The Super Regionals are set after a thrilling weekend of Regional play. It’s a cliché to say that this year’s tournament seems more unpredictable than ever, but consider the following: More teams in The Athletic’s preseason top 25 missed the NCAA Tournament (seven) than made the Supers (six).The final seed breakdown: nine No. 1s, three No. 2s, two No. 3s and two No. 4s.I ranked the final 16 teams in order of who’s most likely to advance to the College World Series. This is not a power ranking of the best teams or a ranking of the teams most likely to win a national title. It’s just about the path to Omaha.1. Alabama (Path to Omaha: hosting St John’s)The Crimson Tide have won eight of their last nine games at home, including three straight over the weekend to win the Tuscaloosa Regional. Now, all they need to do to advance to the CWS for the first time since 1999 is beat a No. 4 seed that went 0-6 in the regular season vs. teams in the NCAA Tournament.That, of course, is selling St John’s a bit short. The Red Storm are clearly a better team now than the one that opened the season with 10 losses in its first 11 games. If you can beat Florida State twice in Tallahassee, you are capable of winning at Alabama.Still, this is clearly a great draw for Alabama, which is the prohibitive favorite to advance.2. West Virginia (Path to Omaha: hosting Cal Poly)The Morgantown Regional was a tremendous showcase for college baseball (if you ignore the walks, hit by pitches and errors). The three West Virginia-Kentucky games were decided by a total of five runs, with the Mountaineers — forced to come out of the loser’s bracket — winning 11-9 on Sunday night and 6-5 in 10 innings on Monday.What followed was one of the great scenes in sports.