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In 2000, the SEC changed the determination of its tennis champions to the team with the best winning percentage in conference regular-season dual matches (11 matches). Before this, a points system was used in which full- or half-points were awarded for wins during the season as well as during the conference tournament.
The tournament games counted in the conference standings, and the team with the best winning percentage at the end of each tournament was crowned conference champion. ^3 The 1992 season was the first in SEC play for Arkansas and South Carolina.
The list of Southeastern Conference national championships begins in 1933, the first year of competition for the Southeastern Conference (SEC), and includes 214 team national championships sanctioned by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), and four additional national championships sanctioned by the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW), won by current ...
The Southeastern Conference (SEC) is a collegiate athletic conference whose member institutions are located primarily in the South Central and Southeastern United States.Its 16 members include the flagship public universities of 12 states, three additional public land-grant universities, and one private research university.
0–9. 1950 Alabama Crimson Tide baseball team; 1951 Tennessee Volunteers baseball team; 1964 Ole Miss Rebels baseball team; 1969 Ole Miss Rebels baseball team
The University of Kentucky baseball team’s surprising and historic 2024 regular season ended with the Wildcats claiming a share of their first Southeastern Conference championship in 18 years ...
The annual tournament determined the tournament champion of the Division I Southeastern Conference in college baseball. The Arkansas Razorbacks emerged for the first time as tournament champions, [2] earning the conference's automatic bid to the 2021 NCAA Division I baseball tournament. [3]
Southeastern Conference champions 1941 Tilden Campbell 19–2–1 Southeastern Conference champions 1942 Tilden Campbell 10–2 Southeastern Conference champions 1943 Paul Burnham 12–6 1944–1945: No team due to World War II: 1946 Dixie Howell: 13–7 1947 Tilden Campbell 20–7 Southeastern Conference champions; NCAA District III playoffs 1948