The LSU Tigers baseball program, a regular presence in the NCAA tournament for more than a decade, will not see its name called when the selection committee announces the 2026 field. The omission ends a streak that began in 2012 and underscores a season that has been anything but ordinary.
A season to forget
LSU finished the SEC schedule with a 9‑21 record, the worst mark in the school’s history, and managed only a handful of series victories. The Tigers were swept in three straight conference series and dropped five of their last six, a slide that left them well outside the bubble of at‑large consideration.
Injuries that compounded the disappointment
Injuries further darkened the campaign. Junior right‑hander Cooper Moore underwent season‑ending elbow surgery, while star outfielder Jake Brown fractured his hamate bone and was ruled out for the remainder of the campaign. Pitcher Casan Evans also missed significant time because of arm discomfort, forcing the staff to rely on a depleted rotation.
Coach Jay Johnson’s candid assessment
Head coach Jay Johnson addressed the fallout in a candid post‑season interview, admitting that the team’s recruitment and development pipelines had not delivered the expected talent. “We fell short in a number of areas,” Johnson said, “and it’s time for us to look inward, reflect, and take concrete steps to get back on track.”
A program in transition
Johnson outlined a comprehensive review that will examine everything from the recruiting strategy to player development protocols. The coaching staff plans to allocate additional resources toward analytics, strength conditioning, and mental‑skill training, hoping to close the gaps that contributed to the historic slump.
Looking ahead
While the immediate future remains uncertain, the administration has expressed confidence that the lessons learned this year will translate into a more competitive roster next season. Fans, too, are hopeful that the Tigers can reclaim their place among the nation’s elite, beginning with a strong showing in the upcoming fall exhibitions.