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As the torpedo bat craze stormed Major League Baseball to start the 2025 season, Shohei Ohtani and Aaron Judge were both ...
Marucci bats were officially approved by MLB for in-game use in 2005. Then, over the next two decades, Marucci gained more high-profile users and everyday fans.
On the eve of the new season, less than 10% of MLB hitters using bats made by Marucci Sports were using the so-called torpedo model, said Kurt Ainsworth, the company’s chief executive.
Marucci is one of the official bats of MLB, along with Victus (Marucci purchased Victus in 2017). Together, they provide bats to a majority of the players in MLB. Those include Francisco Lindor ...
That’s why several bat manufacturers, including Marucci and Victus, the official bats of MLB, as well as Chandler Bats and Louisville Slugger, rushed to capitalize on the moment to begin selling ...
Louisville Slugger has been synonymous with Major League Baseball for more than 100 years, but now Marucci Sports, a company founded in 2002, has replaced it as MLB’s official bat. “I created ...
In the meantime, other retailers have swooped in to capitalize off baseball's newest craze. Torpedo bats are available for sale from outlets that include Marucci Sports, RPG Authentic Bats, and ...
Torpedo bats have been a hit among Major League Baseball players. The MLB-legal, tailor-made bats with weight distribution toward the barrel have become the talk of the town after the New York Yankees ...
Stott tested bats at the Marucci hit lab down in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, churning through styles until the company found the right fit. “They connect all these wires to you, and you swing 1,000 ...
Swanson started testing Marucci Sports’ torpedo bat during the offseason and spring training before committing to trying it for one or two at-bats in Cactus League games. As Swanson put it ...
Stott tested bats at the Marucci hit lab down in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, churning through styles until the company found the right fit. “They connect all these wires to you, and you swing 1,000 ...
Marucci bats were officially approved by MLB for in-game use in 2005. Then, over the next two decades, Marucci gained more high-profile users and everyday fans.