For the women's softball championship, see the Women's College World Series.
The College World Series is the culmination of the NCAA Division I Baseball Championship which determines the NCAA Division I collegiate baseball champion. It takes place in June of each year. Since 1950, the tournament has been held at Johnny Rosenblatt Stadium in Omaha, Nebraska; previous tournaments were held at Hyames Field in Kalamazoo, Michigan (1947-48) and Wichita, Kansas (1949). The name is derived from that of the Major League Baseball World Series championship.
The 2006 College World Series took place June 16-22 with championship games June 24-26. Participating teams included Cal State Fullerton, Clemson, Georgia, Georgia Tech, Miami, North Carolina, Oregon State, and Rice. Oregon State defeated North Carolina 2-1 in the best-of-three final.
The 8-team tournament concludes the NCAA baseball tournament. When the tournament had 48 teams, there were 8 six-team regionals, with the winners advancing to the College World Series. With the tournament's current size of 64 teams, adopted in 1999, there are 16 four-team double-elimination regionals. Regional winners advance to 8 head-to-head best-of-three super regionals, and super regional winners advance to the College World Series.
Through 1987, the College World Series was a pure double-elimination event. The format was changed in 1988, when the tournament was divided into two four-team double-elimination brackets, with the survivors of each bracket playing in a single championship game. The single-game championship was made for broadcast television, with the final game traditionally on CBS. But in 2003, the tournament was shifted entirely to ESPN and the championship final became a best-of-three series between the last two remaining teams. In the results shown here, Score indicates the score of the championship game(s) only.
Since 1999, the four-team brackets in the CWS have been determined by the results of regional and super regional play, much like the NCAA basketball tournament. Prior to 1999, the pairings for the CWS were not determined until after the completion of the regional tournaments.
The Division II tournament has been held in Montgomery, Alabama since 1985. The Division III tournament has been held in Appleton, Wisconsin since 2000.
Division I
| Year | Champion | Coach | Score | Runner-up | Most Outstanding Player |
| 1947 | Cal | Clint Evans | 8-7 | Yale | |
| 1948 | USC | Sam Barry | 9-2 | Yale | |
| 1949 | Texas | Bibb Falk | 10-3 | Wake Forest | Charles Teague, Wake Forest |
| 1950 | Texas | Bibb Falk | 3-0 | Washington State | Ray VanCleef, Rutgers |
| 1951 | Oklahoma | Jack Baer | 3-2 | Tennessee | Sidney Hatfield, Tennessee |
| 1952 | Holy Cross | Jack Barry | 8-4 | Missouri | James O'Neill, Holy Cross |
| 1953 | Michigan | Ray Fisher | 7-5 | Texas | J.L. Smith, Texas |
| 1954 | Missouri | Hi Simmons | 4-1 | Rollins | Tom Yewcic, Michigan State |
| 1955 | Wake Forest | Taylor Sanford | 7-6 | Western Michigan | Tom Borland, Oklahoma A&M |
| 1956 | Minnesota | Dick Siebert | 12-1 | Arizona | Jerry Thomas, Minnesota |
| 1957 | Cal | George Wolfman | 1-0 | Penn State | Cal Emery, Penn State |
| 1958 | USC | Rod Dedeaux | 8-7 | Missouri | Bill Thom, USC |
| 1959 | Oklahoma State | Toby Greene | 5-3 | Arizona | Jim Dobson, Oklahoma State |
| 1960 | Minnesota | Dick Siebert | 2-1 | USC | John Erickson, Minnesota |
| 1961 | USC | Rod Dedeaux | 1-0 | Oklahoma State | Littleton Fowler, Oklahoma State |
| 1962 | Michigan | Don Lund | 5-4 | Santa Clara | Bob Garibaldi, Santa Clara |
| 1963 | USC | Rod Dedeaux | 5-2 | Arizona | Bud Hollowell, USC |
