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Some Major League Baseball players are changing up the type of bat they use in favor of ones that feature the thickest part ...
The FOX Sports MLB staff weighs in on the hottest early-season topics, including which division leaders are here to stay, ...
In an interview with The New York Times, Manfred also forecasted fans getting more access to game broadcasts after the 2028 ...
Never one to shy away from a controversial topic, MLB commissioner Rob Manfred lauded “torpedo” bats as the future of America ...
After a stellar Yankees win on Saturday, torpedo bats are in the spotlight. Is there science behind these baseball bats?
Keenan Long of LongBall Labs joined MLB Now on Thursday to discuss the new bats and what is next in the search for technology ...
While other types of modified bats, such as corked bats, are strictly forbidden in the major leagues, MLB has already ...
It makes sense, then, that the talk around Major League Baseball after Opening Weekend concerned not a player or a team, a play or a result, but a piece of lumber: the torpedo bat. After speaking on ...
It should be noted that one Yankee declined to use the torpedo bat. Aaron Judge said he was more comfortable with conventional lumber, which is what he used to blast four home runs in 11 at bats. The ...
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 ...
Torpedo bats in MLB are here to stay — and could spark further exploration for a technological edge in baseball and beyond.