Spotlight - DeMarini
Transcription
Spotlight - DeMarini
Spotlight Softball Today • APRIL 2006 22 more performance for a lot of those companies. What we knew at the time and some of our competitors latter learned is that the number of walls used in muti-wall design is only part of the equation. How each wall functions in accordance with the others is the key to having a great multiwalled bat design.” “In the case of the 2007 Juice By Michael Cisneros m o d e l we've “Juice” can be defined taken a as power, vitality or clout. four wall At DeMarini, it is all approach. those things and more in a We worked 34-inch package. Juice is from the inside (innermost DeMarini's newest slow pitch wall) out, but in the end we bat, a BPF 1.20 offering unlike had to pay close attention to anything ever made by any bat each individual wall and manufacturer - including DeMarini. it's over all role in the “This is a very different bat for total bat design”. us,” said Jerry Garnett, Marketing “After we nailed Manager for DeMarini. down our barrel That's putting it mildly. configuration we then The Juice is so different that it concentrated our effort uses a heretofore unknown on tuning the barrel technology - “Stacked Design” - to and handle of the Juice create a barrel that is both 100% so that this design composite and multi-walled, in this would provide superior case to the tune of four distinct walls. performance & feel Add to that a completely new Half & regardless of the ball Half technology handle and the largest compression. It's not effective hitting area in company just taking a barrel and history, and this bat is the Juice. making adjustments; it “DeMarini has always been at the is taking each individual forefront of muti-wall bat designs”, component of the bat said Garnett. “After we introduced the and making sure that industries first Doublewall (multithey all compliment walled) bat back in 1993, we had a each other. This real good idea that our approach to philosophy is really bat designing would re-define how what DeMarini Half & bats were made. What we quickly Half technology is began to see was other companies all about”. utilizing three or more walls to try When asked what and get more performance out of Larry Carter swings the kind of bat the Juice their bat designs. But it's not as is, Garnett put it easy as some might have thought new DeMarini Juice as part of the WSL Long Haul Bombers bluntly - Juice has and more walls did not result in Stadium Tour. the “maximum performance allowed.” Which means it cannot be used in the ASA, but is accepted in USSSA, NSA, ISA, Senior Softball and ISF. It pushes right up against the Bat Performance Factor limit of 1.20. And it redefines the term “sweet spot.” In creating this bat, Garnett says the plan was to make the hottest bat possible. They did and it was hotter than anyone in the company had even imagined. Then the work was to take that pinnacle and begin to dial it back down to where it met the BPF 1.20 standard. “People really expect that from us; that when we do something, we do it at a very high level,” said Garnett. “It's taken a couple of years, but we wanted to have a bat that would really reestablish us as the premier slow-pitch bat manufacture. We wanted to come out with something that had a real WOW factor. The Juice has undergone a tremendous amount of player testing, and it's per those players that we now have a bat that will definitely turn a lot of heads at the ball field.” But how is that possible, if all bats have the same ceiling on performance put over them? “With the Stacked Design, we are able to truly push the performance linearly on this barrel,” explained Garnett. “A lot of people can't believe the what they have come to refer to as - sweet spot on this bat. Center of Percussion (sweet spot) is talked about by a lot of bat manufacturers, but what is talked about and what present when players actual hit the bat isn't always the same. You can tell a great story to compliment the performance of a bat that truly performs, but don't try to give ball players the old song and dance or you'll get torched in the court of popular opinions. We still play this game and we are on the field all of the time. We know what players want and that is what we are going to give them. We are going to be extremely scrutinized as we reconnect with the soft-ball community, so this model needed to be right.” The Juice has a new handle design - “there will always be a difference in the handle when compared to previous (Half & Half) models; anytime there is a change in the barrel you need a change in the handle,” said Garnett. The new end cap is integral in tuning the four walls. The barrel is a little heavy due Continued on page 34 Softball Today • APRIL 2006 By Neil K. Warner 34 SACRAMENTO - If any of the teams in the 7th annual USSSA Early Bird C NIT should have needed a few games to warm up, it would have been CTown, the team from Boise, Idaho. Without getting too technical about weather patterns and geography, winters in Boise are, ah, let's just say not playable. You won't see anyone taking infield in January. So could anyone explain a how C-Town, from Boise remember, could cruise to a win in the Early Bird NIT by posting a 5-0 tournament record and score an average of 24.6 runs per game? “We were able to hit indoors in some batting cages, but that's not the same. We had only been able to hit outside once, said first basemen Chris Hoshaw. “We kind of made a last minute decision to play in this tournament. We were just hoping to win a few games.” Apparently C-Town doesn't need much time to warm up because it opened the tournament with a convincing 26-18 win over NWP-ITS. Then came the team's lowest scoring game of the tournament, a 19-12 win over Team Gold, in nine innings. The two teams were deadlocked at 12 after seven innings. Neither team scored in the eighth, but C-Town put up a seven spot in the top of the ninth to hold on for the win. The run continued with a 20-15 win over Bully's, followed by a 25-10 win over Yard Sharks to become the tournament's only undefeated team. C-Town waited for Bully's to beat Team Gold, 24-19, and then beat Yard Sharks, 26-11, to earn a date with C-Town. In the finals, C-Town officially hit its stride and scored a tournament-high 33 runs to beat Bully's 3314 in five innings. “We were pretty excited because from everything I've heard and read about, USSSA Nor Cal is sort of the measuring stick for the West,” Hoshaw said. “For us to come out and win the first tournament and secure a world berth in March, we felt pretty good about that.” Tim Pemderton moved from third base to pitcher and was named tournament MVP. He batted .740 for the tournament. Other members of the All-Tournament team were Ryan Barabe, who hit .792; Travis Vezina (.762); and Dane Alndt and Sack Deboi. USSSA Early Bird C NIT 1. C-Town Softball Club 5-0 2. Bully's 5-2 3. Yard Sharks 3-2 4. Team Gold 4-2 5. Maks/Easton/dssbats 3-2 6. Premier 2-2 7. Ripstik/A.P.S. 3-2 8. Sacramento Banshees 2-3 9. B2B 2-2 10. Delta Lending Group/l'infanzia 1-2 11. Team Alpha Male 1-2 12. SMD 1-2 13. Bingers 1-2 14. NWP-ITS 0-2 15. Outkast 0-3 16. Bucks Softball Club 0-3 to all those walls; it's not real end loaded but it has more barrel weight than other composite bats. “You are starting to see a trend to heavier barrels,” said Garnett. End loaded bats were always preferred by power hitters in the early years of the aluminum bat era of softball, but high compression balls, high strength aluminum and composite technology eliminated the need - at least from a performance standpoint - of a heavy barrel. But players never forgot the comfort of the end weighting and now with changes in ball technology, even composites are becoming available with heavier barrels. “We see a lot of lower compression balls being used regardless of the association. It is not uncommon at all for league or tournament directors to use a ball that is lower in compression than what their rule book allows” said Garnett. “We as bat designers look at that trend and understand that as the ball compression goes down the desire to have a heavier (more end loaded) bat will go up. There is no better way to get more performance out of a softer ball than with a heavier barrel.” The Juice is designed for D, C and B players, but, points out Garnett, that doesn't mean it shouldn't be used by E or A players. It is all about comfort & confidence. “That is really the key,” he said. “There is no one bat for everybody. But I believe we will appease the masses with this design, we've accomplished what we set out to do” The Juice is available in 26, 28 and 30 ounces, though it swings a bit heavier than that. It will be available in quantity in May.