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The belief was that the juiced bats of the 1990s had compromised the integrity of college baseball and posed safety concerns. Over the next decade, steps were taken to reduce the power potential of the metal bats, and the specifications implemented in 2011 were emasculating.

 

"We went too far the other way. Everybody knows that, and everybody agrees with that. And now we're stuck with it," Gillespie said, "because the manufacturers have made these bats and they have a large inventory. It's a nightmare."

 

According to the NCAA's midseason statistical trend report, the Division I batting average of .268 and per-team scoring of 5.14 runs a game were lowest since the wooden-bat era of 1973. The per-team home-run average of 0.36 a game was lowest since at least 1969.

http://bostonherald.com/sports/college/college_baseball/2014/06/mike_gillespie_bat_changes_too_drastic_game_suffers

 

 

 

 

Bring back the 90s bats please.

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pre-2011 bats, before they were dulled down

 

Physically, what's the difference between pre-2011 and present day bats? Practically none? Very easy to sneak pre-2011 bats instead of dulled bats (cheater a.l.a. cork) ?? Just wondering.

 

 

The bats used now are composite bats. It reduces the exit speed of the ball when hit. Old bats were aluminum. Ball came off bat extremely fast, which caused safety issues. Little league now uses composite bats also. If a little league bat does not have a USSSA stamp on it, the player gets thrown out of the game.

 

No way to cheat. Aluminum bats make the "ping" sound when the ball is hit. You can definitely tell the difference.

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