LSU vs. Florida live stream: How to watch College World Series, TV channel, time, NCAA baseball odds

LSU vs. Florida live stream: How to watch College World Series, TV channel, time, NCAA baseball odds

It all comes down to Monday night in the Men's College World Series. It's Florida vs. LSU in a decisive Game 3 of the CWS finals with the 2023 national championship up for grabs. LSU pulled out an extra-inning victory in Game 1 of the series on Saturday before the Gators crushed the Tigers by 20 runs in Game 2 on Sunday. LSU is going for its seventh national title on Monday night, while Florida is trying to win the NCAA championship for the second time.

Florida advanced to the finals with a win over TCU on Wednesday afternoon, and LSU punched its ticket on Thursday night with an extra-inning victory over Wake Forest. Tennessee, Oral Roberts, Stanford, Virginia, TCU, and Wake Forest have been eliminated from the eight-team CWS field.

Below we have everything fans need to know about college baseball's tournament, from the format and dates to the bracket and scores. Let's dive in.

LSU vs. Florida Game 3

Time: 7 p.m. ET | Date: Monday, June 26Location: Charles Schwab Field -- Omaha, Neb.TV channel: ESPN | Live stream: fubo (try for free)Odds (via Caesars Sportsbook): LSU -145; Florida +115; O/U: 9 runs

College World Series schedule, scores, bracket

The College World Series was a double-elimination format until the final two teams were left standing. For LSU vs. Florida, the slates were wiped clean and it's a best-of-three series to determine the national champion. 

Below are the CWS scores and the remaining schedule.

Monday, June 26

Florida vs. LSU, 7 p.m., ESPN/fubo

Sunday, June 25

Saturday, June 24

LSU 4, Florida 3 (11 innings)

Thursday, June 22

LSU 2, Wake Forest 0 (Wake Forest eliminated)

Wednesday, June 21

Florida 3, TCU 2 (TCU eliminated)LSU 5, Wake Forest 2

Tuesday, June 20

TCU 6, Oral Roberts 1 (Oral Roberts eliminated)LSU 5, Tennessee 0 (Tennessee eliminated)

Monday, June 19

Tennessee 6, Stanford 4 (Stanford eliminated)Wake Forest 3, LSU 2

Sunday, June 18

TCU 4, Virginia 3 (Virginia eliminated)Florida 5, Oral Roberts 4

Saturday, June 17

Wake Forest 3, Stanford, 2LSU 6, Tennessee 3

Friday, June 16

Oral Roberts 6, TCU 5Florida 6, Virginia 5

And here's a look at the original College World Series bracket:

Super Regionals scores

Friday, June 9

Duke 5, Virginia 4TCU 4, Indiana State 1Florida 5, South Carolina 4Oregon 9, Oral Roberts 8

Saturday, June 10

Wake Forest 5, Alabama 4Virginia 14, Duke 4Florida 4, South Carolina 0 (Florida advances to CWS)Texas 7, Stanford 5LSU 14, Kentucky 0TCU 6, Indiana State 4 (TCU advances to CWS)Oral Roberts 8, Oregon 7

Sunday, June 11

Southern Miss 5, Tennessee 3Wake Forest 22, Alabama 5 (Wake Forest advances to CWS)Virginia 12, Duke 2 (Virginia advances to CWS)Tennessee 8, Southern Miss 4LSU 8, Kentucky 3 (LSU advances to CWS)Oral Roberts 11, Oregon 6 (Oral Roberts advances to CWS)Stanford 8, Texas 3

Monday, June 12

Tennessee 5, Southern Miss 0 (Tennessee advances to CWS)Stanford 7, Texas 6 (Stanford advances to CWS)

Regionals scores

Winston-Salem Regional
Hosted by No. 1 national seed Wake Forest.

June 2: Wake Forest 12, George Mason 0June 2: Maryland 7, Northeastern 2June 3: George Mason 11, Northeastern 3June 3: Wake Forest 21, Maryland 6June 4: George Mason 11, Maryland 10June 4: Wake Forest 15, George Mason 1 (Wake Forest advances)

Gainesville Regional
Hosted by No. 2 national seed Florida.

June 2: Florida 3, Florida A&M 0June 2: Texas Tech 3, UConn 2June 3: UConn 9, Florida A&M 6June 3: Texas Tech 5, Florida 4June 4: Florida 8, UConn 2June 4: Florida 7, Texas Tech 1June 5: Florida 6, Texas Tech 0 (Florida advances)

Fayetteville Regional
Hosted by No. 3 national seed Arkansas.

June 2: Arkansas 13, Santa Clara 6June 2: TCU 12, Arizona 4June 3: Santa Clara 9, Arizona 3June 4: TCU 20, Arkansas 5June 4: Arkansas 6, Santa Clara 4June 5: TCU 12, Arkansas 4 (TCU advances)

Clemson Regional
Hosted by No. 4 national seed Clemson.

June 2: Clemson 12, Lipscomb 5June 2: Tennessee 8, Charlotte 1June 3: Charlotte 9, Lipscomb 2June 3: Tennessee 6, Clemson 5 (F/14)June 4: Charlotte 3, Clemson 2June 4; Tennessee 9, Charlotte 2 (Tennessee advances)

Baton Rouge Regional
Hosted by No. 5 national seed LSU.

