Acceptance Rate
90%
Avg SAT
1,057
Avg ACT
21
Enrollment
21,029
Sport
Baseball
Gender
Men's
Division
NCAA Division 1
Location
Statesboro, GA
Now Evaluating
Official Recruiting Questionnaire
Complete the official questionnaire to get on the coaches' radar for Georgia Southern University Men's Baseball.
Rodney Hennon
Head Coach
Hennon. Under Hennons guidance, the Eagles have won at least 30 games in all but one season and have posted 40 or more wins three times. Hennon has guided the Eagles to six NCAA Regionals including the 2014 Tallahassee Regional, where GS defeated #5 national seed Florida State 7-0. He has led the Eagles to 10 regular season or tournament conference titles including Southern Conference Tournament Titles in 2009, 2011 and 2014. In 2016, Hennon led the Eagles through a deep run in the Sun Belt Tournament, falling in the Championship Game. Since taking over the storied program before the 2000 season, Hennon has accumulated a 606-416 record with a .593 winning percentage. In all during his 19 total seasons as a head coach, he has amassed a career record of 687-454-1. During the past eight years, Hennon has led the Eagles to three SoCon Tournament Championships and two tournament final appearances. He also led the Eagles to a tournament titles in 2000 and 2002 and regular season championships in 2000 and 2001. Hennon surpassed legendary coach J.I. Clements for second place on the schools all-time wins list during the 2008 season when he picked up his 321st Georgia Southern win in a 17-13 victory over The Citadel on May 2nd. Hennon most recently won his 500th career game at the College of Charleston on March 23, 2014. When he captured his 100th career victory on April 8, 2000, he reached the triple-digit milestone quicker than any other coach in Southern Conference history. During his tenure, Hennon has guided the Eagles to at least a fourth-place finish in the Southern Conference regular season 12 times, including six runner-up or championship finishes. The Eagles also advanced to the NCAA Regionals for three consecutive years from 2000-2003. In the Eagles debut season in the Sun Belt Conference, Hennons Eagles went 18-12 to place fourth in the league. The 2016 squad backed that up with a fifth place finish in the regular season and three-straight wins in the Sun Belt Tournament to reach Championship Sunday for the first time in the new league. The Eagles posted a 26-24 overall mark in 2016 with a 14-13 league record. The Eagles cut their strikeout total by 12% in 2016 and scored 57 more runs in their second year in the Fun Belt. Hennons Eagles took advantage of that increase in scoring, posting a 23-2 record when scoring six or more runs. While the Eagles have continued their winning tradition on the field, Hennon has put an emphasis on success in the classroom. Academics have always been a high priority for Hennon and the Sun Belt Conference recognized 23 members of the 2014 squad on either its Academic Honor Roll or Commissioners List. In 2008, David Richardson (2nd Team), Chris Shehan (3rd Team) and Brian Pierce (3rd Team) all earned CoSIDA Academic All-District accolades. During the 2005-06 academic year, the baseball team posted the highest GPA of any Georgia Southern mens team that year. Hennon has produced talent on the field as well, coaching five All-America performers and 36 major league draft picks. Victor Roache was the latest Eagle to be called an All-American after hitting a NCAA-best 30 home runs in 2011. Junior Jordan Wren is the most recent Eagle selected in the MLB draft, picking up a 36th round selection by the Boston Red Sox. Hennon led GSU to a 13-game improvement over the 2013 season and posted his fourth 40-win season as the Eagles rallied from a first round defeat in the Southern Conference Tournament to win the Tournament Title and reach the NCAA Regionals. The Regional was the sixth appearance for Hennon as a head coach. The Eagles finished tied for third in the SoCon during the 2014 regular season and posted wins over Georgia, Georgia Tech, Clemson and Florida State. The Eagles had three players drafted following the season and a pair of freshman were named Freshman All-American (Garrett Chapman and Ryan Cleveland). In 2011 Georgia Southern advanced to their second regional in three seasons after winning the Southern Conference Tournament behind a 1-0 complete game shutout by Chris Beck. The Eagles faced eventual national champion South Carolina in the opening game and scored