2025 NCAA Baseball Tournament Super Regionals Scores, Bracket, Live Updates


It’s going to be hard for super regionals to top the madness of last weekend’s regionals, but we can’t wait to see it try.
The 2025 NCAA Baseball Tournament returns Friday with supers action across the country. The remaining 16 teams will battle for a spot in the College World Series. Below, Baseball America will have live scores, updates and analysis from every game. Follow along all weekend.
You can find our preview of each super regional below as well. You can also listen to our college podcast previewing the weekend here.
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NCAA Baseball Super Regionals Scores
Super Regional Matchup | Time/Result | TV |
Auburn: Coastal Carolina vs. Auburn | ||
Game 1 (Friday) | Coastal Carolina, 7-6 (10) | ESPN2 |
Game 2 (Saturday) | Coastal Carolina, 4-1 | ESPN2 |
Baton Rouge: West Virginia vs. LSU | ||
Game 1 (Saturday) | LSU, 16-9 | ESPN |
Game 2 (Sunday) | LSU, 12-5 | ESPN2 |
Chapel Hill: Arizona vs. North Carolina | ||
Game 1 (Friday) | North Carolina, 18-2 | ESPN2 |
Game 2 (Saturday) | Arizona, 10-8 | ESPN2 |
Game 3 (Sunday) | Arizona, 4-3 | |
Corvallis: Florida State vs. Oregon State | ||
Game 1 (Friday) | Oregon State, 5-4 (10) | ESPN2 |
Game 2 (Saturday) | Florida State, 3-1 | ESPN2 |
Game 3 (Sunday) | Oregon State, 14-10 | |
Durham: Murray State vs. Duke | ||
Game 1 (Saturday) | Duke, 7-4 | ESPNU |
Game 2 (Sunday) | Murray State, 19-9 | ESPN+ |
Game 3 (Monday) | Murray State, 5-4 | |
Fayetteville: Tennessee vs. Arkansas | ||
Game 1 (Saturday) | Arkansas, 4-3 | ESPN |
Game 2 (Sunday) | Arkansas, 11-4 | ESPN |
Los Angeles: UTSA vs. UCLA | ||
Game 1 (Saturday) | UCLA, 5-2 | ESPNU |
Game 2 (Sunday) | UCLA, 7-0 | ESPN+ |
Louisville: Miami vs. Louisville | ||
Game 1 (Friday) | Louisville, 8-1 | ESPN2 |
Game 2 (Saturday) | Miami, 9-6 | ESPN |
Game 3 (Sunday) | Louisville, 3-2 |
Auburn Super Regional
You can find our preview here.
Saturday’s Game
Coastal Carolina (4) vs. Auburn (1) — Auburn eliminated
In what’s been the case all season, Coastal Carolina received outstanding pitching en route to its come-from-behind, CWS-clinching victory. Auburn took a 1-0 lead in the second on a Chase Fralick RBI single, and it was a lead they would cling to until the bottom of the seventh inning. In their half of the fifth inning Coastal had a golden opportunity to at least tie the game when it loaded the bases with nobody out, but Cade Fisher bore down and somehow escaped unscathed. The Chanticleers finally broke through in the seventh inning and took the lead for good on a Walker Mitchell RBI single, a run-scoring E3 and a hit-by-pitch with the bases loaded. Mitchell in the bottom of the eighth delivered his second RBI single in as many innings to give the Chants a key insurance run.
Circling back to Coastal’s pitching, Sun Belt Pitcher of the Year Jacob Morrison spun a quality start in which he allowed one earned run and struck out six in as many innings pitched, while lefthander Hayden Johnson collected a season-high five strikeouts across three shutout innings to slam the door. With today’s win, Coastal Carolina secured its first College World Series appearance since 2016.
Friday’s Game
Coastal Carolina (7) vs. Auburn (6)
It was a tale of two games—three if you want to go through it with a fine tooth comb—for each team. Before the lengthy rain delay, it was all Coastal Carolina. On the strength of two home runs courtesy of Blagen Pado, the Chants carried a 6-3 lead into the sixth inning. Not only that, but star righthander Cameron Flukey was in the midst of a quality start and on track to throw at least one or two more innings. However, the game came to a screeching halt in the sixth and a nearly two-hour weather delay ensued.
