The Record (Troy, NY)

Company trying to revolution­ize baseball bats

- By TimBooth

RENTON, WASH. » Players have been altering bats for decades in a bid to improve their grip — adding pine-tar or some specialize­d grip tape, maybe shaving the handle slightly to make it thinner.

Gradually, some players have started gravitatin­g to a more revolution­ary option offered by a company that set up shop deep in a warehouse in Renton, Washington. As the company’s name suggests, Axe Bat has developed a bat that fundamenta­lly changes the shape of the bat’s handle so you hold it like an axe.

Some major leaguers like the feel. Others have turned to the axe handle as an option after hand or forearm injuries.

Red Sox right fielder Mookie Betts and Astros and former Tri- City Val- leyCats outfielder George Springer are the biggest proponents and the only two paid endorsers by the company. But there are many others — Jake Lamb, Dustin Pedroia, Carlos Correa, even Kris Bryant this season — who have used the bat handle at one time or another.

Each has a different reason for turning to this style of bat, whether it’s a desire to be better on inside pitches, to reduce hand and wrist pain, or simply wanting to try something different.

“I had issues with my hand with hamate surgery and I just noticed it never hurt,” Lamb said. “If you’re talking about hand health and my hand not hurting anymore, then yeah, I’m going to try out your product. That was the main thing for me.”

The history of Axe Bat dates to 2009 when a woodworker from New York named Bruce Leinart started reaching out to sporting goods companies to see if they were interested in his wood baseball bat designed with the axe-like handle. He found a willing ear in Baden Sports, the company that started Axe Bat.

The Axe Bat lab where the company has developed and refined its designs is tucked away in the Baden Sports warehouse about 15 miles from the Seattle Mariners’ Safeco Field. The company developed its first bat in 2012 and it has gone through roughly 75 iterations before getting to where it is today.

“Lots of testing with players. Lots of prototypin­g. Lots of iterations,” said Brent Weidenbach, director of product management. “Basically, the iteration process stated with taking the general axe handle concept which was maybe a little more oval in your hand and really opened up your hand quite wide, and we kind of refined it to work more along with a baseball swing.”

Axe Bat licenses its handle design to four MLBapprove­d bat makers: Victus Sports, Tucci Lumber, Chandler Bats, and Dove Tail Bats.

Springer first tried it because his teammate Correa had one. It was Betts who left Springer his first bat to use full-time during the 2015 season. In the two full seasons that Springer has used the handle, he hit a combined .271 with 63 home runs, 167 RBIs and was a World Series MVP.

“It takes a little bit of getting used to having a nontraditi­onal handle on a bat but I got the hang of it and I love it,” Springer said. “I think it’s helped me control my barrel more and it’s helped me control my swing more and I’m going to stick with it.”

Betts was introduced to the bat because Pedroia was trying one out. Same with Chris Owings in Arizona, who saw the success Lamb was having and decided to give it a shot in batting practice one day and ended up getting a couple of hits that night.

“You know how it is. You get something you like, why change it?” Owings said. “I like how it feels and I’m probably not going to try and get any other handles beside that standard one.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? FILE - In this file photo, Houston Astros’ George Springer takes a swing during a baseball game against the Seattle Mariners in Seattle. Springer is using a bat made by Axe Bat, a company headquarte­red in Renton, Wash., that is trying to revolution­ize...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE - In this file photo, Houston Astros’ George Springer takes a swing during a baseball game against the Seattle Mariners in Seattle. Springer is using a bat made by Axe Bat, a company headquarte­red in Renton, Wash., that is trying to revolution­ize...

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