]—to 2016, SWAC entrants went just 4–36 in NCAA regional play.[11]
The roots of the tournament began in 1977 when the league split into eastern and western divisions, with the division winners facing off in a best-of-three championship series;[3] Jackson State and Southern met in that first series.[12] A true tournament format was initially planned for the conclusion of the 1980 regular season, but SWAC officials were unable to assemble it in time—so another two-team championship series ended up being held in its place instead.[13] After the 1980 series featured a fourth consecutive JSU–SU match-up,[14][15][16] the series was successfully converted into a more inclusive four-team, double-elimination tournament for the 1981 season, guaranteeing that at least one school that had never won the SWAC title before could compete in it (the four-team field was expanded to six teams in 2000[10] and eight teams in 2008[1]). That first tournament, held in Grambling, Louisiana, actually had the reverse effect though as it included division champions Grambling and Alcorn State—but then still gave division runners-up Southern and Jackson State yet another opportunity to win the title;[17] indeed, Southern did win[18] the rain-delayed tournament.[19]
Initially, the earliest tournaments alternated between the home stadiums of the western and eastern division champions. Although the event had been played off-campus before (at Pete Goldsby Field, in Baton Rouge, Louisiana), it was played in a non-qualifier's hometown (Houston, home of Texas Southern) for the first time in 1985[20] and then moved to its first true neutral location for the 1986 edition—a rainy affair held at the old Bringhurst Field in Alexandria, Louisiana.[21] But the tournament has not evolved without growing pains. It has changed locations numerous times over the years (including nine different stadiums for the eight tournaments played between 1999 and 2006). The tournament has not necessarily been easy for cities to bid on, as the SWAC office has sometimes preferred bids that cover multiple sports facilities for an entire "SWAC Spring Sports Festival" encompassing all league-sponsored sports that have championship tournaments near the end of the spring semester.[22]
The competition's changing format has also been questioned. In 2002 a weary columnist for the Baton Rouge Advocate lamented: "The SWAC Tournament has had a different venue and a different format each of the last four years. In that span, there have been times where both the site and the format were decided just weeks before the event."[23] Indeed, multiple people associated with the Southern program over the years have expressed disappointment with format adjustments, hinting that it could be done to reduce odds of the Jaguars winning yet another tournament.[24][25][26] One of the tournament's most vocal critics has been Roger Cador,[23][27] who served as an assistant or head coach at Southern during most of the SWAC tournaments that have been held. In 2019 the league office responded by hiring Cador in an advisory role as staff liaison to "assist with marketing, promotions, and game management/event operations" for the tournament.[28]
Besides the partial cancellation of the 1980 tournament, in 1993 the then-Natchez, Mississippi-based tournament was canceled by SWAC commissioner James Frank before the championship game could be played, due to the field's condition after enduring lightning and rain delays with only "makeshift tarps" available; the title game participants, Jackson State and Southern, were subsequently declared co-champions.[25] This was not the first rain-plagued tournament held in Natchez,[29] nor was it the last. In 1994 rain pushed Southern into playing three full nine-inning games on the day of the championship; the exhausted team ended up losing the finale by a mere one run.[30] In 1995 the stadium was double-booked with Mississippi High School Activities Association playoff games during one of the days.[31] The 2005 tournament, which was held at historic Rickwood Field in Birmingham, Alabama, was suspended during the 15th inning of the championship game due to stray gunfire generated from a gang fight that occurred on the street behind the center field wall; the teams and fans alike were forced to scramble for cover.[32] Since then, the tournaments have been held relatively drama-free; however, even then rain delays at the 2008 event[33] required the use of an additional facility in an attempt to stay on schedule[34] with its new eight-team format. Also, a multi-year contract to hold the tournament at LaGrave Field in Fort Worth, Texas starting with the 2013 tourney was canceled after only one year due to the venue being in a state of disrepair.[35] The event found a stable home after that at Wesley Barrow Stadium in New Orleans, which is associated with initiatives by the Major League Baseball Urban Youth Academy to promote increased participation by minorities in the sport[36]—something that the SWAC has a vested interest in as a conference for historically black universities. In 2019 New Orleans served as a host city for the SWAC tournament for the tenth time—the most of any city (Natchez's Chester Willis Field is the venue that has hosted both the most tournaments overall and the most consecutive tournaments—eight between 1988 and 1995).
