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For those who didn't already see this tonight, this is one of the coolest things I've ever seen. 1 swing, 3 hits. Hopefully someone here will end up with this bat!
I thought it was the rule that a batter was out if the bat hit the ball a second time, but the commentators indicated that was not the case for a broken bat. What does the rulebook actually say? (I'm rushing to help babysit our three little grandsons, and don't have time to look it up.)
The replay technology was awesome: I've never seen replays show the ball-bat collision so closely. Physicist baseball fans could have a rich source of data from that! If such double-collisions (or other occurences) do happen a lot faster than a human eye can perceive, they may have to re-write some rules in the future.
For those who didn't already see this tonight, this is one of the coolest things I've ever seen. 1 swing, 3 hits. Hopefully someone here will end up with this bat!
Dont you mean "pieces and pieces of this bat"?
It is an awesome bat anyway. But most likely, MLB will try to hawk it as ONE OF A KIND bat - "3 hits with one bat".
In real time, there was no way to tell that it happened... though you knew something was fishy when the shortstop broke toward third to field the ball and it ended up passing him on his glove side. The ball had some funky english on it.
As if the Game 7 triple-double wasn’t strange enough, Hunter Pence revealed Tuesday that the magical bat had a name. “Fryer,” Pence said. “I name all my bats. Whatever word comes to mind, I write it on them.” Fryer? “F-R-Y-E-R,”… Continue Reading →
As if the Game 7 triple-double wasn’t strange enough, Hunter Pence revealed Tuesday that the magical bat had a name.
“Fryer,” Pence said. “I name all my bats. Whatever word comes to mind, I write it on them.”
Fryer?
“F-R-Y-E-R,” Pence said.
So now we know, Fryer was the hero that died for a great cause Monday night. Fryer was also the bat that hit a baseball deep into the St. Louis night in Game 4. Pence said he has no idea what happened to Fryer, but Andrew Baggarly did some digging and found that a season-ticket holder bought it at the team store and later called the Giants and said Pence should have it back.
This story may have a happy ending after all for Pence, who thought the bat was long gone.
“He will always be Fryer to me,” Pence said.
Fryer might be coming home, and with the way Pence breaks bats, surely will soon be joined by another named bat. What are the other names?
“Man,” Pence said, smiling. “You all are getting personal.”
SAN FRANCISCOHunter Pence didnt know what became of it.Neither did Giants clubhouse man Mike Murphy. The most famous and magical broken bat in franchise historyhad disappeared for a few hoursonly for everyone to react in horror when theydiscovered where it ended up: Sold, for 400, to a fan at the From the Clubhouse game-usedmerchandise stall behind Section 119 just an…
They can't find the ball that ended the game now that Scutaro caught.
Amazing how fast the Giants take items from game time to their store for sale.
I don't understand why the bat is such a big deal and would be considered Giant lore. It's not like the bat won the game, even without Pence's hit the Giants still would have won and if the short stop fielded his position the right way it would have been a double play and only scored 1 run that at-bat.
I' still trying to figure out how the barrel caught up with the moving ball. It looks like so much energy was sent up the bat in shattering that it slowed the bat the instant of impact and also caused the batter's grip to loosen, so the ball got only the momentum a bunt would've given it. But the follow-through continued to accelerate the bat and the handle straightened out, allowing it to catch up to the ball and hit it at a different angle, and thus confusing the fielder's reaction.
If my memory's correct, I think physicists say the ball-bat collision takes .001 seconds. I think commentators said the replay had 3000 frames/second, allowing it to see the collision. A human eye can't see it except for Ted Williams, who reportedly proved he could perceive the collision.
was watching the game with my two sons 8 & 6. they both were amazed as was I. They for some reason also thought it was one of the funniest things they had every seen
This has nothing to do with multiple contact, but more to do with what can be seen in super-slow motion. The small splinter of bat seems to be hitting his shirt with more impact than I would expect. It makes you realize how dangerous the larger shards are that fly through the infield sometimes.
Thanks for all the info on that Pence bat, you guys. Naturally, I would love to have been at the game--or any play-off game. But TV technology (super slo-mo) has turned these series into something surreal -- the bat splintering, the rain falling--all that stuff makes being at home watching a real joy.
And on top of all that -- Joe Buck and Tim McCarver (the Fox guys) have redeemed themselves this year. Sounds like they're having a blast in the city-by-the-bay.
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