The SEC was still pretty damn good in the 80’s….albeit not nearly as dominant as they are now. Was only a 10-team league then, and MSU, Florida, LSU, and UGA all made the CWS….some of them multiple times. UGA capped off the decade with a natty. Bama was pretty good back then too, but didn’t break through to Omaha.
That’s kind of an apples and oranges comparison. In 1981, only 34 teams made the NCAA tournament. From 1982-1986, only 36 teams made it. 1987 - 38 teams. 1988 - 40 teams. 1989-1990 - 48 teams. Only missing the tournament 3 times in 12 years, when only between 34-40 teams made the field for 10 of those 12 years. That’s a hell of an accomplishment.
To make your comparison more appropriate, the 2011 and 2015 teams would not have made the field in most or all years of the 1980’s format. In 2020, there was no tournament. 2018, 2012, and 2017 teams may or may not have made it….depending on how many autobids were given out back then. So you would have had the 2013, 2014, 2016, 2019, and 2021 teams who would have made the 1980’s field. 5 teams in 10 years that there was actually a postseason that were equivalent to the 9 teams in 12 years we had from 1979-1990. 3 more maybes in ‘12, ‘17, and ‘18. Best case is probably 2 of those 3 making it and you have 7 of 10 teams being capable of being one of the top 10-12 at-large bids. That still pales in comparison to 9 teams in 12 years making a field that’s 48 teams or less every year.
And again, in 2021, if we get bounced from our own regional instead of winning it all, we aren’t even having this conversation. That takes me back to my original point….we can’t claim shít as far as “elite-ness” since the 1980’s for any period that is longer than 1 season. 25 continuous years of sub-.500 baseball in our own conference is pretty damned hard to ignore.