Post-delay, Auburn scored three unanswered runs—headlined by a no-doubt home run by Eric Snow—to tie the game. While they hadn’t led since the first inning, it felt as if Auburn had all the momentum. That was until the top of the 10th inning, however, when Caden Bodine blasted what proved to be the game-winning solo home run.
It’s hard to overstate two things: the first being how important the back-end of Coastal’s bullpen was. Go-to bullpen arm Dominick Carbone got roughed up a bit, but the duo of Matt Potok (2 IP) and Ryan Lynch (1 IP) bore down and fired three-straight shutout innings. The second is Blake Barthol. In the bottom of the ninth, he made a diving play on a Lucas Steele sinking line drive and turned a 4-6 double play to save the game. The following inning, Barthol made a nearly-identical play, this time robbing Chase Fralick to end the game.
Baton Rouge Super Regional
You can find our preview here.
Sunday’s Game
LSU (12) vs. West Virginia (5) — West Virginia eliminated
Despite starter Anthony Eyanson (5 IP, 5 H, 4 R, 3 BB, 7 K) not having his best stuff, LSU picked up a rather comfortable win to secure its second College World Series appearance in the last three seasons. The Tigers got off to a fast start and built up a 6-0 lead by the end of the second inning. Both Jake Brown and Jared Jones delivered an RBI single, while Steven Milam’s bases-clearing, three-run double was the biggest swing of their initial rally.
West Virginia scored four unanswered runs on a pair of home runs by Sam White and Ben Lumsden, while White also came through with an RBI single. That was as close as the Mountaineers would get, though, as LSU’s six-run seventh inning—headlined by a Jake Brown two-run home run—proved to be the final nail in the coffin. In relief of Eyanson, the duo of Cooper Williams (2.2 IP, 1 H, 1 R, 1 BB, 1 K) and Chase Shores (1.1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 3 K) was fantastic.
Saturday’s Game
LSU (16) vs. West Virginia (9)
It took a few innings for its bats to get going, but LSU cruised to a convincing 16-9 win. West Virginia got the scoring started on a Jace Rinehart RBI groundout, but it was all Tigers from that point on. Star freshman Derek Curiel in the fourth put an excellent swing on a left-on-left breaking ball and drove a three-run home run out to the opposite field. An inning later, Steven Milam broke the game open with an opposite field grand slam. The Mountaineers did their best to chip away and scored four runs in their half of the sixth inning, but veteran outfielder Josh Pearson provided the exclamation point—and put the game out of reach for good—with a grand slam of his own.
The trio of Curiel (5), Milam (4) and Pearson (4) accounted for 13 of LSU’s 16 RBIs.
Chapel Hill Super Regional
You can find our preview here.
Sunday’s Game
Arizona (4) vs. North Carolina (3) — North Carolina eliminated
The Wildcats rode the momentum they built in yesterday’s come-from-behind win into this afternoon, as they again erased an early deficit and punched their ticket to Omaha. North Carolina took a 3-1 lead in the third on a Jackson Van De Brake three-run home run (exit velocity of 111), and that was the extent of the offense for either team until the top of the eighth. The Wildcats got a run back on a nasty collision at first base after an Easton Breyfogle bunt before a Mason White two-run single gave them the lead for good. It was an excellent piece of hitting by White, who got his barrel to the top of the zone, went with the pitch—that was located on the outer-half—and laced it through a vacated left side of the infield.
Much like yesterday, Arizona’s bullpen was fantastic. Following a strong start by freshman Smith Bailey (6 IP, 5 H, 3 R, 3 BB, 4 K), the trio of Julian Tonghini, Casey Hintz and Tony Pluta each fired a shutout, hitless inning to seal the victory. Arizona will return to the College World Series for the first time since 2021.
