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How far is "too far?"
So on another forum, guys frequently ask about fixing their bats. End caps come off (Mizunos are notorious for that), rivets come out, and so on.
Some guys say it's perfectly fine to push the rivets back in. Some say it's fine to glue the end cap back on. I had one guy ask if he could pound the end cap back into place when it had gapped slightly (about 3mm). So where do you draw the line between normal "fixing" of a bat and "altering?"
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Dave I haven't decided if I should call it from the dugout or the outfield. Apparently, both have really great views! Screw green, it ain't easy being blue! I won't be coming here that much anymore. I might check in now and again. |
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The bat issue in softball is as much about liability, insurance and litigation as it is about competition, inflated egos and softball. |
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I've always felt that once the cap comes off, the bat is done unless the repairs are done by the manufacturer only. But if some umpires allow players to knock the rivets back into place, how would that be consistent with prohibiting players from glueing their end caps back into place? Or would this be a topic better left off the public radar?
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Dave I haven't decided if I should call it from the dugout or the outfield. Apparently, both have really great views! Screw green, it ain't easy being blue! I won't be coming here that much anymore. I might check in now and again. |
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If the player has a problem, it is with the manufacturer, or the person who screwed with their bat, not the sanctioning body with whose rules to which the manufacturer agreed to abide. How about that for some serious, yet effective and factual, rhetoric?
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The bat issue in softball is as much about liability, insurance and litigation as it is about competition, inflated egos and softball. |
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What about a cap that hasn't come off? One that appears to be slowly working its way out of the barrel, does not appear to be tampered with, but still appears secure? Would a player be allowed to tamp it back into place (not that we'd ever know, but if I'm asked...)?
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Dave I haven't decided if I should call it from the dugout or the outfield. Apparently, both have really great views! Screw green, it ain't easy being blue! I won't be coming here that much anymore. I might check in now and again. |
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i actually had a J2 (demarini juggernaut 2) end cap come off a month ago. i grabbed the bat, made sure it wasnt shaved, looked at the end cap to see if it had been messed with (most notably "pry marks"). nothing was wrong with the bat, but i told the team the bat had to be removed from the game. on a side note, while i wish bat manufacturers would just make an endcap that can be taken off in 1s so anyone can check to see if the bats shaved, i will give some credit for the new utrip rules which have some sort of cap over the endcap to make it damn near impossible to take off. |
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As noted in the rules, the end cap must be securely in place so that the end cap can only be removed by the manfacturer without being destroyed. Unless the guy who was swinging the bat owns the company that produced that bat, any appearance that the cap is not exactly where it was when it left the factory is not good to go.
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The bat issue in softball is as much about liability, insurance and litigation as it is about competition, inflated egos and softball. |
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If you really want to alleviate the situation, get rid of the end cap, period. Make them find a way to produce a bat that doesn't need and end cap.
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its sorta like having the plastic cases around a fire alarm in a public building. first you have to open of the case, then pull the alarm. having the case prevents an accidental pull. having a cover on the endcap prevents someone from removing the cap without it being pretty f'n obvious, even to the untrained eye. Quote:
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There have been space-age adhesives around for years. There is absolutely no excuse for the production of a substandard piece of equipment. Quote:
I'd just rather go to a low-compression 14" ball and let them use anything they can find to hit the damn thing.
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The bat issue in softball is as much about liability, insurance and litigation as it is about competition, inflated egos and softball. |
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Then they'd just figure out ways to doctor the ball.
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Tom |
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"Figure out?"
Trust me, that was done long ago.
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Dave I haven't decided if I should call it from the dugout or the outfield. Apparently, both have really great views! Screw green, it ain't easy being blue! I won't be coming here that much anymore. I might check in now and again. |
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but you did say that if the cap comes off a bat, that it "clearly suggests there has been an attempt to alter the bat." i agree there definitely could be a better way to manufacture the bats, but companies dont do whats the best, they do whats the most profitable. and btw, just last spring i purchased a brush that has a bat ring built in from my ASA office. very similar to this one Sport About Equipment : Allstar Umpire Plate Brush and Bat Ring PB3 [PB3] - $8.99 please dont fault me for buying what was stocked in my local ASA office. |
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If you are going to take everything out of context, please let me know now so I can save the keystrokes after this post. Quote:
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The bat issue in softball is as much about liability, insurance and litigation as it is about competition, inflated egos and softball. |
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Re: Bat Rings
I'm still of the camp that believes that bat rings still serve a purpose, albeit a very narrow one now. While they are no longer necessary to detect dents in a bat, they can be useful to spot a bat that has been poorly painted or has deceptive decals.
This won't stop a bat that has been visited by a decent enough bat doctor, but it can catch the fly-by-night bat doctors. I still keep them in my bag. Feel free to send them my way.
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Dave I haven't decided if I should call it from the dugout or the outfield. Apparently, both have really great views! Screw green, it ain't easy being blue! I won't be coming here that much anymore. I might check in now and again. |
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