Jump to content

Big East Conference baseball tournament

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Big East Conference baseball tournament
Conference baseball championship
Big East Conference logo
SportBaseball
ConferenceBig East Conference
Number of teams4
FormatDouble-elimination tournament
Current stadiumPrasco Park
Current locationMason, Ohio
Played1985–present
Last contest2024
Current championSt. John's (10)
Most championshipsSt. John's (10)
Official websiteBigEast.org Baseball
Host stadiums
Prasco Park (2018–24)
TD Ameritrade Park Omaha (2015, 2017)
Leidos Field at Ripken Stadium (2016)
MCU Park (2007, 2014)
Bright House Field (2006, 2008–2013)
Commerce Bank Ballpark (2000–2005)
Waterfront Park (1999)
Dodd Stadium (1996–1998)
Muzzy Field (1985–1995)
Host locations
Mason, OH (2018–23)
Omaha, NE (2015, 2017)
Aberdeen, MD (2016)
Brooklyn, NY (2007, 2014)
Clearwater, FL (2006, 2008–2013)
Bridgewater, NJ (2000–2005)
Trenton, NJ (1999)
Norwich, CT (1996–1998)
Bristol, CT (1985–1995)

The Big East Conference baseball tournament is the conference championship tournament in baseball for the Big East Conference. It is a double-elimination tournament and seeding is based on regular-season records. The winner receives the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Division I baseball tournament. The Big East Tournament champion is separate from the conference champion. The conference championship is determined solely by regular-season record.

From 1985 to 2013, the tournament was sponsored by the old Big East Conference. Starting with the 2014 tournament, it has been sponsored by the newly formed, non-football Big East Conference.

Tournament

[edit]

The Big East Conference baseball tournament is a four-team double-elimination tournament, held annually at various locations in the Big East Conference region. The four teams with the best conference record at the end of the regular season earn berths in the tournament. The winner earns the Big East's automatic bid to the NCAA Division I baseball tournament. The remaining Big East teams can also qualify for the 64-team NCAA Tournament by receiving an at-large bid.

History

[edit]

The tournament was first held in 1985.

1985–1995

[edit]

The tournament consisted of four teams competing in a double-elimination tournament.

1996–2000

[edit]

The tournament was expanded to a six-team, double-elimination tournament.

2001–2005

[edit]

The tournament returned to a four-team, double-elimination format.

2006–2013

[edit]

The tournament was expanded to become an eight-team, double-elimination tournament.

2014

[edit]

In the 2012–2013 academic year, the old Big East Conference had 15 members. In its inaugural 2013–2014 academic year, the new Big East Conference had only 10 members.

With only seven baseball-sponsoring schools in the conference, the top four teams participate.

Champions by year

[edit]
Year School Site Jack Kaiser Award
(Most Outstanding Player)
1985 St. John's Muzzy FieldBristol, CT Joe Armeni, Seton Hall
1986 St. John's Muzzy Field • Bristol, CT Tom Finke, St. John's
1987 Seton Hall Muzzy Field • Bristol, CT Mo Vaughn, Seton Hall
1988 St. John's Muzzy Field • Bristol, CT Mike Weinberg, St. John's
1989 Villanova Muzzy Field • Bristol, CT Rafael Novoa, Villanova
1990 Connecticut Muzzy Field • Bristol, CT Craig MacDonald, Connecticut
1991 Villanova Muzzy Field • Bristol, CT Mike Neill, Villanova
1992 Providence Muzzy Field • Bristol, CT Jim Foster, Providence
1993 St. John's Muzzy Field • Bristol, CT Mike Maerten, St. John's
1994 Connecticut Muzzy Field • Bristol, CT Chris Bisson, Connecticut
1995 Pittsburgh Muzzy Field • Bristol, CT Jon DeBernardis, Pittsburgh
1996 West Virginia Dodd StadiumNorwich, CT Chris Enochs, West Virginia
1997 St. John's Dodd Stadium • Norwich, CT Mike Dzurilla, St. John's
1998 Rutgers Dodd Stadium • Norwich, CT Dave Marciniak, Rutgers
1999 Providence Waterfront ParkTrenton, NJ Marc DesRoches, Providence
2000 Rutgers Commerce Bank BallparkBridgewater, NJ Bobby Brownlie, Rutgers
2001 Seton Hall Commerce Bank Ballpark • Bridgewater, NJ Isaac Pavlik, Seton Hall
2002 Notre Dame Commerce Bank Ballpark • Bridgewater, NJ Steve Stanley, Notre Dame
2003 Notre Dame Commerce Bank Ballpark • Bridgewater, NJ Javi Sanchez, Notre Dame
2004 Notre Dame Commerce Bank Ballpark • Bridgewater, NJ Matt Macri, Notre Dame
2005 Notre Dame Commerce Bank Ballpark • Bridgewater, NJ Matt Edwards, Notre Dame
2006 Notre Dame Bright House FieldClearwater, FL Wade Korpi, Notre Dame
2007 Rutgers KeySpan ParkBrooklyn, NY Todd Frazier, Rutgers
2008 Louisville Bright House Field • Clearwater, FL Chris Dominguez, Louisville
2009 Louisville Bright House Field • Clearwater, FL Andrew Clark, Louisville
2010 St. John's Bright House Field • Clearwater, FL Kyle Hansen, St. John's
2011 Seton Hall Bright House Field • Clearwater, FL Joe DiRocco, Seton Hall
2012 St. John's Bright House Field • Clearwater, FL Matt Carasiti, St. John's
2013 Connecticut Bright House Field • Clearwater, FL Billy Ferriter, Connecticut
2014 Xavier MCU ParkBrooklyn, NY Mitch Elliott, Xavier
2015 St. John's TD Ameritrade Park OmahaOmaha, NE Alex Caruso, St. John's
2016 Xavier Leidos Field at Ripken StadiumAberdeen, MD Daniel Rizzie, Xavier
2017 Xavier TD Ameritrade Park OmahaOmaha, NE Conor Grammes, Xavier
2018 St. John's Prasco ParkMason, OH Jeff Belge, St. John's
2019 Creighton Prasco ParkMason, OH Jack Strunc, Creighton
2020 Canceled due to COVID-19
2021 UConn Prasco ParkMason, OH Kyler Fedko, UConn
2022 UConn Prasco ParkMason, OH Luke Franzoni, Xavier
2023 Xavier Prasco ParkMason, OH Jack Housinger, Xavier
2024 St. John's Prasco ParkMason, OH Jimmy Keenan, St. John's

All championship information, including tournament results, all-tournament teams, and Jack Kaiser award winners, can be found on pages 64–66 of the 2009 Big East Baseball Media Guide.[1]

Championships by school

[edit]
School Tourney Titles Title Years
St. John's 10 1985, 1986, 1988, 1993, 1997, 2010, 2012, 2015, 2018, 2024
Notre Dame 5 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006
UConn 5 1990, 1994, 2013, 2021, 2022
Xavier 4 2014, 2016, 2017, 2023
Seton Hall 3 1987, 2001, 2011
Rutgers 3 1998, 2000, 2007
Louisville 2 2008, 2009
Providence 2 1992, 1999
Villanova 2 1989, 1991
Creighton 1 2019
Pittsburgh 1 1995
West Virginia 1 1996
Georgetown 0
Butler 0
  • Italics indicate that the program is no longer a Big East member.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). www.nmnathletics.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 February 2016. Retrieved 12 January 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
[edit]