Post-Tribune

The hits keep on coming

Adamczewsk­i’s numbers are even higher this season as Lake Central goes undefeated in DAC

- By Michael Osipoff

Less has been more for Lake Central’s Josh Adamczewsk­i.

The Ball State signee tweaked his mechanics heading into his senior season, and it has paid dividends.

“I changed my swing a little bit,” Adamczewsk­i said. “I widened out a little bit, shortened up my stance and just been more simple to the ball. That’s helped me a lot to stay closed and just straight to the ball.

“I haven’t really worried much about power; the power still does come. But I’ve just been focusing on line drives, everything oppo, and if I get a pitch inside, turn on it.”

Adamczewsk­i is hitting .493, second on the team to senior shortstop Hunter Snyder, with team highs of six homers and 41 RBIs.

Adamczewsk­i stayed hot by going 3-for-3 with a triple, two runs and a stolen base in the Indians’ history-making 7-4 win at home against Crown Point in a Duneland Athletic Conference finale in St. John on Wednesday.

Lake Central became the first team to go undefeated in the DAC since joining it for the 2003-04 school year.

Adamczewsk­i is one of the reasons. He has three grand slams in the past four games for Lake Central (21-4, 14-0), which is ranked No. 2 in the Class 4A state coaches poll. He hit two in the series opener at Crown Point (13-10, 8-6) on Tuesday.

“His slumps, he gets one hit in a couple of games . ... He’s just good,” Lake Central coach Mike Swartzentr­uber said. “He knows how to hit. He has a good plan when he gets up there. He doesn’t swing at garbage; he swings at strikes. He’s good with two strikes — he gets the bat on the ball.

“He’s just a good high school hitter.” Adamczewsk­i started at second base the past two seasons. He hit .488 with four homers and 36 RBIs last year and .470 with 23 RBIs in his high school debut after his freshman season was canceled due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The 6-foot Adamczewsk­i has gained weight throughout his career. He went from 145 pounds as a freshman to 195 this season.

“I’ve definitely seen more pop and gotten a lot stronger this year,” he said. “I’ve grown in that sense.”

Adamczewsk­i has also taken a position switch in stride. He was moved to third base this season in an attempt to protect the arm of No. 1 pitcher Griffin Tobias, with the Indiana commit playing second instead of third when he’s not on the mound.

“It’s a little bit more difficult,” Adamczewsk­i said of playing third. “It’s the first time I’m ever playing there, but I feel like I’m doing a pretty good job.

“I played shortstop my whole life until I got to high school. Even now I’m still at short in travel ball, but I just do what’s best for the team.”

No matter the position, Adamczewsk­i has continued to produce at a high level.

“He’s electric,” Snyder said. “Griffin uses that word all the time, but that’s the perfect way to summarize him.

“He always has that bulldog in him. He thinks he’s better than the pitcher and always thinks he’s going to get the best of him, and that’s exactly what he does.”

Ball State coach Rich Maloney saw the additional potential in Adamczewsk­i, who plans to study exercise science.

“He is a physical young man who shows promise in becoming an elite hitter,” Maloney said in a statement in November after Adamczewsk­i signed his national letter of intent.

Snyder, a Columbia recruit, went 3-for-3 with a triple, double, three RBIs and two runs against Crown Point on Wednesday.

 ?? JOHN SMIERCIAK/POST-TRIBUNE ?? Lake Central’s Josh Adamczewsk­i hits a triple against Crown Point on Wednesday.
JOHN SMIERCIAK/POST-TRIBUNE Lake Central’s Josh Adamczewsk­i hits a triple against Crown Point on Wednesday.

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