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"But a Wiffle ball is even worse, because you've got holes in it, it's hollow, it's light, and the air can do all sorts of crazy things to it. That's an extremely difficult thing to research." ...
Created in 1953, the Wiffle ball was Connecticut-native David N. Mullany’s solution to turning his 12-year-old son into a pitching menace without blowing out his arm.
There was no such thing as a World Wiffle Ball Championship in the summer of 1980, no inkling of an idea for a plastic-laden tournament that even the most nonathletic of players could conquer.
According to www.Wiffle.com, the originator of the game was the grandfather of David and Stephen Mullany in Fairfield, Conn., in 1952. The kids in the neighborhood had given up on baseball because ...
After a long day working at Pottery Barn Kids at Crossgates Mall, he rushes home to watch ...
The first thing you need to know is local rules apply. A fire hydrant may be a foul pole, a lawn chair may separate a single from a double and ...
Wiffle balls -- so named because of the many strikeouts, or whiffs, it produced -- were flying off the shelves. The company's plant, originally based in Woodbridge, needed a larger space.
When Kenny Gram of Tempe pulled a king from a deck of cards, and his opponent a jack, the 2000 Wiffle Ball World Series Championship was decided.
Fastpitch competitive Wiffle Ball is a scaled-down version of baseball that utilizes the 8-hole. Wiffle Ball produced by the family-owned Wiffle Ball, Inc. Keeping with the backyard roots of the ...