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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 ...
"It's not the noodle. It's the chef," said Scott Boras, whose agency had Louisville Slugger send client Elly De La Cruz his ...
It didn’t take long for Elly De La Cruz to find his way with the much-talked-about “torpedo” bat. The Cincinnati Reds star ...
If a torpedo bat revolution is underway in MLB, the New York Yankees might be at the forefront of it, but the Cincinnati Reds ...
Cincinnati shortstop Elly De La Cruz blasted a pair of 400-foot homers and drove in seven runs while using the trendy torpedo ...
"It's not the noodle. It's the chef," said Scott Boras, whose agency had Louisville Slugger send client Elly De La Cruz his ...
Like it or not, the Cincinnati Reds' Elly De La Cruz just dumped a ton of fuel on torpedo-style bat conversation that's ...
Nine were reportedly hit with the new bats. Cincinnati Reds' Elly De La Cruz added more fuel to the fire when he picked up a torpedo bat for the first time Monday night in a homestand series ...
Raleigh, the switch-hitting catcher who signed a $105 million extension three weeks ago, homered from both sides of the plate to reach 100 home runs for his career, and Miller bounced back from a bout ...
For the MIT-educated physicist behind the torpedo bat, it’s more about the talent of the players than their lumber at the plate.
If a torpedo bat revolution is underway in MLB, the New York Yankees might be at the forefront of it, but the Cincinnati Reds are close behind. The fallout from what happened at Yankee Stadium is ...
The success of the New York Yankees' torpedo bats is spreading around the MLB. One Cincinnati Reds star is taking advantage of the new bat. Cincinnati Reds shortstop Elly De La Cruz hits a three ...