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ESPN announces broadcast teams for 2025 NCAA Baseball Super Regionals

FaceProfileby: Thomas Goldkamp06/04/25
NCAA Baseball
Dylan Widger-Imagn Images

ESPN has announced its broadcast teams for the NCAA Super Regionals. The next round of the 2025 NCAA Tournament — and the last step before Omaha — will begin on Friday.

All eight best-of-three series will air across ESPN platforms, including on ESPN, ESPN2 and ESPNU. All games will also be available to stream live on ESPN+. Numerous broadcast teams will be in play for the Super Regionals. Some include ESPN’s top on-air talent.

Below are the commentators calling the various Super Regionals. ESPN’s lead team of three will be in Fayetteville, while all other broadcast teams will have two members.

Super Regional Broadcast Teams

Louisville: Mike Ferrin, Gaby Sanchez
Corvallis: Roxy Bernstein, Devon Travis
Chapel Hill: Eric Frede, Jensen Lewis
Auburn: Roy Philpott, Lance Cormier
Los Angeles: Victor Rojas, Todd Walker
Durham: Clay Matvick, Gregg Olson
Baton Rouge: Dave Neal, Ben McDonald
Fayetteville: Tom Hart, Kyle Peterson, Chris Burke

ESPN provided some brief highlights of the Super Regional action in its press release announcing this weekend’s broadcast teams. Below are some of the most pertinent details.

  • Per ESPN Baseball Insider Kiley McDaniel, the Super Regional round will feature 14 of the top 40 MLB Draft prospects, including top overall prospect and Florida State ace Jamie Arnold. Other top prospects include left-handers Liam Doyle (Tennessee) and Kade Anderson (LSU), and power-hitting shortstop Aiva Arquette (Oregon State).
  • Tennessee and Arkansas match up in an intriguing Super Regional filled with a number of the country’s top players, including 2025 Golden Spike Award semifinalists Doyle and Wehiwa Aloy, the star Razorback shortstop.
  • Despite seven of the top 16 teams being eliminated, college baseball powerhouses remain in the field. Recent MCWS champions playing this weekend include Tennessee (2024), LSU (2023), Oregon State (2018), Coastal Carolina (2016), UCLA (2013) and Arizona (2012).