There was an incident in Gainesville that should have received more attention. The Troy Trojans, a mid-major program that most casual fans couldn’t have put on a map a month ago, entered Florida’s home regional as a No. 3 seed, lost to Miami in their opening game, and then won four straight, including back-to-back victories over Florida by scores of 16-11 and 10-2. In the end, it wasn’t close. dominant. These are the kinds of performances that leave you wondering if a team just clicked at the right time or if the seeding committee was looking at the correct statistics.
That’s a miniature version of the 2026 College World Series bracket. Out of the sixteen national seeds, nine failed to advance past the regionals. Home is UCLA. The No. 2 overall seed Georgia Tech was defeated by an Oklahoma team that had persevered through two elimination games to reach the ten-inning regional final. In Tallahassee, St. John’s, a Queens, New York-based program that isn’t exactly a traditional baseball factory, defeated Florida State twice. As the super regional weekend approaches, the bracket hardly resembles what anyone would have created on the day of the selection show.
It seems like the power dynamics in the sport have been subtly changing for some time, and this weekend of regionals just brought it to light. If you follow college baseball from outside the conference, the SEC’s six-year run of national titles has begun to feel almost oppressive. Omaha has begun to resemble a regional conference tournament with a few outsiders permitted, including Tennessee, LSU, Ole Miss, and Mississippi State. That streak might come to an end in 2026. At the moment, the bracket is at least posing the question aloud.

A few things come to mind as the super regional matchups take shape. The matchup between Troy and Little Rock, two underdog teams that have both defeated teams with far greater resources and experience, is truly unlike anything else on the board. They will travel to Omaha to play each other. In four elimination games in Gainesville, Troy amassed 48 runs. You don’t expect that to continue at the next level, but it’s also not exactly a fluke. Nevertheless, home-field advantage in super regionals is real, and the Trojans are at home. It’s difficult not to wish for a little more mayhem.
Although this tournament has already demonstrated how meaningless that term is, the matches on the other side of the bracket feel more predictable. Georgia, the third-ranked national seed and the top seed still standing following Atlanta’s regional mayhem, takes on Mississippi State, a team that defeated Louisiana 19-5 in their regional final and appeared to be in full swing. On paper, the matchup between Alabama and St. John’s appears lopsided, but keep in mind that St. John’s recently defeated Florida State in their own stadium. In what may be the most intriguing seeded matchup of the bunch, Texas takes on Oregon. Both teams have respectable pitchers and lineups capable of outperforming anyone.
There are about 35,000 spectators at Charles Schwab Field in Omaha, and by the time the 79th Men’s College World Series starts on June 12th, the crowd will most likely include fans of at least one program that, based on preseason predictions, had no right to be there. It’s not a grievance. That’s what makes it worthwhile to watch. When these teams play in a double-elimination format, everything is recalculated, including the national seeds, the SEC streak, and the blue-blood programs. The College World Series bracket for 2026 is messy. It’s not neat. That’s precisely what collegiate baseball is meant to be.
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