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The fabled torpedo bats were again on center stage at Monday night’s Home Run Derby, as the Mariners' Cal Raleigh took home ...
Torpedo bats are all the rage in Major League Baseball these days, but one bat expert set the record straight on an idea that has been floating around since their introduction.
In the late 1990s, an Ottawa man changed bat technology with the creation of maple bats. Soon, almost every major leaguer wanted one.
Torpedo bats are a new addition to the world of Major League Baseball. The bats have already been confirmed as legal for use, and some players are fans.
Using a strikingly different model in which wood is moved lower down the barrel after the label and shapes the end a little like a bowling pin, the torpedo bat has become baseball’s latest fa… ...
After a stellar Yankees win on Saturday, torpedo bats are in the spotlight. Is there science behind these baseball bats?
Torpedo bats are all the rage this season, and MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred believes all that chatter is good for the game.
It was Lucy May’s big debut as a bat dog for a minor league baseball team. As the Clearwater Threshers’ official bat dog, Lucy May, a 10-month-old Labrador retriever, was tasked with ...
They look like baseball bats morphing into bowling pins, their ends flaring into an aggressive bulge that suddenly tapers. So how do they work?
High school baseball players use aluminum bats during the prep season but use wood bats in some youth and high school leagues.
Fantasy Baseball: Five things that might matter after one week, from the Yankees' bats to Nolan Arenado's bat We want to be careful not to overreact to Week 1 but..
Torpedo bats are changing Major League Baseball, but with his head in the sand, MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred wants us to know: "Nothing to see here!" ...