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Cal Raleigh, torpedo bat convert, hits 6 homers in one week

Cal Raleigh, torpedo bat convert, hits 6 homers in one week

Fox Sports18-04-2025

Cal Raleigh is a switch-hitting catcher for the Mariners, and one who hits for power. On Wednesday, he launched the 99th and 100th home runs of his career, and then on Thursday night, hit another for good measure. That's all normal stuff for "Big Dumper," as he's been so affectionately nicknamed, but what's new is his choice of bat.
Raleigh is a recent convert to torpedo bats, which he picked up just a week ago for the start of a Mariners-Rangers series. That week has gone pretty well, but there is also something important to note here: Raleigh is only using a torpedo bat when hitting from the left side of the plate. Which, granted, is more often than he bats from the right side since there are far more right-handed pitchers in the league than there are lefties, but it's still not something he's doing for every plate appearance. Enough for five of the six home runs he's hit since last Friday to be from the left side with a torpedo bat in hand, though.
The reason for that, as Raleigh explained on The Cal Raleigh Show , which broadcasts on the Seattle Sports radio network, is due to how he prefers the weight distribution of his bats depending on which side of the plate he's hitting on. From the left, the torpedo bat's thicker barrel works for him, given the nature of his swing. From the right, though, Raleigh's swing is "flatter," so he would rather have more weight at the end of the bat instead of centered on the barrel.
While Raleigh feels that the torpedo bat is as natural in his hands as what he was using previously, there are differences. The barrel, of course, but what has gotten less attention is the kind of wood used to produce these bats in their notable shape. "There's regulations on maple bats because of the way they break and the low density, so it's a safety thing for when you break them," Raleigh explained on the show. "You don't want pitchers [to] get hit or a position player because [maple bats] break so easy when they're shaped a certain way and the barrel is too big. So they keep the maples a little smaller, whereas ash or birch, you get to make the barrel a lot bigger because the density and it's not going to break like a maple would."
[MORE: Torpedo bats are 'absolutely good' for baseball, says MLB commissioner]
Maple bats were not always the ubiquitous choice among major-league players, as their rise owes much to the success of players like Barry Bonds during the late-90s and early-2000s. Torpedo bats might not end up being for everyone — again, even Raleigh, who seems to be a fan of them so far, doesn't have a good reason to switch to torpedoes from both sides of the plate — but if they get popular enough, it could also remove a little bit of maple's prominence as the go-to wood for MLB bats.
What it will take for that to happen, though, is for players to like Raleigh to continue to find success with the bats, and to be able to understand why that success is happening. MLB players are both open to changes that can improve their performance, but also loathe to switch up what's working, for understandable reasons. Someone like Raleigh who already hits for power – he went deep 34 times in 2024, his second season of at least 30 homers in three full years in the bigs – coming in and seeing more success after switching up his bat type is the kind of thing that will turn heads among players who think they're already in a good place, however.
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The Sports Report: Dodgers are routed by Padres
The Sports Report: Dodgers are routed by Padres

Los Angeles Times

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  • Los Angeles Times

The Sports Report: Dodgers are routed by Padres

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From Sports Bars To Big Deals, Women Athletes Are Winning—Yet Pay Gaps Persist
From Sports Bars To Big Deals, Women Athletes Are Winning—Yet Pay Gaps Persist

Forbes

timean hour ago

  • Forbes

From Sports Bars To Big Deals, Women Athletes Are Winning—Yet Pay Gaps Persist

The WNBA's New York Liberty was recently estimated to be valued at $450 million. Summer 2025 is signaling a remarkable wave of milestones in women's sports. After a strong-performing 2024 that saw equal representation between women and men at the Olympics for the first time in history as well as standout college stars Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese making their much-anticipated WNBA debuts, women athletes have only continued to build on their momentum. In fact, this year, the growth potential for women athletes is expected to be even more impressive. According to reporting from Axios, there are now eleven women's sports bars across the U.S., a significant feat considering there was only one just three years ago. More locations may be on the horizon, as The Sports Bra, the world's first sports bar dedicated exclusively to women's sports, plans to expand into four more U.S. cities. 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Men's professional sports have had a century-and-a-half-long head start, so naturally, women's sports have a lot of catching up to do, and while each step forward matters, slowing down isn't an option. To reach the full potential of women's sports, we'll have to pick up the pace. The good news is, progress is continuing to be made. In addition to the MLB's investment in the AUSL, others are seizing the opportunity to invest in women's sports and are cashing in. New ventures, like Ariel Investments' Project Level, are being created specifically to fund women's sports initiatives. Brands are also beginning to forge partnerships with men's and women's leagues, such as Airbnb's partnership with both the men's and women's Tour de France for the next three years. And CBS Sports recently announced that it has acquired the rights to the UEFA Women's Champions League, with all matches for this year's season streaming on Paramount+. 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