the games first run before falling 2-1. The Eagles were awarded with both the SoCon Pitcher of the Year in Matt Murray and the Player of the Year in Victor Roache. Roache set both the school and SoCon record with his 30 home runs. In 2008 Georgia Southern put up staggering offensive numbers, not only program record-setting numbers but also statistics that ranked among the nations best. The Eagles finished the year nationally ranked in various offensive categories: second in batting average (.346); second in scoring (10.3 runs per game); fourth in doubles (2.66 p/g); second in home runs (114); second in slugging percentage (.584); 13th in walks (302); 15th in stolen bases (108); 10th in sacrifice flies (37); and 36th in hit by pitches (80). The offensive juggernauts set GSU records with: 114 home runs (3rd in SoCon season Top 10), six grand slams (1st SoCon), 595 runs scored (2nd SoCon), 543 RBI (2nd SoCon), 1,269 total bases (2nd SoCon) and 751 hits (5th SoCon). The 154 doubles were second most (5th SoCon), and the .346 team batting average was the highest total in the modern era (tied 5th SoCon). Georgia Southerns .584 slugging percentage was the second-highest average in the SoCon record books, and the 37 sacrifice flies tied for second-most. One of the most impressive offensive displays - not only in Georgia Southern history but in the nation - came in mid-March 2008 at home against Columbia. The Eagles slammed a NCAA Division I record 14 home runs during a 26-8 rout of the Lions. In fact 12 different Eagles went deep, including a stretch of three straight pinch-hit home runs in the eighth inning. Two games later against the Lions, Georgia Southern pounded out another 13 extra-base hits in a 22-8 victory. During the 2005 campaign, the Eagles put together one of the most dominating offenses in the country led by a pair of .400 hitters in Greg Dowling and James Payne. GSU posted a .331 team batting average that season which helped lead to 38 wins and a runner-up SoCon finish. Not only did that impressive batting average rank third-best in GSU history but also the fifth-highest in the nation. Southern also ranked 11th nationally in slugging percentage, 25th in scoring and home runs, 47th in stolen bases and 22nd in doubles per game. From 2000 to 2003 Hennon guided the Eagles to three NCAA regionals, three SoCon Tournament Championship games and two regular season conference championships. In 2001 Georgia Southern won 42 games, 21 of those coming in SoCon play which led to its second-straight regular season title. The postseason saw the Eagles defeat No. 9 Georgia in the NCAA Regionals for the schools first win in the postseason since 1996. Faced with a continuing set of obstacles and hurdles during his initial spring in 2000, Hennon led a spirited and over-achieving 19-man Eagle squad to a 38-23 record, a Southern Conference regular season and tournament championship, and the schools first NCAA Regional appearance in four years. Along with a trimmed down pitching staff of just six arms, Hennons club set a new school record with a 23-7 league mark and won 23 of its last 33 games after finishing February and March just two games over .500 at 15-13. Twice named Southern Conference Coach of the Year, Hennon came to Georgia Southern after two seasons (1998-99) as head coach of his alma mater Western Carolina. After accepting an offer to guide the Western Carolina program in July 1997, Hennon quickly added his own distinctive chapters to one of the winningest programs in the Southern Conference. During his inaugural campaign as head coach in 1998, Hennon led the Catamounts to a 45-15 overall record and a 20-6 SoCon mark, tying the WCU mark for most victories in a single year and ranking sixth among all NCAA Division I members in winning percentage. His players claimed both the Southern Conferences Pitcher and Player of the Year awards while seven signed professional contracts at the conclusion of the season. In addition, the 1998 WCU squad led the nation in stolen bases with 153, which shattered a 33-year-old school record and a 16-year-old conference mark. He directed a pitching staff which also enjoyed an outstanding season, turning in a 4.01 earned run average to rank 11th nationally, while finishing ninth among all Division I institutions with 499 strikeouts. Hennon followed up his record-setting initial season with a 36-23-1 mark, which included a third-place league standing at 18-10. The Catamounts easily distinguished