Search "End Cap" on the website and add 1 to the cart along with the bat ** The end cap replacement is a direct match, factory cap. There is an end cap product to add to the order. If you do not want to run the risk of creasing, shrinkage or discoloration, the end cap will have to be drilled out and replaced which is $30 additional. This doesn't happen all the time, but it can happen. All new Easton slow pitch bats are vinyl wrapped (not painted) and the laminate decal tends to crease or discolor as pressure is applied. ** NOTE - there is a chance if you are getting this bat shaved, decal creases, end cap shrinkage or some discoloration will occur near the end cap when removing the cap from the bat. Level 2 and 3 are insanely hot, but durability is compromised at these levels. Would suggest a Level 1 shave option for durability. These bats swing very stiff like the Wegman Eastons from years past. Every bat model is required to comply with the standard before it can receive certification marks.The 2020 Easton Synergy Loaded USSSA Slowpitch Softball Bat is a 1 piece 13.25" barrel with a moderate end load. Advancements in the scientific development of bats prompted the ASA to adopt a new bat performance standard in January 2004, which takes into account the batter’s swing speed. In 2000, the ASA first adopted the ASA Bat Performance Standard based on batted ball speed. The Amateur Softball Association of America regulates softball bats used in ASA Championship Play, which is a tournament from which the winner may advance to higher levels of ASA play. Today, there are various composite choices to choose from such as all-composite bats, bats with composite outer shells over aluminum barrels, bats with composite handles and aluminum barrels, and some all-composite double-wall bats. All-composite bats are among the highest performing softball bats. In 2000, composite bats made a major entrance into the market, and it wasn’t long before composite softball bats were competing with the leading aluminum bats. These are also known as multi-walled bats. In an effort to produce higher performing bats using mainly aluminum alloys, designers started experimenting with barrels that had two or more layers of metal or metal/composite hybrids. This advancement allowed bat barrels to be much thinner compared to aluminum and yet still withstand the impact of the ball without denting. In 1993, single-walled titanium softball bats were introduced. Then in 1995, manufacturers Louisville Slugger and Easton developed the strongest, lightest grade of aluminum bats to date. In the late 1970s, manufacturer Easton hit the scene with a stronger grade of grade of aluminum. Shortly after, Worth made the first one-piece aluminum bat and the first little league aluminum bat. AluminumĪluminum bats were first introduced in 1970 by bat manufacturer Worth. Wooden bats were then used until the introduction of the aluminum bat in 1970. Hancock wound up writing down rules and developed a soft, oversized ball and rubber-tipped bat for the game. Hancock then came up with the idea of creating a softball by binding the glove with its laces, and an indoor game of softball was under way. The story goes that a Yale man threw a boxing glove at the Harvard grads, and one of them hit the glove back with a stick, apparently a broom handle. ![]() Hancock was among a group of Yale and Harvard alumni who had gathered at Chicago's Farragut Boat Club. ![]() The first softball bat can be traced to 1887, when George Hancock, a reporter for the Chicago Board of Trade, invented the game.
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