While I realize this is a "high school" baseball website, most here are looking for information about their son moving on to the "next" level, which in a lot of cases is college baseball. There was a post on another thread that if LSU lost to Rice, that would prove the "lack of dominance" of SEC baseball. I was a little curious, so I did a little research. Since 1990, a SEC or ACC team has either won or been runner up in the college world series every year except 5. So in the past 25 years, the champion or runner up has come from these two conferences. I would say that is pretty dominant and fairly consistent. Since 2008, the champion or runner up has come from the SEC. Last year, 6 of the 8 teams in Omaha were from the SEC / ACC. This year, 9 of the 16 super regional participants are from these 2 conferences.
People seem to get sick and tired of hearing about the SEC. Sorry folks, the facts are the facts. I know sports are cyclical. For many years the PAC-12 dominated the baseball scene. For the past 25 years, the SEC and ACC have been the standard bearer for collegiate baseball. The same can be said for college football and the dominance of the SEC. In the same 25 year time period, the collegiate national football champion has come from the SEC / ACC every year except 8, with the SEC winning 8 of the last 10. One could argue that the ACC has pretty much dominated basketball in recent memory.
Yes I am from the south and yes my son does play in the SEC, so I guess that makes me a homer. That still doesn't change the facts. A team outside one of these conferences may very well win the baseball college world series this year, but that doesn't change the fact that teams from the SEC and ACC have dominated collegiate athletics for the past 25 years. I didn't look into it, but I would bet the same trend is seen in softball, tennis, golf, etc.