Little League Pitcher Killed by Line Drive -- Parents Crusade to Ban Aluminum Bats

Amused

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Apr 14, 2001
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In Little League batter's box, it's safety vs. homers

By Todd Wilkinson | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor

MILES CITY, MONT. ? "It was a sweet, beautiful night for baseball."

That's how Spud and Debbie Patch remember the final moments of their son's life on the mound - right up to a jarring and fatal ping.

On July 25, 2003, 18-year-old Brandon Patch, a southpaw pitcher for the Miles City Mavericks American Legion team, was killed after a line drive rocketed off an aluminum bat and struck him in the head.

Now, almost two years later and in an attempt to prevent future tragedies, his parents and others are on a crusade to see the national pastime, at all levels, revert to wood bats.

This week, the Patches watched Montana Governor Brian Schweitzer sign an unprecedented resolution calling upon American Legion baseball, with its thousands of teams nationally to adopt wood bats out of concern that aluminum counterparts propel balls at dangerous speeds.

"We have a responsibility to protect our young people in their sports endeavors," says Governor Schweitzer. "Sometimes, common sense solutions have to come from an unlikely place like Montana."

The debate over aluminum has raged for a generation in bleacher seats on four continents. Grass-roots campaigns to ban aluminum at local levels have advanced in, among other places, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New York City, California, and Florida.

Yet Montana's action, inspired by these working-class parents from a dusty cowboy town, is the first time a state has officially taken a stand.

Since their invention in the 1970s as a durable replacements for breakable lumber, aluminum bats have supplanted wood almost entirely in youth baseball. More than 4.1 million are made in the United States each year and commonly retail for upward of $350 apiece.

Following their son's death, and those of dozens of other players they say have been killed or hurt in several states over the past decade, the Patches felt compelled to become activists. Spud, a grocery store meat cutter, and Debbie, who operates a tanning salon, went to the state legislature after being rebuffed by American Legion officials, who said the indictment against aluminum was unwarranted.

"One gentleman told me we would never see the abolition of aluminum bats in his lifetime," Mrs. Patch says. "I told him maybe not in his lifetime, but that doesn't mean it won't happen in mine."

They originally had sought an across-the-board prohibition on aluminum bats in Montana youth baseball. Yet, fearing the ban could trigger widespread consumer panic and encourage a flurry of lawsuits, major batmakers flew into Helena and joined a coalition of the largest youth-baseball governing bodies to get a resolution, rather than a law, that merely advises American Legion to eschew aluminum.

"The truth of the matter is that trying to address this issue through a state legislature was the wrong way to go about it," says Jim Darby, vice president of promotions for Easton Sports, which had sued the NCAA for $250 million in 2000 when it tried to impose tough restrictions on aluminum bats. "If people believe this needs to be studied, let's do it."

Manufacturers strongly challenge the Patches' assertions of danger. Given the 20 million players in the US, the number of pitches hurled each day, the number of balls hit, and the small number of young people seriously injured, baseball and softball are actually two of the safest team sports, says Rick Redman, vice president with Hillerich & Bradsby Co., maker of the famous "Louisville Slugger."

But Bill Thurston, the head baseball coach at Amherst College and former editor of the NCAA Rules Committee, says the Patch tragedy is no anomaly.

In fact, Mr. Thurston, who has testified as an expert witness in lawsuits, cites many examples of youth players who have been injured by aluminum batted balls. Often, grievances brought by parents against manufacturers are resolved in out-of-court settlements, he says.

In a sport smitten with home runs, aluminum bats are regarded by some as akin to steroids, bestowing lesser players with raw hitting power.

"Aluminum bats have changed the game of baseball," says Rob Bishop, coach of the Miles City Junior College Pioneers, which has joined the growing ranks of college teams playing in wood bat conferences.

During his college playing days at South Dakota State University, coach Bishop studied the phenomenon of aluminum bats contributing to soaring numbers of home runs. The technology, he and Thurston say, has inflated batting averages, buoyed scores, reduced the importance of defense, extended the duration of games, and caused younger players to focus on homers rather than stroking base hits.

"A company cannot, on the one hand, boast that it's making bats which enable players to hit balls longer distances and, at the same time, say aluminum bats aren't boosting power," Bishop says. "How far the ball flies is in direct correlation to how fast it comes off the bat."

Hillerich & Bradsby's Redman notes that in 2002, the Consumer Products Safety Commission examined the purported dangers of aluminum bats and concluded there was not compelling proof to declare they were unsafe.

Mr. Patch believes the companies are balking because of huge profits derived from aluminum bats. Hillerich & Bradsby, however, says it would actually be more lucrative if the company sold only wooden bats, which easily break and have to be replaced.

"The bottom line is that we have great sympathy for the Patch family. What happened to their son breaks our hearts," Redman says. "Obviously, this is a very emotional issue for them. We respect that, but for us it is a scientific issue and one that we believe should be resolved with facts."

Former Major League pitcher Jeff Ballard, a Montanan who played for both the Baltimore Orioles and Pittsburgh Pirates, says he shared the Patch's concerns but he's been persuaded otherwise by data.

