Miami Ohio University Athletics

Photo by: Will Corey
Everything But a Nickname: Inside a Historic Miami Softball Season
5/18/2024 11:59:00 PM | Softball
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The Miami University softball team has a problem.
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The 2024 RedHawks had one of the best-hitting lineups in college softball – check that, in college softball history— but they're missing one crucial thing.
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They need a nickname.
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After all, the 1927 New York Yankees with Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig were 'Murderers' Row.'

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The Cincinnati Reds dynasty of the mid-'70s featuring Pete Rose, Johnny Bench and Joe Morgan was the 'Big Red Machine.'
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So as Miami Softball wraps up one of the greatest season the program has known --including a fourth consecutive trip to the NCAA Tournament-- what catchphrase or label should the team adopt?
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Take your time. We're open to suggestions.
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But while you're thinking, let's recap just a few of the remarkable factoids, shall we?
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As a team, Miami finished the season with 160 home runs, one short of the national record (161, held by the 2021 Oklahoma Sooners). The RedHawks slugged 2.76 home runs per game, more than any other program in the country.
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(To attempt to put 2.76 home runs per game in perspective, how many Major League Baseball teams all-time have averaged even two homers per game for an entire season? The answer is…exactly zero. And Miami is playing seven –or fewer!— innings per contest, compared to nine for MLB.)
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Karli Spaid hit 36 home runs this year, eight more than any other player in the country and one shy of the all-time record (Arizona's Laura Espinoza hit 37 nearly 30 years ago). The next-closest player on the national leaderboard with 28? Miami's Jenna Golembiewski. When the RedHawks' season came to a close, Spaid, Golembiewski, Kate Kobayashi (20 HRs) and Holly Blaska (19 HRs) all ranked among the top 20 in the nation in that category.
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Perhaps the most ridiculous stat about Miami's slugger-rich lineup? Before Spaid and company first stepped foot on campus, the program's CAREER individual home run record was 30. Read that again: No Miami Softball player had ever hit more than 30 homers over a four-year career.Â
Spaid has 36 since February.
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In fact, the RedHawks' record book for that career stat category now reads like a May 2024 lineup card: Karli Spaid 103, Allie Cummins 66, Holly Blaska 50, Jenna Golembiewski 46, Kate Kobayashi 42. In all, seven of the top eight home run hitters in the conference this spring wear the Red and White.
"You can't count anybody out," said Spaid. "In big situations, somebody's going to come through; you just never know who. Every time, it's somebody different, which is unbeatable!"
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Of course, the group of seniors Miami honored on April 27 (Spaid, Cummins, Blaska, Kobayashi, Maddi Banks, Ashley Hitchcock, Addy Jarvis and Logan Mueller) is well-represented on nearly every other page in the record book too. Spaid, Cummins, Blaska and Kobayashi now comprise four of the top five all-time in career RBI, career runs AND career walks, with Spaid and Cummins ranking 1-2 in career batting average and hits. Oh, and the RedHawks do damage on the basepaths on the rare occasions they don't hit the ball over the fence: Spaid and Blaska are in the program's top three for all-time steals.
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We could go on and on. At least one RedHawk home run in 52 of 58 games this year. 41 multi-homer games, including seven dingers in a five-inning contest against Central Michigan on April 20. 25 games of 10 or more runs en route to leading the country in scoring at a 8.74 clip. Eight First-Team All-MAC honorees this season, along with the Coach of the Year, Player of the Year, Freshman Pitcher of the Year and Freshman Player of the Year. And Spaid not only was named a Top-10 Finalist for USA Softball Player of the Year, but the senior infielder became the program's first-ever pro draftee when she went seventh overall in the Athletes Unlimited draft in May.
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The mind-boggling collection of numbers and accomplishments all adds up to the statistic that head coach Kirin Kumar and the back-to-back-to-back-to-back-to-back MAC Champions value the most: wins.
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Miami captured a school-record 49 victories against only nine losses, including a perfect 42-0 mark when out-hitting its opponent. The Red and White posted a healthy .967 winning percentage against MAC teams this year (29-1 including last week's tournament). In the process, the RedHawks produced two double-digit win streaks, highlighted by setting a conference record earlier this season with 23 straight victories from March 9 to April 21.

