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..................................NFHS
Board of Directors Approves New Bat Rule
KANSAS CITY, MO (January 7,
2000) — The National Federation of State High School Associations
(NFHS) will have a new bat rule for the 2001 high school baseball
season.
At a meeting in San
Francisco, the NFHS Board of Directors approved a rule calling
for narrower, heavier and more wood-like bats. The maximum diameter
of bats will be reduced from 2¾ inches to 2 5/8 inches, and the
unit differential, namely the difference between bat length measured
in inches and bat weight measured in ounces, will be reduced from
five units to three units.
The Board commended
the work of the NFHS Baseball Rules Committee, but chose to defer
action on two other bat-related committee proposals. One deferred
proposal would have imposed a more restrictive maximum exit ball
speed than the one recently adopted by the NCAA. The other would
have imposed a wood-like moment-of-inertia requirement. The Board
expressed interest in both proposals, but decided to return them
to the rules committee for further assessment.
In addition to the
new size and weight limitations, the NFHS Board of Directors anticipates
that bats used in play after January 1, 2001, will comply with
the new NCAA exit ball speed rule. In fact, the presence of a
mark denoting compliance with the NCAA bat rule will be one assurance
that a bat is compliant with the size and weight components of
the new NFHS rule. Although bats meeting the new NFHS rule will
not be required for another year, they are legal immediately.
Student-athletes, parents and coaches wishing to utilize such
bats this year are free to do so.
"The game of high school
baseball is in good shape," said NFHS President Dick Durost. "Even
so, we need to stay vigilant to ways in which technology is having
an impact. The new rule will make the physical dimensions of non-wood
bats more closely mirror those of wood bats. Further changes relating
to bat weight distribution and exit ball speed may soon be in
the offing."
The NFHS is the national
service and administrative organization for high school athletics
and fine arts programs in speech, music, drama and debate. Its
membership consists of the state high school athletic and activity
associations in all 50 states plus the District of Columbia.
The NFHS promulgates
voluntary playing rules in 17 sports for girls and boys competition.
When considering a rules change, the NFHS looks at risk minimization,
the balance between offense and defense, and the sound tradition
of the sport in question.
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