- Dec 11, 2010
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- 113
The “Killer b’s” used to be EVERYWHERE and cheap!
I just threw away a FP11ST9 that dd trashed out a couple springs ago. It was good while it lasted!
The “Killer b’s” used to be EVERYWHERE and cheap!
USC isn't the only one.... UC Irvine doesn't have a program either and they're in the home town of the PGF National Championship Game, all of the CIF Southern Section High School Championship games are played in Irvine too. The IDT is played in Boulder and Colorado doesn't have a softball team. And another one that I have always been shocked that didn't have a softball program is Pepperdine. The school is in Malibu where the lifeguards trucks tell you to "surf like a girl" Have you seen the view from Pepperdine's baseball stadium? It would be nearly impossible to not be able to recruit High School girls to Pepperdine.
Back east Vanderbilt and Miami are baseball powerhouses that don't have softball programs. It's odd that USC, Pepperdine, Miami, Vanderbilt.... are all private universities that don't have softball, they must rely on less federal money because you'd think title ix would have made them start programs
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I thought it was that the percentage of athletic scholarahips had to match the percentage of the student body that was each gender.Title IX doesnt require certain sports to be available. They just have to have as many scholarships available to girls as guys.
The NCAA tests all models that show up at the annual tournaments ( top 64 d1,2,3). Each bat is tested on a machine. If it fails it is confiscated for that tournament and the MODEL is issued a strike. Once 3 strikes are accumulated the bat is banned. So a great number of older POPULAR models get banned. This started in about 2008 - 2010. Since so many are banned they now switched to an ALLOWED list. Basically the mfg submit this years models and they do not get enough strikes until the end of the season to be banned if they do get banned.So today I picked up this fine piece of equipment 32/22 with maybe 100 hits on it I was told. It doesn't look like many balls have hit it. Has some clete marks on it that's it. I did my fair share of looking and investigating paid 220 and change with tax. Now what I don't understand is why it's banned in NCAA? It has the current ASA USSSA NSA ISA markings. Just curios as to why not allowed NCAA
A lot of the big private universities you name chose to cut men's teams instead of starting women's teams when Title IX was implemented due to budget concerns. The reason Stanford and UCLA have so many men's and women's teams is that they were/are willing to pump money into the athletic department instead of bleeding the money off for other needs. Private schools like Stanford and the Ivies have such huge endowments that they can provide financially for more non-revenue sports for both genders when Title IX came out they added women's teams instead of culling men's teams. The state schools with the best academic reputations, UCLA, UC Berkeley, Michigan, UVA, etc. have a large number of out-of-state and foreign students paying full tuition so they can support more teams and their mission often includes providing maximum extra curricular opportunities for the student body.USC isn't the only one.... UC Irvine doesn't have a program either and they're in the home town of the PGF National Championship Game, all of the CIF Southern Section High School Championship games are played in Irvine too. The IDT is played in Boulder and Colorado doesn't have a softball team. And another one that I have always been shocked that didn't have a softball program is Pepperdine. The school is in Malibu where the lifeguards trucks tell you to "surf like a girl" Have you seen the view from Pepperdine's baseball stadium? It would be nearly impossible to not be able to recruit High School girls to Pepperdine.
Back east Vanderbilt and Miami are baseball powerhouses that don't have softball programs. It's odd that USC, Pepperdine, Miami, Vanderbilt.... are all private universities that don't have softball, they must rely on less federal money because you'd think title ix would have made them start programs
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The one I picked up is a 22oz sticker weight I weighed it and it was 1.3 oz heavier than sticker weightThe FP11ST10 & FP11ST9 I think both received their 3rd strike shortly after the National Championship in 2015. Both of Florida’s National Championships in 2014-2015 the FP11ST10 was 70% of the bats they were using. I have a picture from a 2015 game and all bats are lined up in front of the dugout, and it is just a sea of white & purple....In fact in those years if they were an Easton team, they were using the FP11ST10.......Those bats were tanks and seemed to last a very long time, other than maybe acquiring a very small rattle after tons of use. They also ran crazy heavy over sticker weight. We had one that was 2oz plus over sticker weight. Definitely an iconic fastpitch bat
Just picked this one up for 125Hammer time! I remember when Anna was probably 11, we went to a USC Upstate camp, there was about 30 of those FP11’s lined up.....look but don’t touch!
Seeing this post just made me dig through my wallet, this piece of paper has been folded up and stuck in a compartment in my wallet for 8 or 9 years! I kept it in case I ran across any old Easton’s at PIAS, or wherever.
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