

9 College World Series records that (we think) will never be broken
9 College World Series records that (we think) will never be broken
Scanning over Official record book Men’s College World Series discovered some stunning numbers. Some even seem inviolable.
Here are nine male records of World Series, which we found that they probably will not fall soon.
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The shortest game length – 1 hour, 13 minutes
Smooth hour, 13 -minute baseball game. Imagine it. It is true that the rash of 5-1 victories in South Carolina nad East Michigan 8. In 16 games at 2018 Men’s College World Series, the average game has eaten 3.5 hours.
In this match in Michigan in South Carolina-Eastern-Eastern Michigan there were several remarkable names. Among them, the winner of Future Cy Young Award Bob Welch took the loss for Emu. Gamecocks was completed by World Series College World Series this year and fell into Texas in Championship.
The shortest-nine-inin game in McWs’s history took place on June 18, 1977. The Arizona state defeated South Carolina 2-1 in the championship game in just an hour, 35 minutes. Chris Bando had a decisive strike in the mug’s duel and hit Homer’s seventh exchange to give Sun Devils the title.
This would require a huge efficiency of both jugs, limited visits to the hill, and changing the pitching, and perhaps a certain divine intervention that at today’s baseball age approaches either a low sign.
The longest McWs game ever played took an incredible five hours, 40 minutes in a 13-innning affair between UC Irvine and Cal State Fullerton in 2013. Nine Inning’s records were set in the McWs opener between North Carolina and Oregon. Tar Heels defeated the Beavers 8-6 National Champion in a steamed four-hour crazy marathon.
Most shifts built by one jug – 15
There is a reason why Steve Arlin was Named to the team of the World Series Legends Male School In 2010. The former Ohio State jug was part of two CWS groups and ended with 0.96 Era in 47 career shifts in Omaha.
Fifteen these shifts came from one appearance. With Ohio State, which faced elimination in 1965 Men’s College World Series, Arlin threw a 15-innning complete game with 20 strikes (another record that will be reached) against Washington. Buckeyes won 1-0 and continued to lose in Arizona in Championship.
Four other jugs threw at least 13 shifts in one game. Gary Gentry Arizona State lost one frame two years later in 1967, when he won 4-3 play in 14 shifts. The last player to reach 13 was Oklahoma’s Jackson Todd in 1972.
Forget obvious obstacles in the way of this record in today’s era: stricter number of playgrounds and heavier use of bulls. To achieve this performance would require another broken record – the longest MCWS according to shifts. The ARLIN is one of the four 15-in-in-instrument marathons in the history of the tournament. No one reached 16 or further.
Legends of Omaha
June 10, 1965: Steve Arlin of Ohio will cause 15-inning, 20-Strikeout Shutout… both #Cws records! pic.twitter.com/dzdmcve30pr
– NCAA Baseball (@ncaacs) February 8, 2016
Most blows from one jug – 20
Arlin did not hold Cougars at bay in its 15-in-inch gem. He cut them. Its 20 strokes remain unrivaled for five decades since Omaha. In the 1965 season he ended up with 165 total stocking outs, still a record in Ohio. In just two years in Columbus, the program had the best 294.
Arkansasus right-handed Gage Wood came closest to the corresponding Arlin in 2025 with 19 strikes and non-Hitter, the third in McWs history to maintain the razorbacks season alive. It is a one -time high brand between nine -sized games. Wood hit seven directly between the third and fifth shifts.
Most playgrounds worthy of one jug (since 1981) – 189
Darren Darren Oklahoma State Darren Dilks probably needed a lot of ice after the 1981 McWs.
Dilks built 8.1 shifts before giving up the three-run Homer with one out with one out in the ninth shift. He relieved and the axis left as the winners at 13.
That has led to This interesting quote From coach Cowboys Gary Ward at Dilks’ Gutsy performance: “Darren Drilks dominated some of the best collegial hitters in the nation 10 runs and besides those.”
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Most runs allowed by one jug – 13
New Hampshire Jug Joe Kazura is the owner of two somewhat dubious McWs records: Most runs (13) and hits (16) allowed on a single trip. Both were part of his final line Stat at a loss of 13-2 UNH on Mississippi 9. June 1956.
Kazura bounced on his credit to pick up victory against Washington the next day, and then got well in the loss of 1-0 to Arizona.
And Excerpt from Biddeford Daily Journal From June 12, 1956:
“Then Joe Kazura from New Hampshire began on his way to defeat by hitting Harry Missick, the first man up. It apparently upset Kazura and he committed the jacket another Hitter to make men on the second and first.
But that was the first round the beginning against Ole Miss that Kazura landed in record books. Tennessee’s Ra Dickey (pre-knuckleball) comes second behind Kazura in hits (15) and tied third in the 1995-allowed (11) run against Cal State Fullerton.
Six other jugs were marked with at least 11 runs allowed in MCWS.
Most walks allowed by one jug – 15
Oklahoma’s James Waldrip had a big clue that the pitcher could get, distribute 15 free passages to Springfield 14.
“I didn’t bother me too much, I built a double,” Waldrip told Oklahoman in 1988. “But walking 15 men … that’s why the coach (Jack) baper has so many gray hair.”
Springfield stuck 17 Baserunners-Daln 9-Inving MCWS. It is the only run to come for a walk in Waldrip’s sixth shift.
Most different players with Homer – 7
LSU hit eight Homers against South California 30 May 1998 – from seven different players. Both sums are MCWS records.
Two days later, LSU hit six more homers from six different players to take the two best places on each ranking.
In order to put the tigers’ offensive fireworks into the perspective, their one -day sum against USC took the entire field of eight -member MCWS in 2013 and ’14 combined (six out of 30 games). The home run itself is impressive. But what this performance is really stunning is a number of contributors.
Danny Higgins, Trey McClure, Eddy Furniss, Brad Crees (twice), Clint Earnhart, Wes Davis and Cedrick Harris all went deep.
Most strokes recorded in one shift – 4
While the four blows in the shift are not as rare, compared to some other numbers on this list, it is almost impossible to complete them.
Ninety -two jugs corresponded to the overall overall in the history of the main league. The record book MCWS does not mention every college player to achieve this performance, but Stanford’s Scott Weiss was the last example in 1990 against Georgia.
If you are wondering how the pitcher could record four blows in one three -time shift, it could happen thanks to a non -acid third strike. If the third strike is not purely caught by a catcher before putting on the ground and the first base is unoccupied, the ball is alive and the dough could try to reach or throw first. If it reaches safely, it still decreases as a blow in your scorecard.
Most Hbps recorded by one batter – 3
Three players own the most painful record on this list. Kurt Suzuki (2003) Cal State Fullerton, Taylor Holiday (2007) and Grant NC State Clyde (2013) were all growl three times in a single game.
Clyde, the last member of the club, was hit by three different jugs UNC 16 June 2013. Two others were also drilled in the victory of 8-1 Wolfpack over the opponent of Tar Heels.
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