themselves as the SoCons top offensive squad with conference bests in batting average (.328), on-base percentage (.413), slugging percentage (.523), runs (502), hits (684), home runs (82) and runs batted in (445) while finishing second in triples (20) and third in stolen bases (123). Hennon guided one of the leagues youngest pitching staffs to a 5.70 earned run average - rating third among all conference teams. Prior to taking over the WCU head coaching duties, Hennon served as a full-time assistant coach for his alma mater for three seasons. As an assistant coach, Hennon helped lead the Cats to a 42-20 record, a Southern Conference title and NCAA Tournament appearance in 1997 as a member of the late Keith LeClairs staff. He joined the WCU baseball staff in 1994 as a part-time assistant after earning numerous on-field and classroom honors during his playing career from 1990 to 1993. A Second Team All-SoCon choice in 1992, Hennon batted .367 to lead the SoCon in hits and runs scored, while sparking the Catamounts to the league regular season and tournament championship. Despite his all-tournament performance (eight hits and five RBI), WCU fell one game short of reaching the College World Series after falling to Florida State in NCAA South II Regional Championship play. A year later as a senior, Hennon earned First Team All-SoCon honors, again leading the league in hits and runs scored and helping the Catamounts to the NCAA South Regional in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. When he left WCU, he ranked first among the schools season leaders in games started and at-bats, while standing tied for 19th in runs scored and 23rd for hits. Hennon earned his bachelors degree in Economics from Western Carolina in 1993. In the classroom, he was a two-time GTE-CoSIDA Academic All-America choice as he posted a 3.55 grade point average during his four years of undergraduate work in WCUs College of Business. Hennon was also named to the Southern Conference Academic Honor Roll in each of his four years while competing as a student-athlete. Hennon is married to the former Kim Estes of Fairburn, and they are the parents of three children - Walker, Keeli and Carter. Rodney Hennon Head Coach 2000 SoCon Coach of the Year 2001 SoCon Coach of the Year The 2017 is the 18th season as Head Coach of Georgia Southern for Rodney Hennon. Under Hennons guidance, the Eagles have won at least 30 games in all but one season and have posted 40 or more wins three times. Hennon has guided the Eagles to six NCAA Regionals including the 2014 Tallahassee Regional, where GS defeated #5 national seed Florida State 7-0. He has led the Eagles to 10 regular season or tournament conference titles including Southern Conference Tournament Titles in 2009, 2011 and 2014. In 2016, Hennon led the Eagles through a deep run in the Sun Belt Tournament, falling in the Championship Game. Since taking over the storied program before the 2000 season, Hennon has accumulated a 606-416 record with a .593 winning percentage. In all during his 19 total seasons as a head coach, he has amassed a career record of 687-454-1. During the past eight years, Hennon has led the Eagles to three SoCon Tournament Championships and two tournament final appearances. He also led the Eagles to a tournament titles in 2000 and 2002 and regular season championships in 2000 and 2001. Hennon surpassed legendary coach J.I. Clements for second place on the schools all-time wins list during the 2008 season when he picked up his 321st Georgia Southern win in a 17-13 victory over The Citadel on May 2nd. Hennon most recently won his 500th career game at the College of Charleston on March 23, 2014. When he captured his 100th career victory on April 8, 2000, he reached the triple-digit milestone quicker than any other coach in Southern Conference history. During his tenure, Hennon has guided the Eagles to at least a fourth-place finish in the Southern Conference regular season 12 times, including six runner-up or championship finishes. The Eagles also advanced to the NCAA Regionals for three consecutive years from 2000-2003. In the Eagles debut season in the Sun Belt Conference, Hennons Eagles went 18-12 to place fourth in the league. The 2016 squad backed that up with a fifth place finish in the regular season and three-straight wins in the Sun Belt Tournament to reach Championship Sunday for the first time in the new league. The Eagles posted a 26-24 overall mark in 2016 with a 14-13 