The 2003 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Championship was held at Dodd Stadium in Norwich, CT from May 15 through 17 (preliminaries) and at Pitt Field in Richmond, VA on May 22 and 24 (championship series). It featured the top two regular-season finishers of each six-team division, plus the next two best finishers. Top-seeded Richmond defeated Massachusetts in the title game to win the tournament for the first time, earning the Atlantic 10's automatic bid to the 2003 NCAA tournament.[1]
Teams | 6 |
---|---|
Format | Six-team double elimination First-round byes for division winners |
Champions | Richmond (1st title) |
Winning coach | Ron Atkins (1st title) |
MVP | Vito Chairavalloti (Richmond) |
Seeding and format
editThe league's top six teams, based on winning percentage in the 24-game regular season schedule, qualified for the field. The top two teams in each division qualified for the tournament automatically; the two division winners, Massachusetts in the East and Richmond in the West, received the top two seeds and byes through to the second round of the double elimination tournament. The tournament was different from most double-elimination formats in that after the two finalists were decided, losses were erased, and a best-of-three series was played at a new site the following weekend to decide the champion.
Team | W | L | Pct. | GB | Seed |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
East Division
| |||||
Massachusetts[a] | 14 | 7 | .667 | – |
2
|
Rhode Island | 16 | 8 | .667 | – |
3
|
St. Bonaventure | 9 | 11 | .450 | 4.5 |
–
|
Saint Joseph's | 10 | 14 | .417 | 5.5 |
–
|
Temple | 10 | 14 | .417 | 5.5 |
–
|
Fordham | 8 | 15 | .348 | 7 |
–
|
West Division
| |||||
Richmond | 19 | 4 | .826 | – |
1
|
Duquesne | 15 | 9 | .625 | 4.5 |
4
|
Xavier | 13 | 8 | .619 | 5 |
5
|
George Washington | 12 | 9 | .571 | 6 |
6
|
La Salle | 6 | 17 | .261 | 13 |
–
|
Dayton | 4 | 20 | .167 | 15.5 |
–
|
Bracket
editFirst round | Quarter-finals | Semi-finals | Final | ||||||||||||||||||
1 | Richmond | 1 | |||||||||||||||||||
5 | Xavier | 6 | 5 | Xavier | 2 | ||||||||||||||||
4 | Duquesne | 3 | 5 | Xavier | 5 | ||||||||||||||||
2 | Massachusetts | 8 | |||||||||||||||||||
2 | Massachusetts | 3 | |||||||||||||||||||
6 | George Washington | 7 | 6 | George Washington | 1 | ||||||||||||||||
3 | Rhode Island | 2 | 2 | Massachusetts | 0 | 4 | – | ||||||||||||||
1 | Richmond | 8 | 7 | – | |||||||||||||||||
5 | Xavier | 3 | |||||||||||||||||||
4 | Duquesne | 2 | 1 | Richmond | 6 | ||||||||||||||||
3 | Rhode Island | 3 | 1 | Richmond | 8 | ||||||||||||||||
6 | George Washington | 8 | 6 | George Washington | 2 | ||||||||||||||||
3 | Rhode Island | 4 |
All-Tournament Team
editThe following players were named to the All-Tournament Team. Richmond's Vito Chairavalloti, one of six Spiders selected, was named Most Outstanding Player.[1]
Richmond's David Reaver and Tim Stauffer, who had both been selected in 2002, were named for the second time.
Pos. | Name | Team |
---|---|---|
OF | Vito Chairavalloti | Richmond |
P | Eric Chown | Massachusetts |
OF | Frank Curreri | Massachusetts |
2B | Bobby LeNoir | Richmond |
P | Mike McGirr | Richmond |
P | Matt McLoughlin | Richmond |
SS | David Reaver | Richmond |
3B | Matt Reynolds | Massachusetts |
1B | Ryan Roberson | George Washington |
P | Tim Stauffer | Richmond |
P | Jarret Sues | Xavier |
P | Dan Sullivan | George Washington |
References
edit- ^ a b "2014 Atlantic 10 Baseball Record Book" (PDF). Atlantic10.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 19, 2014. Retrieved July 15, 2014.
- ^ "2014 UMass Baseball Record Book" (PDF). UMass Athletics Communications. Archived (PDF) from the original on July 28, 2014.