The Green Wave baseball team competes in the American Athletic Conference and play their home games on campus at Greer Field at Turchin Stadium.
The team made it to the College World Series in Omaha, only to blow an 8–0 lead against Stanford University and lose the game 13–11.
The Green Wave defeated Oregon State 3–1 in its first game but fell 5–0 to Texas, the eventual national champion.
With the renovation of Turchin Stadium delayed, the Green Wave were forced to play home games at nearby Zephyr Field for 2 seasons.
Despite the distractions and disruptions of their day-to-day lives, the Green Wave finished the regular season 39–17, in third place in C-USA with a 15–9 conference record.
The university's Renewal Plan called for the suspension of some of its sports, and Tulane Athletics did not return to a full 16 teams until the 2011–12 school year.
A solid 28–11 start to the season (including a sweep of in-state rival LSU) was followed by a 6–15 limp to the finish line.
In his first year at Tulane in 2015, David Pierce brought the Green Wave back to postseason play for the first time since 2008.
Their jerseys feature two pelicans, Louisiana's state bird, perched on a baseball bat in the style of the St. Louis Cardinals logo.
Throughout the years, multiple publications and fans have voted the Green Wave jerseys as having the #1 Logo and Uniform in college baseball, and as recently as 2016 the NCAA named it one of the top nine in the country.
Tulane has worn multiple color combinations throughout the years that include the following: olive green, sky blue, cream, white, gray, black, and padre style camo jerseys, all donning the famous Tulane "birds on the bat" logo.
The team has a .750 winning percentage in games played there[11] and consistently ranks highly among Division I baseball programs in average attendance figures.
One player, a player/coach and two coaching legends each have their names and numbers immortalized inside Greer Field at Turchin Stadium.
The latest honoree was former Georgia Tech assistant Rick Jones who created an Omaha pedigree program during his tenure at Tulane.
Nine players/coaches have donned the red, white and blue uniform on eight separate occasions since Ivan Zweig became the first to represent Tulane as a member of Team USA in 1991.