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This story was excerpted from Christina De Nicola’s Marlins Beat newsletter. To read the full newsletter, click here. And ...
According to a study by RotoGrinders, an online fantasy sports platform, Rockies fans are among the fan bases with the most ...
The Mariners' Cal Raleigh homered in three straight games with the new torpedo bat. Purists balk, but all legal avenues for ...
The Pitt News asked Pitt physics chair Andrew Zentner his thoughts on the new bats and the science behind the torpedo-shaped ...
Torpedo bats in MLB are here to stay — and could spark further exploration for a technological edge in baseball and beyond.
It’s been just two weeks since Opening Day, but it only took one series for a defining subplot of the 2025 season to emerge: ...
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 ...
Baseball is a game of numbers, and statistically, hitting a baseball is one of the hardest things to do in all of professional sports.
And while torpedo bats look different, they are legal under MLB rules. MIT physicist Aaron Leanhardt has been credited with creating the torpedo bats. Leanhardt previously served as a hitting ...
The bats were developed by current Miami Marlins coach and former New York analyst Aaron Leanhardt. The torpedo bats move the widest part of the barrel from the end toward the "sweet-spot," which ...
“Now when you look at pictures, you’re like, oh yeah, it’s a torpedo.” Aaron Leanhardt, a former Yankees front-office staffer who now works for the Miami Marlins, was credited as the one ...