| 1964 | Minnesota | Dick Siebert | 5-1 | Missouri | Joe Ferris, Maine |
| 1965 | Arizona State | Bobby Winkles | 2-1 | Ohio State | Sal Bando, Arizona State |
| 1966 | Ohio State | Marty Karow | 8-2 | Oklahoma State | Steve Arlin, Ohio State |
| 1967 | Arizona State | Bobby Winkles | 11-2 | Houston | Ron Davini, Arizona State |
| 1968 | USC | Rod Dedeaux | 4-3 | Southern Illinois | Bill Seinsoth, USC |
| 1969 | Arizona State | Bobby Winkles | 10-1 | Tulsa | John Dolinsek, Arizona State |
| 1970 | USC | Rod Dedeaux | 2-1 | Florida State | Gene Ammann, Florida State |
| 1971 | USC | Rod Dedeaux | 7-2 | Southern Illinois | Jerry Tabb, Tulsa |
| 1972 | USC | Rod Dedeaux | 1-0 | Arizona State | Russ McQueen, USC |
| 1973 | USC | Rod Dedeaux | 4-3 | Arizona State | Dave Winfield, Minnesota |
| 1974 | USC | Rod Dedeaux | 7-3 | Miami (Fla.) | George Milke, USC |
| 1975 | Texas | Cliff Gustafson | 5-1 | South Carolina | Mickey Reichenbach, Texas |
| 1976 | Arizona | Jerry Kindall | 7-1 | Eastern Michigan | Steve Powers, Arizona |
| 1977 | Arizona State | Jim Brock | 2-1 | South Carolina | Bob Horner, Arizona State |
| 1978 | USC | Rod Dedeaux | 10-3 | Arizona State | Rod Boxberger, USC |
| 1979 | Cal State-Fullerton | Augie Garrido | 2-1 | Arkansas | Tony Hudson, CS-Fullerton |
| 1980 | Arizona | Jerry Kindall | 5-3 | Hawaii | Terry Francona, Arizona |
| 1981 | Arizona State | Jim Brock | 7-4 | Oklahoma State | Stan Holmes, Arizona State |
| 1982 | Miami (Fla.) | Ron Fraser | 9-3 | Wichita State | Dan Smith, Miami (Fla.) |
| 1983 | Texas | Cliff Gustafson | 4-3 | Alabama | Calvin Schiraldi, Texas |
| 1984 | Cal State-Fullerton | Augie Garrido | 3-1 | Texas | John Fishel, CS-Fullerton |
| 1985 | Miami (Fla.) | Ron Fraser | 10-6 | Texas | Greg Ellena, Miami (Fla.) |
| 1986 | Arizona | Jerry Kindall | 10-2 | Florida State | Mike Senne, Arizona |
| 1987 | Stanford | Mark Marquess | 9-5 | Oklahoma State | Paul Carey, Stanford |
| 1988 | Stanford | Mark Marquess | 9-4 | Arizona State | Lee Plemel, Stanford |
| 1989 | Wichita State | Gene Stephenson | 5-3 | Texas | Greg Brummett, Wichita State |
| 1990 | Georgia | Steve Webber | 2-1 | Oklahoma State | Mike Rebhan, Georgia |
| 1991 | LSU | Skip Bertman | 6-3 | Wichita State | Gary Hymel, LSU |
| 1992 | Pepperdine | Andy Lopez | 3-2 | Cal State-Fullerton | Phil Nevin, CS-Fullerton |
| 1993 | LSU | Skip Bertman | 8-0 | Wichita State | Todd Walker, LSU |
| 1994 | Oklahoma | Larry Cochell | 13-5 | Georgia Tech | Chip Glass, Oklahoma |
| 1995 | Cal State-Fullerton | Augie Garrido | 11-5 | USC | Mark Kotsay, CS-Fullerton |
| 1996 | LSU | Skip Bertman | 9-8 | Miami (Fla.) | Pat Burrell, Miami (Fla.) |
| 1997 | LSU | Skip Bertman | 13-6 | Alabama | Brandon Larson, LSU |
| 1998 | USC | Mike Gillespie | 21-14 | Arizona State | Wes Rachels, USC |
| 1999 | Miami (Fla.) | Jim Morris | 6-5 | Florida State | Marshall McDougall, Florida State |
| 2000 | LSU | Skip Bertman | 6-5 | Stanford | Trey Hodges, LSU |
| 2001 | Miami (Fla.) | Jim Morris | 12-1 | Stanford | Charlton Jimerson, Miami (Fla.) |
| 2002 | Texas | Augie Garrido | 12-6 | South Carolina | Huston Street, Texas |
| 2003 | Rice | Wayne Graham | 4-3 (10 inn.), 3-8, 14-2 | Stanford | John Hudgins, Stanford |
| 2004 | Cal State-Fullerton | George Horton | 6-4, 3-2 | Texas | Jason Windsor, CS-Fullerton |
| 2005 | Texas | Augie Garrido | 4-2, 6-2 | Florida | David Maroul, Texas | |
| 2006 | Oregon State | Pat Casey | 3-4, 11-7, 3-2 | North Carolina | Jonah Nickerson, Oregon State | |
Division II
Division III
External links
College World Series | 1947 establishments | Baseball playoffs and champions | College baseball | NCAA Championships | Sports in Omaha