Ferocious line drives, fueled by balls impacting the legendary "sweet spots" on bats, are going to occur regardless of whether the material is made of aluminum or wood, Ballard, now a Legion coach, adds. "I've been hit by balls coming off both kinds of bats and there's no way I could have avoided them. Baseball has its risks but as a game it's still very safe."

In Miles City, tears still well up in Mr. Patch's eyes as he explains the difficulty of going to a game and hearing the sounds of aluminum bats. As a tribute to the memory of his son, all youth baseball teams in Miles City, including the junior college Pioneers, now use wood and offer opponents a symbolic wood bat at the start of every game.

For Bishop's squad, the move has had a huge impact on his team's offensive output. Three years ago, Pioneer players socked 57 home runs in 50 games with aluminum bats before converting to wood. So far this season, the team has notched just five homers in 40 games. He points out, however, that last season a team from a wood conference beat a team using aluminum for the national junior college championship.

"There isn't a coach on the planet who will tell you that from the standpoint of developing sound fundamental skills in players, wood bats isn't the way to go," Bishop says. "It's baseball like it used to be played and it's a great game to watch."

 

Anubis

No Lifer
Aug 31, 2001
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tbqhwy.com
banning aluminum bats is a good idea and has been a good idea for like 10 years when it was first brought up
 

Ophir

Golden Member
Mar 29, 2001
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Originally posted by: Anubis
banning aluminum bats is a good idea and has been a good idea for like 10 years when it was first brought up
Those bats have so much pop now, it's a wonder it doesn't happen more often.
 

Fingolfin269

Lifer
Feb 28, 2003
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After aluminum bats are banned the headline will be 'Parents on crusade to ban wooden bats after child impaled by bat fragment'.
 

aplefka

Lifer
Feb 29, 2004
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This isn't something new. Did you miss the part in the article where it said this happened two years ago and ever since then they were trying to get them banned? Or did you even bother looking up other such stories? Trust me, this is a debate that's at least 5 years old.
 

Fingolfin269

Lifer
Feb 28, 2003
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Originally posted by: aplefka
This isn't something new. Did you miss the part in the article where it said this happened two years ago and ever since then they were trying to get them banned? Or did you even bother looking up other such stories? Trust me, this is a debate that's at least 5 years old.

Who said it wasn't? That's why the subtitle is 'ANOTHER knee jerk reaction'.
 

Anubis

No Lifer
Aug 31, 2001
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Originally posted by: Fingolfin269
After aluminum bats are banned the headline will be 'Parents on crusade to ban wooden bats after child impaled by bat fragment'.

players in the majors dont even shater bats that often and they are much stronger and hitting pitches that come at around 100 mph, neither of those would ever be a factor in LL

they should ban them in college as well because they do pitch at 90 mph and the players are strong enough that the bathead speed is fast enough to gitthe ball so hard noone in teh world woudl have a chance to react to it before it took their head off

in college it also produces un realistic hitting numbers, which is a good reason as to whya lot of the great college players dont do crap in teh majors
 

Koing

Elite Member <br> Super Moderator<br> Health and F
Oct 11, 2000
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Sports have risks. When you try to hit a ball very far out you will end up with some guys hit in the head.

Lets hit with rubber bats...

Anyway I wonder how much 'slower' a wodden bat would have made the hit to the kids head, or where ever it did to kill him. Would have survived?

Koing
 

Anubis

No Lifer
Aug 31, 2001
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Originally posted by: Koing
Sports have risks. When you try to hit a ball very far out you will end up with some guys hit in the head.

Lets hit with rubber bats...

Anyway I wonder how much 'slower' a wodden bat would have made the hit to the kids head, or where ever it did to kill him. Would have survived?

Koing

IDK the numbers however there was a Real Sports ep on this not so long ago, they did the testing at college speeds for pitching and bat head speed, they determined that with a 80mph pitch and a average swing speed the ball came off the aluminium bat 2-3x faster then the wooden bat, and whats scary is that some good college pitchers can pitch over 90 mph, the ball woudl basically get back to the mound in less then 1/2 a second, reaction time being a second at best, you are just asking for trouble

and they have found it over and over again, some death, many peopel in teh hospitial with carrear ending injuries
 

RaynorWolfcastle

Diamond Member
Feb 8, 2001
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I play baseball here in Canada, all the university and elite leagues have switched back to wood because "aluminum" bats are generally bad for the game. I say "aluminum" because no one really makes them out of aluminum anymore, they're all made of exotic allows so they can get a better "trampoline effect". These bats all have sweet spots the size of Montana and the weight distribution is such that you can get the bathead around on almost any pitch.

Having played with both wood and aluminum, I think that wood and resin bats are much better. They allow pitchers to develop the inside and high fastball much better compared to aluminums where any fastball that's over the plate can get wrecked by any batter. So regardless of what happened to these people and their son, I think that as soon as kids are strong enough to get decent bat speed with wood; everything from maybe from 16 years old upwards should be wood.
 

alkemyst

No Lifer
Feb 13, 2001
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shouldn't we just use flags for football too, that tackling stuff has got to be dangerous.

