This article origially appeared on Deadspin.com, 8/28/18
Thanks to Vince Guerrieri
As Barry Bonds pursued the single-season home run record in 2001, no detail went uninterrogated.
His clubhouse space—three lockers, complete with recliner and big-screen TV—was written about. His exceptional plate discipline (a .515 on base percentage and a then-record 177 walks) drew awe. No less an august authority than the New York Times evaluated broadcasters’ home run calls and wondered if they would stand the test of time for historic value.
People even wanted to talk about his bat—a maple creation 34 inches long and weighing 31.6 ounces, from a small Canadian company that had only been approved as a licensed manufacturer for Major League Baseball four years earlier.
For decades, baseball bats had been made almost exclusively of ash. But in the mid-1990s, Sam Holman, a sort of Johnny Mapleseed of baseball bats, started experimenting with maple, giving samples to several players for the nearby Toronto Blue Jays. Eventually, one found its way into Bonds’ hands. He liked the way it felt, and the results seemed self-evident.
Correlation might not imply causation, but imitation is the sincerest form of flattery. Since Bonds started using a maple bat to crush balls into McCovey Cove, maple has supplanted ash as Major League Baseball’s wood of choice, a fortuitous change since America’s supply of ash wood has been imperiled by an invasive beetle species. It’s estimated now that around three-quarters of major leaguers swing a maple bat, and even though that’s brought its own problems, maple’s dominance is only expected to increase. Ballplayers are a superstitious lot, and ballplayers believe maple makes for better hitting—even if the science might not exactly back it up.
“A time is coming,” said Rick Redman, VP of corporate communications for Hillerich & Bradsby, which has manufactured Louisville Slugger bats for the major leagues since 1884, “when ash will disappear.”
The early days of baseball saw a lot of experimentation, some of which led to changes that still exist to this day. Candy Cummings—so the story goes—saw the way clamshells dipped and curved when thrown and was determined to do the same with a baseball, inventing the curveball. Doug Allison took the field wearing a mitten to prevent injuries, giving rise to the glove.
And bats took on many forms. There were square bats, flat bats, and Cap Anson even used a laminated bat before it was banned in 1884—the same year Bud Hillerich made a bat for ballplayer Pete Browning, the Kentucky native whose nickname Louisville Slugger would grace bats for more than a century to come.
A wide range of woods was used. Shoeless Joe Jackson’s famed “Black Betsy” was hickory, as was the bat Babe Ruth used to hit 60 home runs in 1927 (a Louisville Slugger model borrowed from Lou Gehrig, Redman says). The Boston Red Stockings in 1873 and ‘74 used willow bats, no doubt a reflection of baseball’s origins in the games of rounders and cricket, which also used willow. Maple was used in baseball’s early days too.
“There were instances when maple was tried, but it never really caught on, and I couldn’t tell you why,” Redman said.
But by the 1930s, ash had become nearly universal—because of its durability and ubiquity, says Major League Baseball’s historian, John Thorn.
“Ash was soft,” Thorn said. “It was plentiful. It’s basically a weed. It’s everywhere. Ash is surprisingly durable for a soft wood. It could be boned. It could be notched. It wasn’t specifically legal to do so all the time, but it was done.”
Boning—as you might or might not infer—is rubbing a bone against the barrel of a bat to scrape off the veneer and harden the wood. There’s a famous photo of Joe DiMaggio doing just that. In 1941, when DiMaggio hit in 56 straight games and Ted Williams hit .406, they used ash bats. When Mickey Mantle won the Triple Crown in 1956 and Roger Maris broke Babe Ruth’s record five years later, they used ash bats. And when George Brett came screaming out of the dugout for having too much pine tar on his bat, that bat was, yep, ash.
But players didn’t just use ash because it was available. They used it because they liked it.
“I loved the feel when you made contact on the sweet spot,” said Jim Thome, who hit 612 home runs in a 21-year career, just about all of them with an ash bat.