June 2: LSU 7, Tulane 2June 2: Oregon State 18, Sam Houston State 2June 4: Sam Houston State 10, Tulane 2June 4: LSU 6, Oregon State 5June 4: Oregon State 3, Sam Houston State 1June 5: LSU 13, Oregon State 7 (LSU advances)

Nashville Regional
Hosted by No. 6 national seed Vanderbilt.

June 2: Vanderbilt 12, Eastern Illinois 2June 2: Oregon 5, Xavier 4June 3: Xavier 7, Eastern Illinois 0June 3: Oregon 8, Vanderbilt 7June 4: Xavier 2, Vanderbilt 1June 4: Oregon 11, Xavier 2 (Oregon advances)

Charlottesville Regional
Hosted by No. 7 national seed Virginia.

June 2: Virginia 15, Army West Point 1June 2: East Carolina 14, Oklahoma 5June 3: Oklahoma 10, Army West Point 1June 3: Virginia 2, East Carolina 1June 4: East Carolina 8, Oklahoma 5June 4: Virginia 8, East Carolina 3 (Virginia advances)

Stanford Regional
Hosted by No. 8 national seed Stanford.

June 2: Stanford 13, San Jose State 2June 2: Texas A&M 12, Cal State Fullerton 7June 3: Cal State Fullerton 9, San Jose State 5June 3: Texas A&M 8, Stanford 5June 4: Stanford 6, Cal State Fullerton 5June 4: Stanford 13, Texas A&M 5June 5: Stanford 7, Texas A&M 1 (Stanford advances)

Coral Gables Regional
Hosted by No. 9 national seed Miami.

June 2: Miami 9, Maine 1June 2: Texas 4, Louisiana 2June 3: Louisiana 19, Maine 10June 3: Texas 4, Miami 1June 4: Miami 8, Louisiana 5June 4: Texas 10, Miami 6 (Texas advances)

Conway Regional
Hosted by No. 10 national seed Coastal Carolina.

June 2: Rider 11, Coastal Carolina 10June 2: Duke 12, UNC Wilmington 3June 3: Coastal Carolina 12, UNC Wilmington 2June 3: Duke 2, Rider 1June 4: Coastal Carolina 13, Rider 5June 4: Coastal Carolina 8, Duke 6June 5: Duke 12, Coastal Carolina 3 (Duke advances)

Stillwater Regional
Hosted by No. 11 national seed Oklahoma State.

June 2: Oral Roberts 6, Oklahoma State 4June 2: Washington 9, Dallas Baptist 5June 3: Dallas Baptist 18, Oklahoma State 4June 3: Oral Roberts 15, Washington 12June 4: Dallas Baptist 9, Washington 1June 4: Oral Roberts 6, Dallas Baptist 5 (Oral Roberts advances)

Lexington Regional
Hosted by No. 12 national seed Kentucky.

June 2: Kentucky 4, Ball State 0June 2: Indiana 12, West Virginia 6June 3: West Virginia 13, Ball State 5June 3: Indiana 5, Kentucky 3June 4: Kentucky 10, West Virginia 0June 4: Kentucky 16, Indiana 6June 5: Kentucky 4, Indiana 2 (Kentucky advances)

Auburn Regional
Hosted by No. 13 national seed Auburn.

June 2: Penn 6, Auburn 3 (F/11)June 2: Samford 4, Southern Miss 2 (F/10)June 3: Southern Miss 7, Auburn 2June 3: Penn 5, Samford 4June 4: Southern Miss 9, Samford 4June 4: Southern Miss 11, Penn 2June 5: Southern Miss 11, Penn 7 (Southern Miss advances)

Terre Haute Regional
Hosted by No. 14 national seed Indiana State.

June 2: Indiana State 6, Wright State 5June 2: Iowa 5, North Carolina 4June 3: North Carolina 5, Wright State 0June 3: Indiana State 7, Iowa 4June 4: Iowa 6, North Carolina 5 (F/13)June 4: Indiana State 11, Iowa 8 (Indiana State advances)

Columbia Regional
Hosted by No. 15 national seed South Carolina.

June 2: South Carolina 19, Central Connecticut State 1June 2: NC State 5, Campbell 1June 3: Campbell 10, Central Connecticut State 5June 3: South Carolina 6, NC State 3June 4: Campbell 11, NC State 1June 4: South Carolina 16, Campbell 7 (South Carolina advances)

Tuscaloosa Regional
Hosted by No. 16 national seed Alabama.

June 2: Alabama 4, Nicholls 3June 2: Troy 11, Boston College 10June 3: Boston College 14, Nicholls 6June 3: Alabama 11, Troy 8June 4: Boston College 4, Troy 1June 4: Alabama 8, Boston College 0 (Alabama advances) 

College baseball notes

Here's a link to NCAA.com's full bracket, which includes region vs. region pairings for the super regionals. Now for some quick hit takeaways on the 64-team field: 

There will be no repeat this year, as reigning national champion Ole Miss (25-29) did not receive a bid. No team has repeated as national champions at the Division I level since South Carolina in 2010 and 2011.
Florida State (23-31) finished with a losing record for the first time ever and missed the postseason for the first time since 1977. Their 44 straight tournament appearances are a record.
Listed alphabetically, the last four teams in were Arizona, Louisiana, Oklahoma State, and Troy. The first four teams out were Arizona State, Kansas State, Kent State, and UC Irvine.The SEC hosted a record eight regionals. The state of South Carolina hosted three regionals while, for the first time since 2013, the state of Texas did not host a regional.

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