News

They look like baseball bats morphing into bowling pins, their ends flaring into an aggressive bulge that suddenly tapers. So how do they work?
The crack of a ball hitting off a wooden bat and echoing throughout a stadium is central to the ethos and mythology of baseball, the kind of sound that conjures images and memories of picturesque ...
College baseball has spent much of the last three decades bouncing between offensive extremes, from the gorilla ball to the dead ball and back to a bombs-away mentality.
Heading into the 2025 College World Series, here's a closer look at why most of college baseball uses metal bats ...
You’ve been hearing all about torpedo bats of late, and with good reason. New equipment isn’t introduced to Major League Baseball often, but the torpedo bat represents a change in the design ...
Torpedo bats are changing Major League Baseball, but with his head in the sand, MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred wants us to know: "Nothing to see here!" ...
Recently, the Baseball Bat Bros fulfilled a childhood dream of hitting at Oracle Park in San Francisco, where John launched a ball into McCovey Cove. “That was the most special experience of my ...
Behind every major league ball team are a set of fast-moving men and women who make sure the game runs smoothly.
They look like baseball bats morphing into bowling pins, their ends flaring into an aggressive bulge that suddenly tapers. So how do they work?
Torpedo bats are all the rage in Major League Baseball these days, but one bat expert set the record straight on an idea that has been floating around.
Baseball is a game played between 2 teams of 9 players each. The team with more runs at the end of nine innings is the winner of the game.