Though the substance of the bat generally remained the same—MLB rules only state that the bat has to be solid wood, no longer than 42 inches and no more than 2.61 inches in diameter at its widest point—the style of the bat changed significantly through the game’s history. Bats from the early 20th century resembled nothing as much as clubs, thick-handled and heavy. Honus Wagner, the first major league player to sign an endorsement deal with Hillerich & Bradsby in 1905, swung a bat around 43 ounces. Ruth swung bats as heavy as 52 ounces in his career, Thorn said. And Heinie Groh used a 40-ounce bottle bat, which resembled a cricket bat, with a small handle that ballooned out to a wide head.
Thome says one of the coolest parts of his induction into the Hall of Fame this year was the tour of the museum, particularly when he saw the different types of bats on display that showed its evolution through the game’s history.
“I got to pick up one of Babe Ruth’s bats, and I can’t even imagine swinging it in a game,” he said. “You just don’t see anyone swing a 40-ounce bat anymore.”
Thorn said it comes down to simple physics: Force equals mass times acceleration. “If you’re trying to get force, you formerly got it through mass. These days it’s acceleration. The trend’s gone toward lighter and lighter bats. Anyone who uses a bat that’s north of 32 ounces is a troglodyte.”
It’s difficult to overstate how much Babe Ruth’s power hitting changed the game of baseball—along with a more subtle change that happened as a result of the only fatality from an injury in a major league game. Ray Chapman’s fatal beaning (which happened against the Yankees in the Polo Grounds, with Ruth in right field) led to the banning of the spitball, and umpires became quicker at taking a ball out of play. As a result, balls were suddenly easier to hit over the fence.
“In the deadball era, no matter how hard you hit it, it was unlikely to go out of the park,” Thorn said. “If you hit it hard up the alley, you had a chance at a triple. Remember the triple?
“Maple is harder, and everyone is looking for exit velocity rather than the ability to manipulate the bat. With maple you’ve got a lightning rod.”
Baseball is like comic books: Everything comes with an origin story. Ken Harrelson’s blistered hands from a golf outing begat the batting glove. A cold day at the Polo Grounds led to the sale of hot sausage sandwiches, which became hot dogs because a cartoonist couldn’t spell dachshund. And MLB’s maple bats began with a conversation over beers in Ottawa.
Bill MacKenzie, a baseball lifer then serving as a scout for the Colorado Rockies, was drinking at the Mayflower Pub in Ottawa with Sam Holman, a former stagehand with the National Arts Center in Ottawa who did some carpentry. MacKenzie said ash bats—by then made with thin handles and thick barrels to maximize power and bat speed—kept breaking. Was there anything Holman could do?
“I’m not going to make a better ash tree,” Holman realized.
Instead, he started making bats out of maple and testing them with the local minor-league team, the Ottawa Lynx. “There was a different feel, a different sound, and he felt like he was on to something,” said Kevin Rathwell, sales director for the Original Maple Bat Corporation, which was formed by Holman to make what are better known to players as Sam Bats. “It flipped the industry on its head.”
From there, Holman went to Toronto and found several Blue Jays players who were willing to try it out. Joe Carter instantly connected and soon started singing the praises of the new maple bats.
“When you first use them, it’s a totally different feel from a normal bat,” Carter told the New York Times in 1998. “I mean, totally different. After you use them, you don’t want to go back.”
Carter finished his career with the Giants in 1998. While there, he evangelized about the maple bats to Barry Bonds. The following year, Holman showed up in Giants training camp with a new maple bat for Bonds. The rest, they say, is history.
Bonds hit his first 400 or so home runs using Louisville Slugger ash bats, but he had switched to maple by the time he hit the two big milestone homers of his career: No. 73 in 2001 and no. 756 six years later. When Albert Pujols knocked in 130 runs for a National League rookie record in 2001, he did so with a maple bat, as did Miguel Cabrera in 2012 when he became baseball’s first Triple Crown winner in 45 years.
“It made a distinct impact very quickly,” Rathwell says. “It got to the point where everybody wanted to try maple bats, and Sam got all the calls. Eventually, other companies took notice.”
