Where does Georgia baseball stand ahead of 2025 NCAA tournament? Latest projections
Georgia baseball's time at the SEC Tournament ended after one game.
Now, the Bulldogs await what their path to Omaha and the College World Series looks like.
Georgia is a lock for an NCAA regional after going 18-12 in the SEC this season and will enter the NCAA Tournament with a 42-15 record after a 3-2 loss to Oklahoma on Wednesday May 21 in Hoover, Ala.
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Coach Wes Johnson said after the regular season that he thought the Bulldogs would be a top eight national seed, which would assure playing at home through the super regionals if his team advances.
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Georgia baseball RPI
Georgia was No. 1 in the NCAA's official RPI entering Wednesday's game. Georgia has the No. 6 strength of schedule and entering Wednesday was 11-10 against Quad 1 opponents, 6-3 against Quad 2 teams, 13-1 against Quad 3 teams and 12-0 against Quad 4 opponents.
Georgia baseball NCAA tournament projections
Baseball America projects Georgia as a No. 4 national seed in the Athens regional in its latest bracket projections released Wednesday. Georgia is the top seed in the regional, with Duke as the No. 2 seed, Stetson as the No. 3 seed and Wright State as the No. 4 seed.
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D1 Baseball this week projected Georgia as a No. 5 national seed and hosting the Athens regional in its latest bracket projections. Georgia is the top seed in the regional, with Wake Forest as the No. 2 seed, East Tennessee State at No. 3 seed and Holy Cross as the No. 4 seed.
The Tennessean's Aria Gerson projected Georgia as the No. 6 national seed and hosting in Athens in the latest bracket outlook. Georgia is the top seed in the regional, with Louisville at the No. 2 seed, UConn as the No. 3 seed and Wright State as the No. 4 seed.
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NCAA baseball tournament schedule
Selection show: Monday, May 26, Noon ET
Regionals: May 30-June 2
Super Regionals: June 6-9
College World Series: June 13-23
This article originally appeared on Athens Banner-Herald: Georgia baseball NCAA tournament projections: Where Bulldogs could land
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Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
College sports enters new era after NCAA settlement, but it won't work if schools cheat
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an hour ago
- USA Today
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Chicago Tribune
2 hours ago
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153 NCAA rules had to be eliminated to clear the way for the House settlement. Here are numbers to know.
The groundbreaking case leading to the transformation of college sports in the United States comes nearly five years after Arizona State swimmer Grant House and Oregon basketball player Sedona Prince filed a complaint against the NCAA and the five most powerful conferences alleging they were unfairly being denied of pay for use of their name, image and likeness. The settlement approved Friday by U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken resolved three antitrust cases — House vs. NCAA, Carter vs. NCAA and Hubbard vs. NCAA — that became known collectively as the 'House case.' The class-action lawsuits contended the NCAA, ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12 and SEC violated antitrust law by not providing benefits and compensation to athletes and restraining athletes' ability to make money for endorsements and sponsorships. Incremental gains won by athletes in previous lawsuits against the NCAA set the stage for the House settlement and the all-out professionalization of college sports. Here's a look at key numbers associated with the case. Athletes who played an NCAA sport between 2016-24 and could be eligible for back payments Class members who submitted a claim form or updated their payment information, which represents approximately 26.2% of the 389,700. Athletes who opted out of the settlement and could pursue their own remedies. Back damages to be paid to current and former college athletes who were denied the opportunity to profit from the use of their NIL rights. The amount will be paid in $280 million installments over 10 years. The NCAA will use reserves and insurance to cover about 40% of the payments. The rest will be covered by the NCAA reducing its annual distributions to Division I schools. Estimated amount of the $2.8 billion that will be paid in back damages to football and men's and women's basketball players in power conferences. The 2025-26 pool of money each Division I school can distribute in direct payments to athletes beginning July 1. The amount represents 22% of the average revenue generated by each school from the five defendant conferences and Notre Dame. NCAA rules that had to be eliminated to allow schools to provide additional benefits to athletes under the settlement. All Division I athletes will be required to report to their schools and the Deloitte clearinghouse any and all third-party NIL contracts with a total value of $600 or more, if payment occurs after July 1, 2025. The clearinghouse will determine whether the amount is commensurate with the athlete's fair market value. The widely accepted estimate by University of San Francisco sports economist Daniel Rascher of additional direct compensation athletes will receive over the next 10 years. The estimated amount of damages faced by the NCAA and the five conferences if they avoided a settlement and lost at trial. Plaintiffs attorneys' request for legal fees. The figure is based on attorneys receiving 20% of the NIL settlement fund and 10% of the additional compensation settlement fund as well as an injunction relief award of $20 million paid by the defendants. That does not included about $9 million in expenses attorney.