Home run rate at dizzying pace as College World Series opens
OMAHA, NEB. » If the College World Series is like the first two rounds of the NCAA baseball tournament, fans in the outfield seats at Charles Schwab Field are going to take home lots of souvenir balls.
The 424 home runs hit in regionals and super regionals already are a tournament record, and at least 14 games remain to be played in the CWS.
The eight-team event opens Friday with No. 5 national seed Texas A&M (4218) playing Oklahoma and No. 9 Texas (47-20) meeting Notre Dame (40-15). Saturday openers match No. 2 Stanford (47-16) against Arkansas (43-19) and Mississippi (37-22) against No. 14 Auburn (42-20).
Omaha’s cavernous ballpark hasn’t surrendered many homers since it opened in 2011. There were 28 in last year’s CWS, the most since the move from the old Rosenblatt Stadium.
Based on what’s happened across college baseball through super regionals, that number is in jeopardy even though the wind is forecast to blow in most of the CWS.
Texas, Stanford and Arkansas each enter the CWS with at least 100 home runs and Mississippi has 99. A total of 19 Division I teams hit at least 100 this season compared with three last year.
Batting down speculation the ball is juiced this year, American Baseball Coaches Association executive director Craig Keilitz said specifications haven’t changed since the flat-seam ball was introduced in 2015.
Coaches and officials point to a confluence of factors contributing to the surge.
Players are older and more developed at the plate because the NCAA offered an extra season of eligibility to athletes whose 2020 seasons were impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Also, fewer juniors have left to play professionally the last two years because the Major League Baseball draft was reduced to five rounds in 2020 and now is at 20, half as many as there were from 2012-19.
“I guess the philosophy on that is takes a little bit more time for hitters to mature,” Keilitz said.