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MIT physicist Aaron Leanhardt has been credited with creating the torpedo bats. Leanhardt previously served as a hitting ...
MLB's torpedo bat has taken the league by storm this season. Which teams and players have used it? Here's a tracker.
Despite being legal, the bat has become controversial among fans, players, and the media ... the league is that most hitters ...
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The New York Yankees made waves through the baseball world by hitting 15 home runs over their opening series against the Milwaukee Brewers, tying a Major League Baseball. When they hit nine of them, ...
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Demand for torpedo bats is booming for batmakersadoption was hardly widespread. On the eve of the new season, less than 10% of MLB hitters using bats made by Marucci Sports ...
Because as much as has been made of the Yankees using those bats — the list, at the moment, comprises Jazz Chisholm Jr., Anthony Volpe, Paul Goldschmidt, Cody Bellinger and Austin Wells, who have ...
Torpedo bats in MLB are here to stay — and could spark further exploration for a technological edge in baseball and beyond.
I'm sure people are curious." A common sentiment from players about torpedo bats is that hitting is about the player. If you can’t hit a 97 mph fastball or nasty slider with a normal bat ...
Never one to shy away from a controversial topic, MLB commissioner Rob Manfred lauded “torpedo” bats as the future of America ...
MLB's biggest trend hasn't made its way to L.A. just yet, but the reigning champion Dodgers are intrigued and plan to test ...
Some of them were hit by players wielding an innovation from a former team employee and a one-time MIT physicist, who reimagined the field-legal bats to be shaped more like a torpedo.
Perhaps most notably, it was revealed that Giancarlo Stanton was swinging a version of a torpedo bat for large portions of last season, including his epic run in October, without anyone drawing ...
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