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Little League Statement on Non-Wood
Bats
WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. (March 23, 2007) – Recently, Little League
International has received a number of inquiries regarding non-wood
bats, particularly in relation to a March 14 vote by the New York
City Council to ban the use of non-wood bats in high school baseball
games.
It is important to note that the New York City
Council’s vote applies only to high school baseball games played in
the city, and does not apply in any way to Little League games at
any level in the city or anywhere else.
Little League
International has and will continue to provide as much factual
information as possible on the subject to the media, to volunteers,
and to legislators considering laws that would dictate the use of
certain types of equipment in Little League Baseball and Softball.
It is Little League International’s belief that the same
governmental imposition may soon be directed at Little League
Baseball and other youth baseball programs.
Little League
Baseball has always advocated that local leagues and individuals may
choose wood or non-wood bats for use in our program.
Little
League supports the right of a local Little League to implement a
wood-only rule, and we support any league’s right to make that
choice for its local community. Some prefer the game played with
wood bats, and that’s fine as well. But Little League International
does not accept the premise that the game will be safer if played
exclusively with wood, simply because there are no facts – none at
all – to support that premise.
As a result, any individual
or league choosing a wood-only option must understand that the
choice is not being made because of any factual data or scientific
information.
Little League volunteers already know that
participation in Little League is made safer by Little League rules,
regulations and policies. Little League’s safety record is second to
none, as less than 1 percent of all participants annually in Little
League require medical treatment of any kind as the result of an
injury in a practice or game.
As Steve Keener, Little League
Baseball and softball president and chief executive officer, said:
“If there was a safety concern, based on Little League’s proven
history of attention to safety with matters such as mandating
background checks and pitch counts, we’d be the first in line to
address it.”
Safety continues to be Little League’s No. 1
concern, and the non-wood bat issue is no exception. For that
reason, we are providing these facts:
• More than 10 years
ago, the major manufacturers of non-wood bats reached an agreement
with Little League to limit their bats to a “Bat Performance Factor”
(BPF) of 1.15. … The BPF is essentially a measure of a
non-wood bat’s performance (how fast the ball exits the bat when
hit) in relation to a standard wood bat’s rating of 1.00. A
very good wood bat’s BPF is 1.15.
• That means
today’s best non-wood bats (usually made of aluminum) used in Little
League perform statistically the same, in terms of how fast the ball
exits the bat, as the best wood bats.
• For the last 10
years, bat manufacturers have only been producing non-wood bats for
play in Little League Baseball that do not exceed the 1.15 BPF. Most
of these bats are already printed with the BPF of 1.15, but
beginning in 2009, all bats used in Little League Baseball must be
imprinted with the BPF.
• A common misconception is that
lighter bats always translate into a baseball being hit harder. This
is not the case, because there is a point at which a lighter bat
(even though it is swung at a higher speed) does not exert the same
force on the pitched ball as a heavier bat does. A simpler way to
understand this is to consider a small hammer used to pound a nail:
Although the small hammer may be swung with much greater speed, a
heavier hammer (swung at a lower speed) will drive the nail with
fewer blows because it has more inertia at the point of impact. This
is why the non-wood bat manufacturers have agreed to the current
standard – so that the non-wood bats perform at a level close to
wooden bats, even though a Little Leaguer may be able to swing them
faster. … Imposing a wood bat mandate could result in fewer players
in the game. A more forgiving bat means more players have a chance
for some success and therefore will want to play and enjoy the game.
• Little League reached this agreement in the early 1990s
with the manufacturers of non-wood bats because it noticed the
number of reported injuries to pitchers who were hit by batted balls
had increased to about 145 in a year.
• Since that agreement,
these types of reported injuries have decreased to their current
level of 20-30 per year. Considering there are more than a million
Little League games played each year, with hundreds of millions of
pitches, this safety record is nothing less than
outstanding.
• Little League also has addressed the baseballs
used in games. Requirements for baseballs to have standardized
hardness and liveliness have been in place for several years as
well.
• In 2002, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission
reviewed this issue thoroughly and resolved that there was
inconclusive data to support such a ban of non-wood bats from use in
high school and youth baseball.
• Since records were kept
beginning in the 1960s, tragically there have been eight fatalities
in Little League Baseball from batted balls. Six of those resulted
from balls hit by wood bats and two from balls hit by non-wood bats.
Those two fatalities occurred in 1971 and 1973, prior to the 1993
implementation of today’s youth bat standards.
• This is not
a business interest for Little League Baseball. While Little League
does receive royalties from the Sporting Goods Manufacturers
Association Youth Bat Licensing Program, these royalties amount to
only about 2 percent of Little League’s annual operating budget of
$18 million. … If a wood-bat mandate were imposed, Little League
estimates that its royalties from this program would either equal or
exceed current levels.
For more information contact Little League
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