Updating based on the latest information ...
Starting with the teams that are absolutely secure (Top 32).
Tennessee, Kentucky, North Carolina, Texas A&M, Arkansas, Clemson, Oklahoma, Georgia, Florida State, Oklahoma State, NC State, Virginia, UC Santa Barbara, Arizona, Oregon State, East Carolina, Duke, Indiana State, Mississippi State, Dallas Baptist, Wake Forest, LSU, San Diego, Vanderbilt, South Carolina, Southern Mississippi, UC Irvine, Nebraska, Louisiana Tech, Louisiana, West Virginia, Alabama.
Seeds may change slightly (Ex. Texas is a #2 instead of a #3, over Alabama), but these teams are secure.
Next we have a group of five teams that I also feel are in the tournament, likely all as #3 seeds (unless the committee gives a significant boost to #48 Texas based on Q1 and conference finish).
Illinois, Texas, Connecticut, TCU, and UCF.
This brings us to 37 teams. Additionally, we have 21 remaining teams that are in the field with an automatic bid (30 total automatic bids ... 34 at-large bids). This brings us to 58 teams, leaving 6 spots open.
The bubble (6 at-large bids available) ...
#30 Florida
#45 Kansas State
#42 College of Charleston
#36 Coastal Carolina
#52 Oregon
#49 Georgia Tech
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#44 James Madison
#55 Indiana
#40 Xavier
#35 Northeastern
#57 Troy
#54 Georgia Southern
#64 California (I do not believe they are in the field, but listed them here as a possibility because D1Baseball had them in the field until their last projection)
While the committee might like to give the Big Ten a third bid with Indiana, I just cannot do it given that the resumes of both Georgia Tech and James Madison are better. I think it will be close between Georgia Tech and James Madison. I would opt for JMU, especially when you consider their SOS and NC SOS (which the committee has demonstrated is important). I just have the feeling that they will opt for GT and use 10 Q1 wins, Q2 differential (4-9 for JMU), and JMU's 5 Q4 losses as reasoning.
Georgia Tech #49 RPI ranking, 10-14 Q1, 4-3 Q2, 1 Q4 loss, #24 SOS, #202 NC SOS)
James Madison #44 RPI ranking, 7-8 Q1, 4-9 Q2, 5 Q4 losses, #41 SOS, #5 NC SOS)
Indiana #55 RPI ranking, 6-10 Q1, 6-4 Q2, 4 Q4 losses, #39 SOS, #67 NC SOS
You could also make the case for JMU over Kansas State, but I do not think the committee goes there.
Regarding College of Charleston, Charleston won the regular season title. If the committee values ECU’s regular season title that much (9th best RPI conference), it will be difficult leaving Charleston out of the field winning the 10th best RPI conference).
Note that if they opt to utilize KPI for any tiebreakers, here we have ...
Coastal Carolina #19
Alabama #22
Florida #23
Texas #25
Georgia Tech #34
Louisiana #35
James Madison #42
Kansas State #43
College of Charleston #47
Indiana #48
Interestingly, East Carolina is #29 in KPI.
Here are the 21 remaining auto-bids mentioned above ...
#34 UNCW
#51 Saint John's
#75 VCU
#61 Nicholls
#46 Wofford
#115 Bryant
#266 Oral Roberts
#124 Army
#132 Southeast Missouri
#128 Western Michigan
#180 Penn
#149 Northern Kentucky
#122 High Point
#103 Niagara
#100 Stetson
#182 Fresno State
#196 Long Island
#96 Grand Canyon (Tarleton State is not eligible for postseason play)
#235 Grambling
#86 Tulane
#76 Evansville
Brian