Saturday’s Game
Arizona (10) vs. North Carolina (8)
Arizona prevailed in today’s see-saw battle in Chapel Hill to force a decisive third game tomorrow afternoon. The theme of today’s game for the Wildcats was “punching back.” Every time the Tar Heels took a lead or tried to gain any separation, the ‘Cats responded with a big swing or inning of their own. In the top of the second, Carolina took a 2-1 lead but Arizona promptly scored a run in the bottom-half of the inning to tie the game. Fast forward to the fourth inning and it was more of the same. UNC took a 4-2 lead on a Luke Stevenson RBI double and a Gavin Gallaher RBI groundout, but Arizona scored a pair of runs on a Tommy Splaine home run and an Aaron Walton RBI infield single to re-tie the game.
Arizona led 6-4 heading into the seventh inning, but this is when the momentum really swung towards North Carolina. After a Tyson Bass titanic three-run home run gave the Tar Heels a 7-6 lead, they got a key insurance run in the form of a Jackson Van De Brake bases-loaded walk. However just like they had done twice already, the Wildcats punched back. In the bottom of the seventh, they landed their biggest haymaker yet and took the lead for good after plating four runs. Potential first-round pick Brendan Summerhill delivered an RBI double, later scored on a wild pitch and Maddox Mihalakis came through with a two-run single.
Quality pitching was hard to come by today for Arizona, but Tony Pluta was nails in relief and slammed the door with a pair of strikeouts across 2.1 shutout innings.
Friday’s Game
North Carolina (18) vs. Arizona (2)
It was a fight at the bat rack this afternoon in Chapel Hill, as North Carolina dismantled Arizona to move within one win of punching its ticket to the College World Series. An Adonys Guzman RBI single got the scoring started in the top of the first, but from that point on it was all Tar Heels. They scored five runs in their half of the first inning and three more in the second to take a commanding 8-1 lead. When all was said and done, North Carolina scored at least one run in six of its eight at bats and multiple runs in five.
The red-hot Gavin Gallaher didn’t miss a beat from regionals and went 4-for-5 with a double and two RBIs, while Hunter Stokely went 3-for-4 with a home run and five RBIs and Luke Stevenson went 2-for-5 with a home run and four RBIs. Eight different UNC hitters registered at least one base knock and its 18 runs are a new super regional program record. Not to be outdone, ACC Pitcher of the Year and staff ace Jake Knapp improved to 14-0 after allowing just two runs across seven quality innings.
Corvallis Super Regional
You can find our preview here.
Sunday’s Game
Oregon State (14) vs. Florida State (10) — Florida State eliminated
Tonight’s decisive third game bucked the “pitcher’s duel” trend and then some. Florida State plated two runs in the first on a Max Williams opposite field home run, but Oregon State responded with an emphatic seven-run inning of its own in which Canon Reeder (three-run) and Carson McEntire hit back-to-back home runs. That was just the beginning for the Beavers. Just two innings later they scored six runs to take a 13-3 lead to put the game out of reach. Trent Caraway’s grand slam—his sixth home run in the last eight games—proved to be the biggest individual swing of the game, while the tooled-out Gavin Turley also homered.
Florida State scored six unanswered runs between the fifth and ninth innings, but the result was never really in doubt. This marks Oregon State’s first trip to Omaha since 2018, which is also the last time it won the national championship.
Saturday’s Game
Florida State (3) vs. Oregon State (1)
For the second time in as many days, quality pitching reigned supreme in the Pacific Northwest. Unlike yesterday, however, Florida State prevailed. Oregon State plated a run in the first on a Wilson Weber RBI single, but that was all the offense it would muster against potential top-five pick Jamie Arnold. The Seminoles eventually broke through in the third on a Max Williams backside RBI single. The score remained deadlocked at one until the bottom of the seventh inning when Gage Harrelson laced what proved to be the game-winning RBI single into left-centerfield.
