Saturday, July 16, 2011

Louisville Slugger K100 All Purpose Wood Fungo Baseball Bat (36-Inch) Review

Louisville Slugger K100 All Purpose Wood Fungo Baseball Bat (36-Inch)
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This bat splinter and cracked from the first day I used it. I tried to tape the areas that were damaged but recently had the handle crack and become no longer of use. This bat should have never been placed in the market, it clearly looked unhealthy the day I received it. Very disappointed!

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Keep your fielders on their toes with the Louisville Slugger K100 all-purpose wood fungo bat. Designed for baseball practice, the K100 is made of northern white ash--pound for pound the strongest timber available. The ash construction offers a flexibility that isn't found in other timbers, including maple, helping create a larger, more forgiving sweet spot in terms of breakage. The bat also offers a thinner barrel and a lighter weight than traditional bats, so it requires less effort to hit balls to any part of the field. Specific features include a 2-1/4-inch barrel, a 36-inch length, and a natural finish.
About Louisville Slugger In many ways, the rich 120-year history of the Louisville Slugger baseball bat began in the talented hands of 17-year-old John A. "Bud" Hillerich. Bud's father, J.F. Hillerich, owned a woodworking shop in Louisville in the 1880s when Bud began working for him. Legend has it that Bud slipped away from work one afternoon in 1884 to watch the Louisville Eclipse, the town's major league team. After Pete Browning--the Eclipse's star who was mired in a hitting slump--broke his bat, Bud invited him to his father's shop to make a new one. With Browning at his side giving advice, Bud handcrafted a new bat from a long slab of wood. Browning got three hits using the bat the next day. Browning told his teammates, which began a surge of professional ballplayers visiting the Hillerich shop.
Although J.F. Hillerich had little interest in making bats, Bud persisted, eventually registering the name Louisville Slugger with the U.S. patent office in 1894. In the early 1900s, the company was one of the first to use a sports endorsement as a marketing strategy, paying Hall of Famer Honus Wagner to use his name on a bat. By 1923, Louisville Slugger was the selling more bats than any other bat maker in the country, with such famed clients as Babe Ruth, Ty Cobb, and Lou Gehrig. In the ensuing years, the company has sold more than 100 million bats, and 60 percent of all Major League players currently use Louisville Sluggers. The company now sells far more than bats, including fielding and batting gloves, helmets, catchers' gear, equipment bags, training aids, and accessories.

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