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"I think they just are having fun. When you're having fun, you're playing loose. When you're playing loose, then that continues," Kumar said just before her team swept three games in three days to win yet another MAC Tournament crown.
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"The offense being No. 1 and No. 2 in several categories in the nation, with the schedule that we've played, is something I don't know that anyone could foresee. Freshmen in there, sophomores, juniors and then obviously the seniors have been in the [hitting] program for four years. So they've gotten better in learning their own swings and learning their teammates' swings.
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"It's fun to see. It's fun to watch!"
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Anyone that saw the RedHawks play in 2024 could tell in a matter of minutes how much fun the team was having. It only took one Miami home run to hear the chorus of chants echoing from the dugout.
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"PAR-TY! PAR-TY! PAR-TY!"
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"Kate kinda started that," Blaska laughed. "We tried it in the dugout one time, then we looked at 2K [Kumar] to see her reaction.Â
"She loved it, so we kept it going!"
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From there, the team's patented celebration evolved a bit this March during a road trip to Oklahoma, when the RedHawks discovered a red 'Proceed to Party' T-shirt for sale at the Toby Keith-branded restaurant where they were eating.
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"We saw it, and we were like, 'We NEED that!'", recounted Blaska. After that, the shirt became a staple, prominently waving near the front of the line of well-wishers as each home-run hitter triumphantly returned to the bench (and whoever was up next grabbed the bat at home plate in search of back-to-back jacks).
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Perhaps the most humorous of the team's 160 'Party! Party!' celebrations this season came in an April run-rule win over an Eastern Kentucky squad that had won 10 straight games and would finish the year 42-10.
Let's set the scene: Spaid, who has had the most opportunities of any RedHawk to fine-tune a post-homer ritual, is accustomed to exchanging high fives and receiving congratulatory slaps on the helmet before greeting whatever teammate is last in the line with a huge bear hug.
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However, when she hit the 95th round-tripper of her career to move into a tie for second place on the all-time Division I list, there was no RedHawk standing at the end of the line awaiting her.

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No teammate? No problem. Spaid didn't even hesitate.
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With the trademark T-shirt in tow, she just laughingly gave herself an air hug and the party kept right on rolling.
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The 2024 Miami Softball season was so successful that sometimes the players themselves couldn't even keep track of what record or accomplishment was on deck next.
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That was the case for Kobayashi, who readily admitted she didn't realize the RedHawks could capture a fifth straight MAC regular-season crown during the home finale on April 27.
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"Senior Day was amazing, but I had no idea we were going to clinch that day," Kobayashi smiled. "We won, and I was walking off the field already crying, because it was the last time I'd play on that field. It was a really special day, and my whole family was able to make it.
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"And then I found out we won the MAC, so the tears just kept flowing!
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"This senior group is really special and we've all gotten so close. They're all my best friends and sisters, and we're going to stay in touch forever. It's really special to have this many great leaders on and off the field."
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Blaska not only had family members in attendance on that memorable afternoon in Oxford, but former professors as well. The graduate student from Champlin, Minn. will finish her time at Miami University with not one, but two degrees (as a whole, the eight-member senior class has earned five Bachelor's degrees, four Master's degrees and a graduate certificate from the institution).
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"It's been awesome to have so much support academically and in softball as well," she said.
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"They are incredible humans," said Kumar. "We have [several] that have already graduated with their Master's…and then to see their different personalities…I'm going to remember how they all came together.
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"You have people who were here for six years, four years, three years, two: I'm just going to remember how they came together and put together this team.
"This team is theirs."
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If it were up to Kobayashi to nickname her team, one of the first phrases that comes to mind for the fifth-year outfielder from Kansas City, Mo. is 'Never Say Die.'
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Even if the Red and White were down to their final at-bat of the game and found themselves trailing (such as a non-conference thriller at then-No. 1 Oklahoma where Miami responded with three consecutive home runs to tie the score), the RedHawks proved it was never too late to get their bats on track.
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"We know not everything's going to go perfect. We're not going to hit five home runs a game some games," Kobayashi said. "But we all have each other's backs."
That was never more apparent than during the MAC Tournament opener in May, when the top-seeded RedHawks struggled through a trio of rain delays to rally past Toledo, earning a 5-4 walk-off win more than nine hours after the game's first pitch. Miami trailed 4-1 in the fifth inning before pulling within striking distance on a two-run blast by Sami Bewick. And although the RedHawks were still down one going into the bottom of the seventh, it was Spaid that confidently strode to the plate with the game on the line.
"Coming out of the dugout, we had talked about refusing to lose. That was going through my head...being able to produce for my team and give us some mojo going to the rest of the inning," Spaid recalled.
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The very first pitch ended up on the far side of the right-field fence. And just that quick, the Rockets' lead had fizzled.
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"We've given up runs in the first inning, and our team's like, '[Okay.] Then, we hit," Kumar shrugged. "So it's like it doesn't matter.
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"Offensively, it's been one of those storybook seasons," said Kumar. "It's been amazing to sit back and watch it."
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Miami finished its season with a trip to the Knoxville Regional, the eighth NCAA Tournament appearance in program history. The RedHawks defeated Dayton 4-0 on Saturday, May 18 but were ultimately eliminated by the Virginia Cavaliers.
The graduating seniors are proud of the foundation they've laid in what has turned into a softball dynasty in Oxford.

"We've put this program on the map, and we want to see it continue to get better every single year," Kobayashi explained.
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As Miami Softball continues to break records and make history in the future, don't be surprised when the RedHawks make an even deeper run in the bracket, perhaps to the program's first-ever NCAA Super Regionals or beyond. They certainly won't be.
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"They want more," Kumar said. "They want to do things that Miami Softball's never done. You have to keep working. You can't be satisfied.
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"And that's what they do."
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Find more Front Row Features at: MiamiRedHawks.com/FrontRowFeatures.
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