In what very well could have been his last start in the Garnet and Gold, Jamie Arnold was sensational. Across 6.2 innings, he allowed only one run on six hits and collected nine strikeouts. In relief of Arnold, Peyton Prescott was nails. He slammed the door with four strikeouts across two shutout, hitless innings. Not to be outdone, Oregon State southpaw Ethan Kleinschmit went punch-for-punch with Arnold and notched 11 strikeouts across six innings of one-run ball.
Friday’s Game
Oregon State (5) vs. Florida State (4) — 10 innings
After two not-so-thrilling games earlier this afternoon, tonight’s tilt between the Beavers and Seminoles was anything but. Florida State and Oregon State traded RBI doubles in the second and fourth innings, respectively, before the ‘Noles scored one run in three-straight innings to take what appeared to be a commanding 4-1 lead. Star freshman Myles Bailey in the sixth hit a titanic, 419-foot solo home run, while both Max Williams and Brody Delamielleur delivered an RBI single.
A leadoff double by Wilson Weber—his second of the game—kickstarted the Beavers’ three-run ninth inning. They eventually loaded the bases and cut FSU’s lead to 4-2 on a wild pitch before a Jacob Krieg two-run single with two outs and two strikes tied the game at four apiece. Kellan Oakes in the 10th fired a key shutout inning to maintain Oregon State’s momentum. In the bottom of the inning, an Aiva Arquette leadoff double and a Gavin Turley infield single had the Beavers in business. After an intentional walk to load the bases, AJ Singer jumped on a first-pitch breaking ball and lined a walk-off single over the head of Florida State’s drawn-in centerfielder.
Durham Super Regional
You can find our preview here.
Monday’s Game
Murray State (5) vs. Duke (4) — Duke eliminated
Tonight’s matchup between Duke and Murray State was the only show in town, and the two teams delivered one of the better games of the super regional slate. The Racers got off to a dream start and took a 2-0 lead in the first on a Jonathan Hogart leadoff home run—his first of two long balls—and a Dom Decker RBI single. However, Duke starter Henry Zatkowski settled in and fired three-straight scoreless innings during which the Blue Devils’ bats came alive. Veteran Jake Hyde cut Murray State’s lead in half with a sac-fly before putting an excellent swing on a changeup that resulted in a game-tying, 430-foot home run.
Duke took a 3-2 lead in the bottom of the fourth inning on a Jake Berger solo shot, and it held a one-run lead until the seventh. With the Blue Devils closing in on their first trip to Omaha since 1961, Hogart turned on a mid-80s cutter that didn’t do a whole lot and crushed a game-tying home run. Hogart’s second blast of the game breathed new life into the Racers’ dugout, and an inning later—Dylan Zentko and Graham Kelham combined to hang a huge “zero”—they took a 5-3 lead following a Luke Mistone solo homer and a Dan Tauken RBI triple.
Duke got a run back in the eighth courtesy of a Macon Winslow solo shot, but for the second time in as many days Kelham (2.2 IP, 1 H, 1 R, 1 BB, 4 K) fired a scoreless ninth inning to slam the door. Murray State’s win secured the first College World Series appearance in program history.
Sunday’s Game
Murray State (19) vs. Duke (9)
Murray State tied its season-high in runs en route to a commanding win to force a decisive game three tomorrow. Duke wasted no time getting going, as AJ Gracia—in his first game back from his questionable one-game suspension—and Ben Miller belted back-to-back home runs in the first. As it turns out, that was the wake up call the Racers needed. Between the bottom of the first and fourth, they outscored Duke 10-1 to take a commanding 10-3 lead. The Blue Devils made it interesting with a five-run sixth inning, but the Racers put the game out of reach with a nine-run seventh inning.
Eight different Murray State hitters registered at least one knock and drove in at least one run, while Graham Kelham allowed one run and struck out three across three solid innings in relief.
