2021 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference baseball tournament

2021 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference
baseball tournament
Teams8
FormatDouble-elimination tournament
Finals site
ChampionsNorfolk State (1st title)
Winning coachKeith Shumate (1st title)
MVPAlsander Womack (Norfolk State)
TelevisionFloSports
2021 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference baseball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
Northern Division
Norfolk State  x‍‍y 18 10   .643 25 28   .472
Delaware State  ‍‍‍ 13 18   .419 15 27   .357
Coppin State  ‍‍‍ 7 20   .259 10 29   .256
Southern Division
North Carolina Central  x‍‍‍ 17 11   .607 27 20   .574
Florida A&M  ‍‍‍ 15 13   .536 22 33   .400
North Carolina A&T  ‍‍‍ 17 15   .531 22 32   .407
x – Division champion
‡ – Tournament champion
y – Invited to the NCAA tournament
  • Florida A&M is ineligible for postseason play and conference championships due to NCAA sanctions.
    As of June 5, 2021[1]
    Rankings from D1Baseball


The 2021 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference baseball tournament began on May 20 and ended on May 22 at Marty L. Miller Field on the campus of Norfolk State University in Norfolk, Virginia. It was a six-team double elimination tournament. Norfolk State won the tournament for the first time and claimed the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference's automatic bid to the 2021 NCAA Division I baseball tournament.[2][3] Departing member Bethune-Cookman, which opted out of baseball competition for 2021,[4] had claimed sixteen of the prior twenty-one tournament championships, with North Carolina A&T earning the 2005 and 2018 titles, Florida A&M winning in 2015 and 2019, and Savannah State in 2013.

  1. ^ "2021 Baseball Standings". meacsports.com. Retrieved June 4, 2021.
  2. ^ "2021 MEAC Baseball Championship". Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. Retrieved May 25, 2021.
  3. ^ "Norfolk State Wins 2021 MEAC Baseball Championship". Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. May 22, 2021. Retrieved May 25, 2021.
  4. ^ Zach Dean (October 27, 2021). "Bethune-Cookman shuts down all sports through spring, citing 'spike' in COVID-19 cases". The Daytona Beach News-Journal. Retrieved May 25, 2021.