A native of Suwanee, Georgia, Beer enters this week’s ACC Baseball Championship tied for the conference lead in home runs with 15 and ranks third in RBIs with 60 in 54 games. Beer is batting .378 to rank sixth in the conference and is second in slugging percentage (.694), third in on-base percentage (.528) and is tied for second in total bases (2.31 per game).

In addition to several conference and national weekly honors, Beer was named the National Hitter of the Month of March by the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association (NCBWA) after batting .431 with nine home runs and 21 RBIs. His regular-season accomplishments also included a 26-game hitting streak – tied for fourth-longest in school history – as he keyed the Tigers to a 38-18 regular season.

Harrington helped Louisville to a second-straight ACC Atlantic Division crown with an 11-1 record in 14 starts. The Elizabethtown, Kentucky, native ranks third in the conference with a 1.66 ERA. Harrington has struck out 71 batters while walking just 22 in 92 innings and has allowed only three home runs. In his 10 ACC starts, Harrington was 8-0 with a 1.33 ERA and 47 strikeouts in 67.2 innings pitched.

McDonnell was again voted ACC Coach of the Year by his peers after guiding the Cardinals to a 46-10 overall regular-season mark, a 22-8 record in ACC play and a top-five national ranking. Louisville brings a nine-game winning streak into the ACC Championship.

Beer, Harrington and McKay (a 2016 All-ACC selection at both DH/utility and starting pitcher) are joined on this year’s first team by catchers Chris Okey of Clemson and Zack Collins of Miami; Georgia Tech first baseman Tristin English; Wake Forest second baseman Nate Mondou; Florida State third baseman John Sansone; Wake Forest third baseman Will Craig; Pitt shortstop Charles LeBlanc; Georgia Tech outfielders Kel Johnson and Matt Gonzalez; Louisville outfielder Corey Ray, Virginia starting pitcher Conner Jones, and Louisville relief pitcher Zack Burdi.

Along with the impressive numbers put up by Beer and Harrington, the All-ACC first team includes the league’s leading hitter in Pitt’s LeBlanc (.405), and the RBI co-leaders in Wake Forest’s Craig and Clemson’s Okey (62). Craig’s 15 home runs are tied with Beer for the ACC lead. Louisville’s Ray leads the conference in stolen bases with 37, while Florida State’s Sansone shares the ACC lead in doubles with 22. Miami’s Collins sets the pace in on-base percentage (.552) and Craig in slugging percentage (.772).

Harrington, McKay and Jones are among the league’s co-leaders in wins with 11. Jones (92.1) and Harrington (92.0) have pitched the most innings this season.

Clemson’s Okey, Miami’s Collins, Wake Forest’s Mondou and Craig, and Louisville’s Ray, McKay and Burdi are all repeat All-ACC first-team selections from last season. Georgia Tech’s Gonzalez made the first team this year after earning second-team All-ACC honors in 2015.

Louisville led all schools by filling five All-ACC first-team slots. Three were selected from Georgia Tech, and two each from Clemson and Wake Forest.

A league-high nine spots on the All-ACC first, second and third teams went to Louisville players, followed by seven from Coastal Division champion Miami. Georgia Tech had six players selected.

Duke and Georgia Tech led with two selections each to the 12-member All-ACC Freshman team.