Saturday’s Game
Duke (7) vs. Murray State (4)
Today can appropriately be deemed the “Kyle Johnson game” for Duke. Due to sophomore outfielder AJ Gracia’s one-game suspension, Johnson was thrust into the starting nine. He had logged just one at-bat in the last two months, but rose to the occasion—and then some—this afternoon. Johnson didn’t just lead the offense, he was the offense. He went 4-for-4 (Duke had just six hits all afternoon) with two doubles, a home run and accounted for five of the Blue Devils’ six RBIs. Who’s to say what will happen over the next day or two, but if Duke punches its ticket to the College World Series for the first time since 1961 Kyle Johnson will be a huge reason why.
On the mound, southpaw Owen Proksch collected seven strikeouts and allowed two runs across 5.2 solid innings, while Reid Easterly sealed the victory with three shutout innings.
Fayetteville Super Regional
You can find our preview here.
Sunday’s Game
Arkansas (11) vs. Tennessee (4) — Tennessee eliminated
Unlike yesterday’s tightly-contested game, Arkansas cruised to an 11-4 win to knock out the defending national champions. Charles Davalan in the top of the third turned around a 95 MPH Liam Doyle fastball and hammered a no-doubt, two-run home run (exit velocity of 107) way out to right field. An inning later, Logan Maxwell broke the game open. He caught an AJ Russell heater deep in the zone, went with it and drove it out to the opposite field for a grand slam. A six-run lead was more than enough run support for starter Gage Wood (3.1 IP, 3 H, 1 R, 2 BB, 0 K) and company.
Lefthander Cole Gibler was the first arm out of the bullpen, and he collected four strikeouts and allowed just one hit across 2.2 shutout innings. Brent Iredale in the ninth inning provided the exclamation point with a solo blast out to left-centerfield. Today’s win marks Arkansas’ second College World Series appearance in the last four season.
Saturday’s Game
Arkansas (4) vs. Tennessee (3)
Game one of what was arguably the most anticipated super regional matchup certainly lived up to the hype. Arkansas was able to scratch a run across in the bottom of the second on an outstanding dirt-ball read by Cam Kozeal, but that was the extent of the offense for either team until the fifth inning. Dalton Bargo reached on an E3 to lead off the inning and Dean Curley followed suit with a two-run home run (393-feet, exit velocity of 101) to give Tennessee a 2-1 lead.
Unfortunately for the Volunteers, their lead was short-lived. In the bottom of the inning, Ryder Helfrick caught a Marcus Phillips slider off the end of the bat, but he got just enough of it and muscled it over the left field wall for a go-ahead, two-run home run. The Razorbacks tacked on a key insurance run in the sixth when Charles Davalan dumped an RBI single into shallow left-centerfield, and that proved to be all the offense they would need.
Zach Root turned in one of his best starts of the season and allowed one run on just one hit across seven quality innings, while Gabe Gaeckle collected a pair of strikeouts in as many innings pitched to earn the save. Should Arkansas win tomorrow, it will punch its ticket to the College World Series for the first time since 2022.
Los Angeles Super Regional
You can find our preview here.
Sunday’s Game
UCLA (7) vs. UTSA (0) — UTSA eliminated
UTSA put up a heck of a fight, but UCLA pulled away in the later innings and earned a 7-0 win to clinch its first College World Series appearance since 2013. Landon Stump (4 IP, 4 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 5 K) and Conor Myles (4.2 IP,7 H, 2 R, 1 BB, 3 K) traded scoreless frames for the first three innings, but UCLA broke through in the fourth when Toussaint Bythewood—who had logged just 12 at-bats all season entering today’s game—muscled an RBI single into shallow right field. An inning later, Big Ten Player of the Year and potential top-10 pick in next year’s draft, Roch Cholowsky, followed suit with an RBI single of his own. The Roadrunners were very much in the game for the vast majority of it, but the Bruins plated two runs in the eighth and three in the ninth to seal their fate.
While its season came to an end, UTSA can leave Westwood with its head held high. Head coach Pat Hallmark guided the Roadrunners to their best season in program history. They set new a new single-season record in wins (47), won their first regular-season conference title since 2008 and advanced to a super regional for the first time in school history. The future is bright in San Antonio.