league record. The Eagles cut their strikeout total by 12% in 2016 and scored 57 more runs in their second year in the Fun Belt. Hennons Eagles took advantage of that increase in scoring, posting a 23-2 record when scoring six or more runs. While the Eagles have continued their winning tradition on the field, Hennon has put an emphasis on success in the classroom. Academics have always been a high priority for Hennon and the Sun Belt Conference recognized 23 members of the 2014 squad on either its Academic Honor Roll or Commissioners List. In 2008, David Richardson (2nd Team), Chris Shehan (3rd Team) and Brian Pierce (3rd Team) all earned CoSIDA Academic All-District accolades. During the 2005-06 academic year, the baseball team posted the highest GPA of any Georgia Southern mens team that year. Hennon has produced talent on the field as well, coaching five All-America performers and 36 major league draft picks. Victor Roache was the latest Eagle to be called an All-American after hitting a NCAA-best 30 home runs in 2011. Junior Jordan Wren is the most recent Eagle selected in the MLB draft, picking up a 36th round selection by the Boston Red Sox. Hennon led GSU to a 13-game improvement over the 2013 season and posted his fourth 40-win season as the Eagles rallied from a first round defeat in the Southern Conference Tournament to win the Tournament Title and reach the NCAA Regionals. The Regional was the sixth appearance for Hennon as a head coach. The Eagles finished tied for third in the SoCon during the 2014 regular season and posted wins over Georgia, Georgia Tech, Clemson and Florida State. The Eagles had three players drafted following the season and a pair of freshman were named Freshman All-American (Garrett Chapman and Ryan Cleveland). In 2011 Georgia Southern advanced to their second regional in three seasons after winning the Southern Conference Tournament behind a 1-0 complete game shutout by Chris Beck. The Eagles faced eventual national champion South Carolina in the opening game and scored the games first run before falling 2-1. The Eagles were awarded with both the SoCon Pitcher of the Year in Matt Murray and the Player of the Year in Victor Roache. Roache set both the school and SoCon record with his 30 home runs. In 2008 Georgia Southern put up staggering offensive numbers, not only program record-setting numbers but also statistics that ranked among the nations best. The Eagles finished the year nationally ranked in various offensive categories: second in batting average (.346); second in scoring (10.3 runs per game); fourth in doubles (2.66 p/g); second in home runs (114); second in slugging percentage (.584); 13th in walks (302); 15th in stolen bases (108); 10th in sacrifice flies (37); and 36th in hit by pitches (80). The offensive juggernauts set GSU records with: 114 home runs (3rd in SoCon season Top 10), six grand slams (1st SoCon), 595 runs scored (2nd SoCon), 543 RBI (2nd SoCon), 1,269 total bases (2nd SoCon) and 751 hits (5th SoCon). The 154 doubles were second most (5th SoCon), and the .346 team batting average was the highest total in the modern era (tied 5th SoCon). Georgia Southerns .584 slugging percentage was the second-highest average in the SoCon record books, and the 37 sacrifice flies tied for second-most. One of the most impressive offensive displays - not only in Georgia Southern history but in the nation - came in mid-March 2008 at home against Columbia. The Eagles slammed a NCAA Division I record 14 home runs during a 26-8 rout of the Lions. In fact 12 different Eagles went deep, including a stretch of three straight pinch-hit home runs in the eighth inning. Two games later against the Lions, Georgia Southern pounded out another 13 extra-base hits in a 22-8 victory. During the 2005 campaign, the Eagles put together one of the most dominating offenses in the country led by a pair of .400 hitters in Greg Dowling and James Payne. GSU posted a .331 team batting average that season which helped lead to 38 wins and a runner-up SoCon finish. Not only did that impressive batting average rank third-best in GSU history but also the fifth-highest in the nation. Southern also ranked 11th nationally in slugging percentage, 25th in scoring and home runs, 47th in stolen bases and 22nd in doubles per game. From 2000 to 2003 Hennon guided the Eagles to three NCAA regionals, three SoCon Tournament Championship games and two regular season conference championships. In 2001 Georgia Southern won 