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2016 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament

2016 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament
2016 ACC Baseball Tournament logo.jpg
Classification Division
Format Round-robin tournament
Site
Champions Clemson (10th title)
Winning coach Monte Lee (1st title)
MVP Mike Triller (Clemson)
2016 Atlantic Coast Conference baseball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
Atlantic
#5 Louisville xy 22 8   .733     48 12   .800
#12 Florida State y 16 10   .615     38 20   .655
#17 NC State y 15 13   .536     36 20   .643
#11 Clemson y 16 14   .533     43 18   .705
Boston College y 13 15   .464     32 20   .615
Wake Forest y 13 17   .433     35 25   .583
Notre Dame 11 17   .393     27 27   .500
Coastal
#3 Miami (FL) xy 21 7   .750     46 11   .807
#8 Virginia y 19 11   .633     38 20   .655
Duke y 14 15   .483     33 23   .589
Georgia Tech y 13 16   .448     36 24   .600
North Carolina 13 17   .433     34 21   .618
Pittsburgh 10 18   .357     25 26   .490
Virginia Tech 6 24   .200     19 36   .345
x – Division champion
‡ – Tournament champion
y – Invited to the NCAA Tournamenet
As of June 4, 2016; Rankings from Collegiate Baseball

The 2016 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 24 through May 29 at Durham Bulls Athletic Park in Durham, North Carolina. The annual tournament determined the conference champion of the Division I Atlantic Coast Conference for college baseball. The tournament champion will receive the league's automatic bid to the 2016 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. This is the last of 19 athletic championship events held by the conference in the 2015–16 academic year.

Clemson, under first year head coach Monte Lee, defeated defending champion Florida State in the championship game to win its 10th ACC Tournament championship, breaking a tie with Georgia Tech for most tournament titles. The title was Clemson's 15th overall ACC championship in baseball (also most all-time in the conference), its first ACC championship since 2006, and first tournament championship under the pool play format that began in 2007. The championship game, hampered by weather delays, took 9 hours and 20 minutes to complete, with first pitch being thrown at 11:02 A.M. and the final out recorded at 7:22 P.M.

The winner of each seven team division and the top eight other teams based on conference winning percentage, regardless of division, from the conference's regular season will be seeded one through ten. Seeds one and two are awarded to the two division winners. The bottom four seeds play an opening round, with the winners advancing to pool play. The winner of each pool plays a single championship.

‡ - Tournament MVP


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