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if you hit the ball on the end of the bat or at the handle the bat is likely to break, regardless of how much you spent or what species of wood the bat is made out of.  You should try (dry swing) various wood bats to find a length/weight/shape that most closely resembles the BBCOR bat you use, then look to find a factory second version of the bat you like.  Since you're in Minnesota you should be able to find MaxBat bats at your favorite baseball shop (they're made here in Minnesota).

 

My son uses a 33.5" RipIt as his BBCOR bat and finds that a 243 pattern feels most like his RipIT.  For wood he uses 33.5" BWP 243 Pro Maple Lite bats with a 1/2 cup in the end (weight's in at -3 to -4) and 33.5 BWP 243 Pro Maple bats with 1/2 cup for cage work (-2 weight).  Since those are for cage use he gets the cage model from BWP to save some bucks.  Just remember, there are a large number of bat shapes and they all feel different.  Besides the 243 that my son prefers, 110, 73, and 271 are other popular shapes.

Louisville Slugger has a model at Dick's or Sports Authority that can be purchased off the shelf for around $49-$59, referred to as Louisville Genuine Maple bat or Louisville hard maple bat. Two tone with natural handle and reddish barrel with cupped end. Decent bat that is fine for the cage or game use. Louisville Slugger HM125S Hard Maple Cupped Slyke Finish Baseball Bat Sees to hold up pretty well.

I've bought several bats from Justbats.com.  My son broke the wood bat this weekend that I bought from Justbats last month.  I called Justbats, told them my son had broken his bat and I needed to order another one.  I was intending to buy two more bats. Without any prompting they sent me a replacement bat for no charge.  I'll be buying all my son's bats from Justbats.com!

 

My opinion - wood bats are another one of those things that it saves in the long run to buy a wood composite bat - even if they are more expensive. My son went through 3 wood bats in 60 days between practice and games. All about $60-80 - bamboo-maple - it did not matter - they all broke relatively quickly. I bit the bullit and bought a BAUM bat ($200) - a composite wood bat but still BBCOR certified. Used it for 2 years - uses every day in practice/batting cages (real balls not hard plastic-never take a wood bat or a BBCOR bat to commercial batting cages) - and is in 2nd summer of wood league - its still going strong. Probably has over 10,000 swings on it.Worth every penny.

I suggest using your same weighted bat in practice. You do not want to slow your swing down using a heavy bat. You are actually training your muscles to swing at a slower speed with a heavy bat. You can check our wood bats at www.annexbaseball.com

and take some time to read our reviews.

 

We ship for free and they are pro grade maple, we also have blems for a great price, you must order those through paypal, not our website . Just send me an email at info@annexbaseball.com for more details. We are also out of MN. Take care, and good luck with your season!

 

Matt Ingle

After my 13u son broke two bats his first two games this summer I went to Dick's Sporting Goods and bought him a bamboo bat that came with a warranty of I think 90 days.  It wasn't that expensive and it actually is still in one piece.  It had a BBB on it,  The label with the warranty will make it stand out as well.  It may have been a few dollars over your $50 budget but you'll have the warranty to fall back on if it breaks. 

Originally Posted by MKbaseballdad:

After my 13u son broke two bats his first two games this summer I went to Dick's Sporting Goods and bought him a bamboo bat that came with a warranty of I think 90 days.  It wasn't that expensive and it actually is still in one piece.  It had a BBB on it,  The label with the warranty will make it stand out as well.  It may have been a few dollars over your $50 budget but you'll have the warranty to fall back on if it breaks. 

Thanks MK, but since PG has banned Bamboo bats I was hoping to go with a different wood.  But thank you!

Ahh, didn't know that.  The oldest (non-bamboo) wood bat I have in one piece is hard maple.  It has to be 7-8 years old (2016 got it when he was in LL).  Younger son was just using it last night for a science project!  The second oldest we have is a Marucci Chase Utley model (maple).  

 

Honestly, if you aren't going to get it online I would have him swing the bats (maple or ash I guess) at the store that are in your price range and see which one feels the best.  It's possible that any of them will break depending on where he makes contact on any given swing.   There are lots of Louisville Slugger wood bats online right now on closeoutbats that are 49 and 59.  Mostly Maple and Ash. 

All bats will break in time.  When my son was your sons age, he went through wood bats like it was going out of style.  Cheap bats, expensive bats, didn't matter.  It was his swing that ultimately determined how long the bat would survive.  I will say that once his swing improved he was able to make a quality wood bat last 10-12 months. 

 

Stick with the mid grade, name brands for now.  Rawlings, Marucci, Demarini, etc.  As far as the wood type, I think that's personal preference.  Ash will have a little more flex.  Maple is a little more dense, therefore it may be a -1 / -2 instead of a -3.  Take your son to the store and have him pick up a few makes and models and see which one feels best when he holds/swings it.  I used to take a scale with me when I purchased wood bats to ensure they were actually -3.  You would be amazed how much wood bats vary in weight.  Sometimes I would have to grab 4-5 bats of the same make/model in order to find one that was -3.  Sounds silly, but I wanted to make sure the wood bat I was buying matched the length/weight of the BBCOR bat he was using at the time. 

 

Hope this helps. 

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