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Schools

Citing Safety, Little League Changes Up Bat Requirements

Though recently purchased bats could now be more useful as paperweights, Little League coaches say the new bat rules make baseball safer.

There might be fewer home runs this summer at the local Little League complex.

In an effort to cut down the risks of injuries, and to even the playing field a bit, Little League has instituted new bat requirements this season, stripping away some of the higher-end composite bats.

While each level of Little League will see changes in bat requirements, it is the Major Division that should see the most change. Pitching mounds are only 46 feet away from the plate, so young pitchers are in the most danger of being struck with a ball hit back up the middle.

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For the Majors, the new bat rule reads: “It shall not be more than thirty-three (33) inches in length nor more than two and one-quarter (2¼) inches in diameter. Non-wood bats shall be labeled with a BPF (bat performance factor) of 1.15 or less.”

It’s a move that local baseball coaches and officers are getting behind.

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“I think that’s what happening is that we have trainers and coaches who are teaching the kids to hit the ball so well, at such a young age, that it has become dangerous for the pitchers, and also the third baseman,” said Dan Finocchi, player agent of West Deptford Little League.

Erial Little League treasurer Jeff Mastrogiovanni agrees.

“Baseball now is 12 months out of year, and on the East Coast, that was never the case,” Mastrogiovanni said. "Kids are now training and they are getting bigger than ever.”

It will be up to the local coaches to ensure that all of their team bats fit under the new rules. Little League's new rules states that a coach will be ejected from the game if his or her squad uses an illegal bat.

West Deptford will hold a training course for all of its coaches later this month. In doing so, it not only informs the volunteer coaches of the rule changes, but enables them to be covered by Little League law in New Jersey.

Erial will hold its meeting Sunday.

So as to not spring this info upon parents at the last minute, Little League indicated three years ago that changes were in the works, providing the notice while conducting an investigation into how wide the changes should be. Some of the top composite bats on the market over the past few years have ranged as high as $200 to $300. While some parents who purchased these bats—which are now only useful as a boat anchor—may be left frustrated, coaches say overwhelming majority have understood that the safety of the children is paramount.

“I have seen them break in half like a wooden bat and it’s scary,” Mastrogiovanni said of composite bats. “From a coaching perspective, they are like bats on steroids. The longer you use them, the harder they get. Over time, one of those bats gets more dangerous, so to speak.

Composite bats have the same exterior as those made of aluminum, but have an interior, "woven" graphite wall that gives the bat more pop. 

"It would be the difference between jumping off a trampoline versus jumping off the ground in terms of the performance of the ball" coming off the bat, said John Mallard, manager of Sports Authority in Turnersville, Gloucester County. 

He added that most bats with an aluminum barrel and a composite handle have not been outlawed by Little League. 

Mallard said that while composite bats might give hitters a small advantage, athletic skill is ultimately what matters most. 

"If you can hit it, you can hit it," he said. "You’re not going to get that extra help from a single-piece aluminum bat." 

Mastrogiovanni and Finocchi both say Little League would be better served if the distance from pitching rubber to home plate increases from 46 feet to 50 feet—the standard dimensions that Babe Ruth uses. It’s a move that has been discussed for years and may soon be made.

“They need to do something,” said Finocchi, who has been involved with West Deptford Little League for three decades. “Right now they are looking at moving to 50-70, which would give the pitchers a better chance.”

“The word I heard is that they are seriously going to institute it next year,” Mastrogiovanni said. “I think it’s the move that has to be made. Babe Ruth and Cal Ripken (leagues) are doing it and Little League is getting left out. I think moving to a 50-70 field would be a lot better for the kids because it softens the transition when they go to 60-90. It would not be as big a jump for them.”

While a move to a bigger field would require hefty changes—moving back or raising the height of fences—its positive impact on safety would likely result in most people supporting the move. That has been the case with the bats. Heated debates have taken place for years over what should be done to limit the amount of “pop” in certain bats, and this move seems to have been a solid conclusion.

Even it if takes some time to get used to, Finocchi said the change is a must.

“If they didn’t do this, they were going to get kids killed or severely injured,” Finocchi said. “I think these are good rules. Physics is being applied and it’s justified. It’s costing Easton a lot of money to change all of their bats, but it’s for a good, sound reason.”

A list of approved and licensed composite bats can be found on the Little League website at littleleague.org.

(Regional Editor Tim Zatzariny Jr. contributed to this report.)

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