Yankees, Milwaukee Brewers
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Milwaukee Brewers starter Nestor Cortes Jr. said the New York Yankees were not fully bought into using the torpedo bats last season.
From The New York Times
Aaron Judge combined with Paul Goldschmidt and Cody Bellinger to go deep on the first three pitches from Nestor Cortes, then hit two more homers as the New York Yankees set a team record with nine hom...
From The Washington Post
In all, Yankee hitters ambushed Cortes for four first-inning homers as he returned to the Bronx following an offseason three-player trade that sent him to the Brewers in exchange for closer Devin Wil...
From CBSSports.com
Read more on News Digest
Fast-forward to Saturday, and YES Network broadcaster Michael Kay revealed on air that Anthony Volpe and Jazz Chisholm Jr. are currently using newly designed "torpedo" bats. These uniquely shaped bats move the mass closer to hitters' hands, potentially increasing bat speed and improving contact.
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Sporting News on MSNAaron Judge explains why he's not using Yankees' new bat designFans noticed throughout the game that a handful of Yankees hitters were using a newly designed bat, which featured a thicker barrel - the design has been dubbed the "torpedo" bat.
New torpedo bats drew attention when the New York Yankees hit a team-record nine homers that traveled a combined 3,695 feet
The New York Yankees debuted a new style of bat this week, dubbed the "torpedo bats," and one Milwaukee Brewers pitcher has taken a harsh stance on the matter.
The Yankees put their heartbreaking World Series loss in the past and teed off for 15 homers during a three-game sweep to start the season.
The biggest revelation from Major League Baseball’s opening weekend was not the Dodgers’ 5-0 dominance, the four home runs hit already by Eugenio Suarez, or Miami’s three consecutive walk-off wins.
1hon MSN
Several New York Yankees players have used redesigned bats this season. The new bats feature a barrel closer to a batter's hands instead of toward the end of the bat.
The reaction across MLB to the design of the New York Yankees' new 'torpedo' bats after the Bronx Bombers belted 13 home runs in two games was swift.