- SOUTHEAST MISSOURI STATE (30-25, 13-9)
2010 RPI: 175
Starters Returning: 8
Weekend Starters: 2
Mid-Week Starters: 2
Key Relievers (20+inns.): 4
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All Conference Candidates:
OF Michael Adamson (.388-6-49)
OF Louie Haseltine (.325-17-56)
SS Kenton Parmley (.380-11-42, 12SBs)
3B Casey Jones (.398-10-66)
LHP Jordan Underwood (6-5, 4.11)
LHP Shae Simmons (3-3, 3.20, 5svs)
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The Good News:
Despite not having a very full cupboard returning to the squad last year, the Redhawks put together a pretty good 30-win season, which included wins over Auburn, Missouri State, Southern Illinois and a series sweep at Jacksonville State. Well now, if SEMO was ever going to make a major move, THIS is the year to do it. The RedHawks are very top-heavy on senior talent and oozing with an amazing amount of experience. Their OVC-leading offense hit .346 as a team last year and returns a hell of a lot of power and, as you’d guess, a lot of seniors, including six four-year starters that hit .311 or better last year. They’ll be led by Michael Adamson, who set the school record for hits in a season last year with 92. And get this, eight of the nine most-used pitchers from 2010 are also back in the fold, with seven of them being seniors as well. Wow! One non-senior to be aware of is Shae Simmons, who was named a Freshman All American last season and was also named a Top 10 pro prospect from the New York Collegiate League last summer.
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The Bad News:
The end to last season was a certifiable bummer, as the Redhawks went 4-10 down the stretch, including a second straight 0-2 finish in the OVC tournament. And if senioritis hits this team, it could be a long, unfulfilling season, so coach Hogan and his staff have to keep a fire lit under their players’ asses and not let any malaise set in. The mound staff will miss Kyle Gumieny, who won eight games last year. The defense was certainly a sticking point last season as the RedHawks fielded at a poor .956 level.
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Schedule Note:
Mid-Major Monsters.
SEMO could be one of the surprise under-the-radar teams in the country for 2011. So it’s kind of too bad they won’t be facing one of those SEC teams they love to pester (the last three years, they’ve beaten the likes of Auburn, Alabama and Vanderbilt). This year, it will be some mid-major teams that they can victimize, led by the season-opener at Louisiana, followed by games at Troy, Arkansas-Little Rock and Missouri State. Not terribly challenging, but it could also help get them 40 wins.
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http://blogs.eastonbaseball.com/collegebaseballtoday/