Saturday’s Game
UCLA (5) vs. UTSA (2)
UCLA picked up a hard-fought win over an excellent UTSA club to inch closer to its first College World Series berth since 2013. The Roadrunners wasted no time getting going, as on the second pitch of the game AAC Player of the Year Mason Lytle turned on a right-on-right changeup and rocketed a solo home run out to left field. An inning later, Caden Miller flashed his high-level baseball IQ and pulled off a straight steal of home.
The Bruins were on their heels a little bit, but to their credit they didn’t flinch. They tied the game with a two-run third inning in which Mulivai Levu hit an RBI double and Roman Martin came through with an RBI groundout. A Dean West sac-fly in the fourth gave them the lead for good, but Martin in the bottom of the eighth drove a two-run triple just past the outstretched glove of UTSA’s right fielder to give UCLA a pair of enormous insurance runs.
Perhaps the biggest positive this evening for UCLA was its pitching. After a quality start by Michael Barnett (6 IP, 6 H, 2 R, 0 BB, 1 K) improved his record to 12-1, the bullpen trio of Jack O’Connor, August Souza and Easton Hawk combined to throw three-straight perfect innings to slam the door.
Louisville Super Regional
You can find our preview here.
Sunday’s Game
Louisville (3) vs. Miami (2) — Miami eliminated
Louisville bounced back from yesterday’s loss—in which in squandered a multi-run lead—and picked up a hard-fought, come-from-behind win to punch its ticket to Omaha. Miami started the scoring in the second on a Max Galvin two-run home run, but that was all the offense it could muster. The Cardinals tied the game in the fourth on a Zion Rose RBI double and a Bayram Hot RBI groundout. Following a pair of key scoreless frames courtesy of Ethan Eberle and Jake Schweitzer, Louisville took the lead in the bottom of the seventh on an Eddie King Jr. RBI double. Miami centerfielder Michael Torres—who’s a plus defender—almost made an outstanding diving play, but it kicked off his glove.
Miami had runners on first and second with one out in the ninth, but Justin West and Brennyn Cutts bore down and got the final two outs. After not making a regional in each of the last two seasons, Louisville returns to the College World Series for the first time since 2019.
Saturday’s Game
Miami (9) vs. Louisville (6)
Miami bounced back from yesterday’s convincing loss with a big-time win to force a winner-take-all game tomorrow with a trip to Omaha on the line. Louisville scored three runs in the third inning and one in the fourth to build an early 4-1 lead, but the Hurricanes bats punched right back with a four-run inning of their own—that was headlined by a Jake Ogden three-run home run—to take a 5-4 lead. Miami maintained its one-run lead until the seventh inning when Eddie King Jr. blasted a game-tying, solo home run—his 17th of the season.
The tie wouldn’t last very long, though, as in Miami’s half of the inning Renzo Gonzalez put an excellent swing on a Ty Starke—who attacks from an extremely funky low-three quarters slot—fastball and shot what proved to be the game-winning RBI single through the left side. Sophomore slugger Daniel Cuvet provided the exclamation point with a three-run home run in the bottom of the eighth inning to give the ‘Canes some much-needed breathing room.
A Miami win tomorrow would secure its first College World Series appearance since 2016, while Louisville is seeking its first CWS appearance since 2019.
Friday’s Game
Louisville (8) vs. Miami (1)
Louisville this afternoon cruised to an 8-1 win over Miami. The momentum really swung the Cardinals’ way for good in the second inning. The ‘Canes loaded the bases with just one out in the top-half of the inning, but Patrick Forbes bore down and notched back-to-back strikeouts to get out of the inning unscathed. Garret Pike and Jake Munroe in the bottom-half blasted back-to-back jacks, and it was smooth sailing from that point on. The Cardinals put the game out of reach with a five-run third that was headlined by a Jake Munroe three-run home run—his second of the day. Munroe’s five RBIs were a new season-high.
After a strong start by Patrick Forbes (5.2 IP, 4 H, 1 R, 4 BB, 9 K), the bullpen duo of Brennyn Cutts (1.1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 2 K) and Justin West (2 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 1 K) combined to throw 3.1 shutout innings.