Smeets played his college baseball at Middle Tennessee State University in the United States.[2] In 1999, he was one for two with a RBI.[3] In 2000, he hit a home run in his only at bat and drew two walks. In 2001, he hit .159/.171/.304 in 30 games. He did homer in a game in which Middle Tennessee State set a school record with 8 circuit clouts.[citation needed] Smeets played for the Dutch team in the 2003 World Port Tournament, going 1 for 2 with a two-run home run. Because there were only two home runs in the tournament, Smeets won the Home Run King award.[4][5]
Smeets moved to Kinheim in 2006 and batted .349/.446/.454 with 36 RBI in 41 games and fielded .996 at catcher.[citation needed] He was 7th in average, 6th in slugging, third in OBP (behind Eugene Kingsale and Sidney de Jong), tied Reily Legito for the RBI lead, was third with 13 doubles (behind Yuji Nerei and Fausto Álvarez), tied Kingsale, Roel Koolen and Evert-Jan 't Hoen for 5th with 27 walks and tied Nerei for 5th with 53 hits.[citation needed] He hit .482 with runners in scoring position. Smeets won the Hoofdklasse MVP award,[7] the 4th catcher so honored.[citation needed] He was 2 for 12 in the playoffs but 9 for 21 with 3 walks and five runs in five games in the Holland Series as Kinheim won the title.[citation needed]
Smeets was 0 for 2 in the 2006 Haarlem Baseball Week. In the 2006 Intercontinental Cup, he was 1 for 4 with a walk and two runs for the silver medalists, backing up de Jong at catcher.[citation needed] In the 2007 Hoofdklasse campaign, Smeets hit .294/.379/.531 with 36 runs and 43 RBI in 36 games and threw out 14 of 30 attempted base-stealers.[citation needed] He hit .300 with a .391 OBP in the playoffs then batted .333/.333/.400 in the 2007 Holland Series.[citation needed]
He scored their first run in their successful championship defense and had three hits in game one; in game two, he was thrown out trying to score in a key play but Kinheim rallied to win.[citation needed] Smeets was 4th in slugging percentage in 2007, second to Alvarez in home runs (with 7), tied with Benjamin Dille for fifth in runs (36), first in RBI (six ahead of Martijn Meeuwis) and tied for 4th in doubles (13).[citation needed]
Smeets batted .263/.391/.316 for Kinheim in the 2007 European Cup, its first European Cup title ever. In the championship game, Smeets was 1 for 5 with two walks and a time hit by pitch.[8] Backing up de Jong, he only played against Sweden and Croatia.[citation needed] Smeets was 2 for 8 in the 2007 World Port Tournament but struck out four times.[9] In the 2007 Baseball World Cup, Smeets was 3 for 6 with a homer, playing in two of the team's 10 games.[10] Smeets batted .421/.476/.526 to help Kinheim win the 2008 European Cup in Grosseto. His 7 RBI tied for the lead. He had the big hit of the competition: down 2–1 in the bottom of the 10th inning in the championship game, Smeets doubled in René Cremer and Dirk van 't Klooster with a shot off of Lincoln Mikkelsen.[11] Smeets had fouled off several pitches before the double.[12]
Smeets retired from Kinheim after the 2010 season. In 2011, he became the manager of Dutch club RCH-Pinguins in Heemstede.[15] During this time, he also worked as a marketing manager for the KNBSB.[16] In October 2013, he became the technical manager of football team AFC Ajax.[17] In 2017, he became the technical director of the KNBSB.[7] He stepped down from that role in 2021.[18] He has also been a coach for the Netherlands national team at the 2011 Baseball World Cup, 2013 World Baseball Classic (WBC), and 2023 WBC.[19]
Personal
During the closing ceremony of the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, he proposed to his girlfriend, Dutch field hockey gold medalist, Minke Smabers, who accepted.[20] He has sons named Xavi and Bodi.[21]