A three-year deal was signed in 2020 to return the tournament to Smith–Wills Stadium.[2] However, just two weeks after that agreement was announced, the NCAA canceled all spring championship events for the 2020 season, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[37]
Champions
Conference championships by year
The following is a list of conference champions and playoff and tournament sites, listed by year.[38] Modern-day title claims do not necessarily agree with contemporary sources concerning the unofficial champions from early seasons prior to 1959.
Unofficial regular season-era champions
Year | Champion(s) |
---|---|
1949 | Southern[39][8] |
1950 | Southern[40][39][41][8] |
1951 | (NA) |
1952 | Southern[42][39][41] |
1953 | Southern[43][39] |
1954 | Southern[44][41] |
Wiley College[44] | |
1955 | Southern[45][41][8] |
1956 | Southern[39][8] |
1957 | Southern[7][46][39][41] |
1958 | Southern[41] |
Wiley College[47][46][48] |
Note: in 1951 the conference was split into divisions.[49]
Official regular season-era champions
Year | Champion | Coach[50] |
---|---|---|
1959 | Southern | Bob Lee |
1960 | Southern | Bob Lee |
1961 | Grambling State | Prez Jones |
1962 | Grambling State | Prez Jones |
1963 | Grambling State | Prez Jones |
1964 | Grambling State | Prez Jones |
1965 | Southern | Emory Hines |
1966 | Southern | Emory Hines |
1967 | Grambling State | Prez Jones |
1968 | Jackson State | Bob Hill |
1969 | Southern | Emory Hines |
1970 | Southern | Emory Hines |
1971 | Jackson State | W. C. Gorden |
1972 | Southern | Emory Hines |
1973 | Jackson State | Bob Braddy |
1974 | Southern | Emory Hines |
1975 | Southern | Emory Hines |
1976 | Southern | Emory Hines |
Playoff-era champions
Year | Champion | Coach[50] | Runner-up | Score | No. of teams in playoffs | Venue(s) | Location |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1977 | Jackson State | Bob Braddy | Southern | 4–0[51] | 2[3] | Pete Goldsby Field | Baton Rouge, LA[12] |
1978 | Jackson State | Bob Braddy | Southern | 3–2 | 2 | University Park | Jackson, MS[14] |
1979 | Southern | Leroy Boyd | Jackson State | 5–3 | 2 | Pete Goldsby Field | Baton Rouge, LA[15] |
1980 | Jackson State | Bob Braddy | Southern | 14–4[52] | 2 | University Park | Jackson, MS[16] |
Tournament-era champions
Year | Champion(s) | Coach(es)[50] | Runner-up | Score | No. of teams in tourney | Venue(s) | Location |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1981 | Southern | Leroy Boyd | Grambling State | 6–0[53] | 4[17] | Old Tiger Field | Grambling, LA[13] |
1982 | Jackson State | Bob Braddy | 4 | University Park | Jackson, MS[54] | ||
1983 | Grambling State | Wilbert Ellis | 4 | Old Tiger Field | Grambling, LA[55] | ||
1984 | Grambling State | Wilbert Ellis | 4 | University Park | Jackson, MS[56] | ||
1985 | Grambling State | Wilbert Ellis | 4 | Neagle Field | Houston, TX[20] | ||
1986 | Jackson State | Bob Braddy | 4 | Bringhurst Field | Alexandria, LA[21] | ||
1987 | Southern | Roger Cador | 4 | Bringhurst Field | Alexandria, LA[57] | ||
1988 | Southern | Roger Cador | 4 | Chester Willis Field | Natchez, MS[58] | ||
1989 | Jackson State | Bob Braddy | Grambling State | 18–4 | 4 | Chester Willis Field | Natchez, MS[59] |
1990 | Jackson State | Bob Braddy | 4 | Chester Willis Field | Natchez, MS[29] | ||
1991 | Southern | Roger Cador | 4 | Chester Willis Field | Natchez, MS[60] | ||
1992 | Southern | Roger Cador | 4 | Chester Willis Field | Natchez, MS[61] | ||
1993 | Jackson State | Bob Braddy | (canceled, due to weather) | 4 | Chester Willis Field | Natchez, MS[25] | |
