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MIT physicist Aaron Leanhardt has been credited with creating the torpedo bats. Leanhardt previously served as a hitting ...
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 ...
Despite being legal, the bat has become controversial among fans, players, and the media ... the league is that most hitters ...
Torpedo bats in MLB are here to stay — and could spark further exploration for a technological edge in baseball and beyond.
MLB's torpedo bat has taken the league by storm this season. Which teams and players have used it? Here's a tracker.
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.
adoption was hardly widespread. On the eve of the new season, less than 10% of MLB hitters using bats made by Marucci Sports ...
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 ...
Torpedo bats have become all the rage during the opening week of the MLB season. Here's what you need to know about baseball's hottest trend.
Nine of their MLB record-tying 15 home runs hit in their first three games were used by five players using torpedo bats, including six of a franchise-record nine homers in Saturday's 20-9 rout ...
Perhaps most notably, it was revealed that Giancarlo Stanton was swinging a version of a torpedo bat for large portions of ...
Torpedo bats are now all the rage across the league, but opinions on the bats are split. Some players are ready to experiment with the torpedo bats. Others are quick to call them a scourge.