2009 Atlantic Coast Conference baseball tournament

2009 Atlantic Coast Conference
baseball tournament
2009 ACC baseball tournament logo
Teams8
Format2 division round robin and
championship game
Finals site
ChampionsVirginia Cavaliers (2nd title)
Winning coachBrian O'Connor (1st title)
MVPDan Grovatt (Virginia Cavaliers)
TelevisionRSN
2009 Atlantic Coast Conference baseball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
Atlantic
No. 10 Florida State  x‍‍‍y 19 9   .679 45 18   .714
No. 15 Clemson  ‍‍‍y 19 11   .633 44 22   .667
Boston College  ‍‍‍y 13 15   .464 34 26   .567
Maryland  ‍‍‍ 10 20   .333 27 27   .500
NC State  ‍‍‍ 10 20   .333 25 31   .446
Wake Forest  ‍‍‍ 6 24   .200 22 30   .423
Coastal
No. 5 North Carolina  x‍‍‍y 19 10   .655 48 18   .727
No. 18 Georgia Tech  ‍‍‍y 17 10   .630 38 19   .667
No. 20 Miami  ‍‍‍y 18 12   .600 38 22   .633
No. 6 Virginia  ‍‍y 16 11   .593 49 15   .766
Duke  ‍‍‍ 15 15   .500 35 24   .593
Virginia Tech  ‍‍‍ 12 17   .414 32 21   .604
x – Division champion
‡ – Tournament champion
y – Invited to the NCAA tournament
As of June 30, 2009[1]
Rankings from Collegiate Baseball
Original 2009 ACC Baseball Championship logo

The 2009 Atlantic Coast Conference baseball tournament was held at Durham Bulls Athletic Park in Durham, North Carolina, from May 20 through 24. It was the first time the tournament has been played at the ballpark since 1999 and fourth time overall since the ballpark opened in 1995. The #6 seeded Virginia Cavaliers won the tournament with a perfect 4–0 record, earning the Atlantic Coast Conference's automatic bid to the 2009 NCAA Division I baseball tournament. It was Virginia's first conference championship in baseball since 1996, and their second tournament championship ever.

The tournament was originally scheduled to be contested at Fenway Park in Boston, home of Major League Baseball's Boston Red Sox. But on August 14, 2008, it was announced by Fenway Sports Group, along with the Atlantic Coast Conference, that the location of the tournament would have to be changed due to a scheduling error. The ACC chose the Bulls' ballpark as Fenway's replacement.

2009 was the third year in which the conference used a round robin tournament format, with the team with the best record in each group at the end of the three-game round robin advancing to a one-game championship.

  1. ^ "College Baseball Conference Standings – 2009". Boyd's World. Retrieved March 23, 2016.