FAQ

How many teams make the NCAA Division-III baseball tournament?
In 2010, 55 teams.

How do teams qualify for the NCAA tournament?
The NCAA selects teams via Pool A, Pool B and Pool C bids.

What’s a Pool A bid?
Those are the automatic qualifiers from conferences with seven or more full NCAA members. In 2010, these 36 conferences will receive Pool A bids, which are mostly determined by conference tournaments:
Allegheny Mountain Collegiate Conference
American Southwest Conference
Capital Athletic Conference
Centennial Conference
College Conference of Illinois and Wisconsin
Colonial States Athletic Conference
Commonwealth Conference
Commonwealth Coast Conference
Freedom Conference
Great Northeast Athletic Conference
Heartland Collegiate Athletic Conference
Iowa Intercollegiate Athletic Conference
Landmark Conference
Liberty League
Little East Conference
Massachusetts State College Athletic Conference
Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association
Midwest Conference
Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference
New England Small College Athletic Conference
New England Women’s and Men’s Athletic Conference
New Jersey Athletic Conference
North Coast Athletic Conference
North Eastern Athletic Conference
Northern Athletics Conference
Northwest Conference
Ohio Athletic Conference
Old Dominion Athletic Conference
President’s Athletic Conference
Skyline Conference
St. Louis Intercollegiate Athletic Conference
Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference
Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference
State University of New York Athletic Conference
USA South Athletic Conference
Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference

What’s a Pool B bid?
Pool B bids are awarded to independent institutions and institutions that are members of conferences that do not meet the requirements for automatic qualification (Pool A).

What’s a Pool C bid?
Pool C is reserved for institutions from automatic-qualifier (Pool A) conferences that are not their conference’s automatic qualifier and the remaining teams in Pool B.

Exactly how many Pool B and Pool C bids are awarded?
In 2010, besides the 36 Pool A bids, there will be four Pool B bids and 15 Pool C bids.

How is the NCAA D-III baseball tournament structured?
In 2010, the 55 selected teams will play in eight regional tournaments (May 19-23). Three regional tournaments will feature eight teams, one regional will have seven teams and four regionals will have six teams. The winners of the eight regional tournaments play in the final tournament (May 28-June 1) at a predetermined site. In 2010, the championship will be at Fox Cities Stadium in Grand Chute, Wis.

How are regional tournament hosts determined?
The NCAA selects hosts based on bids submitted by schools. The NCAA considers, in no particular order: geographic locations, submitted budgets, available lodging accomodations, quality and seating capacity of the playing facilities among many other criteria.

What are regional rankings?
NCAA Division-III baseball is broken down into eight geographic regions (Central, Mideast, Midwest, Mid-Atlantic, New England, New York, South, West). Each of those regions has an advisory committee (with different people making them up each year), consisting of head coaches and/or athletic administrators, that helps the NCAA create a ranking for each region. The regional rankings are based on teams’ in-region records, opponent’s winning percentages, head-to-head results and opponent’s opponent’s winning percentages among other factors. Besides the three published regional rankings, the NCAA creates another one after all conference tournaments are completed. That last rankings list is not available to the public.

What’s the difference between regional rankings and regular Top 25 rankings?
In short, regional rankings are the rankings that matter. The NCAA publishes three regional rankings – one each week – at the end of the season. Those regional rankings create the official order for the purposes of selection to the NCAA tournament. Top 25 polls have no bearing on NCAA selections.

In what order are Pool A, Pool B and Pool C bids awarded?
Pool A teams are the first in the NCAA tournament. Then the NCAA selects the Pool B teams. After Pool A and Pool B teams are taken away, every other team, regardless of region or whether they are Pool B or Pool C eligible, are up for consideration at the same time. The basis for selection is the final, unpublished regional rankings list. The NCAA begins the Pool C process by selecting the best team in the nation of the ones that didn’t earn a Pool A or a Pool B bid. Eight teams – one team from each region – are up for selection consideration in each round.
Example: The No. 2-ranked team from each region are up for Pool C selection. Say the No. 2 team from Central Region is selected. Then the No. 2 teams from the previous selection round are still up for consideration against the No. 3 team from the Central. Repeat that process until all 54 slots are full, and that’s how the NCAA arrives at the final 54 teams, which are then grouped into the eight regionals based primarily on geographic location and competitive balance.

Where can I get a harder-to-comprehend version of this information?
The NCAA publishes Handbooks for each sport in each division, detailing how champions are determined. The 2009 NCAA Division-III Baseball Handbook can be found here. The 2010 version can be found here.

-Ricky Nelson


3 Responses to “FAQ”

  1. I hope you have a place to stay in Appleton this week for the Div. III world series!!

  2. It’s nice to have friends in Appleton who’ll take in the likes of me for nearly a week.

  3. [...] in the 2010 NCAA tournament: 36 Pool A, 5 Pool B, 14 Pool C. For an explanation of what that means, see the FAQ. Last year there were 35 Pool A’s, 6 Pool B’s and 13 Pool C’s (54 total [...]

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