MLB, Torpedo and Louisville Slugger bats
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USA TODAY |
The new bats, named for their torpedo shape, bring more wood to the bat's barrel, where a hitter most often makes contact.
Bleacher Report |
New York faced the Arizona Diamondbacks on Tuesday in its fourth game of the season and wasted no time making early noise with solo home runs from Jasson Domínguez in the third inning and Anthony Vol...
U.S. News & World Report |
The torpedo model — a striking design in which wood is moved lower down the barrel after the label and shapes the end a little like a bowling pin — became the talk of major league baseball over the w...
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Louisville Slugger has been synonymous with Major League Baseball for more than 100 years, but now Marucci Sports, a company founded in 2002, has replaced it as MLB’s official bat.
After the Yankees broke the franchise record for home runs in a game, all eyes turned to their new "torpedo bats." Louisville Slugger talks about the process and planning that went into them.
Yankees' hitters Cody Bellinger and Austin Wells used the models made by Louisville Slugger and hit home runs.
By Monday morning, however, baseball fans in Jentucky were jammed up to a window watching a custom torpedo bat being made for Yankees centerfielder Cody Bellinger at the Louisville Slugger Museum, according to the Louisville Courier-Journal.
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