The New York Yankees’ Austin Wells hits a house run utilizing a torpedo bat towards the Milwaukee Brewers at Yankee Stadium on Saturday. The bats’ distinctive form shortly grew to become the speak of the brand new baseball season.
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Mike Stobe/Getty Pictures
If you happen to had been making a bowling pin on a lathe and out of the blue determined to make a baseball bat as a substitute, the consequence would look one thing just like the “torpedo bat” that’s the speak of MLB’s new season. After some New York Yankees used the weird bats to launch a barrage of home runs on opening weekend, scientists who research baseball shortly took discover.
“The identical bat design has been in existence for a century and a half, perhaps,” says Alan Nathan, professor emeritus of physics at College of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. “And to give you one thing new, to me, is at all times very thrilling.”
Nathan and different specialists say they’re fascinated that the hype is over the form of a hunk of wooden, one which even baseball’s rulebook calls a “stick.”
“There’s simply not an entire lot you are able to do with these things,” Lloyd Smith, a professor of mechanical engineering at Washington State College, tells NPR. He says he often finds wooden a bit boring — however he provides that on this case, “I used to be confirmed incorrect.”
The logic behind the torpedo bats appears deceptively easy: Their bulbous form comes from analyzing how hitters are likely to make contact with the ball.
“In the event that they’re making contact on the similar place within the barrel on a regular basis, what can we do concerning the bat to attempt to give them higher efficiency at that particular location?” says Dan Russell, an acoustics professor at Penn State College.
Russell, Smith, and Nathan weren’t concerned in designing the brand new bats. However they’ve a protracted historical past of learning how baseball works, together with a collaboration studying illegal “corked” bats.
The torpedo bats are authorized, conforming to MLB’s rule 3.02, which states, “The bat shall be a easy, spherical stick no more than 2.61 inches in diameter on the thickest half and less than 42 inches in size.”
As for weight, Babe Ruth famously used bats weighing greater than 40 ounces — however the present norm is round 31 or 32 ounces, much like the 33 ounces wielded by Hank Aaron, in accordance with the Louisville Slugger Museum.

Babe Ruth used this bat to hit his first dwelling run in Yankee Stadium in 1923; it is seen right here in 2004 at Sotheby’s in New York. Bat design hasn’t modified a lot in additional than 100 years, aside from their weight dropping from above 40 ounces in Ruth’s case to the present norm of round 31 or 32 ounces, baseball specialists inform NPR.
Julie Jacobson/AP
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Julie Jacobson/AP
Torpedo bat designs can cut back weight, an important part as batters face pitchers throwing baseballs faster than ever. So, why hasn’t anybody tried the method earlier than in baseball — a sport well-known for its obsession with metrics?
“The man who had the concept, in fact, has a physics background,” Nathan says. “In order that’s why I’m, in a means, I am jealous.”
The man in query is Aaron Leanhardt, a former MIT physicist who grew to become a Yankees analyst and now works for the Miami Marlins. He is credited with driving the brand new design.
Torpedo bats broke an ‘unwritten rule’ in design
For a way of how a torpedo form would possibly assist a batter, contemplate fashionable “cupped” bats, their barrels ending with a deep indentation fairly than a rounded curve.
“That is vital weight” to remove, Smith says. “That is on the finish of the bat — that is going to be far more vital than weight close to the deal with. It makes the bat a bit simpler to swing.”
“You wish to take away the load the place it does not do you any good,” Nathan says. “Now the following logical step shouldn’t be solely to take away weight however transfer it some other place. So that’s the subsequent logical step.”
To take that step, the torpedo designers broke what Smith calls an unwritten rule: For many years, a bat’s diameter mainly elevated from the deal with to the barrel, by no means reducing till rounding off on the finish.
Torpedo bats’ diameters widen, however then they slim, bringing quite a lot of dynamics into play. On a vital stage, Nathan says, transferring weight from the tip of the bat nearer to the fingers reduces “what’s known as the swing weight or in technical language, the second of inertia of the bat, making it simpler to swing, simpler to regulate.”
One other potential profit, he provides, is that if the design permits a bat to have a barely wider diameter in a batter’s favored location with out including to the swing weight.
“Then the benefit is having a bigger floor over which to make contact with the ball,” he says.
However the torpedo design does not essentially translate to extra energy on the plate.
“If you happen to decrease the swing weight, you enhance your swing pace,” which is “tremendous vital for batted ball pace” and hitting the ball farther, Smith says. The tradeoff, he provides, is that by reducing a bat’s swing weight, “you swing the bat sooner, however you might have much less mass to hit the ball with.”
To image how that works, we must always visualize a sledgehammer, in accordance with Scott Drake, president of PFS-TECO, a wooden merchandise firm that inspects bats used within the MLB.
“If you happen to may swing a sledgehammer actually quick and make contact with the ball proper on the head, it is going to go actually far,” Drake says. In fact, it will be troublesome to swing a sledgehammer with that a lot pace and accuracy.
If you happen to slide the load down the deal with towards your fingers, he says, it turns into simpler and simpler to swing sooner — “however if you make contact on the tip, there’s much less and fewer mass for the place you make contact.”
“For the typical particular person, what it means is in the event you decrease the swing weight of a bat, your batted ball pace goes down a bit bit,” Smith says.
In fact, main league hitters aren’t common folks. However it’s price noting that of the Yankees’ 9 dwelling runs final Saturday, three were hit by Aaron Judge — utilizing his regular, non-torpedo bat.
Russell, Smith and Nathan say they’re desperate to conduct checks on the brand new bats to see how they steadiness these competing components — and the way the design impacts a bat’s “candy spot,” the place the collision of bat and ball is best.
So, do the bats give hitters an edge?
“I do not suppose it is hitting the ball any sooner,” Russell says of the torpedo bat. However, together with the potential beneficial properties in bat management, he and his colleagues imagine the bats would possibly increase a much less measurable issue: batters’ confidence.
“The sport of baseball is so superstitious,” Russell says. “It does not matter what the factor is, in the event you discovered one thing that makes you extra assured, it is going to work.”
That dynamic extends from the batter’s field out to the mound, the place pitchers are prone to see extra batters holding oddly swollen bats.
“I am certain the pitchers are going, ‘What the heck is that factor?’ ” Russell says.
Whereas the Yankees are drawing headlines for utilizing torpedo bats, gamers on no less than eight MLB groups have tried the bats, from the Chicago Cubs to the Tampa Bay Rays in batting observe, spring coaching or the common season. A number of of baseball’s 41 accepted bat suppliers are making variations of them, from Louisville Slugger and Victus to Chandler and Genuine.
“If the entire producers aren’t already making them, I am certain they are going to be quickly,” Russell says.