:roll:
 

RaynorWolfcastle

Diamond Member
Feb 8, 2001
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Originally posted by: Anubis
Originally posted by: Koing
Sports have risks. When you try to hit a ball very far out you will end up with some guys hit in the head.

Lets hit with rubber bats...

Anyway I wonder how much 'slower' a wodden bat would have made the hit to the kids head, or where ever it did to kill him. Would have survived?

Koing

IDK the numbers however there was a Real Sports ep on this not so long ago, they did the testing at college speeds for pitching and bat head speed, they determined that with a 80mph pitch and a average swing speed the ball came off the aluminium bat 2-3x faster then the wooden bat, and whats scary is that some good college pitchers can pitch over 90 mph, the ball woudl basically get back to the mound in less then 1/2 a second, reaction time being a second at best, you are just asking for trouble

and they have found it over and over again, some death, many peopel in teh hospitial with carrear ending injuries

One of the pitchers I played with two years ago had an 85-87ish fastball. In the second inning, he left one over and the batter hit an absolute rope right back up the middle. The bill hit his head (luckily it didn't hit him square), went up and was almost caught by a centerfielder. The guy ended up was out 2 weeks with a concussion, if that ball was hit about 2 inches lower, he takes it in the face and probably dies.
 

flxnimprtmscl

Diamond Member
Jan 30, 2003
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Originally posted by: Ophir
Originally posted by: Anubis
banning aluminum bats is a good idea and has been a good idea for like 10 years when it was first brought up
Those bats have so much pop now, it's a wonder it doesn't happen more often.

QFT.
 

Koing

Elite Member <br> Super Moderator<br> Health and F
Oct 11, 2000
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Originally posted by: RaynorWolfcastle
Originally posted by: Anubis
Originally posted by: Koing
Sports have risks. When you try to hit a ball very far out you will end up with some guys hit in the head.

Lets hit with rubber bats...

Anyway I wonder how much 'slower' a wodden bat would have made the hit to the kids head, or where ever it did to kill him. Would have survived?

Koing

IDK the numbers however there was a Real Sports ep on this not so long ago, they did the testing at college speeds for pitching and bat head speed, they determined that with a 80mph pitch and a average swing speed the ball came off the aluminium bat 2-3x faster then the wooden bat, and whats scary is that some good college pitchers can pitch over 90 mph, the ball woudl basically get back to the mound in less then 1/2 a second, reaction time being a second at best, you are just asking for trouble

and they have found it over and over again, some death, many peopel in teh hospitial with carrear ending injuries

One of the pitchers I played with two years ago had an 85-87ish fastball. In the second inning, he left one over and the batter hit an absolute rope right back up the middle. The bill hit his head (luckily it didn't hit him square), went up and was almost caught by a centerfielder. The guy ended up was out 2 weeks with a concussion, if that ball was hit about 2 inches lower, he takes it in the face and probably dies.

Was that with a wooden bat?

Reaction time is 0.1 second iirc. Anything 'faster' is guessing it and deemed not 'reaction time'. The 100m starters can react to pretty dam close to 0.1 second of the gun going off.

Koing
 

moshquerade

No Lifer
Nov 1, 2001
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Originally posted by: Fingolfin269
After aluminum bats are banned the headline will be 'Parents on crusade to ban wooden bats after child impaled by bat fragment'.
umm.. yeh... right.
let someone you care about get killed like the guy in the above article, and talk to me about aluminum bats.

wooden bats are safer on the whole for obvious reasons.

 

feralkid

Lifer
Jan 28, 2002
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Originally posted by: alkemyst
shouldn't we just use flags for football too, that tackling stuff has got to be dangerous.

:roll:




Helmets are for wusses too.

Shoulder pads? sissy stuff!

I bet some of these wimps even wear a cup!

 
Jun 14, 2003
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i know jack about baseball but how is a aluminium bat more dangerous than a wooden bat? surely its to do with the power of the guy slugging it?
 

classy

Lifer
Oct 12, 1999
15,219
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Originally posted by: Ophir
Originally posted by: Anubis
banning aluminum bats is a good idea and has been a good idea for like 10 years when it was first brought up
Those bats have so much pop now, it's a wonder it doesn't happen more often.

I agree regardless of this incident, aluminum bats are not good for baseball. Wood bats should be used for all levels.
 

BigJ

Lifer
Nov 18, 2001
21,330
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At least in my day, parents and their children had to sign consent forms before ever stepping out on the field. These forms specifically said there was a real possibility that you could get seriously hurt, or even die playing baseball. I guess people just never expect it to happen to them.

Statistically, how many deaths per year are contributed to aluminum bats? How many injuries?

The wood bats are much better for baseball in general, but if a kid is using aluminum he's only cheating himself.
 

Hayabusa Rider

Admin Emeritus & Elite Member
Jan 26, 2000
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Ban baseball. Institute manditory whiffle ball only. If it saves one life, it will be worth it.
 

BigJ

Lifer
Nov 18, 2001
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Originally posted by: WinstonSmith
Ban baseball. Institute manditory whiffle ball only. If it saves one live, it will be worth it.

But the ball travels so fast off of those plastic yellow bats!

:(