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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 moved more toward the center.
Torpedo bats in MLB are here to stay — and could spark further exploration for a technological edge in baseball and beyond.
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 ...
Bettors are all over the torpedo bat craze, but what do the sportsbooks think? Max Meyer talked to oddsmakers to find out.
However, Yelich and other Brewers made it clear that torpedo bats aren’t the reason why the Yankees swept them in embarrassing fashion. As Milwaukee manager Pat Murphy put it, “It’s not like ...
Yankees shortstop Anthony Volpe and second baseman Jazz Chisholm are among the players using the new bats. Both hit home runs on opening day. Chisholm added two more on Sunday. The torpedo bat ...
One bat, everybody knows the rules. Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy fumed over the Yankees’ new Torpedo bats in a more than two-minute rant posted on X on Sunday night. The new bats have ...
Yankees shortstop Anthony Volpe and second baseman Jazz Chisholm are among the players using the new bats. Both hit home runs on opening day. Chisholm added two more on Sunday. The torpedo bat ...
Jazz Chisholm Jr. and Anthony Volpe were among the many players using so-called "torpedo" bats when they joined the home-run party and helped propel the Yanks to their historic home run barrage.