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Torpedo bats in MLB are here to stay — and could spark further exploration for a technological edge in baseball and beyond.
Some Major League Baseball players are changing up the type of bat they use in favor of ones that feature the thickest part ...
The bats have a striking design in which wood is moved lower down the barrel and the end is shaped a little like a bowling ...
The FOX Sports MLB staff weighs in on the hottest early-season topics, including which division leaders are here to stay, ...
At Victus Sports in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, the phones have been blowing up since torpedo bats took MLB and the baseball world by storm last weekend. The torpedo bats aren't necessarily new ...
The extraordinary torpedo bats that have taken MLB by storm may be headed toward being completely ordinary. “I think you’re going to see it across all 30 teams,”former MLB pitcher and co ...
The torpedo bats have the barrel of the bat in a different location. Instead of being at the end of the bat, the barrel is closer to the handle, which gives the bat a bowling pin shape.
Torpedo bats have been a hit among Major League Baseball players. The MLB-legal, tailor-made bats with weight distribution toward the barrel have become the talk of the town after the New York ...
Can anything defuse Major League Baseball's hottest hitting weapon? The so-called torpedo bats − the MLB-legal, tailor-made bats with weight distribution toward the barrel − have become the ...
According to the MLB, torpedo bats are defined by an untraditional barrel, which rests closer to the hitter's hands. The bats are designed to be skinnier at the top end, with noticeably more wood ...