Southern | Roger Cador | ||||||
1994 | Jackson State | Bob Braddy | Southern | 6–5 | 4 | Chester Willis Field | Natchez, MS[30] |
1995 | Jackson State | Bob Braddy | Southern | 10–4[62] | 4 | Chester Willis Field | Natchez, MS[31] |
1996 | Southern | Roger Cador | Jackson State | 7–3[63] | 4 | "Rags" Scheuermann Field at Kirsch-Rooney Stadium | New Orleans, LA[64] |
1997 | Southern | Roger Cador | Alcorn State | 12–8[63] | 4 | "Rags" Scheuermann Field at Kirsch-Rooney Stadium | New Orleans, LA[65] |
1998 | Southern | Roger Cador | Jackson State | 11–7[63] | 4 | "Rags" Scheuermann Field at Kirsch-Rooney Stadium | New Orleans, LA[66] |
1999 | Southern | Roger Cador | Grambling State | 13–8[63] | 4 | "Rags" Scheuermann Field at Kirsch-Rooney Stadium | New Orleans, LA[67] |
2000 | Jackson State | Bob Braddy | Grambling State | 12–11[63] | 6[10] | Smith–Wills Stadium | Jackson, MS[68] |
2001 | Southern | Roger Cador | Jackson State | 10–6[63] | 6 | Fair Grounds Field | Shreveport, LA[69] |
2002 | Southern | Roger Cador | Jackson State | 14–2[63] | 6 | W. Peyton Shehee, Jr. Stadium | Shreveport, LA[70] |
Pilot Field | |||||||
2003 | Southern | Roger Cador | Mississippi Valley State | 10–7[63] | 4[71] | Lee–Hines Field | Baton Rouge, LA[35] |
2004 | Texas Southern | Candy Robinson | Mississippi Valley State | 18–1[72] | 4[73] | Baseball USA | Houston, TX[72] |
2005 | Southern | Roger Cador | Prairie View A&M | 6–5 (15 inn.)[63] | 6[74] | Rickwood Field | Birmingham, AL[75] |
2006 | Prairie View A&M | Michael Robertson | Alcorn State | 3–2[63] | 6 | Trustmark Park | Pearl, MS[76] |
2007 | Prairie View A&M | Michael Robertson | Southern | 8–7[63] | 6 | Smith–Wills Stadium | Jackson, MS[77] |
2008 | Texas Southern | Candy Robinson | Prairie View A&M | 12–11[63] | 8[1] | Lee–Hines Field | Baton Rouge, LA[34] |
Pete Goldsby Field | |||||||
2009 | Southern | Roger Cador | Alcorn State | 12–10 | 8 | Lee–Hines Field | Baton Rouge, LA[63] |
2010 | Grambling State | James Cooper | Alcorn State | 15–2 | 8 | Fair Grounds Field | Shreveport, LA[63] |
2011 | Alcorn State | Barrett Rey | Southern | 12–6[63] | 8 | Fair Grounds Field | Shreveport, LA[78] |
2012 | Prairie View A&M | Waskyla Cullivan | Mississippi Valley State | 7–4 | 8 | Lee–Hines Field | Baton Rouge, LA |
2013 | Jackson State | Omar Johnson | Prairie View A&M | 6–2 | 8 | LaGrave Field | Fort Worth, TX[35] |
2014 | Jackson State | Omar Johnson | Alabama State | 9–8 | 8 | Wesley Barrow Stadium | New Orleans, LA[5] |
2015 | Texas Southern | Michael Robertson | Southern | 10–0 | 8 | Wesley Barrow Stadium | New Orleans, LA[5] |
2016 | Alabama State | Mervyl Melendez | Texas Southern | 7–5 | 8 | Wesley Barrow Stadium | New Orleans, LA[5] |
2017 | Texas Southern | Michael Robertson | Alabama State | 4–2 | 8 | Wesley Barrow Stadium | New Orleans, LA[79] |
2018 | Texas Southern | Michael Robertson | Grambling State | 18–3 | 8 | Wesley Barrow Stadium | New Orleans, LA[4] |
2019 | Southern | Kerrick Jackson | Alabama State | 15–0 | 8 | Wesley Barrow Stadium | New Orleans, LA[80] |
2020 | (canceled, due to COVID-19 pandemic)[37] | 8 | Smith–Wills Stadium | Jackson, MS[2] | |||
2021 | Smith–Wills Stadium | Jackson, MS[2] | |||||
2022 | Smith–Wills Stadium | Jackson, MS[2] | |||||
Note: in 1993 Jackson State and Southern were declared co-champions, due to weather forcing the cancellation of the SWAC Tournament final.[25]
Conference championships by school
The following is a list of conference champions, listed by school (not including seasons prior to 1959).