42 games, 21 of those coming in SoCon play which led to its second-straight regular season title. The postseason saw the Eagles defeat No. 9 Georgia in the NCAA Regionals for the schools first win in the postseason since 1996. Faced with a continuing set of obstacles and hurdles during his initial spring in 2000, Hennon led a spirited and over-achieving 19-man Eagle squad to a 38-23 record, a Southern Conference regular season and tournament championship, and the schools first NCAA Regional appearance in four years. Along with a trimmed down pitching staff of just six arms, Hennons club set a new school record with a 23-7 league mark and won 23 of its last 33 games after finishing February and March just two games over .500 at 15-13. Twice named Southern Conference Coach of the Year, Hennon came to Georgia Southern after two seasons (1998-99) as head coach of his alma mater Western Carolina. After accepting an offer to guide the Western Carolina program in July 1997, Hennon quickly added his own distinctive chapters to one of the winningest programs in the Southern Conference. During his inaugural campaign as head coach in 1998, Hennon led the Catamounts to a 45-15 overall record and a 20-6 SoCon mark, tying the WCU mark for most victories in a single year and ranking sixth among all NCAA Division I members in winning percentage. His players claimed both the Southern Conferences Pitcher and Player of the Year awards while seven signed professional contracts at the conclusion of the season. In addition, the 1998 WCU squad led the nation in stolen bases with 153, which shattered a 33-year-old school record and a 16-year-old conference mark. He directed a pitching staff which also enjoyed an outstanding season, turning in a 4.01 earned run average to rank 11th nationally, while finishing ninth among all Division I institutions with 499 strikeouts. Hennon followed up his record-setting initial season with a 36-23-1 mark, which included a third-place league standing at 18-10. The Catamounts easily distinguished themselves as the SoCons top offensive squad with conference bests in batting average (.328), on-base percentage (.413), slugging percentage (.523), runs (502), hits (684), home runs (82) and runs batted in (445) while finishing second in triples (20) and third in stolen bases (123). Hennon guided one of the leagues youngest pitching staffs to a 5.70 earned run average - rating third among all conference teams. Prior to taking over the WCU head coaching duties, Hennon served as a full-time assistant coach for his alma mater for three seasons. As an assistant coach, Hennon helped lead the Cats to a 42-20 record, a Southern Conference title and NCAA Tournament appearance in 1997 as a member of the late Keith LeClairs staff. He joined the WCU baseball staff in 1994 as a part-time assistant after earning numerous on-field and classroom honors during his playing career from 1990 to 1993. A Second Team All-SoCon choice in 1992, Hennon batted .367 to lead the SoCon in hits and runs scored, while sparking the Catamounts to the league regular season and tournament championship. Despite his all-tournament performance (eight hits and five RBI), WCU fell one game short of reaching the College World Series after falling to Florida State in NCAA South II Regional Championship play. A year later as a senior, Hennon earned First Team All-SoCon honors, again leading the league in hits and runs scored and helping the Catamounts to the NCAA South Regional in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. When he left WCU, he ranked first among the schools season leaders in games started and at-bats, while standing tied for 19th in runs scored and 23rd for hits. Hennon earned his bachelors degree in Economics from Western Carolina in 1993. In the classroom, he was a two-time GTE-CoSIDA Academic All-America choice as he posted a 3.55 grade point average during his four years of undergraduate work in WCUs College of Business. Hennon was also named to the Southern Conference Academic Honor Roll in each of his four years while competing as a student-athlete. Hennon is married to the former Kim Estes of Fairburn, and they are the parents of three children - Walker, Keeli and Carter.
Sign in to contact this coach
Cody Wofford
Assistant Coach
Sign in to contact this coach
Join PrepHero to reach Georgia Southern University Men's Baseball coaches directly. Create your free athlete profile and start your college recruiting journey today.