Very interesting read, if not brief. http://tinyurl.com/3bmx67Evidently the speed of a bat is more important than the weight of bat for long balls
10/12/2007 10:35:14 AM
some interesting points in therei liked
10/12/2007 10:43:24 AM
yeah that is an interesting readthanks for the link
10/12/2007 12:24:26 PM
10/12/2007 12:30:47 PM
A question not answered is do MLB players care if their bats break or not. Also what are the stats on batting average on broken bat plays compared to a normal series of at bats. Common sense would say most broken bat balls put in play induce outs, but what is the strength of the correlation. Is it in the player's best interest to have a sturdy bat?
10/12/2007 2:27:59 PM
^For anyone who played baseball, I think that answer is pretty easy. I'd much rather my bat not break.
10/12/2007 2:58:35 PM
^ obviously you dont want your bat to break in any particular at bat, but does A-Rod care if he breaks 20-30 bats a season in exchange for 45-55 HRs? (assuming that weaker bats do in fact aid homers as stated by Nye)
10/12/2007 3:46:17 PM
i missed the bit where he said weaker bats aid batters...
10/12/2007 4:38:58 PM
I think he's talking about how bats are lighter now and smaller, therefore making them weaker, but able to get more momentum from them[Edited on October 12, 2007 at 4:55 PM. Reason : .]
10/12/2007 4:54:40 PM
10/12/2007 6:34:39 PM
thats odd both mass and velocity are in that equation... moron
10/12/2007 9:15:43 PM
10/12/2007 9:17:59 PM
you missed my point.... what i meant was that A-Rod may use a lighter bat to increase bat speed (hit more HRs), but in making a bat lighter it is therefor weaker and prone to breaking. A safe assumption is that the vast majority of broken bat situations result in outs thus A-Rod may be trading incresased bat speed (read HRs) for broken bats (read outs that cause a decrease in batting average). Conclusion: A-Rod more likely than not is happy to hit more HRs at the cost of hitting .305 instead of .310 or moreBy the way the broken bats do not occur when he hits the HRs read the original posted link[Edited on October 12, 2007 at 9:40 PM. Reason : .]
10/12/2007 9:37:37 PM
it depends on which is more valued, marginal batting average or marginal home runsi'd take the batting average
10/12/2007 9:42:57 PM
yeah you have hgh for home runs anyways.
10/12/2007 11:14:23 PM
^^ if you are a true team player thats a good pick i think, on the other hand marginal runs may be more vauluable than marginal hits to an AL team. A small ball playing NL team probably wopuld take the extra hits
10/13/2007 10:02:41 AM
10/13/2007 1:00:05 PM
^ shut up.... just shut up i bet you believe a penny will kill you if its dropped from the empire state building too
10/13/2007 5:48:40 PM
Ha, you can't even say anything. I'll take that as your concession.Keep doing what you're doing, though. Watching Bill Nye is obviously very educational for you.
10/13/2007 6:16:42 PM
KyleAtState majorly PWND himself by getting trapped into skokiaan's weak PWNT
10/13/2007 6:49:41 PM
man shit yo, he got engineer on that ass.
10/13/2007 10:42:22 PM
who was the first one here to state that speed was more important, yeah me in post #1. and some douche comes along and tries to poo poo how obvious it is. guess what, no matter how many equations that you throw out there (however correctly they apply) it is still not as obvious as just saying "duh E=mc^2". The truth is that it still takes skill on the part of the batter to put the ball in the stands. Which is why it is hard to make scientific studies of these things by removing the human element. Wasnt there a mythbusters where they tried to mechanically synthesize kicking a football? I dont recall the whole episode but I think they had real trouble making that one work.
10/14/2007 9:58:21 AM
^ you got pwnt by skokiaan, just drop it and accept that you lost this one.
10/14/2007 10:44:11 AM
goonies never say die
10/14/2007 12:17:30 PM
10/14/2007 1:13:52 PM