School | No. of titles | Year(s) |
---|---|---|
Southern | 27 | 1959, 1960, 1965, 1966, 1969, 1970, 1972, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1979, 1981, 1987, 1988, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2009, 2019 |
Jackson State | 16 | 1968, 1971, 1973, 1977, 1978, 1980, 1982, 1986, 1989, 1990, 1993, 1994, 1995, 2000, 2013, 2014[81] |
Grambling State | 9 | 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1967, 1983, 1984, 1985, 2010[82] |
Texas Southern | 5 | 2004, 2008, 2015, 2017, 2018 |
Prairie View A&M | 3 | 2006, 2007,[83] 2012 |
Alabama State | 1 | 2016 |
Alcorn State | 1 | 2011 |
Western Division championships by school
The following is a list of Western Division champions, listed by school (not including the 1951 season).
School | No. of titles | Year(s) |
---|---|---|
Southern | 29 | 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1982,[84] 1984,[85] 1986,[86] 1987,[87] 1990,[88] 1991,[89] 1992,[90] 1994,[91] 1995,[31] 1996,[92] 1997,[93] 1998,[94] 1999,[95] 2000,[96] 2001,[97] 2002,[98] 2003,[99] 2004,[100] 2005,[101] 2008,[102] 2009,[103] 2011,[104] 2012, 2013, 2019 |
Grambling State | 7 | 1981, 1983,[105] 1985,[106] 1988,[107] 1989,[108] 1993,[25] 2017 |
Arkansas–Pine Bluff | 3 | 2014, 2015, 2016 |
Texas Southern | 3 | 2005,[101] 2010,[109] 2018 |
Prairie View A&M | 2 | 2006,[110] 2007[111] |
Note: in 2015 Arkansas–Pine Bluff was ineligible for the SWAC Tournament, due to a violation of SWAC rules concerning Academic Progress Rate scores.
Eastern Division championships by school
The following is a list of Eastern Division champions, listed by school (not including the 1951 season).
School | No. of titles | Year(s) |
---|---|---|
Jackson State | 25 | 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1982,[84] 1984,[85] 1986,[86] 1987,[87] 1989,[108] 1990,[88] 1991,[89] 1992,[90] 1993,[25] 1994,[91] 1995,[31] 1996,[92] 1998,[94] 1999,[95] 2000,[96] 2007,[111] 2008,[112] 2010,[109] 2012, 2013, 2017 |
Alcorn State | 7 | 1981, 1985,[106] 1988,[113] 1997,[93] 2001,[97] 2002,[98] 2011[114] |
Mississippi Valley State | 6 | 1983,[115] 2003,[116] 2004,[116] 2005,[116] 2006,[116] 2009[117] |
Alabama State | 5 | 2014, 2015, 2016, 2018, 2019 |
Note: in 2006 Jackson State initially clinched the Eastern Division championship but, after forfeiting conference games for the use of ineligible players, fell behind Mississippi Valley State in the final division standings, before the SWAC Tournament; though Jackson State still had a good enough record remaining to qualify for the tournament, it subsequently withdrew.[116]
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