Thome mostly adhered to ash throughout his career, but he admitted that the denser wood of a maple bat just felt different. “I used maple in the short-term, and when you squared a ball up with a maple bat, it definitely had a distinct feeling.”
It’s not hard to see the biggest problem with maple bats. The evidence usually consists of about a dozen pieces.
“When ash breaks, it typically maintains its integrity and will just crack because of its long grain structure,” Redman says. “Maple bats tend to break catastrophically.”
It’s not hyperbole. In 2008, more than one in three bats that broke in Major League Baseball broke into what were called “multi-piece failures,” potentially launching sharp-edged pieces of wood toward fans, umpires, or other players.
“When it broke, it would split,” said Thome. “If you were on the field, you had to be careful.”
Or if you were even near the field. In 2008, Pirates hitting coach Don Long was in the dugout when he was cut with a shard of maple at Dodger Stadium. A few days later at Chavez Ravine, a fan sitting behind the visitors’ dugout was hit in the face by a piece of the barrel of Todd Helton’s bat during a game against the Rockies.
There was even talk of an outright ban of maple bats, but what happened instead is that manufacturers—which had bloomed from eight when Holman was making his first maple bat to more than 30—started paying more attention to the wood.
Redman says Louisville Slugger does a test measuring what’s called the slope of grain, which influences the possibility of the bat breaking. Zero degrees slope of grain is optimal, but no bat used in a game has a slope of grain—tested by dropping ink on the billet, the round cylinder that a bat is made from—more than 3 degrees. Bats that do have a lower slope become souvenirs, since they can be displayed but most likely won’t have to stand up against a 100-mph fastball.
As maple rose to prominence, ash faced an existential threat.
In 2002, scientists discovered the emerald ash borer, an insect native to northeastern Asia, in southeastern Michigan. The beetle eats the tree’s leaves, but the females lay their eggs inside the tree—and the larvae tunnel through the tree, feeding off it and ultimately killing it within one to three years. By 2016, the emerald ash borer could be found in 25 different states—including New York and Pennsylvania, home to most of the ash trees used for baseball bats—killing an estimated 50 million ash trees in the United States. Maple bats, all other things being equal, are more expensive than ash, but the emerald ash borer is making ash scarcer, to a point where, Rathwell said, ash might become as expensive as maple.
Today, Redman said, about 75 percent of major leaguers swing maple bats. About 20 percent still swing ash, and about 5 percent swing bats made from birch. Thome used maple on occasion (he, like many players, would use it in batting practice; one maple bat could last an entire season), but remained mostly faithful to ash.
“I was pr
etty stubborn,” he says. “I had success with ash, and that’s what I knew.”
And that’s really the big question: Are maple bats better than ash?
The rise of maple bats has come as baseball has seen an increase in strikeouts and home runs, but again, relation does not imply causation. Jim Sherwood of the Baseball Research Center at the University of Massachusetts-Lowell, said the conclusion of a 2005 study was that the ball goes just as far off maple as it does off ash. Lloyd V. Smith, an engineering professor at Washington State University, went even further, telling the Washington Post, “If Barry Bonds had not been swinging maple when he broke that record, I don’t think anybody would even be talking about maple right now.”
But it’s that perception that’s key, Thorn said. “Everyone’s always looking for an edge. Everyone’s pushing the boundaries, and everyone’s on the fringes of baseball criminality. The psychology is more interesting to me than the physicality.”
Vince Guerrieri is an award-winning journalist and author in the Cleveland area. He likes Lake Erie perch sandwiches, Jim Traficant and long walks on the field at League Park. His website is vinceguerrieri.com, and you can follow him on Twitter @vinceguerrieri.
Note from FORECON: obviously they’ll be an asterisk next to Barry Bonds’ homerun record for reasons that have been previously alleged, but thanks to Barry, MLB has had a head start on introducing maple as substitute for the traditional ash bat – which is a fortuitous thing since ash has been on a seriously decline in our forests since the Emerald Ash Borer has all but wiped out that species from our hardwood forests. For decades, most of the ash that was used to produce baseball bats for Major League Baseball was grown and harvested right in our region by many of our clients.